Existence and Uniqueness Results for a Fully Third-Order Boundary Value Problem ()
1. Introduction and Main Results
In this paper we discuss existence of solutions for third-order boundary value problem (BVP) with fully nonlinear term
(1.1)
where
,
is a continuous nonlinearity.
The boundary value problems of the third-order ordinary differential equation have many practical application backgrounds. They appear in many different areas of applied mathematics and physics, such as the deflection of the curved beam with constant or variable cross section, the three-layer beam, electromagnetic wave or gravity driven flows, etc. [1] [2] . These problems have attracted the attention of many authors, and some theorems and methods of nonlinear functional analysis have been applied to research the solvability of these problems, such as the topological transversality [3] , the monotone iterative technique [4] [5] [6] , the method of upper and lower solutions [7] [8] [9] , Leray-Schauder degree [10] [11] [12] [13] , the fixed point theory of increasing operator [14] [15] , the fixed-point theorem of Guo-Krasnoselskii’s cone expansion or compression type [16] [17] [18] [19] .
However, most of the above work is about the special case of that nonlinearity f that does not contain derivative term
or
, only a few authors consider the case with fully nonlinear term. Recently, the authors of Reference [20] considered the fully third-order BVP (1.1) and they showed when nonlinearity
is nonnegative and superlinear or sublinear growth on
at origin and infinity, BVP (1.1) has at least one positive solution by using the fixed point index theory in cones. In this paper, we will use different methods to establish the existence and uniqueness results of solution and positive solution for general BVP (1.1) under some simple inequality conditions without restriction of the growth of nonlinearity.
Let
be a constant. We define two domains of
by
(1.2)
(1.3)
Let
be continuous and set
(1.4)
(1.5)
Our main results are as follows:
Theorem 1.1. Let
be continuous. If there exists a constant
such that
, then BVP (1.1) has a solution u satisfies
(1.6)
Theorem 1.2. Under the assumptions of Theorem 1.1, if f satisfies the following Lipschtz type condition in
(H1) there exist constants
restricted by
(1.7)
such that
(1.8)
for any
and
, then BVP (1.1) has a unique solution satisfies (1.6).
Let
,
. When nonlinearity f is nonnegative, we have the following existence theorems of positive solution:
Theorem 1.3. Let
be continuous. If there exists a constant
such that
, then BVP (1.1) has a solution u satisfies
(1.9)
Theorem 1.4. Under the assumptions of Theorem 1.3, if there exist constants
restricted by (1.7) such that f satisfies the Lipschtz condition (1.8) in
, then BVP (1.1) has a unique solution satisfies (1.9).
Note that (1.9) implies
for every
, and hence it is a positive solution of BVP (1.1).
If f satisfies that
(1.10)
we easily verify that for any
, there exists
such that
. Hence by Theorem 1.1, we have:
Corollary 1.5. If
be continuous and satisfies (1.10), BVP (1.1) has at least one solution.
Similarly, by Theorem 1.3, we have:
Corollary 1.6. Let
be continuous and satisfy
(1.11)
Then BVP (1.1) has at least one positive solution.
The proof of Theorems 1.1 - 1.4 will be given in next section. Some applications and examples are presented in Section 3 to illustrate the applicability of our results.
2. Proof of the Main Results
Let
denote the Banach space of all continuous function
on I with norm
. Generally for
, we use
to denote the Banach space of all nth-order continuous differentiable function on I with the norm
. Let
be the cone of nonnegative functions in
.
To discuss BVP (1.1), we first consider the corresponding linear boundary value problem (LBVP)
(2.1)
where
is a given function.
Lemma 2.1. For every
, LBVP (2.1) has a unique solution
, which satisfies
(2.2)
Moreover, the solution operator
is a bounded linear operator. When
, the solution of LBVP (2.1) satisfies
(2.3)
Proof. Let
. Integrating the Equation (2.1), we obtain that
(2.4)
by this expression we have
(2.5)
Hence
is a unique solution of LBVP (2.1). For every
, by (2.4) and (2.5), we have
This means that (2.2) holds and
Hence
is bounded. When
, by (2.4) and (2.5), (2.3) holds.
Proof of Theorem 1.1. Define a mapping
by
(2.6)
Then by the continuity of f,
is continuous and it maps every bounded in
into a bounded set in
. By the compactness of the embedding
↪
, the solution operator of LBVP (2.1)
is completely continuous. Hence, the composition operator of S and F
(2.7)
is completely continuous. By the definitions of S and F, the solution of BVP (1.1) is equivalent to the fixed point of A. We use the Schauder fixed point theorem to show A has a fixed u satisfied (1.6).
For the positive constant r in Theorem 1.1, define a bounded subset of
by
(2.8)
Clearly,
is convex and closed in
. We show that
(2.9)
For any
, set
. Then
and
. By the definitions of
and
, u satisfies
For every
, by the definition of
, we obtain that
(2.10)
and hence
. By this and (2.2) of Lemma 2.1,
. Thus (2.9) holds. By the Schauder fixed point theorem, A has a fixed u in
. By the definition of
, u satisfies (1.6) and it is a solution of BVP (1.1).
Proof of Theorem 1.2. By Theorem 1.1, BVP (1.1) has at least one solution satisfies (1.6). Let
be two solutions of BVP (1) satisfied (1.6). Then
,
. Set
and
. Then
By the definition of the operator S, u is the solution of LBVP (2.1). Hence,
satisfies (2.2). By the assumption (H1) and (2.2), for every
, we have
From this it follows that
(2.11)
This implies that
, so that
. Hence
. This means BVP (1.1) has only one solution satisfied (1.6).
Proof of Theorem 1.3. Define a closed convex cone of
by
(2.12)
By the continuity of
, the mapping
defined by (2.6) is continuous and it maps every bounded in K into a bounded set in
. By (2.3), the solution operator S of BVP (2.1) satisfies
(2.13)
Hence, the composition operator
is completely continuous. Set
(2.14)
Then
is a bounded closed convex set in
. Similar to the proof of (2.9), we can obtain that
(2.15)
Therefore, by the Schauder fixed point theorem, A has a fixed u in
. By the definition of
, u satisfies (1.9) and is a solution of BVP (1.1).
Proof of Theorem 1.4. The existence of a solution satisfied (1.9) is guaranteed by Theorem 1.3. Let
be two solutions of BVP (1) satisfied (1.9). Then
and
,
. Set
and
. Then
and
. Similar to the argument in Theorem 1.2, we can prove that h satisfies (2.11). From (2.11) it follows that
. So we have
, that is
. Hence BVP (1.1) has a unique solution satisfied (1.9).
3. Applications
In this section, we use the main results obtained in Section 1 to deduce some concrete existence and uniqueness theorems for some third-order boundary value problems.
Firstly, our main results can be applied to BVP (1.1) under the nonlinearity
is linear growth on x, y and z.
Theorem 3.1. Let
be continuous and satisfy the following linear growth condition.
(H2) there exist constants
restricted by (1.7) and
, such that
(3.1)
Then BVP (1.1) has at least one solution.
Proof. For
, when
and
, by (3.1) and the definition of
, we have
Hence, by (1.4) and (1.7) we have
(3.2)
Hence when r large enough,
, and the assumption of Theorem 1.1 is satisfied. By Theorem 1.1, BVP (1.1) has at least one solution.
In Theorem 3.1, when f is nonnegative, any solution u of BVP (1.1) is positive. In fact, since
, by Lemma 2.1,
satisfies (2.2), and u is a positive solution of BVP(1.1). That is:
Corollary 3.2. Let
be continuous and satisfy the assumption (H2). Then BVP (1.1) has at least one positive solution.
Strengthening the condition of Theorem 3.1, we have the following uniqueness result:
Theorem 3.3. Let
be continuous and satisfy the following global Lipschitz condition.
(H3) there exist constants
restricted by (1.7) such that
(3.3)
for any
and
, Then BVP (1.1) has a unique solution.
Proof. For any
and
, in Condition (H3) choosing
,
, and setting
, we obtain that (H1) holds. By Theorem 1.1, BVP (1.1) has at least one solution.
By (3.2), there exists
such that
for
. Let
be two solutions of BVP (1). Setting
(3.4)
and choosing
, we have
(3.5)
Hence
and
satisfy (1.6). By the uniqueness conclusion of Theorem 1.2,
. Hence BVP (1.1) has a unique solution.
By Theorem 3.3 and Corollary 3.2, we have:
Corollary 3.4. Let
be continuous and satisfy the assumption (H3). Then BVP (1.1) has a unique positive solution.
Secondly, our main results can be also applied to BVP (1.1) with superlinear growth nonlinearity f.
Example 3.1. Consider the following superlinear third-order boundary value problem
(3.6)
Corresponding to BVP (1.1), the nonlinearity is
(3.7)
which is superlinear on x, y and z. We verify that f satisfies the condition of Theorem 1.3 for
.
For every
and
, by (3.7)
(3.8)
Hence
. That is, f satisfies the condition of Theorem 1.3 for
. By Theorem 1.3, BVP (3.6) has at least one positive solution.
It should be noted that this existence result of BVP (3.6) can not be obtained from ( [20] , Theorem 1.1), since the corresponding nonlinearity f does not satisfy the Condition (F1) of ( [20] , Theorem 1.1).
Funding
This research is supported by NNSFs of China (12061062, 11661071).