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Hilbert's nineteenth problem

Hilbert's nineteenth problem is one of the 23 Hilbert problems, set out in a list compiled by David Hilbert in 1900.[1] It asks whether the solutions of regular problems in the calculus of variations are always analytic.[2] Informally, and perhaps less directly, since Hilbert's concept of a "regular variational problem" identifies this precisely as a variational problem whose Euler–Lagrange equation is an elliptic partial differential equation with analytic coefficients,[3] Hilbert's nineteenth problem, despite its seemingly technical statement, simply asks whether, in this class of partial differential equations, any solution inherits the relatively simple and well understood property of being an analytic function from the equation it satisfies. Hilbert's nineteenth problem was solved independently in the late 1950s by Ennio De Giorgi and John Forbes Nash, Jr.

History edit

The origins of the problem edit

Eine der begrifflich merkwürdigsten Thatsachen in den Elementen der Theorie der analytischen Funktionen erblicke ich darin, daß es Partielle Differentialgleichungen giebt, deren Integrale sämtlich notwendig analytische Funktionen der unabhängigen Variabeln sind, die also, kurz gesagt, nur analytischer Lösungen fähig sind.[4]

— David Hilbert, (Hilbert 1900, p. 288).

David Hilbert presented what is now called his nineteenth problem in his speech at the second International Congress of Mathematicians.[5] In (Hilbert 1900, p. 288) he states that, in his opinion, one of the most remarkable facts of the theory of analytic functions is that there exist classes of partial differential equations which admit only analytic functions as solutions, listing Laplace's equation, Liouville's equation,[6] the minimal surface equation and a class of linear partial differential equations studied by Émile Picard as examples.[7] He then notes that most partial differential equations sharing this property are Euler–Lagrange equations of a well defined kind of variational problem, satisfying the following three properties:[8]

(1)      ,
(2)      ,
(3)      F is an analytic function of all its arguments p, q, z, x and y.

Hilbert calls this a "regular variational problem".[9] Property (1) means that these are minimum problems. Property (2) is the ellipticity condition on the Euler–Lagrange equations associated to the given functional, while property (3) is a simple regularity assumption about the function F.[10] Having identified the class of problems considered, he poses the following question: "... does every Lagrangian partial differential equation of a regular variation problem have the property of admitting analytic integrals exclusively?"[11] He asks further if this is the case even when the function is required to assume boundary values that are continuous, but not analytic, as happens for Dirichlet's problem for the potential function .[8]

The path to the complete solution edit

Hilbert stated his nineteenth problem as a regularity problem for a class of elliptic partial differential equation with analytic coefficients.[8] Therefore the first efforts of researchers who sought to solve it were aimed at studying the regularity of classical solutions for equations belonging to this class. For C 3  solutions, Hilbert's problem was answered positively by Sergei Bernstein (1904) in his thesis. He showed that C 3  solutions of nonlinear elliptic analytic equations in 2 variables are analytic. Bernstein's result was improved over the years by several authors, such as Petrowsky (1939), who reduced the differentiability requirements on the solution needed to prove that it is analytic. On the other hand, direct methods in the calculus of variations showed the existence of solutions with very weak differentiability properties. For many years there was a gap between these results. The solutions that could be constructed were known to have square integrable second derivatives, but this was not quite strong enough to feed into the machinery that could prove they were analytic, which needed continuity of first derivatives. This gap was filled independently by Ennio De Giorgi (1956, 1957), and John Forbes Nash (1957, 1958), who were able to show the solutions had first derivatives that were Hölder continuous. By previous results this implied that the solutions are analytic whenever the differential equation has analytic coefficients, thus completing the solution of Hilbert's nineteenth problem. Subsequently, Jürgen Moser gave an alternate proof of the results obtained by Ennio De Giorgi (1956, 1957), and John Forbes Nash (1957, 1958).

Counterexamples to various generalizations of the problem edit

The affirmative answer to Hilbert's nineteenth problem given by Ennio De Giorgi and John Forbes Nash raised the question if the same conclusion holds also for Euler–Lagrange equations of more general functionals. At the end of the 1960s, Maz'ya (1968),[12] De Giorgi (1968) and Giusti & Miranda (1968) independently constructed several counterexamples,[13] showing that in general there is no hope of proving such regularity results without adding further hypotheses.

Precisely, Maz'ya (1968) gave several counterexamples involving a single elliptic equation of order greater than two with analytic coefficients.[14] For experts, the fact that such equations could have nonanalytic and even nonsmooth solutions created a sensation.[15]

De Giorgi (1968) and Giusti & Miranda (1968) gave counterexamples showing that in the case when the solution is vector-valued rather than scalar-valued, it need not be analytic; the example of De Giorgi consists of an elliptic system with bounded coefficients, while the one of Giusti and Miranda has analytic coefficients.[16] Later, Nečas (1977) provided other, more refined, examples for the vector valued problem.[17]

De Giorgi's theorem edit

The key theorem proved by De Giorgi is an a priori estimate stating that if u is a solution of a suitable linear second order strictly elliptic PDE of the form

 

and   has square integrable first derivatives, then   is Hölder continuous.

Application of De Giorgi's theorem to Hilbert's problem edit

Hilbert's problem asks whether the minimizers   of an energy functional such as

 

are analytic. Here   is a function on some compact set   of Rn,   is its gradient vector, and   is the Lagrangian, a function of the derivatives of   that satisfies certain growth, smoothness, and convexity conditions. The smoothness of   can be shown using De Giorgi's theorem as follows. The Euler–Lagrange equation for this variational problem is the non-linear equation

 

and differentiating this with respect to   gives

 

This means that   satisfies the linear equation

 

with

 

so by De Giorgi's result the solution w has Hölder continuous first derivatives, provided the matrix   is bounded. When this is not the case, a further step is needed: one must prove that the solution   is Lipschitz continuous, i.e. the gradient   is an   function.

Once w is known to have Hölder continuous (n+1)st derivatives for some n ≥ 1, then the coefficients aij have Hölder continuous nth derivatives, so a theorem of Schauder implies that the (n+2)nd derivatives are also Hölder continuous, so repeating this infinitely often shows that the solution w is smooth.

Nash's theorem edit

Nash gave a continuity estimate for solutions of the parabolic equation

 

where u is a bounded function of x1,...,xn, t defined for t ≥ 0. From his estimate Nash was able to deduce a continuity estimate for solutions of the elliptic equation

  by considering the special case when u does not depend on t.

Notes edit

  1. ^ See (Hilbert 1900) or, equivalently, one of its translations.
  2. ^ "Sind die Lösungen regulärer Variationsprobleme stets notwendig analytisch?" (English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson:-"Are the solutions of regular problems in the calculus of variations always necessarily analytic?"), formulating the problem with the same words of Hilbert (1900, p. 288).
  3. ^ See (Hilbert 1900, pp. 288–289), or the corresponding section on the nineteenth problem in any of its translations or reprints, or the subsection "The origins of the problem" in the historical section of this entry.
  4. ^ English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson:-"One of the most remarkable facts in the elements of the theory of analytic functions appears to me to be this: that there exist partial differential equations whose integrals are all of necessity analytic functions of the independent variables, that is, in short, equations susceptible of none but analytic solutions".
  5. ^ For a detailed historical analysis, see the relevant entry "Hilbert's problems".
  6. ^ Hilbert does not cite explicitly Joseph Liouville and considers the constant Gaussian curvature K as equal to -1/2: compare the relevant entry with (Hilbert 1900, p. 288).
  7. ^ Unlike Liouville's work, Picard's work is explicitly cited by Hilbert (1900, p. 288 and footnote 1 in the same page).
  8. ^ a b c See (Hilbert 1900, p. 288).
  9. ^ In his exact words: "Reguläres Variationsproblem". Hilbert's definition of a regular variational problem is stronger than the one currently used, for example, in (Gilbarg & Trudinger 2001, p. 289).
  10. ^ Since Hilbert considers all derivatives in the "classical", i.e. not in the weak but in the strong, sense, even before the statement of its analyticity in (3), the function F is assumed to be at least C 2 , as the use of the Hessian determinant in (2) implies.
  11. ^ English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson: Hilbert's (1900, p. 288) precise words are:-"... d. h. ob jede Lagrangesche partielle Differentialgleichung eines reguläres Variationsproblem die Eigenschaft at, daß sie nur analytische Integrale zuläßt" (Italics emphasis by Hilbert himself).
  12. ^ See (Giaquinta 1983, p. 59), (Giusti 1994, p. 7 footnote 7 and p. 353), (Gohberg 1999, p. 1), (Hedberg 1999, pp. 10–11), (Kristensen & Mingione 2011, p. 5 and p. 8), and (Mingione 2006, p. 368).
  13. ^ See (Giaquinta 1983, pp. 54–59), (Giusti 1994, p. 7 and pp. 353).
  14. ^ See (Hedberg 1999, pp. 10–11), (Kristensen & Mingione 2011, p. 5 and p. 8) and (Mingione 2006, p. 368).
  15. ^ According to (Gohberg 1999, p. 1).
  16. ^ See (Giaquinta 1983, pp. 54–59) and (Giusti 1994, p. 7, pp. 202–203 and pp. 317–318).
  17. ^ For more information about the work of Jindřich Nečas see the work of Kristensen & Mingione (2011, §3.3, pp. 9–12) and (Mingione 2006, §3.3, pp. 369–370).

References edit

  • Bernstein, S. (1904), "Sur la nature analytique des solutions des équations aux dérivées partielles du second ordre", Mathematische Annalen (in French), 59 (1–2): 20–76, doi:10.1007/BF01444746, ISSN 0025-5831, JFM 35.0354.01, S2CID 121487650.
  • Bombieri, Enrico (1975), , Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vancouver, B.C., 1974, Vol. 1, ICM Proceedings, Montreal: Canadian Mathematical Congress, pp. 53–63, MR 0509259, Zbl 0344.49002, archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-31, retrieved 2011-01-29. Reprinted in Bombieri, Enrico (1976), "Variational problems and elliptic equations", in Browder, Felix E. (ed.), Mathematical developments arising from Hilbert problems, Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, vol. XXVIII, Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society, pp. 525–535, ISBN 978-0-8218-1428-4, MR 0425740, Zbl 0347.35032.
  • De Giorgi, Ennio (1956), "Sull'analiticità delle estremali degli integrali multipli", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Rendiconti. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali, Serie VIII (in Italian), 20: 438–441, MR 0082045, Zbl 0074.31503. "On the analyticity of extremals of multiple integrals" (English translation of the title) is a short research announcement disclosing the results detailed later in (De Giorgi 1957). While, according to the Complete list of De Giorgi's scientific publication (De Giorgi 2006, p. 6), an English translation should be included in (De Giorgi 2006), it is unfortunately missing.
  • De Giorgi, Ennio (1957), "Sulla differenziabilità e l'analiticità delle estremali degli integrali multipli regolari", Memorie della Accademia delle Scienze di Torino. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematicahe e Naturali, Serie III (in Italian), 3: 25–43, MR 0093649, Zbl 0084.31901. Translated in English as "On the differentiability and the analyticity of extremals of regular multiple integrals" in (De Giorgi 2006, pp. 149–166).
  • De Giorgi, Ennio (1968), "Un esempio di estremali discontinue per un problema variazionale di tipo ellittico", Bollettino dell'Unione Matematica Italiana, Serie IV (in Italian), 1: 135–137, MR 0227827, Zbl 0084.31901. Translated in English as "An example of discontinuous extremals for a variational problem of elliptic type" in (De Giorgi 2006, pp. 285–287).
  • De Giorgi, Ennio (2006), Ambrosio, Luigi; Dal Maso, Gianni; Forti, Marco; Miranda, Mario; Spagnolo, Sergio (eds.), Selected papers, Springer Collected Works in Mathematics, Berlin–New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. x+889, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-41496-1, ISBN 978-3-540-26169-8, MR 2229237, Zbl 1096.01015.
  • Giaquinta, Mariano (1983), Multiple integrals in the calculus of variations and nonlinear elliptic systems, Annals of Mathematics Studies, vol. 105, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, pp. vii+297, ISBN 978-0-691-08330-8, MR 0717034, Zbl 0516.49003.
  • Gilbarg, David; Trudinger, Neil S. (2001) [1998], Elliptic partial differential equations of second order, Classics in Mathematics (Revised 3rd printing of 2nd ed.), Berlin – Heidelberg – New York: Springer Verlag, pp. xiv+517, ISBN 978-3-540-41160-4, MR 1814364, Zbl 1042.35002.
  • Giusti, Enrico (1994), Metodi diretti nel calcolo delle variazioni, Monografie Matematiche (in Italian), Bologna: Unione Matematica Italiana, pp. VI+422, MR 1707291, Zbl 0942.49002, translated in English as Giusti, Enrico (2003), Direct Methods in the Calculus of Variations, River Edge, New Jersey – London – Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, pp. viii+403, doi:10.1142/9789812795557, ISBN 978-981-238-043-2, MR 1962933, Zbl 1028.49001.
  • Giusti, Enrico; Miranda, Mario (1968), "Un esempio di soluzioni discontinue per un problema di minimo relativo ad un integrale regolare del calcolo delle variazioni", Bollettino dell'Unione Matematica Italiana, Serie IV (in Italian), 2: 1–8, MR 0232265, Zbl 0155.44501.
  • Gohberg, Israel (1999), "Vladimir Maz'ya: Friend and Mathematician. Recollections", in Rossman, Jürgen; Takáč, Peter; Wildenhain, Günther (eds.), The Maz'ya anniversary collection. Vol. 1: On Maz'ya's work in functional analysis, partial differential equations and applications. Based on talks given at the conference, Rostock, Germany, August 31 – September 4, 1998, Operator Theory. Advances and Applications, vol. 109, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, pp. 1–5, ISBN 978-3-7643-6201-0, MR 1747861, Zbl 0939.01018.
  • Hedberg, Lars Inge (1999), "On Maz'ya's work in potential theory and the theory of function spaces", in Rossmann, Jürgen; Takáč, Peter; Wildenhain, Günther (eds.), The Maz'ya Anniversary Collection, Operator Theory: Advances and Applications, vol. 109, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, pp. 7–16, doi:10.1007/978-3-0348-8675-8_2, ISBN 978-3-0348-9726-6, MR 1747862, Zbl 0939.31001
  • Hilbert, David (1900), "Mathematische Probleme", Nachrichten von der Königlichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse (in German) (3): 253–297, JFM 31.0068.03.
    – Reprinted as "Mathematische Probleme", Archiv der Mathematik und Physik, dritte reihe (in German), 1: 44–63 and 253–297, 1900, JFM 32.0084.05.
    – Translated to English by Mary Frances Winston Newson as Hilbert, David (1902), "Mathematical Problems", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 8 (10): 437–479, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1902-00923-3, JFM 33.0976.07, MR 1557926.
    – Reprinted as Hilbert, David (2000), "Mathematical Problems", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, New Series, 37 (4): 407–436, doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-00-00881-8, MR 1779412, S2CID 12695502, Zbl 0979.01028.
    – Translated to French by M. L. Laugel (with additions of Hilbert himself) as Hilbert, David (1902), , in Duporcq, E. (ed.), Compte Rendu du Deuxième Congrès International des Mathématiciens, tenu à Paris du 6 au 12 août 1900. Procès-Verbaux et Communications, ICM Proceedings, Paris: Gauthier-Villars, pp. 58–114, JFM 32.0084.06, archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-31, retrieved 2013-12-28.
    – There exists also an earlier (and shorter) resume of Hilbert's original talk, translated in French and published as Hilbert, D. (1900), "Problèmes mathématiques", L'Enseignement Mathématique (in French), 2: 349–355, doi:10.5169/seals-3575, JFM 31.0905.03.
  • Kristensen, Jan; Mingione, Giuseppe (October 2011). (PDF) (Report). Oxford: Oxford Centre for Nonlinear PDE. pp. 1–30. OxPDE-11/17. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-01-07..
  • Maz'ya, V. G. (1968), Примеры нерегулярных решений квазилинейных эллиптических уравнений с аналитическими коэффициентами, Funktsional'nyĭ Analiz I Ego Prilozheniya (in Russian), 2 (3): 53–57, MR 0237946.
    – Translated in English as Maz'ya, V. G. (1968), "Examples of nonregular solutions of quasilinear elliptic equations with analytic coefficients", Functional Analysis and Its Applications, 2 (3): 230–234, doi:10.1007/BF01076124, S2CID 121038871, Zbl 0179.43601.
  • Mingione, Giuseppe (2006), "Regularity of minima: an invitation to the Dark Side of the Calculus of Variations.", Applications of Mathematics, 51 (4): 355–426, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.214.9183, doi:10.1007/s10778-006-0110-3, hdl:10338.dmlcz/134645, MR 2291779, S2CID 16385131, Zbl 1164.49324.
  • Morrey, Charles B. (1966), Multiple integrals in the calculus of variations, Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften, vol. 130, Berlin–Heidelberg–New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. xii+506, ISBN 978-3-540-69915-6, MR 0202511, Zbl 0142.38701.
  • Nash, John (1957), "Parabolic equations", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 43 (8): 754–758, Bibcode:1957PNAS...43..754N, doi:10.1073/pnas.43.8.754, ISSN 0027-8424, JSTOR 89599, MR 0089986, PMC 528534, PMID 16590082, Zbl 0078.08704.
  • Nash, John (1958), "Continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations" (PDF), American Journal of Mathematics, 80 (4): 931–954, Bibcode:1958AmJM...80..931N, doi:10.2307/2372841, hdl:10338.dmlcz/101876, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2372841, MR 0100158, Zbl 0096.06902.
  • Nečas, Jindřich (1977), "Example of an irregular solution to a nonlinear elliptic system with analytic coefficients and conditions for regularity", in Kluge, Reinhard; Müller, Wolfdietrich (eds.), Theory of nonlinear operators: constructive aspects. Proceedings of the fourth international summer school, held at Berlin, GDR, from September 22 to 26, 1975, Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften der DDR, vol. 1, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, pp. 197–206, MR 0509483, Zbl 0372.35031.
  • Petrowsky, I. G. (1939), "Sur l'analyticité des solutions des systèmes d'équations différentielles", Recueil Mathématique (Matematicheskii Sbornik) (in French), 5 (47): 3–70, JFM 65.0405.02, MR 0001425, Zbl 0022.22601.

hilbert, nineteenth, problem, hilbert, problems, list, compiled, david, hilbert, 1900, asks, whether, solutions, regular, problems, calculus, variations, always, analytic, informally, perhaps, less, directly, since, hilbert, concept, regular, variational, prob. Hilbert s nineteenth problem is one of the 23 Hilbert problems set out in a list compiled by David Hilbert in 1900 1 It asks whether the solutions of regular problems in the calculus of variations are always analytic 2 Informally and perhaps less directly since Hilbert s concept of a regular variational problem identifies this precisely as a variational problem whose Euler Lagrange equation is an elliptic partial differential equation with analytic coefficients 3 Hilbert s nineteenth problem despite its seemingly technical statement simply asks whether in this class of partial differential equations any solution inherits the relatively simple and well understood property of being an analytic function from the equation it satisfies Hilbert s nineteenth problem was solved independently in the late 1950s by Ennio De Giorgi and John Forbes Nash Jr Contents 1 History 1 1 The origins of the problem 1 2 The path to the complete solution 1 3 Counterexamples to various generalizations of the problem 2 De Giorgi s theorem 3 Application of De Giorgi s theorem to Hilbert s problem 4 Nash s theorem 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory editThe origins of the problem edit Eine der begrifflich merkwurdigsten Thatsachen in den Elementen der Theorie der analytischen Funktionen erblicke ich darin dass es Partielle Differentialgleichungen giebt deren Integrale samtlich notwendig analytische Funktionen der unabhangigen Variabeln sind die also kurz gesagt nur analytischer Losungen fahig sind 4 David Hilbert Hilbert 1900 p 288 David Hilbert presented what is now called his nineteenth problem in his speech at the second International Congress of Mathematicians 5 In Hilbert 1900 p 288 he states that in his opinion one of the most remarkable facts of the theory of analytic functions is that there exist classes of partial differential equations which admit only analytic functions as solutions listing Laplace s equation Liouville s equation 6 the minimal surface equation and a class of linear partial differential equations studied by Emile Picard as examples 7 He then notes that most partial differential equations sharing this property are Euler Lagrange equations of a well defined kind of variational problem satisfying the following three properties 8 1 F p q z x y d x d y Minimum z x p z y q displaystyle iint F p q z x y dxdy text Minimum qquad left frac partial z partial x p quad quad frac partial z partial y q right nbsp 2 2 F 2 p 2 F 2 q 2 F p q 2 gt 0 displaystyle frac partial 2 F partial 2 p cdot frac partial 2 F partial 2 q left frac partial 2 F partial p partial q right 2 gt 0 nbsp 3 F is an analytic function of all its arguments p q z x and y Hilbert calls this a regular variational problem 9 Property 1 means that these are minimum problems Property 2 is the ellipticity condition on the Euler Lagrange equations associated to the given functional while property 3 is a simple regularity assumption about the function F 10 Having identified the class of problems considered he poses the following question does every Lagrangian partial differential equation of a regular variation problem have the property of admitting analytic integrals exclusively 11 He asks further if this is the case even when the function is required to assume boundary values that are continuous but not analytic as happens for Dirichlet s problem for the potential function 8 The path to the complete solution edit Hilbert stated his nineteenth problem as a regularity problem for a class of elliptic partial differential equation with analytic coefficients 8 Therefore the first efforts of researchers who sought to solve it were aimed at studying the regularity of classical solutions for equations belonging to this class For C 3 solutions Hilbert s problem was answered positively by Sergei Bernstein 1904 in his thesis He showed that C 3 solutions of nonlinear elliptic analytic equations in 2 variables are analytic Bernstein s result was improved over the years by several authors such as Petrowsky 1939 who reduced the differentiability requirements on the solution needed to prove that it is analytic On the other hand direct methods in the calculus of variations showed the existence of solutions with very weak differentiability properties For many years there was a gap between these results The solutions that could be constructed were known to have square integrable second derivatives but this was not quite strong enough to feed into the machinery that could prove they were analytic which needed continuity of first derivatives This gap was filled independently by Ennio De Giorgi 1956 1957 and John Forbes Nash 1957 1958 who were able to show the solutions had first derivatives that were Holder continuous By previous results this implied that the solutions are analytic whenever the differential equation has analytic coefficients thus completing the solution of Hilbert s nineteenth problem Subsequently Jurgen Moser gave an alternate proof of the results obtained by Ennio De Giorgi 1956 1957 and John Forbes Nash 1957 1958 Counterexamples to various generalizations of the problem edit The affirmative answer to Hilbert s nineteenth problem given by Ennio De Giorgi and John Forbes Nash raised the question if the same conclusion holds also for Euler Lagrange equations of more general functionals At the end of the 1960s Maz ya 1968 12 De Giorgi 1968 and Giusti amp Miranda 1968 independently constructed several counterexamples 13 showing that in general there is no hope of proving such regularity results without adding further hypotheses Precisely Maz ya 1968 gave several counterexamples involving a single elliptic equation of order greater than two with analytic coefficients 14 For experts the fact that such equations could have nonanalytic and even nonsmooth solutions created a sensation 15 De Giorgi 1968 and Giusti amp Miranda 1968 gave counterexamples showing that in the case when the solution is vector valued rather than scalar valued it need not be analytic the example of De Giorgi consists of an elliptic system with bounded coefficients while the one of Giusti and Miranda has analytic coefficients 16 Later Necas 1977 provided other more refined examples for the vector valued problem 17 De Giorgi s theorem editThe key theorem proved by De Giorgi is an a priori estimate stating that if u is a solution of a suitable linear second order strictly elliptic PDE of the form D i a i j x D j u 0 displaystyle D i a ij x D j u 0 nbsp and u displaystyle u nbsp has square integrable first derivatives then u displaystyle u nbsp is Holder continuous Application of De Giorgi s theorem to Hilbert s problem editHilbert s problem asks whether the minimizers w displaystyle w nbsp of an energy functional such as U L D w d x displaystyle int U L Dw mathrm d x nbsp are analytic Here w displaystyle w nbsp is a function on some compact set U displaystyle U nbsp of Rn D w displaystyle Dw nbsp is its gradient vector and L displaystyle L nbsp is the Lagrangian a function of the derivatives of w displaystyle w nbsp that satisfies certain growth smoothness and convexity conditions The smoothness of w displaystyle w nbsp can be shown using De Giorgi s theorem as follows The Euler Lagrange equation for this variational problem is the non linear equation i 1 n L p i D w x i 0 displaystyle sum limits i 1 n L p i Dw x i 0 nbsp and differentiating this with respect to x k displaystyle x k nbsp gives i 1 n L p i p j D w w x j x k x i 0 displaystyle sum limits i 1 n L p i p j Dw w x j x k x i 0 nbsp This means that u w x k displaystyle u w x k nbsp satisfies the linear equation D i a i j x D j u 0 displaystyle D i a ij x D j u 0 nbsp with a i j L p i p j D w displaystyle a ij L p i p j Dw nbsp so by De Giorgi s result the solution w has Holder continuous first derivatives provided the matrix L p i p j displaystyle L p i p j nbsp is bounded When this is not the case a further step is needed one must prove that the solution w displaystyle w nbsp is Lipschitz continuous i e the gradient D w displaystyle Dw nbsp is an L displaystyle L infty nbsp function Once w is known to have Holder continuous n 1 st derivatives for some n 1 then the coefficients aij have Holder continuous nth derivatives so a theorem of Schauder implies that the n 2 nd derivatives are also Holder continuous so repeating this infinitely often shows that the solution w is smooth Nash s theorem editNash gave a continuity estimate for solutions of the parabolic equation D i a i j x D j u D t u displaystyle D i a ij x D j u D t u nbsp where u is a bounded function of x1 xn t defined for t 0 From his estimate Nash was able to deduce a continuity estimate for solutions of the elliptic equation D i a i j x D j u 0 displaystyle D i a ij x D j u 0 nbsp by considering the special case when u does not depend on t Notes edit See Hilbert 1900 or equivalently one of its translations Sind die Losungen regularer Variationsprobleme stets notwendig analytisch English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson Are the solutions of regular problems in the calculus of variations always necessarily analytic formulating the problem with the same words of Hilbert 1900 p 288 See Hilbert 1900 pp 288 289 or the corresponding section on the nineteenth problem in any of its translations or reprints or the subsection The origins of the problem in the historical section of this entry English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson One of the most remarkable facts in the elements of the theory of analytic functions appears to me to be this that there exist partial differential equations whose integrals are all of necessity analytic functions of the independent variables that is in short equations susceptible of none but analytic solutions For a detailed historical analysis see the relevant entry Hilbert s problems Hilbert does not cite explicitly Joseph Liouville and considers the constant Gaussian curvature K as equal to 1 2 compare the relevant entry with Hilbert 1900 p 288 Unlike Liouville s work Picard s work is explicitly cited by Hilbert 1900 p 288 and footnote 1 in the same page a b c See Hilbert 1900 p 288 In his exact words Regulares Variationsproblem Hilbert s definition of a regular variational problem is stronger than the one currently used for example in Gilbarg amp Trudinger 2001 p 289 Since Hilbert considers all derivatives in the classical i e not in the weak but in the strong sense even before the statement of its analyticity in 3 the function F is assumed to be at least C 2 as the use of the Hessian determinant in 2 implies English translation by Mary Frances Winston Newson Hilbert s 1900 p 288 precise words are d h ob jede Lagrangesche partielle Differentialgleichung eines regulares Variationsproblem die Eigenschaft at dass sie nur analytische Integrale zulasst Italics emphasis by Hilbert himself See Giaquinta 1983 p 59 Giusti 1994 p 7 footnote 7 and p 353 Gohberg 1999 p 1 Hedberg 1999 pp 10 11 Kristensen amp Mingione 2011 p 5 and p 8 and Mingione 2006 p 368 See Giaquinta 1983 pp 54 59 Giusti 1994 p 7 and pp 353 See Hedberg 1999 pp 10 11 Kristensen amp Mingione 2011 p 5 and p 8 and Mingione 2006 p 368 According to Gohberg 1999 p 1 See Giaquinta 1983 pp 54 59 and Giusti 1994 p 7 pp 202 203 and pp 317 318 For more information about the work of Jindrich Necas see the work of Kristensen amp Mingione 2011 3 3 pp 9 12 and Mingione 2006 3 3 pp 369 370 References editBernstein S 1904 Sur la nature analytique des solutions des equations aux derivees partielles du second ordre Mathematische Annalen in French 59 1 2 20 76 doi 10 1007 BF01444746 ISSN 0025 5831 JFM 35 0354 01 S2CID 121487650 Bombieri Enrico 1975 Variational problems and elliptic equations Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians Vancouver B C 1974 Vol 1 ICM Proceedings Montreal Canadian Mathematical Congress pp 53 63 MR 0509259 Zbl 0344 49002 archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 31 retrieved 2011 01 29 Reprinted in Bombieri Enrico 1976 Variational problems and elliptic equations in Browder Felix E ed Mathematical developments arising from Hilbert problems Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics vol XXVIII Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society pp 525 535 ISBN 978 0 8218 1428 4 MR 0425740 Zbl 0347 35032 De Giorgi Ennio 1956 Sull analiticita delle estremali degli integrali multipli Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei Rendiconti Classe di Scienze Fisiche Matematiche e Naturali Serie VIII in Italian 20 438 441 MR 0082045 Zbl 0074 31503 On the analyticity of extremals of multiple integrals English translation of the title is a short research announcement disclosing the results detailed later in De Giorgi 1957 While according to the Complete list of De Giorgi s scientific publication De Giorgi 2006 p 6 an English translation should be included in De Giorgi 2006 it is unfortunately missing De Giorgi Ennio 1957 Sulla differenziabilita e l analiticita delle estremali degli integrali multipli regolari Memorie della Accademia delle Scienze di Torino Classe di Scienze Fisiche Matematicahe e Naturali Serie III in Italian 3 25 43 MR 0093649 Zbl 0084 31901 Translated in English as On the differentiability and the analyticity of extremals of regular multiple integrals in De Giorgi 2006 pp 149 166 De Giorgi Ennio 1968 Un esempio di estremali discontinue per un problema variazionale di tipo ellittico Bollettino dell Unione Matematica Italiana Serie IV in Italian 1 135 137 MR 0227827 Zbl 0084 31901 Translated in English as An example of discontinuous extremals for a variational problem of elliptic type in De Giorgi 2006 pp 285 287 De Giorgi Ennio 2006 Ambrosio Luigi Dal Maso Gianni Forti Marco Miranda Mario Spagnolo Sergio eds Selected papers Springer Collected Works in Mathematics Berlin New York Springer Verlag pp x 889 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 41496 1 ISBN 978 3 540 26169 8 MR 2229237 Zbl 1096 01015 Giaquinta Mariano 1983 Multiple integrals in the calculus of variations and nonlinear elliptic systems Annals of Mathematics Studies vol 105 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp vii 297 ISBN 978 0 691 08330 8 MR 0717034 Zbl 0516 49003 Gilbarg David Trudinger Neil S 2001 1998 Elliptic partial differential equations of second order Classics in Mathematics Revised 3rd printing of 2nd ed Berlin Heidelberg New York Springer Verlag pp xiv 517 ISBN 978 3 540 41160 4 MR 1814364 Zbl 1042 35002 Giusti Enrico 1994 Metodi diretti nel calcolo delle variazioni Monografie Matematiche in Italian Bologna Unione Matematica Italiana pp VI 422 MR 1707291 Zbl 0942 49002 translated in English as Giusti Enrico 2003 Direct Methods in the Calculus of Variations River Edge New Jersey London Singapore World Scientific Publishing pp viii 403 doi 10 1142 9789812795557 ISBN 978 981 238 043 2 MR 1962933 Zbl 1028 49001 Giusti Enrico Miranda Mario 1968 Un esempio di soluzioni discontinue per un problema di minimo relativo ad un integrale regolare del calcolo delle variazioni Bollettino dell Unione Matematica Italiana Serie IV in Italian 2 1 8 MR 0232265 Zbl 0155 44501 Gohberg Israel 1999 Vladimir Maz ya Friend and Mathematician Recollections in Rossman Jurgen Takac Peter Wildenhain Gunther eds The Maz ya anniversary collection Vol 1 On Maz ya s work in functional analysis partial differential equations and applications Based on talks given at the conference Rostock Germany August 31 September 4 1998 Operator Theory Advances and Applications vol 109 Basel Birkhauser Verlag pp 1 5 ISBN 978 3 7643 6201 0 MR 1747861 Zbl 0939 01018 Hedberg Lars Inge 1999 On Maz ya s work in potential theory and the theory of function spaces in Rossmann Jurgen Takac Peter Wildenhain Gunther eds The Maz ya Anniversary Collection Operator Theory Advances and Applications vol 109 Basel Birkhauser Verlag pp 7 16 doi 10 1007 978 3 0348 8675 8 2 ISBN 978 3 0348 9726 6 MR 1747862 Zbl 0939 31001 Hilbert David 1900 Mathematische Probleme Nachrichten von der Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen Mathematisch Physikalische Klasse in German 3 253 297 JFM 31 0068 03 Reprinted as Mathematische Probleme Archiv der Mathematik und Physik dritte reihe in German 1 44 63 and 253 297 1900 JFM 32 0084 05 Translated to English by Mary Frances Winston Newson as Hilbert David 1902 Mathematical Problems Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 8 10 437 479 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1902 00923 3 JFM 33 0976 07 MR 1557926 Reprinted as Hilbert David 2000 Mathematical Problems Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 37 4 407 436 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 00 00881 8 MR 1779412 S2CID 12695502 Zbl 0979 01028 Translated to French by M L Laugel with additions of Hilbert himself as Hilbert David 1902 Sur les problemes futurs des Mathematiques in Duporcq E ed Compte Rendu du Deuxieme Congres International des Mathematiciens tenu a Paris du 6 au 12 aout 1900 Proces Verbaux et Communications ICM Proceedings Paris Gauthier Villars pp 58 114 JFM 32 0084 06 archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 31 retrieved 2013 12 28 There exists also an earlier and shorter resume of Hilbert s original talk translated in French and published as Hilbert D 1900 Problemes mathematiques L Enseignement Mathematique in French 2 349 355 doi 10 5169 seals 3575 JFM 31 0905 03 Kristensen Jan Mingione Giuseppe October 2011 Sketches of Regularity Theory from The 20th Century and the Work of Jindrich Necas PDF Report Oxford Oxford Centre for Nonlinear PDE pp 1 30 OxPDE 11 17 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 07 Maz ya V G 1968 Primery neregulyarnyh reshenij kvazilinejnyh ellipticheskih uravnenij s analiticheskimi koefficientami Funktsional nyĭ Analiz I Ego Prilozheniya in Russian 2 3 53 57 MR 0237946 Translated in English as Maz ya V G 1968 Examples of nonregular solutions of quasilinear elliptic equations with analytic coefficients Functional Analysis and Its Applications 2 3 230 234 doi 10 1007 BF01076124 S2CID 121038871 Zbl 0179 43601 Mingione Giuseppe 2006 Regularity of minima an invitation to the Dark Side of the Calculus of Variations Applications of Mathematics 51 4 355 426 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 214 9183 doi 10 1007 s10778 006 0110 3 hdl 10338 dmlcz 134645 MR 2291779 S2CID 16385131 Zbl 1164 49324 Morrey Charles B 1966 Multiple integrals in the calculus of variations Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften vol 130 Berlin Heidelberg New York Springer Verlag pp xii 506 ISBN 978 3 540 69915 6 MR 0202511 Zbl 0142 38701 Nash John 1957 Parabolic equations Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 43 8 754 758 Bibcode 1957PNAS 43 754N doi 10 1073 pnas 43 8 754 ISSN 0027 8424 JSTOR 89599 MR 0089986 PMC 528534 PMID 16590082 Zbl 0078 08704 Nash John 1958 Continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations PDF American Journal of Mathematics 80 4 931 954 Bibcode 1958AmJM 80 931N doi 10 2307 2372841 hdl 10338 dmlcz 101876 ISSN 0002 9327 JSTOR 2372841 MR 0100158 Zbl 0096 06902 Necas Jindrich 1977 Example of an irregular solution to a nonlinear elliptic system with analytic coefficients and conditions for regularity in Kluge Reinhard Muller Wolfdietrich eds Theory of nonlinear operators constructive aspects Proceedings of the fourth international summer school held at Berlin GDR from September 22 to 26 1975 Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften der DDR vol 1 Berlin Akademie Verlag pp 197 206 MR 0509483 Zbl 0372 35031 Petrowsky I G 1939 Sur l analyticite des solutions des systemes d equations differentielles Recueil Mathematique Matematicheskii Sbornik in French 5 47 3 70 JFM 65 0405 02 MR 0001425 Zbl 0022 22601 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hilbert 27s nineteenth problem amp oldid 1189352560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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