Abstract
In this paper, we study the uniqueness and existence of positive solutions for the fractional integro-differential equation with the integral boundary value problem. By means of the Banach contraction principle and the Krasnoselskii fixed point theorem, the sufficient conditions on the uniqueness and existence of positive solutions are investigated. An example is given to illustrate the main results.
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1 Introduction
It is widely recognized that the memory and hereditary properties of various materials and processes are well predicted by using fractional differential operators. The differential equation with fractional order derivative has recently proven to be a strong tool in the modeling of many phenomena in various fields of science and engineering [1, 2]. The fractional differential equation has made a profound impact on some areas such as viscoelasticity, diffusion procedures, relaxation vibrations, electrochemistry, signal and image processing, mechatronics, physics, and control theory; see [3–5].
The Volterra model for population growth of a species within a closed system is characterized by a nonlinear fractional integro-differential equation in the following form:
where \({}^{c}D^{\alpha}\) denotes the Caputo fractional derivative of order \(0<\alpha\leq1\), \(p(t)\) is the scaled population of identical individuals, t denotes the time, \(a > 0\) is the birth rate coefficient, \(b > 0\) is the crowding coefficient, and \(c > 0\) is the toxicity coefficient, which denotes the essential behavior of the population evolution before its level falls to zero in the long run [6, 7]. Besides, the nonlinear oscillation of earthquake can be modeled with fractional derivatives [8], and the fluid-dynamic traffic model with fractional derivatives can eliminate the deficiency arising from the assumption of continuum traffic flow [9]. In the characterization of viscoelasticity’s Hook law, the five parameter generalized Zener model
or the three parameter generalized Maxwell model
are often used. With suitable initial or boundary conditions, the existence and nonexistence of positive solutions for the above equations are significant and serviceable.
Since theoretical results can help to get an in-depth understanding for the fractional order model, motivated by the mentioned equation models and their application background, in this paper, we concentrate on the more complicated and abstract fractional boundary value problem (FBVP):
where \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\), \(0\leq\mu< n-1\), \(n\geq3\), \(b_{i}\geq0\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-3, n-1\)), \({}^{c}D^{\alpha}\) is the Caputo fractional derivative. \(f: J\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\times \mathbb{R}_{+}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{+}\) is a given function satisfying some assumptions that will be specified later, \(J=[0, 1]\), \(\mathbb {R}_{+}=[0, +\infty)\). T, S are given by
with \(k^{*}=\sup_{t\in J}\int_{0}^{t} K(t, s)\,ds\), \(h^{*}=\sup_{t\in J}\int_{0}^{1} H(t, s)\,ds\), in which \(K\in C(D, \mathbb{R}_{+})\), \(D=\{(t, s)\in J\times J: t\geq s\}\), \(H\in C(J\times J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\).
For the past few decades, many researchers have tried to model real processes using the fractional calculus. In the mathematical context, several interesting results about the existence of positive solutions for fractional equation models have been reported [10–25]. In [10], the following boundary value problem of the fractional differential equation was considered:
where \(2<\alpha\leq3\), \({}^{c}D^{\alpha}\) is the Caputo fractional derivative. \(f: (0, 1]\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{+}\) is continuous. By the Guo-Krasnoselskii fixed point theorem and the nonlinear alternative of Leray-Schauder type, the authors in [10] established the existence of positive solutions to the problem (1.2).
Cabada and Wang [14] demonstrated some existence results for positive solutions to the FBVP (1.3) relying on the known Guo-Krasnoselskii fixed point theorem,
where \(2<\alpha<3\), \(0<\lambda<2\), \({}^{c}D^{\alpha}\) is the Caputo fractional derivative. \(f: J\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{+}\) is a continuous function. Xu and He [17] researched the FBVP (1.3) for \(3<\alpha<4\).
But up to now, when f contains integral operators T and S, a fractional differential equation like FBVP (1.1) has seldom been considered, furthermore, in FBVP (1.1), \(b_{i}\geq0\), we generalized the boundary conditions in [10, 14, 17]. Inspired greatly by the above mentioned works, we establish some new existence criteria of uniqueness and existence of positive solutions for FBVP (1.1).
2 Preliminaries and lemmas
Denote \(C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\) the Banach space of all continuous functions from J into \(\mathbb{R}_{+}\) with the norm \(\|u\|: =\sup \{|u(t)|: t \in J \}\), \(L^{p}(J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\) the Banach space of all Lebesgue measurable functions from J into \(\mathbb{R}_{+}\) with the norm \(\|y\|_{L^{p}}: = (\int_{0}^{1}(y(t))^{p}\, dt )^{\frac{1}{p}}<+\infty\), \(1\leq p<+\infty\), respectively. Next, we introduce some basic definitions and properties of the fractional calculus theory and auxiliary lemmas in order to obtain the uniqueness and existence of positive solutions for FBVP (1.1).
Definition 2.1
The Caputo fractional order derivative of order \(\alpha>0\), \(n-1 < \alpha< n\), \(n\in \mathbb{N}\) is defined as
where \(u \in C^{n}(J, \mathbb{R})\), \(\mathbb{R}=(-\infty, +\infty)\), \(\mathbb{N}\) denotes the natural number set, \(n =[\alpha]+1\), and \([\alpha]\) denotes the integer part of α.
Definition 2.2
The Riemann-Liouville fractional derivative of order \(\alpha>0\), \(n-1 <\alpha< n\), \(n\in\mathbb{N}\) is defined as
where the function \(u(t)\) is n times continuously differentiable on J.
Definition 2.3
Let \(\alpha>0\) and let u be piecewise continuous on \((0, +\infty)\) and integrable on any finite subinterval of J. Then, for \(t>0\), we call
the Riemann-Liouville fractional integral of u of order α.
Lemma 2.1
Let \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\). Then the differential equation \({}^{c}D^{\alpha}u(t)=0\) has one solution as follows:
where \(c_{i} \in\mathbb{R}\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-1\)), n is the smallest integer greater than or equal to α.
Lemma 2.2
Let \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\), \(u \in C^{n}[0, 1]\). Then
where \(c_{i} \in\mathbb{R}\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-1\)), n is the smallest integer greater than or equal to α.
For \(h\in C(0, 1)\cap L^{1}(0, 1)\), consider the following FBVP (2.1) with integral boundary value condition:
where \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\), \(0\leq\mu< n-1\), \(n\geq3\), \(b_{i}\geq0\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-3, n-1\)).
Lemma 2.3
Let \(h\in C(0, 1)\cap L^{1}(0, 1)\), then FBVP (2.1) has an integral representation
where \(M(t)=b_{0}+ b_{1}t+\cdots+\frac{b_{n-3}t^{n-3}}{(n-3)!} +\frac{b_{n-1}t^{n-1}}{(n-1)!}\), \(M(1)=b_{0}+ b_{1}+\cdots+\frac{b_{n-3}}{(n-3)!}+\frac{b_{n-1}}{(n-1)!}\), \(\mathcal{M}=b_{0}+ \frac{b_{1}}{2}+\cdots+\frac{b_{n-3}}{(n-2)!}+\frac{b_{n-1}}{n!}\).
Proof
FBVP (2.1) is equivalent to the following integral equation:
Since \(u(0)=b_{0}\), \(u'(0)=b_{1},\ldots, u^{(n-3)}(0)=b_{n-3}, u^{(n-1)}(0)=b_{n-1}\), we can deduce that
The other boundary condition \(u(1)=\mu\int_{0}^{1}u(s)\, d(s)\) implies that
Hence, substituting (2.5) into (2.4), we have
Now, integrate (2.6) from 0 to 1 in both sides, we get
Substituting (2.7) into (2.6), we obtain (2.2). This completes the proof of the lemma. □
Remark 2.1
According to Lemma 2.3, we get \(u(t)\geq0\), if \(h(t)\geq0\), \(t\in J\). By (2.2), we have
Since \(0\leq\mu< n-1\), \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\), for \(0\leq s\leq t\leq1\), we have
Thus, by (2.8) and (2.9), we know
For \(0\leq t\leq s\leq1\), we have
Then we obtain
By the definition of \(M(t)\), \(M(1)\) and \(\mathcal{M}\), since \(b_{i}\geq0\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-3, n-1\)), we know \(M(t)\geq0\), \(M(1)\geq0\) and \(\mathcal{M}\geq0\), so
From (2.10), (2.12), and (2.13), we get \(u(t)\geq0\), if \(h(t)\geq0\), \(t\in J\).
Remark 2.2
By Remark 2.1, combined with the boundary conditions \(0\leq\mu< n-1\), \(n\geq3\), \(b_{i}\geq0\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-3, n-1\)), we also get \(u(t)> 0\), \(t\in(0, 1)\), if \(h(t)\not\equiv0\).
Lemma 2.4
Krasnoselskii fixed point theorem [28]
Let X be a closed convex and nonempty subset of the Banach space E. Let A and B be two operators such that
-
1.
\(Ax + By \in X\), whenever \(x, y \in X\);
-
2.
A is compact and continuous;
-
3.
B is a contraction mapping.
Then there exists \(z \in X\) such that \(z = Az + Bz\).
3 Main results
In the following, we list some conditions to be used later:
- (H1):
-
\(f: J\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\times \mathbb{R}_{+}\times\mathbb{R}_{+} \rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{+}\) is measurable with respect to t on J.
- (H2):
-
There exist a constant \(\alpha_{1} \in(0, \alpha-n+1)\) and real-valued functions \(m_{1}(t), m_{2}(t), m_{3}(t) \in L ^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{1}}} (J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\) such that
$$\begin{aligned}& \bigl\vert f(t, u, v, w)-f(t, \overline{u}, \overline{v}, \overline{w})\bigr\vert \\& \quad \leq m_{1}(t)\vert u-\overline{u}\vert +m_{2}(t) \vert v-\overline{v}\vert +m_{3}(t)\vert w-\overline{w}\vert , \quad t\in J, u, v, w, \overline{u}, \overline{v}, \overline{w}\in \mathbb{R}_{+}. \end{aligned}$$ - (H3):
-
There exist a constant \(\alpha_{2} \in(0, \alpha-n+1)\) and a real-valued function \(h(t) \in L ^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{2}}} (J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\) such that
$$\bigl\vert f(t, u, v, w)\bigr\vert \leq h(t), \quad t\in J, u, v, w\in D, D \subset\mathbb{R}_{+} \mbox{ is a bounded subinterval}. $$
Theorem 3.1
Assume that (H1)-(H3) hold. If
where \(\varpi=\|m_{1}+k^{*}m_{2}+h^{*}m_{3}\|_{L^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{2}}}}\), then FBVP (1.1) has a unique positive solution on J.
Proof
For \(t\in J\), \(u\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+} )\), by (H3), we have
Thus, \(\vert (t-s)^{\alpha-1}f(s, u(s), Tu(s), Su(s))\vert \) is Lebesgue integrable with respect to \(s \in[0, t]\) for all \(t \in J\) and \(u\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+} )\). Hence, FBVP (1.1) is equivalent to the following integral equation:
Let
Now, define the operator F on \(B_{r}= \{u\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+}) : \|u\| \leq r\}\) as follows:
Therefore, the existence of a solution of the FBVP (1.1) is equivalent to that of a fixed point on \(B_{r}\) of the operator F. We shall use the Banach contraction principle to prove that F has a fixed point. The proof is divided into two steps.
1. \(Fu \in B_{r}\), for every \(u\in B_{r}\).
For every \(u\in B_{r}\) and \(\delta>0\), by (H3) and the Hölder’s inequality, we get
Thus, the right-hand side of the above inequality tends to zero as \(\delta\rightarrow0\). Therefore, F is continuous on J.
Next, we prove \(Fu(t)\geq0\), \(t\in J\). For any \(t\in J\),
Since \(0\leq\mu< n-1\), \(n-1<\alpha\leq n\), for \(0\leq s\leq t\leq1\), by (2.8) and (2.9), we have
For \(0\leq t\leq s\leq1\), by (2.11), we know
By the definition of \(M(t)\), \(M(1)\), and \(\mathcal{M}\), since \(b_{i}\geq0\) (\(i=1, 2, \ldots, n-3, n-1\)), we know \(M(t)\geq0\), \(M(1)\geq0\) and \(\mathcal{M}\geq0\), thus
From (3.2)-(3.5), we obtain \(Fu(t)\geq0\), \(t\in J\). So, \(Fu \in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\).
Moreover, for any \(u\in B_{r}\) and all \(t \in J\), we have
which implies that \(\|Fu\|\leq r\). Thus, we can conclude that, for all \(u\in B_{r}\), \(Fu \in B_{r}\), that is, \(F: B_{r} \rightarrow B_{r}\).
2. F is a contraction mapping on \(B_{r}\).
For \(u_{1}, u_{2} \in B_{r}\) and any \(t \in J\), using (H2) and the Hölder’s inequality, we have
So, we obtain
Thus, F is a contraction mapping by the condition (3.1). By the Banach contraction principle, we can deduce that F has an unique fixed point which is the unique positive solution of the FBVP (1.1). □
Theorem 3.2
Assume that \(f: J\times\mathbb{R}_{+}\times \mathbb{R}_{+}\times\mathbb{R}_{+} \rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{+}\) is a continuous function, and (H 2), (H 3) hold. If
where \(\varpi^{*}=\int_{0}^{1}\frac{(1-s)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )} (m_{1}(s)+k^{*}m_{2}(s)+h^{*}m_{3}(s) )\,ds\), \(\varpi=\|m_{1}+k^{*}m_{2}+h^{*}m_{3}\|_{L^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{2}}}}\), then FBVP (1.1) has at least one positive solution on J.
Proof
Choose
where \(\Psi=\max\{f(t, 0, 0, 0 ): t\in J\}\). Consider the set \(B_{R}= \{u\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+}) : \|u\| \leq R\}\), then \(B_{R}\) is a closed, bounded and convex set of \(C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\). We define the operators A and B on \(B_{R}\) as
By a similar proof to (3.2)-(3.5) in Theorem 3.1, we know \(Au(t)+Bu(t)\geq0\), \(t\in J\). For any \(u\in B_{R} \), by (H2) and the triangle inequality, we get
Then, for any \(u\in B_{R} \) and all \(t\in J\), we have
For any \(v\in B_{R} \) and all \(t\in J\), by (H2), we have
By (3.6)-(3.7), we obtain \(|Au(t) + Bv(t)|\leq|Au(t)|+|Bu(t)|\leq R \), \(u, v\in B_{R}\), \(t\in J\).
For \(v_{1}, v_{2} \in B_{R}\) and any \(t \in J\), using (H2) and the Hölder’s inequality, we have
Therefore, we get
It follows from (H2) that B is a contraction mapping for \({\Omega^{*}} < 1\).
The continuity of f implies that A is continuous. Also, A is uniformly bounded on \(B_{R}\), since for any \(u\in B_{R} \), by (H3), we have
On the other hand, for any \(u\in B_{R} \), \(t_{1}, t_{2}\in J\), without loss of generality, we may assume \(t_{1}< t_{2}\), for any \(\varepsilon>0\), choose \(\delta=\frac{1}{2} (\frac{\varepsilon\Gamma(\alpha)}{\Phi } )^{\frac{1}{\alpha}}\), \(\Phi=\sup \{f(t, u, v, w): (t, u, v, w)\in J\times B_{R}\times B_{k^{*}R}\times B_{h^{*}R} \}\), \(B_{k^{*}R}= \{v\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+}) : \|v\| \leq{k^{*}R}\}\), \(B_{h^{*}R}= \{w\in C(J, \mathbb{R}_{+}) : \|w\| \leq{h^{*}R}\}\), such that, for \(0< t_{2}-t_{1}<\delta\), we have
Since \(0< t_{2}-t_{1}<\delta\), we have the following two cases:
Case 1. \(\delta\leq t_{1}< t_{2}\leq1\).
Case 2. \(0\leq t_{1}<\delta\), \(t_{2}\leq2\delta\leq1\).
Therefore, A is equicontinuous, by the Arzela-Ascoli theorem, we know that A is compact on \(B_{R}\), so the operator A is completely continuous. Thus, all the assumptions of Lemma 2.4 are satisfied, by Lemma 2.4, FBVP (1.1) has at least one positive solution on J. □
4 Example
Now we consider the existence and uniqueness of positive solutions for the fractional differential system:
where \(3<\alpha<4\), \(0<\mu=\frac{\sin1}{1-\cos 1}<3\). Let \(k>0\) be a constant, choose
So
For \(t\in J\), \(\alpha_{1}\in(0, \alpha-3)\), \(\alpha_{2}\in(0, \alpha-3)\), set \(m_{1}(t)=\frac{e^{-t}}{1+k}, m_{2}(t)=\frac{e^{-kt}}{1+k}, m_{3}(t)=\frac{e^{-t}}{8(1+k^{2})} \in L ^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{1}}} (J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\), \(h(t)=\frac{e^{-t}+e^{-kt}}{1+k}+\frac{e^{-t}}{8(1+k^{2})} \in L ^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{2}}} (J, \mathbb{R}_{+})\), \(\varpi=\Vert \frac{e^{-t}}{1+k}+\frac{e^{-kt}(e-1)}{(1+k)^{2}} +\frac{3e^{-t}}{256(1+k^{2})^{2}}\Vert _{L^{\frac{1}{\alpha_{2}}}}\). Choosing some \(k >0\) large enough and suitable \(\alpha_{1}\in(0, \alpha-3)\), \(\alpha_{2}\in(0, \alpha-3)\), we can arrive at the inequality (3.1). Therefore, by Theorem 3.1, we see that FBVP (4.1) has a unique solution on J.
5 Conclusions
In this work, we establish the conditions of uniqueness and existence results of positive solutions for a class of fractional integro-differential equations involving the Caputo derivative of order α (\(n-1<\alpha \leq n\), \(n\geq3\)), the explicit cases, including measurable or continuous nonlinear term f, are discussed by adopting new assumption conditions. Our results (Theorems 3.1 and 3.2) are based on the Banach contraction principle and the Krasnoselskii fixed point theorem. In particular, an example is given to show the effectiveness of the obtained results. Moreover, the sufficient conditions we obtained are very simple, which provides flexibility for the application and analysis of a nonlinear fractional differential equation.
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Acknowledgements
The authors were supported financially by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (11626125, 11371221, 11571296), the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province of China (ZR2016AP04), a Project of Shandong Province Higher Educational Science and Technology Program (J16LI03, J14LI08), and the Applied Mathematics Enhancement Program of Linyi University and the Science Research Foundation for Doctoral Authorities of Linyi University (LYDX2016BS080).
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Wang, Y., Liu, L. Uniqueness and existence of positive solutions for the fractional integro-differential equation. Bound Value Probl 2017, 12 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13661-016-0741-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13661-016-0741-1