Brezis–Gallouet inequality

In mathematical analysis, the Brezis–Gallouet inequality,[1] named after Haïm Brezis and Thierry Gallouet, is an inequality valid in 2 spatial dimensions. It shows that a function of two variables which is sufficiently smooth is (essentially) bounded, and provides an explicit bound, which depends only logarithmically on the second deivatives. It is useful in the study of partial differential equations.

Let u\in H^2(\Omega) where \Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^2. Then the Brézis–Gallouet inequality states that there exists a constant C such that

\displaystyle \|u\|_{L^\infty(\Omega)}\leq C \|u\|_{H^1(\Omega)}\left(1+\log\frac{\|\Delta u\|}{\lambda_1\|u\|_{H^1(\Omega)}}\right)^{1/2},

where \Delta is the Laplacian, and \lambda_1 is its first eigenvalue.

See also

Notes

  1. Nonlinear Schrödinger evolution equation, Nonlinear Analysis TMA 4, 677. (1980)

References