299 research outputs found

    Overdetermined boundary value problems for the \infty-Laplacian

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    We consider overdetermined boundary value problems for the \infty-Laplacian in a domain Ω\Omega of Rn\R^n and discuss what kind of implications on the geometry of Ω\Omega the existence of a solution may have. The classical \infty-Laplacian, the normalized or game-theoretic \infty-Laplacian and the limit of the pp-Laplacian as pp\to \infty are considered and provide different answers.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur

    The problem of minimal resistance for functions and domains

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    Here we solve the problem posed by Comte and Lachand-Robert in [SIAM J. Math. Anal., 34 (2002), pp. 101–120]. Take a bounded domain Ω ⊂ R2 and a piecewise smooth nonpositive function u : ¯Ω → R vanishing on ∂Ω. Consider a flow of point particles falling vertically down and reflected elastically from the graph of u. It is assumed that each particle is reflected no more than once (no multiple reflections are allowed); then the resistance of the graph to the flow is expressed as R(u; Ω) = 1 |Ω| Ω(1 + |∇u(x)|2)−1dx. We need to find infΩ,u R(u;Ω). One can easily see that |∇u(x)| 1/2. We prove that the infimum of R is exactly 1/2. This result is somewhat paradoxical, and the proof is inspired by, and partly similar to, the paradoxical solution given by Besicovitch to the Kakeya problem [Amer. Math. Monthly, 70 (1963), pp. 697–706]

    On rotationally symmetric mean curvature flow

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    On rotationally symmetric mean curvature flow

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    On the isoperimetric problem for the Laplacian with Robin and Wentzell boundary conditions

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    We consider the problem of minimising the eigenvalues of the Laplacian with Robin boundary conditions uν+αu=0\frac{\partial u}{\partial \nu} + \alpha u = 0 and generalised Wentzell boundary conditions Δu+βuν+γu=0\Delta u + \beta \frac{\partial u}{\partial \nu} + \gamma u = 0 with respect to the domain ΩRN\Omega \subset \mathbb R^N on which the problem is defined. For the Robin problem, when α>0\alpha > 0 we extend the Faber-Krahn inequality of Daners [Math. Ann. 335 (2006), 767--785], which states that the ball minimises the first eigenvalue, to prove that the minimiser is unique amongst domains of class C2C^2. The method of proof uses a functional of the level sets to estimate the first eigenvalue from below, together with a rearrangement of the ball's eigenfunction onto the domain Ω\Omega and the usual isoperimetric inequality. We then prove that the second eigenvalue attains its minimum only on the disjoint union of two equal balls, and set the proof up so it works for the Robin pp-Laplacian. For the higher eigenvalues, we show that it is in general impossible for a minimiser to exist independently of α>0\alpha > 0. When α0\alpha 0 establish a type of equivalence property between the Wentzell and Robin minimisers for all eigenvalues. This yields a minimiser of the second Wentzell eigenvalue. We also prove a Cheeger-type inequality for the first eigenvalue in this case

    Minimal resistance of curves under the single impact assumption

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    We consider the hollow on the half-plane {(x,y):y0}R2\{ (x,y) : y \le 0 \} \subset \mathbb{R}^2 defined by a function u:(1,1)Ru : (-1,\, 1) \to \mathbb{R}, u(x)<0u(x) < 0, and a vertical flow of point particles incident on the hollow. It is assumed that uu satisfies the so-called single impact condition (SIC): each incident particle is elastically reflected by graph(u)(u) and goes away without hitting the graph of uu anymore. We solve the problem: find the function uu minimizing the force of resistance created by the flow. We show that the graph of the minimizer is formed by two arcs of parabolas symmetric to each other with respect to the yy-axis. Assuming that the resistance of u0u \equiv 0 equals 1, we show that the minimal resistance equals π/22arctan(1/2)0.6435\pi/2 - 2\arctan(1/2) \approx 0.6435. This result completes the previously obtained result [SIAM J. Math. Anal., 46 (2014), pp. 2730--2742] stating in particular that the minimal resistance of a hollow in higher dimensions equals 0.5. We additionally consider a similar problem of minimal resistance, where the hollow in the half-space {(x1,,xd,y):y0}Rd+1\{(x_1,\ldots,x_d, y) : y \le 0 \} \subset \mathbb{R}^{d+1} is defined by a radial function UU satisfying the SIC, U(x)=u(x)U(x) = u(|x|), with x=(x1,,xd)x = (x_1,\ldots,x_d), u(ξ)<0u(\xi) < 0 for 0ξ<10 \le \xi < 1, and u(ξ)=0u(\xi) = 0 for ξ1\xi \ge 1, and the flow is parallel to the yy-axis. The minimal resistance is greater than 0.5 (and coincides with 0.6435 when d = 1) and converges to 0.5 as dd \to \infty

    The Neumann eigenvalue problem for the \infty-Laplacian

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    The first nontrivial eigenfunction of the Neumann eigenvalue problem for the pp-Laplacian, suitable normalized, converges as pp goes to \infty to a viscosity solution of an eigenvalue problem for the \infty-Laplacian. We show among other things that the limit of the eigenvalue, at least for convex sets, is in fact the first nonzero eigenvalue of the limiting problem. We then derive a number of consequences, which are nonlinear analogues of well-known inequalities for the linear (2-)Laplacian.Comment: Corrected few typos. Corollary 5 adde

    Schwere Lithiumintoxikationen bei normalen Serumspiegeln

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    Anliegen Unser Ziel ist es, Faktoren zu identifizieren, die das Risiko einer Lithiumintoxikation trotz normaler Serumspiegel erhöhen. Methode Wir beschreiben zwei eigene Fälle und bewerten diese im Kontext der Literatur. Ergebnisse Alter, Begleiterkrankungen und psychopharmakologische Komedikation erhöhen das Risiko einer Lithiumintoxikation bei normalen Serumspiegeln. Diskussion Bei älteren, multimorbiden Patienten sollte eine engmaschige klinische Kontrolle inklusive Spiegelbestimmung und EEG erfolgen, bei klinischen Anzeichen der Intoxikation sollte auch bei unauffälligen Spiegeln ein Absetzen erwogen werden
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