1. Introduction
Boundary value problems with conditions on submanifolds of arbitrary dimension were introduced by Sobolev [
1] for polyharmonic equations. Such problems arise in mechanics when studying oscillations of bars and plates with hinged fastening. For arbitrary pseudodifferential operators, the theory of boundary value problems with conditions on submanifolds of arbitrary dimensions was developed by Sternin and his co-authors (see [
2,
3,
4,
5]). Such problems are stated in terms of boundary operators (restriction to submanifold) and dual coboundary operators. In local coordinates, the coboundary operator takes functions on a submanifold to distributions on the ambient manifold obtained by multiplying by the Dirac
-function in the directions normal to the submanifold. Unlike classical boundary value problems, the number of boundary conditions in Sobolev problems depends on the smoothness exponent of the Sobolev space, in which the problem is considered.
Similar problems arise for the Schrödinger equation with the potential containing
-functions supported on some submanifolds (see [
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14]). From the spectral theory point of view, in such problems, one has to describe self-adjoint extensions of second-order operators with domains consisting of functions vanishing at a submanifold. The domains of self-adjoint extensions in these problems are effectively described in terms of coboundary operators (see [
15,
16]).
Although self-adjoint extensions for second-order operators are considered in many papers, operators of arbitrary order have been studied much less. In [
17,
18], results on the completeness of eigenfunctions and asymptotics of the counting function of eigenvalues for some self-adjoint Sobolev problems are stated without proof for elliptic differential operators of arbitrary order. Our aim in this work is to study one particular self-adjoint extension, namely, the Friedrichs extension [
19], for operators or arbitrary order with conditions on submanifolds of arbitrary dimensions. We note that the Friedrichs extension is a canonical extension for semibounded operators, and it is one of the most studied extensions for differential operators in geometry (e.g., see [
20,
21]) with numerous applications (e.g., see [
22]).
On a compact, smooth, closed manifold, we consider an elliptic symmetric nonnegative operator with the domain consisting of functions vanishing to a certain order on a given submanifold. For this operator, a self-adjoint Friedrichs extension is defined, and the main result of the work is an explicit description of the Friedrichs extension. It turns out that this extension is a Sobolev problem, i.e., it contains boundary and coboundary operators. We show that the spectrum of the Friedrichs extension, in this case, is discrete and study the smoothness of the eigenfunctions. Note that our results agree with the model case considered in [
23] of the biharmonic operator on the 3-torus, with the domain consisting of functions vanishing on a circle. We expect our results to have applications in hyperbolic problems (e.g., wave equation for the biharmonic operator with conditions on a submanifold) and spectral invariants and asymptotics for pairs (manifold, submanifold).
The author is grateful to the referees for their useful remarks.
2. Sobolev–Dirichlet Operators
Let us recall basic definitions from relative elliptic theory; see [
2,
3,
4,
5].
Consider the pair of closed smooth manifolds with the codimension of the submanifold X denoted by and the embedding denoted by i.
Denote by the normal bundle of X and by its dual. We suppose in this paper that the normal bundle is trivial and denote as some normal coordinate system in a neighborhood of X such that X is defined by the equations . As local coordinates on M in a neighborhood of , we use , where stand for local coordinates on X.
Given integer
, the
Sobolev–Dirichlet boundary operator is defined as
and it takes functions on the ambient manifold to the restriction on
X of their jets in the normal variables. Here,
is a multiindex,
, while
stands for the dimension of the space of homogeneous symmetric polynomials of degree
in
variables. Finally,
stands for Sobolev spaces with smoothness exponent
s on the corresponding manifolds. The operator (
1) is well-defined and bounded provided that
.
Sobolev–Dirichlet coboundary operator
is defined by duality. Namely, the operators (
1) and (
2) are duals of each other
with respect to the pairing
of smooth functions and distributions. In the special case, when
and
, the operator (
2) is equal to
The following proposition is a generalization of Theorems 3.2.4 and 4.3.1 from [
24] (cf. [
25] Theorem 2.3.5) for Sobolev spaces on manifolds.
Proposition 1. - 1.
The boundary operator (1) is surjective. Moreover, it has a continuous right inverse operator, which is independent of s. - 2.
The coboundary operator (2) is injective. Moreover, it has a left inverse operator, which is independent of s. - 3.
The range of the coboundary operator (2) for is equal to the subspace of distributions in with support in . Here, is the maximal integer, which is less than x.
The proof repeats the proof from the cited monograph, and we omit it here.
3. Sobolev–Dirichlet Problem
We fix a volume form on M and consider the corresponding Hilbert space .
Let be an elliptic symmetric positive definite pseudodifferential operator of order on M. Below, we also consider the standard action of A on distributions and denote this action by .
We consider
A as an unbounded operator on
with the dense domain
Our aim in this paper is to describe the Friedrichs extension of this operator. To this end, we first describe the adjoint operator and its domain .
Theorem 1. One haswhere for , we have for all , while for , we have Proof. 1. Consider the case when
. Given
, we have
where
denotes the inner product in
. Since
A is symmetric by assumption, we obtain
where
, as above, denotes the pairing of smooth functions and distributions, while
Hence, (
4) implies that the difference
is a distribution supported on
X. It follows from Proposition 1 above that such distributions are equal to zero, whenever
. Hence, we obtain the desired equality
and also
. Thus, we proved that
and
on this domain. Let us prove the converse inclusion
. Indeed, given
, we have
where we first expressed the inner product as the pairing with the corresponding distributions, then used the definition of action of pseudodifferential operators on distributions, and in the last equality, noted that
and expressed the pairing in terms of the inner product in
. Now, (
5) gives the desired facts:
and
. This gives the proof of Theorem 1 in the special case
.
2. Now suppose that
. Let
. Similar to the previous case, we conclude that the difference
is a distribution supported on
X. Then Proposition 1 implies that this difference is in the range of some coboundary operator
where
is a distribution on
X. Substituting this in Equation (
4), we obtain
Since
is surjective and
for all
, it follows that
in (
6) is zero whenever
. Hence
This shows that
u lies in the desired subspace (see (
3))
It remains to prove the inclusions
. Clearly, one has
and
for all
. Let us now show that
and this subspace is in the kernel of
. Indeed, given
, we conclude that
for some
Note also that
. We have to show that
and
. By the definition of the adjoint operator, this is equivalent to proving the equality
Indeed, we have
Here we used duality between boundary and coboundary operators and the fact that
A is symmetric. Hence, we obtain (
7).
The proof of Theorem 1 is now complete. □
Denote by
the Friedrichs extension of
A. Recall that (e.g., see [
26,
27,
28])
where
is the completion of
with respect to the norm
Since
A is elliptic and positive definite, the norm
is equivalent to the norm in
.
Proof. Let us describe the space
in (
8).
Proof. 1. Consider the case
. To prove (
10), it suffices (cf. [
24] Theorem 5.1.14) to show that
is dense in
with respect to the norm in
. By locality, it suffices to prove this statement in the special case
,
, where
is the
k-dimensional torus.
First, for all
, we construct smooth functions
with the properties
We define the desired function as a Fourier series
We set
(hence, condition
will be satisfied automatically) and define
,
, as
Note that the series
is divergent, while the sums over
enjoy the estimate
Here and below
C denotes some constants, while
denotes binomial coefficients. These two facts imply that there exists
such that
Using this choice of
, we obtain the estimates
and if we take
small enough, then the last expression will be
. Thus, we constructed function
with properties (
11).
Let us now take
and set
. Then, we have
, and we can estimate the norm of the difference
as follows
Estimate (
12) implies that
is dense with respect to the
-norm whenever
.
2. Let now
. To prove (
10), it suffices to show that
is dense with respect to the
-norm. Indeed, if
, then there exists a sequence
with the properties
Let
denote the right inverse operator to operator
in Proposition 1 (i.e.,
).
Consider the sequence
Then
, since
. We have the following estimates
This and Equation (
13) give the desired statement
in
as
.
The proof of Lemma 1 is now complete. □
Theorem 1 and Lemma 1 (see Equations (
3), (
8), (
10)) give the desired Equation (
9). Indeed, we have
- (1)
if , then we have ;
- (2)
if
, then we have
where
, since nonzero distributions in
are not in
(hence, also not in its subset
);
- (3)
if
, we have
where we have
by Proposition 1.
This gives the desired Equation (
9) and completes the proof of Theorem 2. □
Remark 1. The statement of Theorem 2 remains true if instead of positive definiteness of A we require that A is only semibounded from below. In this case, one has to replace by an arbitrary pseudodifferential parametrix , , of such that is of order . We claim that the domain of the Friedrichs extension does not depend on the choice of such parametrix. Indeed, we have , where is a pseudodifferential operator of order . This implies . Hence, we obtainThis equality implies the desired independence of of the choice of parametrix. Remark 2. We note that the above results can be generalized to the case of Sobolev–Dirichlet problems with jets of order on the submanifold. More precisely, consider the operator A as above with the domainThen, one can describe the adjoint operator and the Friedrichs extension as followsThe proof of these formulas is similar to the proof of Theorems 1 and 2 above and is omitted. 4. Examples
1. Consider operator
with the domain
. Then, we have
and we use Theorem 2 to describe the domain of the Friedrichs extension of
A:
while
. Here, we used the fact that
modulo smooth functions.
Similar boundary conditions arise when studying oscillations of bars with hinged fastening at .
2. Consider the biharmonic operator
, where
with the domain
. Then, we have
, and we use Theorem 2 to describe the domain of the Friedrichs extension of
A:
while
. This extension was considered in [
23]. We note that the domain of the Friedrichs extension will not change if we perturb
by an operator of order
.
3. Note that the Friedrichs extension of the Laplacian with the domain recovers the Laplacian on distributions with the domain whenever . In the codimension 1 case, the Friedrichs extension is isomorphic to the Dirichlet problem for the Laplacian on the smooth manifold obtained by cutting M along X. This manifold has boundary .
5. Properties of Eigenvalues and Eigenfunctions
Theorem 3. The spectrum of the Friedrichs extension in Theorem 2 is discrete and consists of real eigenvalues with finite multiplicities, which tend to . If is an eigenfunction of with eigenvalue λ, then modulo smooth functions, where stands for a parametrix of elliptic operator modulo smoothing operators. In particular, u is smooth on .
Proof. We consider the case .
1. Let us prove the discreteness of the spectrum. To this end, we compute the inverse operator
. A direct computation shows that the equation
,
,
is equivalent to the system
Then
,
, where
is a pseudodifferential operator of order
on
X (see [
2]). We claim that this operator is elliptic and positive definite. Indeed, its principal symbol is equal to
Here the integral is absolutely convergent since the integrand is
. The integral is a positive function since the integrand enjoys this property for all
. Similarly, one can prove the positive definiteness of the operator
.
Hence, we obtain the following expression for the inverse operator
It follows that the self-adjoint operator
has Sobolev order
. Hence, it is compact as an operator in
. Thus, by the spectral theorem for compact self-adjoint operators
has a discrete spectrum with eigenvalues of finite multiplicities, and the eigenvalues tend to zero. This gives the desired properties for the eigenvalues of
.
2. Note that
is an eigenfunction of
with eigenvalue
if and only if
,
,
. These conditions are equivalent to
where
is the inverse operator on the orthogonal complement of the kernel. Since
is an elliptic operator on
X, all the solutions
w are smooth. Thus, we obtain the desired property:
The proof of Theorem 3 is now complete. □
6. Conclusions
In this paper, we described the Friedrichs extension of elliptic symmetric operators defined on subspaces of functions vanishing on a submanifold of arbitrary dimension and showed that this extension is defined by boundary and coboundary operators. We showed that the spectrum of the Friedrichs extension is discrete and described the singularities of the eigenfunctions on the submanifold. This work paves the way for more detailed studies of spectral properties of such problems (e.g., spectral asymptotics and their relation with the geometry of the submanifold) and corresponding nonstationary problems. Let us also mention that there is an interesting problem of describing extensions of operators with general boundary conditions on the submanifold.