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The integral estimate with Orlicz norm in Lφ(x)-averaging domain

Abstract

In this article, we obtain some local and global integral inequalities with Orlicz norm for the A-harmonic tensors in Lφ(x)-averaging domain, where φ(x) satisfies the φ p condition. These estimates indicate that many existing inequalities with Lp-norms are special cases of our results.

1 Introduction

In recent years, there are many remarkable results about the solutions of the nonhomogeneous A-harmonic equation dA(x, ) = B(x, ) have been made, see [17]. For example, in [2], the following Caccioppoli inequality has been established.

d u p , Q C Q - 1 n u p , σ Q , p > 1 , σ > 1 .
(1.1)

In [3] we can find the general Poincaré inequality

u - u Q p , Q C Q diam ( Q ) d u p , σ Q , p > 0 , σ > 1 .
(1.2)

In [46], many inequalities for the classical operators applied to the differential forms have been studied. These integral inequalities play a crucial role in studying PDE and the properties of the solutions of PDE. However, most of these inequalities are developed with the Lp-norms. Meanwhile, we know the Orlicz spaces is the important tool in studying PDE, see [8]. So, in this article, the normalized Lp-norms are replaced by large norms in the scale of Orlicz spaces. We first introduce the φ p condition, which is a particular class of the Young functions, then using the result that the maximal operator M φ is bounded on Lp(n), see [9], we establish some integral estimates with Orlicz norms. In the global case, we also expand the local results to a relative large class of domains, the Lφ-averaging domain. Applying our results, we can easily find that many versions of the existing estimates become the special cases of our new results.

Throughout this article, we assume that Ω is a bounded connected open subset of n, Q, and σQ are the cubes with the same center and diam(σQ) = σ diam(Q), σ > 0. We use |E| to denote the Lebesgue measure of the set E n. Let Λl = Λl(n) be the set of all l-forms on n, D'(Ω, Λl) be the space of all differential l-forms on Ω. A differential l-form ω(x) is generated by {dxi 1 dxi 2 dx il }, l = 0, 1, ..., n, that is ω ( x ) = I ω I ( x ) d x I = ω i 1 , i 2 , , i l ( x ) d x i 1 d x i 2 d x i l , where I = (i1, i2, ..., i l ), 1 ≤ i1 < i2 < ... < i l n. Let Lp(Ω, Λl) be the l-forms ω ( x ) = I ω I ( x ) d x I on Ω satisfying Ω ω I p < for all ordered l-tuples I, l = 1, 2, ..., n. We write ω p , Ω = Ω ω p d x 1 p = Ω ( I ω I ( x ) 2 ) p 2 d x 1 p . we denote the exterior derivative by d : D'(Ω, Λl) → D'(Ω, Λl+1) for l = 0, 1, ..., n - 1. Its formal adjoint operator d : D'(Ω, Λl+1) → D'(Ω, Λl) is given by d = (-1)nl+1 d on D'(Ω, Λl+1), l = 0, 1, 2, ..., n - 1, here is the well known Hodge star operator. A differential l-form u D'(Ω, Λl) is called a closed form if du = 0 in Ω. A homotopy operator T : C(Ω, Λl) → C(Ω, Λl-1) is defined in [10], and the decomposition

u = d ( T u ) + T ( d u )
(1.3)

holds for any differential form u. We define the l - form u Q D'(Q, Λl) by

u Q = Q - 1 Q u ( y ) d y , l = 0 and u Q = d T ( u ) ,
(1.4)

for all u Lp(Q, Λl), 1 ≤ p < ∞, then u Q = u - T(du), l = 1, 2, ..., n.

In this article, we consider solutions to the non-homogeneous A-harmonic equation of the form

d A ( x , d ω ) = B ( x , d ω ) ,
(1.5)

where A : Ω × Λl(n) → Λl(n) and B : Ω × Λl(n) → Λl-1(n) satisfy the conditions: |A(x, ξ)| ≤ a|ξ|p-1, 〈A(x, ξ), ξ〉 ≥ | ξ |p and |B(x, ξ)| ≤ b|ξ|p-1for almost every x Ω and all ξ Λl(n). Here, a, b > 0 are constants and 1 < p < ∞ is a fixed exponent associated with (1.5). A solution to (1.5) is an element of the Sobolev space W l o c 1 , p ( Ω , Λ l - 1 ) such that ∫ΩA(x, ), 〉 + 〈B(x, ), φ〉 = 0 for all φ W l o c 1 , p ( Ω , Λ l - 1 ) with compact support.

2 Main results

In this section, we first obtain the local strong-type Orlicz norm inequality for the homotopy operator applied to the solutions of Equation 1.5, then, under the similar method, we establish the Caccioppoli and Poincaré inequalities with the Orlicz norms. We also give the generalized weak reverse Hölder-type inequality for the A-harmonic tensors. Finally, we expand these results to the global case. To prove the main results, we first introduce the following definitions and lemmas.

Definition 2.1 Given a Young function φ(t): [0, ∞) → [0, ∞), and a cube Q, define the normalized Luxemburg norm on Q by

u φ ( Q ) = i n f { λ > 0 : 1 Q Q φ ( u ( x ) λ ) d x 1 } .
(2.1)

If φ(t) = tp, 1 ≤ p < ∞, then u φ ( Q ) = ( 1 Q Q u p d x ) 1 p (see [9]) and the Luxemburg norm reduce to the Lp norm.

Given a Young function φ, let φ ̄ denote its associate function: the Young function with the property that t φ - 1 ( t ) φ ̄ - 1 ( t ) 2t, t > 0. If φ(t) = tp, then φ ̄ ( t ) = t p ; and if φ(t) = tplog(e+t)α, then φ ̄ ( t ) t p log ( e + t ) - α p p , where p' satisfies 1 p + 1 p =1.

Definition 2.2 (see [9]) Given p, 1 < p < ∞, a Young function φ satisfies the φ p condition if for some c > 0,

c φ ( t ) t p d t t < .
(2.2)

Given a Young function φ, we define the Orlicz maximal operator associated with φ by

M φ u ( x ) = sup Q x u φ ( Q ) .
(2.3)

We have the following result taken from [9] that characterizes the boundedness of these maximal functions on Lp(n). This will play an important role in the proofs of our main results.

Lemma 2.3 Given p, 1 < p < ∞, and a Young function φ , then for any nonnegative function f, the following result holds.

M φ : L p ( n ) L p ( n ) , i f a n d o n l y i f φ φ p .
(2.4)

Lemma 2.4 If A, B, and C are Young functions such that A-1(t)B-1(t) ≤ C-1(t), then for all functions f and g and any cube Q,

f g C ( Q ) 2 f A ( Q ) g B ( Q ) .
(2.5)

In particular, given any Young function φ,

1 Q Q f ( x ) g ( x ) d x 2 f φ ( Q ) g φ ̄ ( Q ) .
(2.6)

From [10], we know that, for any differential form u L l o c s ( Q , Λ l ) , l = 1, 2, ..., n, 1 ≤ s < ∞, we have

T u s , Q C Q diam ( Q ) u s , Q
(2.7)

and

( T u ) s , Q C Q u s , Q .
(2.8)

Theorem 2.5. Let φ(x) be a Young function satisfying φ p condition, 1 < p < ∞. Assume φ ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) and u is a solution of the nonhomogeneous equation (1.5) in Ω, T is the homotopy operator, φ ( T u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) . Then there exists a constant C, independent of u such that

T u φ ( Q ) C Q d i a m ( Q ) u φ ( σ Q ) ,
(2.9)

where Q is any cube with σQ Ω, σ is constant with 1 < σ < ∞.

Proof. Using Hölder inequality with 1 = 1/p + (p - 1)/p and the definition of the Orlicz maximal operator, we have

T u φ ( Q ) 1 Q Q M φ ( T u ) d x 1 Q ( Q ( M φ ( T u ) ) p d x ) 1 p ( Q 1 p ( p - 1 ) d x ) ( p - 1 ) p = Q - 1 + ( p - 1 ) p ( Q ( M φ ( T u ) ) p d x ) 1 p .
(2.10)

Since φ(x) satisfies the φ p condition, then using Lemma 2.3, we obtain

T u φ ( Q ) C 1 Q - 1 p T u p , Q .
(2.11)

Applying (2.7), (2.11) becomes

T u φ ( Q ) C 2 Q - 1 p Q diam ( Q ) u p , Q .
(2.12)

u is the solution of Equation 1.5 satisfying the weak reverse Hölder inequality ||u||s,QC||u||t,σQ, σ > 1 and 0 < s, t < ∞ (see [3]), so

T u φ ( Q ) C 3 Q - 1 p Q diam ( Q ) Q ( 1 - p ) p u 1 , σ Q = C 3 Q diam ( Q ) Q - 1 u 1 , σ Q .
(2.13)

Using Lemma 2.4, we can easily have

T u φ ( Q ) C 4 Q diam ( Q ) u φ ( σ Q ) 1 φ ̄ ( σ Q ) C 5 Q diam ( Q ) u φ ( σ Q ) .
(2.14)

This ends the proof of Theorem 2.5.

Using the similar method and (2.8), under the same condition of Theorem 2.5 we can also prove the following result

( T u ) φ ( Q ) C Q u φ ( σ Q ) .
(2.15)

Remark. Using the similar method, we can expand the result to include a variety of operators-the Green's operator G, the projection operator H and other composite operators such as T G, T H, T Δ G, and so on.

Using the similar method and the general Caccioppoli inequality (1.1), we can prove the following Caccioppoli inequality with the Luxemburg norm.

Theorem 2.6 Let φ(x) be a Young function satisfying φ p condition, 1 < p < ∞. Assume φ ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) and u is a solution of the nonhomogeneous equation (1.5) in Ω, φ ( d u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) . Then, there exists a constant C, independent of u such that

d u φ ( Q ) C Q - 1 n u φ ( σ Q ) ,
(2.16)

where Q is any cube with σQ Ω, σ is constant with 1 < σ < ∞.

If u is a solution of the equation (1.5), du satisfies the weak reverse Hölder inequality ||du||p,QC||du|| q,σQ , σ > 1 and 0 < p, q < ∞(see [3]). So, applying the general Pioncaré inequality (1.2), under the similar proceeding of Theorem 2.5, we can easily obtain the following Pioncaré-type inequality.

Theorem 2.7 Let φ(x) be a Young function satisfying φ p condition, 1 < p < ∞. Assume φ ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) and u is a solution of the nonhomogeneous equation (1.5) in Ω, φ ( d u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) . Then, there exists a constant C, independent of u such that

u - u Q φ ( Q ) C Q diam ( Q ) d u φ ( σ Q ) ,
(2.17)

where Q is any cube with σQ Ω, σ is constant with 1 < σ < ∞.

We can also generalize the weak reverse Hölder-type inequality for the A-harmonic tensors.

Theorem 2.8 Let φ1(x) and φ2(x) be the Young functions with φ1(x) satisfying φ p condition, 1 < p < ∞. Assume that u is a solution of the nonhomogeneous equation (1.5) in Ω φ 1 ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) and φ 2 ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) . Then, there exists a constant C, independent of u such that

u φ 1 ( Q ) C u φ 2 ( σ Q ) ,
(2.18)

where Q is any cube with σQ Ω, σ is constant with 1 < σ < ∞.

Proof. Using Hölder inequality with 1 = 1/p + (p - 1)/p, we have

u φ 1 ( Q ) 1 Q Q M φ 1 ( u ) d x 1 Q Q ( M φ 1 ( u ) ) p d x 1 p Q 1 p ( p - 1 ) d x ( p - 1 ) p = Q - 1 + ( p - 1 ) p Q ( M φ 1 ( u ) ) p d x 1 p .
(2.19)

Since φ1(x) satisfies the φ p condition, then using Lemma 2.3, we obtain

u φ 1 ( Q ) C 1 Q - 1 p u p , Q .
(2.20)

Using the weak reverse Hölder inequality of u, (2.20) becomes

u φ 1 ( Q ) C 2 Q - 1 p Q ( 1 - p ) p u 1 , σ Q .
(2.21)

Using Lemma 2.4, we can easily have

u φ 1 ( Q ) C 2 Q - 1 u 1 , σ Q C 3 u φ 2 ( σ Q ) 1 φ ̄ 2 ( σ Q ) C 4 u φ 2 ( σ Q ) .
(2.22)

This ends the proof of Theorem 2.8.

In the following Lφ(x)-averaging domains, we will extend the local estimates into the global case.

Definition 2.9 (see [11]). Let φ(x) be an increasing convex function on [0, ∞) with φ(0) = 0. we call a proper subdomain Ω n an Lφ(x)-averaging domain, if |Ω| < ∞ and there exists a constant C such that

Ω φ ( τ u - u Q 0 ) d x C sup Q Ω Ω φ ( σ u - u Q ) d x
(2.23)

for some cube Q0 Ω and all u such that φ ( u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) , where τ, σ are constants with 0 < τ < ∞, 0 < σ < ∞. More properties and applications of the Lφ(x)-averaging domain can be founded in [11, 12].

Theorem 2.10 Let φ(x) be a Young function satisfying φ p condition, 1 < p < ∞, and let Ω be any bounded Lφ(x)-averaging domain. Assume that φ ( d u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) and u is a solution of the nonhomogeneous equation (1.5) in Ω, T is the homotopy operator, φ ( T u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) . Then there exists a constant C, independent of u such that

T u - ( T u ) Q 0 φ ( Ω ) C Ω diam ( Ω ) u φ ( Ω ) ,
(2.24)

where Q0 Ω is some fixed cube.

Proof. In Lφ(x)-averaging domain, since φ ( T u ) L l o c 1 ( Ω ) , Tu satisfies (2.23), so

T u - ( T u ) Q 0 φ ( Ω ) C 1 sup Q Ω T u - ( T u ) Q φ ( Q ) .
(2.25)

For any differential form u, we know that

u Q s , Q C 2 u s , Q .
(2.26)

Using (2.7) and (2.26), we have

T u - ( T u ) Q s , Q = T d ( T u ) s , Q C 2 Q diam ( Q ) d T u s , Q = C 2 Q diam ( Q ) u Q s , Q C 3 Q diam ( Q ) u s , Q .
(2.27)

Using the similar method of Theorem 2.5, for σ > 1, we can prove

T u - ( T u ) Q φ ( Q ) C 4 Q diam ( Q ) u φ ( σ Q ) .
(2.28)

Substituting (2.28) in (2.25), we obtain

T u - ( T u ) Q 0 φ ( Ω ) C 5 sup Q Ω Q diam ( Q ) u φ ( σ Q ) C 6 sup Q Ω Ω diam ( Ω ) u φ ( Ω ) C 7 Ω diam ( Ω ) u φ ( Ω ) .
(2.29)

This ends the proof of Theorem 2.10.

Similarly, we can extend Theorem 2.7 into the global case. Under the conditions of Theorem 2.7, we have

u - u Q 0 φ ( Ω ) C Ω diam ( Ω ) d u φ ( Ω ) .
(2.30)

Remark. If φ(t) = tp, then u φ ( Ω ) = ( 1 Ω Ω u p ) 1 p and the Luxemburg norm reduce to the Lp norm. Note that a typical Young function that belongs to the class φ p is φ(t) = ts with 1 ≤ s < p. We can easily increase s → ∞ as p → ∞, then for p ≥ 1, our results can be held with Lp -norms. So some existing inequalities in [25] become the special cases of our results.

3 Examples

Example 1 We consider the Young function φ(t) given by

φ 1 ( t ) = t p log 1 + δ ( e + t )
(3.1)

with δ > 0, which satisfies the φ p condition. We defines the Luxemburg norm u φ 1 ( Ω ) = inf { λ > 0 : 1 Ω Ω φ 1 ( u ( x ) λ ) d x 1 } in the Orlicz space L φ 1 ( Ω ) . There is an advantage in using the following integral expression instead of u φ 1 ( Ω )

[ u ] Ω = 1 Ω Ω u ( x ) p log 1 + δ e + u ( x ) u p , Ω d x 1 p .
(3.2)

This is not a norm, but compares well with the Luxemburg norm. Using the elementary inequality

min { 1 , λ } log ( e + λ t ) log ( e + t ) max { 1 , λ } ,
(3.3)

we prove

C 1 u φ 1 ( Ω ) [ u ] Ω C 2 u φ 1 ( Ω ) .
(3.4)

Under the same conditions of Theorem 2.10, we have

[ T u - ( T u ) Q 0 ] Ω C Ω diam ( Ω ) [ u ] Ω .
(3.5)

Example 2

we can consider another particular example given by

φ 2 ( t ) = t p e ( 1 + t ) ( 1 - δ )
(3.6)

with 1 < δ < 2p, which is continuous, convex and increasing satisfying φ2(0) = 0 and φ2(t) → ∞ as t → ∞, so it is a Young function. It also satisfies the φ p condition.

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Wen, H. The integral estimate with Orlicz norm in Lφ(x)-averaging domain. J Inequal Appl 2011, 90 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1186/1029-242X-2011-90

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