There are some partial differential equations which have no solution. However, some of them have something like ‘almost a solution’, which we call a weak solution. Among these there are partial differential equations whose weak solutions model processes in nature, just like solutions of partial differential equations which have a solution.
These weak solutions will be elements of the so-called Sobolev spaces. By proving properties which elements of Sobolev spaces in general have, we will thus obtain properties of weak solutions to partial differential equations, which therefore are properties of some processes in nature.
In this chapter we do show some properties of elements of Sobolev spaces. Furthermore, we will show that Sobolev spaces are Banach spaces (this will help us in the next section, where we investigate existence and uniqueness of weak solutions).
But first we shall repeat the definition of the standard mollifier defined in chapter 3.
Example 3.4: The standard mollifier
, given by

, where
, is a bump function (see exercise 3.2).
Definition 3.13:
For
, we define
.
Lemma 12.1: (to be replaced by characteristic function version)
Let
be a simple function, i. e.
,
where
are intervals and
is the indicator function. If
,
then
.
The following lemma, which is important for some theorems about Sobolev spaces, is known as the fundamental lemma of the calculus of variations:
Lemma 12.2:
Let
and let
be functions such that
and
. Then
almost everywhere.
Proof:
We define

Remarks 12.2: If
is a function and
is a
-dimensional multiindex, any two
th-weak derivatives of
are equal except on a null set. Furthermore, if
exists, it also is an
th-weak derivative of
.
Proof:
1. We prove that any two
th-weak derivatives are equal except on a nullset.
Let
be two
th-weak derivatives of
. Then we have

Notation 12.3 If it exists, we denote the
th-weak derivative of
by
, which is of course the same symbol as for the ordinary derivative.
Theorem 12.4:
Let
be open,
,
and
. Assume that
have
-weak derivatives, which we - consistent with notation 12.3 - denote by
and
. Then for all
:

Proof:
Definition and theorem 12.6:
Let
be open,
,
and
. The Sobolev space
is defined as follows:

A norm on
is defined as follows:

With respect to this norm,
is a Banach space.
In the above definition,
denotes the
th-weak derivative of
.
Proof:
1.
We show that

is a norm.
We have to check the three defining properties for a norm:
(definiteness)
for every
(absolute homogeneity)
(triangle inequality)
We start with definiteness: If
, then
, since all the directional derivatives of the constant zero function are again the zero function. Furthermore, if
, then it follows that
implying that
as
is a norm.
We proceed to absolute homogeneity. Let
.

And the triangle inequality has to be shown:

2.
We prove that
is a Banach space.
Let
be a Cauchy sequence in
. Since for all
-dimensional multiindices
with
and

since we only added non-negative terms, we obtain that for all
-dimensional multiindices
with
,
is a Cauchy sequence in
. Since
is a Banach space, this sequence converges to a limit in
, which we shall denote by
.
We show now that
and
with respect to the norm
, thereby showing that
is a Banach space.
To do so, we show that for all
-dimensional multiindices
with
the
th-weak derivative of
is given by
. Convergence then automatically follows, as

where in the last line all the summands converge to zero provided that
for all
-dimensional multiindices
with
.
Let
. Since
and by the second triangle inequality

, the sequence
is, for large enough
, dominated by the function
, and the sequence
is dominated by the function
.
incomplete: Why are the dominating functions L1?
Therefore

, which is why
is the
th-weak derivative of
for all
-dimensional multiindices
with
.
We shall now prove that for any
function, we can find a sequence of bump functions converging to that function in
norm.
approximation by simple functions and lemma 12.1, ||f_eps-f|| le ||f_eps - g_eps|| + ||g_eps - g|| + ||g - f||
Let
be a domain, let
, and
, such that
. Let furthermore
. Then
is in
for
and
.
Proof: The first claim, that
, follows from the fact that if we choose

Then, due to the above section about mollifying
-functions, we know that the first claim is true.
The second claim follows from the following calculation, using the one-dimensional chain rule:


Due to the above secion about mollifying
-functions, we immediately know that
, and the second statement therefore follows from the definition of the
-norm.
Let
be an open set. Then for all functions
, there exists a sequence of functions in
approximating it.
Proof:
Let's choose

and

One sees that the
are an open cover of
. Therefore, we can choose a sequence of functions
(partition of the unity) such that




By defining
and
, we even obtain the properties




where the properties are the same as before except the third property, which changed.
Let
,
be a bump function and
be a sequence which approximates
in the
-norm. The calculation

reveals that, by taking the limit
on both sides,
implies
, since the limit of
must be in
since we may choose a sequence of bump functions
converging to 1.
Let's choose now

We may choose now an arbitrary
and
so small, that


Let's now define

This function is infinitely often differentiable, since by construction there are only finitely many elements of the sum which do not vanish on each
, and also since the elements of the sum are infinitely differentiable due to the Leibniz rule of differentiation under the integral sign. But we also have:

Since
was arbitrary, this finishes the proof.
Let
be a bounded domain, and let
have the property, that for every point
, there is a neighbourhood
such that

for a continuous function
. Then every function in
can be approximated by
-functions in the
-norm.
Proof:
to follow