1. Introduction
The geometric theory of Banach spaces is an important research direction of a nonlinear functional analysis and has been widely applied in many fields of modern mathematics, such as differential equations, economics, optimization, game theory, fixed point theory, dynamic system theory, and so on. In particular, Kirk proved that the Banach space with normal structure has a fixed point property. Since then, research on the existence of fixed points for nonlinear differential equations by using the geometric properties of Banach spaces has rapidly developed. In recent years, many scholars have introduced geometrical constants that could easily describe the geometry properties of Banach spaces (see [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8]).
Let
X be a Banach space with a norm
. The unit sphere of
X is denoted by
and the unit ball of
X is denoted by
. The constant
, which is defined by Gao in [
9], is as follows:
The Gao constant
, which plays an important role in [
10], was intensively studied by some scholars, in which the famous Tingley problem [
11] was partially solved. They gave specific descriptions of the geometric properties, such as uniformly non-square and the normal structure in the context of the fixed point property (see [
12,
13,
14,
15,
16]). Now, let us collect some properties of constant
as follows:
- (i)
Let X be a Banach space, then .
- (ii)
X is uniformly non-square if and only if .
- (iii)
X is an inner product space if and only if .
It is easy to see that the calculation of the constant
for some concrete spaces is important. Sequences on the Gao constant
for various spaces were presented, for example, Gao calculated the constant
of the spaces
(see [
9]), Cui and Wang computed the value of
for the Lorentz sequence space using the absolute normalized norms (see [
17]), Zuo and Cui used the formula to calculate the constant
by the modulus of smoothness
; however, they did not find the exact values of
. It is hard to compute the values of
in some concrete Banach spaces (see [
13]).
Motivated by the constant
from [
18], i.e.,
Asif et al. [
16] considered the following Gao-type constant:
where
is a constant. It is obvious that the Gao-type constant is a generalization of the constant
(in fact,
). Therefore, the Gao-type constant
is more important than the Gao constant
, which plays a significant role in the geometry theory of Banach spaces. The exact values of
have been calculated for some classical spaces, such as the space
, the Lorentz sequence space, the Cesàro space, etc. Naturally, the studies on the values of the Gao-type constant
for these spaces are important. In [
16], Asif et al. only obtained
for any Banach space
X and
, However, some problems in the existing literature need solving; for instance, how does one compute the values of the constant
for the absolute normalized norms of some concrete Banach spaces? Can it be used to characterize the inner product space for the value of the Gao-type constant
? The main purpose of this paper is to solve the above problems.
2. Preliminaries and Notations
First, we define the general mean and provide an example of the weighted mean of order s.
Definition 1. Let be real numbers, such that . Then, any number is called a mean of x and y if it satisfies One of the most known means is the weighted mean of the order s, which is defined as where are positive real numbers and .
A norm on
is called absolute, if for all
, it satisfies
A norm
is called normalized if
The set of all absolute normalized norms on
is denoted by
. Let
denote the set of all convex functions on
with
, satisfying
Proposition 1 ([
19]).
If , then . Moreover, if , thenis a norm . The typical example is the
norm as follows:
The corresponding convex function
is defined as
It is well known that for any . Moreover, by taking different convex functions , Proposition 1 also enables us to obtain many non- norms. The following lemma will help us utilize our results.
Lemma 1 ([
20]).
Let and be functions of with for all . If attains the maximum at and the function attains the minimum at , then the function attains its maximum at . 3. Main Results
Firstly, we will obtain some equivalent definitions of the Gao-type constant
from Proposition 4.3 in [
21].
Proposition 3. Let X be a nontrivial Banach space, thenwhere is the set of all two-dimensional subspaces of X. Proof. Secondly, for any
, there exist
and
in
, such that
Let
, then
thus, we obtain
Since
is arbitrary, we have
The proof is completed. □
Theorem 1. Let and be two norms, such thatwhere α and β are constants with , then Moreover, if , where is a constant, then
Proof. Similarly, we can obtain the following inequality:
The proof is completed. □
Theorem 2. Let and for all . Suppose that attains its maximum at and , then Proof. From the condition of
and the definition of
, one has
By taking
and
in Theorem 1, we obtain the following inequality:
Since the function
attains its maximum at
, i.e.,
, and note that
, then
Let us put
and
, then
From (
1) and (
2), we obtain
□
Theorem 3. Let and () for all , then Proof. Let
. By the condition that
(
) for all
and the Clarkson inequality in [
22], we have
The definition of
implies that
On the other hand, note that
attains its maximum
. Let us put
and
, then
From inequalities (3) and (4), we infer that
We complete the proof. □
Theorem 4. Let and for all . Suppose that attains its maximum at and , then Proof. From the condition that
and the definition of
, we can obtain
Taking
and
in Theorem 1, we have
Since
and
, then
On the other hand, let us put
and
, then
By the inequalities (
5) and (
6), we can obtain that
We end the proof. □
Theorem 5. Let and (), if the maximum attains at , then Proof. Let
, from the condition of
(
) for all
, and the Clarkson inequality in [
22], we have
which implies that
On the other hand, since
, let us put
and
, then
From inequalities (7) and (8), we infer that
We obtain the desired result. □
In the following, let us state the conclusion about the general mean .
Corollary 1. Let for all , is the mean convex function of the functions and .
- (i)
If
attains its maximum at
and
, then
- (ii)
If
attains its maximum at
and
, then
Proof. It is well known that
for all
. It is easy to check that
. Since the function
is convex, we can obtain the result from Theorem 2 and Theorem 4, respectively. □
Next, we give the lower bound and upper bound of the constant for the general case .
Theorem 6. Let for , .
Proof. (i) If
, it is easy to obtain the right inequality from (
4), then
Let
. By the definition of
,
, and the Clarkson inequality, we have
The inequality implies that
(ii) Let
. The right inequality is obvious from inequality (
8), then
Let
. From the Clarkson inequality, we can obtain
The definition of
implies that the left inequality is as follows:
We complete the proof. □
From Theorem 3 and Theorem 5, the Gao-type constant coincides with the upper bound. In the following, we only give some conditions under which the Gao constant coincides with the lower bound.
Theorem 7. Let for all . If there exist two points , such thatthen Proof. Firstly, take
and
in Theorem 1. Since
, then
Secondly, note that
. Put
,
, then
From the conditions that
and
, we have
It is well known that
then
Consequently, we obtain
From inequalities (9) and (10), we infer that
Thus, the claim holds. □
4. Some Examples
In this section, we compute the values of the Gao-type constant on some specific spaces. We give the exact value of the Gao-type constant under the absolute normalized norms in , and provide examples to show that the value of the Gao-type constant cannot characterize the inner product space in a general case.
Example 1. For the usual space, then In particular, .
Proof. Let
and
. From the Clarkson inequality, we have
which means that
Let us put
and
, then
From inequalities (11) and (12), we can obtain
Let
and
. From the Clarkson inequality, we obtain
then
Taking
,
, then
The definition of
from (13) and (14) implies that
Since
, it is well known that
attains the maximum at
, then
It is well known that
and
- (i)
Let , , then and .
- (ii)
Let , , then and .
Therefore, by Theorem 5, we have . □
Remark 1. - (i)
Since the Gao-type constant has two-dimensional characters and the concept of an absolute normalized norm concerns spaces with bases, we can first consider the examples as norms in , from Proposition 3 and Example 1, we have This method can be helpful for us to deal with the values of for the general spaces X.
- (ii)
Since for any ; therefore, the exact value of the Gao-type constant cannot characterize the inner product space in a general case.
Example 2. Let be the space with the normwhere and , then Proof. Firstly, the norm
, the corresponding function is
In fact, since
is symmetric with respect to
, we can only consider the function
on the interval
. Let
be a point such that
, then
- (i)
Let
, since
and the function
attains the maximum at
. By Theorem 3, we obtain
- (ii)
Let
. Since for any
,
and
, then
, and the function
also attains the maximum at
. By Theorem 5, we obtain
This completes the process. □
Example 3. Let , and be constants. The Banach space and its corresponding norm is Therefore, the corresponding function is defined bythen Proof. Since
is the weighted mean of order
k of the functions
and
, then
- (i)
If
, then by the simple calculations,
and the function
attains the maximum at
. Take
and
in Corollary 1 (i), then
- (ii)
If
, then
and the function
attains its maximum at
. Similarly, take
and
in Corollary 1 (ii), then
We obtain the desired result. □
Remark 2. - (i)
In fact, take , or , in Example 2, the Gao constant was calculated in [17,23,24]. Now, Example 2 calculates the values of the constant for the general case and . - (ii)
In fact, the concrete Banach space in Example 3 was studied in some papers (see [24,25,26]. However, the exact value of for the general case remains undiscovered. Example 3 gives the value of the constant for the general case , and .
From Examples 1, 2, 3, the maximum value is always attained at . However, we give some examples to show that does not attain at .
Example 4. Let and the function be defined bythen Proof. It is obvious that
, and the norm of
is
Since
, then from Theorem 3, it follows that
This proof is completed. □
Example 5. If and be two-dimensional Cesàro space, thenwhere Proof. Firstly, we define a norm
for all
. Obviously,
is the absolute and normalized norm space, the corresponding convex function is as
It has been proved that
is isometrically isomorphic to
. Note that
Consequently,
(
). By using Theorem 3, we obtain
The proof is completed. □
Remark 3. - (i)
In particular, take in Example 4, some classical constants were calculated in [15,20]. Now, we obtain Moreover, Example 4 gives the exact value of the Gao-type constant for the general case .
- (ii)
In Example 5, the function attains the maximum at if and only if for the Cesàro space .
Example 6. The Lorentz sequence space is with the norm:where and , is the rearrangement of satisfying , then Proof. The norm
is absolute and normalized on
, and the corresponding convex function is as
Since
, it is obvious that
. We can only consider
for
, in which the function is symmetric with respect to
. For any
, let
, then
therefore,
for
, and the function
attains its maximum at
. By Theorem 5, then
We gain the conclusion. □
Example 7. Let and be the space with the norm:then Proof. Firstly, the norm
is absolute and normalized on
, and the corresponding convex function is
It is obvious that
, and we can consider
for
. The function
attains the maximum at
and
attains its minimum at
. By Lemma 1, we obtain that function
attains the maximum at
; hence, it follows immediately from Theorem 5 that
We complete the proof. □
We can discuss something similar, such as in Example 7, and obtain Example 8 as follows.
Example 8. Let () be the space endowed with the norm: thenin which the corresponding convex function has the form: Remark 4. - (i)
Taking and in Example 6, we obtain the Lorentz sequence space , which were studied in [20,23,27], and the exact value of Gao’s constant was given in [17]. Now, we obtain the exact value of the Gao-type constant for the general case and in Example 6. - (ii)
The Banach spaces and were studied widely in [24,28], where some classical constants were calculated. Now, the values of are calculated for the general Banach spaces , in Examples 7 and 8 by Theorem 5.
Finally, we present a practical example that satisfies the conditions of Theorem 7; thus, the exact value of Gao’s constant coincides with the lower bound .
Example 9. Let . The corresponding convex function is given bythen Proof. It is easy to check that
and
for all
. If
, simple calculations show that
where
,
satisfy the condition
in Theorem 7. Then we have
Therefore, we finish the proof. □
5. Conclusions
In this paper, we present a general method to calculate the Gao-type constant for some Banach spaces with the absolute normalized norms, which can help us compute the values of the Gao-type constant on some new specific spaces. Furthermore, we also present an example to show that the value of the Gao-type constant cannot characterize the inner product space in a general case. However, some problems remain unsolved, i.e., the precise lower bound and upper bound of the constant for the general case . The values of the Gao-type constant on some specific spaces are not yet known, such as the Banach space in the case of , the Lorentz sequence space for the case , etc. We will investigate these questions in the future.
Author Contributions
Z.Z. designed the research and wrote the paper. Y.H. and H.H. conducted the draft preparation and methodology. J.W. co-wrote and revised the paper. Z.Z. provided support with the funding acquisition. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
The work was sponsored by the Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing (CSTB2022NSCQ-MSX0290, cstc2020jcyj-msxmX0762), the Scientific and Technological Research Program of Chongqing Municipal Education Commission (grant no. KJZD-M202001201), China. The research was partially supported by the Talent Initial Funding for Scientific Research of Chongqing Three Gorges University (20190020).
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
The data presented in this study are available upon request from the corresponding author.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the editor and the reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions, which improved greatly the quality of this paper.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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