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In this paper we prove a reverse Faber-Krahn inequality for the principal eigenvalue $mu_1(Omega)$ of the fully nonlinear eigenvalue problem [ label{eq} left{begin{array}{r c l l} -lambda_N(D^2 u) & = & mu u & text{in }Omega, u & = & 0 & text{on }partial Omega. end{array}right. ] Here $ lambda_N(D^2 u)$ stands for the largest eigenvalue of the Hessian matrix of $u$. More precisely, we prove that, for an open, bounded, convex domain $Omega subset mathbb{R}^N$, the inequality [ mu_1(Omega) leq frac{pi^2}{[text{diam}(Omega)]^2} = mu_1(B_{text{diam}(Omega)/2}),] where $text{diam}(Omega)$ is the diameter of $Omega$, holds true. The inequality actually implies a stronger result, namely, the maximality of the ball under a diameter constraint. Furthermore, we discuss the minimization of $mu_1(Omega)$ under different kinds of constraints.
We study a Rayleigh-Faber-Krahn inequality for regional fractional Laplacian operators. In particular, we show that there exists a compactly supported nonnegative Sobolev function $u_0$ that attains the infimum (which will be a positive real number)
We prove a local Faber-Krahn inequality for solutions $u$ to the Dirichlet problem for $Delta + V$ on an arbitrary domain $Omega$ in $mathbb{R}^n$. Suppose a solution $u$ assumes a global maximum at some point $x_0 in Omega$ and $u(x_0)>0$. Let $T(x_
For a domain $Omega subset mathbb{R}^n$ and a small number $frak{T} > 0$, let [ mathcal{E}_0(Omega) = lambda_1(Omega) + {frak{T}} {text{tor}}(Omega) = inf_{u, w in H^1_0(Omega)setminus {0}} frac{int | abla u|^2}{int u^2} + {frak{T}} int frac{1}{2
The objective of this paper is two-fold. First, we establish new sharp quantitative estimates for Faber-Krahn inequalities on simply connected space forms. In these spaces, geodesic balls uniquely minimize the first eigenvalue of the Dirichlet Laplac
We obtain new Faber-Krahn-type inequalities for certain perturbations of the Dirichlet Laplacian on a bounded domain. First, we establish a two- and three-dimensional Faber-Krahn inequality for the Schrodinger operator with point interaction: the opt