The Fatou theorem on the boundary behaviour of derivatives in the class of biharmonic functions (Q795965)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3863571
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The Fatou theorem on the boundary behaviour of derivatives in the class of biharmonic functions
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3863571

    Statements

    The Fatou theorem on the boundary behaviour of derivatives in the class of biharmonic functions (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    1983
    0 references
    The solution of the Dirichlet problem in the unit circle of the complex plane \(z=re^{ix}\), \[ f(r,x)=(1/2\pi)\int^{\pi}_{-\pi}f(t)(1-r^ 2)/[1-2r \cos(t-x)+r^ 2]dt \] is known as Poisson's formula. Here f(t) is a 2\(\pi\)-periodic function. A detailed study of f(r,x) was made by Fatou in 1906. A similar study is made in this paper for a biharmonic function satisfying on the unit circle \(\Gamma\) the conditions \(u|_{\Gamma}=f(x)\), \(\partial u/\partial n|_{\Gamma}=0\). For these functions the author proves the following two theorems: (1) There exist such 2\(\pi\)-periodic functions f(t) satisfying the condition \(D_ 1f(x_ 0)=0\) for which the limit lim \(\partial f(r,x)/\partial x\) for r exp(ix)\({\hat \to}\exp(ix_ 0)\) does not exist; (2) there exist such 2\(\pi\)-periodic functions f(t) satisfying the condition \(D^ 2f(x_ 0)=0\) for which the limit lim \(\partial^ 2f(r,x)/\partial x^ 2\) for r exp(ix)\({\hat \to}\exp(ix_ 0)\) does not exist. Here f(r,x) denotes the biharmonic function satisfying on \(\Gamma\) the above conditions; \(D_ 1f(x_ 0)\) is the first derivative in the Schwarz sense of f(x) in \(x_ 0\); \(D^ 2f(x_ 0)\) is the second derivative in the Schwarz sense; r exp(ix)\({\hat \to}\exp(ix_ 0)\) means the point \(re^{ix}\) tends to the point \(e^{ix}\) on a path nontangent to \(\Gamma\). These two theorems extend other similar results from the theory of harmonic functions.
    0 references
    Fatou theorems
    0 references
    Dirichlet problem
    0 references
    biharmonic function
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references