International Journal of Modern Nonlinear Theory and Application
Vol.2 No.2(2013), Article ID:33414,2 pages DOI:10.4236/ijmnta.2013.22019
Some Notes on the Paper “New Common Fixed Point Theorems for Maps on Cone Metric Spaces”
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Assiut University, Assiut, Egypt
Email: mahmed68@yahoo.com
Copyright © 2013 Mohamed Abd El-Rahman Ahmed. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Received January 17, 2013; revised February 21, 2013; accepted March 19, 2013
Keywords: Cone Metric; Weakly Compatible; Fixed Point
ABSTRACT
In this paper, we show that Theorem 2.1 [1] (resp. Theorem 2.2 [1]) is a consequence of Corollary 2.1 [1] ( resp. Corollary 2.2 [1]).
1. Introduction
In 2007, Huang and Zhang [2] initiated fixed point theory in cone metric spaces. On the other hand, in 2011, Haghi, Rezapour and Shahzad [3] gave a lemma and showed that some fixed point generalizations are not real generalizations. In this note, we show that Theorem 2.1 [1] and Theorem 2.2 [1] are so.
Following [2], let be a real Banach space and
be the zero vector in
, and
.
is called cone iff 1)
is closed, nonempty and
2)
for all
and nonnegative real numbers
3)
.
For a given cone, we define a partial ordering
with respect to
by
iff
.
(resp.
) stands for
and
(resp.
), where
denotes the interior of
. In the paper we always assume that
is solid, i.e.,
. It is clear that
leads to
but the reverse need not to be true.
The cone is called normal if there exists a number
such that for all
,
implies
.
The least positive number satisfying above is called the normal constant of.
Definition 1.1 [2]. Let be a nonempty set. A function
is called cone metric iff
(M1)(M2)
iff
,
(M3),
(M4)for all
.
is said to be a cone metric space.
Lemma 1.1 [3]. Let be a nonempty and
. Then there exists a subset
such that
and
is one-to-one.
Definition 1.2 [4]. Let be a cone metric space and
be mappings. Then,
is called a coincidence point of
and
iff
.
Definition 1.3 [4]. Let be a cone metric space. The mappings
are weakly compatible iff for every coincidence point
of
and
,
.
Theorem 1.1 (Theorem 2.1 [1]). Let be a cone metric space and let
be constants with
. Suppose that the mappings
satisfy the condition
for all.
If the range of contains the range of
and
is a complete subspace, then
and
have a unique point of coincidence in
. Moreover, if
and
are weakly compatible, then
and
have a unique fixed point.
Theorem 1.2 (Corollary 2.1 [1]). Let be a complete cone metric space and let
i = (1,2,3,4,5) be constants with
. Suppose that the mapping
satisfies the condition
for all.
Then has a unique fixed point
in
.
Theorem 1.3 (Theorem 2.2 [1]). Let be a cone metric space and let the mappings
satisfy the condition
, for all
where
,
.
If the range of contains the range of
and
is a complete subspace, then
and
have a unique point of coincidence in
. Moreover, if
and
are weakly compatible, then
and
have a unique fixed point.
Theorem 1.4 (Corollary 2.2 [1]). Let be a complete cone metric space and let the mapping
satisfies the condition
, for all
where
,
.
Then has a unique fixed point
in
.
2. Main Result
In this section, we show that that Theorem 1.1 (resp. Theorem 1.3) is a consequence of Theorem 1.2 (resp. Theorem 1.4).
Theorem 2.1. Theorem 1.1 is a consequence of Theorem 1.2.
Proof. By Lemma 1.1, there exists such that
and
is one-to-one. Define a map
by
for each
. Since
is one-to-one on
, then
is well-defined. Also, for arbitrary
,
where
are constants with
.
From the completeness of, there exists
such that
by Theorem 1.2. Hence, and
have a point of coincidence which is also unique. Since
and
are weakly compatible, then
and
have a unique common fixed point.
Theorem 2.2. Theorem 1.3 is a consequence of Theorem 1.4.
REFERENCES
- G. Song, X. Sun, Y. Zhao and G. Wang, “New Common Fixed Point Theorems for Maps on Cone Metric Spaces,” Applied Mathematics Letters, Vol. 23, No. 9, 2010, pp. 1033-1037. doi:10.1016/j.aml.2010.04.032
- L.-G. Huang and X. Zhang, “Cone Metric Spaces and Fixed Point Theorems of Contractive Mappings,” Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications, Vol. 332, No. 2, 2007, pp. 1468-1476. doi:10.1016/j.jmaa.2005.03.087
- R. H. Haghi, Sh. Rezapour and N. Shahzad, “Some Fixed Point Generalizations Are Not Real Generalizations,” Nonlinear Analysis, Theory, Methods and Applications, Vol. 74, 2011, pp. 1799-1803.
- C. Di Bari and P. Vetro, “ϕ-Pairs and Common Fixed Points in Cone Metric Spaces,” Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo, Vol. 57, No. 2, 2008, pp. 279- 285. doi:10.1007/s12215-008-0020-9