Questions tagged [sobolev-spaces]

For questions about or related to Sobolev spaces, which are function spaces equipped with a norm that controls both a function and its weak derivatives in some Lebesgue space.

Sobolev spaces are function spaces generalizing the Lebesgue spaces. Whereas elements of Lebesgue spaces have certain integrability condition imposed on them, derivatives of functions in a Sobolev space are also required to be sufficiently integrable: that is, we require all (weak) partial derivatives of the function up to a certain order belong to a certain fixed Lebesgue space.

In more detail, let $U \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n$ be an open set. A weak $\alpha$th partial derivative $D^\alpha f$ of $f$ is a function $g\in L^1_{\mathrm{loc}}(U)$ such that $$\int_U f D^\alpha \phi \, dx = (-1)^{|\alpha|} \int g\phi \, dx$$ for each compactly supported smooth function $\phi \in C^\infty_c(U)$. the Sobolev space $W^{k, p}(U)$ consists of those functions $f\in L^p(U)$ such that for every multi-index $\alpha$ of length at most $k$, every weak partial derivative $D^{\alpha}f$ exists and is an element of $L^p$. The Sobolev spaces are equipped with norms defined by

$$\|u\|_{W^{k,p}(U)} = \begin{cases} \left( \sum_{|\alpha| \le k} \|D^{\alpha} u\|_{L^p(U)}^p \right)^{1/p} & p < \infty, \\ \max_{|\alpha| \le k} \|D^{\alpha}\|_{L^{\infty}(U)} &p=\infty .\end{cases}$$

$(W^{k,p}(U),\|\cdot\|_{W^{k,p}(U)})$ are Banach spaces for each $k\in\mathbb N$, and each $p\in[1,\infty]$. The norms measure both the size and the regularity of a function.

The basic fundamental result of Sobolev spaces is the Sobolev embedding theorem. In words, it says that (1) if $kp<n$, having $k$ weak derivatives in $L^p$ places your function in a better Lebesgue space $L^{p^*}$, where $\frac1{p^*} = \frac1p - \frac kn$, and (2) if $kp>n$, then your function is not only in $L^\infty$ but also has a continuous representative in some space of Hölder continuous functions. In particular, sufficiently many weak derivatives means that your function is in fact classically differentiable.

Reference: Sobolev space.

5824 questions
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Why are Sobolev spaces useful?

Why are Sobolev spaces useful, and what problems were they developed to overcome? I'm particularly interested in their relation to PDEs, as they are often described as the 'natural space in which to look for PDE solutions' - why is this? How do weak…
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dual of $H^1_0$: $H^{-1}$ or $H_0^1$?

I have a problem related to dual of Sobolev space $H^1_0$. By definition, the dual of $H^1_0$ is $H^{-1}$, which contains $L^2$ as a subspace. However, from Riesz representation theorem, dual of a Hilbert space is itself (in the sense of…
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Why are functions with vanishing normal derivative dense in smooth functions?

Question Let $M$ be a compact Riemannian manifold with piecewise smooth boundary. Why are smooth functions with vanishing normal derivative dense in $C^\infty(M)$ in the $H^1$ norm? Here I define $C^\infty(M)$ to be those functions which have all…
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Why are $L^p$-spaces so ubiquitous?

It always baffled me why $L^p$-spaces are the spaces of choice in almost any area (sometimes with some added regularity (Sobolev/Besov/...)). I understand that the exponent allows for convenient algebraic manipulations, but is there more behind it…
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Sobolev space $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is an algebra with $2s>n$

How do you prove that the Sobolev space $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is an algebra if $s>\frac{n}{2}$, i.e. if $u,v$ are in $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$, then so is $uv$? Actually I think we should also have $\lVert uv\rVert_s \leq C \lVert u\rVert_s \lVert…
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Existence theorem on weak solutions of ordinary differential equations

Consider an ordinary vector-valued differential equation of the form $$ \begin{align*} \dot y(t) &= f(t,y(t)), \\ y(0) &= y_0 \in \mathbb{R}^n. \end{align*} $$ It is well known that if $f$ is continuous and furthermore Lipschitz continuous in an…
28
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The Sobolev Space $H^{1/2}$

In my course on linear PDEs, the professor used $H^{1/2}$ without defining it, and I have been looking on google trying to find a definition, but the only related thing I found was $H^{-1/2}$ as being the dual space to $H^{1/2}$ which does not…
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What does "test function" mean?

I am trying to learn weak derivatives. In that, we call $\mathbb{C}^{\infty}_{c}$ functions as test functions and we use these functions in weak derivatives. I want to understand why these are called test functions and why the functions with these…
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Why do we need semi-norms on Sobolev-spaces?

I have been studying Sobolev spaces and easy PDEs on those spaces for a while now and keep wondering about the norms on these spaces. We obviously have the usual norm $\|\cdot\|_{W^{k,p}}$, but some proofs also use the semi-norm $|\cdot|_{W^{k,p}}$…
dinosaur
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Dual space of $H^1$

It holds that $W^{1,2}=H^1 \subset L^2 \subset H^{-1}$. This is clear since for every $v \in H^1(U)$, $u \mapsto (u,v)_{H^1}$ is an element of $H^{-1}$. Moreover for every $v \in L^2(U)$, $u \mapsto (u,v)_{L^2}$ is an element of $H^{-1}$. But I also…
tba
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How to prove the spectrum of the Laplace operator?

How can I prove that the spectrum of the Laplace operator $$\Delta: H^2(\mathbb{R}^N)\subset L^2(\mathbb{R}^N)\rightarrow L^2(\mathbb{R}^N)$$ is $\sigma(\Delta)=[-\infty,0]$?
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Are polynomials dense in Gaussian Sobolev space?

Let $\mu$ be standard Gaussian measure on $\mathbb{R}^n$, i.e. $d\mu = (2\pi)^{-n/2} e^{-|x|^2/2} dx$, and define the Gaussian Sobolev space $H^1(\mu)$ to be the completion of $C_c^\infty(\mathbb{R}^n)$ under the inner product $$\langle f,g…
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The Relation between Holder continuous, absolutely continuous, $W^{1,1}$, and $BV$ functions

I am trying to find out the relation between those spaces. Take $I\subset R$ on the real line. $I$ can be unbounded. Then I have: We first assume $I$ is bounded. If $u\in C^{0,\alpha}(I)$, for $0<\alpha<1$, then $u$ is uniformly continuous for sure.…
spatially
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Dual space of the sobolev spaces.

What is the dual space of $ H¹(\Omega) = W^{1,2}(\Omega) $? What is the dual space of $ W^{m,p}(\Omega) $? I know for example that the dual space of $ L^{p}(\Omega) $ for $ 1 \le p < \infty $ is $ L^{q}(\Omega) $ where $ \dfrac{1}{p} + \dfrac{1}{q}…
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Suppose that there exist a set $\Gamma$ of positive measure such that $\nabla u=0, a.e.\ x\in\Gamma$.

Suppose $\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^n$ is a bounded domain. Let $u\in H_0^1(\Omega)$ and $\tilde{u}\in L^2(\Omega)$ satisfies $$\int_\Omega\nabla u\nabla v=\int_\Omega \tilde{u}v,\ \forall\ v\in C_0^{\infty}(\Omega)$$ Suppose that there exist a set…
Tomás
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