On the Fredholm alternative for the Fučík spectrum.
Drábek, Pavel, Robinson, Stephen B. (2010)
Abstract and Applied Analysis
Similarity:
Drábek, Pavel, Robinson, Stephen B. (2010)
Abstract and Applied Analysis
Similarity:
To Fu Ma, Luis Sanchez (1997)
Mathematica Slovaca
Similarity:
Zhang, Jing, Xue, Xiaoping (2011)
Boundary Value Problems [electronic only]
Similarity:
Dumitru Motreanu (1997)
Mathematica Slovaca
Similarity:
Carl, Siegfried, Perera, Kanishka (2002)
Abstract and Applied Analysis
Similarity:
Zhang, Zhitao, Li, Shujie, Liu, Shibo, Feng, Weijie (2002)
Abstract and Applied Analysis
Similarity:
Fernández Bonder, Julián (2004)
Abstract and Applied Analysis
Similarity:
Carl, Siegfried, Motreanu, Dumitru (2010)
International Journal of Differential Equations
Similarity:
Pavel Drábek (2014)
Mathematica Bohemica
Similarity:
General mathematical theories usually originate from the investigation of particular problems and notions which could not be handled by available tools and methods. The Fučík spectrum and the -Laplacian are typical examples in the field of nonlinear analysis. The systematic study of these notions during the last four decades led to several interesting and surprising results and revealed deep relationship between the linear and the nonlinear structures. This paper does not provide a...