
Comparison Principles for General Potential Theories and PDEs
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An examination of the symbiotic and productive relationship between fully nonlinear partial differential equations and generalized potential theories
In recent years, there has evolved a symbiotic and productive relationship between fully nonlinear partial differential equations and generalized potential theories. This book examines important aspects of this story. One main purpose is to prove comparison principles for nonlinear potential theories in Euclidian spaces straightforwardly from duality and monotonicity under the weakest possible notion of ellipticity. The book also shows how to deduce comparison principles for nonlinear differential operators, by marrying these two points of view, under the correspondence principle.
The authors explain that comparison principles are fundamental in both contexts, since they imply uniqueness for the Dirichlet problem. When combined with appropriate boundary geometries, yielding suitable barrier functions, they also give existence by Perron's method. There are many opportunities for cross-fertilization and synergy. In potential theory, one is given a constraint set of 2-jets that determines its subharmonic functions. The constraint set also determines a family of compatible differential operators. Because there are many such operators, potential theory strengthens and simplifies the operator theory. Conversely, the set of operators associated with the constraint can influence the potential theory.
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Preface
- Guide for the Reader
- I. A Comprehensive Introduction
- 1. A Comprehensive Introduction
- 1.1 The Potential Theory Setting
- 1.2 The Differential Operator Setting
- 1.3 The Correspondence Principle
- 1.4 Canonical Operators
- 1.5 Gradient-Free Operators
- 1.6 Operators Involving Gårding-Dirichlet Polynomials
- 1.7 General Potential-Theoretic Comparison Theorems
- 1.8 Limitations of the Method and Comparison with the Literature
- 1.9 Reflections on "Potential Theory versus Operator Theory"
- II. The Potential Theory Approach
- 2. Constant-Coefficient Constraint Sets and Their Subharmonics
- 3. Dirichlet Duality and F-Subharmonic Functions
- 4. Monotonicity Cones for Constant-Coefficient Subequations
- 4.1 The Maximal Monotonicity Cone Subequation
- 4.2 Product Monotonicity Cone Subequations
- 5. A Fundamental Family of Monotonicity Cone Subequations
- 5.1 Construction of the Fundamental Family
- 5.2 Nesting, Limit Cases, and Simplifying the Family of Cones
- 5.3 The Fundamental Nature of the Family of Monotonicity Cones
- 6. The Zero Maximum Principle for Dual Monotonicity Cones
- 7. Comparison Principles for Potential Theories with Sufficient Monotonicity
- 8. Comparison on Arbitrary Domains by Additional Monotonicity
- 9. Failure of Comparison with Insufficient Maximal Monotonicity
- 9.1 Finite R and Failure of Comparison on Large Domains
- 9.2 Failure of Comparison on Arbitrarily Small Domains
- 10. Special Cases: Reduced Constraint Sets
- 10.1 Pure Second Order
- 10.2 Gradient-Free
- 10.3 First Order and Pure First Order
- 10.4 Zero-Order-Free
- 10.5 Summary
- III. Marrying Potential Theory to Operator Theory via the Correspondence Principle
- 11. The Correspondence Principle for Compatible Operator-Subequation Pairs
- 11.1 Compatible Operator-Subequation Pairs and Topological Tameness
- 11.2 The Correspondence Principle for Compatible Pairs
- 11.3 A Structure Theorem Derived from Subequation Monotonicity
- 11.4 Canonical Operators for Subequations with Monotonicity
- 11.5 Lipschitz Regularity of Subequation Boundaries
- 11.6 Gårding-Dirichlet Operators
- 11.7 Subequation Branches
- IV. Applications to PDEs
- 12. Comparison Principles for Operators with Sufficient Monotonicity
- 12.1 Proper Elliptic Gradient-Free Operators
- 12.2 Degenerate Elliptic Operators with Strict Monotonicity in r
- 12.3 Proper Operators with Some Degree of Strict Ellipticity
- 12.4 From Linear Operators to Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman Operators
- 12.5 Proper Elliptic Operators with Directionality in the Gradient
- 12.6 Parabolic Operators
- Appendix
- A. Existence Holds and Uniqueness Implies Comparison
- B. Failure of Comparison on Small Balls: Radial Proof
- C. Equivalent Definitions of F-Subharmonic Functions
- D. Elementary Properties of F-Subharmonic Functions
- Bibliography
- Index
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