Palais-Smale compactness condition

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The Palais-Smale compactness condition is a necessary condition for some theorems of the calculus of variations.

The condition is necessary because the calculus of variations studies function spaces that are infinite dimensional — some extra notion of compactness beyond simple boundedness is needed. See, for example, the proof of the mountain pass theorem in section 8.5 of Evans.

[edit] Strong formulation

A functional I from a Hilbert space H to the reals satisfies the Palais-Smale condition if I\in C^1(H,\mathbb{R}), and if every sequence \{u_k\}_{k=1}^\infty\subset H such that:

  • \{I[u_k]\}_{k=1}^\infty is bounded, and
  • I'[u_k]\rightarrow 0 in H

is precompact in H.

[edit] Weak formulation

Let X be a Banach space and \Phi\colon X\to\mathbf R be a Gateaux differentiable functional. The functional Φ is said to satisfy the weak Palais-Smale condition if for each sequence \{x_n\}\subset X such that

  • \sup |\Phi(x_n)|<\infty,
  • \lim\Phi'(x_n)=0 in X * ,
  • \Phi(x_n)\neq0 for all n\in\mathbf N,

there exists a critical point \overline x\in X of Φ with

\liminf\Phi(x_n)\le\Phi(\overline x)\le\limsup\Phi(x_n)

[edit] References

  • Evans, Lawrence C. (1998). Partial Differential Equations. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-0772-2. 
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