Carathéodory's existence theorem

In mathematics, Carathéodory's existence theorem says that an ordinary differential equation has a solution under relatively mild conditions. It is a generalization of Peano's existence theorem. Peano's theorem requires that the right-hand side of the differential equation is continuous, while Carathéodory's theorem shows existence of solutions (in a more general sense) for some discontinuous equations. The theorem is named after Constantin Carathéodory.

Introduction

Consider the differential equation

with initial condition

where the function ƒ is defined on a rectangular domain of the form

Peano's existence theorem states that if ƒ is continuous, then the differential equation has at least one solution in a neighbourhood of the initial condition.[1]

However, it is also possible to consider differential equations with a discontinuous right-hand side, like the equation

where H denotes the Heaviside function defined by

It makes sense to consider the ramp function

as a solution of the differential equation. Strictly speaking though, it does not satisfy the differential equation at , because the function is not differentiable there. This suggests that the idea of a solution be extended to allow for solutions that are not everywhere differentiable, thus motivating the following definition.

A function y is called a solution in the extended sense of the differential equation with initial condition if y is absolutely continuous, y satisfies the differential equation almost everywhere and y satisfies the initial condition.[2] The absolute continuity of y implies that its derivative exists almost everywhere.[3]

Statement of the theorem

Consider the differential equation

with defined on the rectangular domain . If the function satisfies the following three conditions:

then the differential equation has a solution in the extended sense in a neighborhood of the initial condition.[4]

Notes

  1. Coddington & Levinson (1955), Theorem 1.2 of Chapter 1
  2. Coddington & Levinson (1955), page 42
  3. Rudin (1987), Theorem 7.18
  4. Coddington & Levinson (1955), Theorem 1.1 of Chapter 2

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/7/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.