Abstract Generated abstract
The paper studies whether energy-type a priori estimates for the one-dimensional wave equation with variable leading coefficient can be extended to the norms of \(C\), \(L_p\), and \(W_p^1\) for \(1 \le p < 2\), with constants depending only on uniform ellipticity bounds. Using periodic reductions, spectral expansions for a Sturm-Liouville problem, inverse spectral construction, and properties of trigonometric series, it constructs bounded coefficients and uniformly bounded initial data whose corresponding solutions become unbounded in the indicated norms at prescribed positive times. The result shows that analogues of the standard energy inequality in these spaces cannot hold with constants depending only on the bounds \(0<\beta\le a(x)\le\gamma\).
Full Text
MATHEMATICS
E. B. BYKHOVSKII
ABSENCE IN THE SPACES \(C\), \(L_p\), AND \(W_p^1\) \((1\le p<2)\) OF ANALOGUES OF THE ENERGY INEQUALITY FOR THE STRING EQUATION WITH BOUNDED LEADING COEFFICIENT
(Presented by Academician V. I. Smirnov, January 23, 1965)
As is known, for the Cauchy problem
\[ v_{tt}=[a(x)v_x]_x;\qquad v|_{t=0}=\varphi(x);\qquad v_t|_{t=0}=\psi(0) \tag{1} \]
when \(a(x)\) is, say, piecewise smooth and satisfies the inequality
\[
0<\beta\le a(x)\le \gamma,
\]
there is an estimate of
\[
\int_x [v_t^2+v_x^2]\,dx
\]
by the same integral at \(t=0\) over an interval of the \(x\)-axis determined by the course of the characteristics of equation (1), with constant \(K(\beta,\gamma)\). An analogous estimate holds for
\[
\int_x v^2\,dx.
\]
If \(K\) is allowed also to depend on the smoothness indices of \(a(x)\), then analogous estimates also hold for the norms \(W_p^1\) and \(\mathscr L_p\) \((1\le p<2)\).
Our purpose is to show that the latter estimates do not hold with \(K(\beta,\gamma)\). Counterexamples will be constructed for
\[ \psi(x)\equiv 0. \tag{2} \]
The functions \(\varphi(x)\) and \(a(x)\), and consequently also \(v(x,t)\), will henceforth be assumed \(l\)-periodic in \(x\).
By \(\|f(x)\|\) we shall mean any one of the norms:
\[ \max_{0\le x\le l}|f(x)|,\qquad \left\{\int_0^l |f(x)|^p\,dx\right\}^{1/p},\qquad \left\{\int_0^l |f'(x)|^p\,dx\right\}^{1/p}. \tag{3} \]
Lemma 1. If in problem (1), (2), for one of the indicated norms, for some \(t_0\) the estimate
\[ \|v(x,t_0)\|\le K(\beta,\gamma)\|v(x,0)\| \]
holds, then this estimate holds uniformly in \(t\in[A_{t_0},\infty)\), \(A_{t_0}>0\).
The proof is based on the fact that the function \(v_\alpha(x,t)=v(\alpha x,\alpha t)\) is a solution of (1), (2) with \(a(\alpha x)\) and \(\varphi(\alpha x)\), while \(0<\beta\le a(\alpha x)\le\gamma\), and on the fact that for periodic \(f(x)\)
\[
\|f(\alpha x)\|=\|f(x)\|\,[\alpha^m+O(1/\alpha)]\quad(\alpha\ge1),
\]
where \(O(1/\alpha)\) is written for large \(\alpha\) and is independent of \(f(x)\).
Thus, counterexamples will be constructed if one can find a sequence \(\varphi_n(x)\) with bounded \(\|\varphi_n(x)\|\) and such an \(a(x)\) that for \(v_n(x,t)\) one has
\[ \sup_{\substack{1\le n<\infty\\ 0\le t<\infty}}\|v_n(x,t)\|=\infty. \]
In what follows we shall take \(\varphi(x)\) to be odd \(2\pi\)-periodic functions, and \(a(x)\) to be an even \(2\pi\)-periodic function. Then \(v(x,t)\), for \(0\le x\le\pi\), will be the solution of the initial-boundary-value problem with boundary conditions \(v(0,t)=v(\pi,t)=0\).
For \(v(x,t)\) we have:
\[
v(x,t)=\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k \cos \lambda_k t\, y_k(x),
\]
where \(y_k(x)\) are the eigenfunctions of the problem
\[
\mathcal L y=[a(x)y']'=-\lambda y,\qquad y(0)=y(\pi)=0;
\tag{4}
\]
\(c_k\) is the coefficient in the expansion
\[
\varphi(x)=\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k y_k(x).
\]
Using the asymptotics of \(y_k(x)\) and adding and subtracting
\[
\sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}}\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k \cos kt \sin k\xi,
\]
we obtain
\[
\begin{aligned}
v[x(\xi),t]
&=\sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}}\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k(\cos \lambda_k t-\cos kt)\sin k\xi \\
&\quad +\frac12 a^{-1/4}[x(\xi)]\, a^{1/4}[x(\xi+t)]\,\varphi[x(\xi+t)] \\
&\quad +\frac12 a^{-1/4}[x(\xi)]\, a^{1/4}[x(\xi-t)]\,\varphi[x(\xi-t)]
+\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{c_k}{k}\eta_k(\xi),
\end{aligned}
\tag{5}
\]
where
\[
\xi=\frac{\pi}{h}\int_{0}^{x} a^{-1/2}(z)\,dz,\qquad
h=\int_{0}^{\pi} a^{-1/2}(z)\,dz,
\]
and the \(\eta_k\) are uniformly bounded with respect to \(k\) and \(\xi\).
An analogous expression can be written for \(v_x[x(\xi),t]\).
Lemma 2. Let an infinite sequence \(\sigma\) of zeros and ones be given arbitrarily. Then there exists a strictly positive \(a(x)\in C_2[0,\pi]\) such that the spectrum \(\lambda_k\) of problem (4) has the following property: for every natural \(n\) there is a \(t_n>0\) such that the numbers
\[
-\frac12(\cos \lambda_{4k}t_n-\cos 4kt_n)\qquad (k=1,2,\ldots,n)
\]
are equal, respectively, to the first \(n\) terms of the sequence \(\sigma\).
In the proof, first the \(\lambda_k\) are chosen in a suitable way according to \(\sigma\), and then \(a(x)\) is constructed as the solution of the inverse Sturm–Liouville problem \((^1)\). It is not hard to see that \(t_n\to+\infty\) as \(n\to\infty\).
Let us consider in detail the case of the space \(C\). Let
\[
S[f]=\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k \sin k\xi
\]
be a series converging uniformly but not absolutely. We shall consider the series
\[
S[f(4\xi)]=\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k \sin 4k\xi,
\]
whose convergence character is the same, and denote its sum by \(S(\xi)\), and by \(\sigma S_n(\xi)\) the partial sum thinned out by the sequence \(\sigma\), respectively. One may assert that \(|S_n(\xi)|\) are uniformly bounded, but if \(\xi_0\) is a point of nonabsolute convergence, then there exists a \(\sigma\) for which
\[
\sigma S_n[f(4\xi_0)]\to\infty.
\]
Using the indicated \(\sigma\), we construct \(a(x)\) as stated in Lemma 2, taking the \(\lambda_k\) with indices not divisible by \(4\) arbitrarily, provided only that the inverse problem can be solved (for example, \(\lambda_k=k\)). In problem (1), (2) we take
\[
\varphi_n(x)=\sum_{k=1}^{n} c_k y_{4k}(x).
\]
Then \(|\varphi_n(x)|\) are uniformly bounded with respect to \(x\) and \(n\) (by virtue of the asymptotics of \(y_k(x)\)).
Let \(v_n(x,t)\) be the solution of problem (1), (2) with the indicated \(a(x)\) and \(\varphi_n(x)\). Using (5), it is not hard to verify that
\[
\sup_{n,x,t\in[0,\infty)} |v_n(x,t)|=\infty,
\]
which completes the construction of the example. Examples for the remaining norms are constructed analogously, but more complicated properties of trigonometric-
series. For \(\mathscr L_p\) one takes the series
\[
S[f(4\xi)]=\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} c_k \sin 4k\xi
\]
such that: a) \(S_n(\xi)\to f(4\xi)\) in \(\mathscr L_p\), and b) there exists a \(\sigma\) such that
\[
\|\sigma S_n\|_{\mathscr L_1}\underset{n\to\infty}{\longrightarrow}\infty.
\]
The existence of such a series is guaranteed by
Lemma 3. Let
\[
S[f]=\frac{a_0}{2}+\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}(a_k\cos kx+b_k\sin kx);\quad f\in\mathscr L_p\ (1<p)
\]
be such that
\[
\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}(a_k^2+b_k^2)=\infty
\]
(i.e. \(p<2\)).
There exists such a \(\sigma\) that
\[
\|\sigma S_n\|_{\mathscr L_1}\underset{n\to\infty}{\longrightarrow}\infty.
\]
The proof is based on theorems from (²) (vol. 1, pp. 214, 148, 266).
For the space \(W_p^1\) one takes the series
\[
\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{k^{1+\beta}}\sin kx,
\]
where
\[
1-\frac{1}{p}<\beta<\frac{1}{2}.
\]
It converges absolutely and uniformly to some \(f(x)\), while the differentiated series
\[
\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{k^\beta}\cos kx
\]
converges uniformly outside any neighborhood of \(x=0\) ((²), vol. 1, p. 4). Its sum \(f'(x)\) in a neighborhood of \(x=0\) behaves like \(1/x^{1-\beta}\) ((²), vol. 1, p. 70). Consequently, \(f'(x)\in\mathscr L_p\) (\(p<2\)); the series converges to it in \(\mathscr L_p\), and
\[
\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{k^{2\beta}}=\infty,
\]
after which Lemma 3 is used.
Thus, the following has been proved.
Theorem. Whatever \(t_0>0\) is prescribed, in the Cauchy problem (1), (2) one can choose a sequence of coefficients \(a_{(n)}(x)\) and initial data \(\varphi_{(n)}(x)\), satisfying uniformly in \(n\) the condition
\[
0<\beta\le a_{(n)}(x)\le \gamma;\qquad \|\varphi_{(n)}(x)\|\le \operatorname{const}\quad (1\le p<2),
\]
so that, for the corresponding solutions \(v_{(n)}(x,t)\) of problem (1), (2), one has not only
\[
\|v_{(n)}(x,t_0)\|_p\underset{n\to\infty}{\longrightarrow}\infty,
\]
but even
\[
\|v_{(n)}(x,t_0)\|_1\underset{n\to\infty}{\longrightarrow}\infty.
\]
All functions involved here are \(2\pi\)-periodic in \(x\), and by \(\|f(x)\|_p\) is meant one of the norms (3); moreover, in the case of \(C\) the subscript is superfluous.
Leningrad State University
named after M. V. Lomonosov
Received
21 I 1965
References
¹ I. M. Gelfand, B. M. Levitan, Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR, Ser. Mat., 15, No. 4, 309 (1951).
² A. Zygmund, Trigonometric Series, 2nd ed., 1, 2, Cambridge, 1959.