Questions tagged [sobolev-spaces]

For questions about or related to Sobolev spaces, which are function spaces equipped with a norm that controls both a function and its weak derivatives in some Lebesgue space.

Sobolev spaces are function spaces generalizing the Lebesgue spaces. Whereas elements of Lebesgue spaces have certain integrability condition imposed on them, derivatives of functions in a Sobolev space are also required to be sufficiently integrable: that is, we require all (weak) partial derivatives of the function up to a certain order belong to a certain fixed Lebesgue space.

In more detail, let $U \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n$ be an open set. A weak $\alpha$th partial derivative $D^\alpha f$ of $f$ is a function $g\in L^1_{\mathrm{loc}}(U)$ such that $$\int_U f D^\alpha \phi \, dx = (-1)^{|\alpha|} \int g\phi \, dx$$ for each compactly supported smooth function $\phi \in C^\infty_c(U)$. the Sobolev space $W^{k, p}(U)$ consists of those functions $f\in L^p(U)$ such that for every multi-index $\alpha$ of length at most $k$, every weak partial derivative $D^{\alpha}f$ exists and is an element of $L^p$. The Sobolev spaces are equipped with norms defined by

$$\|u\|_{W^{k,p}(U)} = \begin{cases} \left( \sum_{|\alpha| \le k} \|D^{\alpha} u\|_{L^p(U)}^p \right)^{1/p} & p < \infty, \\ \max_{|\alpha| \le k} \|D^{\alpha}\|_{L^{\infty}(U)} &p=\infty .\end{cases}$$

$(W^{k,p}(U),\|\cdot\|_{W^{k,p}(U)})$ are Banach spaces for each $k\in\mathbb N$, and each $p\in[1,\infty]$. The norms measure both the size and the regularity of a function.

The basic fundamental result of Sobolev spaces is the Sobolev embedding theorem. In words, it says that (1) if $kp<n$, having $k$ weak derivatives in $L^p$ places your function in a better Lebesgue space $L^{p^*}$, where $\frac1{p^*} = \frac1p - \frac kn$, and (2) if $kp>n$, then your function is not only in $L^\infty$ but also has a continuous representative in some space of Hölder continuous functions. In particular, sufficiently many weak derivatives means that your function is in fact classically differentiable.

Reference: Sobolev space.

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Implication for a Sobolev function

Suppose $f\in H^2(\mathbb{R})$ with $\lVert f\rVert_{H^1}<\varepsilon$. Does this imply that $f\in C^1(\mathbb{R})$? I know that for open and bounded $\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}$, one can embed $H^2(\Omega)$ into $C^1(\Omega)$. But I guess this is not…
Salamo
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Gagliardo–Nirenberg–Sobolev inequality notations

I was looking up the Gagliardo–Nirenberg–Sobolev inequality. In its formulation \begin{equation} \|u\|_{L^{p^*}(\mathbf{R}^n)}\leq C \|Du\|_{L^{p}(\mathbf{R}^n)}. \end{equation} I didn't really understand what $Du$ was. Is it the gradient of $u$?…
roi_saumon
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Weak convergence and tensors

Let: $\Omega$ a bounded domain of $\mathbb{R}^d$ with a Lipshitz boundary $\partial\Omega =\Gamma_1 \cup\Gamma_2\cup\Gamma_3.$ $S_{d}$ is the space of second order symetric tensors on $\mathbb{R}^d…
jzz
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$g=(g_1,...,g_N)$ $Q$ periodic implies $\int_Q \operatorname{div} g=0$?

Let $g_i:\mathbb{R}^N\to\mathbb{R}$ ($i=1,...N$) with $g_i\in W^{1,\infty}(\mathbb{R}^N)$ and define $g=(g_1,...,g_N)$. Let $G=\operatorname{div}g$, where $\operatorname{div}g=\frac{\partial g_1}{\partial x_1}+...+\frac{\partial g_N}{\partial x_N}$.…
Tomás
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Weak star convergence problem

let $\Omega$ be a bounded domain of $\mathbf{R}^n$ with a smooth boundary $\Gamma$. $u_n:\Omega\times[0,T]\rightarrow \mathbf{R}$ $ a\left(.,.\right):H^1_0\left(\mathbf{R}\right)\times H^1_0\left(\mathbf{R}\right)\rightarrow \mathbf{R}$ a form which…
sd19
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If $v \in W^{1,\infty}\left([0,T];X\right)$ and $\|u\|_V\leq \|v\|_X$, do we have $u\in W^{1,\infty}\left([0,T];V\right)$?

Let $V, X$ be two Banach spaces, and $v:[0,T]\rightarrow X ,\ u:[0,T]\rightarrow V .$ if $v \in W^{1,\infty}\left([0,T];X\right)$ and we have this relation $$\|u\|_V\leq \|v\|_X,$$ Is there a result which says that$$u\in…
sd19
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Show that the function belongs to Sobolev space

Suppose that we have $$\Omega =\{x\in R^2 | \ \|x\|_2 \le 1 \}$$ I need to show that for any $\alpha>0$, $f(x)=\|x\|^{\alpha}_2$ belongs to the Sobolev space $H^1(\Omega)$ where $$f(x)=\sqrt{(x^2+y^2)^{\alpha}}.$$ Determine the range of $\alpha$…
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Sobolev spaces $\sin x\in W^{1,p}_0$ but $\sin x\notin W^{2,p}_0$ when $x\in (0,\pi)$

Proof that $\sin x\in W^{1,p}_0$, but $\sin x\notin W^{2,p}_0$. I got the first question, but have no idea how to proof in general that the function $u(x)\notin W^{2,p}_0$? Please give me some ideas. Put $$\begin{equation*} u^{\delta}(x) = …
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Sobolev and distribution

If $u \in L^{p}$ and continuous. And if $u' \in L^{p}$ (derivation for distribution) and continuous then $u$ is $C^{1}$ ? EDIT : $L^{p}(\Omega)$ with $\Omega$ a open. Thanks and regards.
user347910
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Soboleve's and Gagliardo Inequality

i am not understanding how he used Holder's inequality to further steps can some explain me how he got (1) and (2)
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Is $H^{1}(\Omega)$ defined by $\left\{u \in L^{2}(\Omega) | \nabla u \in L^{2}(\Omega)^{d}, u=0 \text { on } \partial \Omega\right\}$

I can't see the difference between these two Sobolev spaces: $H^{1}(\Omega):=\left\{u \in L^{2}(\Omega) | \nabla u \in L^{2}(\Omega)^{d}, u=0 \text { on } \partial \Omega\right\}$ and $H_{0}^{1}(\Omega)=\left\{v \in H^{1}(\Omega) | v_{| \partial…
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Integral of a weak derivative is continuous?

I am having some trouble proving the following. Let $I \subset \mathbb{R}$ and consider $u \in H^1(I)$. Fix some point $y_0 \in I$, and define $$ \bar{u}(x) := \int_{y_0}^x u'~dt, $$ then $\bar{u}(x)$ is continuous over $\bar{I}$. This might seem…
D666
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Is a $W^{1,\infty}$ function a continuous function?

Let consider a function $f\in W^{1,\infty}([a,b];\mathbb{R}^n)$. Somebody can suggest me a reference where I could confirm if $f$ is a continuous function, due to $f \in W^{1,\infty}([a,b];\mathbb{R}^n)$? Thank you very much! Ana
Ana
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A density problem in Sobolev space?

For $ k,p \in \mathbb{N} $, denote $ k $ order classical Sobolev space on $ (0,2\pi) $ by $ H^k(0,2\pi) $ and define \begin{equation*} \mathcal{H}^{k+p}_0:= \{ \varphi \in H^{k+p}(0,2\pi): \varphi(0) = \cdots = \varphi^{(p-1)}(0) = 0…
Yidong Luo
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Dual of Sobolev space $H^{s}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ Taylor Michael.

Why the dual of $H^{s}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is $H^{-s}(\mathbb{R})$? I know that dual of $H^{s}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is $\left\{T:H^{s}(\mathbb{R}^n)\to \mathbb{C}:T \text{ bounded and linear functional} \right\}$ Is it because $\Lambda^{-s}\Lambda^{s}u=u$ and…
eraldcoil
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