1. Introduction
The fractional derivative introduced by Hilfer in [
1] was recently used in the study of many boundary value problems concerned with fractional derivatives. This fractional derivative generalizes both Riemann–Liouville and Caputo derivatives; in fact, this derivative is an interpolation between Riemann–Liouville and Caputo derivatives. Several properties and applications of the Hilfer fractional derivative may be found in [
2]. Additionally, we recall that the literature is full of explanations and motivations for considering systems defined by fractional order derivatives (e.g., [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7] etc.).
Recently, many papers in the literature have been devoted to the study of fractional differential equations and inclusions defined by the Hilfer fractional derivative (e.g., [
8,
9,
10,
11] etc.). We point out that a complete survey on this field of study may be found in [
8]. Taking into account this new trend in research, our intention is to contribute to the development of this topic by establishing new results for a particular class of problems.
The present note is devoted to the following boundary value problem
where
,
are given set-valued maps,
is the Hilfer fractional derivative of order
and type
,
is the Riemann–Liouville fractional integral of order
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
.
Our study is motivated by two recent papers [
10,
11]. In [
10], problems (
1) and (
2) is studied in the single-valued case; namely, the right-hand side in (
1) is given by single-valued maps. Existence and uniqueness results are provided by using well-known fixed point theorems: Banach, Leray–Schauder and Krasnoselskii. In [
11], a “simple” (not coupled) set-valued problem as in (
1)–(
2) is studied, and existence results are also obtained by applying known set-valued fixed point results as Leray–Schauder and Nadler.
The purpose of our note is twofold. On one hand, we extend the study in [
10] to the set-valued framework, and on the other hand, we generalize the study in [
11] to the coupled case. The approach we present here avoids the applications of fixed point theorems and takes into account the case when the values of
and
are not convex; but these set-valued maps are assumed to be Lipschitz in the second and third variable. In this case, we establish an existence result for problems (
1) and (
2). Our result use Filippov’s technique [
12]; more exactly, the existence of solutions is obtained by starting from a pair of given “quasi”solutions. In addition, the result provides an estimate between the “quasi” solutions and the solutions obtained.
Even if the technique used here may be seen at other classes of coupled systems of fractional differential inclusions [
13,
14,
15], to the best of our knowledge, the present paper is the first in literature which contains an existence result of Filippov type for coupled systems of Hilfer fractional differential inclusions.
2. Preliminaries
We set by I the interval . We denote by the Banach space of all continuous functions endowed with the norm and by the Banach space of all integrable functions endowed with the norm .
The Pompeiu–Hausdorff distance of the closed subsets is defined by , where and .
The fractional integral of order of a Lebesgue integrable function
is defined by
provided the right-hand side is pointwise defined on
and
is the (Euler’s) Gamma function defined by
.
The Riemann–Liouville fractional derivative of order of a Lebesgue integrable function
is defined by
where
, provided the right-hand side is pointwise defined on
.
The Caputo fractional derivative of order of a function
is defined by
where
. It is assumed implicitly that
f is
n times differentiable whose
n-th derivative is absolutely continuous.
The Hilfer fractional derivative of order and type of a function
is defined by
As it was already recalled, this derivative interpolates between Riemann–Liouville and Caputo derivatives. When the Hilfer fractional derivative gives Riemann–Liouville fractional derivative and when the Hilfer fractional derivative gives Caputo fractional derivative .
The next technical result proved in [
10] considers a linear version of problems (
1) and (
2), for which an integral representation of the solution is provided.
Lemma 1. Let , be continuous mappings and , , , , , , , , , .
Then, the solution of the systemwith boundary conditions (2) is given bywhere . Definition 1. The mappings are said to be solutions of problems (1) and (2) if there exists such that , and and are given by (3). In what follows, denotes the characteristic function of the set .
Remark 1. Let us introduce the following notations Then, the solutions in Lemma 1 may be put as Moreover, we have the following estimates: Finally, in the proof of our main result we need the following selection result for set-valued maps (e.g., [
16]). It is, in fact, a variant of the well known selection theorem due to Kuratowski and Ryll-Nardzewski which, briefly, states that a measurable set-valued map with nonempty closed values admits a measurable selection.
Lemma 2. Let Z be a separable Banach space, B its closed unit ball, is a set-valued map whose values are nonempty closed and are two measurable functions. Ifthen the set-valued map admits a measurable selection. 3. Main Result
Our results are proved under the following hypotheses.
Hypothesis 1. (i) and have nonempty closed values and the set-valued maps , are measurable for any .
(ii) There exist such that, for almost all , is -Lipschitz and is -Lipschitz; i.e., In what follows , .
Theorem 1. Assume that , Hypothesis 1 is satisfied and . are considered such that there exist that verify a.e. , a.e. , , and .
Then, there exists a solution of problem (1) and (2) satisfying for all Proof. From the assumptions of the theorem
By Lemma 2, there exist mesurable selections
,
such that
Define
We have the estimates
and so,
In the next part of the proof, we construct, by induction, the sequences
and
,
,
with the following properties
We point out that from (
5) to (
7) it follows
The case
is already proved. Now, we assume (
8) valid for
. For almost all
,
In a similar way, we obtain for almost all
,
Therefore, (
8) is true for
n.
Inequality (
8) shows that the sequences
are Cauchy in the space
. Let
and
be their limits in
. Additionally, from (
7) we deduce that, for almost all
, the sequences
,
are Cauchy in
. We consider
,
their pointwise limit.
At the same time, inequality (
8) and Hypothesis 1 give
and
for almost all
.
This means that the sequences , are integrably bounded and, therefore, their limits belong to .
The next step of the proof contains the construction in (
5)–(
7). By induction, we suppose that for
,
and
,
with (
5) and (
7) for
and (
6) for
are constructed.
Using again Hypothesis 1
for almost all
. By Lemma 2, we obtain the existence of measurable selections
of
and
of
such that
We define
as in (
5) with
.
Finally, it remains to take
in (
5) and (
9) in order to finish the proof. □
Theorem 1 is the first in the literature that contains an existence result of Filippov type for coupled systems of Hilfer fractional differential inclusions. Due to the presence in its statement of the ”quasi” solutions, the formulation of Theorem 1 seems to look complicated. However, for a particular choice of the ”quasi” solutions (namely, ), one may obtain a statement similar to a result that can be derived by using the set-valued contration principle. This may be seen in the following consequence of Theorem 1.
Corollary 1. Assume that , Hypothesis 1 is satisfied, , a.e. and a.e. .
Then, there exists a solution of problems (1) and (2) satisfying for all Proof. We apply Theorem 1 with , and . □
Remark 2. If in (1), and are single-valued maps, Corollary 1 provides a generalization to the set-valued framework of Theorem 1 in [10]. Example 1. Let us consider the problemwith nonlocal integral boundary conditions as in [10]Thus, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and . For all and all we haveBy standard computations (e.g., [10]) , , , and . So, we may apply Corollary 1 and obtain the existence of a solution for problems (10) and (11).