List of results that are fundamentally different to the local case and Literature on Nonlocal Equations: Difference between pages

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In this page we collect some results in nonlocal equations that contradict the intuition built in analogy with the local case.
== 2011 ==


The list should be continuously expanding. Please help by editing it.
{{Citation | last1=Barles | first1=Guy | last2=Chasseigne | first2=Emmanuel | last3=Imbert | first3=Cyril | title=Hölder continuity of solutions of second-order non-linear elliptic integro-differential equations | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4171/JEMS/242 | doi=10.4171/JEMS/242 | year=2011 | journal=Journal of the European Mathematical Society (JEMS) | issn=1435-9855 | volume=13 | issue=1 | pages=1–26}}


=== Traveling fronts in Fisher-KPP equations with fractional diffusion have exponential speed ===
{{Citation | last3=Rosado | first3=Jesus | last2=Laurent | first2=Thomas | last1=Bertozzi | first1=Andrea | title=Lp theory for the multidimensional aggregation equation | doi=10.1002/cpa.20334 | year=2011 | journal=[[Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics]] | issn=0010-3640 | volume=64 | issue=1 | pages=45–83}}
Let us consider the reaction diffusion equation
\[ u_t + (-\Delta)^s u = f(u), \]
with a Fisher-KPP type of nonlinearity (for example $f(u) = u(1-u)$). In the local diffusion case, the stable state $u=1$ invades the unstable state $u=0$ at a constant speed. In the nonlocal case (any $s<1$), the invasion holds at an exponential rate.


The explanation of the difference can be understood intuitively from the fact that the fat tails in the fractional heat kernels make diffusion happen at a much faster rate <ref name="CR"/><ref name="CR2"/>.
== 2010 ==


=== The optimal regularity for the fractional obstacle problem exceeds the scaling of the equation ===
{{Citation | last1=Biler | first1=Piotr | last2=Monneau | first2=Régis | last3=Karch | first3=Grzegorz | title=Nonlinear Diffusion of Dislocation Density and Self-Similar Solutions | doi=10.1007/s00220-009-0855-8 | year=2009 | journal=Communications in Mathematical Physics | issn=0010-3616 | volume=294 | issue=1 | pages=145–168}}
Given a function $\varphi$, the obstacle problem consists in the solution to an equation of the form
\[ \min((-\Delta)^s u , u-\varphi) = 0.\]


If $\varphi$ is smooth enough, the solution $u$ to the obstacle problem will be $C^{1,s}$ and no better. There is a big difference between the case $s=1$ and $s<1$ which makes the proof fundamentally different. In the classical case $s=1$, the optimal regularity matches the scaling of the equation. The classical proof of optimal regularity is to show an upper bound in the separation of $u$ from the obstacle in the unit ball and then just scale it. In the fractional case $s<1$, this method only gives $C^{2s}$ regularity, which matches the scaling of the equation. It is somewhat surprising that a better regularity result holds and it requires a different method for the proof.
== 2009==


The intuitive explanation is that $(-\Delta)^s u$ satisfies an extra elliptic equation in terms of its Laplacian to the power $1-s$, and that equation provides the extra regularity <ref name="S"/>.
{{Citation | last1=Barlow | first1=Martin T. | last2=Bass | first2=Richard F. | last3=Chen | first3=Zhen-Qing | last4=Kassmann | first4=Moritz | title=Non-local Dirichlet forms and symmetric jump processes | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-08-04544-3 | doi=10.1090/S0002-9947-08-04544-3 | year=2009 | journal=[[Transactions of the American Mathematical Society]] | issn=0002-9947 | volume=361 | issue=4 | pages=1963–1999}}


=== Solutions to nonlocal elliptic equations can have interior maximums ===
<ref name="K">{{Citation | last1=Kassmann | first1=Moritz | title=A priori estimates for integro-differential operators with measurable kernels | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00526-008-0173-6 | doi=10.1007/s00526-008-0173-6 | year=2009 | journal=Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations | issn=0944-2669 | volume=34 | issue=1 | pages=1–21}}</ref>


Solutions to linear (and nonlinear) integro-differential equations satisfy a ''nonlocal'' maximum principle: they cannot have a ''global'' maximum or minumum in the interior of the domain of the equation. Local extrema are possible.
== 2008 ==


This is related to the fact that Dirichlet boundary conditions have to be given in the whole complement of the Domain and not only on its boundary. It is also related to the failure in general of the classical [[Harnack inequality]] unless the positivity of the function is assumed in the full space <ref name="K"/>.
{{Citation | last1=Barles | first1=G. | last2=Chasseigne | first2=Emmanuel | last3=Imbert | first3=Cyril | title=On the Dirichlet problem for second-order elliptic integro-differential equations | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1512/iumj.2008.57.3315 | doi=10.1512/iumj.2008.57.3315 | year=2008 | journal=Indiana University Mathematics Journal | issn=0022-2518 | volume=57 | issue=1 | pages=213–246}}


In fact, any function $f\in C^k(\overline{B_1})$ can by approximated with a solution to $(-\Delta)^su$ in $B_1$ that vanishes outside a compact set <ref name="dipierro2014all" />. That is, s-harmonic functions are dense in $C^k_{loc}$. This is clearly in contrast with the rigidity of harmonic functions, and is a purely nonlocal feature.
{{Citation | last1=Barles | first1=Guy | last2=Imbert | first2=Cyril | title=Second-order elliptic integro-differential equations: viscosity solutions' theory revisited | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anihpc.2007.02.007 | doi=10.1016/j.anihpc.2007.02.007 | year=2008 | journal=Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré. Analyse Non Linéaire | issn=0294-1449 | volume=25 | issue=3 | pages=567–585}}


=== Boundary regularity of solutions is different from the interior ===
{{Citation | last1=Caffarelli | first1=Luis | last2=Salsa | first2=Sandro | last3=Silvestre | first3=Luis | title=Regularity estimates for the solution and the free boundary of the obstacle problem for the fractional Laplacian | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00222-007-0086-6 | doi=10.1007/s00222-007-0086-6 | year=2008 | journal=[[Inventiones Mathematicae]] | issn=0020-9910 | volume=171 | issue=2 | pages=425–461}}


For second order equations, the boundary regularity of solutions to $\Delta u=0$ is the same as in the interior. For example, a solution to $\Delta u=0$ in $B_1^+$, with $u=0$ in $\{x_n=0\}$, can be extended (by odd reflection) to a solution of $\Delta u=0$ in $B_1$. Thus, in this case the boundary regularity of $u$ just follows from the interior regularity --one has $u\in C^\infty(\overline{B_{1/2}^+})$.
== 2007 ==


In a general smooth domain $\Omega$ one can flatten the boundary and repeat the previous argument to get that $u\in C^\infty(\overline\Omega)$.
{{Citation | last1=Caffarelli | first1=Luis | last2=Silvestre | first2=Luis | title=An extension problem related to the fractional Laplacian | url=http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/10.1080/03605300600987306 | doi=10.1080/03605300600987306 | year=2007 | journal=Communications in Partial Differential Equations | issn=0360-5302 | volume=32 | issue=7 | pages=1245–1260}}


This is not the case for nonlocal equations. Indeed, the function $u(x)=(x_+)^s$ satisfies $(-\Delta)^su=0$ in $(0,\infty)$, and $u=0$ in $(-\infty,0)$. However, $u$ is not even Lipschitz up to the boundary, while all solutions are $C^\infty$ in the interior. This is related to the fact that the odd reflection of $u$ is not anymore a solution to the same equation.
== 2005 ==


More generally, solutions to $(-\Delta)^su=f$ in $\Omega$, with $u=0$ in $\mathbb R^n\setminus\Omega$, are smooth in the interior of $\Omega$, but not up to the boundary. The optimal Holder regularity is $u\in C^s(\overline\Omega)$. See [[boundary regularity for integro-differential equations]] for more details.
{{Citation | last1=Bass | first1=Richard F. | last2=Kassmann | first2=Moritz | title=Harnack inequalities for non-local operators of variable order | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-04-03549-4 | doi=10.1090/S0002-9947-04-03549-4 | year=2005 | journal=[[Transactions of the American Mathematical Society]] | issn=0002-9947 | volume=357 | issue=2 | pages=837–850}}


=== For some equations, the weak Harnack inequality may hold while the full [[Harnack inequality]] does not ===
== 2002 ==


The weak Harnack inequality relates the minimum of a positive supersolution to an elliptic equation to its $L^p$ norm. It is an important step used to derive [[Hölder estimates]] and also the usual [[Harnack inequality]]. However, there are examples of non local elliptic equation for which the weak Harnack inequality and Hölder estimates hold, whereas the classical Harnack inequality does not. There is a discussion about this fact in an article by Moritz Kassmann, Marcus Rang and Russell Schwab <ref name="rang2013h" />.
{{Citation | last1=Bass | first1=Richard F. | last2=Levin | first2=David A. | title=Harnack inequalities for jump processes | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016378210944 | doi=10.1023/A:1016378210944 | year=2002 | journal=Potential Analysis. An International Journal Devoted to the Interactions between Potential Theory, Probability Theory, Geometry and Functional Analysis | issn=0926-2601 | volume=17 | issue=4 | pages=375–388}}
 
=== Solutions to elliptic linear and translation invariant equations may not be smooth ===
 
For second order equations, any solution to an elliptic linear and translation invariant equation $Lu=f$ in $\Omega$ is smooth in the interior whenever $f$ is smooth. For second order equations, $L$ must be of the form $Lu=a_{ij}\partial_{ij}u$, and hence after an affine change of variables it is just the Laplacian $\Delta$.
 
For nonlocal equations, solutions to $Lu=f$ in $\Omega$, with $f$ smooth, may not be smooth inside $\Omega$, even if $L$ is an elliptic linear and translation invariant operator like
\[Lu(x)=\int_{\mathbb R^n}\bigl(u(x+y)-u(x)\bigr)K(y)dy,\]
with $K(y)=K(-y)$ and satisfying
\[\frac{\lambda}{|y|^{n+2s}}\leq K(y)\leq \frac{\Lambda}{|y|^{n+2s}}.\]
It was proved in <ref name="Serra2" /> that there exist a solution to $Lu=0$ in $B_1$, with $u\in L^\infty(\R^n)$, which is not $C^{2s+\epsilon}(B_{1/2})$ for any $\epsilon>0$. The counterexample can be constructed even in dimension 1, and it is very related to the regularity of the kernel $K$.
 
Related to this, it was shown in <ref name="Ros-Valdinoci" /> that there is a $C^\infty$ domain $\Omega$ and an operator of the form
\[Lu(x)=\int_{\mathbb R^n}\bigl(u(x+y)-u(x)\bigr)\frac{a(y/|y|)}{|y|^{n+2s}}\,dy,\]
for which the solution to $Lu=1$ in $\Omega$, $u=0$ in $\mathbb R^n\setminus\Omega$, is not $C^{3s+\epsilon}$ inside $\Omega$ for any $\epsilon>0$. See the survey <ref name="Ros-survey" /> for more details.
 
 
=== Viscosity solutions can be evaluated at points ===
 
The concept of [[viscosity solutions]] is developed in order to make sense of an elliptic equation even for continuous functions for which the equation cannot be evaluated classically at points. The idea is to use test functions whose graphs are tangent to the graphs of the weak solution at some point, and then evaluate the equation on that test function. The ellipticity property tells us that the value of the equation for that test function at the point of contact must have certain sign, and this is the condition that a viscosity solution fulfill.
 
It turns out that for a large class of [[fully nonlinear integro-differential equations]], every time a viscosity solution can be touched by a smooth test function at a point, then the equation can be evaluated classically for '''the original function''' at that point <ref name="CS"/>.
 
=== Viscosity solutions to fully nonlinear integro-differential equations can be approximated with classical solutions ===
It is a very classical trick that if we have a weak solution to a linear PDE with constant coefficients, we can approximate it with a smooth solution via a simple mollification. For nonlinear equations this trick is no longer available and we are always forced to deal with the technical difficulties of viscosity solutions. This is an apparent difficulty for example when proving [[regularity estimates]], since in general we cannot derive them an a priori estimate for a classical solution. On the other hand, [[viscosity solutions]] to [[fully nonlinear integro-differential equations]] can be approximated by $C^2$ solutions to approximate equations <ref name="CS3"/>.
 
This procedure can also be carried out to approximate viscosity solutions to fully nonlinear elliptic equations with smooth solutions of an approximate equation. However, the approximated equation is integro-differential <ref name="CS4"/>.
 
=== Improved differentiability of solutions to integro-differential equations in divergence form ===
 
A classical theorem asserts that solution to uniformly elliptic equations in divergence form
\[ \mathrm{div} \, ( A(x) \nabla u) = 0,\]
where $\lambda I \leq A(x) \leq \Lambda I$ belong to the space $W^{1,2+\varepsilon}$ for some $\varepsilon > 0$. This is a nontrivial result, since the variational formulation of the problem only gives us a solution in $W^{1,2}$. The result provides an improvement in the integrability of $|\nabla u|$ from $L^2$ to $L^{2+\varepsilon}$.
 
The fractional version of the equation consists in a function $u$ so that
\[ \int (u(x)-u(y)) (\eta(x)-\eta(y)) K(x,y) \, dx dy = 0,\]
for all compactly supported, smooth enough, functions $\eta$. It turns out that under the uniform ellipticity assumption $\lambda |x-y|^{-d-2s} \leq K(x,y) \leq \Lambda |x-y|^{-d-2s}$, the solution $u$ turns out to belong to the space $W^{s+\varepsilon,2+\varepsilon}$ <ref name="kuusi2015"/>. The surprising part of the result is that there is an improvement of differentiability. Not only is the power of integrability improved from $2$ to $2+\varepsilon$, but also the order of differentiability is improved from $s$ to $s+\varepsilon$.
 
== References ==
{{reflist|refs=
<ref name="CR">{{Citation | last1=Cabré | first1=Xavier | last2=Roquejoffre | first2=Jean-Michel | title=Propagation de fronts dans les équations de Fisher-KPP avec diffusion fractionnaire | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.crma.2009.10.012 | doi=10.1016/j.crma.2009.10.012 | year=2009 | journal=Comptes Rendus Mathématique. Académie des Sciences. Paris | issn=1631-073X | volume=347 | issue=23 | pages=1361–1366}}</ref>
<ref name="CR2">{{Citation | last1=Cabré | first1=Xavier | last2=Roquejoffre | first2=Jean-Michel | title=The influence of fractional diffusion in Fisher-KPP equations | url=http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.6072 | year=to appear | journal=Comm. Math. Phys.}}</ref>
<ref name="S">{{Citation | last1=Silvestre | first1=Luis | title=Regularity of the obstacle problem for a fractional power of the Laplace operator | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpa.20153 | doi=10.1002/cpa.20153 | year=2007 | journal=[[Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics]] | issn=0010-3640 | volume=60 | issue=1 | pages=67–112}}</ref>
<ref name="K">{{Citation | last1=Kassmann | first1=Moritz | title=The classical Harnack inequality fails for non-local operators | year=Preprint}}</ref>
<ref name="CS">{{Citation | last1=Caffarelli | first1=Luis | last2=Silvestre | first2=Luis | title=Regularity theory for fully nonlinear integro-differential equations | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpa.20274 | doi=10.1002/cpa.20274 | year=2009 | journal=[[Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics]] | issn=0010-3640 | volume=62 | issue=5 | pages=597–638}}</ref>
<ref name="CS3">{{Citation | last1=Caffarelli | first1=Luis | last2=Silvestre | first2=Luis | title=The Evans-Krylov theorem for non local fully non linear equations | year=to appear | journal=[[Annals of Mathematics]] | issn=0003-486X}}</ref>
<ref name="CS4">{{Citation | last1=Caffarelli | first1=Luis | last2=Silvestre | first2=Luis | title=Nonlinear partial differential equations and related topics | publisher=[[American Mathematical Society]] | location=Providence, R.I. | series=Amer. Math. Soc. Transl. Ser. 2 | year=2010 | volume=229 | chapter=Smooth approximations of solutions to nonconvex fully nonlinear elliptic equations | pages=67–85}}</ref>
<ref name="rang2013h">{{Citation | last1=Rang | first1= Marcus | last2=Kassmann | first2= Moritz | last3=Schwab | first3= Russell W | title=H$\backslash$" older Regularity For Integro-Differential Equations With Nonlinear Directional Dependence | journal=arXiv preprint arXiv:1306.0082}}</ref>
<ref name="dipierro2014all">{{Citation | last1=Dipierro | first1= Serena | last2=Savin | first2= Ovidiu | last3=Valdinoci | first3= Enrico | title=All functions are locally $s$-harmonic up to a small error | journal=arXiv preprint arXiv:1404.3652}}</ref>
<ref name="Serra2">{{Citation | last1=Serra | first1= Joaquim | title=$C^{2s+\alpha}$ regularity for concave nonlocal fully nonlinear elliptic equations with rough kernels | journal=arXiv preprint}}</ref>
<ref name="Ros-Valdinoci">{{Citation | last1=Ros-Oton | first1= Xavier | last2=Valdinoci | first2= Enrico | title=The Dirichlet problem for nonlocal operators with singular kernels: convex and nonconvex domains | journal=arXiv preprint}}</ref>
<ref name="Ros-survey">{{Citation | last1=Ros-Oton | first1= Xavier | title=Nonlocal elliptic equations in bounded domains: a survey | journal=arXiv preprint}}</ref>
<ref name="kuusi2015">{{Citation | last1=Kuusi | first1= Tuomo | last2=Mingione | first2= Giuseppe | last3=Sire | first3= Yannick | title=Nonlocal self-improving properties | url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2140/apde.2015.8.57 | journal=Anal. PDE | issn=2157-5045 | year=2015 | volume=8 | pages=57--114 | doi=10.2140/apde.2015.8.57}}</ref>
}}

Revision as of 11:23, 22 January 2012

2011

Barles, Guy; Chasseigne, Emmanuel; Imbert, Cyril (2011), "Hölder continuity of solutions of second-order non-linear elliptic integro-differential equations", Journal of the European Mathematical Society (JEMS) 13 (1): 1–26, doi:10.4171/JEMS/242, ISSN 1435-9855, http://dx.doi.org/10.4171/JEMS/242 

Bertozzi, Andrea; Laurent, Thomas; Rosado, Jesus (2011), "Lp theory for the multidimensional aggregation equation", Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 64 (1): 45–83, doi:10.1002/cpa.20334, ISSN 0010-3640 

2010

Biler, Piotr; Monneau, Régis; Karch, Grzegorz (2009), "Nonlinear Diffusion of Dislocation Density and Self-Similar Solutions", Communications in Mathematical Physics 294 (1): 145–168, doi:10.1007/s00220-009-0855-8, ISSN 0010-3616 

2009

Barlow, Martin T.; Bass, Richard F.; Chen, Zhen-Qing; Kassmann, Moritz (2009), "Non-local Dirichlet forms and symmetric jump processes", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 361 (4): 1963–1999, doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-08-04544-3, ISSN 0002-9947, http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-08-04544-3 

[1]

2008

Barles, G.; Chasseigne, Emmanuel; Imbert, Cyril (2008), "On the Dirichlet problem for second-order elliptic integro-differential equations", Indiana University Mathematics Journal 57 (1): 213–246, doi:10.1512/iumj.2008.57.3315, ISSN 0022-2518, http://dx.doi.org/10.1512/iumj.2008.57.3315 

Barles, Guy; Imbert, Cyril (2008), "Second-order elliptic integro-differential equations: viscosity solutions' theory revisited", Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré. Analyse Non Linéaire 25 (3): 567–585, doi:10.1016/j.anihpc.2007.02.007, ISSN 0294-1449, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anihpc.2007.02.007 

Caffarelli, Luis; Salsa, Sandro; Silvestre, Luis (2008), "Regularity estimates for the solution and the free boundary of the obstacle problem for the fractional Laplacian", Inventiones Mathematicae 171 (2): 425–461, doi:10.1007/s00222-007-0086-6, ISSN 0020-9910, http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00222-007-0086-6 

2007

Caffarelli, Luis; Silvestre, Luis (2007), "An extension problem related to the fractional Laplacian", Communications in Partial Differential Equations 32 (7): 1245–1260, doi:10.1080/03605300600987306, ISSN 0360-5302, http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/10.1080/03605300600987306 

2005

Bass, Richard F.; Kassmann, Moritz (2005), "Harnack inequalities for non-local operators of variable order", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 357 (2): 837–850, doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-04-03549-4, ISSN 0002-9947, http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-04-03549-4 

2002

Bass, Richard F.; Levin, David A. (2002), "Harnack inequalities for jump processes", Potential Analysis. An International Journal Devoted to the Interactions between Potential Theory, Probability Theory, Geometry and Functional Analysis 17 (4): 375–388, doi:10.1023/A:1016378210944, ISSN 0926-2601, http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016378210944 

  1. Kassmann, Moritz (2009), "A priori estimates for integro-differential operators with measurable kernels", Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations 34 (1): 1–21, doi:10.1007/s00526-008-0173-6, ISSN 0944-2669, http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00526-008-0173-6