Fredholm alternative

In mathematics, the Fredholm alternative, named after Ivar Fredholm, is one of Fredholm's theorems and is a result in Fredholm theory. It may be expressed in several ways, as a theorem of linear algebra, a theorem of integral equations, or as a theorem on Fredholm operators. Part of the result states that a non-zero complex number in the spectrum of a compact operator is an eigenvalue.

Linear algebra

If V is an n-dimensional vector space and T : V V {\displaystyle T:V\to V} is a linear transformation, then exactly one of the following holds:

  1. For each vector v in V there is a vector u in V so that T ( u ) = v {\displaystyle T(u)=v} . In other words: T is surjective (and so also bijective, since V is finite-dimensional).
  2. dim ( ker ( T ) ) > 0. {\displaystyle \dim(\ker(T))>0.}

A more elementary formulation, in terms of matrices, is as follows. Given an m×n matrix A and a m×1 column vector b, exactly one of the following must hold:

  1. Either: A x = b has a solution x
  2. Or: AT y = 0 has a solution y with yTb ≠ 0.

In other words, A x = b has a solution ( b Im ( A ) ) {\displaystyle (\mathbf {b} \in \operatorname {Im} (A))} if and only if for any y such that AT y = 0, it follows that yTb = 0 ( i . e . , b ker ( A T ) ) {\displaystyle (i.e.,\mathbf {b} \in \ker(A^{T})^{\bot })} .

Integral equations

Let K ( x , y ) {\displaystyle K(x,y)} be an integral kernel, and consider the homogeneous equation, the Fredholm integral equation,

λ φ ( x ) a b K ( x , y ) φ ( y ) d y = 0 {\displaystyle \lambda \varphi (x)-\int _{a}^{b}K(x,y)\varphi (y)\,dy=0}

and the inhomogeneous equation

λ φ ( x ) a b K ( x , y ) φ ( y ) d y = f ( x ) . {\displaystyle \lambda \varphi (x)-\int _{a}^{b}K(x,y)\varphi (y)\,dy=f(x).}

The Fredholm alternative is the statement that, for every non-zero fixed complex number λ C , {\displaystyle \lambda \in \mathbb {C} ,} either the first equation has a non-trivial solution, or the second equation has a solution for all f ( x ) {\displaystyle f(x)} .

A sufficient condition for this statement to be true is for K ( x , y ) {\displaystyle K(x,y)} to be square integrable on the rectangle [ a , b ] × [ a , b ] {\displaystyle [a,b]\times [a,b]} (where a and/or b may be minus or plus infinity). The integral operator defined by such a K is called a Hilbert–Schmidt integral operator.

Functional analysis

Results about Fredholm operators generalize these results to complete normed vector spaces of infinite dimensions; that is, Banach spaces.

The integral equation can be reformulated in terms of operator notation as follows. Write (somewhat informally)

T = λ K {\displaystyle T=\lambda -K}
to mean
T ( x , y ) = λ δ ( x y ) K ( x , y ) {\displaystyle T(x,y)=\lambda \;\delta (x-y)-K(x,y)}
with δ ( x y ) {\displaystyle \delta (x-y)} the Dirac delta function, considered as a distribution, or generalized function, in two variables. Then by convolution, T {\displaystyle T} induces a linear operator acting on a Banach space V {\displaystyle V} of functions φ ( x ) {\displaystyle \varphi (x)}
V V {\displaystyle V\to V}
given by
φ ψ {\displaystyle \varphi \mapsto \psi }
with ψ {\displaystyle \psi } given by
ψ ( x ) = a b T ( x , y ) φ ( y ) d y = λ φ ( x ) a b K ( x , y ) φ ( y ) d y . {\displaystyle \psi (x)=\int _{a}^{b}T(x,y)\varphi (y)\,dy=\lambda \;\varphi (x)-\int _{a}^{b}K(x,y)\varphi (y)\,dy.}

In this language, the Fredholm alternative for integral equations is seen to be analogous to the Fredholm alternative for finite-dimensional linear algebra.

The operator K {\displaystyle K} given by convolution with an L 2 {\displaystyle L^{2}} kernel, as above, is known as a Hilbert–Schmidt integral operator. Such operators are always compact. More generally, the Fredholm alternative is valid when K {\displaystyle K} is any compact operator. The Fredholm alternative may be restated in the following form: a nonzero λ {\displaystyle \lambda } either is an eigenvalue of K , {\displaystyle K,} or lies in the domain of the resolvent

R ( λ ; K ) = ( K λ Id ) 1 . {\displaystyle R(\lambda ;K)=(K-\lambda \operatorname {Id} )^{-1}.}

Elliptic partial differential equations

The Fredholm alternative can be applied to solving linear elliptic boundary value problems. The basic result is: if the equation and the appropriate Banach spaces have been set up correctly, then either

(1) The homogeneous equation has a nontrivial solution, or
(2) The inhomogeneous equation can be solved uniquely for each choice of data.

The argument goes as follows. A typical simple-to-understand elliptic operator L would be the Laplacian plus some lower order terms. Combined with suitable boundary conditions and expressed on a suitable Banach space X (which encodes both the boundary conditions and the desired regularity of the solution), L becomes an unbounded operator from X to itself, and one attempts to solve

L u = f , u dom ( L ) X , {\displaystyle Lu=f,\qquad u\in \operatorname {dom} (L)\subseteq X,}

where fX is some function serving as data for which we want a solution. The Fredholm alternative, together with the theory of elliptic equations, will enable us to organize the solutions of this equation.

A concrete example would be an elliptic boundary-value problem like

( ) L u := Δ u + h ( x ) u = f in  Ω , {\displaystyle (*)\qquad Lu:=-\Delta u+h(x)u=f\qquad {\text{in }}\Omega ,}

supplemented with the boundary condition

( ) u = 0 on  Ω , {\displaystyle (**)\qquad u=0\qquad {\text{on }}\partial \Omega ,}

where Ω ⊆ Rn is a bounded open set with smooth boundary and h(x) is a fixed coefficient function (a potential, in the case of a Schrödinger operator). The function fX is the variable data for which we wish to solve the equation. Here one would take X to be the space L2(Ω) of all square-integrable functions on Ω, and dom(L) is then the Sobolev space W 2,2(Ω) ∩ W1,2
0
(Ω), which amounts to the set of all square-integrable functions on Ω whose weak first and second derivatives exist and are square-integrable, and which satisfy a zero boundary condition on ∂Ω.

If X has been selected correctly (as it has in this example), then for μ0 >> 0 the operator L + μ0 is positive, and then employing elliptic estimates, one can prove that L + μ0 : dom(L) → X is a bijection, and its inverse is a compact, everywhere-defined operator K from X to X, with image equal to dom(L). We fix one such μ0, but its value is not important as it is only a tool.

We may then transform the Fredholm alternative, stated above for compact operators, into a statement about the solvability of the boundary-value problem (*)–(**). The Fredholm alternative, as stated above, asserts:

  • For each λR, either λ is an eigenvalue of K, or the operator K − λ is bijective from X to itself.

Let us explore the two alternatives as they play out for the boundary-value problem. Suppose λ ≠ 0. Then either

(A) λ is an eigenvalue of K ⇔ there is a solution h ∈ dom(L) of (L + μ0) h = λ−1h ⇔ –μ0+λ−1 is an eigenvalue of L.

(B) The operator K − λ : X → X is a bijection ⇔ (K − λ) (L + μ0) = Id − λ (L + μ0) : dom(L) → X is a bijection ⇔ L + μ0 − λ−1 : dom(L) → X is a bijection.

Replacing -μ0+λ−1 by λ, and treating the case λ = −μ0 separately, this yields the following Fredholm alternative for an elliptic boundary-value problem:

  • For each λR, either the homogeneous equation (L − λ) u = 0 has a nontrivial solution, or the inhomogeneous equation (L − λ) u = f possesses a unique solution u ∈ dom(L) for each given datum fX.

The latter function u solves the boundary-value problem (*)–(**) introduced above. This is the dichotomy that was claimed in (1)–(2) above. By the spectral theorem for compact operators, one also obtains that the set of λ for which the solvability fails is a discrete subset of R (the eigenvalues of L). The eigenvalues’ associated eigenfunctions can be thought of as "resonances" that block the solvability of the equation.

See also

References

  • Fredholm, E. I. (1903). "Sur une classe d'equations fonctionnelles". Acta Math. 27: 365–390. doi:10.1007/bf02421317.
  • A. G. Ramm, "A Simple Proof of the Fredholm Alternative and a Characterization of the Fredholm Operators", American Mathematical Monthly, 108 (2001) p. 855.
  • Khvedelidze, B.V. (2001) [1994], "Fredholm theorems", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • "Fredholm alternative", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
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