Home Multiplicity results for fractional Schrödinger-Kirchhoff systems involving critical nonlinearities
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Multiplicity results for fractional Schrödinger-Kirchhoff systems involving critical nonlinearities

  • Soraya Fareh ORCID logo , Kamel Akrout ORCID logo , Abdeljabbar Ghanmi ORCID logo and Dušan D. Repovš ORCID logo EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: June 13, 2023

Abstract

In this article, we study certain critical Schrödinger-Kirchhoff-type systems involving the fractional p -Laplace operator on a bounded domain. More precisely, using the properties of the associated functional energy on the Nehari manifold sets and exploiting the analysis of the fibering map, we establish the multiplicity of solutions for such systems.

MSC 2010: 35P30; 35J35; 35J60

1 Introduction

In recent years, a lot of attention has been paid to problems involving fractional and nonlocal operators. These types of problems arise in applications in many fields, e.g., in materials science [9], phase transitions [5,39], water waves [16,17], minimal surfaces [13], and conservation laws [10]. For more applications of such problems in physical phenomena, probability, and finances, we refer interested readers to [12,14,47]. Due to their importance, there are many interesting works on the existence and multiplicity of solutions for fractional and nonlocal problems either on bounded domains or on the entire space, see [1,3,4,6,23,24,34,3638].

In the last decade, many scholars have paid extensive attention to Kirchhoff-type elliptic equations with critical exponents, see [20,25,33], for the bounded domains and [26,28,29] for the entire space. In particular, in [22], the authors considered the following Kirchhoff problem:

(1.1) M R 2 n u ( x ) u ( y ) 2 x y n + 2 s d x d y ( Δ ) s u = λ f ( x , u ) + u 2 s 2 u in Ω , u = 0 on R n \ Ω ,

where t 0 and M ( t ) = a + b t for some a > 0 and b 0 . Here, and in the rest of this article, Ω will denote a bounded domain in R n with Lipschitz boundary Ω .

Under suitable conditions and by using the truncation technique method combined with the mountain pass theorem, the authors proved that for λ > 0 large enough, problem (1.1) has at least one nontrivial solution. Later, the fractional Kirchhoff-type problems were extensively studied by many authors using different methods, see [7,8,15,21,27,3032,35,40,4245]. In particular, by using the Nehari manifold method and the symmetric mountain pass theorem, Xiang et al. [43] investigated the multiplicity of solutions for some p -Kirchhoff system with Dirichlet boundary conditions.

Mingqi et al. [30] studied the following Schrödinger-Kirchhoff-type system:

(1.2) M ( [ ( u , v ) ] s , p p + u , v p , V p ) ( p s u + V ( x ) u p 2 u ) = λ H u ( x , u , v ) + α p s v β u α 2 u in R n , M ( [ ( u , v ) ] s , p p + u , v p , V p ) ( p s v + V ( x ) v p 2 v ) = λ H v ( x , u , v ) + β p s u α v β 2 v in R n ,

where λ > 0 , α + β = p s n p n s p , V : R n [ 0 , ) is a continuous function, the Kirchhoff function M : ( 0 , ) ( 0 , ) is continuous, and H u and H v are Caratheodory functions. Under some suitable assumptions and by applying the mountain pass theorem with Ekeland’s variational principle, the authors obtained the existence and asymptotic behavior of solutions for system (1.2).

By the same methods as in [30], Fiscella et al. [21] studied the existence of solutions for a critical Hardy-Schrödinger-Kirchhoff-type system involving the fractional p -Laplacian in R n . Using the three critical points theorem, Azroul et al. [8] established the existence of three weak solutions for a fractional p -Kirchhoff-type system on a bounded domain with homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions. Recently, Azroul et al. [7] have established the existence of three solutions for the ( p , q ) -Schrödinger-Kirchhoff-type system in R n via the three critical points theorem.

Motivated by the above-mentioned articles, we consider in this article the following Schrödinger-Kirchhoff-type system involving the fractional p -Laplacian and critical nonlinearities:

(1.3) M 1 ( u V 1 p ) ( ( Δ ) p s u + V 1 ( x ) u p 2 u ) = a 1 ( x ) u p s 2 u + λ f ( x , u , v ) in Ω , M 2 ( v V 2 p ) ( ( Δ ) p s v + V 2 ( x ) v p 2 v ) = a 2 ( x ) v p s 2 v + λ g ( x , u , v ) in Ω , u , v > 0 in Ω , u = v = 0 on R n \ Ω ,

where . V 1 and . V 2 will be given later (see (1.6)), n > p s , 0 < s < 1 < q < p , λ is a positive parameter, the weight functions a 1 and a 2 are positive and bounded on Ω , and ( Δ ) p s is the fractional p -Laplace operator, defined as follows:

( Δ ) p s u = 2 lim ε 0 R N \ B ε ( x ) u ( x ) u ( y ) p 2 ( u ( x ) u ( y ) ) x y n + p s d y , for all x R n ,

where B ε ( x ) = { y R n : x y < ε } . For more details about the fractional p -Laplacian operator and the basic properties of fractional Sobolev spaces, we refer the reader to [18].

Throughout this article, the index i will denote integers 1 or 2, and we shall assume that the potential function V i : Ω ( 0 , ) is continuous and that there exists v i > 0 such that inf Ω V i v i . In addition, we shall assume that M i : ( 0 , ) ( 0 , ) is a continuous function satisfying the following conditions:

( H 1 ) lim t t 1 p s p M i ( t ) = 0 .

( H 2 ) There exists m i > 0 such that for all t > 0 , we have M i ( t ) m i .

( H 3 ) There exists θ i 1 , p s p such that for all t > 0 , we have M i ( t ) t θ i M ^ i ( t ) , where M ^ i ( t ) = 0 t M i ( s ) d s .

Moreover, we shall assume that f , g C ( Ω ¯ × R × R , [ 0 , [ ) are positively homogeneous functions of degree ( q 1 ) , i.e., for all t > 0 and ( x , u , v ) Ω × R × R , we have

(1.4) f ( x , t u , t v ) = t q 1 f ( x , u , v ) , g ( x , t u , t v ) = t q 1 g ( x , u , v ) .

Finally, we shall also assume that there exists a function H : Ω ¯ × R × R R satisfying

H u ( x , u , v ) = f ( x , u , v ) and H v ( x , u , v ) = g ( x , u , v ) ,

where H u (respectively, H v ) denotes the partial derivative of H with respect to u (respectively, v ). We note that the primitive function H belongs to C 1 ( Ω ¯ × R × R , R ) and satisfies the following assumptions for all t > 0 , ( x , u , v ) Ω ¯ × R × R , and some constant γ > 0 :

(1.5) H ( x , t u , t v ) = t q H ( x , u , v ) , q H ( x , u , v ) = u f ( x , u , v ) + v g ( x , u , v ) , H ( x , u , v ) γ ( u q + v q ) .

Before stating our main result, let us introduce some notations. For s ( 0 , 1 ) , we define the functional space

W s , p ( Q ) = w : R n R measurable: w L p ( Ω ) and w ( x ) w ( y ) x y n p + s L p ( Q ) ,

which is endowed with the norm

w W s , p ( Q ) = w L p ( Ω ) p + Q w ( x ) w ( y ) p x y n + p s d x d y 1 p ,

where Q = R 2 n \ ( Ω c × Ω c ) and Ω c = R n \ Ω . From now on, we shall denote by q the norm on the Lebesgue space L q ( Ω ) . It is well known that ( W s , p ( Q ) , W s , p ( Q ) ) is a uniformly convex Banach space.

Next, L p ( Ω , V i ) denotes the Lebesgue space of real-valued functions, with V i ( x ) w p L 1 ( Ω ) , endowed with the following norm:

w p , V i = Ω V i ( x ) w p d x 1 p .

Let us denote by W V i s , p ( Q ) the completion of C 0 ( Q ) with respect to the norm

(1.6) w V i = w p , V i p + Q w ( x ) w ( y ) p x y n + p s d x d y 1 p .

According to [18, (Theorem 6.7]), the embedding W V i s , p ( Q ) L ν ( Ω ) is continuous for any ν [ p , p s ] . Namely, there exists a positive constant C ν such that

w ν C ν w V i for all w W V i s , p ( Q ) .

Moreover, by [46, Lemma 2.1], the embedding from W V i s , p ( Q ) into L ν ( Ω ) , is compact for any ν [ 1 , p s ) .

Let W = W V 1 s , p ( Q ) × W V 2 s , p ( Q ) be equipped with the norm ( u , v ) = ( u V 1 p + v V 2 p ) 1 p . Then, ( W , . ) is a reflexive Banach space. The interested reader can refer to [2] for more details. Let S p , V i be the best Sobolev constants for the embeddings from W V i s , p ( Q ) into L p s ( Ω ) , which is given as follows:

(1.7) S p , V i = inf u W V i s , p ( Q ) \ { 0 } w V i p w p s p .

For simplicity, in the rest of this article, S will denote the following expression:

(1.8) S = min ( S p , V 1 , S p , V 2 ) .

Next, we define the notion of solutions for problem (1.3).

Definition 1.1

We say that ( u , v ) W is a weak solution of problem (1.3), if

M 1 ( u p ) Q u ( x ) u ( y ) p 2 ( u ( x ) u ( y ) ) ( z ( x ) z ( y ) ) x y n + p s d x d y + Ω V 1 ( x ) u p 2 u z d x + M 2 ( v p ) Q v ( x ) v ( y ) p 2 ( v ( x ) v ( y ) ) ( w ( x ) w ( y ) ) x y n + p s d x d y + Ω V 2 ( x ) v p 2 v w d x = Ω ( a 1 ( x ) u p s 2 u z + a 2 ( x ) v p s 2 v w ) d x + λ Ω ( H u ( x , u , v ) z + H v ( x , u , v ) w ) d x ,

for all ( z , w ) W .

The following theorem is the main result of this article.

Theorem 1.1

Assume that s ( 0 , 1 ) , n > p s , 1 < q < p < p s , and that equations (1.4) and (1.5) hold. If M satisfies conditions ( H 1 )–( H 3 ), then there exists λ > 0 such that for all λ ( 0 , λ ) , system (1.3) has at least two nontrivial weak solutions.

This article is organized as follows. In Section 2, we present some notations and preliminary results related to the Nehari manifold and fibering maps. In Section 3, we prove Theorem 1.1.

2 The Nehari manifold method and fibering maps analysis

This section collects some basic results on the Nehari manifold method and the fibering maps analysis, which will be used in the forthcoming section; we refer the interested reader to [11,12,19] for more details. We begin by considering the Euler-Lagrange functional J λ : W R , which is defined as follows:

(2.1) J λ ( u , v ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + M ^ 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) 1 p s B ( u , v ) λ C ( u , v ) ,

where

A i ( w ) = w V i p , B ( u , v ) = Ω ( a 1 ( x ) u p s + a 2 ( x ) v p s ) d x , C ( u , v ) = Ω H ( x , u , v ) d x .

We can easily verify that J λ C 1 ( W , R ) ; moreover, its derivative J λ from the space W into its dual space W is given as follows:

(2.2) J λ ( u , v ) , ( u , v ) = A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) B ( u , v ) λ q C ( u , v ) .

From the last equation, we can see that the critical points of the functional J λ are exactly the weak solutions for problem (1.3). Moreover, since the energy functional J λ is not bounded from below on W , we shall show that J λ is bounded from below on a suitable subset of W , which is known as the Nehari manifold and is defined as follows:

N λ = { ( u , v ) W \ { ( 0 , 0 ) } , J λ ( u , v ) , ( u , v ) W = 0 } .

It is clear that ( u , v ) N λ if and only if

(2.3) A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) B ( u , v ) λ q C ( u , v ) = 0 .

Hence, from (2.2), we see that the elements of N λ correspond to nontrivial critical points, which are solutions of problem (1.3).

It is useful to understand N λ in terms of the stationary points of the fibering maps φ u , v : ( 0 , ) R , is defined as follows:

φ u , v ( t ) = J λ ( t u , t v ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + M ^ 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) λ t q C ( u , v ) .

A simple calculation shows that for all t > 0 , we have

φ u , v ( t ) = t p 1 ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) t p s 1 B ( u , v ) λ q t q 1 C ( u , v ) ,

and

φ u , v ( t ) = ( p 1 ) t p 2 ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) + p t 2 p 2 ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s 1 ) t p s 2 B ( u , v ) λ q ( q 1 ) t q 2 C ( u , v ) .

It is easy to see that for all t > 0 , we have

φ u , v ( t ) = J λ ( t u , t v ) , ( u , v ) W = 1 t 2 J λ ( t u , t v ) , ( t u , t v ) W .

So, ( t u , t v ) N λ if and only if φ u , v ( t ) = 0 . In the special case, when t = 1 , we obtain ( u , v ) N λ , if and only if φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 . On the other hand, from (2.3), we obtain

(2.4) φ u , v ( 1 ) = ( p 1 ) ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s 1 ) B ( u , v ) + p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) λ q ( q 1 ) C ( u , v ) = p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s p ) B ( u , v ) λ q ( q p ) C ( u , v )

(2.5) φ u , v ( 1 ) = p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) + λ q ( p s q ) C ( u , v ) ( p s p ) ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) )

(2.6) φ u , v ( 1 ) = p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s q ) B ( u , v ) + ( p q ) ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) .

Now, in order to obtain a multiplicity of solutions, we divide N λ into three parts as follows:

N λ + = { ( u , v ) N λ : φ u , v ( 1 ) > 0 } = { ( u , v ) W : φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 and φ u , v ( 1 ) > 0 } , N λ = { ( u , v ) N λ : φ u , v ( 1 ) < 0 } = { ( u , v ) W : φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 and φ u , v ( 1 ) < 0 } , N λ 0 = { ( u , v ) N λ : φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 } = { ( u , v ) W : φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 and φ u , v ( 1 ) = 0 } .

Lemma 2.1

Suppose that ( u 0 , v 0 ) is a local minimizer for J λ on N λ , with ( u 0 , v 0 ) N λ 0 . Then, ( u 0 , v 0 ) is a critical point of J λ .

Proof

If ( u 0 , v 0 ) is a local minimizer for J λ on N λ , then ( u 0 , v 0 ) solves the following optimization problem:

min ( u , v ) N λ J λ ( u , v ) = J λ ( u 0 , v 0 ) , β ( u 0 , v 0 ) = 0 ,

where

β ( u , v ) = A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) B ( u , v ) λ q C ( u , v ) .

By the Lagrangian multipliers theorem, there exists δ R , such that

(2.7) J λ ( u 0 , v 0 ) = δ β ( u 0 , v 0 ) .

Since ( u 0 , v 0 ) N λ , we obtain

(2.8) δ β ( u 0 , v 0 ) , ( u 0 , v 0 ) W = J λ ( u 0 , v 0 ) , ( u 0 , v 0 ) W = 0 .

Moreover, by (2.3) and the constraint β ( u 0 , v 0 ) = 0 , we have

β ( u 0 , v 0 ) , ( u 0 , v 0 ) W = p ( ( A 1 ( u 0 ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u 0 ) ) + ( A 2 ( v 0 ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v 0 ) ) ) ( p s p ) B ( u 0 , v 0 ) λ q ( q p ) C ( u 0 , v 0 ) = φ u 0 , v 0 ( 1 ) .

Since ( u 0 , v 0 ) N λ 0 , we have φ u 0 , v 0 ( 1 ) 0 . Thus, by (2.8), we obtain δ = 0 . Consequently, by substituting δ in (2.7), we obtain J λ ( u 0 , v 0 ) = 0 . This completes the proof of Lemma 2.1.□

In order to understand the Nehari manifold and fibering maps, let us define the function ψ u , v : ( 0 , ) R as follows:

(2.9) ψ u , v ( t ) = t p q ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) t p s q B ( u , v ) λ q C ( u , v ) .

We note that t q 1 ψ u , v ( t ) = φ u , v ( t ) . Thus, it is easy to see that ( t u , t v ) N λ if and only if

(2.10) ψ u , v ( t ) = 0 .

Moreover, by a direct computation, we obtain

ψ u , v ( t ) = ( p q ) t p q 1 ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) + p t 2 p q 1 ( A 1 2 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s q ) t p s q 1 B ( u , v ) .

Therefore,

(2.11) t q 1 ψ u , v ( t ) = φ u , v ( t ) .

Hence, ( t u , t v ) N λ + , ( respectively , ( t u , t v ) N λ ) if and only if ψ u , v ( t ) = 0 and ψ u , v ( t ) > 0 (respectively, ψ u , v ( t ) = 0 , and ψ u , v ( t ) < 0 ). Put

(2.12) m = min ( m 1 , m 2 ) , θ = max ( θ 1 , θ 2 ) ,

and

(2.13) λ = ( m S ) p s q p s p γ q Ω p s q p s p s p p s q p q ( p s q ) a p q p s p .

Now we shall prove the following crucial result.

Lemma 2.2

Assume that conditions ( H 1 ) and ( H 2 ) hold. Then, for all ( u , v ) N λ , there exist λ > 0 and unique t 1 > 0 and t 2 > 0 , such that for each λ ( 0 , λ ) , we have ( t 1 u , t 1 v ) N λ + and ( t 2 u , t 2 v ) N λ .

Proof

We begin by noting that by (2.9), we have

ψ u , v ( t ) λ q C ( u , v ) , as t 0 + , and ψ u , v ( t ) , as t .

Now, if we combine equations (1.5) and (1.7) with the Hölder inequality, we obtain

(2.14) B ( u , v ) a 1 u p s p s + a 2 v p s p s a ( u p s p s + v p s p s ) a ( S p , V 1 p s p ( A 1 ( u ) ) p s p + S p , V 2 p s p ( A 2 ( u ) ) p s p ) S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p ,

and

(2.15) C ( u , v ) γ ( u q q + v q q ) γ Ω p s q p s ( u p s q + v p s q ) γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( A ( u , v ) ) q p ,

where a = max ( a 1 , a 2 ) , A ( u , v ) = ( u , v ) p , and S is given by equation (1.8).

On the other hand, by combining equations (2.14) and (2.15) with ( H 2 ) , we obtain

(2.16) ψ u , v ( t ) t p q ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) t p s q S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p λ q γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( A ( u , v ) ) q p m t p q A ( u , v ) t p s q S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p λ q γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( A ( u , v ) ) q p ( A ( u , v ) ) q p F u , v ( t ) ,

where m is given by equation (2.12) and F u , v is defined for t > 0 by

F u , v ( t ) = m t p q ( A ( u , v ) ) p q p t p s q S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s q p λ q γ S q p Ω p s q p s .

Since 1 < q < p < p s , it is easy to see that lim t 0 + F u , v ( t ) < 0 and lim t F u , v ( t ) = . So, by a simple calculation, we can prove that F u , v attains its unique global maximum at

(2.17) t max ( u , v ) = m S p s p a p q p s q 1 p s p ( A ( u , v ) ) 1 p .

Moreover,

(2.18) F u , v ( t max ) = q γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( λ λ ) ,

where λ is given by (2.13).

If we choose λ < λ , then we obtain from (2.16)

(2.19) ψ u , v ( t max ) ( A ( u , v ) ) q p F u , v ( t max ) > 0 .

Hence, by a variation of ψ u , v ( t ) , there exist unique t 1 < t max ( u , v ) and unique t 2 > t max ( u , v ) , such that ψ u , v ( t 1 ) > 0 and ψ u , v ( t 2 ) < 0 . Moreover, ψ u , v ( t 1 ) = 0 = ψ u , v ( t 2 ) . Finally, it follows from (2.10) and (2.11) that ( t 1 u , t 1 v ) N λ + and ( t 2 u , t 2 v ) N λ . This completes the proof of Lemma 2.2.□

We can see from Lemma 2.2 that sets N λ + and N λ are nonempty. In the following lemma, we shall provide a property related to N λ 0 .

Lemma 2.3

Assume that condition ( H 2 ) holds. Then, for all λ ( 0 , λ ) , we have N λ 0 = .

Proof

We shall argue by contradiction. Assume that there exists λ > 0 in ( 0 , λ ) such that N λ 0 . Let ( u 0 , v 0 ) N λ 0 . Then, invoking ( H 2 ) , (2.5), and (2.15), we have

(2.20) 0 = φ u ( 1 ) = p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s p ) ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) + λ q ( p s q ) C ( u , v ) p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s p ) ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) + λ q ( p s q ) C ( u , v ) p ( ( A ( u ) ) 2 M ( A ( u ) ) + ( A ( v ) ) 2 N ( A ( v ) ) ) ( p s p ) m A ( u , v ) + λ q ( p s q ) γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( A ( u , v ) ) q p .

On the other hand, by ( H 2 ) , (2.6), and (2.14), one has

(2.21) 0 = φ u ( 1 ) = p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) + ( p q ) ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) ( p s q ) B ( u , v ) p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) + ( p q ) ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) ( p s q ) B ( u , v ) p ( ( A 1 ( u ) ) 2 M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + ( A 2 ( v ) ) 2 M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) + ( p q ) m A ( u , v ) ( p s q ) S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p .

Combining (2.20) and (2.21), we obtain

(2.22) λ m ( A ( u , v ) ) p q p S p s p a ( A ( u , v ) ) p s q p q γ S q p Ω p s q p s .

Next, we define the function H on ( 0 , ) by

H ( t ) = m t p q p S p s p a t p s q p q γ S q p Ω p s q p s .

Since 1 < q < p < p s , it follows that lim t 0 + H ( t ) = 0 and lim t H ( t ) = . A simple computation now shows that H attains its maximum at

t ˜ = p q p s q m S p s p a p p s p ,

and

(2.23) max t > 0 H ( t ) = H ( t ˜ ) = λ .

Hence, it follows from (2.22) and (2.23), that λ max t > 0 H ( t ) = λ , which contradicts λ ( 0 , λ ) . Therefore, we can conclude that that indeed N λ 0 = , for λ ( 0 , λ ) . This completes the proof of Lemma 2.3.□

Lemma 2.4

Assume that conditions ( H 2 ) and ( H 3 ) hold. Then, J λ is coercive and bounded from below on N λ .

Proof

Let ( u , v ) N λ . Then, by (2.3), we obtain

B ( u , v ) = A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) λ q C ( u , v ) .

Therefore,

J λ ( u , v ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + M ^ 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) 1 p s ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) λ 1 q p s C ( u , v ) .

Moreover, by ( H 2 ) , ( H 3 ) , and (2.15), we have

J λ ( u , v ) 1 θ 1 p A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + 1 θ 2 p A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) 1 p s A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) 1 p s A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) λ 1 q p s C ( u , v ) 1 θ p 1 p s ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) ) λ 1 q p s C ( u , v ) 1 θ p 1 p s ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) λ 1 q p s C ( u , v ) m 1 θ p 1 p s A ( u , v ) λ 1 q p s γ S q p Ω p s q p s ( A ( u , v ) ) q p .

Since q < p and θ p < p s , it follows that J λ is coercive and bounded from below on N λ . This completes the proof of Lemma 2.4.□

By Lemma (2.3), we can write N λ = N λ + N λ , and by Lemma (2.4), we can define

α λ = inf ( u , v ) N λ J λ ( u , v ) and α λ + = inf ( u , v ) N λ + J λ ( u , v ) .

3 Proof of the main result

In this section, we shall prove the main result of this article (Theorem 1.1). First, we need to prove two propositions.

Proposition 3.1

Assume that conditions ( H 2 ) and ( H 3 ) hold. Then, there exist t 0 > 0 and ( u 0 , v 0 ) W \ { 0 } , with ( u 0 , v 0 ) > 0 in R n , such that

(3.1) 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( A 1 ( u 0 ) t 0 p ) + M 2 ^ ( A 2 ( v 0 ) t 0 p ) ) t 0 p s p s B ( u 0 , v 0 ) = s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p .

Proof

For any ( u , v ) W \ { 0 } , we define the function ζ u , v : ( 0 , ) R as follows:

ζ u , v ( t ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( A 1 ( t u ) ) + M 2 ^ ( A 2 ( t v ) ) ) 1 p s B ( t ( u , v ) ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + M ^ 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) .

By ( H 3 ) , it can be shown that lim t 0 + ζ u , v ( t ) 0 and lim t ζ u , v ( t ) = . It is clear that ζ is of class C 1 . Moreover, invoking ( H 2 ) and ( H 3 ) , we obtain

ζ u , v ( t ) t p θ 1 p A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + t p θ 2 p A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) t p θ p ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( t p A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( t p A 2 ( v ) ) ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) t p θ p ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) m θ p t p A ( u , v ) t p s p s B ( u , v ) = ω u , v ( t ) .

Since lim t 0 ω u , v ( t ) = 0 and lim t ω u , v ( t ) = , it follows that ω u , v attains its global maximum at

t = m A ( u , v ) θ B ( u , v ) 1 p s p .

Moreover, from (2.14) and the fact that p s > θ p , we have

(3.2) sup t > 0 ω u , v ( t ) = ω u , v ( t ) = p s p p p s m θ p s p s p ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p s p ( B ( u , v ) ) p p s p = p s p p p s m θ p s p s p ( A ( u , v ) ) p s p B ( u , v ) p p s p = s n m θ n s p ( A ( u , v ) ) n s p ( B ( u , v ) ) n s p s s n a n s p s m S θ n s p s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p = p s θ p θ p p s a n s p s m S θ n s p > 0 .

Therefore, using the variations of the functions ζ u , v and ω u , v , we obtain

sup t > 0 ζ u , v sup t > 0 ω u , v s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p .

Hence, there exists t 0 > 0 such that

ζ u , v ( t 0 ) = s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p .

This completes the proof of Proposition 3.1.□

Set now

(3.3) L = ( p q ) m q s n θ 1 θ p q p q p s q θ p 2 p p q γ S q p Ω p s q p s p p q .

Proposition 3.2

Assume that conditions ( H 2 ) and ( H 3 ) hold. If 1 < q < p < p s , then every Palais-Smale sequence { ( u k , v k ) } W for J λ at level c , with

(3.4) c < s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L ,

possesses a convergent subsequence.

Proof

Let { ( u k , v k ) } be a Palais-Smale sequence for J λ at level c , i.e.,

J λ ( u k , v k ) c , and J λ ( u k , v k ) 0 , as k .

By Lemma (2.4), we know that { ( u k , v k ) } is bounded in W . So up to a subsequence, still denoted by { ( u k , v k ) } , there exists ( u , v ) W , μ > 0 , and η > 0 , such that as k tends to infinity, we have

(3.5) ( u k , v k ) ( u , v ) weakly in W , u k V 1 μ , v k V 2 η , ( u k , v k ) ( u , v ) weakly in L p s ( Ω ) × L p s ( Ω ) , ( u k , v k ) ( u , v ) strongly in L q ( Ω ) × L q ( Ω ) , 1 q < p s , ( u k , v k ) ( u , v ) a.e. in Ω ,

Since 1 q < p s , it follows from [41, Theorem IV-9] that there exist functions l 1 , l 2 L q ( Ω ) such that for a.e. x Ω , we have u k ( x ) l 1 ( x ) , v k ( x ) l 2 ( x ) . Hence, by the dominated convergence theorem,

(3.6) C ( u k , v k ) C ( u , v ) as k .

On the other hand, by the Brezis-Lieb lemma [21, Lemma 1.32], for k large enough, we have

A 1 ( u k ) = A 1 ( u k u ) + A 1 ( u ) + o ( 1 ) , A 2 ( v k ) = A 2 ( v k v ) + A 2 ( v ) + o ( 1 ) ,

and

B ( u k , v k ) = B ( u k u , v k v ) + B ( u , v ) + o ( 1 ) .

Consequently, by letting k tend to infinity, we obtain

o ( 1 ) = J λ ( u k , v k ) , ( u k u , v k v ) W = M 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) Q u k ( x ) u k ( y ) p 1 ( ( u k u ) ( x ) ( u k u ) ( y ) ) x y n + p s d x d y + Ω V 1 ( x ) u k p 1 ( u k u ) d x Ω a 1 ( x ) u k p s 1 ( u k u ) d x + M 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) Q v k ( x ) v k ( y ) p 1 ( ( v k v ) ( x ) ( v k v ) ( y ) ) x y n + p s d x d y + Ω V 2 ( x ) v k p 1 ( v k v ) d x Ω a 2 ( x ) v k p s 1 ( v k v ) d x λ Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x = M 1 ( μ p ) ( μ p A 1 ( u ) ) + M 2 ( η p ) ( η p A 2 ( v ) ) Ω ( a 1 ( x ) u k p s + a 2 ( x ) v k p s ) d x + Ω ( a 1 ( x ) u p s + a 2 ( x ) v p s ) d x λ Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x + o ( 1 ) = M 1 ( μ p ) A 1 ( u k u ) + M 2 ( η p ) A 2 ( v k v ) B ( u k u , v k v ) λ Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x + o ( 1 ) .

Therefore,

M 1 ( μ p ) lim k A 1 ( u k u ) + M 2 ( η p ) lim k A 2 ( v k v ) = lim k B ( u k u , v k v ) + lim k λ Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x

By (1.5), (3.5), and the Holder inequality, it follows that

Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x γ q Ω u k q 1 ( u k u ) d x + γ q Ω v k q 1 ( v k v ) d x γ q u k q q 1 u k u q + γ q v k q q 1 v k v q C q γ q u k V 1 q 1 u k u q + C q γ q v k V 2 q 1 v k v q

for some positive constant C q . So, we obtain

(3.7) lim k Ω ( H u ( x , u k , v k ) ( u k u ) + H v ( x , u k , v k ) ( v k v ) ) d x = 0 .

Thus, from (3.7), we can deduce that

lim k B ( u k u , v k v ) = M 1 ( μ p ) lim k A 1 ( u k u ) + M 2 ( η p ) lim k A 2 ( v k v ) .

For simplicity, set b lim k B ( u k u , v k v ) . Note that b 0 . Moreover, to prove that ( u k , v k ) converges strongly to ( u , v ) , it suffices to prove that b = 0 . Suppose to the contrary, that b > 0 . Then, by ( H 2 ) , we obtain

(3.8) A 1 ( u k u ) M 1 ( μ p ) + A 2 ( v k v ) M 2 ( η p ) m 1 A 1 ( u k u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v k v ) m A ( u k u , v k v ) .

Using (2.14), we obtain

(3.9) A ( u k u , v k v ) S a p p s ( B ( u k u , v k v ) ) p p s .

So by combining (3.8) and (3.9), we obtain

A 1 ( u k u ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u ) ) + A 2 ( v k v ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v ) ) m S a p p s ( B ( u k u , v k v ) ) p p s .

By letting k tend to infinity, we conclude that

(3.10) b a n s p s ( m S ) n s p .

On the other hand, by ( H 3 ) , (3.6), and (3.10), one has

c = lim k J λ ( u k , v k ) = lim k J λ ( u k , v k ) 1 p s J λ ( u k , v k ) , ( u k , v k ) W = lim k 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) + M ^ 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) ) 1 p s A 1 ( u k ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) 1 p s A 2 ( v k ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u k , v k ) lim k 1 θ 1 p A 1 ( u k ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) + 1 θ 2 p A 2 ( v k ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) 1 p s ( A 1 ( u k ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) + A 2 ( v k ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u k , v k ) lim k 1 θ p 1 p s ( A 1 ( u k ) M 1 ( A 1 ( u k ) ) + A 2 ( v k ) M 2 ( A 2 ( v k ) ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u k , v k ) = lim k p s θ p θ p p s A 1 ( u k ) M 1 ( μ p ) + p s θ p θ p p s A 2 ( v k ) M 2 ( η p ) λ p s q p s C ( u k , v k ) = lim k p s θ p θ p p s ( A 1 ( u k u ) M 1 ( μ p ) + A 2 ( v k v ) M 2 ( η p ) ) + p s θ p θ p p s ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( μ p ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( η p ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u k , v k ) = s n θ 1 θ p b + s n θ 1 θ p ( A 1 ( u ) M 1 ( μ p ) + A 2 ( v ) M 2 ( η p ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u , v ) s n θ 1 θ p b + s n θ 1 θ p ( m 1 A 1 ( u ) + m 2 A 2 ( v ) ) λ p s q p s C ( u , v ) s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s ( m S ) n s p + s n θ 1 θ p m A ( u , v ) λ p s q p s C ( u , v ) .

Now, from (2.15), and using the fact that θ p < p s , we obtain

(3.11) c s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s ( m S ) n s p + s n θ 1 θ p m A ( u , v ) λ γ S q p Ω p s q p s p s q θ p ( A ( u , v ) ) q p = s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s ( m S ) n s p + h ( A ( u , v ) ) ,

where h is defined on [ 0 , ) by

h ( ξ ) = s n θ 1 θ p m ξ λ γ S q p Ω p s q p s p s q θ p ξ q p .

A simple computation shows that h attains its minimum at

ξ 0 = λ q γ S q p Ω p s q p s p q m p 1 s n θ p ( θ 1 ) p p q ,

and

(3.12) inf ξ > 0 h ( ξ ) = h ( ξ 0 ) = λ p p q L ,

where L is given by (3.3).

Therefore, from (3.11), (3.12), and by considering θ 1 , we obtain

c s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s ( m S ) n s p λ p p q L s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L .

This contradicts (3.4). Hence, b = 0 . So, we deduce that ( u k , v k ) ( u , v ) strongly in W . This completes the proof.□

Proposition 3.3

Assume that conditions ( H 2 ) and ( H 3 ) hold. Then, there exist λ > 0 , t 0 > 0 , and ( u 0 , v 0 ) W such that

(3.13) J λ ( t 0 u 0 , t 0 v 0 ) s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L ,

provided that λ ( 0 , λ ) . In particular,

(3.14) α λ < s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L .

Proof

We put

λ = 1 L s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p p q p .

Then, for any 0 < λ < λ , we have

(3.15) s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L > 0 .

By (3.1), there exist t 0 > 0 and ( u 0 , v 0 ) W \ { 0 } such that

(3.16) J λ ( t 0 u 0 , t 0 v 0 ) = 1 p ( M ^ 1 ( t 0 p A 1 ( u 0 ) ) + M ^ 2 ( t 0 p A 2 ( v 0 ) ) ) t 0 p p B ( u 0 , v 0 ) λ t 0 q C ( u 0 , v 0 ) = s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ t 0 q C ( u 0 , v 0 ) .

Let

λ = t 0 q C ( u 0 , v 0 ) L , p q q .

Then, for all λ ( 0 , λ ) , we have

(3.17) λ t 0 q C ( u 0 , v 0 ) < λ p p q L .

Thus, from (3.16) and (3.17), we obtain

J λ ( t 0 u 0 , t 0 v 0 ) < s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L .

Hence, (3.13) holds. Finally, if we put λ = min ( λ , λ , λ ) , then for all 0 < λ < λ and using the analysis of the fibering maps φ u , v ( t ) = J λ ( t u , t v ) , we obtain

α λ < s n θ 1 θ p a n s p s m S θ n s p λ p p q L .

This completes the proof of Proposition 3.2.□

Now, we are in a position to prove the main result of this article.

Proof of Theorem 1.1

By Lemma 2.4, J λ is bounded from below on N λ . Consequently, it is bounded from below on N λ + and N λ . So, we can find sequences { ( u k + , v k + ) } N λ + and { ( u k , v k ) } N λ , such that if k tends to infinity, then

J λ ( u k + , v k + ) inf ( u , v ) N λ + J λ ( u , v ) = α λ + ,

and

J λ ( u k , v k ) inf ( u , v ) N λ J λ ( u , v ) = α λ .

By an analysis of fibering maps φ u , v , we can conclude that α λ + < 0 and α λ > 0 . Moreover, by Propositions 3.2 and 3.3, we have

J λ ( u k + , v k + ) J λ ( u + , v + ) = inf ( u , v ) N λ + J λ ( u , v ) = α λ + , J λ ( u k + , v k + ) 0 ,

and

J λ ( u k , v k ) J λ ( u , v ) = inf ( u , v ) N λ J λ ( u , v ) = α λ , J λ ( u k , v k ) 0 .

Therefore, ( u + , v + ) (respectively, ( u , v ) ) is a minimizer of J λ on N λ + (respectively, on N λ ). Hence, by Lemma 2.1, problem (1.3) has two solutions ( u + , v + ) N λ + and ( u , v ) N λ . Moreover, since N λ + N λ = , it follows that these two solutions are distinct. Finally, the fact that α λ + < 0 and α λ > 0 imply that ( u + , v + ) and ( u , v ) are nontrivial solutions for problem (1.3). This completes the proof of Theorem 1.1.□


;

Acknowledgments

We thank the referees for their comments and suggestions.

  1. Funding information: D.D.R. was supported by the Slovenian Research Agency program P1-0292 and grants N1-0278, N1-0114, N1-0083, J1-4031, and J1-4001.

  2. Conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. D.D.R., who is an Honorary Member of the Advisory Board, declares to have no involvement in the decision process.

  3. Data availability statement: The authors declare that all data analyzed during this study are included in this published article.

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Received: 2022-07-07
Revised: 2023-02-18
Accepted: 2023-04-30
Published Online: 2023-06-13

© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Regular Articles
  2. On sufficient “local” conditions for existence results to generalized p(.)-Laplace equations involving critical growth
  3. On the critical Choquard-Kirchhoff problem on the Heisenberg group
  4. On the local behavior of local weak solutions to some singular anisotropic elliptic equations
  5. Viscosity method for random homogenization of fully nonlinear elliptic equations with highly oscillating obstacles
  6. Double-phase parabolic equations with variable growth and nonlinear sources
  7. Logistic damping effect in chemotaxis models with density-suppressed motility
  8. Bifurcation diagrams of one-dimensional Kirchhoff-type equations
  9. Standing wave solution for the generalized Jackiw-Pi model
  10. Weak-strong uniqueness and energy-variational solutions for a class of viscoelastoplastic fluid models
  11. Eigenvalue inequalities for the buckling problem of the drifting Laplacian of arbitrary order
  12. Homoclinic solutions for a differential inclusion system involving the p(t)-Laplacian
  13. Equivalence between a time-fractional and an integer-order gradient flow: The memory effect reflected in the energy
  14. Bautin bifurcation with additive noise
  15. Small solitons and multisolitons in the generalized Davey-Stewartson system
  16. Nonstationary Poiseuille flow of a non-Newtonian fluid with the shear rate-dependent viscosity
  17. A global compactness result with applications to a Hardy-Sobolev critical elliptic system involving coupled perturbation terms
  18. On a strongly damped semilinear wave equation with time-varying source and singular dissipation
  19. Singularity for a nonlinear degenerate hyperbolic-parabolic coupled system arising from nematic liquid crystals
  20. Stability of stationary solutions to the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations with surface tension
  21. Uniform decay estimates for the semi-linear wave equation with locally distributed mixed-type damping via arbitrary local viscoelastic versus frictional dissipative effects
  22. Symmetry and nonsymmetry of minimal action sign-changing solutions for the Choquard system
  23. Periodic and quasi-periodic solutions of a four-dimensional singular differential system describing the motion of vortices
  24. Multiple nontrivial solutions of superlinear fractional Laplace equations without (AR) condition
  25. Existence and blow-up of solutions in Hénon-type heat equation with exponential nonlinearity
  26. Existence and concentration behavior of positive solutions to Schrödinger-Poisson-Slater equations
  27. On the fractional Korn inequality in bounded domains: Counterexamples to the case ps < 1
  28. Gradient estimates for nonlinear elliptic equations involving the Witten Laplacian on smooth metric measure spaces and implications
  29. Dynamical analysis of a reaction–diffusion mosquito-borne model in a spatially heterogeneous environment
  30. Existence and multiplicity of solutions for a quasilinear system with locally superlinear condition
  31. Nontrivial solution for Klein-Gordon equation coupled with Born-Infeld theory with critical growth
  32. Modeling Wolbachia infection frequency in mosquito populations via a continuous periodic switching model
  33. Infinitely many localized semiclassical states for nonlinear Kirchhoff-type equation
  34. Fujita-type theorems for a quasilinear parabolic differential inequality with weighted nonlocal source term
  35. Approximations of center manifolds for delay stochastic differential equations with additive noise
  36. Periodic solutions to a class of distributed delay differential equations via variational methods
  37. Groundstate for the Schrödinger-Poisson-Slater equation involving the Coulomb-Sobolev critical exponent
  38. Existence of nontrivial solutions for the Klein-Gordon-Maxwell system with Berestycki-Lions conditions
  39. Global Sobolev regular solution for Boussinesq system
  40. Normalized solutions for the p-Laplacian equation with a trapping potential
  41. Nonlinear elliptic–parabolic problem involving p-Dirichlet-to-Neumann operator with critical exponent
  42. Blow-up for compressible Euler system with space-dependent damping in 1-D
  43. High energy solutions of general Kirchhoff type equations without the Ambrosetti-Rabinowitz type condition
  44. On the dynamics of grounded shallow ice sheets: Modeling and analysis
  45. A survey on some vanishing viscosity limit results
  46. Blow-up for logarithmic viscoelastic equations with delay and acoustic boundary conditions
  47. Generalized Liouville theorem for viscosity solutions to a singular Monge-Ampère equation
  48. Front propagation in a double degenerate equation with delay
  49. Positive solutions for a class of singular (pq)-equations
  50. Higher integrability for anisotropic parabolic systems of p-Laplace type
  51. The Poincaré map of degenerate monodromic singularities with Puiseux inverse integrating factor
  52. On a system of multi-component Ginzburg-Landau vortices
  53. Existence and concentration of solutions to Kirchhoff-type equations in ℝ2 with steep potential well vanishing at infinity and exponential critical nonlinearities
  54. Multiplicity results for fractional Schrödinger-Kirchhoff systems involving critical nonlinearities
  55. On double phase Kirchhoff problems with singular nonlinearity
  56. Estimates for eigenvalues of the Neumann and Steklov problems
  57. Nodal solutions with a prescribed number of nodes for the Kirchhoff-type problem with an asymptotically cubic term
  58. Dirichlet problems involving the Hardy-Leray operators with multiple polars
  59. Incompressible limit for compressible viscoelastic flows with large velocity
  60. Characterizations for the genuine Calderón-Zygmund operators and commutators on generalized Orlicz-Morrey spaces
  61. Non-local gradients in bounded domains motivated by continuum mechanics: Fundamental theorem of calculus and embeddings
  62. Noncoercive parabolic obstacle problems
  63. Touchdown solutions in general MEMS models
  64. Existence and nonexistence of nontrivial solutions for the Schrödinger-Poisson system with zero mass potential
  65. Short-time existence of a quasi-stationary fluid–structure interaction problem for plaque growth
  66. Fine bounds for best constants of fractional subcritical Sobolev embeddings and applications to nonlocal PDEs
  67. Symmetries of Ricci flows
  68. Asymptotic behavior of solutions of a second-order nonlinear discrete equation of Emden-Fowler type
  69. On the topological gradient method for an inverse problem resolution
  70. Supersolutions to nonautonomous Choquard equations in general domains
  71. Uniform complex time heat Kernel estimates without Gaussian bounds
  72. Global existence for time-dependent damped wave equations with nonlinear memory
  73. Normalized solutions for a critical fractional Choquard equation with a nonlocal perturbation
  74. Reversed Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequalities with weights on the Heisenberg group
  75. Lamé system with weak damping and nonlinear time-varying delay
  76. Global well posedness for the semilinear edge-degenerate parabolic equations on singular manifolds
  77. Blowup in L1(Ω)-norm and global existence for time-fractional diffusion equations with polynomial semilinear terms
  78. Boundary regularity results for minimisers of convex functionals with (p, q)-growth
  79. Parametric singular double phase Dirichlet problems
  80. Special Issue on Nonlinear analysis: Perspectives and synergies
  81. Editorial to Special issue “Nonlinear analysis: Perspectives and synergies”
  82. Identification of discontinuous parameters in double phase obstacle problems
  83. Global boundedness to a 3D chemotaxis-Stokes system with porous medium cell diffusion and general sensitivity
  84. On regular solutions to compressible radiation hydrodynamic equations with far field vacuum
  85. On Cauchy problem for fractional parabolic-elliptic Keller-Segel model
  86. The evolution of immersed locally convex plane curves driven by anisotropic curvature flow
  87. Stability of combination of rarefaction waves with viscous contact wave for compressible Navier-Stokes equations with temperature-dependent transport coefficients and large data
  88. On concave perturbations of a periodic elliptic problem in R2 involving critical exponential growth
  89. Existence of solutions for a double-phase variable exponent equation without the Ambrosetti-Rabinowitz condition
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