Existence results for nonlocal multivalued boundary-value problems.
In this paper, we study a new class of three-point boundary value problems of nonlinear second-order q-difference inclusions. Our problems contain different numbers of q in derivatives and integrals. By using fixed point theorems, some new existence results are obtained in the cases when the right-hand side has convex as well as noncovex values.
In this paper, we study ϕ-Laplacian problems for differential inclusions with Dirichlet boundary conditions. We prove the existence of solutions under both convexity and nonconvexity conditions on the multi-valued right-hand side. The nonlinearity satisfies either a Nagumo-type growth condition or an integrably boundedness one. The proofs rely on the Bonhnenblust-Karlin fixed point theorem and the Bressan-Colombo selection theorem respectively. Two applications to a problem from control theory are...
Let be a continuous multifunction with compact, not necessarily convex values. In this paper, we prove that, if F satisfies the following Lipschitz Selection Property: (LSP) For every t,x, every y ∈ c̅o̅F(t,x) and ε > 0, there exists a Lipschitz selection ϕ of c̅o̅F, defined on a neighborhood of (t,x), with |ϕ(t,x)-y| < ε, then there exists a measurable selection f of ext F such that, for every x₀, the Cauchy problem ẋ(t) = f(t,x(t)), x(0) = x₀, has a unique Carathéodory solution, depending...
In this paper we consider periodic and Dirichlet problems for second order vector differential inclusions. First we show the existence of extremal solutions of the periodic problem (i.e. solutions moving through the extreme points of the multifunction). Then for the Dirichlet problem we show that the extremal solutions are dense in the -norm in the set of solutions of the “convex” problem (relaxation theorem).
In this paper we study semilinear second order differential inclusions involving a multivalued maximal monotone operator. Using notions and techniques from the nonlinear operator theory and from multivalued analysis, we obtain “extremal” solutions and we prove a strong relaxation theorem.