During my research, I come across this question.
Let $f \in C^2(\mathbb R, \mathbb R_+^*)$ with $\forall x \in\mathbb R, f'(x) \geq |f''(x)+f(x)|$.
Is it true that $\forall x \in \mathbb R, f''(x) \geq 0$ ?
During my research, I come across this question.
Let $f \in C^2(\mathbb R, \mathbb R_+^*)$ with $\forall x \in\mathbb R, f'(x) \geq |f''(x)+f(x)|$.
Is it true that $\forall x \in \mathbb R, f''(x) \geq 0$ ?
There is no such function.
In terms of $g=f'/f$, the inequality becomes $g\ge |1+g^2+g'|$ or $|g'/g+g+1/g|\le 1$, at least when $g>0$. This shows that $g'/g\le -1$ or $g'\le -g$, and this last conclusion is clearly also correct when $g=0$.
Gronwall's inequality now shows that $g(x)\le ae^{-x}$. Since $g=(\log f)'$ and this bound is integrable on $x>0$, it follows that $f$ is bounded.
Since $f$ is also increasing, $L=\lim_{x\to\infty} f(x)$ exists, and $f'(x)\to 0$. However, then the inequality forces $f''(x)\to -L$, which will make $f'$ negative eventually, leading to a contradiction.