Quantitative a Priori Estimates for Fast Diffusion Equations with Caffarelli-Kohn-Nirenberg weights. Harnack inequalities and H\"older continuity

Abstract

We study a priori estimates for a class of non-negative local weak solution to the weighted fast diffusion equation ut = |x|γ ∇· (|x|-β ∇ um), with 0 < m <1 posed on cylinders of (0,T)× RN. The weights |x|γ and |x|-β, with γ < N and γ -2 < β ≤ γ(N-2)/N can be both degenerate and singular and need not belong to the class A2, a typical assumption for this kind of problems. This range of parameters is optimal for the validity of a class of Caffarelli-Kohn-Nirenberg inequalities, which play the role of the standard Sobolev inequalities in this more complicated weighted setting. The weights that we consider are not translation invariant and this causes a number of extra difficulties and a variety of scenarios: for instance, the scaling properties of the equation change when considering the problem around the origin or far from it. We therefore prove quantitative - with computable constants - upper and lower estimates for local weak solutions, focussing our attention where a change of geometry appears. Such estimates fairly combine into forms of Harnack inequalities of forward, backward and elliptic type. As a consequence, we obtain H\"older continuity of the solutions, with a quantitative (even if non-optimal) exponent. Our results apply to a quite large variety of solutions and problems. The proof of the positivity estimates requires a new method and represents the main technical novelty of this paper. Our techniques are flexible and can be adapted to more general settings, for instance to a wider class of weights or to similar problems posed on Riemannian manifolds, possibly with unbounded curvature. In the linear case, m=1, we also prove quantitative estimates, recovering known results in some cases and extending such results to a wider class of weights.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…