ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Based on a recent work of Mancini-Thizy [28], we obtain the nonexistence of extremals for an inequality of Adimurthi-Druet [1] on a closed Riemann surface $(Sigma,g)$. Precisely, if $lambda_1(Sigma)$ is the first eigenvalue of the Laplace-Beltrami operator with respect to the zero mean value condition, then there exists a positive real number $alpha^ast<lambda_1(Sigma)$ such that for all $alphain (alpha^ast,lambda_1(Sigma))$, the supremum $$sup_{uin W^{1,2}(Sigma,g),,int_Sigma udv_g=0,,| abla_gu|_2leq 1}int_Sigma exp(4pi u^2(1+alpha|u|_2^2))dv_g$$ can not be attained by any $uin W^{1,2}(Sigma,g)$ with $int_Sigma udv_g=0$ and $| abla_gu|_2leq 1$, where $W^{1,2}(Sigma,g)$ denotes the usual Sobolev space and $|cdot|_2=(int_Sigma|cdot|^2dv_g)^{1/2}$ denotes the $L^2(Sigma,g)$-norm. This complements our earlier result in [39].
Let $Sigma$ be a closed Riemann surface, $h$ a positive smooth function on $Sigma$, $rho$ and $alpha$ real numbers. In this paper, we study a generalized mean field equation begin{align*} -Delta u=rholeft(dfrac{he^u}{int_Sigma he^u}-dfrac{1}{mathrm
In a seminal paper Volumen und Oberflache (1903), Minkowski introduced the basic notion of mixed volumes and the corresponding inequalities that lie at the heart of convex geometry. The fundamental importance of characterizing the extremals of these
Let $(Sigma,g)$ be a closed Riemannian surface, $textbf{G}={sigma_1,cdots,sigma_N}$ be an isometric group acting on it. Denote a positive integer $ell=inf_{xinSigma}I(x)$, where $I(x)$ is the number of all distinct points of the set ${sigma_1(x),cdot
Let $(Sigma,g)$ be a closed Riemannian surface, $W^{1,2}(Sigma,g)$ be the usual Sobolev space, $textbf{G}$ be a finite isometric group acting on $(Sigma,g)$, and $mathscr{H}_textbf{G}$ be a function space including all functions $uin W^{1,2}(Sigma,g)
} In this article, we put forward a Neumann eigenvalue problem for the bi-harmonic operator $Delta^2$ on a bounded smooth domain $Om$ in the Euclidean $n$-space ${bf R}^n$ ($nge2$) and then prove that the corresponding first non-zero eigenvalue $Upsi