In mathematics, Gårding's inequality is a result that gives a lower bound for the bilinear form induced by a real linear elliptic partial differential operator. The inequality is named after Lars Gårding.
Statement of the inequality
Let
be a bounded, open domain in
-dimensional Euclidean space and let
denote the Sobolev space of
-times weakly differentiable functions
with weak derivatives in
. Assume that
satisfies the
-extension property, i.e., that there exists a bounded linear operator
such that
for all
.
Let L be a linear partial differential operator of even order 2k, written in divergence form

and suppose that L is uniformly elliptic, i.e., there exists a constant θ > 0 such that

Finally, suppose that the coefficients Aαβ are bounded, continuous functions on the closure of Ω for |α| = |β| = k and that

Then Gårding's inequality holds: there exist constants C > 0 and G ≥ 0
![{\displaystyle B[u,u]+G\|u\|_{L^{2}(\Omega )}^{2}\geq C\|u\|_{H^{k}(\Omega )}^{2}{\mbox{ for all }}u\in H_{0}^{k}(\Omega ),}](./0406fb02870cc7b10ed92ba51f71ae4ddcf1a08f.svg)
where
![{\displaystyle B[v,u]=\sum _{0\leq |\alpha |,|\beta |\leq k}\int _{\Omega }A_{\alpha \beta }(x)\mathrm {D} ^{\alpha }u(x)\mathrm {D} ^{\beta }v(x)\,\mathrm {d} x}](./1e28cc59fa2c3765c37d43687e308a8486e1f3b6.svg)
is the bilinear form associated to the operator L.
Application: the Laplace operator and the Poisson problem
Be careful, in this application, Garding's Inequality seems useless here as the final result is a direct consequence of Poincaré's Inequality, or Friedrich Inequality. (See talk on the article).
As a simple example, consider the Laplace operator Δ. More specifically, suppose that one wishes to solve, for f ∈ L2(Ω) the Poisson equation

where Ω is a bounded Lipschitz domain in Rn. The corresponding weak form of the problem is to find u in the Sobolev space H01(Ω) such that
![{\displaystyle B[u,v]=\langle f,v\rangle {\mbox{ for all }}v\in H_{0}^{1}(\Omega ),}](./e700a2141dbfe5653b61673cbeecdab5e8be6943.svg)
where
![{\displaystyle B[u,v]=\int _{\Omega }\nabla u(x)\cdot \nabla v(x)\,\mathrm {d} x,}](./d305ee89730f1e302c67ca9624087f2439691a01.svg)

The Lax–Milgram lemma ensures that if the bilinear form B is both continuous and elliptic with respect to the norm on H01(Ω), then, for each f ∈ L2(Ω), a unique solution u must exist in H01(Ω). The hypotheses of Gårding's inequality are easy to verify for the Laplace operator Δ, so there exist constants C and G ≥ 0
![{\displaystyle B[u,u]\geq C\|u\|_{H^{1}(\Omega )}^{2}-G\|u\|_{L^{2}(\Omega )}^{2}{\mbox{ for all }}u\in H_{0}^{1}(\Omega ).}](./0a12ae24f19a56ff630ea121f9c4f739127f6927.svg)
Applying the Poincaré inequality allows the two terms on the right-hand side to be combined, yielding a new constant K > 0 with
![{\displaystyle B[u,u]\geq K\|u\|_{H^{1}(\Omega )}^{2}{\mbox{ for all }}u\in H_{0}^{1}(\Omega ),}](./a937f5c32914bcfb3239e2fa9edfbb5f443c98f1.svg)
which is precisely the statement that B is elliptic. The continuity of B is even easier to see: simply apply the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality and the fact that the Sobolev norm is controlled by the L2 norm of the gradient.
References
- Renardy, Michael; Rogers, Robert C. (2004). An introduction to partial differential equations. Texts in Applied Mathematics 13 (Second ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 356. ISBN 0-387-00444-0. (Theorem 9.17)
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