Yu. G. Reshetnyak
Unknown
Submitted 1963-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-196301.51534 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

This paper studies a stability form of Liouville’s theorem for conformal mappings in n-dimensional Euclidean space within Sobolev classes. For topological mappings of the unit ball into itself whose normalized energy to Jacobian ratio is at most 1 plus a small epsilon, it proves the existence of a Möbius mapping that uniformly approximates the given mapping on every smaller concentric ball, with an error tending to zero as epsilon tends to zero. It also states the sharp limiting case: if the ratio equals 1, the mapping itself is Möbius. The argument relies on compactness and equicontinuity properties of Sobolev mappings, supported by a higher-dimensional analogue of Courant’s lemma using Sobolev embedding theorems.

Full Text

Yu. G. Reshetnyak

On Stability in Liouville’s Theorem on Conformal Mappings of Space

(Presented by Academician S. L. Sobolev on 4 IV 1963)

  1. Let \(E^n\) be \(n\)-dimensional Euclidean space, \(|x|\) the length of a vector \(x \in E^n\), and \(Q_r\) the ball \(\{|x|<r\}\), \(0 \le r < 1\). In the space \(E^n\) we assume a fixed Cartesian orthonormal coordinate system. Let \(f(x)\) be a mapping of a domain \(M \subset E^n\) into \(E^n\). We shall say that the mapping \(f(x)\) belongs to the class \(W_n^1(M)\) if the coordinates \(f_1(x), f_2(x), \ldots, f_n(x)\) of the vector function \(f(x)\) have first derivatives, generalized in the sense of S. L. Sobolev \((^1)\), summable to the power \(n\) in the domain \(M\). If, in addition, \(f(x)\) is a topological mapping of the domain \(M\) into itself, then we shall say that \(f(x) \in W_{n,T}^1(M)\).

For an arbitrary mapping \(f(x) \in W_n^1(M)\) we set:

\[ \lambda(x,f)=\sum_{i=1}^{n}\sum_{j=1}^{n}\left(\frac{\partial f_i}{\partial x_j}\right)^2,\qquad D(f,M)=\int_M[\lambda(x,f)]^{n/2}\,dx, \]

\[ J(x,f)=\frac{\partial(f_1,f_2,\ldots,f_n)}{\partial(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_n)} =\det\left\|\frac{\partial f_i}{\partial x_j}\right\|,\qquad V(f,M)=\int_M J(x,f)\,dx. \]

If the mapping \(f(x) \in W_{n,T}^1(M)\), then \(V(f,M)\ne 0\). We set

\[ \theta(f)=\frac{D(f,M)}{n^{n/2}|V(f,M)|}. \]

Theorem 1. There exists a universal function \(\alpha(\varepsilon,r)\ge 0\), defined for \(\varepsilon>0\), \(0\le r<1\), with \(\alpha(\varepsilon,r)\to 0\) as \(\varepsilon\to 0\), such that for every mapping \(f(x)\in W_{n,T}^1\) of the ball \(Q_1\) into itself for which \(\theta(f)\le 1+\varepsilon\), there exists a Möbius mapping \(g(x)\) such that, for \(|x|\le r<1\), the inequality

\[ |f(x)-g(x)|\le \alpha(\varepsilon,r) \]

holds.

Remark. The function \(\alpha(\varepsilon,r)\) in the theorem just formulated cannot be replaced by a function \(\alpha(\varepsilon)\) independent of \(r\).

Theorem 2. If a mapping \(f(x)\in W_{n,T}^1\) and \(\theta(f)=1\), then the mapping \(f(x)\) is Möbius.

Theorem 1 contains, as a special case, the theorem from the author’s work \((^2)\). The proofs of Theorems 1 and 2 are based on considerations analogous to those given in \((^2)\).

The equicontinuity of a sequence of mappings of the class \(W_{n,T}^1\) of the ball \(Q_1\) into itself is ensured by the following lemma.

Lemma. Let \(f(x)\) be a mapping of the class \(W_n^1(Q_1)\) of the ball \(Q_1\) such that \(D(f,Q_1)\le D_0<\infty\). Then for every point \(x_0\in D_1\) and for every

\(\delta \in [0,1]\) there exists an \(r\) such that \(\delta < r < \sqrt{\delta}\), and the vector-function \(f(x)\) is continuous on the sphere \(S_r = \{|x - x_0| = r\}\). Moreover, for any \(x_1, x_2 \in S_r\) the inequality

\[ |f(x_1) - f(x_2)| \leq C_n \left( \frac{D_0}{\ln 1/\delta} \right)^{1/n} \left| \frac{x_1 - x_2}{r} \right|^{1/n}, \]

holds, where \(C_n\) is a constant.

In the case \(n = 2\), this lemma coincides with the well-known lemma of R. Courant (³). The proof of the lemma in the general case is based on considerations analogous to those used when \(n = 2\). In doing so it is necessary to apply the embedding theorems of S. L. Sobolev (¹).

Received
23 II 1963

CITED LITERATURE

¹ S. L. Sobolev, Some Applications of Functional Analysis to Mathematical Physics, 1951.
² Yu. G. Reshetnyak, in: Some Problems of Mathematics and Mechanics, Novosibirsk, 1961, p. 219.
³ R. Courant, Dirichlet’s Principle, Conformal Mappings, and Minimal Surfaces, IL, 1953.

Submission history

Yu. G. Reshetnyak