Abstract
The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the existence of a unique positive solution to non-local fractional p-Laplacian equations of the Brézis–Oswald type involving Hardy potentials. The main feature of this paper is solving the difficulty that arises in the presence of a singular coefficient and in the lack of the semicontinuity property of an energy functional associated with the relevant problem. The main tool for overcoming this difficulty is the concentration–compactness principle in fractional Sobolev spaces. Also, the uniqueness result of the Brézis–Oswald type is obtained by exploiting the discrete Picone inequality.
Keywords:
fractional p-Laplacian; Hardy potential; concentration-compactness principle; discrete Picone inequality MSC:
35B33; 35D30; 35J20; 35J60; 35J66
1. Introduction
In the last few decades, a great deal of work has been devoted to fractional Sobolev spaces and their corresponding non-local problems, arising in many fields such as fractional quantum mechanics, game theory, Lévy processes, image processing, thin obstacle problems, optimization, frame propagation, geophysical fluid dynamics, anomalous diffusion in plasma, and American options; see [1,2,3,4,5] and references therein for more details.
In this paper, we deal with a Brézis–Oswald-type problem driven by a non-local p-Laplacian fractional involving Hardy potential as follows:
where is a real parameter, is a bounded open set with Lipschitz boundary , , , , , and is non-negative function, which will be specified later. Here, is a non-local operator defined pointwise as
where the kernel is a measurable function with the following properties:
- ()
- There are positive constants and with such thatfor almost all and ;
- ()
- for all .
It is obvious that by setting . If , is the fractional p-Laplacian operator defined by
where .
The primary purpose of the present paper is dedicated to proving the existence and uniqueness of solutions to non-local fractional p-Laplacian problems of the Brézis–Oswald type involving Hardy potentials in the spirit of the celebrated paper by Brézis–Oswald on Laplacian problems. In [6], the authors delved into the existence and uniqueness of solutions to certain types of sublinear elliptic equations. In particular, they provided insights and results that have significant implications for the study of differential equations and their applications. Since this work, there has been a growing interest in supplying necessary and/or sufficient conditions for the solvability of more general problems, taking into account various operators and boundary conditions; see [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. The authors in [16] examined the conditions that ensure the existence of positive solutions to p-Laplacian equations, and also provided criteria under which the uniqueness of these solutions is guaranteed. As an improvement on the classical Brézis–Oswald and Dìaz–Saa results in the Orlicz–Sobolev framework, the existence and uniqueness of solutions for a quasilinear elliptic problem can be found in [10]. As we know, the main tool for considering the Brézis–Oswald result for p-Laplacian problems or more general problems is the Dìaz–Saa-type inequalities, as given in [16,17]. In order to apply the Dìaz–Saa-type inequalities given in [16,17] to an elliptic problem, the classical Hopf boundary lemma is needed to ensure the fact that the quotient between solutions belongs to the -space. However, the solutions of fractional-order equation are usually singular at the boundary, making it difficult to deal with their quotient between solutions because Hopf’s boundary lemma is not preserved. Thus, in contrast with the references [10,12,13], the major difficulty is to obtain the result that a nonlinear problem of the Brézis–Oswald type driven by the fractional p-Laplacian possesses a unique positive weak solution. The authors in [7,11,15,18] overcame this difficulty by considering the discrete Picone inequality in [8,19]. By using this inequality, Mugnai–Pinamonti–Vecchi [15] discussed necessary and sufficient conditions that ensure the existence of a unique positive solution to the non-local Robin boundary value problem involving the fractional p-Laplacian. Motivated by this work, the author in [18] recently established the existence, uniqueness, and localization of positive solutions to non-local problems with discontinuous Kirchhoff-type functions via the global minimum principle of Ricceri [20]. Also, I refer to [11] for the case of the fractional –Laplace equation with Dirichlet boundary conditions, and to [7] for some sublinear Dirichlet problems driven by a mixed local and a non-local operator.
Another interesting respect of the problem at hand is the emergence of Hardy potentials. In recent years, the stationary problem associated with singular coefficients has gained increasing attention as they can be demonstrated in models of various physical phenomena and in economic models. For more comprehensive details and examples, see [21,22,23]. In addition, by virtue of this great interest, these problems have been investigated more in recent years; see [24,25,26,27]. In particular, Ferrara and Bisci [24] revealed that a nonlinear Dirichlet boundary problem with Hardy potential possesses at least one nontrivial solution. Inspired by this work, Khodabakhshi et al. [26] proved the existence of at least three distinct generalized solutions; see [27] for nonlinear elliptic problems involving p-Laplace-type operators. Here, we also cite the paper given in [25] for infinitely many solutions. These elliptic problems with singular coefficients pose some technical difficulties because it is not immediately obvious how to assure the compactness condition of the Palais–Smale type in the desired function space due to the presence of Hardy potential. For this reason, the authors of [24,25,26,27] discussed the multiplicity results of solutions by exploiting the various critical point theorems in [28,29] without substantiating the compactness condition of the Palais–Smale type.
In a different approach from [24,25,26,27], Fiscella in [30] recently demonstrated the existence of at least one non-trivial solution to a fractional p-Laplacian equation of the Schrödinger–Kirchhoff type with a Hardy term:
where , , , , and are real numbers, is a potential function, and g is a continuous function that fulfills the classical Ambrosetti–Rabinowitz condition. The primary tool for achieving this consequence is the mountain pass theorem. Motivated by this work, the existence of multiple solutions to equations of the Schrödinger-Hardy type driven by the non-local fractional p-Laplacian was obtained in [12]. In addition, the authors of [31] derived several multiplicity results and proved the regularity of nontrivial solutions for Kirchhoff–Schrödinger–Hardy-type p-Laplacian problems.
Unlike the aforementioned related studies, the main purpose of this paper is to establish the existence of a unique positive solution to non-local fractional p-Laplacian problems of the Brézis–Oswald type with Hardy potential without exploiting critical point theorems in [28,29] and the variational methods in [12,30,31]. However, this problem has some technical difficulties in showing the semicontinuity property of an energy functional corresponding to problem (1) because of the presence of the Hardy term. To overcome this difficulty, we utilize the concentration-compactness principle in fractional Sobolev spaces, which is given in [32,33]. As far as we are aware, this study is the first effort to develop the uniqueness result of positive solutions to non-local Brézis–Oswald-type elliptic problems with Hardy potentials.
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. Section 2 presents some essential preliminary knowledge of function spaces to be utilized in the rest of the paper. In Section 3, we provide the variational framework related to problem (1); then, Section 4 derives the existence result of a unique positive solution under suitable assumptions. Finally, some useful comments related to the problems given in (1) are given in Section 5.
2. Preliminaries
In this section, we briefly give some useful definitions and elementary properties of fractional Sobolev spaces that will be utilized in the next sections. Let the fractional Sobolev space be defined as follows:
endowed with the norm
where
Then, is a separable and reflexive Banach space. Also, the space is dense in —that is, (see, e.g., [4,34]).
Lemma 1
([4]). Let and . Then, the following continuous embeddings hold:
In particular, the space is compactly embedded in for any , where is the fractional critical Sobolev exponent, namely,
Let the fractional Sobolev space be defined as follows:
where the kernel function satisfies the conditions (1)–(2). By the assumption (1), the function
holds for any . Let us consider the problem (1) in the closed linear subspace defined as
with respect to the norm
where
Throughout the sequel, let , with and , and let the kernel function satisfy the conditions (1)–(2).
Lemma 2
([35]). If , then . Additionally, one has
where is given in (2).
According to Lemmas 1 and 2, we can give the following assertion instantly:
Lemma 3
([35]). For any and , there is a constant such that
where is given in (2). As a result, the space X is continuously embedded in for any . Additionally, the embedding
is compact for .
The following consequence is the fractional Hardy inequality given in [19].
Lemma 4.
For any , in case , and for all , in case , we have
where is a positive constant.
3. Variational Setting and Useful Auxiliaries
In this section, we give the variational setting associated with problem (1). Also, we provide some useful auxiliary consequences, which are essential in obtaining our main result.
Let the functional be defined by
where
Then, it is not difficult to show that is well defined on X, and the result below can be derived from following the lines of the proof of Lemma 2 in [36].
Lemma 5.
For each , the functional is of class and its Fréchet derivative is
for any , where denotes the pairing of X and its dual .
Proof.
It is immediately provable that has a Fréchet derivative in X and (3) is satisfied for any . Let be a sequence satisfying strongly in X as . Without loss of generality, we assume that a.e. in . Then, the sequence
is bounded in , as well as a.e. in :
Thus, taking into account the Brézis–Lieb Lemma (see [37]), one has
The fact that converges strongly to in X as implies that
Owing to (4), we infer that
In view of Lemma 4, we have
Now, we present the following consequence, which provides the concentration-compactness principle in fractional Sobolev spaces; see [32,33]. This result is essential in showing the semicontinuity property of the functional .
Lemma 6.
Let be the space of all signed finite Radon measures on with the total variation norm. Let be a bounded sequence in X such that in X. Let us assume that
Then, there exist sets , , and where I is an at most countable index set, such that
where denotes the Dirac mass at and
Lemma 7.
There is a constant such that the functional is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous on X for any ; that is,
Proof.
Thanks to Theorem 6 in [38], we infer that is a dense subset of X. Hence, utilizing density arguments to show that is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous on X, it suffices to prove that the functional
for any . So, let be a sequence in such that
Thus, in accordance with Lemma 6, there exist two bounded measures and , positive real numbers , and an at most countable set of indices I of distinct points such that the following convergence holds weakly in the sense of measures:
Finally,
By virtue of the continuity of the embedding , for every , we have that
Set , where and are given in (2) and Lemma 4. Let us consider first. In view of Lemma 4, we know . From this and (17)–(19), we obtain that
for any .
4. Main Result
In this section, we give the existence result of a unique nontrivial positive solution to problem (1), which is the main result of this paper. To accomplish this, suppose that the following conditions hold:
- (F1)
- is a Carathéodory function;
- (F2)
- for every , and there exists a constant such thatfor all and for almost all ;
- (F3)
- and for almost all ;
- (F4)
- The function is decreasing in , uniformly in .
Under Assumptions (F1) and (F2), let the functional be defined by
for any , where . Then, it is easy to show that , and its Fréchet derivative is
for any . Next, the functional is defined as
Then, and its Fréchet derivative is
We now introduce a discrete version of the celebrated Picone inequality that is given in Proposition 4.2 in [8]; see also Lemma 2.6 in [19].
Lemma 8
(Discrete Picone inequality). Let and let , with . Then,
where for . In addition, if equality holds in (26), then
For any and , let us define the following truncation:
Now, we give a technical Lemma that will be very useful hereinafter. The proof of this assertion is completely the same as that of Lemma 2.3 in [15]; see also [18]. For the reader’s convenience, we will give the proof.
Lemma 9.
Proof.
Let be given. Since the function is 1-Lipschitz, we know
which immediately implies that . By virtue of the Lagrange theorem, we know that for any and for every , we have that
Then, since and , taking (28) and (29) into account, we have
for every . Thus, the Gagliardo seminorm of is finite. Further, one has
and thus,
where . This consequently implies that . □
Definition 1.
In accordance with Lemmas 7 and 9, we derive that problem (1) possesses at least one positive solution.
Lemma 10.
If (F1)–(F3) hold, then there is a positive constant such that problem (1) admits a positive solution for any .
Proof.
Firstly, let us establish
where , and and are given in (2) and Lemma 3, respectively.
Moreover, since g has subcritical growth, is a sequentially weakly continuous on X. Also, by virtue of Lemma 7, we obtain that is sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous on X. Let us choose any positive real number satisfying either
Since , there exists a positive constant such that
for any and for almost all . Thus, we have
where denotes the Lebesgue measure on . This, together with Lemmas 3 and 4, (32), and the definition of the X-norm, yields that for any and for every ,
For any , it follows from the analogous argument (as in (33)) that
Hence, due to the choice of , we have
Let us define the modified energy functional as
where and
for all and for almost all . Then, it is obvious by Lemma 7 and the above argument that is also sequentially weakly lower semicontinuous and coercive on X. Hence, it holds that there exists such that
Now, we show that we can assume . To this end, let us assume that is sign-changing. By Lemma 9, we infer and so . Since when for almost all , we have the following:
Consequently, is a non-negative solution of (1). For simplicity, let us write directly in place of . Let us claim that . Since for almost all , it follows from arguments analogous to those in Theorem 3.7 of [18] that either or for almost all . Hence, in order to show , it is enough to show that . Now, in the light of Theorem 4.1 in [39], fix any nonnegative function , with on , such that
where is a positive eigenvalue that can be characterized as
By virtue of Theorem 3.2 in [39], we infer that . Let with and let be fixed. Then the Lebesgue measure of the set is positive. In addition, fix so that
According to the second condition in (F3), there is a constant such that
for all . Then, for small enough and for any , one has
On the other hand, let us fix and satisfying
Then, it follows from Lemma 4 and what is similarly given in (34) that
for any .
We are in a position to provide our main assertion. The fundamental idea of the following consequence comes from [9,15].
Theorem 1.
If (F1)–(F4) hold, then for any , problem (1) admits a unique positive solution, where is given in Lemma 10.
Proof.
In view of Lemma 10, we assume that problem (1) has two weak positive solutions and . For any , let us define the truncations as in (27) for . We define the functions
and
By Lemma 9, we deduce that for . Now, set
Considering the weak formulation (30) of , by choosing for , we infer
and
Adding the above two equations, (36) and (37), and utilizing the fact that
we obtain that
Now, applying the discrete Picone inequality in Lemma 8 and the fact that is 1-Lipschitz, we obtain
and
As as for , by taking the limit in (38) and taking into account the Fatou Lemma in the first and third terms while applying the Dominated Convergence Theorem in all the other terms, we deduce that
Using Lemma 8 on the left-hand side of (39), we obtain
Hence, since the function is decreasing in , we obtain that . As a result, we conclude that problem (1) possesses a unique positive solution for any . This completes the proof. □
5. Conclusions
The present paper is devoted to obtaining the existence of a unique positive solution to fractional p-Laplacian problems of the Brézis–Oswald type with Hardy potentials. The main difficulty in this paper is the lack of the semicontinuity property of the energy functional associated with our problem. To overcome this difficulty, we utilized the concentration–compactness principle in fractional Sobolev spaces. Also, we obtained the uniqueness result of the Brézis–Oswald type by exploiting the discrete Picone inequality given in [8,19]. However, Assumption (F3) can be regarded as a special case of that of [15,40], i.e., that the nonlinear term g satisfies conditions
for almost all . Let us define and as
and
If instead of (F3) is satisfied, then it follows from obvious modifications of the proof of Theorem 1 and similar arguments as those in [15] that problem (1) admits a unique positive solution for any .
Additionally, a new research direction would be to investigate mixed local and non-local problems of the Brézis–Oswald type involving Hardy potentials:
where , for a positive constant and is the classical p-Laplacian operator. Recently, the authors in [7] established necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a unique positive weak solution for problem (40) with . However, to the best of my knowledge, there have been no results on the existence and uniqueness of a positive solution to problem (40) involving the Hardy potential. As a further study, one could therefore seek to obtain similar results as those given in [7] for problem (40).
Funding
This research was funded by a 2022 research Grant from Sangmyung University.
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
The original contributions presented in this study are included in the article.
Conflicts of Interest
The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.
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