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Theory of fractional hybrid differential equations with linear perturbations of second type

Abstract

In this paper, we develop the theory of fractional hybrid differential equations with linear perturbations of second type involving Riemann-Liouville differential operators of order 0<q<1. An existence theorem for fractional hybrid differential equations is proved under the φ-Lipschitz condition. Some fundamental fractional differential inequalities which are utilized to prove the existence of extremal solutions are also established. Necessary tools are considered and the comparison principle which will be useful for further study of qualitative behavior of solutions is proved.

MSC:34A40, 34A12, 34A99.

1 Introduction

Fractional differential equations have been of great interest recently. It is caused both by the intensive development of the theory of fractional calculus itself and by the applications; see [114]. Although the tools of fractional calculus have been available and applicable to various fields of study, there are few papers on the investigation of the theory of fractional differential equations; see [1519]. The differential equations involving Riemann-Liouville differential operators of fractional order 0<q<1 are very important in modeling several physical phenomena [2022] and therefore seem to deserve an independent study of their theory parallel to the well-known theory of ordinary differential equations.

In recent years, quadratic perturbations of nonlinear differential equations have attracted much attention. The importance of the investigations of hybrid differential equations lies in the fact that they include several dynamic systems as special cases. This class of hybrid differential equations includes the perturbations of original differential equations in different ways. There have been many works on the theory of hybrid differential equations, and we refer the readers to the articles [2329]. Dhage and Lakshmikantham [24] discussed the following first-order hybrid differential equation with linear perturbations of first type:

{ d d t [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] = g ( t , x ( t ) ) , a.e.  t J , x ( t 0 ) = x 0 R ,

where fC(J×R,R{0}) and gC(J×R,R). Dhage and Jadhav [25] discussed the following first-order hybrid differential equation with linear perturbations of second type:

{ d d t [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] = g ( t , x ( t ) ) , t J , x ( t 0 ) = x 0 R ,

where fC(J×R,R{0}) and gC(J×R,R). They established the existence and uniqueness results and some fundamental differential inequalities for hybrid differential equations initiating the study of theory of such systems and proved utilizing the theory of inequalities, its existence of extremal solutions and a comparison result.

From the above works, we develop the theory of fractional hybrid differential equations involving Riemann-Liouville differential operators of order 0<q<1. In this paper, we initiate the basic theory of fractional hybrid differential equations of mixed perturbations of second type involving three nonlinearities and prove the basic result such as the strict and nonstrict fractional differential inequalities, an existence theorem and maximal and minimal solutions etc. We claim that the results of this paper are a basic and important contribution to the theory of nonlinear fractional differential equations.

2 Fractional hybrid differential equation

Let be a real line and J=[ t 0 , t 0 +a) be a bounded interval in for some t 0 ,aR with a>0. Let C(J×R,R) denote the class of continuous functions f:J×RR.

Definition 2.1 [19]

The Riemann-Liouville fractional derivative of order α>0 of a continuous function f:( t 0 ,+)R is given by

D α f(t)= 1 Γ ( n α ) ( d d t ) ( n ) t 0 t f ( s ) ( t s ) α n + 1 ds,

where n=[α]+1, [α] denotes the integer part of number α, provided that the right-hand side is pointwise defined on ( t 0 ,+).

Definition 2.2 [19]

The Riemann-Liouville fractional integral of order α>0 of a function f:(0,+)R is given by

I α f(t)= 1 Γ ( α ) t 0 t ( t s ) α 1 f(s)ds,

provided that the right-hand side is pointwise defined on ( t 0 ,+).

We consider fractional hybrid differential equations (in short FHDE) involving Riemann-Liouville differential operators of order 0<q<1,

{ D q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] = g ( t , x ( t ) ) , t J , x ( t 0 ) = x 0 ,
(2.1)

where f,gC(J×R,R).

By a solution of FHDE (2.1), we mean a function xC(J,R) such that

  1. (i)

    the function txf(t,x) is continuous for each xR, and

  2. (ii)

    x satisfies the equations in (2.1).

The theory of strict and nonstrict differential inequalities related to ODEs and hybrid differential equations is available in the literature (see [24, 25, 28, 29]). It is known that differential inequalities are useful for proving the existence of extremal solutions of ODEs and hybrid differential equations defined on J.

3 Existence result

In this section, we prove the existence results for FHDE (2.1) on the closed and bounded interval J=[ t 0 , t 0 +a] under mixed Lipschitz and compactness conditions on the nonlinearities involved in it.

We place FHDE (2.1) in the space C(J,R) of continuous real-valued functions defined on J. Define a supremum norm in C(J,R) by x= sup t J |x(t)|. Clearly, C(J,R) is a Banach algebra with respect to the above norm.

We prove the existence of a solution for FHDE (2.1) by a fixed point theorem in the Banach algebra due to Dhage [30].

Definition 3.1 Let X be a Banach space. A mapping T:XX is called φ-Lipschitzian if there exists a continuous and nondecreasing function φ: R + R + such that

TxTyφ ( x y )

for all x,yX, where φ(0)=0.

Further, if φ satisfies the condition φ(r)<r, r>0, then T is called a nonlinear contraction with a control function φ.

Lemma 3.1 [30]

Let S be a nonempty, closed convex and bounded subset of the Banach algebra X and let A:XX and B:SX be two operators such that

  1. (a)

    A is nonlinear contraction,

  2. (b)

    B is completely continuous,

  3. (c)

    Ax+BxS for all xS.

Then the operator equation Ax+Bx=x has a solution in S.

We consider the following hypotheses in what follows.

(A0) The function xxf(t,x) is increasing in for all tJ.

(A1) There exist constants ML>0 such that

| f ( t , x ) f ( t , y ) | L | x y | M + | x y |

for all tJ and x,yR.

(A3) There exists a continuous function hC(J,R) such that

| g ( t , x ) | h(t),tJ,

for all xR.

Lemma 3.2 [19]

Let 0<q<1 and u L 1 (0,T).

(H1) The equality D q I q u(t)=u(t) holds.

(H2) The equality

I q D q u(t)=u(t) I 1 q u ( t 0 ) Γ ( q ) ( t t 0 ) q 1

holds almost everywhere on J.

The following lemma is useful in what follows.

Lemma 3.3 Assume that hypothesis (A0) holds. Then, for any hC(J,R) and 0<q<1, the function xC(J,R) is a solution of the FHDE

D q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] =h(t),tJ,
(3.1)

and

x( t 0 )= x 0 ,
(3.2)

if and only if x satisfies the hybrid integral equation (HIE)

x(t)= x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 )+f ( t , x ( t ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 h(s)ds,tJ.
(3.3)

Proof Let x be a solution of the Cauchy problem (3.1) and (3.2). Since the Riemann-Liouville fractional integral I q is a monotone operator, thus we apply the fractional integral I q on both sides of (3.1). By Lemma 3.2, we have

I q D q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] =x(t)f ( t , x ( t ) ) I 1 q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] | t = t 0 Γ ( q ) ( t t 0 ) q 1 = I q h(t),

then by (3.2), we get

x(t)f ( t , x ( t ) ) = I q h(t)+ I 1 q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] | t = t 0 Γ ( q ) ( t t 0 ) q 1 = x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 )+ I q h(t),

i.e.,

x ( t ) = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + f ( t , x ( t ) ) + I q h ( t ) = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + f ( t , x ( t ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 h ( s ) d s , t J .

Thus, (3.3) holds.

Conversely, assume that x satisfies HIE (3.3). Then applying D q on both sides of (3.3), (3.1) is satisfied. Again, substituting t= t 0 in (3.3) yields

x( t 0 )f ( t 0 , x ( t 0 ) ) = x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 ).

The map xxf(t,x) is increasing in for all tJ, the map xxf( t 0 ,x) is injective in , hence x( t 0 )= x 0 . The proof is completed. □

Now, we are in a position to prove the following existence theorem for FHDE (2.1).

Theorem 3.1 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Then FHDE (2.1) has a solution defined on J.

Proof Set X=C(J,R) and define a subset S of X defined by

S= { x X x N } ,
(3.4)

where N=| x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 )|+L+ F 0 + a q Γ ( q + 1 ) h L 1 and F 0 = sup t J |f(t,0)|.

Clearly, S is a closed, convex and bounded subset of the Banach algebra X. Now, using the hypotheses (A0)-(A2), it can be shown by an application of Lemma 3.3, FHDE (2.1) is equivalent to the nonlinear HIE

x(t)= x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 )+f ( t , x ( t ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) ds,tJ.
(3.5)

Define two operators A:XX and B:SX by

Ax(t)=f ( t , x ( t ) ) ,tJ,
(3.6)

and

Bx(t)= x 0 f( t 0 , x 0 )+ 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) ds,tJ.
(3.7)

Then HIE (3.5) is transformed into the operator equation as

Ax(t)+Bx(t)=x(t),tJ.
(3.8)

We will show that the operators A and B satisfy all the conditions of Lemma 3.1.

First, we show that A is a Lipschitz operator on X with the Lipschitz constant L. Let x,yX. Then by hypothesis (A1),

| A x ( t ) A y ( t ) | = | f ( t , x ( t ) ) f ( t , y ( t ) ) | L | x ( t ) y ( t ) | M + | x ( t ) y ( t ) | L x y M + x y

for all tJ. Taking supremum over t, we obtain

AxAy L x y M + x y

for all x,yX. This shows that A is a nonlinear contraction on X with a control function φ defined by φ= L r M + r .

Next, we show that B is a compact and continuous operator on S into X. First, we show that B is continuous on S. Let { x n } be a sequence in S converging to a point xS. Then, by the Lebesgue dominated convergence theorem,

lim n B x n ( t ) = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + lim n 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x n ( s ) ) d s = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 lim n g ( s , x n ( s ) ) d s = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s = B x ( t )

for all tJ. This shows that B is a continuous operator on S.

Now, we show that B is a compact operator on S. It is enough to show that B(S) is a uniformly bounded and equicontinuous set in X. On the one hand, let xS be arbitrary. Then by hypothesis (A2),

| B x ( t ) | = | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + | 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s | | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 | g ( s , x ( s ) ) | d s | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 h ( s ) d s | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + a q Γ ( q + 1 ) h L 1 ,

for all tJ. Taking supremum over t,

Bx | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + a q Γ ( q + 1 ) h L 1

for all xS. This shows that B is uniformly bounded on S.

On the other hand, let t 1 , t 2 J with t 1 < t 2 . Then, for any xS, one has

| B x ( t 1 ) B x ( t 2 ) | = | 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 1 ( t 1 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 2 ( t 2 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s | | 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 1 ( t 1 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 1 ( t 2 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s | + | 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 1 ( t 2 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 2 ( t 2 s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s | h L 1 Γ ( q + 1 ) [ | ( t 2 t 0 ) q ( t 1 t 0 ) q ( t 2 t 1 ) q | + ( t 2 t 1 ) q ] .

Hence, for ε>0, there exists a δ>0 such that

| t 1 t 2 |<δ | B x ( t 1 ) B x ( t 2 ) | <ε,

for all t 1 , t 2 J and for all xS. This shows that B(S) is an equicontinuous set in X. Now, the set B(S) is a uniformly bounded and equicontinuous set in X, so it is compact by the Arzela-Ascoli theorem. As a result, B is a complete continuous operator on S.

Next, we show that hypothesis (c) of Lemma 3.1 is satisfied. Let xS. Then, by assumption (A1), we have

| A x ( t ) + B x ( t ) | | A x ( t ) | + | B x ( t ) | | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + | f ( t , x ( t ) ) | + | 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , y ( s ) ) d s | | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + [ | f ( t , x ( t ) ) f ( t , 0 ) | + | f ( t , 0 ) | ] + ( 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 | g ( s , x ( s ) ) | d s ) | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + L + F 0 + ( 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 h ( s ) d s ) | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | + L + F 0 + T q Γ ( q + 1 ) h L 1 .

Taking supremum over t,

x | x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) | +L+ F 0 + T q Γ ( q + 1 ) h L 1 =N.

Thus, all the conditions of Lemma 3.1 are satisfied and hence the operator equation Ax+Bx=x has a solution in S. As a result, FHDE (2.1) has a solution defined on J. This completes the proof. □

4 Fractional hybrid differential inequalities

We discuss a fundamental result relative to strict inequalities for FHDE (2.1).

Lemma 4.1 [17]

Let m: R + R be locally Hölder continuous such that for any t 1 (0,+), we have

m( t 1 )=0andm(t)0 for t 0 t t 1 .
(4.1)

Then it follows that

D q m( t 1 )0.
(4.2)

Theorem 4.1 Assume that hypothesis (A0) holds. Suppose that there exist functions y,z:JR that are locally Hölder continuous such that

D q [ y ( t ) f ( t , y ( t ) ) ] g ( t , y ( t ) ) ,tJ,
(4.3)

and

D q [ z ( t ) f ( t , z ( t ) ) ] g ( t , z ( t ) ) ,tJ,
(4.4)

one of the inequalities being strict. Then

y( t 0 )<z( t 0 )
(4.5)

implies

y(t)<z(t)
(4.6)

for all tJ.

Proof Suppose that inequality (4.4) is strict. Assume that the claim is false. Then there exists a t 1 J, t 1 >0, such that y( t 1 )=z( t 1 ) and y(t)<z(t) for t 0 t< t 1 .

Define

Y(t)=y(t)f ( t , y ( t ) ) andZ(t)=z(t)f ( t , z ( t ) ) .

Then we have Y( t 1 )=Z( t 1 ) and by virtue of hypothesis (A0), we get Y(t)<Z(t) for all t 0 t< t 1 . Setting m(t)=Y(t)Z(t), t 0 t t 1 , we find that m(t)0, t 0 t t 1 and m( t 1 )=0. Then by Lemma 4.1, we have D q m( t 1 )0. By (4.3) and (4.4), we obtain

g ( t 1 , y ( t 1 ) ) D q Y( t 1 ) D q Z( t 1 )>g ( t 1 , z ( t 1 ) ) .

This is a contradiction to y( t 1 )=z( t 1 ). Hence, the conclusion (4.6) is valid and the proof is complete. □

The next result is concerned with nonstrict fractional differential inequalities which require a kind of one-sided φ-Lipshitz condition.

Theorem 4.2 Assume that the conditions of Theorem 4.1 hold. Suppose that there exists a real number M>0 such that

g(t, x 1 )g(t, x 2 ) M 1 + t q ( x 1 f ( t , x 1 ) ) ( x 2 f ( t , x 2 ) ) ,tJ,
(4.7)

for all x 1 , x 2 R with x 1 x 2 . Then y(0)z(0) implies, provided M a q 1 Γ ( 1 q ) ,

y(t)z(t)
(4.8)

for all tJ.

Proof

We set

z ε (t)f ( t , z ε ( t ) ) =z(t)f ( t , z ( t ) ) +ε ( 1 + t q )

for small ε>0, so that we have

z ε (t)f ( t , z ε ( t ) ) >z(t)f ( t , z ( t ) ) z ε (t)>z(t).
(4.9)

Define Z ε (t)= z ε (t)f(t, z ε (t)) and Z(t)=z(t)f(t,z(t)) for tJ. Since

g ( t , z ε ( t ) ) g ( t , z ( t ) ) M 1 + t q ( ( z ε ( t ) f ( t , z ε ( t ) ) ) ( z ( t ) f ( t , z ( t ) ) ) )

for all tJ and M a q 1 Γ ( 1 q ) , one has

D q Z ε ( t ) = D q Z ( t ) + ε D q ( 1 + t q ) g ( t , z ( t ) ) + ε ( 1 t q Γ ( 1 q ) + Γ ( 1 + q ) ) g ( t , z ε ( t ) ) M ε + ε 1 t q Γ ( 1 q ) + ε Γ ( 1 + q ) > g ( t , z ε ( t ) ) .

Also, we have z ε (0)>z(0)y(0). Hence, by an application of Theorem 4.1 with z= z ε yields that y(t)< z ε (t) for all tJ. By the arbitrariness of ε>0, taking the limits as ε0, we have y(t)z(t) for all tJ. This completes the proof. □

Remark 4.1 Let f(t,x)0 and g(t,x)=x. We can easily verify that f and g satisfy the condition (4.7).

5 Existence of maximal and minimal solutions

In this section, we prove the existence of maximal and minimal solutions for FHDE (2.1) on J=[ t 0 , t 0 +a]. We need the following definition in what follows.

Definition 5.1 A solution r of FHDE (2.1) is said to be maximal if for any other solution x to FHDE (2.1), one has x(t)r(t) for all tJ. Similarly, a solution ρ of FHDE (2.1) is said to be minimal if ρ(t)x(t) for all tJ, where x is any solution of FHDE (2.1) on J.

We discuss the case of a maximal solution only, as the case of a minimal solution is similar and can be obtained with the same arguments with appropriate modifications. Given an arbitrary small real number ε>0, consider the following initial value problem of FHDE of order 0<q<1,

{ D q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] = g ( t , x ( t ) ) + ε , a.e.  t J , x ( t 0 ) = x 0 + ε ,
(5.1)

where f,gC(J×R,R).

An existence theorem for FHDE (5.1) can be stated as follows.

Theorem 5.1 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Then, for every small number ε>0, FHDE (5.1) has a solution defined on J.

Proof The proof is similar to Theorem 3.1 and we omit the details. □

Our main existence theorem for a maximal solution for FHDE (2.1) is as follows.

Theorem 5.2 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Then FHDE (2.1) has a maximal solution defined on J.

Proof Let { ε n } 0 be a decreasing sequence of positive real numbers such that lim n ε n =0. By Theorem 5.1, then there exists a solution r(t, ε n ) of the FHDE defined on J

{ D q [ x ( t ) f ( t , x ( t ) ) ] = g ( t , x ( t ) ) + ε n , t J , x ( t 0 ) = x 0 + ε n .
(5.2)

Then, for any solution u of FHDE (2.1), any solution of auxiliary problem (5.2) satisfies

D q [ r ( t , ε n ) f ( t , r ( t , ε n ) ) ] =g ( t , r ( t , ε n ) ) + ε n >g ( t , r ( t , ε n ) ) ,

where u( t 0 )= x 0 x 0 + ε n =r( t 0 , ε n ). By Theorem 4.2, we infer that

u(t)r(t, ε n )
(5.3)

for all tJ and nN{0}.

Since x 0 + ε 2 =r( t 0 , ε 2 )r( t 0 , ε 1 )= x 0 + ε 1 , then by Theorem 4.2, we infer that r(t, ε 2 )r(t, ε 1 ). Therefore, r(t, ε n ) is a decreasing sequence of positive real numbers, the limit

r(t)= lim n r(t, ε n )
(5.4)

exists. We show that the convergence in (5.4) is uniform on J. To finish, it is enough to prove that the sequence r(t, ε n ) is equicontinuous in C(J,R). Let t 1 , t 2 J with t 1 < t 2 be arbitrary. Then

| r ( t 1 , ε n ) r ( t 2 , ε n ) | = | ( f ( t 1 , r ( t 1 , ε n ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 1 ( t 1 s ) q 1 ( g ( s , r ( s , ε n ) ) + ε n ) d s ) ( f ( t 2 , r ( t 2 , ε n ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t 2 ( t 2 s ) q 1 ( g ( s , r ( s , ε n ) ) + ε n ) d s ) | | f ( t 1 , r ( t 1 , ε n ) ) f ( t 2 , r ( t 2 , ε n ) ) | + 1 Γ ( q ) t 1 t 2 ε n d s + 1 Γ ( q ) | t 0 t 1 ( ( t 1 s ) q 1 ( t 2 s ) q 1 ) g ( s , r ( s , ε n ) ) d s | + 1 Γ ( q ) | t 1 t 2 ( t 2 s ) q 1 g ( s , r ( s , ε n ) ) d s | | f ( t 1 , r ( t 1 , ε n ) ) f ( t 2 , r ( t 2 , ε n ) ) | + ε n Γ ( q ) ( t 2 t 1 ) + h L 1 Γ ( q + 1 ) [ ( t 2 t 0 ) q ( t 1 t 0 ) q ] + ( t 2 t 1 ) q .

Since f is continuous on a compact set J×[N,N], it is uniformly continuous there. Hence,

| f ( t 1 , r ( t 1 , ε n ) ) f ( t 2 , r ( t 2 , ε n ) ) | 0as  t 1 t 2

uniformly for all nN.

Therefore, from the above inequality, it follows that

| r ( t 1 , ε n ) r ( t 2 , ε n ) | 0as  t 1 t 2

uniformly for all nN. Therefore,

r(t, ε n )r(t)as n

for all tJ.

Next, we show that the function r(t) is a solution of FHDE (2.1) defined on J. Now, since r(t, ε n ) is a solution of FHDE (5.2), we have

r(t, ε n )= x 0 + ε n +f ( t , r ( t , ε n ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 ( g ( s , r ( s , ε n ) ) + ε n ) ds
(5.5)

for all tJ. Taking the limit as n in above Eq. (5.5) yields

r(t)=f ( t , r ( t ) ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , r ( s ) ) ds

for all tJ. Thus, the function r is a solution of FHDE (2.1) on J. Finally, from inequality (5.3), it follows that u(t)r(t) for all tJ. Hence, FHDE (2.1) has a maximal solution on J. This completes the proof. □

6 Comparison theorems

The main problem of differential inequalities is to estimate a bound for the solution set for the differential inequality related to FHDE (2.1). In this section, we prove that the maximal and minimal solutions serve as bounds for the solutions of the related differential inequality to FHDE (2.1) on J=[ t 0 , t 0 +a].

Theorem 6.1 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Suppose that there exists a real number M>0 such that

g(t, x 1 )g(t, x 2 ) M 1 + t q [ ( x 1 f ( t , x 1 ) ) ( x 2 f ( t , x 2 ) ) ] ,tJ,

for all x 1 , x 2 R with x 1 x 2 , where M a q 1 Γ ( 1 q ) . Furthermore, if there exists a function uC(J,R) such that

{ D q [ u ( t ) f ( t , u ( t ) ) ] g ( t , u ( t ) ) , a.e. t J , u ( t 0 ) x 0 .
(6.1)

Then

u(t)r(t)
(6.2)

for all tJ, where r is a maximal solution of FHDE (2.1) on J.

Proof Let ε>0 be arbitrary small. By Theorem 5.2, r(t,ε) is a maximal solution of FHDE (5.1) and the limit

r(t)= lim ε 0 r(t,ε)
(6.3)

is uniform on J and the function r is a maximal solution of FHDE (2.1) on J. Hence, we obtain

{ D q [ r ( t , ε ) f ( t , r ( t , ε ) ) ] = g ( t , r ( t , ε ) ) + ε , t J , r ( t 0 , ε ) = x 0 + ε .

From the above inequality, it follows that

{ D q [ r ( t , ε ) f ( t , r ( t , ε ) ) ] > g ( t , r ( t , ε ) ) , a.e.  t J , r ( t 0 , ε ) > x 0 .
(6.4)

Now, we apply Theorem 4.2 to inequalities (6.1) and (6.4) and conclude that u(t)<r(t,ε) for all tJ. This further, in view of limit (6.3), implies that inequality (6.2) holds on J. This completes the proof. □

Theorem 6.2 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Suppose that there exists a real number M>0 such that

g(t, x 1 )g(t, x 2 ) M 1 + t q [ ( x 1 f ( t , x 1 ) ) ( x 2 f ( t , x 2 ) ) ] ,tJ,

for all x 1 , x 2 R with x 1 x 2 , where M T q 1 Γ ( 1 q ) . Furthermore, if there exists a function uC(J,R) such that

{ D q [ v ( t ) f ( t , v ( t ) ) ] g ( t , v ( t ) ) , a.e. t J , v ( t 0 ) > x 0 .

Then

ρ(t)v(t)

for all tJ, where ρ is a minimal solution of FHDE (2.1) on J.

Note that Theorem 6.1 is useful to prove the boundedness and uniqueness of the solutions for FHDE (2.1) on J. A result in this direction is as follows.

Theorem 6.3 Assume that hypotheses (A0)-(A2) hold. Suppose that there exists a function G:J× R + R + such that

| g ( t , x 1 ) g ( t , x 2 ) | G ( t , | ( x 1 ( s ) f ( t , x 1 ( s ) ) ) ( x 2 ( s ) f ( t , x 2 ( s ) ) ) | ) , a.e. tJ,

for all x 1 , x 2 R. If an identically zero function is the only solution of the differential equation

D q m(t)=G ( t , m ( t ) ) a.e. tJ,m( t 0 )= x 0 ,
(6.5)

then FHDE (2.1) has a unique solution on J.

Proof By Theorem 3.1, FHDE (2.1) has a solution defined on J. Suppose that there are two solutions u 1 and u 2 of FHDE (2.1) existing on J. Define a function m:JR by

m(t)=| ( u 1 ( t ) f ( t , u 1 ( t ) ) ) ( u 2 ( t ) f ( t , u 2 ( t ) ) ) |.

As D α (|x(t)|)| D α x(t)| for tJ, we have

D q m ( t ) = | D q ( u 1 ( t ) f ( t , u 1 ( t ) ) ) D q ( u 2 ( t ) f ( t , u 2 ( t ) ) ) | = | g ( t , u 1 ( t ) ) g ( t , u 2 ( t ) ) | G ( t , ( u 1 f ( t , u 1 ) ) ( u 2 f ( t , u 2 ) ) ) = G ( t , m ( t ) )

for almost everywhere tJ, and m( t 0 )=0.

Now, we apply Theorem 6.1 with f(t,x)0 to get that m(t)0 for all tJ. This gives

u 1 f(t, u 1 )=( u 2 f(t, u 2 )

for all tJ. Then we can get u 1 = u 2 in view of hypothesis (A0). This completes the proof. □

7 Existence of extremal solutions in a vector segment

Sometimes it is desirable to have knowledge of the existence of extremal positive solutions for FHDE (2.1) on J. In this section, we prove the existence of maximal and minimal positive solutions for FHDE (2.1) between the given upper and lower solutions on J=[ t 0 , t 0 +a]. We use a hybrid fixed point theorem of Dhage [26] in ordered Banach spaces for establishing our results. We need the following preliminaries in what follows.

A nonempty closed set K in a Banach algebra X is called a cone with vertex 0 if

  1. (i)

    K+KK,

  2. (ii)

    λKK for λR, λ0,

  3. (iii)

    (K)K=0, where 0 is the zero element of X,

  4. (iv)

    A cone K is called positive if KKK, where is a multiplication composition in X.

We introduce an order relation ‘≤’ in X as follows. Let x,yX. Then xy if and only if yxK. A cone K is called normal if the norm is semi-monotone increasing on K, that is, there is a constant N>0 such that xNy for all x,yK with xy. It is known that if the cone K is normal in X, then every order-bounded set in X is norm-bounded. The details of cones and their properties appear in Heikkilä and Lakshmikantham [31].

Lemma 7.1 [26]

Let K be a positive cone in a real Banach algebra X and let u 1 , u 2 , v 1 , v 2 K be such that u 1 v 1 and u 2 v 2 . Then u 1 u 2 v 1 v 2 .

For any a,bX, the order interval [a,b] is a set in X given by

[a,b]={xX:axb}.

Definition 7.1 A mapping T:[a,b]X is said to be nondecreasing or monotone increasing if xy implies TxTy for all x,y[a,b].

We use the following fixed point theorems of Dhage [27] for proving the existence of extremal solutions for IVP (2.1) under certain monotonicity conditions.

Lemma 7.2 [27]

Let K be a cone in a Banach algebra X and let a,bX be such that ab. Suppose that A,B:[a,b]K are two nondecreasing operators such that

  1. (a)

    A is a nonlinear contraction,

  2. (b)

    B is completely continuous,

  3. (c)

    Ax+Bx[a,b] for each x[a,b].

Further, if the cone K is positive and normal, then the operator equation Ax+Bx=x has a least and a greatest positive solution in [a,b].

We equip the space C(J,R) with the order relation ≤ with the help of a cone K defined by

K= { x C ( J , R ) : x ( t ) 0 , t J } .
(7.1)

It is well known that the cone K is positive and normal in C(J,R). We need the following definitions in what follows.

Definition 7.2 A function aC(J,R) is called a lower solution of FHDE (2.1) defined on J if it satisfies (4.3). Similarly, a function aC(J,R) is called an upper solution of FHDE (2.1) defined on J if it satisfies (4.4). A solution to FHDE (2.1) is a lower as well as an upper solution for FHDE (2.1) defined on J and vice versa.

We consider the following set of assumptions:

(B0) f:J×R R + {0}, g:J×R R + .

(B1) FHDE (2.1) has a lower solution a and an upper solution b defined on J with ab.

(B2) The function xxf(t,x) is increasing in the interval [ min t J a(t), max t J b(t)] almost everywhere for tJ.

(B3) The functions f(t,x) and g(t,x) are nondecreasing in x almost everywhere for tJ.

(B4) There exists a function k L 1 (J,R) such that g(t,b(t))k(t).

We remark that hypothesis (B4) holds in particular if f is continuous and g is L 1 -Carathéodory on J×R.

Theorem 7.1 Suppose that assumptions (A1) and (B0)-(B4) hold. Then FHDE (2.1) has a minimal and a maximal positive solution defined on J.

Proof Now, FHDE (2.1) is equivalent to integral equation (3.5) defined on J. Let X=C(J,R). Define two operators A and B on X by (3.6) and (3.7) respectively. Then the integral equation (3.5) is transformed into an operator equation Ax(t)+Bx(t)=x(t) in the Banach algebra X. Notice that hypothesis (B0) implies A,B:[a,b]K. Since the cone K in X is normal, [a,b] is a norm bounded set in X. Now it is shown, as in the proof of Theorem 3.1, that A is a Lipschitzian with the Lipschitz constant L and B is a completely continuous operator on [a,b]. Again, hypothesis (B3) implies that A and B are nondecreasing on [a,b]. To see this, let x,y[a,b] be such that xy. Then, by hypothesis (B3),

Ax(t)=f ( t , x ( t ) ) f ( t , y ( t ) ) =Ay(t)

for all tJ. Similarly, we have

B x ( t ) = x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + 1 Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , y ( s ) ) d s = B y ( t )

for all tJ. So, A and B are nondecreasing operators on [a,b]. Lemma 7.1 and hypothesis (B3) together imply that

a ( t ) x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + f ( a , a ( t ) ) f ( t , a ( t ) ) Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + f ( t , x ( t ) ) + f ( t , x ( t ) ) Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s x 0 f ( t 0 , x 0 ) + f ( t , b ( t ) ) + f ( t , b ( t ) ) Γ ( q ) t 0 t ( t s ) q 1 g ( s , x ( s ) ) d s b ( t )

for all tJ and x[a,b]. As a result, a(t)Ax(t)+Bx(t)b(t) for all tJ and x[a,b]. Hence, Ax+Bx[a,b] for all x[a,b].

Now, we apply Lemma 7.2 to the operator equation AxBx=x to yield that FHDE (2.1) has a minimal and a maximal positive solution in [a,b] defined on J. This completes the proof. □

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Acknowledgements

Dedicated to Professor Hari M Srivastava.

This research is supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (11071143, 60904024, 61174217), Natural Science Outstanding Youth Foundation of Shandong Province (JQ201119) and supported by Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (ZR2012AM009, ZR2010AL002, ZR2011AL007), also supported by Natural Science Foundation of Educational Department of Shandong Province (J11LA01).

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Lu, H., Sun, S., Yang, D. et al. Theory of fractional hybrid differential equations with linear perturbations of second type. Bound Value Probl 2013, 23 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-2770-2013-23

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