Open Journal of Mathematical Analysis
ISSN: 2616-8111 (Online) 2616-8103 (Print)
DOI: 10.30538/psrp-oma2020.0048
On a hyper-singular equation
Department of Mathematics, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA.; ramm@math.ksu.edu
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction and formulation of the result
LetTheorem 1. The solution to equation (1) for \(\lambda=-\frac1 4\) does exist, is unique and less singular than \(t^{-\frac 5 4}\) as \(t\to 0\).
Proof. We define the integral in (1) as a convolution of the distribution \(t^{\lambda-1}\) and \(v\). The space of the test functions for this distribution is the space \(\mathcal{K}:=C^\infty_0(R_+)\) of compactly supported on \(R_+:=[0, \infty)\) infinitely differentiable functions \(\phi(t)\) defined on \(R_+:=[0,\infty)\). The topology on this space is defined by countably many norms \(\sup_{t\ge 0}t^m|D^p\phi(t)|\). A sequence \(\phi_n(t)\) converges to \(\phi(t)\) in \(\mathcal{K}\) if and only if all the functions \(\phi_n(t)\) have compact support on an interval \([a,b]\), \(a>0\), \(b< \infty\) and \(\phi_n\) converges on this interval to \(\phi\) in every of the above norms. Let us check that \(t^{\lambda-1}:=t_+^{\lambda-1}\) is a distribution on \(\mathcal{K}\) for \(\lambda< 0\), i.e., a linear bounded functional on \(\mathcal{K}\). Let \(\phi_n\in \mathcal{K}\) and \(\phi_n \to \phi\) in \(\mathcal{K}\). If \(\lambda< 0\) then \(\max_{t\in [a,b]}t^{\lambda -1}\le a^{\lambda-1}+b^{\lambda-1}\). Thus, $$|\int_0^\infty t^{\lambda-1}\phi_n(t)dt|\le [a^{\lambda-1}+b^{\lambda-1}] \int_0^\infty |\phi_n(t)|dt,$$ where \(a>0\) and \(b< \infty\). Since \(\phi_n \to \phi\) in \(\mathcal{K}\), we have $$\int_0^\infty |\phi_n(t)|dt\to \int_a^b | \phi|dt.$$ So, the integral \(\int_0^\infty t^{\lambda-1}\phi(t)dt\) is a bounded linear functional on \(\mathcal{K}\) and \(t^{\lambda-1}\) is a distribution on the set of the test functions \(\mathcal{K}\) for \(\lambda\neq 0,-1,-2,...\). The integral in (1) is the convolution \(t^{\lambda-1}\star v\). This convolution is defined for any distributions on the dual to \(\mathcal{K}\) space \(\mathcal{K}'\). This is done in [3], p.57. For another space of the test functions \(K=C^\infty_0(R)\) this is done in [2], p.135. It is known, see e.g. [1], p.39, that
2. Concluding remark.
Historically it is well known that equation (1) can be solved explicitly by the Laplace transform if \(\lambda>0\) and the function \(1-L(t^{\lambda -1})\neq 0\). To our knowledge, for \(\lambda< 0\) there were no results concerning the solvability of equation (1). The author got interested in (1) in the case \(\lambda=-\frac 1 4\) in connection with the millennium problem about unique global solvability of the Navier-Stokes problem (NSP) in \(R^3\) which was solved in [5], see also [3] Chapter 5.Author Contributions
All authors contributed equally to the writing of this paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.Competing Interests
The author(s) do not have any competing interests in the manuscript.References
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