We consider the behavior of the nonlocal minimal surfaces in the vicinity of
the boundary. By a series of detailed examples, we show that nonlocal minimal
surfaces may stick at the boundary of the domain, even when the domain is
smooth and convex. This is a purely nonlocal phenomenon, and it is in sharp
contrast with the boundary properties of the classical minimal surfaces.
In particular, we show stickiness phenomena to half-balls when the datum
outside the ball is a small half-ring and to the side of a two-dimensional box
when the oscillation between the datum on the right and on the left is large
enough.
When the fractional parameter is small, the sticking effects may become more
and more evident. Moreover, we show that lines in the plane are unstable at the
boundary: namely, small compactly supported perturbations of lines cause the
minimizers in a slab to stick at the boundary, by a quantity that is
proportional to a power of the perturbation.
In all the examples, we present concrete estimates on the stickiness
phenomena. Also, we construct a family of compactly supported barriers which
can have independent interest