Calculus of Variations and Elliptic Equations
Master course - Master en Mathématiques Avancées,
UCBL and ENS Lyon
Practical Information
Duration: 24h
Schedule: 10 classes of 2h24' each (approximately :-) on
Monday morning, from Sep 13 to end of November. More precisely, we will
start at 9.30am and finish at 12pm, with 6' break somewhere.
Where: La Doua, in the building Braconnier, the main building
of the Math Dept. Room 125, 1st floor (with only one exception, on
Monday Sept 27st).
Examination: A mid-term exam is scheduled on October 25 (30%
of the mark) and a final exam (50%) on December 13; the
remaining 20% of the mark wil lbe based on homeworks and participation
in class.
Language: the classes are in English.
Prerequisites: some functional analysis.
Program
There will be 10 classes of 2h24' each.
1) (13/9, room 125) Calculus of Variations in 1D.
The examples of Geodesics, brachistochrone, economic growth. Euler-Lagrange equation and boundary conditions.Techniques for existence.
References: I wrote some partial lecture notes here. You can also have a look at these
notes in French
(originally written for ENSAE engineers): one
by
Guillaume Carlier on dynamic problems and one
about existence; you can also see the book by G. Buttazzo, M. Giaquinta, S. Hildebrandt
One-dimensional variational problems (not easy to read)
2) (20/9, room 125) Convexity and weak semi-continuity.
Convexity and sufficient conditions, strict convexity and
uniqueness. Lower-semicontinuous functionals: strong and weak
convergence and link with convexity conditions. Integral functionals
with L(x,u,Du).
References:
Giusti, Direct Methods in the Calculus of
Variations, chapter 4; I also wrote some partial lecture notes here
3) (27/9, room 112) Convex duality and minimal-flow
problems
Main notions on convex functions, Legendre transform and
subdifferentials. Duality between min ∫ H(x,v) : ∇·v = f and
min ∫ H*(x,∇u) + fu with proofs.
4) (4/10, room 125) Regularity via duality
Laplacian: Δu =f, f∈L2⇒ ∇u∈H1, p-Laplacian: Δpu
=f, f∈W1,q⇒ ∇up/2∈H1, Very degenerate
problems...
References for lessons 3 and 4: some partial lecture notes for
the beginning of lesson 3 are here; for the duality result, see
the beginning of these short lecture notes, later
transformed in a paper (more complete but probably less
student-friendly): see
here. As a general reference for convex analysis, one can consider
the book Convex analysis by R.T. Rockafellar, or Chapter 1 in
Functional Analysis by H. Brezis.
5) (11/10, room 125) Harmonic functions and
distributions
Mean property and derivatives of harmonic functions. Caccioppoli
inequality. Fundamental solutions and Δu=f. Any distribution u
which solves Δu=0 is indeed an analytic function.
References: You can have a look at Chapter 1 in the book
Elliptic Partial Differential Equations by Q. Han and F. Lin.
but you'll also find some partial lecture notes here.
6) (18/10, room 125) Lp theory for
Δu=f
Marcinkiewicz interpolation ; W2,p regularity of Γ*f
if f is Lp and Γ is the fundamental solution of the Laplacian.
References: You can have a look at Sections 9.2, 9.3 and 9.4 in the book
Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order by
D. Gilbarg and N. Trudinger. In what concerns global regularity using
reflections, have a look at these partial lecture notes
7) Campanato spaces and Holder regularity for
elliptic PDEs with
regular coefficients
Morrey and Campanato spaces. Solutions of div(aDu)= div(F) are
C1,α if a and F are C0,α.
References: Chapter 5 in the book by M. Giaquinta L. Martinazzi, An introduction to the
regularity theory for elliptic systems, harmonic maps and minimal
graph.
8) De Giorgi's Holder regularity
result without regularity of the coefficients
The 19th Hilbert problem and the path to obtain C∞ solutions. Moser's proof
of the De Giorgi result: div(aDu)=0 with a bounded from below and
above implies that u is C0,α. Local
L∞ estimates for div(aDu)=div(F) for bounded F.
References: the
original paper by J. Moser; partial notes here for div(aDu)=div(F).
9) General Γ-convergence theory
and examples.
Definitions and properties of Γ-convergence in metric
spaces. The example of the Γ-convergence of quadratic functional of the form
∫ an│u'│2. The asymptotics of
the optimal location problem (without the Γ-limsup part).
10) The perimeter functional and the
Modica-Mortola Γ-convergence result.
After finishing the Γ-limsup proof from the previous class, a
short introduction to BV functions and sets of finite perimeter. Then,
the Modica-Mortola
approximation of the perimeter functional.
References for lessons 9 and 10: Have a look at these three
sets of partial lecture notes general theory, optimal location, and perimeter approximation. You can also
have a look at the books by A. Braides Gamma-Convergence for
Beginners or by G. Dal Maso An Introduction to
Γ-Convergence and at
the short paper by Bouchitte-Jimenez-Rajesh
Asymptotic of an optimal location problem. For Modica-Mortola, the book by
A. Braides Approximation of Free-Discontinuity Problems. Also look at these (incomplete) short
notes by G. Leoni. For the BV space, one can look either at the
book Functions of Bounded Variation and Free Discontinuity
Problems by Ambrosio, Fusco and Pallara, or at Measure theory
and fine properties of functions by Evans and Gariepy (which also
includes the co-area formula we used).
Exercises
A list of exercises is available. Each student should hand three
solutions as a homework, according to the rules we discussed.
Full list of exercises.
Here you will find some
solutions (exercises with a written solution cannot be chosen as a
homework ; exercise 43 has been done in class and cannot be chosen neither).
The mid-term exam of last year is here, (with solutions).
Evaluation
The mid-term exam took place on Monday October 25th.
Here is the examination text, with the solutions.
The final exam took place on December 13th. You can find the examination text, with its solutions.