Basic Theory of Differential Equations With Linear
Basic Theory of Differential Equations With Linear
Basic Theory of Differential Equations With Linear
1 Introduction
In this paper, we discuss the following differential equations with linear perturbations of
second type on time scales (in short DETS):
[u(t) – f (t, u(t))] = g(t, u(t)), t ∈ J,
(1)
u(t0 ) = u0 ,
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Zhao et al. Boundary Value Problems (2019) 2019:183 Page 2 of 13
2 Existence result
In this section, we discuss the existence results for DETS (1). We place DETS (1) in the
space Crd (J, R) of rd-continuous functions defined on J. · denotes a supremum norm
in Crd (J, R) by
u = supu(t).
t∈J
Clearly Crd (J, R) is a Banach algebra with respect to the above norm. L1 (J, R) denotes the
space of Lebesgue -integrable functions on J equipped with the norm · L1 defined by
t0 +a
uL1 = u(s)s.
t0
Some definitions and lemmas that will be used in our main results are given in what
follows.
Tu – Tv ≤ ϕ u – v
for all u, v ∈ P. The function ϕ is called a D-function of Q on P. If ϕ(t) = lt, l > 0, then T
is called Lipschitz with the Lipschitz constant l. In particular, if l < 1, then T is called a
contraction on X with the contraction constant l. Furthermore, if ϕ(t) < t for t > 0, then T
is called nonlinear D-contraction and the function ϕ is called D-function of T on X.
Zhao et al. Boundary Value Problems (2019) 2019:183 Page 3 of 13
The details of different types of contractions appear in the monographs of Dhage [16]
and Granas and Dugundji [17]. There do exist D-functions, and the commonly used D-
t
functions are ϕ(t) = lt and ϕ(t) = 1+t . These D-functions have been widely used in the
theory of nonlinear differential and integral equations for proving the existence results
via fixed point methods.
Another notion that we need in the sequel is the following definition.
Definition 2.2 ([12]) An operator T on a Banach space P mapping into itself is called
compact if T(P) is a relatively compact subset of P. T is called totally bounded if, for any
bounded subset Q of P, T(Q) is a relatively compact subset of P. If T is continuous and
totally bounded, then it is called completely continuous on P.
The following fixed point theorem in Banach algebra due to Dhage [16] is useful in the
proofs of our main results.
Lemma 2.1 ([16]) Let Q be a closed convex and bounded subset of the Banach space P,
and let A : P → P and B : Q → P be two operators such that
(a) A is a nonlinear D-contraction,
(b) B is compact and continuous, and
(c) u = Au + Bv for all v ∈ Q ⇒ u ∈ Q.
Then the operator equation Au + Bu = u has a solution in Q.
L|u – v|
f (t, u) – f (t, v) ≤
M + |u – v|
for all u ∈ R.
Lemma 2.2 Suppose that (A0 ) holds. Then, for any v ∈ L1 (J, R), the -differentiable func-
tion u is a solution of the DETS
u(t) – f t, u(t) = v(t), t ∈ J, (2)
and
u(t0 ) = u0 ∈ R, (3)
Proof Let u be a solution of problem (2) and (3). Applying -integral to (2) from t0 to t,
we obtain
t
u(t) – f t, u(t) – u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) = v(s)s,
t0
i.e.,
t
u(t) = u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + f t, u(t) + v(s)s, t ∈ J.
t0
u(t0 ) – f t0 , u(t0 ) = u0 – f (t0 , u0 ).
Since the map u → u–f (t, u) is increasing in R for t ∈ J, the map u → u–f (t0 , u) is injective
in R and u(t0 ) = u0 . Hence, (3) also holds.
Now we will give the following existence theorem for DETS (1).
Theorem 2.1 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Then DETS (1) has a solution defined on J.
S = u ∈ U|u ≤ N ,
Au(t) = f t, u(t) , t ∈ J, (6)
and
t
Bu(t) = u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + g s, u(s) s, t ∈ J. (7)
t0
Next, we prove that the operators A and B satisfy all the conditions of Lemma 2.1.
Zhao et al. Boundary Value Problems (2019) 2019:183 Page 5 of 13
Lu – v
Au – Av ≤
M + u – v
= Bu(t)
Bu ≤ u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + hL1
t
where p(t) = t0 h(s)s. Since the function p is continuous on compact J, it is uniformly
continuous. Hence, for ε > 0, there exists δ > 0 such that
|t1 – t2 | < δ ⇒ Bu(t1 ) – Bu(t2 ) < ε
for all t1 , t2 ∈ J and u ∈ S. This shows that B(S) is an equicontinuous set in U. Now the set
B(S) is a uniformly bounded and equicontinuous set in U, so it is compact by the Arzela–
Ascoli theorem. As a result, B is a complete continuous operator on S.
Next, we show that (c) of Lemma 2.1 is satisfied. Let u ∈ U and v ∈ S be arbitrary such
that u = Au + Bv. Then, by assumption (A1 ), we have
u(t) ≤ Au(t) + Bv(t)
t
= f t, u(t) + u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + g s, v(s) s
t0
t
≤ f t, u(t) – f (t, 0) + f (t, 0) + g s, v(s) s
t0
t
≤ u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + L + F0 + h(s)s
t0
≤ u0 – f (t0 , u0 ) + L + F0 + hL1 .
Theorem 3.1 Suppose that (A0 ) holds. Assume that there exist -differentiable functions
v, w such that
v(t) – f t, v(t) ≤ g t, v(t) , t ∈ J, (8)
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and
w(t) – f t, w(t) ≥ g t, w(t) , t ∈ J, (9)
one of the inequalities being strict. Then v(t0 ) < w(t0 ) implies
for all t ∈ J.
Proof Assume that inequality (9) is strict. Suppose that the claim is false. Then there exists
t1 ∈ J, t1 > t0 such that v(t1 ) = w(t1 ) and v(t) < w(t) for t0 ≤ t < t1 .
Define
V (t) = v(t) – f t, v(t) and W (t) = w(t) – f t, w(t)
for all t ∈ J. Then we obtain V (t1 ) = W (t1 ) and, by (A0 ), we have V (t) < W (t) for all t < t1 .
By V (t1 ) = W (t1 ), we get
V (t1 ) ≥ W (t1 )
g t1 , v(t1 ) ≥ V (t1 ) ≥ W (t1 ) > g t1 , w(t1 ) .
The next result is concerned with nonstrict DITS which needs a Lipschitz condition.
Theorem 3.2 Suppose that the conditions of Theorem 3.1 hold with inequalities (8) and
(9). Suppose that there exists a real number K > 0 such that
g(t, u1 ) – g(t, u2 ) ≤ K sup u1 (s) – f s, u1 (s) – u2 (s) – f s, u2 (s) , t∈J (11)
t0 ≤s≤t
for all u1 , u2 ∈ R with u1 ≥ u2 . Then v(t0 ) ≤ w(t0 ) implies v(t) ≤ w(t) for all t ∈ J.
wε (t) – f t, wε (t) = w(t) – f t, w(t) + εe2L(t–t0 ) ,
so that we get
wε (t) – f t, wε (t) > w(t) – f t, w(t) ⇒ wε (t) > w(t).
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Let Wε (t) = wε (t) – f (t, wε (t)) so that W (t) = w(t) – f (t, w(t)) for t ∈ J. By (9), we obtain
Wε (t) = W (t) + 2Kεe2L(t–t0 ) ≥ g t, w(t) + 2Lεe2L(t–t0 ) .
g t, wε (t) – g t, w(t) ≤ K sup Wε (s) – W (s) = Kεe2L(t–t0 )
t0 ≤s≤t
Wε (t) ≥ g t, wε (t) – Kεe2L(t–t0 ) + 2Kεe2L(t–t0 ) > g t, wε (t) ,
i.e.,
wε (t) – f t, wε (t) > g t, wε (t)
for all t ∈ J. Also, we get wε (t0 ) > w(t0 ) > v(t0 ). Hence, an application of Theorem 3.1 with
w = wε implies that v(t) < wε (t) for all t ∈ J. By the arbitrariness of ε > 0, taking the limits
as ε → 0, we have v(t) ≤ w(t) for all t ∈ J.
Definition 4.1 A solution r of DETS (1) is said to be maximal if, for any other solution u
to DETS (1), one has u(t) ≤ r(t) for all t ∈ J. Similarly, a solution ρ of DETS (1) is said to
be minimal if ρ(t) ≤ u(t) for all t ∈ J, where u is any solution of DETS (1) on J.
We discuss the case of maximal solution only. Similarly, the case of minimal solution can
be obtained with the same arguments with appropriate modifications. Given an arbitrarily
small real number ε > 0, discuss the following initial value problem of DETS:
[u(t) – f (t, u(t))] = g(t, u(t)) + ε, t ∈ J,
(12)
u(t0 ) = u0 + ε,
Theorem 4.1 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Then, for every small number ε > 0, DETS (12)
has a solution defined on J.
Proof The proof is similar to that of Theorem 2.1, and we omit the proofs.
Our main existence theorem for maximal solution for DETS (1) is as follows.
Theorem 4.2 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Then DETS (1) has a maximal solution de-
fined on J.
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for all t ∈ J and n ∈ N ∪ {0}, where r(t, εn ) defined on J is a solution of the DETS
[u(t) – f (t, u(t))] = g(t, u(t)) + εn , t ∈ J,
(13)
u(t0 ) = u0 + εn .
By Theorem 3.2, {r(t, εn )} is a decreasing sequence of positive real numbers, the limit
exists. We prove that the convergence in (14) is uniform on J. Next, we show that the
sequence {r(t, εn )} is equicontinuous in Crd (J, R). Let t1 , t2 ∈ J with t1 < t2 be arbitrary.
Then we have
r(t1 , εn ) – r(t2 , εn )
t1
= u0 + εn – f (t0 , u0 + εn ) + f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) + g s, r(s, εn ) s
t0
t1
+ εn s – u0 + εn – f (t0 , u0 + εn ) + f t2 , r(t2 , εn )
t0
t2 t2
+ g s, r(s, εn ) s + εn s
t0 t0
t1
≤ f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) – f t2 , r(t2 , εn ) +
g s, r(s, εn ) s
t0
t2 t1 t2
– g s, r(s, εn ) s + εn s – εn s
t0 t0 t0
t2 t2
= f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) – f t2 , r(t2 , εn ) +
g s, r(s, εn ) s + εn s
t1 t1
t2
≤ f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) – f t2 , r(t2 , εn ) + h(s)s + |t1 – t2 |εn
t1
≤ f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) – f t2 , r(t2 , εn ) + p(t1 ) – p(t2 ) + |t1 – t2 |εn ,
t
where p(t) = t0 h(s)s.
Since f is continuous on a compact set J × [–N, N], it is uniformly continuous there.
Hence,
f t1 , r(t1 , εn ) – f t2 , r(t2 , εn ) → 0 as t1 → t2
uniformly for all n ∈ N. Similarly, since the function p is continuous on a compact set J, it
is uniformly continuous and hence
p(t1 ) – p(t2 ) → 0 as t1 → t2 .
Zhao et al. Boundary Value Problems (2019) 2019:183 Page 10 of 13
Therefore, we obtain
r(t1 , εn ) – r(t2 , εn ) → 0 as t1 → t2
r(t, εn ) → r(t) as n → ∞
for all t ∈ J.
Next, we prove that the function r(t) is a solution of DETS (1) defined on J. Since r(t, εn )
is a solution of DETS (13), we get
t t
r(t, εn ) = u0 + εn – f (t0 , u0 + εn ) + f t, r(t, εn ) + g s, r(s, εn ) s + εn s (15)
t0 t0
for all t ∈ J. Thus, the function r is a solution of DETS (1) on J. Finally, from inequality
(13), it follows that x(t) ≤ r(t) for all t ∈ J. Hence, DETS (1) has a maximal solution on J.
Theorem 5.1 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Assume that there exists a -differentiable
function u such that
[x(t) – f (t, x(t))] ≤ g(t, x(t)), t ∈ J,
(16)
x(t0 ) ≤ u0 .
Then
Proof Let ε > 0 be arbitrarily small. From Theorem 4.2, r(t, ε) is a maximal solution of
DETS (12) and the limit
is uniform on J, and the function r is a maximal solution of DETS (1) on J. Hence, we have
[r(t, ε) – f (t, r(t, ε))] = g(t, r(t, ε)) + ε, t ∈ J,
r(t0 , ε) = u0 + ε.
Zhao et al. Boundary Value Problems (2019) 2019:183 Page 11 of 13
Now, we apply Theorem 3.2 to inequalities (16) and (19) and conclude that x(t) < r(t, ε)
for all t ∈ J. Thus, (18) implies that inequality (17) holds on J.
Theorem 5.2 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Assume that there exists a -differentiable
function u such that
[y(t) – f (t, y(t))] ≥ g(t, y(t)), t ∈ J,
y(t0 ) ≥ u0 .
Then
ρ(t) ≤ y(t)
Note that Theorem 5.1 is useful to prove the boundedness and uniqueness of the solu-
tions for DETS (1) on J. We have the following result.
Theorem 5.3 Suppose that (A0 )–(A2 ) hold. Assume that there exists a function G :
J × R+ → R+ such that
g(t, u1 ) – g(t, u2 ) ≤ G t, u1 – f (t, u1 ) – u2 – f (t, u2 ) , t∈J
for all u1 , u2 ∈ R with u1 ≥ u2 . If an identically zero function is the only solution of the
differential equation
m (t) = G t, m(t) , t ∈ J, m(t0 ) = 0, (20)
Proof From Theorem 2.1, DETS (1) has a solution defined on J. Suppose that there are
two solutions x1 and x2 of DETS (1) existing on J with x1 > x2 . Define m : J → R+ by
m(t) = x1 (t) – f t, x1 (t) – x2 (t) – f t, x2 (t) .
= g(t, x1 ) – g(t, x2 )
x1 x2
≤ G t, – = G t, m(t)
f (t, x1 ) f (t, x2 )
Now, we apply Theorem 5.1 with f (t, u) ≡ 0 to get that m(t) ≤ 0 for all t ∈ J, where an
identically zero function is the only solution of DETS (20). m(t) ≤ 0 is a contradiction with
m(t) > 0. Then we have x1 = x2 .
Remark 5.1 When f ≡ 0 and T = R in our results of this paper, we obtain the differential
inequalities and other related results given in Lakshmikantham and Leela [18] for the IVP
of ordinary nonlinear differential equation
u
(t) = g t, u(t) , t ∈ [t0 , t0 + a], u(t0 ) = u0 .
Remark 5.2 The main results in this paper extend and improve some well-known results
in [12].
6 Conclusion
In this paper, we have developed the theory of DETS (1). By the fixed point theorem in
Banach algebra due to Dhage, we have presented an existence theorem for DETS (1) under
D-Lipschitz conditions. We have also established some DITS for DETS (1) which are used
to investigate the existence of extremal solutions. The comparison principle on DETS (1)
has been given. Our results in this paper extend and improve some well-known results.
Acknowledgements
The authors sincerely thank the reviewers for their valuable suggestions and useful comments that have led to the
present improved version of the original manuscript.
Funding
This research is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (61703180, 61803176, 61877028,
61807015, 61773010), the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (ZR2019MF032, ZR2017BA010), the Project
of Shandong Province Higher Educational Science and Technology Program (J18KA230, J17KA157), and the Scientific
Research Foundation of University of Jinan (1008399, 160100101).
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
The authors declare that the study was realized in collaboration with the same responsibility. All authors read and
approved the final manuscript.
Author details
1
School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Jinan, Jinan, P.R. China. 2 School of Automation and Electrical
Engineering, Key Laboratory of Complex systems and Intelligent Computing in Universities of Shandong, Linyi University,
Linyi, P.R. China. 3 College of Mathematics and System Science, Shandong University of Science and Technology, Qingdao,
P.R. China.
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