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Article

Hyers–Ulam Stability and Existence of Solutions for Differential Equations with Caputo–Fabrizio Fractional Derivative

1
Department of Mathematics, Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025, China
2
Department of Mathematical Analysis and Numerical Mathematics, Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Informatics, Comenius University in Bratislava, Mlynská dolina, 842 48 Bratislava, Slovakia
3
Mathematical Institute, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Štefánikova 49, 814 73 Bratislava, Slovakia
4
School of Mathematics, Statistics and Applied Mathematics, National University of Ireland, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland
5
School of Mathematical Sciences, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Mathematics 2019, 7(4), 333; https://doi.org/10.3390/math7040333
Submission received: 14 March 2019 / Revised: 30 March 2019 / Accepted: 1 April 2019 / Published: 5 April 2019

Abstract

:
In this paper, the Hyers–Ulam stability of linear Caputo–Fabrizio fractional differential equation is established using the Laplace transform method. We also derive a generalized Hyers–Ulam stability result via the Gronwall inequality. In addition, we establish existence and uniqueness of solutions for nonlinear Caputo–Fabrizio fractional differential equations using the generalized Banach fixed point theorem and Schaefer’s fixed point theorem. Finally, two examples are given to illustrate our main results.

1. Introduction

Fractional differential operators describe mechanical and physical processes with historical memory and spatial global correlation and for the basic theory—see [1,2,3]. Results on existence, stability and controllability for differential equations with Caputo, Riemann–Liouville and Hilfer type fractional derivatives can be found, for example, in [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19]. Caputo and Fabrizio [20] introduced a new nonlocal derivative without a singular kernel and Atangana and Nieto [21] studied the numerical approximation of this new fractional derivative and established a modified resistance loop capacitance (RLC) circuit model. Losada and Nieto [22] presented a fractional integral corresponding to the Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative and introduced Caputo–Fabrizio fractional differential equations and established existence and uniqueness results. Baleanu et al. [23] extended the study to Caputo–Fabrizio fractional integro-differential equations and obtained the approximate solution. Franc and Goufo [24] established a new Korteweg–de Vries–Burgers equation involving the Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative with no singular kernel and presented existence and uniqueness results and also gave numerical approximations.
Hyers–Ulam stability is a concept that provides an approximate solution for the exact solution in a simple form for differential equations. A Laplace transform method is applied to show the Hyers–Ulam stability for integer order differential equations in [25,26] and Wang and Li [27] adopted the idea and applied a Laplace transform method to show the Hyers–Ulam stability for fractional order differential equations involving Caputo derivatives. There are many papers on differential equations involving fractional derivatives–see, for example, [28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36]. However, there are only a few papers on the Hyers–Ulam stability for differential equations with the Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative. In [37], Wang et al. offered the Ulam stability for the fractional differential equations with the Caputo derivative.
First, we recall the well-known Caputo fractional derivative [2] of order β , given by
( D β y ) ( x ) = 1 Γ ( 1 β ) a x f ˙ ( s ) ( x s ) β d s , 0 < β < 1 ,
where f C 1 ( a , b ) , b > a . By changing the kernel ( x s ) β with the function exp ( β 1 β ( x s ) ) and 1 Γ ( 1 β ) by 1 2 π ( 1 α 2 ) , we obtain the new definition of fractional derivative without a singular kernel ( C F D α y ) ( x ) —see Definition 1 for details.
In this paper, we study Hyers–Ulam stability and existence and uniqueness of solutions for the following Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative equations:
( C F D α y ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y ) ( x ) = u ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] , 0 < α , β < 1 ,
and
( C F D α y ) ( x ) = f ( x , y ( x ) ) , x [ 0 , T ] , 0 < α < 1 ,
where ( C F D γ y ) ( · ) denotes the Caputo–Fabrizio derivative for y with the order 0 < γ < 1 (see Definition 1), λ R , u : [ 0 , T ] R and f : [ 0 , T ] × R R will be specified later.
The main contributions are as follows: we obtain a simple result to check whether the approximate solution is near the exact solution for linear Equation (1), which implies Hyers–Ulam stability and generalized Hyers–Ulam stability on the finite time interval. In addition, we present a condition to derive existence and uniqueness of solutions for nonlinear Equation (2) using the generalized Banach fixed point theorem (this improves the result in (Theorem 1, [22])). In addition, we establish sufficient conditions to guarantee the existence of solutions for nonlinear Equation (2) using Schaefer’s fixed point theorem. Based on the existence and uniqueness result, we prove the Hyers–Ulam stability of (2) via the Gronwall inequality.

2. Preliminaries

Let C ( I , R ) be the Banach space of all continuous functions from I into R with the norm y C : = sup { | y ( x ) | : x I } .
Definition 1
(see [22]). Let 0 < α < 1 , h C 1 [ 0 , b ) and b > 0 . The Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative for a function h of order α is defined by
C F D α h ( τ ) = ( 2 α ) M ( α ) 2 ( 1 α ) 0 τ exp ( α 1 α ( τ x ) ) h ( x ) d x , τ 0 ,
where M ( α ) is a normalization constant depending on α. Note that ( C F D α ) ( h ) = 0 if and only if h is a constant function.
Definition 2
(see Definition 1, [22]). Let 0 < α < 1 . The Caputo–Fabrizio fractional integral for a function h of order α is defined by
C F I α h ( τ ) = 2 ( 1 α ) ( 2 α ) M ( α ) h ( τ ) + 2 α ( 2 α ) M ( α ) 0 τ h ( x ) d x , τ 0 .
Theorem 1
(see [20,22]). Let α ( 0 , 1 ) . Then,
L [ C F D α h ( τ ) ] ( s ) = ( 2 α ) M ( α ) 2 ( s + α ( 1 s ) ( s L [ h ( τ ) ] ( s ) h ( 0 ) ) , s > 0 .
Motivated by (Definition 2.3, [37]), we introduce the following definition.
Definition 3.
Let 0 < α , β < 1 and u : [ 0 , T ] R be a continuous function. Then, (1) is Hyers–Ulam stable if there exists K > 0 and ϵ > 0 such that, for each solution y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (1),
| C F D α y ( x ) λ C F D β y ( x ) u ( x ) | ϵ , x [ 0 , T ] ,
and there exists a solution z C ( [ 0 , T ) , R ) of (2) with
| y ( x ) z ( x ) | K ϵ , x [ 0 , T ] .
Definition 4.
Let 0 < α , β < 1 , u : [ 0 , T ] R be a continuous function and G : [ 0 , T ] R + be continuous functions. Then, (1) is generalized Hyers–Ulam–Rassias stable with respect to G if there exists a constant c f , G > 0 such that for each solution y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (1),
| C F D α y ( x ) λ C F D β y ( x ) u ( x ) ) | G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] ,
and there exists a solution z C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (2) with
| y ( x ) z ( x ) | c f , G G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
Definition 5.
Let f : [ 0 , T ] × R R be a continuous function. Then, (2) is Hyers–Ulam stable if there exists K > 0 and ϵ > 0 such that for each solution y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (2),
| C F D α y ( x ) f ( x , y ( x ) ) | ϵ , x [ 0 , T ] ,
and there exists a solution z C ( [ 0 , T ) , R ) of (2) with
| y ( x ) z ( x ) | K ϵ , x [ 0 , T ] .
Definition 6.
Let f : [ 0 , T ] × R R and G : [ 0 , T ] R + be continuous functions. Then, (2) is generalized Hyers–Ulam–Rassias stable with respect to G if there exists a constant c f , G > 0 such that, for each solution y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (2),
| C F D α y ( x ) f ( x , y ( x ) ) | G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] ,
and there exists a solution z C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) of (2) with
| y ( x ) z ( x ) | c f , G G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .

3. Stability Results for the Linear Equation

In this section, we study Hyers–Ulam and generalized Hyers–Ulam-Rassias stability of (1).
Theorem 2.
Let 0 < β , α < 1 , λ R , and u ( x ) be a given real function on [ 0 , T ] . If a function y : [ 0 , T ] R satisfies the inequality
| ( C F D α y ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y ) ( x ) u ( x ) | ε
for each x [ 0 , T ] and ε > 0 , then there exists a solution y a : [ 0 , T ] R of (1) such that
| y ( x ) y a ( x ) | 2 | C A | ε + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } x ε + 2 | α β B | x ε ,
where
A = ( 1 β ) ( 2 α ) M ( α ) λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) ( 1 α ) , B = ( 2 α ) M ( α ) β λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) α , C = ( 1 β ) ( 1 α ) , D = α + β 2 α β .
Proof. 
Let
F ( x ) = ( C F D α y ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y ) ( x ) u ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
Taking the Laplace transform of (10) via Theorem 1, and we have
L { F ( x ) } ( s ) = L { ( C F D α y ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y ) ( x ) u ( x ) } ( s ) = L { ( C F D α y ) ( x ) } ( s ) λ L { ( C F D β y ) ( x ) } ( s ) L { u ( x ) } ( s ) = [ ( 2 α ) M ( α ) 2 ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) 2 ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) ] s L { y ( x ) } ( s ) + [ ( 2 α ) M ( α ) 2 ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) + λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) 2 ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) ] y ( 0 ) L { u ( x ) } ( s ) ,
where L { F } denotes the Laplace transform of the function F. From (11), one has
L { y ( x ) } ( s ) = 1 s y ( 0 ) + 1 s 2 ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) ( 2 α ) M ( α ) ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) × L { u ( x ) } ( s ) + L { F ( x ) } ( s ) = 1 s y ( 0 ) + 2 C A + A D B C A 2 1 s + B A + α β B 1 s α β B 1 s + B A ( L { u ( x ) } ( s ) + L { F ( x ) } ( s ) ) ,
where A , B , C , D are defined as in (9). Set
y a ( x ) = y ( 0 ) + 2 C A u ( x ) + 2 A D B C A 2 α β B 0 x exp ( B A t ) u ( x t ) d t + 2 α β B 0 x u ( x t ) d t .
Taking the Laplace transform of (13), one has
L { y a ( x ) } ( s ) = 1 s y ( 0 ) + 2 C A L { u ( x ) } ( s ) + 2 A D B C A 2 α β B 1 s + B A L { u ( x ) } ( s ) + 2 α β B 1 s L { u ( x ) } ( s ) = 1 s y ( 0 ) + 2 C A + A D B C A 2 1 s + B A + α β B 1 s α β B 1 s + B A L { u ( x ) } ( s ) .
Note that
L { ( C F D α y a ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y a ) ( x ) } ( s ) = ( 2 α ) M ( α ) ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) λ ( 2 β ) M ( β ) ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) 2 ( s + α ( 1 s ) ) ( s + β ( 1 s ) ) ( s L { y a ( x ) } ( s ) y ( 0 ) ) .
Substituting (14) into (15), we obtain
L { ( C F D α y a ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y a ) ( x ) } ( s ) = L { u ( x ) } ,
which yields that y a ( x ) is a solution of Equation (1) since L is one-to-one. From (12) and (14), we have
L { y ( x ) y a ( x ) } ( s ) = 2 C A + A D B C A 2 1 s + B A + α β B 1 s α β B 1 s + B A L { F ( x ) } .
This implies that
y ( x ) y a ( x ) = 2 C A F ( x ) + 2 ( A D B C A 2 α β B ) ( exp ( B A x ) F ( x ) + 2 α β B ( 1 F ( x ) ) ,
so
| y ( x ) y a ( x ) | = | 2 C A F ( x ) + 2 ( A D B C A 2 α β B ) ( exp ( B A x ) F ( x ) + 2 α β B ( 1 F ( x ) ) | 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | | exp ( B A x ) F ( x ) | + 2 | α β B 1 F ( x ) | 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | 0 x | exp ( B A t ) F ( x t ) | d t + 2 | α β B | 0 x | F ( x t ) | d t ) 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | ε 0 x max { 1 , exp ( B A ( T ) ) } d t + 2 | α β B | ε 0 x 1 d t ) 2 | C A | ε + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | x max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } ε + 2 | α β B | x ε .
The proof is complete. □
Remark 1.
If T < , then (1) is Hyers–Ulam stable with the constant
K = 2 | C A | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } T + 2 | α β B | T .
Remark 2.
Let 0 < β , α < 1 , λ R , and u ( x ) be a given real function on [ 0 , T ] . If a function y : [ 0 , T ] R satisfies the inequality
| ( C F D α y ) ( x ) λ ( C F D β y ) ( x ) u ( x ) | G ( x ) ,
this implies that
| F ( x ) | G ( x )
for each x [ 0 , T ] and some function G ( x ) > 0 , where F is defined in (10).
From Theorem 2, then there exists a solution y a : [ 0 , T ] R of (1) such that
y ( x ) y a ( x ) = 2 C A F ( x ) + 2 ( A D B C A 2 α β B ) ( exp ( B A x ) F ( x ) + 2 α β B ( 1 F ( x ) ) ,
and
| y ( x ) y a ( x ) | 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | | exp ( B A x ) F ( x ) | + 2 | α β B 1 F ( x ) | 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } | 0 x F ( x t ) d t | + 2 | α β B 0 x F ( x t ) d t | 2 | C A F ( x ) | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } | F ( x ) | + 2 | α β B F ( x ) | 2 | C A | + | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A ( T ) ) } + | α β B | G ( x )
provided that
0 x F ( t ) d t F ( x )
for any x [ 0 , T ] , where F is defined in (10) and A , B , C , D are defined as in (9). Thus, (2) is generalized Hyers–Ulam stable with respect to G on [ 0 , T ] .

4. Existence and Stability Results for the Nonlinear Equation

We introduce the following conditions:
  • [ A 1 ] : f : [ 0 , T ] × R R is continuous.
  • [ A 2 ] : There exists a k f > 0 such that
    | f ( x , y ) f ( x , g ) | k f | y g | , y , g R , x [ 0 , T ] .
  • [ A 3 ] : There exists a constant L > 0 such that
    | f ( x , y ) | L ( 1 + | y | )
    for each x [ 0 , T ] and all y R .
Let a α = 2 ( 1 α ) 2 α M ( α ) , b α = 2 α 2 α M ( α ) , y ( 0 ) = y 0 and C 0 = a α f ( 0 , y 0 ) + y 0 .
Theorem 3.
Let 0 < α < 1 . Assume that [ A 1 ] and [ A 2 ] hold. If a α k f < 1 , then (2) with y ( 0 ) = y 0 has a unique solution.
Proof. 
Consider P : C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) as follows:
( P y ) ( x ) = C 0 + a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) + b α 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s .
Note P is well defined because of [ A 1 ] . For all y 1 , y 2 C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) and all x [ 0 , T ] , using [ A 2 ] , we have
| ( P y 1 ) ( x ) ( P y 2 ) ( x ) | a α | f ( x , y 1 ( x ) ) f ( x , y 2 ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , y 1 ( s ) ) f ( x , y 2 ( x ) ) | d s a α k f | y 1 ( x ) y 2 ( x ) | + b α 0 x k f | y 1 ( s ) y 2 ( s ) | d s = a α k f y 1 y 2 C + b α k f x y 1 y 2 C .
Denote C n i = n ! ( n i ) ! i ! . Next,
| ( P 2 y 1 ) ( x ) ( P 2 y 2 ) ( x ) | a α | f ( x , ( P y 1 ) ( x ) ) f ( x , ( P y 2 ) ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , ( P y 1 ) ( s ) ) f ( x , ( P y 2 ) ( x ) ) | d s a α k f | P y 1 ( x ) P y 2 ( x ) | + b α 0 x k f | P y 1 ( s ) P y 2 ( s ) | d s a α k f ( a α k f y 1 y 2 C + b α k f x y 1 y 2 C ) + b α k f 0 x ( a α k f y 1 y 2 C + b α k f x y 1 y 2 C ) d s ( k f a α ) 2 + 2 k f a α ( k f b α x ) + ( k f b α x ) 2 2 ! y 1 y 2 C = i = 0 2 C 2 i ( k f a α ) 2 i ( k f b α x ) i i ! y 1 y 2 C .
For any m N + , suppose the following inequality hold
| ( P m y 1 ) ( x ) ( P m y 2 ) ( x ) | i = 0 m C m i ( k f a α ) m i ( k f b α x ) i i ! y 1 y 2 C .
Then,
| ( P m + 1 y 1 ) ( x ) ( P m + 1 y 2 ) ( x ) | a α | f ( x , ( P m y 1 ) ( x ) ) f ( x , ( P m y 2 ) ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( x , ( P m y 1 ) ( s ) ) f ( x , ( P m y 2 ) ( s ) ) | d s k f a α i = 0 m C m i ( k f a α ) m i ( k f b α x ) i i ! + k f b α 0 x i = 0 m C m i ( k f a α ) m i ( k f b α s ) i i ! d s y 1 y 2 C = i = 0 m + 1 C m + 1 i ( k f a α ) m + 1 i ( k f b α x ) i i ! y 1 y 2 C S ( m ) y 1 y 2 C ,
where S ( m ) : = i = 0 m + 1 C m + 1 i ( k f a α ) m + 1 i ( k f b α T ) i i ! . Thus, for any m N + ,
P m + 1 y 1 P m + 1 y 2 C S ( m ) y 1 y 2 C .
From the condition k f a α < 1 via (Theorem 2.9, [38]), one has S ( m ) 0   as   m . This implies that for any large enough m N + , S ( m ) < 1 . Thus, P m is a contraction mapping. As a result, P has a fixed point. Thus, (2) with y ( 0 ) = y 0 has a unique solution. This proof is complete. □
Remark 3.
In (Theorem 1, [22]), an existence and uniqueness result for (2) with y ( 0 ) = y 0 is established by imposing a uniformly Lipschitz condition and applying Banach’s fixed point theorem with the condition a α k f + b α T k f < 1 , where k f denotes the Lipschitz constant. Here, we use the generalized Banach fixed point theorem and we weaken the condition a α k f + b α T k f < 1 in (Theorem 1, [22]) to a α k f < 1 .
Next, we show that the existence of solutions for (2) via Schaefer’s fixed point theorem.
Theorem 4.
Assume that [ A 1 ] and [ A 3 ] hold. If a α L < 1 , then (2) with y ( 0 ) = y 0 has at least one solution.
Proof. 
Consider P as in (17). We divide our proof into several steps.
Step 1.P is continuous.
Let y n be a sequence such that y n y in C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) . For all x [ 0 , T ] , we get
| P y n ( x ) P y ( x ) | = | a α f ( x , y n ( x ) ) + b α 0 x f ( s , y n ( s ) ) d s a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | a α | f ( x , y n ( x ) ) f ( x , y ( x ) ) | + b α | 0 x f ( s , y n ( s ) ) d s 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | a α | f ( x , y n ( x ) ) f ( x , y ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , y n ( s ) ) f ( s , y ( s ) ) | d s . ( a α + b α T ) f ( · , y n ) f ( · , y ) C .
This shows that P is continuous since f y n f y C 0 when n .
Step 2.P maps bounded sets into bounded sets of C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) .
Indeed, we prove that for all r > 0 , there exists a k > 0 such that for every y B r = { y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) : y C r } , we have P y C k . In fact, for any x [ 0 , T ] , from [ A 3 ] , we have
| P y ( x ) | | C 0 | + a α | f ( x , y ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , y ( s ) ) | d s | C 0 | + a α L ( 1 + | y | ) + b α L 0 x ( 1 + | y ( s ) | ) d s | C 0 | + a α L ( 1 + y C ) + b α T L | ( 1 + y C ) | C 0 | + a α L ( 1 + r ) + b α T L ( 1 + r ) = | C 0 | + ( a α + b α T ) L ( 1 + r ) ,
which implies that
P y | C 0 | + ( a α + b α T ) L ( 1 + r ) : = k .
Step 3.P maps bounded sets into equicontinuous sets in C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) .
Let x 1 , x 2 [ 0 , T ] , with 0 x 1 < x 2 T , y B r . From [ A 3 ] , we have
| P y ( x 1 ) P y ( x 2 ) | = | a α f ( x 1 , y ( x 1 ) ) + b α 0 x 1 f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s a α f ( x 2 , y ( x 2 ) ) b α 0 x 2 f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | a α | f ( x 1 , y ( x 1 ) ) f ( x 2 , y ( x 2 ) ) | + b α | 0 x 1 f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s 0 x 2 f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | a α | f ( x 1 , y ( x 1 ) ) f ( x 1 , y ( x 2 ) ) | + a α | f ( x 1 , y ( x 2 ) ) f ( x 2 , y ( x 2 ) ) | + b α | x 1 x 2 f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | a α | f ( x 1 , y ( x 1 ) ) f ( x 1 , y ( x 2 ) ) | + a α | f ( x 1 , y ( x 2 ) ) f ( x 2 , y ( x 2 ) ) | + b α L ( 1 + r ) ( x 2 x 1 ) .
Then, as x 1 approaches x 2 , the right-hand side of the above inequality tends to zero (because of [ A 1 ] ) as x 1 x 2 . Thus, P is equicontinuous.
We can conclude that P is completely continuous from Step 1–Step 3 with the Arzela–Ascoli theorem.
Step 4. A priori bounds.
Now, we show that the set E ( P ) = { y C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) : y = λ P y for some λ ( 0 , 1 ) } is bounded.
Let y E ( P ) . Then, y = λ P y for some λ ( 0 , 1 ) . For each x [ 0 , T ] , we have
| y ( x ) | | C 0 | + a α | f ( x , y ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , y ( s ) ) | d s | C 0 | + a α L ( 1 + | y ( x ) | ) + b α L 0 x ( 1 + | y ( s ) | ) d s K + a α L | y ( x ) | + b α L 0 x | y ( s ) | d s ( K = | C 0 | + a α L + b α L T ) .
Using the condition 1 a α L > 0 , one has
| y ( x ) | K 1 a α L + b α L 1 a α L 0 x | y ( s ) | d s ,
and Gronwall’s inequality yields
| y ( x ) | K 1 a α L exp b α L T 1 a α L < .
Then, the set E ( P ) is bounded.
Schaefer’s fixed point theorem guarantees that P has a fixed point, which is a solution of (2). The proof is finished. □
In the following, we consider (2) and (6) to discuss the generalized Ulam–Hyers–Rassias stability.
We need the following condition.
[ A 4 ] : Let G C ( [ 0 , T ] , R + ) be an increasing function and there exists λ G > 0 such that
0 x G ( s ) d s λ G G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
Theorem 5.
Assumptions [ A 1 ] , [ A 2 ] and [ A 4 ] hold. If a α k f < 1 , then (2) is generalized Ulam–Hyers–Rassias stable with respect to G on [ 0 , T ] ( T < ) .
Proof. 
Let g C ( [ 0 , T ] , R ) be a solution of (6). From Theorem 3,
C F D α y ( x ) = f ( x , y ( x ) ) , 0 < α < 1 , t [ 0 , T ) , y ( 0 ) = C 0 ,
has the unique solution
y ( x ) = C 0 + a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) + b α 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s , x [ 0 , T ] .
From (6), we have
| g ( x ) C 0 a α f ( x , g ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , g ( s ) ) d s | a α G ( x ) + b α 0 x G ( s ) d s ( a α + b α λ G ) G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
Thus,
| g ( x ) y ( x ) | | g ( x ) C 0 a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | | g ( x ) C 0 a α f ( x , g ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , g ( s ) ) d s + a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) + b α a x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s a α f ( x , y ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | | g ( x ) C 0 a α f ( x , g ( x ) ) b α 0 x f ( s , g ( s ) ) d s | + a α | f ( x , y ( x ) ) f ( x , g ( x ) ) | + b α 0 x | f ( s , y ( s ) ) f ( s , g ( s ) ) | d s ( a α + b α λ G ) G ( x ) + a α k f | y ( x ) g ( x ) | + b α k f 0 x | y ( s ) g ( s ) | d s .
Note that a α k f < 1 , and so,
| y ( x ) g ( x ) | ( a α + b α λ G ) G ( x ) 1 a α k f + b α k f 1 a α k f 0 x | y ( s ) g ( s ) | d s .
From Gronwall’s inequality, we have
| y ( x ) g ( x ) | ( a α + b α λ G ) 1 a α k f exp ( x ) G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
Set K * = a α + b α λ G 1 a α k f exp ( T ) . Note that one has
| y ( x ) g ( x ) | K * G ( x ) , x [ 0 , T ] .
From Definition 6, (2) is generalized Ulam–Hyers–Rassias stable with respect to G on [ 0 , T ] . The proof is complete. □

5. Examples

In this section, two examples are given to illustrate our main results.
For convenience in calculating, we suppose that M ( · ) in Definition 2 is the roots of the following equation:
2 ( 1 · ) ( 2 · ) M ( · ) + 2 · ( 2 · ) M ( · ) = 1 .
Then, one can derive an explicit formula M ( α ) = 2 2 α and M ( β ) = 2 2 β (see (p. 89, [22])).
Example 1.
Consider
( C F D 1 2 y ) ( x ) 1 3 ( C F D 2 3 y ) ( x ) = 2 3 e x + 1 3 e 2 x 2 3 , x [ 0 , T ] .
Set α = 1 2 , β = 2 3 , u ( x ) = 2 3 e x + 1 3 e 2 x 2 3 and λ = 1 3 . From (Definition 1, [22]), M ( 1 2 ) = 4 3 and M ( 2 3 ) = 3 2 .
Let y 1 ( x ) = e x , and we have
( C F D 1 2 y 1 ) ( x ) = 2 0 x e t x e t d t = e x e x ,
( C F D 2 3 y 1 ) ( x ) = 3 0 x e 2 ( x t ) e t d t = e x e 2 x .
Choose ε = 2 3 . Note y 1 ( x ) = e x satisfies
| ( C F D 1 2 y 1 ) ( x ) 1 3 ( C F D 2 3 y 1 ) ( x ) 2 3 e x 1 3 e 2 x + 2 3 | = | e x e x 1 3 e x + 1 3 e 2 x 2 3 e x 1 3 e 2 x + 2 3 | = | 2 3 e x | 2 3 .
Note y 1 ( 0 ) = 1 and with the formulas of A , B , C , D in (9) and (13), we obtain an exact solution of Equation (1) as
y a ( x ) = y ( 0 ) + 2 C A u ( x ) + 2 A D B C A 2 α β B 0 x exp ( B A t ) u ( x t ) d t + 2 α β B 0 x u ( x t ) d t = 1 + 2 3 e x 1 3 e 2 x 2 3 4 9 0 x e 3 t ( e x t + e 2 ( x t ) 2 1 ) d t + 4 9 0 x ( e x t + e 2 ( x t ) 2 1 ) d t = e x + 4 27 + 5 27 e 3 x 2 3 e 2 x 4 9 x .
Clearly,
| y 1 ( x ) y a ( x ) | = | e x + 4 27 + 5 27 e 3 x 2 3 e 2 x 4 9 x e x | = | 4 27 + 5 27 e 3 x 2 3 e 2 x 4 9 x | | 4 27 4 9 x | 2 3 + 8 9 x = ( 1 + 4 3 x ) 2 3 .
Note in Theorem 2 (see Remark 1) that we have K = 2 | C A | + 2 | A D B C A 2 α β B | max { 1 , exp ( B A T ) } T + 2 | α β B | T = 1 + 4 3 T and ε = 2 3 . Thus, Equation (20) is Hyers–Ulam stable when T < .
Example 2.
We consider the following fractional problem:
( C F D 1 3 y ) ( x ) = e 2 x 1 + e x | y | 1 + | y | , x [ 0 , 2 ] ,
and the inequality
| ( C F D 1 3 y ) ( x ) e 2 x 1 + e x | y | 1 + | y | | G ( x ) , x [ 0 , 2 ] .
Set α = 1 3 , T = 2 and f ( x , y ) = e 2 x 1 + e x | y | 1 + | y | , ( x , y ) [ 0 , 2 ] × R . Clearly, [ A 1 ] holds. Then, M ( 1 3 ) = 6 5 , a 1 3 = 24 25 , b 1 3 = 12 25 . Let G ( x ) = e x C ( [ 0 , 2 ] , R ) and 0 x G ( s ) d s = 0 x e s d s = e x 1 e x . Here, λ G = 1 > 0 .
For any x [ 0 , 2 ] and y 1 , y 2 R ,
| f ( x , y 1 ) f ( x , y 2 ) | = e 2 x 1 + e x | | y 1 | 1 + | y 1 | | y 2 | 1 + | y 2 | | e 2 x | y 1 y 2 | ( 1 + e x ) ( 1 + | y 1 | ) ( 1 + | y 2 | ) e 2 x ( 1 + e x ) | y 1 y 2 | e 2 x 2 | y 1 y 2 | 1 2 | y 1 y 2 | .
For all x [ 0 , 2 ] and y R ,
| f ( x , y ) | = e 2 x 1 + e x | y | 1 + | y | e 2 x 1 + e x | y | e 2 x 2 | y | 1 2 | y | 1 2 ( 1 + | y | ) .
Thus, [ A 2 ] and [ A 3 ] hold.
Set L = 1 2 = k f . Then a α k f = 24 25 × 1 2 = 12 25 < 1 . From Theorem 3, (21) has an unique solution.
Thus, all the assumptions in Theorem 4 are satisfied, so our results can be applied to (21).
Let g C ( [ 0 , 2 ] , R ) be a solution of (22). We have
| ( C F D 1 3 g ) ( x ) f ( x , g ( x ) ) | = | ( C F D 1 3 g ) ( x ) e 2 x 1 + e x | g | 1 + | g | | G ( x ) , x [ 0 , 2 ] .
From Theorem 3, we see (21) with y ( 0 ) = C 0 has the unique solution
y ( x ) = C 0 + a 1 3 f ( x , y ( x ) ) + b 1 3 0 x f ( s , y ( s ) ) d s = C 0 + 24 25 e 2 x 1 + e x | y | 1 + | y | + 12 25 0 x e 2 s 1 + e s | y | 1 + | y | d s .
Applying the fractional integrating operator C F I α ( · ) on both sides of (23), we have
| g ( x ) C 0 a 1 3 f ( x , g ( x ) ) b 1 3 0 x f ( s , g ( s ) ) d s | a 1 3 G ( x ) + b 1 3 0 x G ( s ) d s ( a 1 3 + b 1 3 λ G ) G ( x ) , x [ 0 , 2 ] .
In addition,
| y ( x ) g ( x ) | ( a 1 3 + b 1 3 λ G ) 1 a 1 3 k f exp ( x ) G ( x ) , x [ 0 , 2 ] .
Set K * = a 1 3 + b 1 3 λ G 1 a 1 3 k f exp ( 2 ) = 24 25 + 12 25 × 1 1 24 25 × 1 2 e 2 = 36 e 2 13 . Note that one has
| y ( x ) g ( x ) | K * G ( x ) , x [ 0 , 2 ] .

6. Conclusions

By applying the well-known Gronwall inequality and fixed point theorems, we obtain the Hyers–Ulam stability of linear and semilinear Caputo–Fabrizio fractional differential equations. Existence and uniqueness theorems of solution are established. In a forthcoming work, we shall consider the impulsive Cauchy problem with Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative.

Author Contributions

The contributions of all authors (K.L., M.F., D.O. and J.W.) are equal. All the main results and examples were developed together.

Funding

This work is partially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (11661016), the Training Object of High Level and Innovative Talents of Guizhou Province ((2016)4006), the Science and Technology Program of Guizhou Province ([2017]5788-10), the Major Research Project of Innovative Group in Guizhou Education Department ([2018]012), the Slovak Research and Development Agency under the contract No. APVV-14-0378, and the Slovak Grant Agency VEGA No. 2/0153/16 and No. 1/0078/17.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the referees for their careful reading of the article and insightful comments.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Liu, K.; Fečkan, M.; O’Regan, D.; Wang, J. Hyers–Ulam Stability and Existence of Solutions for Differential Equations with Caputo–Fabrizio Fractional Derivative. Mathematics 2019, 7, 333. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7040333

AMA Style

Liu K, Fečkan M, O’Regan D, Wang J. Hyers–Ulam Stability and Existence of Solutions for Differential Equations with Caputo–Fabrizio Fractional Derivative. Mathematics. 2019; 7(4):333. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7040333

Chicago/Turabian Style

Liu, Kui, Michal Fečkan, D. O’Regan, and JinRong Wang. 2019. "Hyers–Ulam Stability and Existence of Solutions for Differential Equations with Caputo–Fabrizio Fractional Derivative" Mathematics 7, no. 4: 333. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7040333

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