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Existence and Asymptotics of Nonlinear Helmholtz Eigenfunctions
Author(s) -
Jesse GellRedman,
Andrew Hassell,
Jacob Shapiro,
Junyong Zhang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
siam journal on mathematical analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.882
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1095-7154
pISSN - 0036-1410
DOI - 10.1137/19m1307238
Subject(s) - mathematics , sobolev space , laplace operator , eigenfunction , lambda , omega , order (exchange) , mathematical analysis , mathematical physics , norm (philosophy) , combinatorics , nabla symbol , helmholtz free energy , physics , eigenvalues and eigenvectors , quantum mechanics , political science , law , economics , finance
We prove the existence and asymptotic expansion of a large class of solutions to nonlinear Helmholtz equations of the form \begin{equation*} (\Delta - \lambda^2) u = N[u], \end{equation*} where $\Delta = -\sum_j \partial^2_j$ is the Laplacian on $\mathbb{R}^n$ with sign convention that it is positive as an operator, $\lambda$ is a positive real number, and $N[u]$ is a nonlinear operator that is a sum of monomials of degree $\geq p$ in $u$, $\overline{u}$ and their derivatives of order up to two, for some $p \geq 2$. Nonlinear Helmholtz eigenfunctions with $N[u]= \pm |u|^{p-1} u$ were first considered by Gutierrez. Such equations are of interest in part because, for certain nonlinearities $N[u]$, they furnish standing waves for nonlinear evolution equations, that is, solutions that are time-harmonic. We show that, under the condition $(p-1)(n-1)/2 > 2$ and $k > (n-1)/2$, for every $f \in H^{k+2}(\mathbb{S}^{n-1})$ of sufficiently small norm, there is a nonlinear Helmholtz function taking the form \begin{equation*} u(r, \omega) = r^{-(n-1)/2} \Big( e^{-i\lambda r} f(\omega) + e^{+i\lambda r} g(\omega) + O(r^{-\epsilon}) \Big), \text{ as } r \to \infty, \quad \epsilon > 0, \end{equation*} for some $g \in H^{k}(\mathbb{S}^{n-1})$. Moreover, we prove the result in the general setting of asymptotically conic manifolds.

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