scholarly journals Splitting Type Variational Problems with Linear Growth Conditions

2020 ◽  
Vol 250 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-249
Author(s):  
M. Bildhauer ◽  
M. Fuchs
Author(s):  
Cristiana De Filippis ◽  
Giuseppe Mingione

AbstractWe provide a general approach to Lipschitz regularity of solutions for a large class of vector-valued, nonautonomous variational problems exhibiting nonuniform ellipticity. The functionals considered here range from those with unbalanced polynomial growth conditions to those with fast, exponential type growth. The results obtained are sharp with respect to all the data considered and also yield new, optimal regularity criteria in the classical uniformly elliptic case. We give a classification of different types of nonuniform ellipticity, accordingly identifying suitable conditions to get regularity theorems.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 12247-12283
Author(s):  
P. Sabatier ◽  
J.-L. Reyss ◽  
J. M. Hall-Spencer ◽  
C. Colin ◽  
N. Frank ◽  
...  

Abstract. Here we show the use of the 210Pb-226Ra excess method to determine the growth rate of corals from one of the world's largest known cold-water coral reef, the Røst Reef off Norway. Two large branching framework-forming cold-water coral specimens, one Lophelia pertusa and one Madrepora oculata were collected alive at 350 m water depth from the Røst Reef at ~67° N and ~9° E. Pb and Ra isotopes were measured along the major growth axis of both specimens using low level alpha and gamma spectrometry and the corals trace element compositions were studied using ICP-QMS. Due to the different chemical behaviors of Pb and Ra in the marine environment, 210Pb and 226Ra were not incorporated the same way into the aragonite skeleton of those two cold-water corals. Thus to assess of the growth rates of both specimens we have here taken in consideration the exponential decrease of initially incorporated 210Pb as well as the ingrowth of 210Pb from the decay of 226Ra. Moreover a~post-depositional 210Pb incorporation is found in relation to the Mn-Fe coatings that could not be entirely removed from the oldest parts of the skeletons. The 226Ra activities in both corals were fairly constant, then assuming constant uptake of 210Pb through time the 210Pb-226Ra chronology can be applied to calculate linear growth rate. The 45.5 cm long branch of M. oculata reveals an age of 31 yr and a~linear growth rate of 14.4 ± 1.1 mm yr−1, i.e. 2.6 polyps per year. However, a correction regarding a remaining post-depositional Mn-Fe oxide coating is needed for the base of the specimen. The corrected age tend to confirm the radiocarbon derived basal age of 40 yr (using 14C bomb peak) with a mean growth rate of 2 polyps yr−1. This rate is similar to the one obtained in Aquaria experiments under optimal growth conditions. For the 80 cm-long specimen of L. pertusa a remaining contamination of metal-oxides is observed for the middle and basal part of the coral skeleton, inhibiting similar accurate age and growth rate estimates. However, the youngest branch was free of Mn enrichment and this 15 cm section reveals a growth rate of 8 mm yr−1 (~1 polyp every two to three years). However, the 210Pb growth rate estimate is within the lowermost ranges of previous growth rate estimates and may thus reflect that the coral was not developing at optimal growth conditions. Overall, 210Pb-226Ra dating can be successfully applied to determine the age and growth rate of framework-forming cold-water corals, however, removal of post-depositional Mn-Fe oxide deposits is a prerequisite. If successful, large branching M. oculata and L. pertusa coral skeletons provide unique oceanographic archive for studies of intermediate water environmentals with an up to annual time resolution and spanning over many decades.


Filomat ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-25
Author(s):  
Dusan Djordjevic ◽  
Miljana Jovanovic

The subject of this paper is an analytic approximate method for a class of stochastic differential equations with coefficients that do not necessarily satisfy the Lipschitz and linear growth conditions but behave like a polynomials. More precisely, equations from the observed class have unique solutions with bounded moments and their coefficients satisfy polynomial condition. Approximate equations are defined on partitions of a time interval, and their coefficients are Taylor approximations of the coefficients of the initial equation. The rate of Lp convergence increases when degrees in Taylor approximations of coefficients increase. At the end of the paper, an example is provided to support the main theoretical result.


Filomat ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (14) ◽  
pp. 3839-3854 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Anguraj ◽  
A. Vinodkumar ◽  
K. Malar

In this paper, we study the existence, uniqueness, stability through continuous dependence on initial conditions and Hyers-Ulam-Rassias stability results for random impulsive fractional pantograph differential systems by relaxing the linear growth conditions. Finally examples are given to illustrate the applications of the abstract results.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 1395-1413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Beck ◽  
Miroslav Bulíček ◽  
Erika Maringová

We study the minimization of convex, variational integrals of linear growth among all functions in the Sobolev space W1,1 with prescribed boundary values (or its equivalent formulation as a boundary value problem for a degenerately elliptic Euler–Lagrange equation). Due to insufficient compactness properties of these Dirichlet classes, the existence of solutions does not follow in a standard way by the direct method in the calculus of variations and in fact might fail, as it is well-known already for the non-parametric minimal surface problem. Assuming radial structure, we establish a necessary and sufficient condition on the integrand such that the Dirichlet problem is in general solvable, in the sense that a Lipschitz solution exists for any regular domain and all prescribed regular boundary values, via the construction of appropriate barrier functions in the tradition of Serrin’s paper [J. Serrin, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., Ser. A 264 (1969) 413–496].


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