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1. According to the (PS) condition, there exiSts eo > 0 such that
IIdl(x)1I ;?: eo Fixing 0 < e < Min
= 0 for
V x e W\V:
H, ;i2; }, we obtain
IId(f + "'9)(x)1I ;?: eo -lIclg(x)II-IId
0 V x e W\V, if IIglb(U) < e. Thus the function F(x) = (f + cpg)(x) satisfies the (PS) condition and pOSSES ES the same critical points as J + 9 in W. Moreover, we have (Fe+" Fe_o) = (fo+o'/,-o). Using Thorn's isomorphism theorem,
where k = ind (f, E) .
136
Critical Point The<W!l
Since
H. (Fc+6.Fc_') '" H. (fc+ •• lc-')
'" H. (IC+6\/c-•. r'(c- 6») '" H.
(c(r).k-(r»).
and
H'
(Ic+.\/c-.) '" H' (e-(r» '" H'(E),
preserving the ring structure. there exist w"Wo •...• Wl E H·(E). t = GL(E). with dimw, > O. i = 1.2•... • t. such that w. UWoU",UWl # O. from which we obtain (Zo].(Z.] •... • (Zd E H.(Fc+o• Fc _') such that (Zo] < (Z.] < ... (Zd· Therefore there are at least l + 1 distinct critical points of F. and then. of 1 + g. in U. provided by Theorem 3.4. Thrthermore. if 1 + 9 is nondegenerate. tben F = 1 + 'Pg is also. Since H.(Fc Fc-o) '" H._k(E). we have at least 1:;':0 A(E) critical points. p~ovided by the Morse inequalities.
+6.
Remark 6.1. Theorems 6.1 and 6.2 were given by Marino Prodi (MaPI]. Theorem 6.3 was obtained by Reeken (Reel]. A special case of Theorem 6.4. in which M is assumed to be finite dimensional. is a version of a theorem under the name of Conley Zehnder by A. Weinstein (Wei2]. cf.(ChaI5].
6.2. Uhlenbeck'. Perturbation Method Lemma6.2. LetM be a G'-Fins/er manifold. and Jet I. g E G 1 (M.1ll. 1 ). Suppo6e that f is hounded below and that 9 ~ O. For e E (0.11. let = f + eg. Assume that (1) IIdgll is hounded on sets on which g i. hounded. (2) satisfies the (PS)c condition. for some c. Then the function h = g(c - J)-1 satisfies the (PS).-. condition and K,_l (h) = Kc(J'). where K.(f) = the critical set of 1 at JeveJ b.
r
r
Proof. By computation dh
= (c- J)-ldg + (c = (c - J)-'g(df
Thus
=.-'
h(xo) xo E K,-t{h) # { dh(xo) = 0
J)-'gdf
+ h- dg). 1
6. Perturbation on Crilic4I Mani/old6
137
I'(xo) = I(xo) + h(xo)-'g(xo) = c .,. { dJ'(xo) = dJ(xo) + h(xo)-'dg(xo) = (c -/(xo))2dh(xo) = 9 .,. Xo E Ke (I') . Suppose that {xi} is a sequence along which
h(xi)
--+
e-'
and dh(xi)
--+
9.
By the same algebraic computation, we have
I'(xi)
IW' (xi)11
--+
c and
= II(c-/(xi))'g(Xi)-' dh(xi) $
Ig (xi) h-' (xi)1
Since 0 $ 9(xi) $
IIdh (xi)11
+ (e - h(Xi)-') dg(xi)II
+ 0 (lIdg (xi)II)·
(~+
l)(c-/(xi» is bounded, provided by the fact that we obtain dJ'(xi) --+ 9. Again, using assumption (2), it follows the (PS),_. condition for the function h.
I is bounded from below. Combining this with assumption (I),
Corollary 6.2. Under the conditions of the above theorem, if, further, Ke(l') = 0 VEE (0, EoJ, then (I'O)e is a strong deformation retract of Ie. Proof. Since 9 ;:: 0 and eo > 0, (I'O)e C Ie. From the theorem,
there is therefore no critical value of h between EO' and +00. The (PS),_. condition for the function h II E E (O,EoJ, implies that (I'O)e = h _. is a strong deformation of Ie
= hoc.
'0
Definition 6.1. Let M be a Finsler manifold, and let I E C'(M,IlI.'). We say that I satisfies the e-deformation property, if (1) I(K(I)) is closed; (2) for any interval la, hJ C lit' on which I has no critical value, i.e., K (I) n I-I la, bJ = 0, there exist. a family of functions I' E C'(M,IlI.') with I' ;:: IV E E (O,lJ such that the level set (I'). is .. strong deformation retract of I. II e E (O,lJ, i.e., 3 'I' : 10,lJ x I. --+ I., satisfying (i) 'I' (0, . ) = id, (ii) '1'(1,/.) c (f')., and (iii) '1'(t, . ) 1(1'). = id(l').'
138
Critical Point
1'hwrlI
Theorem 6.5. (E-Minimax Principle) Let:F be a family of suboets of M, and let f E C'(M,JR') satisfy tbeE-
If (1) c is finite, (2) :F is invariant with respect to 1/' liE E (O,lJ where 11' is tbe strong deformation retract satisfying (i)-(iii) with any interval [a, bJ containing c as an interior point. Then c is a critical value of J. Proof. Suppose that c is not a critical value provided by the closeness of f(K(f», there exists 6 > such that K(f) n r'lc - 6,c + 6J = 0. Choosing Fo E :F such that Fo C fc+', we have if(l, Fo) C g_" but
°
f(x):5 r(x):5 c- 6 II x E 1/'(l,Fo) E:F. This is a contradiction.
Theorem 6.6. Let M be a C'-FinsJer manifold modeled on a separable Banach space with differentiable norms. Let f, 9 E C'(M, JR'), satisfy the following assumptions: '.,(1) f ~ -m > -00, 9 > and = f + eg satisfies tbe (PS) condition, lie > 0. (2) IIdg(x)1I is bounded on sets on which 9 is bounded.
° r
(3) UO<'';'o K(f') n (f<) 'la, bJ is compact for some 60 > 0. (4) a,b ¢ f(K(f». And II Xo E K(f) c r'(a,b), 3 a neighborhood U such that K(f') n U consists of a curve X(E), with x(O) = xo, E E 10,6J, and X(E) are nondegenerl1te (in the sense of Section 4, Chapter I) and of the fixed index. Then f. with handles, adjoined in a corresponding fashion to the critical points of f with values in (a, b), is 11 deformation retract of fb' The dimensions of the handles correspond to the dimensions of the indices at these critical points.
°
Proof. First, assume b < +00. Then 3 6 > such that a, b ¢ f'(K(f')) II e E 10,6]. We claim that (f<)-'la,bJnK(f') consists of all these families of curves
x(e). In fact, if not, then 3 Ej -+ 0, Xj E K(f'j) n (f'j)-'la,bJ; but x; do not lie on any families x(e) defined in (4). However, by assumption (3), x; -+ x' E K(f) n r'la, b). This contradicts assumption (4). Then Corollary 6.2 is applied: (I'). ~ f., (f')b ~ fb. Since the Morse handle body theorem for f' is known (Chapter I, Section 4)
•
(I'). u U h;(Dmj) ~ (I')b' j=1
6. Perturbation on CriIic4l Mani/old6
where h;(Dm;) denotes the attached handle, i = 1,2, ...
139 ,8.
We obtain
•
I. u U h; (Dm;) ~ I.· j""'. Second, if b = +00, then 3 bJ - +00 such that b; ¢ I(K'), and E; ! 0 with the following properties. (1) VEE lo,EJ)' bJ- .. bJ are not critical values of /" (2) V "'0 E KU') n U,)-lla,b;), it lies on the unique one parameter family of nondegenerate critical points of /' near the critical points of I. Then (1';).; can be retracted to (I'J).;_I with bandies corresponding to critical points of 1'; with values in (bJ_I,bj ). In addition, U';-I).;_I is a deformation retract of U'j ).j. The sequence of retractions gives the desired result for 1+00.
Remark 6.2. The material of this subsection is taken from K. Uhlenbeck IUhI2).
CHAPTER
III
Applications to Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Value Problems
Semilinear elliptic boundary value problems have attracted great interest in the applications of critical point theory because they are good models to deal with multiple solutions problems with respect to both results and methods. 1. Preliminaries
Let us turn to some notation and basic facts in the theory of partial differential equations. ) .•et !l C llI.n be a bounded open domain with smooth boundary 00. For a nonnegative integer vector Q' = (all' .. I an) we write
to denote the differential operator, with lal = a, + ... + an. Let V(!l) be the function space consisting of Coo functions with compact support in !l, and let V'(!l) be the dual of V(!l), i.e., the Schwartz distribution space. For each integer m ~ 0, we denote
cm(fi) = {u: fi ..... llI.' I {J"u is oontinuous on fi, lal with norm
lIuli m =
L
~ m},
su!'.l{J"u(x)l·
1D:I~m zEO
For p
~
I, and an integer m 2:: 0, we denote
W;'(!l)
= {u E LP(!l) I (J"u E LP(!l),
lal ~ m} ,
where V is the p-th power integrable Lebesgue space, and ential operator in the distribution sense, with norm
{J'"
is the differ-
141
1. Preliminaries
w;,(n) is called the Sobol•• space. In particular, if p = 2, Hm(n) stands for W2'(n). The closure of V(n) in the space W;,(n) (Hm(n) and C"'(i'l) o
_
is denoted by w;:,(n) (HO'(rl), CQ"(n) respectively). o
The dual space of W;:'(rl) (and HO'(n» is denoted by w,;m(rl) (and H-m(rl) resp.), where + ~ = 1. The following inequalities are applied very frequently.
*
Poincare inequality
,
,
(!olul" dx)' ~ c(n) (!olvul"dx)'
o
Vu E w!(n)
where Vu denotes the gradient of u, and C(rl) is a constant independent ofu. Sobolev inequality. Suppose that for I ~ p, r < 00 and integers t <: m <: 0, we have (I) If ~ ~+ then the embedding W:(rl) <-+ W;'(rl) is continuous. If the inequality ~ is replaced by a strict inequality <, then the embedding is compact. (2) If ~ then the embedding W:(rl) <-+ C"'(i'l) is continuous. If the inequality ~ is replaced by a strict inequality <, then the embedding is compact.
*
*
':m,
':m,
For a function f E C(i'l • lit' ,lit' ), suppose that there exist constants a, C > 0 such that If(x, t)1 ~ C (I + IW). Then the following nonlinear operator: u ~ f(x,u(x»
maps boundedly and continuously from £P(rl) to L'(n), with p = aq, for example, cf. [Berl]. The operator is called the Nem"tcJci operulor. Applying this result, in combination with the Sobolev inequality. we see tha.t the functional J(u) =
!o f(x, u(x)) dx
is well-defined and continuous on the Sobolev space HJ(n) if
2n
a<--
- n-2'
If we further assume that growth condition:
If:(x, t)1
f
E
c' (i'l x lit'. R')
~ C (1 + 111°)
with"
satisfies the following
~ : ~ ~,
142
Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Value Probknu
then the funct.ional J is C' on the space HJ(Il). with differential
(dJ(u).v) = Furthermore if IE
L
f.(.,.u(.,»v(.,)dx.
"v E HJ(Il).
C'(n x JR'.JR'). satisfies
1/:;(.,.t)1 ~ C(1 +IW)
with 0 S
n~2'
then J is C' on HJ(Il). with
rP J(u)(v. w) =
In I:a.,.
u(x»v(.,)w(.,) dx "v. wE HJ(Il).
As for the Laplacian -A defined on L'(Il). with domain D( -A) =
H2(1l)
n HJ{Il).
it is a self-adjoint operator. The operator -A can he
w:
o
extended from n W!(Il) to 0'(11). 1 < p < 00. continuously. It is known that ker(-A) = {9}. and that K = (_11.)-' maps 0'(11) int!> itself continuously. and is 8 compact operator. Also the operator K maps L'(Il) into HJ(Il). such that
The following boundary value prohlem will he considered: -Au = g(x ...(x)) in n { ..100 = O.
(1.1)
where the following growth condition on 9 E C(!! x JR'. 11.1 ) is assumed: (1.2)
Ig(x.t)1 S C(1
(and if n :s; 2,
Q
+ ItIO)
0
~ :~~.
ifn
has no restriction) for constants C,
Q
~3 > O. We say that
... E HJ(Il) is a weak solution of (1.1) if
L
[V... · Vv - g(x ....(.,))v(x)] dx = 0 "v E HJ(!1).
If we define the functional (1.3)
143
1. Preliminariu
where
G(x,t)
(1.4)
then J is
=
J.'
g(x,{)d{,
e 1 on HJ (0) with
(dJ(u),v) = klvu.vv-g(x,,,(x)).v(x)]dx VveHJ(O). This means that the differential equation (1.1) is just the Euler equation of the functional J and the weak solutions of (1.1) are critieal points of J, and conversely. Since it is well-known that weak solutions of (1.1) are classleal solutions of (1.1), if the function 9 is smooth enough (cf. IGiTIIl, it is enough to look for weak solutions of (1.1), i.e., the critieal points of J. The notion of sub- (or super- ) solutions of the equation (1.1) is also important. We say y e CO(O) n ern) (or a) is a sub- (or super- resp.) solution if
{
-Ay:5 g(x,y(x» in 0
(or - Aa
Yloo :5 0
aloo ~ 0).
~
g(x, a(x)) in 0
If furthermore y < a, then we say they are a pair of suI>- or supersolutions. They are ealled strict if they are not solutions. Fbr second order elliptic operators, (especially for -A) the maximum principle plays an important role in both qualitative and existence studies. Theorem (Maximum Principle). Suppose that" equation
(1.5)
e CO(O) satisJies the
-A" :5 0 in O.
If u attains a maximum M at a point of 0, then" '" M in O. Theorem. (Strong Maximum Principle) Suppose that" e COCO) satisfies (1.5). Suppose that u :5 M in 0, and" = M at a boundary point P. Assume that P Ii... on the boundary of a ball K 1 in D. If" is continuous in 0 U P and an outward directional derill8tive &u/Bn exists at P, then &u/Bn > 0 at P unless u '" M.
Corollary 1.1. The operator K = (_.0.)-1 is positive, in the sense that it map" nonnegative functions to nonnegative functions. Particularly, K : LP(O) -+ eJ(n) for p > i, maps nonnegative functions to the interior of the positive cone in eJ (n). For positive operators, we have the Krein-Rutman Theorem which asserts that the first eigenvalue (-A) is simple. More generally, we have
144
Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Value Problerru
Theorem. (Kat<>-Hess [KaRl]) Suppose that m E C(i"i), /Uld that there is a point Xo E f! such that m(xo) > O. Then the equation
-6u(x) = Am(x)u(x) { ul8ll = 0
xEf!, AER'
admits a principle eigenvalueA,(m) > 0, characterized by being the unique positive eigenvalue having a positive eigenfunction. Moreover, A, (m) has the following properties: (1) if>' E C is an eigenvalue with Re >. > 0, then Re >. 2: A,(m). (2) J.!,(m) := l/A, (m) is an eigenvalue of the operator K·(m·) : L2(f!) ~ L2(f!) with algebraic multiplicity 1. In the applications, sometimes we would consider the restriction J of J on a smaller Banach space CJ (n) , where J is defined in (1.3). The functional I may lose the (PS) condition (on CHn), even if J has on HHf!)). However, hy a bootstrap iteration, the following is proved in
[Cha3). Theorem 1.1. Under assumption (1.2) with a < ~, ifn > 2, suppose ~at 9 E C' , and that J satisfies the (PS) condition; then the functional I possesses the following properties: (1) I(K) is a closed subset.
(2) For each pair a < b, K n I-'(a, b) = 0 implies that 1. is a strong deformation retract of J"\Kb, where K is the critical set of J ( and also
1). Thus for any isolated Po E K, we have Corollary 1.2. c.(I,Po) = C.(J,Po) with integral coefficients.
Claim. For any open neighborhood U of Po, let V = U'ea' ~(t, U), where '1 is the negative gradient flow of J. We have c. (J,Po)
= H. (Jo n V, (Jo\{Po}) n V;Z) = H. = H.
(L, nv,.L,nv;z)
= C.
(3,+, n v';,_,V;z)
(I,Po) ,
using the Palais Theorem at the end of Chapter I, Section 1, where c = !(Po) and < > 0 is suitably small. 2. Superlinear Problems
The classification of the semilinear elliptic BVPs into snperlinear, asymptotical1y linear, and sublinear is very vague. Roughly speaking, it describes
2. Superlinear Pro6lems
145
the growth of the function g(x, u) with respective to u in (1.1). But sometimes g(x, u) is superlinear in one direction, but subUnear in the other, so that it is not easy to classify them very clearly. Nevertheless, we follow the customary notation in the literature. In the following, (1.2) is assumed (0 < ~, subcritical, 0 = ~ is called critical). Our first result in this section is tbe following.
Theorem 2.1. Assume that the functional J defined in (1.3) satisfies the (PS) condition on the space HJ(O), and that J is unbounded below. Moreover, if there exists a pair of strict suI>- and supersolutions of equation (1.1), then (1.1) po....... at least two distinct solutions. Before going into the proof, we recall a weD-known result (cf. Amann IAmal)) that if there is a pair of suI>- and super- solutions y < il of (1.1), then there is a solution Uo e C of (1.1). One asks whether we can characterize the solution by the corresponding functional J? Now we shall prove that J is bounded from helow on C x = C n cJ(Il), where C = {u E HJ(O) I y(x) ::; ,,(x) ::; il(x) a.e.}, and then attains its minimum, which is the variational characterization of tlQ. Applying Example 1 from Chapter I, Section 4, we obtain the critical groups of Uo: k=O
(2.1)
k~O,
if it is isolated. Lemma 2.1. Suppose that y < il is a pair of strict suI>- and supersolutions of (1.1). Then there is a point Uo E. CX which is a local minimum of the functional J = JlcJ(l!)" Moreover, if it is isolated, then (2.2) Proof. One may assume that y(x) Define a new function
_ g(x,~)
< Ii(x), without loss of generality.
{ g(x, Ii(x» II (-~il(x», = g(x, ~), g(x,y(x» V (-~y(x»,
>y(x) ::; ~ ::; Ii(x)
where a V b = max{a,b}, and a II b = min{a,b}. By definition,
C(Il X lII. 1 ) is bounded and satisfies: g(x,{) =
g(x,~)
for
y(x)::;
~::;
fi(x).
g(x,~)
E
146
Semi/in""r Elliptic Bounda'll Value Problems
Let
- {) G(x, Then
= J.{ 0 g(x, t) dt.
8 E el(n x Il'), and the functional
defined on HJ (0) is bounded from below and satisfies the (PS) condition. Hence there is a minimum Uo which satisfies
i.e., Uo satisfies the equation
-t.Uo = g(x, Uo) { UoIIll! = O. According to the lJ' regularity of solutions of elliptic BVP and the strong o _
ma.ximum principle, we see that Uo E ex, the interior of ex in the CJ(O) top";,logy. (See Remark 2.1 below.) However, flex = Jicx = flex; therefore Uo is a local minimum of f. (2.2) follows from Example 1, Chapter I, Section 4. Under condition (1.2) J is well-defined On HJ(O). Since eJ(n) is dense in Hl(O), Uo must be also a local minimum of J. In the case when it is isolated, (2.1) holds. o
Remark 2.1. We verify Uo E ex. Claim. Since!! is 8 strict sub-solution,
-t. (Uo -!!) (x) { Uo - !!11lI! ~ O.
~
0, but not identical to 0, in 0,
It follows from the strong maximum principle, that Uo > !h and (uo - !!)11lI! < 0, where t. is the outward normal derivative. Similarly, we have Uo < il, and t.(il- Uo)11lI! < O. Therefore Uo is an interior point of ex in eJ topology.
I..
Proof of Theorem 2.1. We already have a local minimum so that it suffices to find Mother critical point. Since J is assumed to be unbounded below, 3 U, E HJ(O) such that J(UI) < J(Uo). A weak version of a link (mountain pass) is easy to see. JIBB(....) ~ J(Uo)
max{J (Ul). J (Uo)) :5 J (uo).
for h > 0 small.
2. Superiinear Pmblenu
147
Exploiting Theorem 1.2 (or Remark 1.2) from Cbapter II, there exists a different critical point. We present an example for the application of Tbeorem 2.1. Assume tbat (g,) (1.2) with a < ~; (g.) 3 9 > 2 and M > 0 such that
9G(x, t) $ t g(x, t) "x E fI, for It I ~ M; (ga) "E
L~ (fI) is nonnegative, but not zero.
Theorem 2.2. Under assumptions (g,), (g.), and (ga), the equation (2.3)
{
-~u =
g(x,u) -" in fI
uloo =
0
possesses at least two solutions, i[g(x,t) ~ 0 "(x,t) E fI x 0, g(x, to) > 0 and g(x, 0) = O.
lit', 3 to>
The proof is just a veri6cation of Theorem 2.1. Lemma 2.2. Under lJSSumptions (gil and (go), [or any" E L"""(fI), the functional J(u) =
(2.4)
10 [~ll7ul' - G(x,u(x)) + "u(X)] dx
satisfies the (PS) condition on HJ(fI). Proof. Let {u.} be a Bequence along which IJ(".)/ $ C, and dJ(u.)
~
.
~
First, {".} is bounded. In fact, 3 C2 , C3 , C, > 0 sucb that
-1. ~ ~II"./l2 _ ~ 1.
C, ~ ~IIu.II2
G(x, ".(x»
dx
IUk(z}I2':M
-1"1' /1".11 - C2
".(x)g (x, ".(x)) dx -Ihl'
IUk(z)I2':M
~ G- ~) 11"./1' + ~ 10 (V"kV'U. - Ihl . /lu.II -
~
11".11 -
C.
9 (x, "') u.) dx
C3
G-~ -.) 11"./1'
+ ~ (dJ (u.), u.) - C"
wbere 11·11, 1·1 and (, ) stand for HJ norm, L~ norm, and tbe HJ(fI) inner product respectively. Since dJ(u.) ~ 9, l(dJ(".), u.)1 $ .11".11 if we choose 2e < ~ - ~, then IIu. /I is bounded.
148
Semilinear Elliptic Bounda'1l Val.., Problem8
Let P = or + 1, and consider the following maps:
Yen)
,(s,-)
where ~ + } = 1. j is a compact embedding, as is i'. Both (_~)-I and g(x,·) are continuous. The boundednes8 in HJ(O) of {Uk} implies a convergent subsequence (-~)-I·i' .g(·,Uk')' Since dJ (u",) =
(_~)-I . j ' . g(. Uk')
Uk' -
--+
8 in HJ,
finally, we obtain a convergent subsequence {Uk'}' Proof of Theorem 2.2. It suffices to verify (1) J is unbounded below. (2) 3 a pair of strict suI>- and supersolutions for (2.3).
Claim (1). Since g(x, t) ~ 0 and g(x, to) > 0, so G(x, t) > 0 \I t > Max {to, M} we have g(x, t) 8 ->G(x,t) - t'
~
to.
For t
Hence G(x, t) ~ Ct" for some constant C > O. There exists a constant C 1 > 0 sucb that
J(u) $
In {~lvuI2 - Cu" + h· U}
dx+
1
C
for any nonnegative U E HJ (0). Noticing 8 > 2, say, if we choose u = tIP., where !PI > 0 is the first eigenvector of -~ with O-Dirichlet boundary data, and t > O,and let t --+ +00, then
J(tcptl--+
-00
Claim (2). The equation (2.3) has a strict supersolution 0, and a strict subsolution 11: -~11 = -h in n { ul8ll = O. By the Maximum Principle 11 < O. All conditions in Theorem 2.1 are fulfilled. The proof is complete. Example 1. The equation -~U = u 2 -
(2.6)
{
uI8Il = 0
h
inn
possesses at least two solutions, if (1!3) is satisfied.
2. Superlin""r Problems
149
Theorem 2.3. Suppa;e (g,), (g2) with G(x, t) > 0,
ItI ;:: M,
and
(g.) 9 E C'(i1 X lit') with g(x,O) = g,(x,O) = O.
Then equation (1.1) J1OO5' '" at least three nontrivial solutions. We need Lemma 2.3. Under the assumptions of Theorem 2.3, there exists a constant A > 0, such that J. '" SO" , the unit sphere in HJ(O) for
-0
> A where J is the functional (1.3).
Proof. By the same deduction, but by assuming G(x, t) > 0 If t, M, we conclude G(x, t) ;:: Cltl' If t, It I ;:: M.
ItI ;::
Thus If u E S"", J(tu)
We want to prove: 3 A f,J(tu) < O. In fact, set A= 2
If J(tu)(= " -
--+ -00
as
> 0 such that
2MIOI
t If
--+ +00. d
< -A, if J(tu) :0:
max Ig(x, t)1 (',')Ellxi-M,MI
d,
then
+ 1.
I" G(x, t,,(x»
d d/(t,,) = (dJ(tu), u)
-In ~ {In
= t
u(x) . g(x, t,,(x»
:0:
G(x, tn(x»
~
In
t,,(x) . g(x, t,,(x»
o}
:0:
~t {(-01_~) f tU(X)g(X,tU(X»
:0:
~t {(-01- ~) CO { Itl'lu(x)I'
The impUcit function theorem is employed to obtain a unique T( u) E C( S"" , It') such that J(T(u)u) = a If u E S"".
150
Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Value Problems
,
Next, we claim that IIT(u)]] possesses a positive lower bound < > 0. In fact, by (&4), g(x,O) = gax,O) = 0, J(t,u) = " - ott') VuE 8"". The conclusion follows.
Finally, let us define a deformation retract 7/ : [0,11 x (H\B,(8» H\B,(8), where H = HJ(fI), and B,(8) is the <-ball with center 8, by
~
7/(B, u) = (1 - B)U + BT(u)u. VuE H\B,(8). This proves H\B,(8) '" J., i.e. J. '" 8"".
Proof of Theorem 2.5. 1. Provided by (&4)
(2.7)
1
J(u) = 211ull' + 0 (i]uIl 2 ),
so, 8 is a local minimum, and C. (J, 8) = 6"" G. 2. We find two nontrivial solutions. Let us define g+(x, t)
={
g(x, t) 0
and
where
G+(x,t)
= /.' g+(x,s)ds.
Again, J+ E C 2 (HJ(fI),JR') satisfies (PS), using Lemma 2.2. As in the proof of Theorem 2.2, we also have
where '1" > 0 is the first eigenvector of -6. with O-Dirichlet data. On the other hand 3 6 > 0 such that
provided by (2.7). The mountain pass lemma (Theorem 1.4 from Chapter II) is applied to obtain a critical point u+ E HJ (fI). with critical value c+ > 0, which satisfies
= g+(x,u+) "+]"" = O. -.6.u+
{
2. Super/in..... Problems
By using the Maximum Principle, u+ J. Analogously, we define
g_(x, t) = {
~
151
0, so it is again a critical point of
~(x, f)
t:o;O f
> 0,
and obtain a critical point ,,_ :0; 0, with critical value c_ > O. Chapter II (Theorem 1.7) and tbe Kato-Hess Theorem imply that C.(h, u±) = 6,1 G. According to the Palais Theorem (cf. Section I), we have
C.(h,u±) = C. (J±,u±) = C. (J,u±) , where
J = JlcJ; and again, C.(J,,,±) =
C.(J,u±). Therefore
3. Suppose that there were no more critical points of J. The Morse type numbers over the pair (HJ(fl), J.) would be
Mo = 1, M) = 2, Mq = 0, q ~ 2, but tbe Betti numbers (J.=O Vq=0,1,2, ... ,
since H.(HJ(fl),J.) '" H.(HJ(fl),S~) '" O. This is a. contradiction. Example 2. The function t~O
f
Theorem 2.4. Under assumption. (gl), (g,) with G(x, t) > 0 for M,and (go) g(x, t) = -9(X, -f)
V (x, f) E fl
It I ~
X IlI.l.
Equation (1.1) possesses infinitely many pairs ofso/ution•.
Proof. The functional defined in (1.3), J E Cl (HJ (fl), Ill. 1 ), is even, and satisfies the (PS) condition.
152
Semilin""r Ellip!ic Boundary Value Prob/e"..
According to (g,), we have (2.8)
J(u)
~ ~lIull2 -
C
(1 + lIull~~~,)
where C > 0 is a suitable constant. By using the Gagliardo-Nirenberg inequality, (2.9) where C, is a constant, and 0 < {J < 1 is defined by
1
-={J 0+1
(I2 nI) ---
1
+(l-{J)·-. 2
Substituting (2.9) in (2.8), for u E IJBp(O), we have J(u)
~ ~p2 - C2p(o+')~lIulli2-P)(0+1) -
C•.
Let A, < ),2 $ ),. $ ... , be the eigenvalues of (-Ll.), associated with eigenvectors fPl,Cf':Z,¥'3, .. ·, and let Ej = span {CP1,Ip:Zl'" ,'Pj}. i = 1,2, .... The variational characterization of the eigenvalues provides the estimates
Hence
where 6 = -~(I - (J)(1 + 0) < O. Since ),j - +00 as j _ 00, we choose p, jo such that 1- 2C2p o+' ~~, { p2 > SC•.
o-'A1
Thus
1 J(u) ~ gp2 > 0 VuE IJBp(O) n E/;,.
Since all norms on a finite dimensional space are equivalent, and since it was already known that G(x, t) ~
Cltl"
V t, It I ~ M,
there exists R j > P such that
J(u) $ 0 VuE Ej\BRj(O)
j
= 1,2, ....
3. A"lI"'ptotiaJl/y Lin .... Problem.
153
According to Corollary 4.2 in Chapter II. the proof will be finished if the (PS), condition with respect to the subspaces {Ej/j = 1.2•... } is verified. However. the verification is similar to that of the (PS) condition given in Leroma2.2. Remark 2.2. Theorems 2.1 and 2.2 are taken from K. C. Chang [ChaJ-
4]. and Theorem 2.3 from Z. Q. Wang [WaZ2]. Remark 2.3. There is a beautiful application of the Morse index estimates to the following perturbation result: Tbe equation
-Ilu = lulp-lu - /(x) { ul80 = 0
in fl
n:,.
has infinitely many solutions. if / E LO(fl). and 1 < p < cf. A. Bahri. H. Berestycki [BaB1). A. Bahri. P-L. Lions [BaLl.2). Dong Li [DoLl). M. Strowe [Strl) and P. H. Rabinowitz [Rab4). 3. Asymptotically Linear Problems
3.1. Nonre80nance and Resonance with the Landesman-Lazer Condition First, we assume that the function 9 is of the form
g(x. t) =
(3.1)
,i.t + rp(x. t).
where 'I' E C(n x JRI.JRI). satisfying rp(x. t) =
aUt I)
as
Itl- 00
uniformly in
x E fl.
We study the BVP (1.1) via the abstract theorems of Section 5 in Chapter II. Set H = HJ (n). A = id - X( -Il)-l.
l' = -10
~(x.t) = and F(u)
rp(x •• )d.
oI>(x. u(x)) dx.
Problem (1.1) is equivalent to finding critical points of the functional 1 J(u) = 2(Au.u)
+ F(u).
154
Semuit\ear Eluptic Boundary Value Problerru
Theorem 3.1. If AIt d( -£1), the spectrum of (-£1), then (1.1) sesses a solution. If we further assume that (3.2)
{
'I'(x,O) = 0
'I' E G I
l'I'ax,t)1
(0 X
p0s-
]RI,IlI.I),
~ G (1 + Itl~)
and 3 AE d( -£1) such that
(3.3)
then (1.1) possesses a nontrivial solution. Theorem 3.2. If XE u( -£1), and 'I'(x, t) is bounded, and we assume the Landesman·Lazer condition that (3.4)
1~ (x, t n
ti 'l'i
(X»)
dx
--+
+00
as
)=1
where Span{'I'I,'!'2, .. ' ,'I'no} = ker(-£1 - XI).
sol~tion. FUrthermore, if (3.2) holds, and if 3
); < AO, then (1.1) possesses a
Then (1.1) possesses a such that X<
XE u( -£1)
nontrivial solution.
Proof. Let Al < A. ~ >.a ~ ... be the eigenvalues associated with the eigenvectors '1'1,'1'.,'1'., ... of (-£1) with O-Dirichlet data. Let H+ = span {'I'j' I Aj
Ho = ker (-£1-
> X},
AI),
H _ = span {'I'j I Aj <
and
X} .
Then (HI) and (H.) of Theorem 5.2 of Chapter II hold. Since dF(u) = (-£1)-I'I'(X,U(x)), F E GI(H,IlI), and then IldF(u)1I = o(lIull) if (3.1), and IIdF(u)1I ~ G, a constant, if 'I'(x,t) is bounded. Note that 'P(z,'} _--=--~, L2 So dF is compact. Therefore (H.) also holds. We apply Theorem 5.2 of Chapter II (with Ho = 0) in the case n = 0, to obtain the existence of a solution in Theorem 3.1, and, in the case n = 1, to prove the existence of a nontrivial solution. In fact, '"Y = dim(Ho Ell H_) = dimH_ = Max (j I Aj < AI, and m_(O) = Max (j I Aj < Aol, mo(O) = dim ker( -£1- Aol). Condition (3.3) is equivalent to '"Y It (m_(O),m_(O) + mo(O)].
155
3. A.oymplotica/ly Linear Probl....
Similarly, Theorem 3.2 is proved by the fact that the Landesman-Lazer condition (3.4) implies F (Pou)
--< -00
as
IIPoull -
00,
where Po is the orthogonal projection onto Ho. Remark 3.1. Problems in wbich X ¢ u( -6) are called nonresonance, and in which XE u( -6) are called resonance.
Theorems 3.1 and 3.2 are due to Amann-Zehnder [AmZl] and Cbang [Cba2] respectively. See also Liu [Liu3]. For a similar problem from the two point boundary value problem in ordinary differential systems, we can get a hetter estimate of the number of solutions. Let us assume that G E C'([O,,,] x IItn,IIt') satisfying (1) G(t,9) = 0, G.(t,8) = 9, (2) 3 integer k such that
k' In < A",,(t) < (k + I)' In, where In is the n x n identity matrix and the limit Aoo(t) = limlul_oo
0, Theorem 2.1 yields a critical point uo f< 8 of J which solves the equation 0 with eo = a and consider the equation
-8u = g(u) x E fI, { Since g(u) of (3.16).
~
ul oo = o.
0, by the Maximum Principle, Uo 2: 0, hence Uo is a solution
170
Semili...... Elliptic Boundal'!/ Value Problema
3. Now we shall prove that -A - g'(",,(x» has a bounded inverse operator on L2(0), which is equivalent to the fact that Jd-( -A)-Ig'(",,(x» has a bounded inverse on HJ (0), i.e., "" is nondegenerate. Since "" satisfies (3.16), it is also a solution of the equation -A"" - q(x)",,(x) ~ 0, where q(x) =
Let 1'1
l
1Jo180 =
0,
g'(t",,(x»dt.
< 1'2 < ... be eigenvalues of the prohlem -Aw - I'g'(IJo(x»w = 0, { wl80 = O.
We shall prove that 1'1 < 1 < 1'2. This implies the invertihility of the operator -A - g'(",,(x». In fact, according to 8SSumption (2), we have q(x)
< g'(",,(x» V x E 0
so that .
1'1
= mm f
f(Vw}' g'(",,)w2
.
f(Vw)'
< mm f q(x)w' :5 1.
Again, hy assumptions (2) 8Jld (3), we have
y'(u.(x)) < A2 V x E O. According to the Rayleigh quotient characterization of the eigenvalues . 1'2 = sup mf
EI UlEEt
f(Vw)2 fg'( (» 2 Uo x w
1
.
> ,sup mf 1\2 EI weEt
f(Vwj2
fW'
= 1
where EI is 8Jly one-dimensional subspace in HJ(O). 4. The Morse identity yields 8Jl odd numher of critical points. Therefore there are at least three solutions of (3.16). Finally, we tum to the following example. Theorem 3.8. Suppooe that g E GI(1lI. 1 ) satisfies the following condi· tions: (1) g(O) = 0, and A. < g'(0) < A3; (2) g'(oo) = lim,_±~ g'(t) exists, and g'(oo) Ii! a( -A), with g'(oo) > >'3; (3) \g(t)\ < 1 and 0 :5 g'(t) < >'3 in the interval [-c, cJ, where c = max,.!! e(x), and .(x) is the solution of the BVP:
-A, = 1 in 0 {
el 80 = o.
3. A.oymptoticallV Linear J'
171
Then equation (3.16) possess at least 8"" nontrivial solution&.
Proof. Define g(e) g(t) { g(-e)
g(t) = and let
I(u) where
Crt)
=
ift>e if ItI :$ e if t < -e
fa [~(VU)2 - C(u)] dz,
= J~ g(s)d8. The truncated equation
'-t.u = g(u)
(3.17)
in 0
ul 80 =0
{
possesses at least three solutions 9, Ull U2, because there are two pairs of sub- and supersolutioDS [",p.,el and I-e,-E'I'.I, where '1" is the first eigenfunction of -t., with '1',(",) > 0, and E > 0 a sOIBII enongh constant. By the weak version of the Mountain PBSS Lemma, there is a mountain pass point U3. That "3 i 9 follows from the fact that
-
C.(J,U3) =
{G0
k=1 k
i
1.
But from condition (1)
-
C.(J, 9)
= {G 0
k=m. kim.
+mo
+mo,
where m; = dimker(-t. - )..,1), i = 1,2, .... By Lemma 2.1, one has
-
C.(J,u,)
= {G0
k=O klO'
i = 1,2.
Noticing that I is bounded from below, we conclude that there is at least another critical point U4Obviously, all these critical points "i, i = 1,2,3,4, are solutions of equation (3.17). On account of the first condition in (3), in combination with the Maximum Principle, all solutions of (3.17) arc bounded in the interval [-c, cl. Therefore they are solutions of (3.16); moreover, all these solutions u, because of their ranges, are included in [-c, c), and we conclude: 2
ind(J, u) + dimker(d'J(u» :$ m:= dimEB(-t. - ).;1), j=1
172
Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Val... Prob,.,...
provided by the second condition in (3). Because of condition (2), we learned from TIleorem 3.1, TIleorem 5.2 of Chapter II is applicable, with 'Y > m, because 9'(00) > ~. Therefore there exists another critical point u., which yields the fifth nontrivial solution for the equation (3.16). Cf. Chang (Cha12].
4. Bounded Nonlinearities 4.1. F\mctlonala Bounded from Below
The functionals J associated with equation (1.1) in this section are considered to be bounded from below. We shall study several cases which occurred in PDE about numbers of solutions. First we assume (go) 3", < )",/2, and P > 0 such that G(x, t)
= 10' g(x, .)d. :5 Qt' + P
''Yhere ),., is the first eigenvalue of -a with O-Dirichlet data; (grllg:Cx,t)i:5 G(l + Itl)', 'Y < n~.' ifn > 2.
Theorem 4.1. Under llSSumptions (go) and (g7), suppose that
(4.1)
g(x,O) = 0, and 3m ~ 1 such that
),.m
< g;(x,O) < ),.m+!.
where {),.,,),. ••... } = u(-a). Then (1.1) has at least three solutions.
Proof. Again, we consider the functional (1.3) J(u) =
.£. [~lvuI2 - G(X,U)] dx
whicb is well-defined and c" on HJ(O) provided by (g7)' (go) implies that J is bounded from below: (4.2)
J(u)
~ ~ (1 - ~7) '£'IVul'dx - P mcs(O).
And 9 is a nonminimum, nondegenerate critical point with finite Morse index of J provided by llSSumption (4.1). In order to apply TIleorem 5.4 of Chapter II it suffices to verify the (PS) conditions. In fact, the coercive condition (4.2) in conjunction with the boundedness of J(u n) imply that {Un} is bounded, and hence is weakly compact. From (g7), we see that Ig(x. t)1
:5 G, (1 + Itl)",
n+2
1'-<--2' n-
if n > 2.
173
4. Bounded Nonlinearitiu
We use the same argument as in Lemma 2.2, from
We conclude that the sequence
Un
is subconvergent.
4.2. Oscillating Nonlinearity
The following technique is often used to reduce problems such as (1.1) to problems with bounded nonlinear terms.
Lemma 4.1. Suppose that the function 9 in (1.2) satisfies (go) 3 { ~ 0 such that g(x, {) ~ 0 V x E 11, and let
g(x,t)
= {g(X,{) g(x, t)
Assume that u E
HHn)
if t >{ if t ~ {.
is a solution of the following equation:
-t.u = g(x, u(x» x E n { ul = o. oo
(4.3)
Then u(x)
~
{, so it is also" solution of (1.1).
Proof. By the standard regularity theorem u E w;(n) V p < +00 so u E CI(n). Considering the domain D = {x E n I u(z) > {}, we have
-t.u(x) :5: 0 V ZED, {
ulaD :5:
e·
By the Maximum Principle, we have D(X) < {in D, and hence D = 0, i.e., D(X) :5: {. Corollary 4.1. If in the above lemma, (go) is replBced by
e
(ga)' 3 ~ 0 such that g(x,{) < 0 V x E Then D(X) < { V x E
n.
n.
Similarly, we introduce the assumption
(ga)· 3 { $ 0 such that g(x, {) ~ 0 (or> 0) V x E 11, and consider the truncation _ { g(z, t) g(x,{)
9( x,t ) We have
if t if t
~
{,
< {.
174
Semilinear Elliptic Boundary Value Problems
Corollary 4.2. Under (1.2) and (I!s)., if u E HJ(O) is a solution of -~u(x)
{ then u(x)
x E0
= g(x, u(x))
ul8
<: eV x E fI, and is also a solution of (1.1).
By the same trick, if one looks for positive solutions, the function 9 de6ned on x R~, is extended continuously to he g: x !lI.' ..... IR' , with g nonnegative for t < O. Keeping this in mind, we consider some examples. For the sake of simplicity, we assume g(x, t) = g(t), and study the eigenvalue problem
n
(4.4)
n
-~u(",)
{
= }..g(u(x»
xE0
ul8
Theorem 4.2. Suppose 9 E C' (!lI.~) and g(O) <: o. Assume that (go) There exists 0 < a, < a, < ... < am, such that g(ai) = 0, i 1,2, ... ,m. ", (glO) G(t) = J~ g(s)ds satislies m",,{G(t) I 0 ~ t ~ ai-'} < G(ai),
i = 2,3, ... ,m
=
and G(a,) > O.
Then 3 }..O > 0 such that Eor >. > }..O, (4.4) poesesses at least (2m - 1) nontrivial solutions. FUrthermore, if g(O) = 0 and g'(O) ~ 0 then 3 }.., > 0 such that for}.. > }.. .. there are at least 2m nontrivial solutions for (4.4). Proof. By the truncation trick, we consider the (unctions
gi(t) =
{
gi(O)
t
~i(t)
O~t~ai
t
> ai
gi E C(R'), and the functionals with parameter }..
Given the above explanation, we know that tbe critical set K i (}..) of J,(.,}..) must he a subset of the critical set Ki+I(}..), i = 1,2, ... ,m - 1, and by Lemma 4.1, VuE K i (}..), 0 ~ u(x) ~ ai, i = 1,2, ... V x E First, we see that J i (·,}..) possesses a global minimum Ui(}..), provided by the bounded ness from below plus the (PS) condition. Thus Hi(}..) E K i (}..), i = 1,2, ... ,m. Second, "i(}..) ¢ K i _,(}..) for>. large, i = 2,3, ... ,m.
n.
4. Bounded Nonlinearitiu
175
Indeed, we only want to show 3~, > 0 and W E HJ(Il), with 0:<:; w(%) :<:; "', such that J,(w,~) < J,_,(",_,(~),~) \I ~ > ~,. Let a = G(",) - Max{G(t) / 0 :<:; t :<:; o,_,}. By (glO), 0 > o. Let 116 = {% E Il J dist(%,8!l) < 6} for 6 > 0, and let
W6 E C8"(Il),
0 :S W6 :<:; OJ,
= OJ
W6(%)
\I % E Il \~.
Thus
{ G(W6)tk
in
=(
10\0,
G(",)tk +
r G(W6(%»)tk
10 ,
~
G(Oj)JIl/ - 2C,J1l6/
~
in G(v,_,(~»tk +
oJIl/- 2C,J1l6/,
where C, = max{G(t) /0:<:; t :<:; a'}. Hence J'(W6,~)
- Ji-l(V'_'(~)'~)
=
~ fa
:<:;
~
in
[J'I7w6/ 2 -
J'I7u,_,(~)J21 tk - ~ fa [G(W6) - G(v,_,(~») tk
J'I7 w6)'tk -
~(o/IlJ -
2C,/1l6)) < 0
for. = " > 0 small, and ~ > ~, large enough. The function W = W6 is just what we need. One may assume~, :<:; ~2 :<:; ... :S ~m. Third, from G(o,) > 0, we have
using the above argument, so v,(~) i o. One may assume #Km(~) < +00. Tben the Morse equality is applied to the bounded from below function J,. Noticing that HJ(Il) is contractible, we have Po = I, p, = {3, = ... = 0,
and
E(-I);MJ(~)
= I,
j
where Mj(~), j = 0,1, ... are the Morse type numbers for K,(~). But the Morse equality also holds for JH " and we have known that u,+I(~) E K'+I(~)\K,(~) for ~ > ~,+ .. and that V'+1 is the global minimum of J HIo so C.(JHh u,+1) = ' .. G, i.e., the contribution of U'+1(~) in the alternative summation Ej(-I)iMr'(~), is 1. If there were no other critical point in KH'(~) \ K,(~) for ~ > ~'+1, then the equality would lose the balance. Therefore, we concludes
#
(KHl(~) \ K,(~» ~ 2
if ~ > ~Hl'
i = 1,2, ... ,m - 1.
176
Semmnear Elliptic Boundary Value ProbJenu
In the cases 9(0) = 0 and 9'(0) > 0, 0 has no contribution in critical groups. This is proved by the standard perturbation technique in combining witb tbe homotopy invariance property (cf [ChaI6». In summary, we bave #(K.,,().) \ {8}) ~ 2m - 1, if), > )..". The first conclusion is proved. Assume that g(O) = 0, and g'(O) 50; then V >., J,(u,>.) ~ 0 = J,(O,>.) for HuH small. 8 is a local minimum of J,(., ).), but not the global minimum u,(>.) V >. > >.,. We apply tbe Morse equality to J" that tbere must be one more point in K,(>.) for>. > >." i.e., #(K,(>.) \ {8}) ~ 2, >. > >., so is #(K.,,(>.) \ {O}) ~ 2m, if >. > >..". 4.3. Even Functionais
Theorem 4.3. Suppose that g(x, t) is ofthe form a(x)t +p(x,t) where and that (g.), a E C(n), and p E C'(O X \li,1 ,\li,'). Assume that a> 0 in (gu) p(x, t) o(lt» uniformly with respect to x E and (g12) p(x, t) -p(x, -t) V (x, t) E i1 X \li,', hold. Then the equation
n,
= =
-6u(x) {
= >.g(x,,,(x»
-Ll.v(x) = Jlo(x)v(x) {
in 0
"\"" = 0
has at least k distinct pairs of solutions, if>. eigenvalue of the eigenvalue problem (4.5)
n,
> >.., where >..
is the kth
in 0
v\"" = o.
Proof. V)", the functional is written as
where P(x, t) = f~ p(x, s)ds is a.n even function with respect to t, provided by (g12). Thus J, is an even functional. According to (go) and Lemma 4.1,1, is bounded from below. And a > 0 plus (gu) imply that there exists p > 0, such that J'\spnE, < 0 for >. > >.., where Sp is the sphere with radius p centered at 8 in HJ (0), and E. is tbe direct sum of eigenspaces with eigenvalues 5 ).. of tbe problem (4.5). The verification of the (PS) condition is omitted. Now we apply Theorem 4.1 of Chapter II. There are at least k pairs of distinct solutions.
4. Bounded Nonlinearitiu
177
4.4. Variational Inequalities A variety of variational problems with side constraints arlSlng from mechanics and physics are called variational inequalities. They have been extensively studied since the 1960s. See, for instance, Duvaut and J. L. Lions [DuLl]. A typical example is as follows: Given a closed convex set C in HJ (n), a continuous g: n x 111.' _ 111.' and h E L~ (n), find uo E C such that (4.6)
l
['I7UO' '17(" - UO) - (g(x,,,o(x» - h(x» (" - UO)(x)]dx 2: 0 Y" E C.
In fact, the variational inequality is attached to tbe following variational problem: to find UO E C, which is the critical point of the functional
J(u) =
~
l
[I'I7 u l' - G(x,,,(x»
+ h(x)u(x») dx
with respect to the closed convex set C (ef. Definition 6.4 of Chapter I). In this sense, all the critical point theories, including the Morse inequalities on closed oonvex sets, are suitable for the applications. In contrast with the well-developed variational inequality theory, in which 9 is assumed to be nonincreasing in t so that the solution is a minimum of the functional J, the restriction on 9 is avoided in this subsection. Indeed, one can find minimax points. We are satisfied to study the following two examples mainly by explaining the differences.
Example I. Assume that 9 satisfies (g,), (g,) and (g;,). Let C = P be the positive cone in HJen); then there are at least two solutions of (4.6), if g(x, 0) = 0 and g(x, t) 2: 0 Y (x, t) E n x 111.~, and if 3 to > 0, such that g(x, to) > O. Claim. We follow Lemma 2.2 step by step to verify the (PS) oondition with respect to P. Note that
where ( , ) is the inner product in HJen). It implies Y < > 0 3 ko E Z+ such that (dJ(".),u.):5 <11".11, Y k 2: ko. (WARNING: Tbis is only a one side ineqUality! Not like that in Lemma 2.2 in wbich we got l(dJ(".). u.)1 :5 <11".IIl. This i. enougb to assure the boundedness of 11".11, as shown in Lemma 2.2.
178
Semi/in ..... Elliptic Bound"'11 Value Prob,."..
Now we prove the subconvergence of u•. All shown in Lemma 2.2, we obtain a subsequence, which we still write in 'Uk, such that
Since 9 is positive in I ~ 0, u. E P, and (-.11.)-' preserves tbe positive cone (Maximum Principle), u· E P. Again, from 1- dJ(u.)( •• - 0, it follows thot V e > 0 3 leo E Z+, such that (-u.+ (-.11.)-' 0;° 09(·'''.),1I-u.):;; tllv-u.n, 'Iv E P, V I.: ~ leo. Consequently, 3 1.:, E Z+, such that
In particular, set v = u., this proves Uk --+ u·. 'lb study the mUltiple solutions, it is easily seen thot 9 is a local minimum for J in P. Since the first eigenvector 'P' E P, J is unbounded from helow in P. A weak version of the Mountain Pass tbeorem with respect to P is
applied to obtain the second solution. For the same functional J. but we change to a different closed convex !Jet, one has
Ezample 2. Suppose '" E H'(!l), and C = {u E HJ(!l) I 0 :S u(or) :;; "'(or) a.e.}. Under the same assumptions on 9 and h in the Example I, assume that (4.7)
inf{J(,,) I u E C} < o.
Then the variational inequality (4.7) possesses at least three solutions.
Claim. The (PS) condition with respect to C can he verified as above. local minimum, and J has a global minimum H2. Assumption (4.7) implies '" "I u •. We apply the Morse eqnality which provides the third critical point of J. Now, "1 = 8 is a
R.errutrl.: 4.1. Theorem 4.1 is taken from K.C. Chang (ChaI]. For an extension of it see K.C. Chang ICha2]. Theorem 4.2 is an extension of the results due to K.J. Brown and H. Budin [BrBI] and P. Hess (Hes2], in which only the case 9(0) > 0 was discussed. Section 4.4 was stndied in K.C. Chang leba7].
CHAPTER
IV
Multiple Periodic Solutions of Hamiltonian Systems
O. Introduction In this chapter, we shall apply Morse theory to estimate the numbers of solutions of Hamiltonian systems. Let H(t,.) be a 0' function defined on 111.' X 1II.2n which is 2,,-periodic with respect to the first variable t. We are interested in the existence and multiplicity of the I-periodic solutions of the following Hamiltonian system:
Ii = -H.(t;q,p) { 1> = H.(t; q,p),
(0.1)
where q,p E III.n, • = (q,p). Tbe function H then is called the Hamiltonian function. Letting J be the standard symplectic structure on 1R2n, i.e.,
J=(OIn -In) 0 ' In
where is the n x n identity matrix, the equation (0.1) can be written in a compact version -Ji = H,(t,.). (0.2) Equation (0.2) is very similar to the operator equation considered in Chapter II, Section 5. Indeed, let X = £2 (O,l),R2n), and let
A: .(t) ......... -Ji(t) with domain
D(A) = H! (1o, 2,,], lII.. n )
= {z(t) E H'((O,2,,],1II. 2n )] z(O) = z(2..n.
For the sake of convenience, we make the real spoce ROn complex. Let en = R" + iRn, and let {el,e2,'" ,e2n} be an orthonormal basis in 1l2ft. Let j = 1,2, ... ,n,
ISO
Multiple Periodic Soluti"""
en.
which defines a basis in Z
The linear isomorphism llI.'n _
'n
n
j=1
j=1
en
= LZjej ~ z= L)Zj - iZj+n)V'j,
is called the complexification of llI. 2n , which preserves the inner product. Namely, n
[i, WJ
s
He ~)Zj ;=1
s
~)ZjWj + Zj+nWj+n)
- iZj+n}(Wj - iWj+n)
n
2n
;=1
= L ZjWj = (Z, W) , ;=1
where [ , ) is the inner product on en. We introduoe the complex Hilbert space L2([0,2".),Cn ) to replace the real Hilbert space L2([0, 2..J, R2n ), whose inner product reads as
["
(i, iiJ) = Jo [%(t), iiJ(t»)dt =
[2.
J
o
(z(t), w(t»dt
s
(z, w).
From now on, if there is no confusion, we shall not distinguish between these two. Sometime, we only write z but not z. One important thing is that Jz ..... ii. Thus, if we expand z E L2 ([0, 2".J, en) in FOurier series:
z(t) =
D(A) = {
t C~"" eime-,m,) t m~""
z E L2 ([0,2".1, en) I
(1
'Pj,
+ Imll21cjml2 < +00 } ,
and A is self-adjoint with the following spectral decomposition: £2([0, ".1, en)
= EEl M(m), mE'
where M(m) = span {e-im'IP1, e- imt
Let E·, where. is +, 0, or -, be the positive, zero, and negative subspaces respectively according to the spectral decomposition, and let p., where + is +, 0, or -, be the associated orthogonal projections. Set
1. A811"1Plolical/y Linear S",Iem8
181
Let
H = D (IAI'/') = { z E L' (10,2 ..), en) I
t. mf;~
(1 + Im))lcj.. I'
< +00 }
with tbe following scalar product: (Z,W)H
= (z,wh' + (IAII/2z,IAI'/2w)L"
Tben H is a Hilbert space. There are few simple properties often used:
(1) The embedding H ..... L" (IO,2 ..),C") is compact, V p < +00. Claim. Since H'/2 (10,2 ..), en) ..... V ((0, 2..), en) is compact and D(IAI'/') ..... H'/' ((0, 2..), en) is continuous. (2) 3 a compact linear operator K:V' ((0,2..),en ) ~ H, such that
{2.
(Kf,z)H =
10
(J(t),z(t»dt,
Claim. K = (J + IA))-I, the rest follows from (1). (3) Let H" = P" H, where * is +, -, or 0. Tbere exists a bounded linear operator A E £'(H, H) satisfying (Az, W)H = (A+)'/' Z , (A+)I/' W ) L' - (A-)'/'z, (A-)'/2 w ) . Moreover,
Claim.
AIH. has bounded inverse with ker(A) = H". A=
A(I + IA))-I.
For a given polynomial growth Hamiltonian function H(t, z), the functional
(2'
g(z)=- 10
H(t,z(t»dt
is weD-defined and is in Cl(H,IlI.'). Then tbe Hamiltonian system (0.2) is rewritten as
AZ + dg(z) =
9.
(0.3)
This is the problem we studied in Chapter I, Section 5 and Chapter II except now we assume dim H- = +00. We look for critical points of the functional on H: 1 (0.4) J(z) = 2(Az,z) + g(z),
182
Multiple Periodic Solution.!
where dg = K
0
d,H(t,.) oi : H
~
H is compact, with
1. Asymptotically Linear Systems The Morse index plays an important role in distinguishing critical points. For functionals defined bY Hamiltonian systems (004), 2.
d'J(z)(w,w) = (AW,W)H -
1 0
The Morse index ind(J,z) depends on A or A and the matrix
Definition 1.1. Let Sym(2n,lII.) be the set of all symmetric 2n x 2n matrices. Let BEe ([0, 2"1, Sym(2n, 111.)), with B(O) = B(2,,). We say . that A is a Floquet multiplier of (1.1)
-Jw(t) = B(t)w(t)
if A is an eigenvalue of W(2,,), where Wet) is the fundamental solution matrix of (1.1). By definition, z is nondegenerate for J(z) (see (0.4)) if and only if the linear system (1.2) -JtiJ(t) = d~H (t, z(t» wet) has no nontrivial 27f-periodic solution, or equivalently, 1 is not a Floquet
multiplier of (1.2). In order to classify this continuous loop of symmetric matrices without a Floquet multiplier It we study the associated fundamental solution matrices (Wet)}. Noticing that, if B(t): [0, 2,,1 ~ Sym(2n,lII.) is continuous, then
~ -T
T
(WT(t)JW(t»)
-
= W JW + W T JW -T =-WT BW - W BW = -T
0,
and from W (O)JW(O) = J, it follows that W JW = J. Conversely. if -T W (t)JW(t) = J, then Wet) is invertible. T Let B = -JWW-'; then BT = (W-')TW J = (W-'jT JW-'
-, =
--'
JWW
B. Therefore, BEe ([0, 2,,1, Sym(2n, JR)).
1. AsymptoticallJl Linear Systems
183
Recall that a matrix M is called symplectic if MT J M = J. We denote by Sp(n,llI.) the set of all real 2n X 2n symplectic matrices. LetP = h E C ([0, 2..), Sp(n,llI.)) 11'(0) = id, 1'(2,,)has no eigenvalue I}. Definition 1.2. Let 1'0,1" E P. We say that 1'0 is equivalent to 1'10 denoted by 1'0 ~ 1'10 if 3 6 E C ([0,1) x [0,2"), Sp(n,llI.)) such that 6(i, I) = 1',(1), i = 0,1, 6(s,O) = id, and I ¢ ,,(6(.,2")) It • E [0,1).
The following classifying theorem is applied [COZ2), [LoZI). Theorem 1.1 (Conley-Zehnder-Long). Every path YEP belongs to one and only one equivalent class Pk, k E 7l. Moreover, It k E Z, one finds a distinguished "standard path· /3. (I) 8S follows.
In tbe case n :::: 2, let X. = diag(O. (k - n + 2)/2.1/2, ... ,1/2), Y = diag(ln2, 0, 0, ... ,0),
Z. = diag«k - n + 1)/2,1/2,1/2, ... ,1/2), be n x n matrices, and /3.(t) = exp(IJB.), 0 :S t :S 2", where B = ((;
;J
• (Z.o Z.0)
In Ihe case n = I, set wet) = 4(1 w,(I) = {W(I),
0,
if (_I)nH = -I, if (_I)nH= 1.
+ cost),
O
" ;; t ;; 2" ' and w.(t) =
{O,
w(t),
and let K = ( 01 0I) ,R(O)
= (COSO sinO
-SinO) cosO ,H(a) =
O:St:S" 71' 5 t .5 271';
(a-'0 a0) ,a l' O.
If k is odd, then /3.(t) = R(tk/2), 0 :S t :S 2", and B. = k/2. If k = 0, Ihen {3o(t) = H (2""), 0 :S t :S 2", and B. = .~ (In 2)K; if k even, but not 0, then /3.(t) = H (2""(')) R(-w,(I)h), O:S t:S 2", and k B.(I) = --2 WI (t)id + In2"'(t)K.
2"
Definition 1.3. We define a map j: P -+ Z as follows: If l' E 1\, then j (-r) = k. The number k is called the Maslov index of l' and is denoted by j(-r) or j(B), if 1'(t) is the fundamental solution matrix of (1.1). In the following, we shall show that the Maslov index of.., = W (t), which is associated with cP. H (t, z( t)), is a candidate for the replacement of the Morse index. Let us denote Em
= EeJiI$m M(j), m = 0, 1,2, ... , and let Pm. be the orthogonal projection onto Em. m = 0,1,2, ... , in which dim Em = 2n(2m+ I).
184
Multiple Periodic Solulionr
Theorem 1.2. A&.ume that BEe ([0, 2,,), Sym(2n,IR)) has no F/oquet multiplier 1 and k = j(B). Let Qm = A - PmBPm E .c(E.. Em), and "", • = -, 0 be the Morse index and the nullity of Qm. Then 3 N > 0 BUch that
m-=~dimEm+kand
",0=0,
Vm?N.
(1.3)
Proof. We bave seen the one-to-one correspondence hetween tbe set of loops in Sym(2n, IR) witbout the F10quet multiplier 1 and P: B(t) = -J"I(th(t)-I. In order to transfer the defonnation on 7 to B, we claim tbat tbe above equivalent classification may he restricted to a smaller class
po = hE C'([O, 211"), Sp(n,lR)) I "1(2,,) = "I(Oh(21t),7(0) = id, 1 "- ,,(-y(2.-»)}. Claim. Given 70,11 E p', 70 ~ 71 in P, i.e. 3 6: [0,1) x [0,2,,) ..... Sp(n,JR), continuous, such tbat 6(i,.,.) = 7i(t), i = 0,1, 6(.,0) = id and 1 rt ,,(6(., t)) V. E [0,1). By reparametrization of " we may assume tbat 6(.,t) = 7o(t) forO:S.:s E, and 6(.,t) = 71(t) forl-<:S.:s 1. Moreover, by reparametrizing in the t variable along
8
= 0 and 8 = 1, we can achieve
that 6(., t) is differentiable in t in the neighborhood of tbe boundary of [0,1) x [0,211") aod satisfies, in addition, the condition "1(2,,) = "1(0)· 7(2,,). It remains tosmootb out < in tbe interior. This is readily done by smoothing the generating functions of tbe symplectic matrices in tbe parameter t. Tben we obtain a continuous family B.(t), • E [0,1), such tbat Bo(t) = B(t), B,(t) is the staodard patb in tbe above theorem, aod A - B,(t) is invertible in.c (L2([0, 2,,), 1lI.2n») (or equivalently, A - KB.(t) is invertible in .c(H)) V • E [0,1). Tberefore (by small perturbation), 3 e > 0, 3 N, > 0 such that, for m
> NIl
This enables us to figure out tbe Morse index and nullity of B(t) by the eounterparts of B,(t), the staodard path. Obviously, we bave ",0 = 0, because Qm = APrn - PmB1Pm. is invertible. As to m-, we only want to verify the standard paths, which are constant matrices except for n = 1 and k even but not O. It satisfies us to verify the simplest case and leave tbe other cases as exercises because they are elementary linear algebra, cr. Long-Zehnder [LoZ1). Indeed, the representation of Qm on the invariant subspaces M(j) Ell M(-j) under tbe basis (real) {cosjfe" sinjte, Ii = 1,2, ... ,2n} (and M(O) under the basis {el' e2, ... ,e2n}), reads as follows: -BI ( jJ
-jJ)
-Bl
88
.
.
1 = 1,2, ... 1 m , and - Bl as J =0.
185
I. A'lI"'ptoticolly Lin ..... Syorem.
For the 4nx4n matrix
(j~' =~), we split tbem again according to tbe
(~. :.), n + 1)/2,1/2, ... ,1/2}, where k = i(B,) = i(B). 1b
standard path. In the simplest case (n;:: 2,
n+k even), B,
=
and Z. = diag{(k those invariant subspaces, in which the elements in Z. equal to 1/2, we have ind (-1/2
-j )
-1/2
j
j
-1/2
-j
-2 for j
=
1,2, ... 1m,
-1/2
and
.10d (-1/2 0
0 ) = 2 ',or 1. = 0. -1/2
There are (n - 1) such elements, and the total contribution in the index is 2(m + l)(n - 1). The remaining element in Z. is (k - n + 1)/2. In the case k 2:: n, -(k - n ind
+ 1)/2 -(k - n+ 1)/2 -(k -
j
(
-j
=
{2,
·f . >
']
·f . < '1
4,
and ind
(-(k -
n
+ 1)/2
~ + 1)/2
-j
-(k - n
)
+ 1)/2
k-n±l 2 1o-n±1 ' 2
. ) = 2 if j = O. -(k - n+ 1)/2
The contribution to the index is 2 (m - .;R)+4 (·;n)+2 = 2m+k-n+2. Therefore ind(Qm) = 2(m + l)(n - 1) + 2m + k - n + 2 = (2m + l)n + k, i.e.,
m- =
~dimEm + k.
Similarly, we verify the case k < n. This finishes the proof. We turn to study the existence and multiplicity of solutions of asymptotically linear Hamiltonian systems. A Hamiltonian system is called asymJ>totically linear if (H~) 3B~ E C([O,2"J,Sym(2n,R» such that B~(O) = B..,(2,,) and IId.H(t, z) - B~(t)zll." = o(lIzlI).,"
uniformly in t, as
IIzll.'" .... 00.
186
Mtcltipl. Periodic Solutions
c'
Lemma 1.1. Assume that H E ([0,2"1)( llI.2.,llI.') satisJies (H=), where B= has no FIoquet multiplier 1. Then the functional (0.4) J satisfies the (PS)· condition with respect to {Em I m = 1,2, ... }, and J m = JIE_ satisfies the (P S) condition V m large. Proof. 1. We claim that IIdJm(z) - Q::'.'ZIIH = o(lIzIIH) as IIzll ..... for z E Eml where q: = APm - PmBooPm . Indeed,
IIdJm(z) - Q:ZIIH
= l)Pm (d,H(t, z) -
00,
B=z) IIH o(lIzIIH)'
$ IId,H(t, z) - B=zIIH
=
2. Since KBoo is compact, and Pm strongly converges to the identity, we have IIK(PmB= - B=)II ..... 0 as n ..... 00. The operator K(A - B=) =
A - K B= is invertible, so by the Banach inverse operator theorem, APm PmKBooPm has also a bounded inverse. Moreover, there exists a constant C such that
II (APm -
PmK B=Pm) -'II $ C
for m large enough.
Combining the above two conclusions, we obtain from dJm(zj) ..... IIzjllEm is bounded. Thus the (PS) condition for J m holds.
e that
3. Assume IIdJm (zm)IIH ..... 8, as m ..... 00 for Zm E Em. Then IIzmllH is bounded, provided by the same reason. Noticing that Po is of finite rank, we have a subsequence of Zml which is still written by Zml such that
Kd%H(t,z,.,J
--+
u and POzm
-t
AZm +POzm = dJm(Zm)
V
as m
--+ 00.
Consequently,
+ PmKd,H(t,zm) + POzm ..... u+ v,
i.e.,
Zm ..... (A + pol-leu + v) since
A+ Po is invertible in H.
in H as m .....
00,
This proves the (PS)" condition.
Theorem 1.3. Suppose that H E C' ([0,2,,) X llI.2., llI.') heing 2" periodic in t satisfies (H=), where B= has no FIoquet multiplier 1. Then the Hamiltonian system (0.2) possesses 11 2"-periodic solution.
FUrther, we assume (Ho) 3 Bo E C (10, 2"), Sym(2n, JR)) such that Bo(O) IId,H(t, z) - Bo(t)zll.'. = o(lIzll.'.) uniformly in t, as If Bo has no Floquet multiplier 1, and if
= Bo(2") and
Ilzll.'...... O.
j(Bo) f. j(B=),
(1.4)
then (0.2) possesses at least a nontrivial 2"-periodic solution. Proof. 1. First, we use the Galerkin method and study the restriction Jm of J on Em, m = 1,2, .... For large m, we learn from Theorem 1.2
187
1. A'lf'"Ptotically Linear SY31ems
and Lemma 5.1 in Chapter II that dim H. (Em' (Jm).~) = 6...;;,. for some a"., where m;;. = ind(Boo), so there exists a critical point z... E Em of J m • According to (Ho), H is C' at z = II on 1R2ft; therefore, the functional H(t, z(t»dt is C' at% = e under the topology C ((0, 21f], Rft), and then it is C' at z = e on each finite dimensional subspare Em. One concludes by the fact that B is a nondegenerate critical point of J m with Morse index mO = n(2m + 1) + j(Bo) "m;;' (cf. Theorem 5.2 from Chapter II), due to (1.4). We want to give a lower bound for 11 .... 11, in order to distinguish the limit, if it exists, from B. Since both A - K Boo and A - K Bo have bounded inverse, we have R > 0 and N > 0 such that
f:-
.... " e
II (APm - KPmBoo Pm) -'II'<:(H) < R, 1
for m
~
N.
II (APm-KPmBoPmf II.c(H)
> 0 so small that IIdJ(z) - (A - KBo)zIlH
= IIK(d,H(t, z) - Boz)IIH 1 < 2R IIzllH V IIzllH < 6.
Then, for large m, we have
IIdJ(z) - (AP m - KPmBoPm)zIlH
~ ~1I(APm -
~
1 2RllzIIH
KPmBoPm)-'II£(H)lIzIlH V IlzliH < 6.
But if we write Q~ = APm - K PmBOPm, then
IIdJ(z)1I ~ IIQ~zIIH - ~11(Q~)-'II£(H)lIzIlH
~ 1I(~)-'II£(H)lIzIIH - ~1I(Q::,nl£tH)lIzIIH =
Zm
~1I(Q::')-'II£tH) ·lIzll·
Consequently, if Zm is a critical point of Jm with = B. Thus 1Iz...IIH ~ 6 for m large enough.
IIzmliH <
6, then
2. Applying the (PS)" condition, there exists a limit point z' of {Zm}. Therefore, z' is a critical point of J, with IIz'll ~ 6. This is the nontrivial solution. The proof is finished. If one wishes to extend the above result to the degenerate case the Maslov index should be extended. In this respect we refer the reader to Y. Long [Lon], Li Liu [LiLl) and Ding Liu [DiLi].
188
Multiple Periodic Solution3
2. Reductions and Periodic N onlinearities We have seen that for indefinite functionais, the Morse indices of critical points could he infinite (e.g., the functionals arising from the Hamiltonian systems), the Galerkin method plays an important role. Nevertheless, there is a kind of Lyspunov-8chmidt procedure, called the saddle point reduction, which reduces the infinite dimensional problems to finite dimensional ones. The later method has the advantage of simplicity. We shall introduce tbis method in Section 2.1, and apply it to the study of (0.1) in Section 2.2. We shall also investigate a cl .... of Hamiltonian systems in which the Hamiltonian functions are periodic in some of their variables. It is interesting to note that it causes multiple periodic solutions. This is Section
2.3. 2.1. Saddle Point Reduction Let H be a real Hilbert space, and let A be a self-adjoint operator with domain D(A) C H. Let F be a potential operator with 01> e C'(H,IR'), F = dol>, 01>(8) = O. Assume that (A) There exist real numbers a < f3 such that a, f3 rf. u(A), and that ., utA) n ia, f3] consists of at most finitely many eigenvalues of finite multiplicities. (F) F is Gateaux differentiable in H, which satisfies
The problem is to find the solutions of tbe following equation: Ax = F(x)
x
e D(A).
(2.1)
With no loss of generality, we may assume a = -f3, f3 > O. A Lyapunov-Schmidt procedure is applied for a finite dimensional reduction. Let
Po
=
J_(pp dE"
where {E,} is the spectral resolution of A, and let
According to (A), there exists E > 0 small, such that assume further the following condition:
-E
rf. utA). We
189
2. Reductioru and Periodic Nonlinearitia
(D) ~ E C'(V,llI.l), where V
= D(IAl l /'), with the graph nonn
IIxliv = (1iIAll/'xll~ +<'lIxll~ )
1/'
.
We decompose the space V as follows:
where
--IA,I-l/'no,
"0 .,
For each
U
""±
IA I-l/'H±, =,
and A ,
= EI + A •
E H. we have the decomposition
Xo
= I A £ 1-1/' UO,
x±
= IA e1-1/' u±.
Thus we have
and that V±. Vo are isomorphic to H± and Ho. respectively. Now we define a functional on H as rollows:
where E+ fo= dE" E_ f~oo dE" and ~,(x) = ~lIxll~ F, =tl+F. The Euler equation of this functional is the system
=
=
u±
= ±IA,I- l /' P±F,(x),
E±uo = ±IA,rl/'E±PoF,(x).
+ ~(",).
Let
(2.2) (2.3)
Thus x = ",++xo+x_ is a solution of (2.1) if and only ifu = u+ +uo+u_ is a critical point of f. However, the system (2.2) is reduced to
which is equivalent to
(2.4)
190
Mulliple Periodic Solutio""
By assumption (D), FE C'(V, V), and by assumption (F)
11F.(u) - F.(v)IIH :5 (e + tI)lIu - vllH V U, v E H. Furthermore, there is a 'Y > tI + e such that IIA;'IH+EDH_II:5
~
by assumption (A). We shall prove that the operator F = A;'(P+ + P_)F. E C'(V, V) is contractible with respect to variables in V+ (j) V_. In fact, V z x+ + x_ + z, II 11+ + 11- + z, for fixed Z E Vo,
=
=
1I.1"(x) - F(y)lIv = IIIA.I-'/2(p+ + P_HF,(x) - F.(II»IIH :5III A,I-'/2(p+ - P-)lIs(H)IIF.(x) - F.(y)IIH :5 (e + tllIIIA,I-'/2(p+ + p-lIls(H)II(x+ + x_) - (y+ + II-)IIH . .Since
IIz±IIH IIIA.I-'/2u±IIH:5 and IIIA.r'/2(p+
~lIu±IIH = ~lIx±llv,
+ P-)lIs(H) :5 ~,
we obtain
IIF(z) - .1"(y)lIv :5 <+ tlllz - "lIv. 'Y
The impHcit function theorem can be applied, yielding a solution x±(xo), for fixed Xo E Va, such that x± E C'(Vo, V±). Since dim Vo is finite, all topologies on Vo are equivalent. We have
u±(xo) = IA,I'/2x±(xO) E e'(Ho, H), which solves the system (2.2). Let
a(xo) = J (u+(xo) where "o(xo) = IA.I'/2xo and let
a(z) =
= zoo We have
~ (IIA!/2x+1I2 + IIA!/'E+zlI' -1I(-A,)'/'x_II' -1I(-A.)'/'E_zIl2) - 4>.(x)
=
Z
+ ,,_(xo) + "o(xo» ,
1
"2 (Az(z),x(z» - 4>(x(z»,
191
2. Reductiom and Periodic NonlineariUe.s
where x(z) = {(z)
+ z, {(z)
=x+(z) + x_(z) E D(A). Noticing that
d{(z) = A;'(P+
+ P_)r,(x(z»dx(z)
by (2.4), one sees that d{(z) E D(A) and that
Ad{(z) = (1 - Po)F'(x(z»dx(z). Thus
da(z) = (dx(z))O[Ax(z) - F(x(z))) = Az - PoF(x(z)) = Ax(z) - F(x(z))
(2.5 )
and
tPa(z)
= [A -
F'(x(z»)dx(z)
= AIH, - PoF'(x(z))dx(z).
In summary, we have proven
Theorem 2.1. Under the 8S8umptions (A), (F) and (D), there is a on~one
correspondence:
z .... x
= x(z) = x+(z) + x_(z) + z,
between the critical points of the C'-function a E C'(Ho,IIi.') with the solutions of the operator equation
Ax = F(x)
x E D(A).
Now we turn to the asymptotic behavior of the function a.
Lemma 2.1. Under tbe &ssumptions (A), (F) and (D), we assume furtber that there is a bounded self-adjoint operator F00 satisfying (i) (Foo)
(ii) { (iii)
PoFoo = FooPOi IIF(u) - Fooull = 0(11"11) as Ilull - 00; o ¢ utA - Foo).
Then we have that (1) {(z) = o(llzll) as IIzll _ 00, and (2) the function a(z) is asymptotically quadratic with &symptotics AFooIHo, i.e.,
llda(z) - (A - Foo)zll = o(lIzll) as IIzll -
00.
192
Multiple Periodic Solutions
Proof. By (2.4), we obtain Ae(z) = (I - Po)F(x(z».
Since Po commutes with Fool we have (A - F~){(z) = (I - PollF(x(z» - F~x(z)l.
Hence, V E > 0 there exists R > 0, such that
lIe(z)1I :5
II(A - F~)-lIII1F(x(z» - F~x(z)1I
< eC (lIzll + Ile(z)II), if Ilzll > R, where C
= II(A -
F~)-ll1; it follows that
lIe(zlil
=
oOlzll>·
By (2.5) we have llda(z) - (A - F~)zll = IIAz - PoF(x(z» - (A - F~)zll F~x(z)1I + IIF~x(z) o(II",(z)11> = o(lIzll) as IIzll - 00.
:5 IIF(x(z» =
F~zll
Lemma 2.2. Under the assumptions (A), (F) and (D), we assume that F(O) = O. (1) If there i. a self-adjoint operator Co E C(H, H) which commutes with Po and p_. such that
o
min(u(A) n la,i1J)I:5 C :5 F'(O), then a(z) :5
~ (A -
Co)z, z)
+ 0(lIzIl2) as IIzll - o.
(2) If there i. a self·adjoint operator ct E C(H, H) which commutes with Po and P+. 8tJch that
F'(S) :5 ct :5 max (u(A) n (a, i1J) I, then a(z) ;::
1
"2 (A -
ct)z, z)
+ 001z1l2) as IIzll - o.
Proof. By the definition and (2.5), a(z) =
"21 (Ax(z),x(z» -
1 = "2(Aq,q) - (q)
(",(z»
1
+"2 (Ax+(z),x+(z»
- ((x(z)) - (q)) ,
2. Reduction.J and Periodic Nonlmearitiu
193
where q = x_(z) + z. We shall prove that
that is, 1 a(z) ::; 2(Aq, q) - ~(q).
(2.6)
In fact, 1
~(x(z» - ~(q) - 2(Ax+(z),x+(z»
+ /.' ° (F(tx+(z) + q) - F(x+(z) + q),x+(z)) dt
= 2 1 (Ax+(z),x+(z))
~ ~lIx+(z)II' -
f.'
13(1 - t)dtllx+(z)II' = O.
However,
I~(q) - ~(F'(8)q,q)1 =
If.'
1 :::; -2
(F(tq) - F'(8)t q,q)dt l
sup IIF'(tq) -
O
F'(O)II.C(v,v)lIqll~,
that is, (2.7)
Note that x_ E C'(Vo, V_); this implies that if IIzll - 0, then IIx-(zlllv_ = O(lIzllv.) because x-(O) = O. Thus (2.8) Substituting (2.7) and (2.8) into (2.6), we obtain a(z) ::;
1 2 «A - F'(O))q, q) + 0(lIzIl2)
1
::; 2 (A -
as IIzll -
=
~ (A -
o.
Let
CO)q, q)
+ o(lIzll')
Cil)x_(z),x_(z»)
a_
+ ~ (A -
= min{u(A)
n [a,p]},
and, by the assumption,
'LI::; Cil.
Cil)z, z)
+ 0(lIzIl2)
194
Multiple Periodic Solutitms
This implies
therefore
a(z):O:;
1
"2 (A -
_ Co )z.z)
+ 0(lIzIl2) as z - O.
We prove the second assumption in a similar way. Finally. we apply Theorem 5.2 of Chapter II to solve the operator equation (2.1) under conditions (A). (F). (D) and (Foo). For a symmetric matrix B. let m ± (B) be the dimension of the maximal positive/negative subspace.
Theorem 2.2. Under assumptions (A). (F). (D) and (F 00)' we assume F(9) = 8. If one of the following conditions holds: (1) There exists a bounded self-adjoint commuting with Po and P_, such that min{u(A) n lo,{3]}I:O:; Co :0:; F'(8)
Co.
and m- (A -
CoIHo) > m- (A - FooIHo);
(2) There exists a bounded self-adjoint Cj", commuting with Po and P+, such that F'(8):O:; Cj" :0:; max{u(A) n lo,{3]}I and m+ (A - Cj"IHo) > m+ (A - FooIHo); then there exists at least one nontrivial solution of the equation (2.1). Proof. By Theorem 2.1, problem (2.1) is reduced to finding critical points of tbe function a E C 2 (Ho,1R 1 ). According to Lemma 2.1, a is an asymptotically quadratic function with a nonsingular symmetric matrix A-FooIHo as asymptotics. By Lemma 2.2, condition (1) means that d"a(8) is negative on the subspace Z_ on which A - Co is negative. Thus
Similarly, condition (2) means that
In this case,
m- (A - F""IHo)
= dimHo -
m+ (A - FooIHo)
> dimHo - m+(d2 a(8» = m-(d 2 a(8»
+ dimker(d2 a(8».
2. Reductiot13 and Periodic Nonlinearitiu
195
Both cases imply that
The conclusion follows from Theorem 5.2 of Chapter II.
Remark 2.1. The finite dimensional reduction method presented here is a modification of a method due to Amann [Amal] and Amann and Zehnder [AmZI]. Avoiding the use of monotone operators and a dull verification of the implicit function theorem, we change a few of the assumptions and gain a considerable simplification of the reduction theory. 2.2. A Multiple Solution Theorem We apply the saddle point reduction to Hamiltonian systems. Let H = L2 ([0, 2".], 11I.2n) , A = -J1;, with D(A) given in the preliminary. For HE C"(11I.' X 11I.2n ,11I.') being 2".-periodic in t, we define
F(z) = d,H(t,z(t». Suppose that there is a constant C
°
> such that (2.9)
then
4>(z)
=
/.2. H(t,z(t»dt EC'(H,11I.').
Again, the derivative F(z) = d4>(z) is Gateaux differentiable with
IIdF(z)IIC(H)
~
C Ii z
E
H,
so conditions (A) and (F) are satisfied. By observing the continuous imbeddings
condition (D) is also easily verified. When we study Hamiltonian systems under condition (2.9), the equation is reduced to
da(z) =0, where
I
a(z) = "2 (Ax(z),x(z» - 4>(x, (z».
196
Mullipl. Periodic Solulion8
Lemma 2.3. Suppose that %0 is a nondegenerate 27r-periodic solution of (0.2), i.e., the linearized equation -Ji =
z(O) = Z(27T),
(2.10)
has no Floquet multiplier 1, then the correspondence Zo E Ho is a nondegenerate critical point of a(z).
Proof. Since
dF(xo)z =
o¢
,,(A - dF(xo)) , because 1 is not a Floquet multiplier of (2.10). And since" (A - dF(xo)) consists of eigenvalues, (A - dF(Uo))-1 exists and is bounded. However,
<Pa(zo)
= (A -
dF(xo)]dx(ZO)
where
dx(zo) = idH,
+ d{(ZO),
hence <Pa(Zo) must be invertible, i.e., Zo is nondegenerate. Now we turn to a result which is concerned with the existence of at least two nontrivial periodic solutions.
Theorem 2.3. Suppose that H E e'(]R1 x]R'n,ll1.t) satisfies the follow· ing conditions:
(1) There exist constants n < (3 such that
nl:S
X
]R.n.
(2) Let jo,jo + 1, ... ,j, be all integers within (n,(3] (without loss of generality, we may assume n, (3 ¢ il.). Suppose that there exist l' and C, such that it < l' < (3 and
H(t,z) ~ (3) H.(t,9)
= 9.
1 21'lIzll' -
C V (t,z) E]R1
X
]R.n.
3j E [io,it) nil. such that
jl < d~H(t,9) < (j + 1)1 Vt E ]Rl.
(4) H is 21r·periodic with respect to t.
2. Reductimu tlfld Periodic. Nonlineoritiu
197
Then the Hami/toniau system (0.2) possesses at least two nontrivial periodic solutions. Proof. According to the finite dimensional reduction, we turn to the function
°
1 (Au(z), u(z» - /." H(t, u(z»dt, a(z) = 2
where u(z)
= z + u+(z) + u_(z), z E Z ~ Ho, and u±(z) E Hr..
Since
°
a(z) = 2(Aw,w) 1 - /." H(t,w)dt
+ {~[(AU(Z)'U(Z» where w = z
- (Aw, w)[ - l'[H(t,u(Z» - H(t,W)]dt},
+ u_(z), and the terms in the bracket are equal to
by condition (1), we obtain a(z) :5
~(Aw, w) 1
.
-1"
H(t, w)dt
:5 2(2"31 - -y)lIwll' + c
-
-00
as Ilzl[ -
00
using condition (2). Thus the function -a( z) is bounded from below and satisfies the (PS) condition. In order to apply the three critical paints theorem we claim that 9 is neither a minimum nor degenerate. In fact, using condition (3), it follows from Lemma 2.2 that
~ (A - X/)z, z) + o(lIzll') :5 a(z) :5 ~ (A where (X, >:) C (j,j
>:1)z,
z) + o(lIzll'),
+ 1), as IIzll - O. The theorem is proved.
Remark 2.2. Saddle point reduction was first applied to Hamiltonian systems by Amann Zehnder [AmZlJ. Theorem 2.3 is due to Chang [Chal].
198
Multiple Periodic Soluliom
2.3. Periodic Nonlinearity A special class of Hamiltonian systems (0.2), in which the function H(t, q; p), q = (qI,tJ2, ... ,qn), P = (PIIP2, ... ,Pn), is periodic in some of its variables, say ql,·.· ,qiJ' PI,'" ,Prl P.+), ... I 1 :5 r :5 8 ~ T. provides a possible way of gaining more solutions. This is due to the fact that the Hamiltonian function H, and then the functional J, is invariant under certain translation groups; therefore, the quotient space contains certain tori.
We start with an abstract theorem: Theorem 2.4. Under &ssumptions (A), (F) and (D), we assume that (P) 3 e" ... ,er E ker A, they are linearly independent, and 3 (T" ... ,Tr) E R', such that
II> (x+tm;T;e;) =1I>(x),
I/(m" ... ,mr)EZ',
I/xEH.
J=1
(LL) lI>(x) - ±oo if Ixl Then the equation
00
1/ x E ker An span{e" ... ,er
}-'-.
Ax -1I>'{x) = 0 has at least r + 1 distinct solutions; and jf all solutions are nondegener8te, then there are at least 2r distinct solutions.
Proof. A saddle point reduction procedure is applied. Consider the function on the finite dimensional space Vo defined below: a(z) =
1
:I (Ax(z),x(z)) -1I>(x{z)).
We shall prove that 1. x±
(z + E;=I T;e;) = x±(z),
In fact,
and therefore
1/
zE Vo.
2. Reductiom and Periodic Nonlinmrities
199
Claim.
a (z+ tT;e;) = ,""'1
~(A"(Z+ tT;e;),,,(z+ tT;e;)) ,=1 ,=1 -~(,,(z+ t.T;e;))
=
~ (Ax(Z),X(Z) + tT;e;) - ~(X(Z) + tT;e;) ,=1
1
=
"2 (Ax(z),x(z)) -
=
a(z).
,=1
~(x(z))
3. a satisfies the (PS) condition on T'" x (Y $ N(A).1) n Vo where Y = N(A) nspan{e ..... ,e,}.1, and T'" is the r-torus defined by
R'/(TIZ 1
X ••• X
T,ZI).
Claim. Suppose that {z'} is a sequence along which (a(z')} is hounded, and IlOO(z')11 = 0(1). According to (2.5),
IAx(z') - F(x(z'))IH = 0(1). Let Q be the orthogonal projection onto Y, which is considered to be a subspace of the Hilbert space /C = Y $ N(A).1. Thus on the space /C,
(I - Q)x(z') = A-1(I - Q)F(x(z'» + 0(1), and since F is hounded, 11(1 - Q)x(z') II is bounded. Noticing
~(Qx(z')) = ~(x(z')) - [ (F(x,(z')), (I = a(z') -
1
"2 (Ax(z'),x(z'») -
where
x,(z)
=
fl
10
Q)x(z'))dt (F(x,(z')), (I - Q)x(z'))dt,
«1 - t)I + tQ) x(z),
and
(Ax(z'),x(z'») = (Ax(z'), (I - Q)x(z'») = (F(x(z'» + 0(1), (/ - Q)x(z')),
200
Multiple.
P~ic
Solutiom
~(Qx(ZO)) must be bounded.
According to condition (LL), Qx(zk) is bounded. The compactness of Zk now follows from the boundedness of x(ZO) and the finiteness of the dimension of Vo. 4. If we decompose Vo into span{ e', ... ,er} z
= v + w,
and let g(w, v)
(v, w) E span{_" ... ,er }
E!)
E!)
(Y E!) N(A).l) n Vo,
(Y E!) N(A).l) n Vo,
= "21 (A{(w + v),{(w + v)) -
~(x(w
+ v)),
where
{(z) = x+(z) r
then 9 is well-defined on T x (Y dg(w,v)
E!)
+ x_(z),
N(A).l) n Vo, and
= PoF(x(w + v)),
which is bounded and then is compact on finite dimensional manifold. The function a(z) now is written in the following form: a(w,v)
1 = 2(Aw,w) -
g(w,v).
Noticing that F is bounded, iI~(z HI is always bounded. If we denote by y the projection of w onto Y, we have g(y, v)
= 21 (A{(y + v), {(v + v)) -
~(y) - [~({(y + v)
+ y + v) -
~(Y)l.
The first term and the third term are bounded, therefore g(y, v)
~
±oo
as
Ilyil ~ 00.
The function a(w, v) satisfies all the assumptions of Theorem 5.3 of Chapter II. Theorem 2.4 is proved, provided cuplength (r) = r, and the sum of the Betti numbers of r is 2r. Now we study the periodic solutions of the Hamiltonian systems in which the Hamiltonian functions are periodic in some of the variables. We use the following notations: p, q E R.",
P = (PI!··· ,Pr).
p= (Pr+l,.·· ,Ps), p= (P.+lt ... ,PT),
Il + (!'TH, ... ,Pn),
q = (qt, ... ,qr), ij= (qr+l,'" ,q.). q= (q,+h ... ,IJ'T), tj = ('IT+t, ... ,qn).
201
2. Reductiom and Periodic Nonlinearities
We make the following assumptions: (I) A(t), B(t), C(t) and D(t) are symmetric continnous matrix functions on S', of order (8 - r) )( (8 - r), (T - 8) )( (T - 8), (n - T) )( (n - T) and (n - T) )( (n - T) respectively. Let A = Is> A(t), and fj = Is> B(t) be invertible. (II) il E CO(S' )( R'n,R') is periodic in the following variables p,li, ii, q, and d'il is bounded. (III) Let span{'P ..... ,'Pm} = ker (-if. - (C(t) eD(t») where
i
=
(0 In-T
-In_T) , 0
and CPt, ... I CPm are linearly independent, a.nd
il
(t, f
Tj'Pj) - ±oo
as
ITI = (Tl + ... + T;')'/' -
00.
J=t
(IV) c,dEC(S"RT
with c= (c ..... ,CT),d= (d ..... ,~) and
),
( o,(t) = ( dj(t) = 0,
lSI
lSI
i = 1, ... ,r, 8 + 1, ... ,T, j = 1, ... IS. We define a Hamiltonian function as follows:
H(t,p, q) =
~A(t)j). jJ + ~B(t)q. q + ~(C(t)p. P + D(t)ij. q) T
+ L (0, (t)p, + d,(t)q,) + il(t,p,q). i=1
Theorem 2.5. Under conditions (I)-(JV), the Hamiltonian system (0.2) d
-Jdiz
= H,(t, z),
,
t ES ,
has at least r+T+ 1 periodic solutions, and if all solutions have no Floquet multiplier I, then (0.2) has 8t least 2r+T periodic solutions. Proof. Let
o A(t)
A(t) =
o C(t)
o
o B(t) D(t)
202
Mullipl. Periodic SoM""",
and let
where the subscripts on J coincide with those on p. We have (P.q)
e ker ( -J~ #
q= A(t)p . { P=O.
#
{
(A(t)
0))'
~= £~ A(s)ds· c+d.
with q(2lf) = iRQ).
p=c
" (i.e .• with
A· c =
ker
8). According to assumption I,
(-J~
- (A(t) 0))
= {(B.d)
c = 8.
We have
Ide R,-r} ~ R,-r.
Similarly,
Thus
Let
~(z) = fs. {B(t, z(t»
+
t,
I",(t)p.(t) + d. (t)q. (t)] } dt.
Then all the assumptions (A). (F), (D), (P) and (LL) are satisfied. The proof is complete. Example 2.1. If the Hamiltonian function H e CO(SI X R 2 ·,R I ) is
periodic in each variable, then (HS) has at least 2n + 1 periodic solutions. This is the case where r = • = T = n. This result, related to the Arnold conjecture (cf. Section 5), was first obtained by Conley and Zehnder ICoZl], see also Chang ICha5].
3. Singular Pol ...1ia&
203
Example 2.2. If H E O'(S' X R2n, R'), where H is periodic in the components or q, and that there is an R > 0 such that ror IPI ~ R, I
H(t,p,q) = 2Mp.p+a.p where a Ell", and M is a symmetric nonsingular time independent matrix,
then the corresponding (HS) possesses at least N + I distinct periodic solutions. This is the case where r = 0, IJ = T = R. This is a result obtained by Conley and Zehnder [CoZIJ; see also P.H. Rabinowitz (Rab6). Remark 2.3. Perindic nonlinearity has been studied by many authors: Conley-Zehnder [CoZI), Franks [Fral), Mawhin (Maw2), MawhinWillems [MaWI), Li [Lil), Rabinowitz [RAb6J, Pucci-Serrin [PSI-2). Fonda-Mawhin [FoMI) and Chang [Cha9). Theorems 2.4 and 2.5 are due to Chang. The condition H E 0' can be weakened to H E C', cr. Liu [Liu4J. 3. Singular Potentials
Most Hamiltonian systems interested in mechanics have singularities in their potentials. Let 0 he an open subset in llI.n with compact complement C = llI. n \ 0, n "= 2. Find xO E 0'([0,2,,),0) satisfying
x(t) = grad, V(t, x(t», { x(O) = x(21<),
x(O) = x(2,,),
(3.1)
where V E 0' ([0,2".) x O,llI. l ) is assumed to be 2".·periodic in t, with additional conditions: (AI) There exists Ro > 0 such that
sup {1V(t, x)1
+ 11V;(t,x)I!_. I (t, x) E [0,2,,) x (lltn \ BRo)} < +00.
(A2 ) There is a neighborhond U or C in llI.n such that
A
V(t,x) ~ tf'(x,C)
ror (t,x) E [0,2,,) x
u,
where d(x, C) is the distance function to C, and A > 0 is a constant. The condition (A2 ) is called the strong rorce condition, according to W. B. Gordon [Gorl). For the sake or simplicity, rrom now on we shall denote the subset of 0'([0, 2"J, 0), satisfying the 2"'periodic condition, by C'(S"O). Similar notations will he used for other 2"'periodic function spaces.
204
Multiple Periodic Solutions
We shall study the problem (3.1) by critical point theory. Let US introduce an open set of the Hilbert space H'(S' ,111.") as follows:
A'fI =
{x E H'(S"III.") I X(/) E fI, VI E S'}.
This is the loop space on fl. Let J(x) =
US
define
{~lIf(/)1I1. + V(t,X(/))} dt
f'
(3.2)
on A'fI, the Euler equation for J is (3.1). In order to apply critical point theory on the open set A' fI, one should take care of the boundary behavior of J, i.e., we should know what happens if x tends to 8(A 'fI). Lemma 3.1. Assume (A,) and (A2). Let {"'o} C A'fI and Xo ~ x weakly in H'(S', 111."), with x E 8(A'fI). Then J("'o) ..... +00.
Proof. It suffices to prove 2 • V (t, xo(t)) dl ..... +00.
1
Moreover, since Yet,X') is bounded from below, it remains to prove that "there is an interval [a, bJ C [0,2"1 such that V(I, x.(I))dt ..... +00.
f:
By definition, x E 8(A'fI) means that there is I' E [0,2"J such that x(/') E 00. According to (Ad and (A2), there is a constant B > 0 such that
A
V(I, x) ~ d2(x, C) - B; hence
{+6
V(/,x(I))dl
~ {+6 (lIx(I) _~(I')lli. -
B)
dl
'V 8 > O. However, we have IIx(t) _ x(t')lIm.
~ II _ 1'1'/2 (f'lIf(/)lIi. dt) '/2
from the Schwarz's inequality; thus t·+6
1,.
V (t, x(I» dt
Since the embedding H'(S',III.")
'-+
= +00.
(3.3)
C(S',III.") is compact, we have
Max {lIx(I) - x.(t)lIm' I I E S'}
..... 0
as
after ornitting a subsequence. Consequently, t~+6
1,.
V (I, x.(I)) dt .....
provided by Patou's Lemma and (3.3).
+00,
k ..... 00,
3. Singular Potentials
205
Lemma 3.2. A&mme (AI) IJlId (A,); then there is 8 coustaut Co d... pending on the C l norm of the function V on Sl x (RR \ B".,), such that J satisfies the (PS)c condition for c > Co. Proof. Assume that {x.} c A In satisfies
J(x.)
~
c,
(3.4)
and
where
We shall prove the subconvergence of {x.} in Alfl. Since V is bounded below, (3.4) implies a constant C I > 0 such that (3.6)
e.
= ,~ J:' x.(t)dt. If we can prove tbat {e.} is bounded, then {Xk} is bounded in HI(SI,IlI.R). Hence, there is 8 subsequence x. - x (weakly in HI). Applying Lemma 3.1, we have that x E Alfl and that
Let
IIgrad.V(·,x.)II•• is bounded. Hence, the strong convergence of {x.} fol· lows from the compactness of IK and (3.5). It remains to prove the boundedness of {e.}. If not, we may assume that Ie. I ~ 00; then for large k, we have
which implies
11"
V(t, x.(t»dtl :5 2" sup {lV(t, x)ll (t, x) E Sl x (Ill." \ B".,)}. (3.7)
From (3.5), we obtain
where Y. =
Xk - ~.,
for k large.
206
Multiple Periodic S.luti ....
Since fo""lI_(t)dt = 0, we have
IIII_IIH' = IIx_IIL"
and
lIy_IIL'
$
11l,_IIH';
hence
[WII:i:.(t)lIi. dt $lIx_IIL' + IIV;(t,x.(tnllL'II:i:.IIL" It follows that
IIx.IIL'
$ 1 + 11V;(·,x.O)IIL' $ 1 + 2.. sup
IIV;(t, x)IIa..
(3.8)
(t,Z}ESI x(I"\BIlo)
Substituting (3.7) and (3.8) into (3.2), and letting
co =
2 1 -2 (1 + 2" (t.z)eS sup IIV;(t,x) II•• ) x (- .. ,Silo) I
+ 2"
sup (t,z)ESl )(1\'"\8110)
Wet, x)l,
we have J(x.) $ CO. This is a contradiction. Lemma 3.3. There exists
8
sequence of integers
o
Proof. Pick a point Po E C and choose R > 0 such that C c B R, we have llI.n \ BR C fl C llI.n \ {Po}. Since llI. n \ BR is a deformation retract of llI. n \ {Po}, A'(Rn \ B R) is a deformation retract of A'(llI. n \ {Po}), and then A'(llI. n \ BR) is a retract of A' fl. We obtain H.(A'fl)
Q<
H. (A '(llI.n \ BR»)
Q<
H.(A',sn-')
(j)
(j) H. (A 'fl, A'(JRn \ Bn» H.(A'fl,A',sn-')
from Chapler I, Section 10. According to Bott [Bot), the Poincare series of A1 sn-l is written as
with il2 coefficients. Our conclusion fonows.
207
3. Singular PotentiaLt
Lemma 3.4. libr each b > 0, there exists a Brute dimensional singular complex M = M. such that the l.ve/ set J. = {x e A'(} I J(x) :5 b} is deformed into M. Proof. According to (A,) and (A,), we have b, > 0 such that
From Lemma 3.1, there exists EO = E(b, b,) > 0 such that
d(x(t), C) ~ EO V x Let us choose an integer N
e J.
'I t
e 5'.
60 1 / 2
= Nb
> 211' ~, 8Ild let
21ri
. t=O,I,2, ... ,N.
ti=N' Define a broken line
'I t = [t,_"t,l, i = 1,2, ... ,N, for any x e J., and let M = {x(t) I x e J.}. The correspondence:;; ..... (x(t,),X(t2), ... ,X(tN» defines a homeomorphism hetween M and a certain open subset of the N-fold product () x () x ... x (). We shall verify the following. (1) Me A'(}. Indeed, 'I x e J., 'I t, > t2,
Therefore, d(:;;(t), C)
~ d(x(t.), C) -
(1 -;" N(t - t,_,») IIx(t,) - x(t,_,)II••
~ EO - 2..N-'b:/ 2 > 0 Vte It,_"t,),i=0,1,2, ... ,N.
208
Mullipl. Periodic Soluliom
(2) There exists '1 E C '1(1, J.) = M. We define 'I as follows:
'1(" x)(t) =
x(t) 1
I
0°, 1] X J.,A'O)
such that '1(0,·) = id, and
for t
~
2...
t
(-I._I
( - 2•• ,._.) x( ,-,)
+ 2'11"_-"_1 '-';-' x(211"')
for
z(l)
1,_, < t < 211"'
for I:S 1,_, :S 2... :S I,
then 'I is the required deformation. We bave proven that J. is deformed into M in the loop space A' O. The proof is finished. Lemma 3.S. For each q > nN, where N = N", is as defined in Lemmas 3.2 and 3.4, set c = inf max J(x), .lEo xelzl where Q E H,(A '0) is nontrivial. Then c ·ofJ. ,
> eo and tben c is a critical value
Proof. If not, c :S eo, then tbere is a Iz) E a such tbat Izl C J...+,. According to Lemma. 3.4, there exists a deformation 7]: (0, I} x Jco + 1 -+ A10, such that '1(1, J...+l) C Moo+l, with dimMoo+l :S nN.... This implies that '1(I,lzll C M ...+l. But '1(I,lzll E a, and a E H,(A'O), with q > nNoo. This is impossible.
Theorem 3.1. Under assumptions (A,) and (A.), (3.1) possesses infinitely many 211"-periodic solutions. Proof. We prove the theorem by contradiction. Assume that there are only finitely many solutions: K = {x"x., ... ,x,}. Noticing that the nullity dimker(d'J(x;)):S 2n, V j, let
q' > max {nNoo , ind(J,x;)
+ dim ker(d' J(x;» 11 :S j :S I} ,
and
b> max {eo, J(x;)
11 :S j
:S I}.
It follows that
C,(J,x;)=O
Vq~q·,j=I,2,
... ,I,
(3.9)
and
H.(A'O, J ... ) = H.(J., J... ). Consequently,
(3.10)
4. The Multiple Pendulum Equation
209
provided by the Morse inequalities. But
i.:H.(AIO) _ H.(AIO,J",) is an injection for q 2::: q-, and the conclusion of Lemma 3.3 contradicts
(3.10). The proof is finished. For autonomous systems, i.e., the potential V is independent of t, in order to single out nonconstant 21r-periodic solutions, we have Corollary 3.1. Under the assumptions of Theorem 3.1, if, further, V is independent oft, then (3.1) pD" ESSes inJinite1y many 211"-periodic nonconstant solutions, if V" is bounded from below on the critical set K of V. Proof. For Rny constant solution x(t) = xo, the Hessian of J at Xo reads as cP J(xo)x = -x + V"(xo)'" with periodic boundary conditions, and hence, the Morse index and the nul· Iity must he bounded by a constant depending on a, where V"(x) ~ aInxn V x E K. We conclude that all constant solutions have a bounded order of critical groups. Therefore there must be infinitely many nonconstant solutions. Remark 3.1. Problem (3.1) was studied by Gordon [Gorl). The critical point approach was given by Ambrosetti-Coti-Zelati [AmZI-2) and CotiZelati [CotI). Theorem 3.1 improves the results in [AmZI-2) considerably, where assumption (Ad was replaced by much stronger conditions:
)V(t,x)I,lIgradzV(t,xlll- 0 uniformly in t, as
IIxll -
+00; and there exists RI
Vet, x) > 0 V x,
> 0 such that
IIxll ~ RI.
Theorem 3.1 is due to M.Y. Jiang [Jial-2). Some related problems of the three body type were recently studied by A. Bahri and P.H. Rabinowitz [BaRI). By Rvoiding condition (A,), Bahri aod Rabinowitz introduced the concept of generalized solutions. The existence and multiplicity results for generalized solutions were studied in [BaRI). A most important problem is to ask when the generalized solution is a regular solution. 4. The Multiple Pendulum Equation The Problem. The simple mechanical system consists of double mathematical pendula having lengths tt,l2 > 0 and masses ml,m2 > 0, as illustrated in the following figure.
210
Multiple Periodic Solution.o
The positions of the system are described by two angle variables
L(
~(m, + m2}1~.p~ + (m, + m2}l,t2 cos('P' +
'P2}.p,.p2
~m2e..p~ + V(
where
V('P} = 9
«m, + m,}t, cos
Let 2,\ he the smaller eigenvalue of the matrix
°
(m,+m2}Q (m,+m2}l,12) ,\ ( (m, + m2)l,l. m,~ ,> .
For the sake of simplicity, we 8SSume the constant of gravitation 9 = 1. We shall add an additional forcing term f f(t) E 1R2 , which is 8SSUmed to depend periodically on time t with period T > 0, and which, moreover, has mean value zero, i.e.,
=
f(t+T) = f(t} Vt f E L 2([0,T],IR'},
and
loT f(t)dt = 0.
(4.1)
We look for periodic solutions 'P(t) = ('P' (t), 'PO(t», having period T, of the Euler Lagrange equation
:tL,,(
= f(t),
(4.2)
or, equivalently, the critical point in H!([O, T],IR') of the functional
J(
[~L(
H!([0,T],IR 2) = (
We shall prove the following
= 'P(t)}.
211
4. The Mulliple Pendulum Equation
Theorem 4.1. Under (4.1), equation (4.2) pas, " at least three periodic solutions having periodT. FUrthermore, if-y, := (m, +m,)t, -m,t, > 0, and if 1'2 := (m, + m,)t, satisBes
T {../f'1'2 + II/IIL' }' < 16,,' ~7" The Solution. The first conclusion is not surprising: it follows from the following simple observation:
J(rp, Let rp, = (ip"
+ 2b, 'PO + 2/,,) =
J(rp" 'PO) V (k.l) E Z'.
iP,), where ip,
= ~ f.T rp,(t)dt,
(Pi
=
CPi -
and
CPi,
i = 1,2. Then J is well-defined on M := T" x #'([0, T),IlI.'), where
#'([O,T),IlI.')
= {rp E H!([O,T),IlI.') I ~ {
rp(t)dt
= 9} .
Lemma 4.1. The functional J is bounded from below. Proof. Indeed,
4(m, + m,)l~
It follows that
J(rp)
~ ~ J.T 1
CT -
J.T iP· I dl,
where C = (m, +m.)l, +m,l2, and iP· 1= iP,/, +iP2J.. 1= (f" first eigenvalue characterization provides the following estimate:
. f ID
II
h)· The
(211")' T
so (4.3) Consequently,
J(rp)
~ ~IIIIi. - CT - ~ II/IIL' II
This finishes the proof.
(4.4)
212
Multipl. Periodic Solutio ...
Lemma 4.2. The functional J satisfies the (P8) condition. Proof. Let {'Pft} he a sequence in M such that J('P.) is hounded, and dJ('P.) ~ 0 as n ~ 00. From (4.3) and (4.4), {1I~nIlH'} is hounded, and since T' is compact, {'P.} is also hounded in M. By passing to a subsequence, one may assume that V'n - 'PO in H!, and V'n -+ 'Po in C ([0, T),1l2), as n -+ 00. Now
(dJ('P.),'P. - '1'0) - (dJ('I'O),'P. - '1'0) = (A('P.)
'1'0)
+ (V'('Pn), 'P. - '1'0)
+ (J,'P. -
'Po) - (A('Po)
- (V'('I'O) , 'P. - '1'0) - (J, 'P. - '1'0) ::: (A('Po)(
::: >'1I
'. L' respectively, and
Since dJ(CPn) -+ 8, !f>n - cpo - 8 in H! and 'Pn conclude from the inequality that
-+
'Po in C J as n
-+ 00,
Therefore, CPn is convergent in M. This completes the proof.
Lemma 4.3. The circle 8)
= {'P E M I Vi) = Vi, = 8,'P) = ",'P, E
(f.~)} C L"T'
Proof. Directly compute, VI{) E 811 we have
J('P) = f.T I-(m)
+ m2)t) + m,t, COS'P2J dt :-:; -·'ltT.
Lemma 4.4. 38 E (0,1) such that
82 = {'P E M I'P)
= O,'P, E (;.~)} nL."T = 0.
we
213
4. The Multiple Pendulum Equalion
Proof. V 'P E 80, J('P} 2:
~1I.pllt, + J.T (m. + m.}t.(cos'P. - cos~.}dt + T,),. - 11f11L' 'II$IIL'
2:
~11.pllt, + T,),. -
')'.
J.T 1$. (t}ldt -lIfllL'll$h'
2: ~1I.pllt, + T,),. - ( VT'l'2 + IIfIlL') II$IIL' 2:
~1I.pllt, + T,),. - ~ (VT'l'2 + IIfIlL') 1I.pIlL'·
Hence, if there is a
I{J
E J -tJ"'11 T
n S'll then
But, by the assumption on 'l'2 in the theorem, it cannot be true V • E (0, I). The contradiction proves the lemma. Note that ')': M = T' x
Ii _ T'
x {8} defined by
,),:('P','P'}"'" ('P.;'P2) is a deformation retract. We need
Lemma 4.5. Let X be a topological space which contains sub6ets satisfying
u
u
X'
:> Y'
u :> Z'.
If Z is a strong deformation retract of X, and if Z' is a strong deformation retract of X', then the inclusion map j: (Z, Z') - (Y, Y') induces a monomorphism j.: H.(Z, Z'} _ H.(Y, Y'} (4.5) in homology and an epimorphism j":H'(Y} - W(Z}
(4.6)
in the cohomology ring.
Proof. We consider the commutative diagram
H.+.{X,Z)
-
H.(Z, Z'}
i·l
H.(Y, Y'}
W(Y',Z'}
--L ,,/"
--->
"1 H.(X,Z'} ,1
--->
H.{X,Y'}
~
--->
H.(X',Z'} (
H.(X,Z}
{4.7}
214
Multiple Periodic Solutiom
where the longest row is the exact sequence of the triple (X. z. Z') and tbe longest column is tbe exact sequence for the triple (X. Y'. Z'). The indicated maps are induced by inclusions. By the assumptions
H.(X. Z)
=0
and
H.(X'. Z')
= o.
Therefore 13 is an isomorphism and ~ is a zero map. To prove that j. is injective. assume a E H.(Z. Z') satisfies j.(a) = O. Then by the commutativity of the rectangle in diagram (4.7). 7013(0) = 60 j.(a) = O. Therefore. by tbe exactness of the longest column in (4.7) there exists an a E H.(Y'. Z') such tbat '1(0) = 13(0). By tbe commutativity of the triangle in (4.7) and the property of ~. we have '1(0) = , 0 {(a) = O. and since 13 is an isomorphism. we conclude a = 13-· 0 'I(a) = 0 as claimed. In order to prove (4.6) we consider tbe commutative diagram W(X.Z)
-
,_____..!..
W(X)
W(Z)
Ti"
_
W+l(X.Z)
(4.8)
--- W(Y) . where the longest row is tbe exact sequence for tbe pair (X. Z) and 13 aod '7 are bomomorphisms induced by inclusions. Since H·(X. Z) = o. 13 is an isomorphism. If a E H·(Z). then by the commutativity of the triangle in (4.8) j'(-y 0 P-·(a» = a. so that j" is indeed surjective.
Proof of Theorem 4.1. 1. The first conclusion follows directly from Corollary 3.4 of Chapter II. because CL(T" x ii) = 2. 2. As to tbe second conclusion, we consider two separate pairs: (M,J-.,.T) and (J-,.T.0). and we want to prove that there are at least two distinct critical points in each pair. For the pair (J_,.T.0). Lemmas 4,3 and 4,4 yield
(S· \ {O})
X
S· )(
ii:::> J_,.T:::> {1r}
)( S· )( {e}.
Construct a strong deformation retraction
'I: [O.lJ x (S· \ {OJ)
X
S· )(
ii -+ {1r} X S· x {II}.
by
Apply Lemma 4.5. Then tbere are a monomorphismj.: H.(S·) and an epimorphism j':H'(L"r) -+ H·(S·).
-+
H.(J-"r)
215
5. Some RuulI& on Arnold Conj
We pick two homology classes, 0 I (0.) E H.(S'), i = 0,1. and a cohomology class, 0 I {J E H' (5'). such that
(00) = (0,) n {J. Let (... ) = j.(o.), i = 0,1, BIld w = r-'({J). Then 0';' (... ) E H.(L"T) for i = 0,1 BIld 0 I w E H'(L"T)' Since
(z.) nw = (j.(o.)) nw = ;.((0.) n;'w) = ;.((0.) n {J) = j. (0,) = (z,). Corollary 3.4 of Chapter II is used to give at 1east two critical points in J-'YlTo
To the pair (M,J-.."T), we observe that M:> M:> 1"" x {O}, and (5' \ {O}) x 5' x
Ii :> L.."T :> { ..} x 8'
x {O}.
Again, applying Lemma 4.5, there are a monomorphism k.: H.(T", 8') -+ H.(M,L."T) and an epimorphism k':H'(M) -+ H·(T"). Similarly, we pick two relative homology classes (6.] E H.(T·,S'), i = 1,2, and a c0homology class 0 I ff E H' (T"), and (51) = (50) n ff. Similarly, let (w.) = k. (6.], i = 1,2, and w' = k O - ' (ff); we have (w,) = )wo) n w'. Then we use Theorem 3.4 of Chapter II to obtain at least two critical points in (M,L",T)' In summary, we have proven that there are at least four distinct solutions. Remark 4.1. The conclusion of Theorem 4.1 was first obtained by Fournier and Willem (FoWl) by a relative category method. The above method enabled Chang, Long and Zehnder (CLZI) to extend Theorem 4.1 to a n-pendulum problem. Under suitable parameters, they obtained 2ft solutions. For a more general consideration, cr. Felmer (Fell).
5. Some Result. on Arnold Conjectures 5.1. The Conjectures Let M be a compact symplectic manifold with a symplectic form w, i.e., a closed nondegenerate 2-form. Let h:IR' x M -+ lR' be a time dependent smooth function. We call it the Hamiltonian. Supposing h is 2,,-periodic in t. we associate a family of vector fields X, on M, defined by w(·, X,) = dh"
216
Multiple Periodic So/utio ...
where X, is called tbe Hamiltonian _ r field associated with h,. We consider the Hamiltonian system
'Po
= id,
(5.1)
which defines a family of symplectic diffeomorphisms. Arnold's first conjecture is concerned with the fixed point of the symplectic diffeomorphism 'P2•• Namely, (AC,) 'P2. has at least as many fixed points as a function on M has critical points. Let CR(M) be tbe minimum number of critical points that a function on M must have, and CRN(M) the minimum number if all are nondegenerate. Clearly, GR(M) <: CL(M) + 1 and
CRN(M)
<: 8B(M),
. where GL is the abbreviation of cuplength, and 8B the sum of Betti numhers. According to Conley-Zehnder [CoZIJ, (AO.) is rewritten as
CL(M)
# Fix(V'2.) <: { 8B(M)
+1 if 'P2.(M)
mM
at Fix(V'2.).
This conjecture is somewhat related to Poincare's last theorem: Let
8' - D'
X
8' be an area preserving homeomorphism such that V'(P, q)
= (f(P, q), q + g(p, q))
(p, q) e D' x 8'
(5.2)
where /,g are 2lT-periodic in q, &ad for all q e 8', /(±I,q) = ±l, g(l, q) > o and g(-I,q) < O. Then V' has at least two fixed points, or, geometrically speaking, for an area preserving homeomorphism on an annulus, if it twists on the boundary, then it has at least two fixed points. Indeed, the symplectic diffeomorphism 'P2. preserves area (in the case M = D' X 8'). If 'P2. is written as (5.2), then the condition
h.(t, ±1, q) = 0
(5.3)
ph, > 0 for p = ±1
(5.4)
implies /(±I,q) = ±l, and
implies g(-I,q) < 0 and g(+1,q) -
~-'2'.-~ ·;~·t:.f.1 ~ •
_"
c'
> 0 V q.
217
5. Some lWuIl.t on Amold C...ject......
The symplectic diffeomorphism 'P2w indnced from a Hamiltonian h E X D' x S"lt'), 2..-periodic in t, satisrying (5.3) and (5.4), satisfies the hypotheses of Poincan\'s last theorem. 00 the other hand, there is a one-I<>-ooo correspondence between the &xed points of 'P2w and the periodic solutiollS of the Hamiltonian system
C"(JR'
itt) = X,(z(t» { z(O) = z(2.. )
(5.5)
provided that _ is the Poincare map z(2,,) = 'P2w(z(O». This relationship enables us to reduce our study of (AC,) to an estimate of the number of periodic solutions of Hamiltonian systems. We tum to the second conjecture. A submanifold L c M is caned a Lagrangian submanifold if w.(e, '1) = 0 V % E L, V e,'1 E T.(L), the tangent space of L at %, and dimL = ~ dimM (a symplectic manifold M is of even dimension). Arnold conjectured: (AG.z) For any Lagrangian submanifold L,
{ # (L n'P2w (L » > -
CL(L) + 1 SB(L)
if L
m'P2w(L)
where 'P2w is defined in (5.1). We now give some examples of the Lagrangian submanifolds.
Example 5.1. M = JR2 n, n
"'" =
L d:c; 1\ d:c +;. n
(5.6)
j:::l
Then (M,,,,,,) is a symplectic manifold, and
is a Lagrangian submanifold.
Example 5.2. M = T'n, the 2n torus, with the canonical symplectic form (5.6). Then (M,,,,,,) is .. compact symplectic manifold, and L = {(Xl,%2, ...
,X2n)
e R2n /71.'ln I Zn+l
= Xn +2 = ... = X2n
= o}
(= T") the n-torus, is a Lagrangian submaniCold.
=
E%ampl. 5.3. M = epn SOn+! /S', the complex projective space. It is defined as follows: First, we imbed SOn+! into the complex space e n +!.
218
Multiple Periodic Solutions
A group action 8' on
en+!
is defined:
V I' E 11.'/2,,7.' e! 8'. The complex projective space is just the quotient space of 8">+1 under the group action 8'. However, n +' has the canonical Hermite form
e
n+!
(z,w) = LZjWj
V z,w E en+!.
;=1
It induces a symplectic form Wo(z,w)
= -Im(z,w).
In real coordinates x, y, u, v E Rn+l. z ::::: X + iy, tv just the canonical symplectic form on ]R2(n+l).
= U + iv, where Wo
is
Noticing that
where ".: S'.+1
-->
Cpn is the projection z ..... [z], the equivalence class
under the group action S1, and i: S2n+l -+ C n+ 1 is the imbedding, we define a symplectic fonn w on Cpn as follows: 1\"·w = i·wo. It is well defined, because Wo is equivariant under the group action 8 1 •
Looking at the symplectic manifold (cpn,w) in this way, the submanifold L = {(z] E cpn I z E [zl, z = x + iy, y = 9} is diffeomorphic to the real projective space \ll.pn, and is easily verified to be a Lagrangian submanifold. 5,2, The Fixed Point Conjecture on (T"n,wo) Theorem 5,}, (Ae!) is true for (T 2n , Wo), i.e., there are at least 2n+ 1 fixed points for 'Po., and at least 22 • fixed points if 'Po. (T"n) is transversal to T 2• at all its fixed points. Proor. As we mentioned before, the problem is reduced to finding the number of 21f-periodic solutions of equation {5.5}. Since Wo is canonical, and lR 2n is the covering space of T'ln ,one may extend the Hamiltonian function h(I, -) from T'n = \ll.2n/2"zn to \11.2. by H E C2(111.' X \ll.2n,\II.'),
satisfying H(t, z) { H(I,z)
= H(t, z + 2"ej), = h(t,z)
j = 1,2, ... ,2n, V (t,z) E \11.' X T 2 . ,
5. Scmae Ruu/Is on Arnold Conjeduru
219
where {ej I 1 :5 j :5 2n} is the orthonormal basis in JR2n. Noticing that the Hamiltonian system induced by H and the canonical symplectic form Wo reads as -Ji = H.(t,z),
(5.7)
this is the equation we have studied so far. Each solution of (5.7) with the boundary condition z(2.. ) = z(O)
+ 2..ko
for some ko E Z2",
corresponds to a 2"-periodic solution [z) of (5.5) on ']"l". Moreover, two such solutions z" Z2 are in the same class [z) if and only if there exists i< E Z2" such that z,(t) = z,(t) + 2.. i<. Therefore, if there are two distinct 211"-periodic solutions Zj of (5.7) satisfying zi(O) = zi(211"), i = 1,2, then they must correspond to distinct classes IZi), i = 1,2, in ']"l". Now since H is of periodic nonlinearity, we apply Theorem 2.5 and conclude that there are at least (2n + 1) (or 22 ") distinct 211" periodic solutions of (5.7) (if all these solutions do not have Floquet multiplier 1 respectively). The proof is complete.
Let us return to the extension of Poincare's last theorem. Theorem 5.2. Let h E C'(JR' x B" x JR",JR') be 211"-periodic in t and q E R". Assume that h.(t,V,q) = 0 and (P,h.(t,V,q» > 0 whenever V E (JB", where B" is the unit ball in JR". Then the Hamiltonian system
-Jz = h.(t,z),
Z
= (p,q)
(5.8)
+ 1 (or 2") distinct 2"-periodic solutions (if all these solutions do not have Floquet multiplier 1 respectively).
possesses at least n
Proof. Since h is 21r-pcriodic in t and q, we may restrict ourse1ves on the compact set (t,q) E 8' x T". From (P,h.(t,V,q» > 0 whenever V E (JB", we have 0 < 5 < e/2, such that (P"h.(t,p"q» > 0, and (P"p,) > 0 for 1 - e :5 Iv,l :5 1, i = 1,2 and lv, - p,1 < e, and that Ih.(t,V,q)1 < 2~ for 1 - 25 :5 Ivl < 1 and (t,q) E 8' x T". Let us define a Hamiltonian HE C 2 (R' X R 2 ",JR') heing 211"-periodic in t and q, as follows:
H(t,V,q) = (1- p([v[)h(t,v, q)
+ P(lv[)alvI 2 ,
where p E C"" (JR~) satisfies 0 :5 p :5 1,
p(s) = {
~
if s ~ 1 ifs:51-5,
220
MuUiple Periodic Solutio ...
and 0 $ p'(s) $ Consequently,
i, and <> ¢ Z is chosen such that <> > 6Maxh(t,p,q).
(P" Hp(t,p" q))
= (p"
(1 - p(lPollhp(t,p"q)
+ [P'(IPoIl(<>1Po1 2 - h(t,p"q) +2<>1p,I'p(Ip,I)) ~I) > 0 '11- E $ 11',1 $ 1, j = 1,2, 11', - p,1 < E and 'I (t,q) E to consider the new iIaIniltonian system -Ji(t) = H. (t,z(t)) ,
s' x '1"'.
We tum
z = (p,q),
(5.9)
and claim that (5.8) and (5.9) have the same 21r-periodic solutions. Indeed, we conclude that 1. (5.9) has no 21r-periodic solutions zIt) (P(t),q(tll such that zIt) ¢ 1f' x llI.n for some t. If not, with no loss of generality, we may assume p(O) ¢ 1f'. In a neighborhood of (P(O),q(O)) we have
=
{
P=-H,=O q = Hp = 2ap'
so the solution must be (P(O) , q(O) + 2apt), which cannot be a periodic solution. Moreover,
2. (5.9) has no 21r-periodic solution zIt) = (P(t),q(t)) such that zIt) ¢ B'_6 x JRn for some t. Otherwise, from 1- 6 $ Ip(O)1 $ 1 aod Ipi = IH.I $ 2~' it follows that 1- 26 $ w(t)1 $ 1 and W(t,) - P(t.lI < E. Thus 0< (p(O),
l'
Hp(t,P(t),q(tlldt) = (P(0),q(21r) - q(O)) = O.
This is a contradiction. However, according to Example 2.2, (5.9) has at least n+ 1 (or 2n) distinct 21r-periodic solutions (if all solutions do not have Floquet multiplier 1 respectively). This proves the theorem. 5.3. The Lagrange Intersections for (CP",IRpn) We turn to (AC.), where the symplectic manifold M = CPR and the Lagrange submanifold L is taken to be IRP", as in Example 5.3. Since CL(IRpn) = SB(llI.P") = n
+ 1,
it is not necessary to consider the transversa) case. We have
221
5. Some R..uIJo on Arnold Con;'''''''"'
Theorem 5.3. (ACo) is true for (eP",RP"), i.e., there are at least (n + 1) intersections of <po.(RP") n RP". We reduce the intersection problem to a critical point problem by several steps: Step 1. Reduction to a boundary value problem. By definition, PI E )RP"n<po.(IRP") if and only if3Po E IRP" such thatp, = <po.CPo) E 11.1"', i.e., the equation
wIt) = X,(w(t)) { w(O) = Po, w(2,,) poss
= p"
po,p, E llI.P"
(5.10)
.eo a solution wIt).
Obviously, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the intersection points and the solutions of (5.10): wIt) = ""Po = "', 0 "'2~P'.
The problem is transferred to find the number of distinct solutions of the BVP (5.10). Step 2. Reduction to Hamiltonian .ystems on C n +!. Note that
cn+ 1 2....
82n + 1 ~ SJn+l/sl = cpn I
where" is the Hopf fibration. We can associate with h:IR' x eP" -llI.' a function H: llI.' x iCn +! _ R' satisfying
(1) H(t,e;#z) = H(t,z) V z = (Z"Z2, ... ,Zn+!) E en+!; (2) H(t, = h(t,.) 0 "; (3) H(t,·) is positively 2-homogeneous in a neighborhood of the unit ball; (4) H(t,·) is C' and C'-bounded. With no loss of generality, we may assume that h(t,·) > 0, so that H(t, z) > o V z ~ 9, and also that H(t, 9) = 0 and H.(t, 9) = 9. We turn to consider a new Hamiltonian system:
·lI......
-Ji(t) = H,(t,z(t)) + oXz(t) { z(0),z(2,,) ERn+! n S"n+!, where
J~
(0
In+!
(5.11)
-In+!) , 0
and oX is a Lagrange multiplier. It plays a role here as an eigenvalue. Lemma 5.1. Let z be a solution of (5.11). Then zIt) E S'n+', and ,,(e;>lz(t)) solves (5.10).
Proof. We consider the derivative of the norm:
!
Iz(t)12 = 2(z(t), zIt)) = 2(z(t), J H.(t, z(t))),
222
Multiple Periodic Soluti ....
where 1·1 and ( , ) are the norm and the inner product on en+, = JlI.2(n+') respectively. But 0 = I,;H(t,.'.z)I.=o = (H,(t),z(t»,-Jz(t» because H is 8' invariant. Therefore Iz(t)l = const. Here and in the following, we write either z = (x,lI) E Rn+' x Itn+' or z = x + ill E iC"+', irthere is no confusion. Al; to the second conclusion, we observe that the symplectic structure w on CP" is defined by 1f·W = i·wo, where Wo is the canonical symplectic structure on cn+'. Thus w(·, X,)
=
dh" and dh,
0".
= dH, ° i = i·wo(·, Yi) = ",·w(·, Yi) = w(·, ".Yi),
where Yi = JH,(t,·). Since d(h, 0") = w(·, X,),
. therefore
Xt = On the other hand, letting z(t)
1r.Yi.
= .'>lz(t), (5.11) is rewritten as
-Ji'(t) = H, (t, z(t».
By the uniqueness of initial value problems, wet)
we
have
= "z(t) = ?TIe'" z(t»),
where wet) is defined by (5.10). Therefore ,,(e'''z(t» solves (5.10). The proof is finished.
Lemma 5.2. Let (,',A,) and (,2,A2) be two solutions oi(5.1l). Then ,,(e"",'(t») =" (e"",2(t») implies A, = A2 (mod ,,). Proof. First, we claim that if z:t ,Z2 solves -Ji = H,(t,z)
(5.12)
and ,,%, = "ZO, then 3 /l E]R' /2,,"§., such that
z' (t) = e'·ZO(t). Indeed, by definition, 3 a function /l(t) such that %'(1) = .'.(')ZO(I). Substituting into equation (5.12), we have
s.
223
Some Ruu/ts on Amoltl Conjectu,..
which implies either tbat 3 to such tbat ro(to) = 6, so that ro(t) = 6, V t, and we can choose p(t) to be constant, or that Mt) = 0 V t. And again we have p(t) = const. Next, we have
e,
p
z2(0) = z'(O),
"",+>,).2(2.. ) = e<>'z'(2..).
+'
Since z'(2j ..) E an n ,y2n+' (i = 1,2, j = 0,1), must be real. Consequently,
,'P and tben ,,(>.->,)
A2 = A,(mod ..). Let us define an operator on L2([O, 2..],IC"+!), d
A= -J dt' witb domain
Lemma 5.3. Th, operator A is self adjoint, with spectrum utA) has multiplicity (n + 1).
each eigenvalue
lk
= lZ;
Proof. Indeed, we have the following spectral decomposition:
L2([O, 2 .. ],C n+!) = E!1span{cos ~kt';+iSin ~ktej+n+' ] j = 1,2, ... ,n+1}, kEZ
where {e;
+ iej+n+! Ii =
1,2, ... ,n + 1} is tbe basis of en+!.
Step 3. Reduction to a variational problem. According to the spectral decomposition, we decompose A into the positive, zero and negative parts: A = A+ + AO - A-, where A+ and A- are positive operators on their associated subspaces. Let us introduce a Hilbert space E = D(IAI'/2), the
domain of the square root of IAI, with norm
liz II "
= ( Izll'
+ IIIAI'/2,"i, )
'/2
.
In the following, if there is no confusion, we denote by ( , ) and by L 2 inner product and norm, respectively. Let us define
J(z) =
~ (I(A+)'/2," 2 -1I(A-)'/2'11 2 )
on the manifold S
= {. E E IlIzIIL' = 1}.
-12'
H(t,.(t»dt
II· II the
224
Multiple Periodic Soiutiom
Lemma 5.4. Suppose that zo is a critical point of J on S with Lagrange multiplier Av. Then (ZO, Av) solves (5.11), and J(ZO) = Av. Proof. Letting (ZO, '\0) be the critical point and the Lagrange multiplier, we have
(5.13)
v z E E, and it follows that Po(H,(t, ZO)
+ .\zo) = 6,
where Po is the orthogonal projection onto the space associated with eigenvalue O. Consequently,
and therefore
zo E D(lAI)
C D(A).
Then the weak solution equation becomes Azo
= H,(t, ZO) + '\ozo,
so that Zo solves (5.11). In particular, if we choose z = ZO in (5.13), then
(1IA+)I/'zoll' -1I(A-)'/'ZoIl')
- 2('\ozo, zo)
-1"
(H,(t, Zo),zo)dt
= O.
Since ZO(t) E S'n+1 (Lemma 5.1) V t E [0,2"J, and H(t, z) is positively 2-homogeneous in a neighhorhood of the unit hall, we have (H,(t,Zo),zo) = 2H(t,zo).
Thus
Remark 5.1. We take the working space E = D(lAII/') with norm
rather than the space HI/2([0, 2"1, C n+ l ) since the trace operator is not well-defined on Hl/2, so that the boundary value condition cannot be formulated in Hl/'l.
IIzllE = (lIzlll, + IIIAI'/'zlll')'/
225
5. Some Results on Amold Conjectures
Finally, we observe that there is a natural symmetry for the functional. Namely, J( -z) = J(z). Indeed, the function H(t, z) is SI-invariant, so that H(t,-z) = H(t,e"z) = H(t,z). Moreover the boundary value condition D(A) is also invariant with respect to this group action. Consequently, J is well defined on the space P = SI'§." where S is the unit L' sphere in E. Returning to the original problem, we point out that we Me not concerned with bow many distinct critical values of J there are, but how many distinct critical points there are associated with critical values in an interoal with length < ... After the preparation, we shall give a proof of Theorem 5.3. The Galerkin approximation will he applied. Let E. =
$
span
{cos ~ltei + i sin ~ltei+n+1 Ii = 1,2, ... ,n + I},
1'1:5'
p.
=
pnE.,
and
J. = Jlp•. Then dim E. = (2k + l)(n + I), dim p. = (2k + l)(n + 1) - 1.
Lemma 5.5. J sati"1ies (PS)" with respect to {Po I k = 1,2, ... }. Proof. SUPP05C that z. E p. is a sequence satisfying IJ(z.)1 =
I~(AZ"Z') -
J.2. H(t,z.)dtl:o; C.
(5.14)
and
(dJ.(Zk),
W)E = (Az., w) - J.2. (H,(t, Zk) + AkZ., w)dt = o(llwIlE)
"W
E E.
(5.15)
zt
We decompose Zk into +z:+z;, according to the spectral decomposition, to positive, zero, negative eigenvalues, respectively. First, setting w = in (5.15), we have
zt
IIz;lI~ :0; IAkl
+ o(llz;IIE) + C 2
where C2 is a bound for IH,(t, z)l. Set w = z. in (5.15). Then by (5.14), 1.1..1 = I(AZ"z,) :0; 2C.
2 J. ·(H,(t,z,),Zk) dt l +o(lIz.IIE)
+ 2"M + O(llz.IIE),
226
Multiple Periodic Solutioru
where M is a bound for
IHI on the sphere 8"+'.
Since
IIz~IIE = Ilz~IIL' :<; 1, Ak and
IIZk II
are bounded.
Next, we prove that {zd possesses a convergent subsequence in the E topology. By the construction of the space E, we see that the injection i: D(lAI) .... D(lAI'/2)
n., •
is compact. Let = +, -, 0 be the ortbogonal projection onto the subspaces with positive, negative and zero eigenvalues. Again, from (5.15), we obtain
zt
114 -IAI-'rr±(H,(t,z.) + A.Zk)IIE = 0(1).
Thus are subconvergent, and, because no E is finite dimensional, we CODclude tbat possesses a convergent subsequence. Tbe proof is finished.
z.
Let pit = Pk nE+, where E+ = rr+ E, dim pit = k(n + 1) -1. We find singular relative homology classes in H.(1\,P. \ Pit). From the special 'structure of Pk, there are nontrivial classes: 9 # [z,l < [z21 < ... < [z.(.+,)I·
Lemma 5.6. Set
of =
inf sup J.(z), aE[z,lzelal
i = 1,2, ... ,k(n + 1).
(5.16)
Then (1) of are critical values of J., (2) ct:<; :<; ••• :<; <1(.+,),
c; W- 1) -
2M" :<; of :<; 1t, for (t - l)(n + 1) < i :<; t(n + 1), I=- 1,2, ... ,k. where M is the maximum of H(t,') on [0,2,,1 x S2.+,. (3)
Proof. (2) is trivial. We prove (3). On the one hand, II a E [z,l,
101 n P,"-, # 0, 80 that
sup (Az, z)
zElal
~
1
2(t - 1),
which, combined with 0 :<; H(t, z) :<; M, yields the left hand inequality. On the other hand, 3 0 E [z,1 such that 101 C p/, provided by the special structure of p., and it follows that (Az, z) :<;
1
2t, II z E 101.
227
5. Some IWulI8 on Arnold Conjecture.
Hence the right band inequality holds. From (3), [zl], [zoJ, ... ,[z'(n+l)J are nontrivial in follows from tbe minimax principle. Now we take limits, letting e;
=
lim
• -00
(1\, (J.)_2M.), (I)
<1 .
Provided by the (PS)" condition, they are all critical values satisfying -2M1r
~ Cl
5 ... ::5
I
Ct(n+l)
::5 it,
l
=
1,2, ....
Moreover, according to the argument in Theorem 4.3 of Chapter correspond to ten + 1) distinct critical points of J. Finally, we come to the proof of our theorem.
n,
they
Proor or Theorem 5.3. As we have mentioned before, it remains to prove that there are at least n + I distinct critical points associated with critical values in an interval with length < ". Indeed, if the conclusion is false, the critical values -2M1r ::; Cl :5
C2
I
:5 ... :::; CA:(n+l) ::5 4"k,
k = 1,2, ... ,
so obtained, satisfy
#
{e; I (t - 1)/4 < e; ::; l/4} ::; n,
It l?: 1.
Suppose T = #{e; I -2M" ::; e; ::; OJ. T is finite, because 1 <1 ?: :It -
2M" for i?: len + I), k?: t.
It follows that e; ?:
I 4' - 2M".
Hence, we have the estimate T::; 2M(n + 1). Then
men + 1) ::; #{e; I -2M" ::; e; ::; m/4} $T+mon, "1m, which is impossible for m large. This contradiction shows that
# (L n 'P.(L» ?: n + I, where L = IRpn. The proof is finished.
Remark 5.2. The above method applies equally well when proving
228
Multiple Periodic Solutions
Theorem 5.4. (AC.) is true for (CP",w), i.e., there are at least n + 1 fixed points for '1'2•• We are satisfied witb pointing out the modifications: (1) The boundary value condition in (5.11) is replaced by a periodic condition, i.e., %(0) = z(2,,). (2) If two periodic solutions (%', A,J and (z', A.) on C n+' correspond to one solution on cpn, then A. = A. (mod 2 .. ). (3) Let T. be the orthogonal representation on H'/'«O, 2lf],Cn +1) (= D(]AI'/') for the periodic case) of the Hopf S' action S.: T.z = S• . % V Z E E., k = 1,2,3, .... Then tbe functional Jon S is S' invariant, so is weD defined on P = SIS', and therefore p. = P n E.,
E. =
EB span {cosltej ± sinltej+n+. Ii = 1,2, ... ,n + I}, 1'1$'
is the (2k+ I)(n+ I) -I dimensional complex projeCtive space, k
= 1,2, ....
Remark 5.3. The Arnold conjectures were formulated in (ArnI-2]. The breakthrough is the pioneer work of Conley-Zehnder (CoZI], in which Theorem 5.1 was proved. Soon after, a series of papers devoted to these problems appeared, cf. Floer (F101-4J, Hofer (Hof3] , Sikarov (SikI]. The far-reaching contribution of Floer enabled him to solve (AC.) and (AC.) under the conditions ".(M) 0 and ".(M, L) = 0, respectively. Unfortunately, we have no space in which to introduce his theory. For Theorem 5.2, cf. Szulkin (SzuIJ. Theorem 5.3 is due to Givental and Chang-Jiang (ChJIJ, and Theorem 5.4 to Fortune (forI].
=
CHAPTER
V
Applications to Harmonic Maps and Minimal Surfaces
Geometric variational problems are of one of the most important parts of applications of infinite dimensional Morse theory. The closed geodesic problem, the minimal surface and the constant mean curvature problems, the hannonic map equation, the Yamahe problem and the Yang-Mills equation are not only interesting in themselves, but also for motivations in the development of infinite dimensional Morse theory. Here, however I we are only concerned with a few examples showing how Morse theory is applied, because esch topic deserves to he treated in specific books. Readers who are interested in these problems are referred to Klingenherg [KlilJ, M. Atiyah and R. Bott [AtBIJ, H. Bnlzis and M. Coron (BrC2J, R. Schoen [ScRIJ, C. Taubes [1'&ul,2J and A. Babri and M. Coron (BaCIJ. 1. Harmonic Maps and the Heat Flow
Let (M,g) and (N, h) he two smooth compact Riemannian manifolds with m = dimM and n = dimN. For a map u:M -> N, e(u) 41Vul2 is called the energy density. In local coordinates, it is written as e(u) = igi;(x)ha,8(u(x»)u~u~, where x = (%1,%2 .... ,X m ), U = (u 1,U2 , •.. ,UR), U~ = t;., a,p = 1,2, ... In, i,; = 1,2, ... ,m, (haP(u») is the metric h on N, (gii (x») is the inverse of the metric 9 on M, and the convention summation is used. The energy of the map u is defined to he
=
E(u) =
L
e(u)dV.,
(1.1)
where V. is the volume element over M. For a CO" map u, we introduce a CO" deformation
The equation is expressed as follows:
1M (1"(u), v)dV. = 0,
230
Application.! to Harmonic Maps and Minimal
SurJ~
where T(U) = Tr8Ceg Vu, or, in the local coordinates,
where NIp,(U) denotes the Christoffel symbol of the manifold N, t:.M is the Laplace-Beltrami operator with respect to the metric g, and Coo (u-1T(N») is the set of smooth sections of u-1T(N), Le., the set of vector fields along
u. In the following we use the shorthand notations:
and t:.U = T(U);
then we get the Euler-Lagrange equation t:.u =
o.
(1.2)
The solution of (1.2) is called a harmonic map. It i. easily seen that in the- case N = IR\ M = a domain in lit") harmonic maps are harmonic functions. In the case 8M "# 0, harmonic maps are determined hy the boundary value conditions. For instance, given'" E COO (8M, N), we find maps u E C=(M, N) satisfying (1.2) and the boundary value condition
If we want to study the existence (and multiplicity) problem for the harmonic maps from the critical point of view, then we should first find a suitable framework, Hilbert Riemannian manifold or Banach Finsler manifold, on which to develop our theory. The Soholev function spaces w:(n) ate extended to spaces of maps as follows: Provided by the Whitney-Nash embedding theorem, the target manifold N can be isometrically imbedded into 1Ii.' for some k, and then one naturally defines W:(M,N) = {u E W:(M,lIi. k ) I u(x) E N
a.e. x EM},
where 1 $ p $ 00 , and i is any integer. Since the energy functional is quadratic, it seems that Wl(M, N) is a natural candidate. Unfortunately, Wi(M,N) is not a Banach manifold for m ~ 2. Another reason for rejecting this choice comes from regularity. According to special nonlinearity, one can prove the smoothness of the solution only if we know it is continuous, but WJ(MtN) is not sufficient to provide a continuous function.
1. Hormonic MaIM and the Heat Flow
231
In this sense, we are forced to take a second choice: C1(M, N) or W,}(M,N), p > 2. A severe problem occurs: The Palais-Smale condition is missing! Carefully analyzing the role of the Palais-Smale condition in the proof of the deformation theorems, we find out that it is strongly tied to the gradient How. We observe, however, that the heat equation for harmonic maps Ot!(t,') = [)./(t,·) J(O,·) = cp(.) (1.3)
{
l(t")18M = ",(.)
produces a How I(t, .), which depends on the initial data cp and reduces the energy:
L =- L
:tE(J(t,.») =
(V/(t,'), VfJ,J(t,·»dV. ([)./(t, ·),fJ,J(t,·»dV.
+ (
J8M
= -
(1.4)
g'j h~/Jo.l{1(t, ')/.': . nj dS.
L
1[)./(t,·)I'dV.
~ O.
One expects to replace the gradient How by the heat How I(t,·) (= to indicate the initial data). This is possible if one can prove the following conclusions:
I~(t,.),
(1) the global existence of the heat How, i.e., l(t,·) is defined on the whole half-axis t ;:>: 0; (2) the limit of I(t, .), as t --0 00, should in some sense be a harmonic mapi (3) the How I~(t, .), as a map depending on t and the initial value cp, is continuous. Before going into these statements, we introduce some notation:
C!+'(M, N)
= {u E C'+>(M, N) I ul 8M =
"'},
0
< 'Y <
I,
QT = [0, T) x M, for T > 0; C1+b/')"+>(QT,lII.k) equals the completion of GOO(QT,lII.k ) functions under the norm
II1II c>+'·'+'
=
II1II
c
+
su P 0<' ,'
+
[IOt!(t,x) - Od(t',x)lc It - 1'1>/'
1~/(t,x) - ~/(I'Y)lc] d(x,y» ;
Applications to Hannonic Map. and Minir'llGl Surfacu
232
W,!,2(QT,lllk ) bas tbe same meaning, but under tbe norm m
II/lIw:" = IIfIlL> + II&./IIL> + L 1I1f.,IW,
,_I
Cl+h/2),2+~(QT' N) =
l:5p
{J E Cl+h/2),2+~(QT,lllk) I I(t, x) EN}
has the same meaning for W,!,2(QT, N), The proof is fairly long, It is sufficient to point out the main steps and some crucial estimates.
Step 1.
LocaI Existence,
There exist e > 0 and a unique
I
E
Cl+.,2+~(Q"N) satisfying (1.4) in Q" and then there is a maximal exis-
tence interval (O,w), The proof is standard, One uses the inverse function theorem on the mapA: I .... (8t! - M, 1(0, ·).J(t, ')IIO,T)X8M)
W,!,2(QT,lll k) _ U(QT,lllk) x B;(I-~) (M,lllk) x B;->,;,2-J ((0, T) x 8M, Ilk). for p > 4, where B;(I-I/p)(M,lllk ) and B'-(1/2p ),2-(Ifp)((O,T] x 8M,lllk) are Besov spaces, the trace spaces of W,!,2 on {OJ x M and (0, T) x 8M, respectively.
Step 2. Global Existence, If the following a priori estimate holdsFor solutions of (1.3), there exists a constant Co depending on 'P, .p, (M, g) and (N,h) such that (1.5) sup IV/(t,x)l:5 Co [O .... )xM
-then global existence follows. Indeed, suppose w < +00. Combining (1.5) with the Schauder estimate for linear parabolic systems (cC. Ladyszenskaya, Solonhikov, Ural'ceva (LSUlJ), we get immediately
1I/IIcH"'+>(Q_) :5 C~(w),
a constant, for any 0 < -r < 1.
Thus the solution of tbe evolution equation (1.3) may be extended beyond the maximal interval IO,w). This is a contradiction. Consequently, w =
+00. In order to prove (1.5), we need a blow-up analysis and the following U estimates.
1. Hannonie Map. and the Heal Flmu
233
Step 3. The V Estimates. Lemma 1.1. Suppose that 1 < p, q < 00 and that t .... g(t,·) E V(M) for a.e. t E 10, T]. Assume that
and
ad -
AM I = g in QT, 1(0,·) = 0 on M,
l(t,'li8M = O.
Then we have a constant C
= Cp •• such that
T
10r
T
II/(t")II:"'(M)dt:5 C JI
10r
IIg(t,·lill'(M)dt.
(1.6)
Proof. The Unear equation is considered an evolution equation associ· ated. with the analytic semigroup, whose generator ~M is sectorial on the space V(M) with domain
First we prove (1.6) in the case p = 2. With no loss of generality, we may assume T = +00, and we may define I and 9 as 0 for t < O. Let F(T,.) and 9 "(T,.) he the Fourier transforms of I(t,.) and g(t,.) with t respectively. We have i.e.,
"
1
•
AM I (T,·) = AM(iT - AM)- 9 (T, .).
The vector· valued Mihlin multiplier theorem (see N. Dunford, J.T. Schwartz IDS1]) provides the inequality
and then by the elliptic theory, we have
i
c.1
T
T
o
IIf(t"lIifv,dt:5
'
IIg(t,·)1I1,dt.
0
Next, in combining the L' estimates for the parabolic equation with the above special case, the interpolation inequalities provide (1.6).
Applications to Harmonic Map$ and Minimal Sur/aces
234
Lemma 1.2. There eJcists a positive number to > 0 such that for a solution of the system (E) in a domain 10, Tl x D, where D = Bp(zo) nM, for some Xo E M, and p > 0, if sup
j
IVI(t, -)l'dV. < Eo
telto,ttl D
for some to, t1 E (0, T), then for any p' E (0, p) and (to, f,) c (to, t1), we have some Q = 1 - ~ > 0 and a constant C depending on £'0, 0, p, p, and to, tl J ~J t~ only such that sup tE{ta,t.]
II/(t,·)IIc>+o(D'):O:
e[1 + 111/l1lC'+'(OMnD) +
VP
1.
IVfl2 dtdV.
e~(QT)'
satisfying
( (to.hJxD
p
)
]
for p > 4, where D' = Bp'(xo) n M. Proof. Define a cutoff function
and
For F
"'I E
(t,x) E It~,t;l x D' (t,x) ¢ Ito, til x D.
= 'PI . I,
a,F - AMF = r(f)(VF, V f) - r(f)(fv",,, V f) - 2V/· v"" F(to,') = 0,
+ I(a, -
AM )'Pl,
F(t")IOM = 'PI' 1/l According to the Sobolev embedding theorem (cf. Nikol'ski INiklJ) and linear V theory, we have" = I - 4jp > 0 such that sup
tel~.tU
III(t, ')lIc"'(O')
:0: sup IIF(t")lIc'+O(D) telto.tt)
:0: eallFllw:·,u,•.•• lxD) :0: e[1 + 111/l1lC'+'(OMnD) + IIVIIIL.U..... lxD)
+ IIVF· V/IIL.([..... lxD»).
(1.7)
1. Harmonic Map8 and the Hmt Flow
235
However, provided by tbe Sobolev imbedding theorem together with Lemma 1.1, letting PI = 2p/(P + I), we have
Jr" •• IIVFII~'(D)dt
lto IIFII~."I (D)dt
::; f"
::; e[I + 1I"'"~h(8MnD) + fto IIV11Ii':'(D)dt
(1.8)
J••
+ f.·IIVF. VIIIi':. (D)dt) Applying the Holder inequality,
(1.9)
For sufficiently small eo > 0, we put inequalities (1.8) and (1.9) together and obtain
f.·IIVF(t")II~'(D)dt::; C•• [1 + 1I"'"~h(8MnD) (1.10)
+{
IIV/(t")IIi':'(D)dt].
Again by the Holder inequality,
IIVF· V IIIL'U',,'.lxD) ::; IIVFilL" . IIVIliL" ::; C•• [1 + 1I"'"co+'(8MnD) + IIVIIIL•• U..... )XD») x IIVIIIL.. (I..... )XD) Returning to (1.7), we have sup II/(t, ')IIC'+O(D') ::; e[l + II!J>IIco+'(8MnD)
telco,til
+ IIVIIIh(I..... )XD») Lemma 1.3. Let w > 0 be finite or infinite. Assume that 'IT < w, IE W':"(QT, N), P > 4, is a solution of (1.3). If there is a relatively open set D c M and a sequence of intervals I; C [O,w) with mes(Ij) ~ 6> 0 such that sup f IV/(t")I'dVg < eo. tEIJ
1D
236
Application! to HafTJ10nic Maps and Minimal Surjaa:J
Then for any opeD subset D' cc D, for any sequence It;} with t; E I j and t; - w, there is a subsequence t;, such that I(t;.,.) is C'(l5',N) convezgent to some U E Wi(M, N). Proof. Since
LIV
2
I(t, ')1 dV9 :5 E(",),
the family of maps {J(t;, ')Ii ~ 1,2, ... } is weakly compact in Wi(M, IRk), so that there is a subsequence {t;.} along which I(t;.,.) - u weakly in Wi(M,lR k ) . Starting from (1.10) with p ~ 2, we obtain a constant, which depends on <0, '" and 6, dominating the norms IIVFIIL'(I,xD) V j. Applying (1.7), IlFllw~"("XD) is also dominated. Then, the Sobolev embedding theorem implies the boundedness of IIV FIIL"(ljXD) V P > 4. Thus, we have
11/(t, ')lIc"Q(D') :5 const.
'It E I;,
provided by Lemma 1.2. This implies a subsequence {t;.} such that I(t;.,·) Cl-converges to u. , Lemma 1.4. SUppll6e that I E Wi· 2(QT, N) 'IT < w is a solution of
(l~3), where P > 4. Then there is a sequence ti' number of points {x" ... ,x,} c M such that
for some u E Wi(M, N), and 0 <
0'
<0
=1 -
W -
0 and a linite
4/p.
Proof. According to a covering theorem due to Besicovitch, there is an open covering of M consisting of disks {B, (y;) I i = 1, ... ,p} such that (a) M c Uf_. B,/2(Y;), (b) V x E M, there exist at most h disks B,(y;) covering x, where h is independent of r. Then IV I(t, .)l2dVg :5 hE(f(t, .» :5 hE(",).
L 1.Brb,.). i
Hence V t, 3 at most I =
[2h:j'f)] +1 disks Br(Yi), i
1.
=
1,2, ... ,f, on which
.IV/(t,·)12dVg~~.
Brh,,)
Fixing f. such disks, there is a sequence
1.
B.(.;)
IV!(tj,·)1 2 dVg <
t; 1 w -
e;,
0 such that Vi> f.
1. Harmonic Map8 and the Heot Flow
237
=
However, let 'P E C8"(B.(II,» be a cutoff function, 0 :5 'P :5 1, 'P 1, on B>t(Y,), IV'PI:5~. Multiplying the equation (1.3) by ha~(f)a.f"r;?, it follows from Young's inequality that
1. ha~(f)8,r8"P'P2dVgds + 1. ! Q"
:5 C :5 {
1 IVII 1a./1IV'PI'P
dV• ds
Q:,
lQ:.
e(f)'P2dVgds
Q"
hap (f)8"aa.I"'P2dVgds + C; { r
lQ:1
IV /l 2dV.ds,
where Ql, = Q, \ Q". Therefore,
{
} BJr hlf }
IV/(t, ·)1 2dV.:5 2 { e{J(t"'»)'P2dV. + C; {' E{J(s,.»)ds }M
< ( -
r
IV/(t',.)12dV.
it'
+ Cl(t;- t') E(rp) , r
JBr(Y;)
which assures a unirorm bound () > 0 such that
sup
IV I(t, ·)I'dV. < <0
/,
It-';I';<
Vi> t.
Bi'(.')
We apply Lemma 1.3 to these remaining disks. Then there is a sequence
ti' T w - 0 such that I(tr,') is cl+a' convergent on M\Uti~, Bi (II,). Letting r = 2- k , k = 1,2, .. . , by the diagonal process, there is a subsequence, still denoted hy {t;,}, so that f(ti"') Cl+a' -cOnverges on M\ {x," ... ,xt}, because the upper bound of the number of exceptional disks is independent ofr.
Step 4. On Asymptotic Behavior. Now, we derive conc1nsion (2) from (1.5) and the a priori estimates. Lemma 1.5. There exist a harmonic map u and 8 sequence tj T +00, such that I(t;,.) -;;0 in Cl+a'(M,N) forO < a' < a.
Proof. We cover M by small halls Lt~, B./2(x,) such that ~ mes(B.(x,» < <0. According to (1.5) sup
IIV/(t,·)IIL'(B.(.. )):5 <0,
te{k,l:+l]
k= 1,2, ... ,i=1, ... ,po It follows from Lemma 1.2 that
sup II/(t, ')lIc"O(M) :5 C" tell,oo]
a constant.
238
Applimtwna to Harmonic Marn and Minimal Sur/acu
From (1.4),
/.= L
18,/(t, .)!'dtdV.
so there is a sequence tJ /
~ E('P),
+00 such that
8,/(t;,·) -> 0 in L'(M,R"). On the one hand, according to Lemmas 1.3 and 1.4, with
it follows that /(t;,·) -> ii(·) in c!+a'(M \ (x" ... ,xt},N) with some (x" ... ,xtl c M. On the other hand, /(t;,·) is bounded in c!+a(M,N), 0/ < a. We conclude that /(t;,·) -> ii in c!+a' (M, N). Thus
V 'PI E C8"(M, N). By applying the elliptic regularity theorem again, we conclude that ii E C2+'(M, N), and
lI.ii = 0, { iil8M = .p. Step 5. Blow up Analysis. Let
m = inf{E(u) I u E WJ(M,N),
b={ inf{E(v)lv:S"'->N +00
ul 8M =.p} harmonic, and nonconstant}
if there is no such map.
Lemma 1.6. Suppose that DT = m8X('.o)EQT Then E('P) ~ m+b. Proof. We may find sequences T. / w and
IV/(T., a.)! =
IV/(t,x)! is not bounded.
a.
E M such that
maxi'" !(T.,x)1 =
oEM
DT"
k = 1,2, .... From now ont we write iJ.r. simply as fJk. Neglecting subsequences, we may only consider the following two possibilities:
(1) 6. dist(a., 8M) (2) 6. dist(a., 8M)
-> ->
+00, < +00;
p
I. Harmonic M,..,. and !he Heal flow
in both cases, we may assume 4k Take a local chart U of B. Let
-+
239
a E Il.
DO={YER'IBo+%. EU} 8Jld
10 = [-(/~To,(/~(",-To»). Define a function on lox Do as follows:
k = 1,2, .... Then we see (1.11)
k= 1,2, ....
(1.12)
Let
Then holT)
~
0, and 'lie> 0
I" hO(T)dT
J-e
$l
T dt { • T,,-e/fJ: 1M
=
10.1(1, x)l'dVg
E (I (To -:~,)}- EU(T.,·») -
0
as k -+ 00. Thus, neglecting a subsequence, we may assume h.(T) - 0
i.e., for almost aU
T
a.e.
T E [-e, 0),
E [-e, 0), (1.13) o
In case (I), B E M, 8Jld Do - R' in the sense that V R > 0, 3 the ball BR centered at (/ in R' is included in Do for k ~ ko. On the one hand, by (1.13) ,
VR>O,
ko > 0,
(1.14)
Applications to Harmonic Map$ and Minimal Sur/aces
240
for almost all r" E [-e, OJ. On the other hand, hy Lemma 1.2, we have IIV.(T, ')IIC'+O(BR) :-;: C[l
sup
+ (e4"R2)'/P).
(1.15)
rE[-e,O)
This implies a. subsequence, where we do not change the subscripts, so that
v.(r",y)
-+
Cl+ a ' (R2)
ii(y),
for some r" E [-e, OJ (actually in a countable dense subset of [-e, 0]). We conclude that ~ii=O in R2. According to the singularity removahle theorem due to Sacks-Uhlenbeck (cf. [SaUl]), ii is extendible to a harmonic map ii: 8 2 -+ N. We are going to show that v is nonconstant. Indeed,
v.
since satisfies (1.11) on I. x D. with the condition (1.12). The Schauder estimate applies to obtain an estimate: IIv.(r,y)lIc'+l','h
+ [e7r(26)2['/p}
(1.16)
for some 6 > 0 small depending on U. The right hand side of the inequality is a constant independent of k. According to the embedding theorem (cf.
[Nikl]) , IIVllvk(T,y)lIcu+'T)/2,l+'T((-e.o)x(BJJ(9)nDIo)
~ CI ,
where C 1 is a constant independent of k. Hence
We may choose r"
> 0 small enough so that lV'v.(T",B)1
>~.
(1.17)
It proves that v is nonconstant. Let T~ = T. +~, since 'r. -+ w, IV'!('r.,·)1 blows up at at most finitely
many points {Xl,'"• ,Xt}, which includes the limit set of {at}, according to Lemma 1.4. We choose 6 > 0 small enough so that
E(J(T~,.J)
=
L
IV'!('r.,x)1 2 dV. I
=
{
JM\U~""IB4(%J)
+L
{
j=l JBJJ(%j)
IV' !('r.,x)1 2 dVg •
1. Harmonic Mapa and the Heat Flow
241
Since
and there exists at least one io such that a =
XjDI
we have
and
f
IV/(7k,x)I'dVg ?:
f
IVvk(rO,y)l'dy
} 8 1 / 2 ,,.,(8)
} B,(zjo)
for k large. First let k - 00; by definition
and then, because 6 > 0 is arbitrary, E(rp)?: lim
f
k-OO}M
?:
IVI(T., x}l'dVg
L
(1.18)
IVu(x)I'dVg
+ b?: m + b.
This is the desired conclusion. In case (2), a E 8M n U. We choose a suitable coordinate (YI,!/2) in R', such that the !/2-axis is parallel to the tangent at a of 8M, and the YI-axis points to the interior of U. Thus Dk tends to the half plane R~ = ((YI,!/2) I!/I > -pI, and for each point on the boundary,!/I = -p,
As in the proof of (1.15), now we have \I R > 0, sup IIvk(r, ·)IIC'+-(BRnD.) ::; rE(-e,O]
C[l + (e47rR')I/. +
II~ (a
k
+ :.)
t"'(8D.nBR)]·
Since on the right hand side, there is a constant control independent of k, we find a function ~ on R! and a subsequence Vk(T·,·) such that Vk(rO, y) _ ii" (V)
242
Applicatiom to Hannonk Maps and Minimal Surfacu
and then a~ =0
inR~,
V'18R' = .p(a). +
On the one band, similar to the proofs of (1.16) and (1.17), we see that i? is nonconstant; and on the other hand, let us define 8 romplex function '1(z) = h(V;,V;)
where h is the Riemannian metric on N, and
v; = ~ (8"1 Z
= Yl
i81n )v\
+ iY2.
Therefore,
The harmonics of ii' implies the analyticity of the function '1. The boundary condition on ii implies that the function 'I can be analytically extended to the whole complex plane. From the condition 'I( -p + i1l2) = 0,
we conclude that '1(z) == 0, and hence that ii' is a constant map. This is a contradiction, SO Lemma 1.6 is proved. In the following, we assume '" (N) = O. We shall expand the conclusion of Lemma 1.6 to the following:
E(rp)
~ mT
+ b,
where :F is the homotopy class of '1', and mT
= inf{E(u) I u E :F}.
Only the inequality (1.18) should be fixed. It is known that f(T.,·) u(·) in CHa' (M \ Lf;=l B.(x;),R k ). We only want to show u E:F. Let 6> 0 be small enough so that B.(x,)nB.(x;) = 0, if i # j. Combine u(x,) with the map f(T., ,)188,(,,) by the following map:
v x ~ U~=l B.(x,), V x E B.(x,),
1. Harmonic Maps and the Held Flow
243
where '1 E C""(R') satisfies
'1(r) = {
~
and exp is the exponential map. Since 7r2(N) = 0, and
1.
we see that remains in the same homotopy c1ass:1'. And from C(M, N), we conclude ii E :1'.
1. _ ii
Step 6. Continuous dependence. From the point of view of
POE,
the continuous dependence
'1' ..... I",(t, x)
from C~+'(M,N) to C~+P+'(QT,N) does hold. The proof depends on the locally uniform houndedness of the heat ftow I"" i.e, V"", E Ec = {u E C!+'(M,N) I E(u) :<; c}, where c :<; mF + b, 3 6 > 0 and C, > 0 such that
'I' .....
Sup(.,z)EIO.oo»)xMIV/",(t,x)l:<; C,. V'I' E B.("",), where B. is the 6-hall in C;+> (M, N). Indeed, if (1.19) does Dot hold, then 3 '1" 3 Tk with T· = limT.' satisfying IIV I •• (Tk' ')IIL~(M)
-
(1.19)
'1'0 in C;+'(M, N) and
00
and V T < TO, 3 C2(T) < +00 such that IIV I",. (t, ·)IIL~((o.T(XM) :<; C 2(T). By local existence, we may assume Tk ~ e > 0, and we shall prove II VI",. (TO - O")IIL~(M) = 00, which contradicts Lemma 1.6 because '1'0 E Ec. For simplicity, we write Jk = / "'.' k = 0, 1, 2 . . . . It is sufficient to prove that {It} is a Cauchy sequence in W':·2(QT), VT < T". Since IIVI>(t, ')IIL~(M) :<; C2(T) < 00. V k V t :<; T < TO, for functions Pk = ci%, where d.(t, x) = dist (I>(t, x), lo(t, x)), we have a constant C3 (T) > 0 satisfying {J.P. :<; IlPk
Thus, by the Maximum Principle,
+ C 3(T)Pk.
Appliooti.... to Harmonic M.". ond Minimol
244
Again, letting I
Surfo~
= I. - 10 we write
ll(r(f)(V I, V f)) = r(f.)(V I., Vft) - r(fo)(V10, V10) = (r(f.) - r(fo»(V I., VJ) + r(fo)(V I, V 10) + r(fo)(V 10, VJ). We have the following equations:
lJ,1 = llM 1+ ll(r(f)(V I, V f)), {
(1.20)
1(0, .) = 'P' - 'Po,
I
hO,T)x8M=
O.
We apply the V estimates to (1.20), p
> 4 and obtain
1I/IIw~·'(Q.T) $ C.(T)II'P' - 'Po1IC'''(Ai.N)'
(1.21)
This proves the conclusion.
Once (1.21) is established, T" = +00, so (U9) holds and then coninuous dependence follows, provided by a bootstrap iteration. Nevertheless, this is not exactly what we need. As a family of maps 1(1; .), t ~ 0, depending on 'P, it is no longer a continuous flow under the strong topology on the Banach manifold C;+'(M, N). (The problem occurs at t = OI). But it is continuous if we use a weaker topology, e.g., 1 - ~ > -y. In the following, we shall employ the heat flow I~(t,·) as deformations, under a weaker topology W:(M, N), on the incomplete manifold C!+' (M, N). For details, cf. Chang ICba).
W;,
Step 7. The First Deformation Lemma, The critical set } Kc= {UEC",2+, (M,N)lllu=O
is compact in C;+' as well as in tbe W;-topology. In extending critical point theory, we have the modified first deformation lemma: For a closed neigbborhood U of K, in the W; topology, 3 • > 0 and a
W:
continuous deformation '1: [0, I) x Ee+~ -
Er:+~ satisfying
,,(0, .) = idE,+.,
,,(1, Ec+< \ U) c E,_<. The deformation is constructed by the solution of the following evolution equation:
ad(t,') = -y(/(t,·»)lll(t, .), {
/(0,.) = 'P, I(t, ')1 8 M =.p,
(1.22)
1. Harmonic Map!J and the Heat Flow
where
'Y(u) = { and
u. =
{u e
~
C:+~(M,N) I distw:(u,Kc):5
6} cU.
(1.19) is not a PDE, but after suitable reparametrization of (1.3), we are able to solve this equation. For details, d. Theorem 7.1 in Chang (ChalO]. In summary, we have the following conclusion:
Theorem 1.1. Let b = inC{ E( v) I v: S'
.... N,
nonconstant harmonic}
(if there is no non constant harmonic map from S' to N, then we doone b = +00), and let F be a component ofC",'+~(M,N). Assume that dim M = 2, 'IT.(N) = 0, and that t/J e C2+~(8M, N), '" e F, with E(",) < mF + b,
where mF = inC{E(u) I u
e F}.
Then we hare (1) The heat flow, i.e., the solution of (1.3), globally exists. (2) 3 a harmonic map ii e F, and a sequence tj i +00 such that
(3) If the infinitely dimensional manifold C!'~ (M, N) is endowed with a weaker topology W:(M, N), p > ~, the flow
is continuous from (0,00) x F .... F, where !",(t,·) denotes the flow with initial data ",. (4) The set Kc
= {u e C~'~(M,N) l.6.u = O,E(u) = c}
is compact under the shove topology, if c < mF + b. (5) Let K = Uc<mF+> Kc. Suppose that
distw:U",(t,.),K);:: 6 > 0
VteIR~.
246
ApplicatiOfl8 to Harmonic Map. and Minimal Surface!l
Then we have e = e( 6) >
°such that
1I1l./",(t, ·)IIL'(M.H) 2: e.
"
- N) of K e , under the (6) For any cloeed neighborhood U C Col (M, W:-topo/ogy, where c < mF + b, 3 e > 0, a cJoeed neighborhood V C U, and a W: - (p> 1~7) stroag deformation retract 1): [0, I] x Ee+< .... Ec+ .. satisfyiag 1)(1, Ee n V) 1)(1, Ee+< \ V) where E. =
C C
Ee n U, Ee_ co
and
{u E :F I E(u) :5 a} is the level set, V a E Jli.~.
Remark 1.1. The heat flow method was first used by J. Eells and Sampson [EeSl] in proving the existence of harmonic maps, where m is arbitrary and N has nonpositive sectional curvature. See also Hamilton [Haml]. Without the restriction on curvatures, but with m = 2, see M. Strowe [Str4] and K.C. Chang [ChalO].
2: Morse Inequalities
In this section, we establish Morse inequalities for harmonic maps under the assumption that all harmonic maps are isolated. As shown in Chapter I, the crucial step in the proof is to prove the following deformation lemma: Lemma 2.1. Let:F be a component of C!+'(M, N). Suppose that there is no harmonic map with energy in the interval (c, d], where d < mF + b, and that there are at most finitely many harmonic maps on the Jevel E-l(C). Assume that ",(N) = 0. Then Ee is a strong deformation retract of Ed. In order to give the proof, first we must improve conclusion (2) of Section 1, under the condition that tbe set of smooth harmonic maps is isolated. Namely, Lemma 2.2. Let E(IP)
< mF + b, and let
c= lim
t-+<XI
E(!",(t,.»).
If Ke is isolated, then /",(t,·) .... u E Ke in the W:-topology, If p > 1~" as t - +00. Proof. According to Theorem 1.1, conclusion (2), combined with a bootstrap iteration, shows that 3 E Ke and tj t +00 such that
u
/",(tj,') ....
u,
C""(M N)
'"
"
V'Y' E (0, 'Y).
2. Mon. lnequaliti..
247
If our conclusion were not correct, there would be a 6 > 0 such that the neighborhood U. = {u E C!"(M,N) I distw:(u.U):5 6} contains the single element ii in K c , and a sequence fj 1 +00 such that I~(fj,·) ~ U•. Therefore 3 (t" ti') satisfying
( 1) f' f" - +00 .' 1 ,
(2) I",(f,,·) E BU,., Mfi',·) E BU•• and (3) I",(f,·) EU.. \U. VfE(fi.tt'). On the One hand, we had 6
:5 II/",(f;,.) - I",(f;', ·)IIw: :5 C.lf; - fi'I',2,
provided by the embedding theorem. On tbe other hand, according to Theorem 1.1, conclusion (5) states
E(!,,(f;',.)) - E(!,,(f;,.») =
1't:;' J. 1;" L1~/(t,
1lJ,I(f,·)I'dV.df
M
=
·)I'dV.df
> «6)lf;' - til· Since tbe left band side of the inequality tends to zero as i _
00,
this is a
contradiction. Now we return to the proof of Lemma 2. 1. The basic idea is to reparametrize the beat flow I",(f,.). Let -r = p(t), where p(f) = (E(",) - c)-' if E( "")
l' IIM~(o,
·)IIi,do,
> c, and let g(-r,.) = I(f, .).
Then we have the following relations:
(E(",,) - e) df (1) 8T g(T,·) = dTlJ,I(f,.) = II~g(-r,.)IIi, ~g(T,·), (2) ::.,. E(g(T,·)) = -
L
(8T g(T, .), ~g(T,· ))dVg
= -(E(",,) -
e).
Therefore
E(g(T, .») = (1- T)E(",,)
+ Te,
V T E [0, 1J.
(3) The functionp: [0, 00) -!R'is continuous and monotone increas-
248
Application.! to Harmonic Mops and Minimal Surfaces
ing which satisfies the following properties:
p(O) = 0, p(+oo)=l
p(+oo)
>1
if f~(t,·) ~ ii e K, as t ~ +00, if
lim E(f~(t,·J)
t_+oo
< c.
Let us define a function 'I: 10, 1) x Ed ~ Ed as follows: 1} (r,f{) )
={
g~(T,·)
cP
if (T, cp) e 10,1) x (Ed \ E,), if (T, cp) e 10,1) x E,.
In order to show that Ec is a deformation retract of Ed, only continuity at the following sets is needed:
(1) {I} x A, where A = {cp e Ed \ E, I f~(oo,·) e K,} (2) 10,1) x E-'(c). Verification lor cose (1). V CPo e A, Ve > 0, we want to find 0 > 0 such that distw', (cp,1 CPo)c- < 0 }.ImpI·les d·IStw3( ) ,U -) < 91{J T,' T> -u P
E',
where ii = I~.(oo, .). Choose eo = eo(o.) as in conclusion (5), Le., lIt.f~(t, ·)IIL' ~ eo
if distw:(f~(t, .), K) ~ 0, V t,
and choose
e 0<0, < ( 2C, such that
)2h E(cp)-c g~
distW:(g~.(1-0".),U) <
Again, we choose 02
i·
> 0 such that distw', (cp, CPo) < 02 implies
distw: (g~(l - 0"
-),g~(1 - 0.. ·J) < ~.
Therefore we have
V cp e B., (CPo). We want to prove
distw,(g,,(T, .),U) < e ,
V (T,cp)
e (1- 0,,1) x B.,(cpo).
249
2. Morse lnequolitiea
If not, 3
T"
> T' > 1- 61 and
'1'1 E Bs,('I'o) such that
and Then we have
~ ~ distw: (gipl (r',·),gCPl('T",·» = distw: (J~, (t', .), f~, (t",.») :S C
e~1t' -
t"l:S = =
,"
f IIllf.., (t, ·m,dt j,. E(J... (t",.») - E(J~.(t',.») E(g... (T", .») - E(g... (T',-»)
= (E('I') - c)IT" -
T'I
< 61 (E(\p) - c), which implies that
This is a. contradiction.
Verification for case (2). V '1'0 E E-l(C), Ve > 0, we want to find 6 such that dist('I','I'o) < 6 implies dist('1(T,\p), '1'0) < e. Similar to the above argument, let us choose
>0
Find 0 < 6 < e/2 such that E(\p) - c < 6, If our conclusion were not true, by the same procedure, we would have
(i) ~ :S C<1t' - t"I'/', and (ii) e~1t' - t"l :S (E('I') - c)IT" - T'I This is again a contradiction.
< 6,.
250
Applications to Harmonit! Map6 and Minimal Sur/acu
The continuity of '1 is proved, so that Ec is a strong deformation retract of Ed, d < mT + b.
Suppose that V d < mT+b there are only isolated harmonic maps. Since K n Ed is compact, they are finite. There are only isolated critical values (at most with limit mT + b)
mT
= Co < Cl < ... < C; < ... < mT + b.
For each c;, there are finitely many harmonic maps:
Vd
< mT + b, let
M:=
m;
LLrankC.(u;j;G) ct,
be the qth Morse type number, q = 0, 1,2, ... , for the manifold Edn:F and
let
P; =
rank H.(Ed n:F,G)
be the qth Betti number, q = 0, 1,2, ... , for Ed n:F. Comparing Corollary 4.1 and Theorem 4.3 of Chapter I with the above deformation, we obtain Morse inequalities for harmonic maps below a certain level. Theorem 2.1. Let:F be a component of C;"(M',N), and let d < mT + b. Assume that ".(N) = 0, and that in the level set Ed n:F tbere are only isolated harmonic maps. Then there exists a formal power series with nonnegative coefficients Qd(t) such that
L"" M:t = L"" p;t' + (1 + t)Qd(t). q
q=O
9=0
3. Morse Decomposition In this section, we will study the handle body decomposition of the level sets of the energy function, under the assumption that all harmonic maps in these level sets are nondegenerate. Let Uo be .. harmonic map from M to N. Let E = uOT N be the pull back bundle over M. Let 0 be a neighborhood in C""(M, N) which contains the section Uo(M). It is obvious that 0 is diffeomorphic to a neighborhood
251
3. Morse Decompoation
oE
of the zero section of the tangent space T.. (E). The diffeomorphism is realized by the exponential map
o n
C;'(M,N). After this we do not concern ourselves with the tangent vector u with its exponential map exp.. (z) u(x). We shall restrict our studies to the neighborhood 08 of the vector space T.. (E). The Taylor expansion of the energy functional at uo is as follows:
E(u) = E(uo)
1 + 2,p E(UO)(u, u) + R(u),
where u(x) = exp.. (z) u(x), and the remainder R(u) satisfies
IR(u)1 = and
IdR(u)1 =
0 (
0
(L l'1uI2) , (L l'1uI2) 1f2) .
As to the Hessian J' E(UO), it is well-known (see Eells-Lemaire (ELlll that, V u, '1 E C""(T.. (EJ),
,p E(uo)(u, '1) =
L
(J.. u, '1)dV.,
where
J.. u = -6."Ou - Trace RN(duo,u)dUO is the Jacobi operator. Noticing that J.. is a linear self-adjoint eUiptic differential operator, o
with domain Wl n WHT.. (E») , J .. can be extended to be a continuous o
bilinear form on the Hilbert space WHT.. (E»). And since
where C 1(UO) is a constant depending on UQ, the negative eigenspace of Juo must be finitely dimensional. The dimension of the negative eigenspace of J uo is called the Morse index of the harmonic map Uo and is denoted by ind(no). UO is called nondegenerate if J.. is invertible. For the self adjoint operator J.. , it is well known that we have a spectral decomposition E, and two projections P+ and P_, wbich correspond the
252
Applications to Hannonic Maps and Minimal Surfaces
positive and negative eigenspaces respectively. For any u E C~"(uoTN),
we have The two square roots
A± := (P±(±Ju.)P±)I/' are well defined, and we have that
IIA±uIlL' is equivalent to lIu±lIwJ' In the following, we shall denote IIA±uIlL' by lu±l, and let lu -I'. Thus, the energy function is written as follows: 1 E(u) = c+ 2(1u+ I' -lu_I') + R(u). For any given 0
lui' = lu+I' +
< "'( < 1, we choose T > 0, satisfying
J1-
1 1+1' and 6 > 0 such that, for a Wi-ball B. with radius 6, centered at the zero section of C 2"(u oTN), we have 1
-"_ < 1-"
IR(u)1 < 211<112
(3.1)
and VuE U that
= B •.
(3.2) IdR(<1)1 < *1. (In the following we always denote B. by U.) These imply
1 21 2 2(1-1)lu+1 -2(1+1)lu-1 $
E(u)-<1 $
1 ,1 2(1+1)1<1+1 -2(1-1) 12 u_1 . (3.3)
Now we are going to construct a series of deformations, which deform the level set E,+< (for suitable < > 0) to E,_, attached with cells: (1) According to Lemma 2.1 we have a strong deformation retract 'Ii> which deforms E,+, into Eo. for < > 0 small, if E- 1 (c, c + E) n K = 0. (2) By conclusion (6) of Theorem 1.1, we have E > 0 and a strong defonnation retract '72, which defonns E, into E,_,U(E,nU) and satisfies '72(1, E, n V) c Ee n U, '72(1, E, \ V) c E,_,. (3) Let us define two conical neighborhoods:
C,
=
C, =
{u {u
E
U
11<1+1 $
J!~~lu-I},
E
U Ilu+1 $
J! ~ ~lu_I}.
Inequality (3.3) implies that C, C E, n U c
C,.
3. Mar.. Decompontion
253
Lemma 3.1. There exists a strong deformation retract '13, which deforms E e_. U (Ee n U) into Ee_. U C,. Proof. Noticing that V " ~ E e_. U C,' with u E U, we have
{l+;y
V~-2-6.
lu-I $ Let K =
JI!, - 1 (> 0), and define a flow on U as follows: '1(t,u)
= (1- t)u+ + (1 + tK)u_.
We have
(a)
'1(0, u) =
(b) '1(1,u) =
u.
J,!,u_ E U if
(1
~ C,.
(c) Letting cp(t) = E('1(t,.», we have
cp'(t) =
_11'1+12 - KI'I_12 + (dR('1(t, '»,-u+ + Ku_) -t
$ (1- 1')
=
(1- 1')
[_1'1+12 _ KI'I_12 + _1'_ (_1_ + K) 1'1+11'1-1] I-t 1-.,. I - t
[-1~~ (1'1+1- 1: 1'1'1-1) - KI'I_I (1'1-1- 1: 1'1'1+1)] ,
and
It follows that
cp'(t) <
°
(3.4)
Combining (a) and (b) with (c), we obtain
'1(t, (1) E (Ee n U) V(t,u) E
[0,11
x «E,W)\(C, U Ee_.»,
provided by the fact that C, C E, n U. F\-om (a) and (b), we see that if u ~ E,_. U C,' but u E Ee n U, then there is a unique to E (O,t) such that '1(tO,u) E E-'(c - e) U 8C,. The uniqueness and the continuous dependence of t· on (/ are verified by the transversality '1 on E-'(c - e) U 8C" which follows from inequality (3.4).
254
Map~
Application.! to Harmonic.
and Minimal Surfacu
Let us define 'iJ (t,a )
={
1)(1°1,<7) <7
<7 E (Ee n U) \ (Ee_. U C,)
if
aE
Ec-~ U C-y.
This is the deformation we need. (4) Noticing that V <7 E E e _. n c,' -E ~
1-1'1,1+1'1 E(u) - c ~ -2<7+1 - -2- <7_ I' ,
we have
1<7_1 > JI~1"
so that E,_. n C, c S := {<7 E c, On the other hand, V <7 E S,
11<7_1 >
(3.5)
J.":,}.
where
Let us define
In the following, we prove
Lemma 3.2. There is a strong deformation retract '14 which defonns Ee_, U C, into E,_. U T.,.60 U {8+} x BZ•• where k = ind(uo). Proof. We define
=
J:_+ [1-t(l- W)]<7+
1
<7_
+ (1 -
(5) Choose
E
<7 E C,,60 $10_1 $ kol<7+1 +60, U E C, n {1<7-1 $ 6o}.
t)<7+
> 0 small enough that E
<
62 (1
-1')
2
.
(3.6)
Define
(1'+ ~) 1+(1'+~)'
1-
(3.7)
255
3. Morso Decompo6ition
We consider the energy function on the conical section of the sphere 886: S. {(7 E 886 11(7+1 < 1'1(7_1}. Letting (7 E S., we have
=
Since then
E(u)-c<--1 (1_1'2 ---~) ff<-€ 2 1 + 1'2' , o
i.e., Sp C Ee_£o
Lemma 3.3. The exit set of the /low
on the ball B6, is the set SIA' where
r. =
Jl2, k.! k2 > O.
Proof. The flow 'I remains on the plane generated by the two vectors (7+ and (7_. Suppose that 'I meets 886 at time to, and Ict'l+ = .-k"0(7+, 11- = e k2t0 t7_. Choosing suitable coordinates ('1+,'1_) = 6(cos9,sin9), we assume that the flow 'I leaves the ball B.. By comparing the tangents of the ball with the tangents of the flow, we see k2 - k, tg9> -ctg9,
i.e.,
In other words, ('1+,'1_) E S..
0
Lemma 3.4. There is a strong deformation retract '75 which deforms the set Ec _. UT..... U ({9+} x B~,) into Ec _. U ({9+} X Bt). o
Proof. We use the flow 'I de6ned in Lemma 3.3. Because S. c E,_" if (71/. E,_eo then there must be a t· E (0,00) such that ,,(t·, (7) E E-'(c- e).
256
App/icotWns to Hannooic Map• • nd MinilMl
Surl.~s
On the other band, 'I(t,') is transversal to the level set E-I(c-e), provided by the £act that d dtE(!J(t,,,»
= -('I+,kl!J+) ~
(!J-,ko!J-)
+ (dR(!J),-kl'l+ + ko!J-)
-kll'l+I' - k,I!J_I' + T(I'I+I + 1'1_1) (kl 1'1+ I + k,I!J-1)
= -(1- T)[kll!J+I' + k,I!J_I' -
1
=T(kl + ko) 1'1+I 1'1-1]
[1'1+1' + ,,'1'1-1' -
1
=T(l + ,,')1'1+11'1-1]
= -(1- T)kl
< 0, if we choose (3.8)
Therefore, II "
e Tk "., \ E,_ ..
t· = t·(<7) is uniquely detennined and
continuous. We define our deformation retract as follows:
if
(7
E E c _£
if
<7
eT.... \E,_.
if
<7
e {9+l x BZ•.
For any two strong deformation retracts
we define their composition as follows:
'I'(t, x)
I
[O'l]
'l'1(2t,x)
tE
'I'2(2t -l,'I'I(l,x»
te[!,l].
=
This is again a strong deformation retract '1': XI - Y, which is denoted by 'I' = '1'2 0 '1'1· Now we come to our main conclusion in this section.
=
Theorem 3.1. Assume that ",(N) 0, and let F be a component of C;"(M',N). Suppose that on the level E-I(c) n F, c < mF + b, there are only nondegenerate harmonic maps Ul, . .. ,Ut, with Morse indices m" ... ,m, respectively. Then the level set n F, attacbed with l handles, whose dimensions correspond to these indices, is a strong deformation retract of EC+f: n:F, [or suitable e > O.
E,_.
!,
i,
l.
Proof. We choose 'Y = T = and IJ = Then we have 6 > 0 small enough such that (3.1) and (3.2) hold. Choose e > 0 small enough
4. E:ristence and Multiplicitp for Harnumic Map.
257
such that £ < ~ and that conclusion (6) holds. Inequalities (3.6), (3.7) and (3.8) are satisfied automatically. The strong deformation retract now is defined to be
Comhining Lemmas 3.1 and 3.2 with 3.4, we obtain our conclusion.
Corollary 3.1. Suppoee that"" is a nondegenerate harmonic map witb E(",,) = c and "" E C!"(M, N), 'Y > O. Assume tbat c < m),+b, if"" E :F and "2(N) = O. Then ...., bave
where k = ind(",,). Sections 2 and 3 are adapted from Chang (Chall). 4. Existence and Multiplicity for Harmonic Maps We present here a few theorems about the existence and the multiplicity ror harmonic maps. We follow the notations in previous sections. Theorem 4.1. (Sacks-Uhlenbeck (SaUl), Lemaire (Leml]). IF7r2 (N) = 0, then for any bomotopy class :F of maps from M to N (with prescribed boundary value '" E Q2"(8M, N) in the case 8M F 8), there exists a harmonjc map. Proof. We choose any d E (m)', m)' + b). Obviously,
f3t := rank Ho(E. n F; 0) F O. It follows Mt
Theorem 4.2. (Bre>is-Coron (BrCI), Jost (Joal». Suppoee that N =
8', and that", E Q2"(8M, 8') is not a constant. Then there exist at least two homotopically different harmonic maps. Proof, By the argument used in Theorem 4.1, we obtain a minimal energy harmonic map ii among all homotopy classes E(ii) = m. The second harmonic map will be obtained by constructing a map v homotopically different from u having energy
E(v) < m+b.
(4.1)
The construction of the map v is as foUows: Cboose a small disc Do on M, take an isometric copy D" and identify Do and D, along their boundary to obtain a 2-sphere 8'. Take a map w: 8' -< N = 8', wbich
Applicoti.... to Hannoni<: Map< and MinimGl Surfaou
258
represents the generator of ".(N), and coincides with il on Do, such that tbemap
v=
{~ID'
M\Do on Do and identify Do with D,
satisfies (4.1). We sball construct w explicitly. Since '" -F const., il -F const., we can choose a point "0 e M, £or which Vil(%o) -F 8. Rotating 5', one can assume that il(%o) is the south pole. Let ,r; 5' - C he the stereographic map from the north pole. We choose local coordinates z e C in a neighborhood of "0, such that z(%o) = 0, Izl < e, e > O. Thus
I" 0 il(z) - 'il( .. 0 ii)(O)zl = O(lzl'). We denote V( .. 0 ii)(O) hy a, which is a nonzero complex number, and write z = rei9 .
Letting
., (r- - -I-e) - +a (1- - -r) ee
t(z) = (.-oii)(ee')
e2
e
£2
£
is ,
we have
I(ee") = .. 0 u(ee;') and t(e - e')e;") = aee". Then we define a function rp: C - C as follows:
Izl$e-eZ e -e' < Izl $ e Izl ~ e. If e > 0 is small, rp is continuous and surjective. The map w is defined to be 1('-1 otp01r. Noticing that 1r is conformal, and that the energy is conformal invariant, we may compute the energy of w by the energy of .. -lrp.
Now E(v) =
~
I.
M\B(Z"o.~)
IVill 2 + ~
J,
B(zo.t-t 2 )
IVwl' +! 2
J,
IV( .. -'I)I'·
8.\8.. _ .. 2
Since (a
-F 0)
4. &i81ence and Multiplicity fur H...,.on;'; Map.
259
and
1
B.\B. ___ ,
~cl'
~_e2
IV(1r-'t)I'
/.. .
[I(1rOii)(Eeil )-aee;·I·
0
+ia = 0(E3), where C
Therefore, for
E
~ + 1("Oii)'(Ee;8)(r. _I-E) £ E
E
G-;.)e;'I}drdO
= Maxlld,,-'U'.
> 0 small enough,
we have
E(v) < m+b. The remaining part of the proof is the same as tbat in Theorem 4.1. Theorem 4.3. Given a Riemann surface M ",ith boundary 8M, if'" E C>+'(8M,9"), .., > 0, n <:: 3, is not .. constant map, tben tbere exist at least two harmonic maps from M to 9" in tbe (nontrivial) homotopy class Fe C!+'(M, 9").
Proof. The proof is similar to the above case. Since "2(9") = 0, n <:: 3, first, we apply Theorem 4.1 to obtain a minimum of the energy functional in F, which is a harmonic map UFo Then we shall prove that there exists d < mF + b such that "._.(Ed n :F) '" 0, where:F is regarded as a component of C~+'(M,8"); or, equivalently, we construct an essential map u E C(8"-', Ed n:F) such that sup E(u(o)):<': d • eSn.-2
< mF + b.
The existence of snch a map u was constructed by Benci-COron (Bee!], in a manner very similar to the construction of'll in Theorem 4.2. We are satisfied with pointing out the main idea, and we omit the details. As in tbe proof of Theorem 4.2, '" '" const., ii '" const. Again we choose a local chart U, outside wbich u is defined to be ii, and inside which, we choose a small disk B.(ZO) on wbich u(o)(z): 9"-' x B.(ZO) - 8" is a homeomorphism. The map CT is connected smoothly. After a careful construction, this makes E(u(o))
< mF + b.
By tbe fact that ".(8") = 0, we see tbat u(o) E:F V 0 E 8"-'. We point out first tbat <7 is essential. Indeed,
<7(8)(Z) = ii(z)
for
z EM \U
260
Applications to Harmonic Mo.". and MintmGl SurJacu
so, outside the ball B.(Zo), <7(o)(z) is contractible. And inside B.(ZO), <7: 8"-' x B.(zo) ..... 8 n is a homeomorphism. Therefore, the image of <7 is homotopic to a n-topological ball. Thus <7 cannot shrink to a constant map, Le., tr is essential. Next, we apply the Hurewicz theorem, which implies the existence of 1m
integer 0 < k ::; n - 2 such that H.(E. n T, Z) -10. The existence of the second harmonic map in T follows from Morse inequalities (Theorem 2.3). Remark 4.1. Theorem 4.3 was obtained by Benci-Coron (BeCI] in case M = D', the 2-disk. See also W.Y. Ding (Dinl] and K.C. Chlmg (ChalO]. For other results in this direction, readers are referred to Sacks-Uhlenbeck (SaUI,2], Schoen-Yau (ScYI] and Jost (JosI]. Readers who need to know more about harmonic maps are referred to Eells-Lemaire (EeLI-2].
5. The Plateau Problem for Minimal Surfaces
The Problem. Given a Jordan curve r in lin ,one asks for 8 surface S with minimal area splmning r. For technical reasons, we assume that r is defined by Or: 8 1 ..... an, which is a C"-diffeomorphism. I~ is known from differential geometry that such a surface 8, if it exists, has inean curvature 0 (see, for example, Ossermann (Ossl]). We introduce isothermal coordinates on S, which parametrize 8 by a function I.p: D - t nth, where D = {z = (x,y) I x' +y2 < I},
with aD = S1.
Thus, 'I' satisfies the following nonlinear differential system: in D, in D. is an oriented parametrization of
r
I
(5.1) where ( , ) is the scalar product on IItn , and 1.1 = (', .)1/2. Although solutions of the differential system (5.1) no longer require S having minimal area, they are also called minimal surfaces. We use complex notations,
z = x +iy, and introduce the conformal group on the disc:
. Ia+z G= { g(z) = e'''''' + az I a E C, 101 <
}
I, 'I'D E IR .
It is easily seen that if 'I' is a solution of (5.1), then 'I' 0 g, V 9 E G, are all solutions of (5.1), i.e., the system is G-equivariant.
5. The PIal""" Probl.... /ar Minimal SurJat%6
261
In order to avoid the nondetennination of solutions, we normalize the
solutions as foUows: Let p .. p•• P3 be an oriented triple of distinct points on
r
I
and assume
We shall study this problem via critical point theory. Inspired by the early work of Courant [CoUll. the conformal condition (the second group of equations) can be solved by minimizing the Dirichlet integral. This suggests the following strategy: Define a parametrization set
M = {u e Cn Hl/2([O.2"1.1R1) I u
3"71',
= 2j
j
= 0,1,2,3,
and
fJ
(i") is nondecreasing } .
This is a closed convex subset of the Banach space X = cnHl/2([o. 2,,1.1R1j. (1) Vue M. solve the Dirichlet problem:
6'1' = 0 in D. { 1P18D = cr 0 u. The unique solution 'I' e Hl(D.lII. n ). depending on u continuously. is denoted by 'I' = "R(a 0 u). Then. we define a functional on M: J(u) =
~
In
IV"R(a 0 u)I'dx II dy.
(2) We lind the critical point of J with respect to the closed convex subset M. and then (a) verify that the generalized critical points solve the conformal condition, and
(b) the extended critical point theory provides the existence and multiplicity results.
AppIicatWn.o 10 Hannonic Map. and Minimol S.wjocu
262
Before going to the minimal surrace problem, we study the Banach space X = C n H'/'([O, 2"J,lII.n ) and related Sobolev spaces. Recall that the Sobolev space H'(D,a n ) bas the following norm:
II%II~'(D) = lI%ni'(D) + IIV%lIi'(D)' The tr""" space of H'(D,an ) is the fractional order space H'/'(S',an ),
In particular, V % E: H'/'(S',an ), we have the Fourier series expansion 00
L:
%(8) = Re
"",e'm',
m=-co
where "'" = 21..
1'· 0
1m
m=O,±1,±2, ....
z(8)e- 'dB,
It is known (cf. Adams [Adal]) that 00
II%II~/. = II zlli. + Izl~/.
=
L:
(1 + Imlll""'I'
m=-oo
1%1./, = (Eml"",I')'/' is called a seminorm which induces a semi-inner product ( , hi" We need the following preparations: (1) Let u .... a 0 u he the Nemytski operator from the Banach linear submanifold X = {u E: CnH'/'([O, 2"J,lII.') I u(O) = 0, .. (2.. ) = 2,,} to X. Then a is a C'-map and J E: C'(X).
is an equivalent norm, where
Claim. The Gateaux derivative of u .... a 0" at ... is a'(... ), so we only want to verify that u .... d(u) is continuous in .c(T~(X,X» topology. Since the embedding Vp> 1 is continuous, we have
1 la' 2.
110' 0 uIlC(T.(X),H'''):S
(
0
u(8l1'dB
)'/r
for
1 2 - = 1--. r p
Therefore, the C(T~(X), H'/2)-continuity of a' 0 u with respect to u in
X follows from the Lebesgue dominance theorem.
5.
~
PIaI...u Probl.... lur Minimal SurJ-
263
It remains to verify the .c(Tu(X),C)-continuity of a' ou with respect to " in X. Since 1(0' 0 u)· vi S la' 0 "le((o,2'I ••') 'Ivle,
the CI-continuity of a implies that 110' 0 " - a' 0 Uon.c(T.(X).e) - 0 as
II" - Uolle - O.
This is just what we need. (2) Suppose that 'P = R(-y). with., E HI/2(SI,It"), i.e., A'P=O in D {
'P18D
=.,.
According to the Poisson fonnulas, we have
"" :l:
cp(r,8) = Re
c".rme;m'
m=-oo
= Re
"" :l:
c".zm.
m=-oo
where
00
.,(8) = Re
:l:
c".e;m'.
m=-oo
(3) 'I X,II E HI/2(SI,IIl"), suppose that 'P,,p are corresponding solutions of the Dirichlet problem, with boundary data x and II respectively. Then we have (X,lIlt/2 = Re
m~oo Iml c".dm = Iv V'P' V,pdxdy
= ]." ('Pro ,p)d8. (4) 'I X,II E HI/'nC(SI,R"), we have (X,II) E HI/. nC(SI,Jli.I) and
I(x, 11)11/2 S IIxlle ·llIh/. + 1IIIIIe 'lxll/2'
Claim. We only verify that
J1{s.J( ls.
2 l(x,II)(O - (.1:,Y)('1)1 d{ d'l
xs.
I{ - 'II'
I(:o({),y({) - 11('1» + (:oW - x('1),Y('1»Id{d'l xS' I{ - '112 S IIxlle . Illh/2 + IIYlle 'l x it/2'
=
Applicatiom to Harmonic Mop' and Minimal Sur/acu
264
(5) If p E CI(III.' ,III.R) and" E HI/2(S"1II.2), thon po" E HI/'(SI,lII.n), 8lld Ip 0 ,,11/. :5 11'1P 0 "IIL~ 100h/,· Claim.
Integrating both sides of the inequality, we obtain the desired conclusion. Next, we need to verify that critical points of J with respect to M satisfy the conformal condition. Letting 'P = ~(", 0 ,,) 8lld F(z) = {),'P = 'P. - Up,: D
->
en,
we have IF(z)I' = ('P. - i'P., 'P. - i'P.) = I'P.I' -I'P.I' - 2i('P., 'P.).
Therefore,
IF(z)i'
= 0
if 8lld only if 'P is conformal.
Howeverl we observe that
(),IF(z)l' = 2({),F(z), F(z» = (l>.'P(z), F(z» = 0; therefore IF(z)I' is 8llalytic in D. In polar coordinates,
Lemma 5.1. V" E M, letting 'P = ~(a 0 u),
we
have
('Pro'P.>I.=1 E CI({)D)" C 'D', the Schwartz distribution space. Proof. First, we assume u E C""({)D). In this case
Then (Hu,O') =
['W
Jo
('P~,'P') ·0'(8)d8,
V" E CI({)D),
deSnes a linear continuous functional on CI({)D).
5. TM P"",",u Problem lor Minimal SurftJCU
265
In order to extend this functional continuously to M, V u, v E C""({JD),
we let 'I' = R(o 0 u), '" = R(o 0 tJ), and we make the following estimates: /."- ('1'.,'1'0) - (';"'''',)judO = /."" [«'I' =
"')., '1',) + ("'" ('I' - "'M J" dO
1[('1('1' - "'), V(rpou»
+ (V"" '1«'1' - ",),u)jdzdll,
where the function u in the l..t integral is understood to he an extension of the same function de6ned on {JD. The last integral is split into two terms:
1 «'1('1' - "'), Vrp.)u + (V"" '1('1' - "')o)ujdzdll
+ 1[('1('1' -
",),rp,Vu)
+ (V""
('I' - "').Vu)jdzdll.
Noticing that
1 u(V"', '1('1' - ",).)dzdll
= - 1 ('1('1' -
"'), U8V", + uV",,)dzdll,
we have
11,,('1('1' - "'), '1('1' - "')8)dzdlll
= ~11 !IV(rp =
~11IV(rp -
1 ~ 211'1' -
",)I' . Udzdlll
"')1'· U8dzdll l
, "'"H'(D)
·lI u llc'(8D).
The remaining three terms are estimated by
In summary,
I(H. - H., ,,)I
:5 c [11'1' -
"'"~'(D) + 11'1' - "'"H'(D) (211"'IIH'(D) + IIrpIIH'(D»)]
lI u llc'(8D) :5 C(lI" - vIlH"" lIuIlH"" IIvIlH''') II" - tJIIH"'(8D) ·lIullc'(8D).
266
App/icalioru 10 Honnoni< Map. and Minimol Surfacu
Since C""(lJD) is dense in M the domain of H can be extended to M, such that Vue M, H. E (C'(lJD»)", the dual of C'(lJD). The lemma is proved. We turn now to finding out tbe derivatives of J. V CT E C'(lJD), with 10"'(11)1 < I, define
p.(II) = II + £11(11),
for
lei < 1.
By definition, Po( II) = II, and d de P.(8) = 0"(11).
For any u E C'(lJD),
Generally speaking, however, Vue M, u 0 p;' does not satisfy the three point condition, so we do not know if it is in M. In order to find the derivative of J with respect to M, we need more work. Note that there is a conformal mapping W,: D - D satisfying
[.
wr::exp tUOp;l
(2i"'311')] -exp [2ii"] -3- ,
j = 0, 1,2,3.
If we define T,(II) = -ilnw,(e") Yr:
and
= Tr: 0 U 0 p;l,
then V,EM.
Lemma 5.2. Ifu E M is 8 critical point of J with respect to M, then the distribution H. = O. Proof. Choose a sequence u· E C'(lJD) such that u· _ u in X = C n H'/·. Observing that J is invariant under T" we have
S. 1'7ul Plateau Problem lor Minimal SurflJl:U
where
u: = T~
0
267
u" 0 p;l. Therefore
(J'('h~I.=o+~ oa)=o. Since
If. EM, and u is a critical point of J with respect to M, we have lim( ]'(u·),
which implies
~I.=o) ~ 0,
-( dU.) lim ]'(u·), d8 a 0
~
o.
Exploiting Green's formula, it follows that
(J'(u.),
~•. a) = (H~ •• a).
Therefore (H.. a) ~ 0 i.e.,
Hu
Va E e'(OD),
= O.
Theorem S.l. SUPJX16" that u E M is a critical point of] with respect to M. Then
Proof. Observe the analytic function .'IF(z)!': Since
1m ,'W(z)I'loD = H. = 0, this implies Re z'W(z)l" at z == O. Hence,
= const.
The constant is determined by the value
.2IF(z)I' =
0
VZED,
which implies
IF(.)!, =
o.
Therefore
268
ApplicGtiDM to Hamwrric Map. and Minimal Surfacu
Lemma 5.3. (Courant-Lebesgue). l'br each constant M > 0, the set JM !. = {" E
MIL
IVR(a 0 u)I'th; 1\
d" $ M}
is compact in the C"-top/ogy.
Proof. 1. Let C. be the circular arc centered at (x., I/O) E 8D with radius p > O. We want to &how that V 6 E (0,1), 3 p E (6,,/6) such that
f l
2M
pJn(lj6)'
for each
1.
,fl
f
10 .,
6
1
Since we have
1$
L
IV
Letting
p(r) = r
f
le.
1
it follows that
I. •
,fl
dr p(r)- $ M. r
Thus, 3 p E (6, ,/6) such that
i.e.,
2. We show that {a 0 u} is equicontinuous. Claim. For the Jordan curve r, V E > 0, 3 d > 0 such that for any two points P, P' E r, r \ {P, P'} possesses one component with diameter < e, provided 0 < dist(P, P') < d.
5. The Plaleou Problem lor Minimal Sur/OI!U
269
According to (I), V Zo E /JD, V 6 > 0, 3 p E (6,./6) such that the arc length of the curve C. has the following estimate: t('P(C.))' :5
:5
(!c. (!c.
1'P.lds)' 1'P.I'ds) ·27rp
4ffM
:5 1n(1/0J" We choose 6 > 0 such that
and that at least two of the following three inequaliti... hold: V z E BD, and
i
= 0, I, 2.
One may assume c < Min dist;,
Lemma 5.4. The functional J satisfies the (PS) condition on M. Proof. Assume that {..... } eM satisfies J(u m ) :5 M, and
1- J'(umllu m
-+
o.
We want to show that it i. subconvergent. According to the Courant-Lebesgue lemma, there exists a subsequence fUm} (without changing the subscripts), such that U m -+
u'(e),
U m '-+
u'(HI/').
and
270
ApplicatiOf'LS' to Hannonic Mops and Minimal Sur/atu
Since M is closed under the C-topology, it suffices to prove that ..... "O(H' /'). Indeed, according to (3), we have I".. -
"ol~/':OS; 10 IV(R(a 0 ..... ) =
R(a 0 "O»)I"dzdy
10 IV('Pm - 'P°)1 2dzdy
(5.2)
= ioD (!('Pm - 'P°),('Pm - 'P0)/dB,
where 'P..
= R(a o ..... ) and 'Po = R(ao"O). Integrating by parts, we have
('Pm - 'P°)18D = a
0
= n' 0
"m(8) - a .....
0 ..
°(8)
(8)( .... (8) - ..'(8»)
Introducing p: IR' _ IRn, and ,1: 8 1 p(',7/) =
_
u_(.) /.".(.)
-
/.u·(9)
o"(9)d8d8'.
9'
IR' by
r /." o"(9)d8d8'
Jf.
I'
and
,,(8) = (,,0(8), " .. (8)), we obtain
Ipo"!./':OS;
IVpo""L~
·1,,1.1'
from (5). By differentiation,
:~ = -
f
a"(9)d8,
~ = a"(7/)(7/ - o· It follows that
and where Co is a constant depending rpm -- 'P. , and then
On Q.
The condition U m -- u· implies
5.
~
271
Plot""u Problem for MinimGl Surfocu
Again by the Courant-Lebesgue lemma and (3). we have
ILD
«'I'm).. p(..... (8). u'(8» d8 1
=
If Iv
(V'I'm. V"R(p 0 (1»dzdll/
S CII'I'mIlH' . lip . <1I1H'"
- o.
Moreover. returning to (5.2). IUm - u'I~/'
f.
..
= 0 «'I'm)" a' 0 u m(8) . (Um(8) - u'(8»d8 + 0(1) = (J'(Um) ...... - 110') + 0(1) = (-J'( ..... ). u' - ..... ) + 0(1) S 1- J'(um)I_. (II..... II H"'nc + lIu'IIH"'nc) + 0(1).
However. there is a constant C
therefore. 110m - u·(HI/').
> 0 such
that
0
Now we can apply the critical point theory on the closed convex set M to obtain the following results. Theorem 5.2. (Existence). Assume that a: 8 1 phism. Then the Plateau problem is solvable.
-
r
is a
CO diffeomor-
Proof. It follows directly from tbe results in Section 6.2 of Chapter I. because J is bounded from below and satisfies tbe (PS) condition on M.
Theorem 5.3. (Morse-Thmpkins-Shiffman). By the same assumption as Theorem 5.2. if, further. we assume that system (5.1) pc two distinct solutions which associate with two local minima of the Dirichlet integral J. then system (5.1) has the third solution. Proof. It is a direct consequence of tbe Morse relations for J on M. Remark 5.1. Theorem 5.2 is due to J. Douglas [Doul) (1936). In his paper. [' is only assumed to be a Jordan curve. Theorem 5.3 was obtained by M. Morse. C.B. Tompkins [MoT1) and M. Shiffman [Shil) independently in 1939. The above proof, based on the modern critical point theory is due to M. Struwe [Str2) (1984).
m
Applications to Harmonic Map8 and Minimal SUrface8
Theorem 5.2 was extended by J. Jost (Jos2] , to where the disk D is replaced by a compact oriented surface of type (p, k), and IIlR is replaced by a complete Riemannian manifold (N, h) with nonpositive sectional curvatures. His method is taken from hyperbolic geometry. While Theorem 5.3 is also extended to that generality by K.C. Chang and J. Eells [ChEll, an a priori assumption excluding the change of topological type is made. Recently, J. Jost and M. Struwe (JoSl] removed the a priori assumption. They successfully developed a Morse theory for minimal surfaces of varying topological type, but one in which the target splICe N = lit' is assumed. Another related result is due to M. Ji and G.Y. Wang (JiWl]. They proved the Mon;e-Tomplins-Shiffman type result in the case M = D, the unit disk, and N equal to a compact Riemannian manifold which admits no minimal sphere. We also mention the work ofT. Tromba [Tro2-3], in which degree theory is used to study disk-type minimal surfaces, and of Struwe [Str3] for annulus type.
ApPENDIX
Witten's Proof of Morse Inequalities
O. Introduction In his paper "Supersymmetry and Morse Theory," E. Witten IWitlJ presented an analytic proof of Morse inequalities. It is the purpose of this appendix to introduce his proof. According to de Rham-Hodge Theory, the Betti numhers of a differential manifold M are related to the dimensions of harmonic forms. In the first section, we shall briefly review Hodge theory. The idea of Witten's proof is to introduce a perturbed elUptic complex for a given Morse function f as follows: "'--11'
A,-I(M)
.-'f 1 ... -+
A,-I(M)
-
dp_1
AP(M) .-If
1
d,,-t
.!.....
A'(M)
d.
Ar>+I(M)
-'"
.-'f 1
d'
--4
A'(M)
-'"
with p = 0,1,2, ... ,n -1,
and to compute the perturbed Laplacian p.
Ll.
We range the eigenvalues of
0:-:;
1
I-
= til' til' +
Llr as follows
-'nt) :-:; -'~(t) :-:; ... :-:; -'t(t) :-:; ....
The Hodge theory implies that there are fJ" eigenvalues equal to 0, where {3p is the pth Betti number, p = 0, 1, ... ,n - l. In local coordinates,
Witten'. Proof of Mor.. Inequalitiu
274
Assume that ,.' is a critical point of I. We approximate lIf in a neighborhood of ,.' and obtain tbe approximate perturbed Laplacian:
A"
. . .oZ·
=
~ (IP 2( ;)2 + tp; [~-; . J) , t:t - (8:>:;)2 + t 2p;" .... 1\, 'b'
wbere {p;} are the eigenvalues of tbe Hessian tP f(,.'). IT we put all tbese lI •.oj togetber (in tbe product ."""") fur all critical points {,.;} as a new operator, and range all eigenvalues as follows:
the number of zero-eigenvalues is then proved to be the number of critical points with Morse indices p. The simple version of Morse inequalities
tben wiD be proved if we have the following asymptotics:
lim
'_00
~W) =~ t
k'
Ie = 1,2, ....
A revised elliptic complex is used to prove the final version of the Morse inequalities. The material of this appendix is based on [Witl), F. Annik (AnnI), G. Henniart (Henl) and B. HelfFer (Hell).
1. A Review of Hodge Theory Let (M,g) be a compact, connected, COO, n-Riemannian manifold without boundary. T M denotes tbe tangent bundle; T.M denotes tbe tangent """"" at '" eM; T'M denotes tbe cotangent bundle; T; M denotes the cotangent""""" at '" eM; A"T'M denotes the anti-symmetric tensor product of T' M. The section of APT'M is called a p-form over M. COO (APT' M), tbe set of all p-forms, is denoted by A"(M). It w e A"(M), in tbe local coordinates (""' ... ,x.), is expressed as follows:
cae
w=
We write g;;
= 9 (1&, ~), g;; = g(d:<',d:
(g,; )-' is positive definite.
$ i,i $ n. Tben (g';) =
1.
275
Hodge Theory
We may also extend 9 to p-Corms: 9
(lb')
E
A ... A d:J:i~ ,t&i 1 1\ .. • /\ ~.. ) =
EArs ••• It:,gi1J"1 ..• gi,i".,
tlo ... ,k,
,I.:,.)
where (k" ...
runs over (1, ... ,p), and
(1, k ... ,p~ )
e••...•• = ±1 ,·C
• , ..• '"'P
is even is odd .
The differential operotor d: AP(M) _ A .... '(M) is defined to be (1) a linear operator,
n'. (%)dz"
(2) d (a; •.
fI ... fI dz") =
Ej~,
8oKi;··· dxi fI dz"
fl· .. fI dz'·.
From the definition, it is easily seen that (i) rP = o. (ii) d(w fl8) = dw fl8 + (-l)Pw fI dB, V w E AP(M), V 8 E A9(M).
The Hodge ..tar operator., AP(M) _ An-p(M) is de6ned as Collows: (1) *(a(%)w + 6(%)8) = a(x) * w + b(x). 8, 't""" "~.. , gitJ". ···9~.j· .. dxi~J A (2) o(dxil A· .. Adzi ,) = L.."k.,··Ic,. .,..... "".,. ',+1'" .. . . . A dxi ... , where
1 $;, < ... < jp $ n, I ::5; ~1 < ... < in. ~ n,
{j" ... ,jp, i .... , ... in} is a permutation oC {I, ... n}, {k" ... ,I.:,.} is a permutation oC {I, ... ,p}, 'It•... t. 19I'/2Et,.••• ,t., 191 det(9ii), and
=
Et.· ..t.= ±1
·C
( 1,2, ... ,n )
'tt t 1,2, .. " "
=
iseven . odd IS
.
Then we have (i) 01 = '1,0'1 = 1 where 'I = 191'/2dz' fl··· fI dz n , (ii) 0 ow (-I)"
=
Claim. We only want to verify this identity Cor w = dz" II ... fI dz'. , 8 = dzi· fl··· fI dxi., with 1 $ i, < ... < ip $ n, 1 $ it < ... <;P $ n.
LHS =
RHS=
E Ekl···t"g'Ii•• .. . 9,,.J,,, . fI,
Witten'". Proof 0/ Morse Inequalities
276
Siru:e {i ••...• i n } must be a permutation of {1 •...• n}. and {I.·· .10 , is 8. pennutation of {l, ... 1 n} with tl < t2 < '" < tPl we have it = tt, ... 1 ip = tp. Therefore,
iP+l ... in}
RHS = IgjI/2 Ei1 ".i."
=
191 1/ 2
L
L
E"I ...•'gIrJlt l ... gip;ltpd:J;i 1 " ... /\
d:t:i ".
k 1 ,···..
1 r!1: 1 ··.k.gili"•... gip;·.dz " ... /\
dx n
Itl, .. I:,.
=LHS. The scalar product on AO(M) is defined by
(w.9) =
iMg(w.O)~
= iM W 1\ (00).
It is real. symmetric. bilinear and positive definite. The completion of AO(M) with respect to ( • ) is denoted by A~,(M). It is a Hilbert spare. The rodiJJerential operolor d": AO(M) ~ AO-'(M) is defined to be the adjoint operator of d with respect to ( • ). i.e .•
(d'w. p) = (w. dp) If wE AO(M). If p E AO-'(M). Nole. The scalar products on both sides are different!
Billie properties of d' . (i) d" = (_l)n(o-')+' 0 do. C!4im.
(d'w.p) = (dp.w) = (_l)o(n- O)(dp, 0
0
w)
= iM dp 1\ (ow) =(-1)0 iMPI\(dOW) = (_l)>+(p-·)(n-O+1) iM p 1\ = (_l)(o-')(n- o)+' (p, od 0
(ii) d" d" = O.
w)
(0 0
dow)
277
Hodge Theorp
1.
The Lop/lJcian. toP: AP(M) -+ AP(M) is defined to be d'd + ddo. A pform w satisfying toP", 0 is caUed a p-harmonic form. Denote HP(M) = ker(to P ).
=
&le. p = O. V f E COO(M),
f
toO = d'df =
-lgl-'/2
E~ (lgl'/2 g;; ~ f) . fh] ax, i,j
This is the Laplace-Beltrami operator on (M,g). We have (i) Let D(toP ), be the space of »,?-Soholev sections of tbe vector bundle APTo M. Then toP is positive and self-adjoint. Claim. V O,W E AP(M), we have (topw,e) = «d'd + dtr)w,O) = (dw,dB)
+ (d'w, d'S)
= (w, (d'd + dtr)8) = (w,toPO).
Friedrich'. extension provides the self adjointness. The positiveness is 01>vious. (ii) toP is an elliptic operator. See (vi) in the following paragraph. (iii) Ill' pGSS c only discrete spectrum, Le., it has only eigenvalues u(to P ) = {,\r < ,\~ < ... }, with ,\~ 2: 0, -+ +00 as k -+ 00, and each eigenvalue has only finite multiplicity. This follows from Riesz-Schauder theory.
>.:
Ezterior and interior product. VOlE A'(M), wll:dz;' 1I· .. lIdz;' .... wlldz;' "",ldz;',AP(M)
-+
Api-'(M),
P
i",: dz;' 11 .. ·11 dz;· ....
E(-1);+'g(w, dz;')dz;'11 j==l
... 1\ dxiJ 1\ ... " dxi "
AP(M)
-+
AP-'(M),
are called the exterior and interior product with respect to w respectively. These products are extended to AP(M) linearly. (i) One has V 8 E AP-'(M), V.p E AP(M),
(w 1I0,.p) = (0, i..,.p). (ii) V f E AO(M),
vo E AP(M), d'ue) = fdoe - i.qe.
278
Witten'. Proof of M....e Inequalities
Claim. V 1/1 E AP-'(M), (I/1,.rU8» = (dl/1,/8) = (fdl/1,8)
= (dUt/I) -
df /I 1/1, 8)
= (fl/1,d08) - (I/1,i4/8) = (t/I,/.r8 - i4/8).
(iii) V W,,"'2 E A'(M), V 8 E AP(M),
Claim. We may verify this for w, = dx' and W, = dx' or dx" in suitable coordinates.
(iv) The principal symbol of the differential operator d is C1Ld = i{/I, where {= Ej~, {jdx j , (6, ... ,{n) E TOM. Therefore
Therefore, C1Ldw = iE{jdxJ /I w, V wE AP(M). Note. For d, the symbol C1d = the principal symbol C1Ld. (v) C1Ldo = i . i(, where { = E{jdx;.
w
Claim. Letting 8, denote the Fourier transforms (in local coordinates) for 8 E AP(M) and t/I E AP+1(M) respectively, (8, .rl/1) = (dB, t/I)
= (C1Ld· =
8,¢)
= i({ /l8,¢)
i(8,ii$).
Therefore (8,udo. ¢) = i(8,i(¢). (vi) C1 Lt. = -I{I". Claim.
uddOd + ddO) = C1 LdoC1 Ld + C1 Ldu Ldo
= - ({ /I i( + i( . {/I)
= -I{I"· By choosing {along an axis, say {= ({" ... ,{n) =
1{le"
I.
Holigo ThflOf'J/
279
Elliptic complex. Let M" he a Riemannian manifold, and let E = {E,}il' he a family of vector bundles over M. Let d = {d'}a-', i = 0, 1, ... ,n - 1,
he a family of pseudo differential operators (",DO) of order r, satisfying (1) d;+1d; 0, (2) If x E M, If {E T;M \ {8}, the sequence
=
is exact, where I7 Ld(x,{) is the principal symbol of the ",DOd. We say that (E, d) is an elliptic complex.
Example (de Rham). We define (E, d) as follow.: d=
E = {A'T'M}"p=o'
{A}"-' ..." p=O'
where d. is the differential operator. This is an elliptic complex.
Cl4im. We only want to verify tbe exactness of the sequence
Since If w E A'(M), I7Ld(x, {)w. = i{" w.,
where { =
Ei-, {,dxj, and it i. easy to see that kerI7Ld(x,{)
= ImI7Ld(x,{).
{Choose { along an axis, say {= '" " " (", " ... " ",) = { 0
el 1\ eil
1\ ... A ei.,
if i, if i,
=1 >1
Therefore, kercTLd(x, {)
= Span{ ,"
" ... "
fl.
11 = i, < ... < i. $ n}
= 1m .,A = 1m "Ld(x,{).) Let (E, d) be an elliptic complex, define
D , : C""(EI)
-+ C~(E,)
as follows: i = 0,1, ... , n - 1.
280
Willen',
Prool 01 Mon. Inequalities
We have (i) D, is symmetric (and it has a self-adjoint extension), and positive. The proof is quite similar to those for /1'. (ii) The ",DO D, is elliptic, i.e.,
Claim. Assume that for 0 E E" (trLD,)O = 0, then g ([(<7L
+ (trL<1;)' (UL
~ g«trL<1;_I)O, (trLdi_I)O) ~ (trL<1;_1)9
= 0,
+ g«<7Ld,)9, (uL
= 0,
= (trLd,)O = o.
By the exactness ofthe sequence, (trL
= 0 ~ 3", E E'_I such that
0= trL
= 0,
In the following, we use the same notations
Then we have (i) L'(S,) N(D,) (\) R(
=
H'(E,d) ~ N(D,), where we denote N(D) = ker(D), R(D) = /m{D) for Mch lin ...r operator.
Proof. D, has a self-adjoint extension, which is denoted hy the same notation. We have L'(E,) N(D,) (\) R(D,).
=
(Because D, i. elliptic, D, has closed range.)
2.
281
The Witten Comp/e%
By definition,
however, implies that
(d;w, dO,_.) = 0, ~ R(d;) .1 R(d;_.)
V wE COO(E'+l), ~
V 8 E COO(E,_.),
R(D,) C R(d;) Ell R(d;_.).
On the other band,
R(d" C N(d;).!., R(d;_.) C N(d;_.)'!' ~ R(d;) Ell R(d;_.) C N(d;).!.
+ N(d;_.)'!' C N(D,).!. =
R(D,).
The last inclusion follows from
N(D,) C N(d;) n N(d;_.). We obtain the first conclusion: R(D,) = R(d;) Ell R(d;_tl, and
L2(E,) = N(D,) Ell R(d;) Ell R(d;_.). For (ii), since N(d;) C R(d;).!., we have
N(d;) C N(D,) Ell R(d;-tl. Conversely, N(D,) C N(d;) is known, and R(d;-tl C N(d,)
follows from
d,d,_.
= O.
(ii) follows. (iii) is obtained in a similar manner. (iv) is a direct consequence of (ii).
Corollary. For the de Rham complez,
iJJ defined to be the i" cohomology group of M, which iJJ iJJornory>hic to N(a'), i = 0,1, ... ,n-I.
The Betti number, (J, = dim H,(M)
=dimH'(M) = dimN(a'),
282
Witten'.
Prool 0/ Morse Inequalities
i = 0,1, ... ,n - 1.
2. The Witten Complex Let if
I: Mn
_ llI.l be a Coo -function. Xo E M is called a critical point of I dl(xo) = 9.
Let K be the set of critical points of I. A function I is called nondegenerate if ,p I(x) is invertible for each xE K. For a given nondegenerate function I, we define a new complex (E,dt ) as follows: E= {A"(M) Ip=O,I, ... ,n}. Vt
~
0, let
d\' =
e- tf dpe" ,
p = 0, 1, ... ,n - I,
and let d.
o _
AD(M)
= {d\' I p = 0, 1, ... ,n -
_ ... _
e-" 1
o -
AD(M)
A"(M)
e-" 1 _ ... _
d.
_
I},
AJ>+I(M)
_'" _
0
e-" !
A"(M)
It is easily verified that (E,
~
O.
Claim. (1) d\'d\'-I = e-"dpdp_Ie" = 0, (2) udd\') = uddp ) = i{A, so that the sequence
is exact. Similarly, we define
Then define
(d\"
w, 9)
p
A.
= (w,d\'9) V wE AP+1, V 9 E AP; therefore
= d\'• d\' + d\'-1 d\' -1- .
2.
283
The Witten Comp/eI:
By the Hodge theorem for elliptic complexes,
ker Af e! ker "/lm ,,-' e! ker d,./Im d,.-, e! ker AP, => p., = dimker Af. Claim. The second isomorphism holds, because
Q: W _
e- tl w satisfies
,,-i.
(1) <>I ...... :kerd,. - kerc/l' is an isomorphism, (2) <> 1m <1,.-, e! 1m Next, we compute fl,. (1)
d,w = .-'1d(.·1 w)
=.-'1 (te'l d/ Aw + .'Idw) =td/ Aw +dw. (2)
d;w = e'/ tr(e-' I w)
=ell (e- tftrw - ide-" w) =trw - etl i-te-I/df W = trw + tidf w. (3) A.w = d,d; w + d; d,w
= tdf A d;w + d(d;w) + tr(d,w) + tid/(d,w) = td/ A (trw+tidfw) + d(d'w + lidfW) + tr(tdf I\w + dw) +tid/(tdf Aw + dw) = Aw + t[d/ 1\ trw + d(idfw)
+ d'W AW) +idfdw)
+ t 2 [d/ 1\ idfw + idf(df Awl) = Aw + t 2 g(df, d/)w + t PdfW,
where
PdfW = idfdw+ d(idfw) +tr(df I\w) + d/ A trw. Let
US
express Pdf explicitly in local coordinates. First we observe that
Pdf(ipW) = vndfdw + idf(dAp 1\ w) +
284
Witten', Proof of Morse InequaJitia
Next, we assume that
K={xjlj=1,2, ...
,8}.
We may find coordinate charts {(Uj,'Pj) I j = 1,2, ... ,B} such that xj E Uj ' u,nuj = 0 if j t j, 'Pj: Uj - R n , with 'Pj("'j) = 9, and assign a special metric OJ on Uj such that
j = 1,2, ... ,s, k,t== 1,2, ... In, where y = IfIj(x}. In this case, OJ on Uj is fiat, so
where we use the notation 1= {i" ... ,ip}.
Let us introduce the commutator:
We obtain Vw E AP(M). In summary, for a suitable metric gj. in a neighborhood of 8. critical point
xj of I, we have AP L.lot w
=
AP L.lo
W
+t
,,,,(Of)' axle L....J k
W
'"
[J_' A, 'd:z:iII . IW. + t L- 8x0'/ k 8:el k,l
u;t;
2. The Witten Complez
285
It is important to note that neither the Betti numbers (J•• p = 0,1, ... ,n, nor the Morse type numbers fflp, p = 0,1, ... ,n, are inftu. enced by the changing of the Riemannian metric 9. so we could choose a suitable 9 to simplify our computations. First. by the Morse lemma. we find neigbborboods Uj of critical points xj of I. i = 1•...• s. as well as local charts 'Pj. such tbat Uj n Uj , = 0. if j -I j'. 'Pj(xj) = 8. 1 •
I(x) - I(xi) =
2 L>M.
U='Pj(X) for XEUj •
1:"",1
where
,p I(xi) =
diag(I'{. ...• 1'1.).
Second. let Vj be an open neigbborhood of U;. with Vj j = 1, ... ,8, and let
n Vj'
= 0 if j -I i',
•
Vo=M\UUj . j=1
Then {Vj}S is an open covering of M. We have a C~-partition of unity {'1jM: 1 = E;=o'l;. where supp '1; c Vj and '1; = 1 on U;, j = 1•... ,'. Define
• 9 = 'lD9 + L'I;9;' ;=1
This is the metric we need. Provided by the new metric in U;:
9 on M,
ar equals the following operator
It is an operator of separable variables. Notice that
H,
=_
(!)" +1"I'"x"
is the Hermite operator in mathematical physics (harmonic oscillation). It has eigenvalues
til'l (1 + 2N). with eigenfunctions
where HN are the hermitian polynomials, N
= 0, 1,2, ....
286
Witlen', Proof of Mors. /nequa/mu
Denote
(
lJ lJxk
k "
H, J = -
.)
"•• + t.It. Zo,
and k = 1,2, ... ,no We have n
6~",; = E(H~J +t,,{KO). k=l
Since
where
1 { = -1
e'
ifkE/ if k¢/,
obviously Kk is a scalar operator on AP(lltn ). Thus the operator 6~••; is self-adjoint, with eigenvalues n
t
E [(1 + 2 Nl)ll'il + d' ,,{] 1'=1
and eigenvectors (ortbonormal)
where Nj = (Nt, ... ,N~) ruus over !'In, and Ij = ".j .j I'll Wltb '1 < ... < 'P' and·3 = 1,2, . .. ,8. We define the direct sum space
(i{, ...
"'P
•
H = E9A~,(lI.n), j=1
and a self-adjoint operator A~
We range the eigenvalues of A~ as foUows:
(s-copies),
,i~) runs over
3.
The Weak Mon. Inequoliliu
Theorem. dim ker(An = m" := #{xj
287
e K I ind(f,xj) = pl.
Proof. By definition, &~Sj
~](1 + 2Nt>IJ1.1 + e£' J1.1
= 0
'=1
k = 1, ... ,n if k ¢ Ii
"* ind(f,xj) = p.
if ke Ii Therefore, each xj witb Morse index p bas a one-dimensional contribution to tbe null space, but if ind(f,xj) '" p, there is no contribution and therefore dim ker(Ar) = m". 3. The Weak Morse Inequalities We shall prove the following ineqnalities: p=O,I, ... ,no
If we compare with the two operators llf and Af, we see that
m.
= dimker(Ar)
and .B,.
= dimker(llf).
We range the eigenvalues of the operator llf as follows:
0:5 >.nt) :S ... :S >.W) :5 .... The weak Morse inequalities bold, if we can prove
«*» First, let us pull hack the eigenvector in H
onto the differential manifold M. We have charts (Ui''''i), where Ui is a neighborhood of xj, "'i is a coordinate such that the Morse lemma holds, and, on (Ui''''i)' the metric
9 is Euclidean, j = 1, ...
,8.
Witten', Prool 0/ Morse Inequalities
288
Define a cut-off function p E C""(JRn), such that 0 :5 p:5 1, Bnd ply)
And define
= {~
1111
:5 1
Iyl <': 2.
•
"'~ = ~>(t2/''P;(x»)('P~P 0 'P;(x), j=l
where ('P~); is the j-component of 'P~, which is a vector in AP(M). For t > 0 large, the support of "'~ is concentrated in Uj=, UJ • These vectors are considered to be "approximate eigenvectors" for the operator
6f.
In order to prove (.), the fol\owing Rayleigh-Ritz principle is needed. Theorem (Rayleigh-Ritz]. A• .rume that A is a self-adjoint operator bounded below on a Hilbert space H. If A only possesses discrete spectrum,
consisting of eigenvalue. with finite multiplicities, A, ::; A, ::; ... ::; An ::; "', then (Ax,x) Aft == sup inf ~, ..... ~._,EH
IIxll' .
.ED(A)
.2:Eepan{¥"l •...•IP.. _l}.1.
Proof. According to the spectral decomposition theorem, (Ax,x) = LAiX~, where Xi = (X, ei), and ei is the ortho-normw eigenvector corresponding to Ai, i == 1.2, .... Therefore,
(Ax, x)
inf .ED(A) :l:Espan{el •... ,e ... _l}.1.
::;
ij;jj2
sup
inf
.. " ......"_,EH
.ED(A)
(Ax, x)
ij;jj2'
xEllpan{ "'1, .. - .!{}._l}.l.
On the other hand, V {'P"'" ,IPn-'}
r:;;:
This proves the equality in the theorem. Let ns make some computations: (i) ("'~, "'~) 6Q~ + O(exp( -at lIS» as t -
=
constant.
+00, where a > 0 is a
3.
The Weak Mor•• In
289
Claim. Noticing that (I"~,'P~) = 60 /3 in the spaoe H, we have
("'!''''~) = t , /.. p2{t'/5I1)(I"!)i(Y)('P~)i(y)dll ,~
=
(I"!'I"~) - ~
=
60 /3 + I.
1.. [1- P'(t2/5Y)J
Since 0 :5 p :5 1, p(lI) = 1 for
lul:5
1.
Letting Z=,fiy,
we have
1:5 {
t(I"!)i(z)(I"W(Z)dZ,
J'%I'?:.t 1 / lO i""l
:5 (
P(z)e-1zl'dz = O(exp{ _at'/5»,
J'%I?:P/10
where the explicit expansions for Hermitian functions are used, P(z) is a polynomial of z, and a is any positive number less than 1. Before computing ("'~, L\.f"'~), we need (ii) V h E COO(M),
Claim. V wE AP(M), [h, (h, L\.'J)w = (h 2L\.' - 2hL1.·h + L\.'h2 )w = h 2 dd"w - 2hddO(hw) + ddO(h2 w) + h 2d°dw - 2hdOd(hw) + d"d(h'w) = h'ddow - 2h'ddow + h 2 dd"w - 2hdh 1\ d"w+ 2hdh 1\ d"w + 2hdidOW - 2hdidOW - 2dh 1\ idO'" + h 2 d"dw - 2h2d"dw + h 2d"dw + 2hidhdw - 2hidOdw - 2hd"(dh 1\ w) + 2hdO(dh 1\ w) - 2idh(dh 1\ w) = -2{dh 1\ idOW + idh{dh 1\ w» = -2{Vh)2w .
Witlen', Proof of Mors. Inequalitiu
290
(iii) ("'~, af"'~) = He~ + ~)("'~, "'~) + O(exp( _at l / 5)) as t _ +00, where ~ and ~ are the eigenvalues associated with and respectively, and a > 0 is a constant.
",1
cp!
Claim.
(1J!!, aM) =
~(~ + ~)(1J!!, "'p)
t, [(p(t'/5Y)('I'~)i, a~,z;p(t'/·Y)('I'p)i)",(
•• )
1 • .• •. l ( p " ' " (. . ] - 2(a~,z;('I'o)',P . ('I'P)')AP(I.') - 2 . ('I'o)',a.,z; '1'/1)')"'("')
= ~ t«'I'!)i, (2pa~..;p -
af,z;p2 -
p'a~,.; ) ('I'p)i)AP(.')
.1=1
=
-~ t«'I'~P' [p, [p, ar,z; Jl ('I'p)i)",( •• ) ;=1
• . , [p, [p,apj ('1'/1)')"'("') = -2I~ L..,«'I'o)' ;=1
It'
•
=
L«'I'~)i, (Vp(t'/·y»)'('I'p)i)AP(.')' ;=1
because ~f:coo , ; = ,6,P+ terms without differentials, which commute with p. Again, we see
(Vp(t'/'y»)' = t 4 / 51(Vp)(t'/'y)I', which is equal to zero outside
It'/'yl ::; 2, and therefore
«'I'~)i, (V p(t'/'y»)2 ('I'~)i) AP(.') = (
t 4 /' P(z)e-I'I' dz
= O(exp( _at l /.)),
JIZlI?2ttflO
where P(z) is another polynomial of z. Now, we turn to the first half of our conclusion: _ _ A"(t) Urn _ 0 - < e P • t_+oo t - k Proof. We range {"'~ I k = I, 2, ... } in such a way that 'I'~ corresponds to the eigenvalue k = 1,2, .... By the Gram-8chmidt procedure we obtain
e:,
0-1
,p~ - LC~ktPJ ;=1
-1
3.
where
The Weak Morse lnequolitiu
291
.-,
L c}. (.p;, .pD = (.pt, .pD,
i=l, ... ,k-l.
j=1
Therefore,
cl. = O(exp( -at""» as
t - +00.
It follows that
-
-
(.pl, .::lND =
t
2(~
,
+ et)6j • + O(exp( -at' oJ),
j,k= 1,2, ... , and that
{¢11 k
= 1,2, ... } is an orthonormal basis.
By the Rayleigh-Ritz principle,
A:(t)
-- = t
<
sup
inf
"'10'" .•"_lEAP(M)
"eD(&r)
sup
~bJ •••.• ""_IEA"(M)
1
(.p, -a:.p) t
."'II=l.¢ES.,.,.{ .1 ..... "'''_1} J.
(Pv.p, !ar Pv.p)
inf
.ev n.,,= 1."Eapan{¥ ••...
t
,1/I"_I}.l
where V = span{;Pt, ... ,;PH, and Pv is tbe orthogonal projection on V. Therefore ~w
- t - :0: ....... ,..:~~EA.(M)
1
j~~
(Pv.p, "tarpv.p)
IIwll=l,,,"Eapan{ Pv t/11 .... ,PvtPlt_l} ~
=
=
sup
tPl, ....... _tEV
sup (
inf 1/Iev U"II =l,.,eapa.n{,pl ,'"
(.p, !ar.p) t
••"_I}.l.
1
-af
//"'//=,
:0:
et + O(exp(-at""J)
as
t - +00.
This proves -1-·-AW)
'-!~oc-t-
< e!'
- •.
The rest of this section is devoted to proving the second half of our conclusion, i.e.,
lim A:(tJ > e!'. t - k
t-+oo
Witten', Proof of Morse [nequa/it;..
292
On the manifold M, we define a cut-off function mx)~
1
o { p(I'/Sip;(X»
x
t
xe U;
and let
~
1, j = 1,2, ...
I
B
•
(J~)' = 1 - ~(.f;)'. ;=1 Then we bave
(iv) Ar = Ej=o J]AU] Claim.
- E;=o(V JJ>". Substituting h ~ J] in (ii), we obtain (JJ)'Ar -
2JJ A UJ + Af(J]>"
= (JJ,[J],An] =
(J],[J],A"J)
=
-2(VJ)'.
Since
•
~(J])'
= I,
;=:0
it follows that
Af
=
•
•
;=0
;=0
~JJAr.f; - LtVJ!)'.
et
Lemma. Suppose thai
etH' -+
Then for large I > 0, thef'e is At.(M) with dim 1m Fo(l) $ k,
such thai
Proof. Since
•
•
;=1
j=D
Ar = J&ArJ~ + ~J!Af.f; - ~(VJ})', tbe operator of the second term acts as tbe same as tbe operator Ar togetber witb a cut-off function. Let Po be tbe orthogonal projection onto tbe subspace spanned by the first k eigenvectors, corresponding to the eigenvalues e'!, ... Then tbe operator
,et·
Fo(t)
•
= ~ J]PoAf PoJ] ;=1
3.
The Weak M .... e Inequalities
293
(P. stands for the pull back of p. on AP(M)) is of finite rank, with dim 1m F.(t) :5 k. We have V t/J E AP(M), (i) (J~ll.P~t/J, t/J) = (ll.P~t/J, JM = (ll.P J~t/J, -Pot/J)
+ t 2 1V11211-Pot/J1I2 + t(P",-Pot/J, -Po.p)
=T. +T2+T3, where TI ;:: O. As for T 2 , 3co
> 0 such that
IV/12;:: co,
for
% E Vo = M\
•
UU
j •
;=1
Since IV 1(%)1 2 = E:~, (/,{rI)2 for x E Uj , Y = 'l'j(x), we know M.p1l2 ·IV/(%)1 2 =
OU-4")II-Pot/Jn 2,
for % E Ui ,
and therefore
As for T3, P", is a bounded operator, which commutes with the multiplications of a function, and therefore
T,
~ -MtnJ~.pn2,
for some constant M
> o.
•
L:(JJt:..PJ,p,.p) = (Aft/J".p,),
(ii)
;=1 where.p, E H equals the element {p(t2'·y)t/J('I'i'(y»}j~,. And, according to the orthogonal decomposition,
•
=
te:+1 L:(JWt/J,.p) + (F.(t).p,.p), ;=1
Witten',
294
Prool 01 Morse lnequaliti..
(iii) We know that
(V' J;(x»2 = 0 if x ¢ Uj (V' J;(x»2 =
j = 1,2, ...
,8.
t. ((:...) t. ((::.)
p(t2/Scpj(X») 2
=
4S 0(t / )
=
0(t4/S)
2 (t / Scp j(X»)'
if x E Uj ,
And
Fa(x) =
(
1-
~(.ry(X))2
'/,
)
,
so that
•
(V'Fa(x»' =0 if x E Vo = M\
UU
j ,
j=l
(V'Fa(X))' =
t (!~t)' k=1
=t 4/.
Ie
t[( (Jp) (t,/sCPj(x». P(t'/SCPj(X))j' k=]
(}XIt:
1[1- p(t'/'CPj(x»') =
0(t 4/.)
if x E Uj
•
Then, finally, we obtain".p E A"(M),
(!:>.f.p,.p) ~ ttf.+l «Fa)'.p, t/J)
• + ttf.+l L «J;)2t/J, t/J) ;=1
+ (F.(t)t/J, t/J) + 0(t )1It/JII' = t(tf.+l + 0(t-1/slH!t/JII' + (F.(t)t/J, .p). 4 5 /
If tf.
< r < tf.+ l' then for large t > 0, we have
!:>.f ~ t· r· Id + F.(t). Now we are going to prove lim >':,(t) ~ ~. The proof is divided into two 1_+00 cases.
4. (1) e._I
Morse lnequa/iti..
< e.. We choose e > 0 such that
Then we have F'_I(t) (8 bounded operator with rBllk ~f ~ t(~
- <)Id + F,_I(t)
for t
:<=;
k - 1) such that
> 0 large.
According to the Rayleigh-Ritz principle,
>.W) = t
...11=1 ...."""1 ..... ··· .... _.)' for t>O large,
~~-e
provided we take
1 •
...iWAn
.....~.~~._.
"'I, ... ,"'.-1
("', t~' "')
as a basis of the subspace 1m F'_I(t). Since
e > 0 is arbitrary, we have
lim >.:(t)
t~OQ
(2) ~-d
~_I =~.
t
> e!'. -
A:
We may 8SSurn. that ~ > 0, BIld then 3 d =~. According to case (1), we have
> 1 such that
< ~-d+l = ...
r
t~oo
>.W) > r t
t~oo
>':-d+J (t) > e!' t
-
- e!'
k-d+l -
k"
This proves our conclusion.
Theorem. Suppose that M is a compact, connected, orientable manifold. Then there exists a Riemannian metric 9 such that
C~
4. Morse Inequalities We have defined {Jp, m p , p = 0,1, ... I n in Sections 1 and 2. Now we are going to prove the following inequalities:
Witten', Prool 01 MONe Inequoliti ..
296
or, in a compact form, letting
pM(t) = LP,t', MI(t) we have
MI (t)
= Lm,t',
= pM (t) + (1 + t)Q(t),
where Q(t) is a formal power series with nonnegative coefficients. Let < < < Min{e!:.p+' I p = 0,1, ... ,n}. Fixing t large enough, we define a. new cohomology complex as follows:
°
X'
= Xr = {w E AP(M) I it is an eigenvector of '\~(t)
with eigenvalue
such that
ar,
'\~t(t) < -}. 0
According to the theorem in Section 3, we see that dimXP == m p '
p=O,l, ... ,n,
and we have (i) rtf: X· _ XP+l, rtf-': X' _ X·-l.
Claim. V wE X', we have arw = ar+'rtfw =
(rtf+"
'\~(t)w
rtf+1
with >'::'(t)
<
+ rtfrtf')rtfw
= rtfrtf' rtfw
= rtf (rtf' rtf + rtf-'rtf-")w = rtfarw = ~(t)rtfw. This implies that rtf w E X'+'. Similarly, one proves ~-1" wE X p -
1,
so we obtain a smaller cohomology
complex,
(ii) dimN(rtf)/R(dr-') = P•. Warning. This is different from the property stated in Section 2 because the complex is different.
Claim. We see easily that (1) N(an c X' n N(rtf). (2) V w E X' n N(rtf) n N(an.l, we have arw = '\~(t)w
where
>'::'(t) '" 0,
4.
297
Morse Inequalities
and Since ~-l· wE XP-l, we see
W
=
(A-') E R "i ,
i.e., those ,..forms in XpnN(df), which have contributions in N(df)/R(df-'), are just Af harmonic forms. Therefore,
in the smaller cohomology complex.
Theorem, Suppose that M is a compoc/, connected, orlentable Coo manifold and that f: M _ IR' is a nondegenerat. COO function. Then the Morse inequalities hold. Proof. We start with the following cohomology complex:
0 - XO ~ Xl
..!!L ... "J:; xn _
0 for large t.
We have shown that (i) dim XP = mp, a.nd
(ii) dimN(df)/R(d\'-') =/3p. Since dimXP = dimN(df)
+ dim R(df) ,
and
dimN(df) = dimR(df-')
+ 13,.,
we obtain
m" p = 1, ...
= /3, + dimR(df) +dimR(df-'),
,n, where we ....ume Ii;' =
O. It follows that
m
L(-lr- (m" p
/3.) = dimR(d;") ~ 0,
,.,.,0
for m
= 0, 1,2, ...
,n. And for the last one, it is an equality: n
n
L(-l)"-Pmp = L(-l)"-P/3p. p=o
1'=0
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INDEX OF NOTATION
df
dilferential of /
19
f. K K.
level set of f, DOt above the level a
20
critical set critical set with critical value a
19 21
Paiais-Smale condition
20
(PS) exp(-)
exponential map
a
Laplacian operator
aM'"
Laplace-Beltrami operator
a
tension operator
"i1
gradient operator
mesO
measure
235
IAI
measure of A
(j)
direct sum
72 142 230 230
141,229
wT
transpose of the matrix W
175 ISO 182
A'A
loop space on A
204
IA
cardinal number of the set A
Fix(-)
fixed point set
A
exterior product
i..,
interior product
216 216 277 277
Id
identity operator
99
INDEX
Arnold oonjectwe on fixed point&, 216 on Lagrangian interaectlo"", 217
Euler characteristic, 6
Finsler manifold, 18
FInsIer structu..., 15 F\'edbolm operator, 47, 97 Banach mauifold, 14 Betti number, 3 bifurcation, 129, 161 blow up lIIl8IysIs, 232 Bott 79, 206
cap product, 9 catesorY, 105 relative catesorY, 109 oonformaI group, 360 convex set, 60 locally, 60 ant Lebesgue lemma, 268 critical group, 32 critical mauifold, 69 aitieal orbit, 61 critical point, 18 w.r.t. a locally convex closed.set, 62 critical . , 18 critical \'aIue, 18 cuplength, 9 cup product, 9
eo....
Deformation lemma, 21 Deformation retract, 20 strong, 21 Deformation theorem fim,29 equivariant first, 67 second, 23 equhariant~nd,68
degenerate critical point, 43
non,33;'41., 1
G-action, 66 G-cohomology, 75 G-critical group, 76 G-equharlant, 66 G-apace,66 GalerkiD approximation, 111 ~ boundary oonditlon, 55 genus, 96
cosenus,96 gradiem Dow, 19 Gromoll-Meyer pnir, 48 Gromoll-Meyer theory, 43
H8QJiItonian system, 179 handle hody theorem, 38 harmonic map, 229
bannoJiic ooclUation, 285 best Dow, 229 Hilbert Rielll8lUlian manifold, 19 Hilbert _ bundle, 70 Hodge theory, 274 homology group, 3 relative, 3 homotopy group, 12 relative, 12 Hurewicz isomorphism theorem, 13 hyperbolic operator, 41 invariant function, 111
isolated eritical manifold, 69
isolated critical orbit, 74 isolated eritical point, 43
312
Index
Jacobi operator, 251 jumping nonlinearity, 164
Poincare-Hop! theorem, 99 projective space
Kunneth rormula, 5,
real,6, 11 complex,6, III pseudo gradient vector field, 19
Landesman-Lazer coodltion, 153 Leray-Scbauder degree, 99 link homological, 84 homotoplcal, 83 Ljustemik-Schnire1man theorem, 105 1oeaI1y convex set, 60
regular set, 18
Marino-Prodi theorem, 53 G-equivariant, 80
Maslov index, 183 maximum principle, 143 strong, 143 minimal surface, 260 mini~8X principle, 87 Morse'decomposition, 250
Morae index, 33
regular point, 18 regular value, 18
saddle point reduction, 188 shifting theorem, 50 Sobolev embedding, 141 Sobo)evspace, 141, 231 splitting theorem, 44 strong resonance, 156 subordinate classes, 10
Bubsolution, 145 supersolutioD, 145 symplectic form, 215
symplectic matrix, 183
Morse inequality, 36, 79 Morse lemma, 33
Morse-.Tompkins-Shiffman theorem,
271
tangent bundle, 15 cotangent bundle, 15
Morae type number I 35 mountain pass point, 90 variational inequality, 65, 177 vector bundle, 15
Nemytcld operator, 141 Ronnal bundle, 70
Palais-Smale condition, 20 w.r.t. a convex Bet., 62
(PS)·,117 Palaia theorem, 14 pendulum, 209 periodic solution, 179 perturbation on critical manifold, 131
Uhlenbeck's method, 136
Plateau problem, 260
Witten complex, 282
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