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I got stuck in the following lemma:

Lemma: Let $B$ be the unit ball in the 4 dimensional Euclidean space. Suppose that $u\in W^{2,2}(B)$, then $e^{u}\in L^{q}$ for any $q>1$.

As we know this is exactly the critical case of Sobolev's imbedding where we fail to get $L^{\infty}$ bounds. Any suggestion and help would be appreciated.

My idea of this that fails:

Note $\int_{B} e^{pu}\leq \sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{p^{k}}{k!}\int_{B} |u|^{k}$. By Sobolev imbedding we know that $W^{2,2}(B)\hookrightarrow L^{k}$ for any $k\geq 1$. So we know that

$$\parallel u\parallel_{L^{k}(B)}\leq C_{k} \parallel u \parallel_{W^{2,2}} $$

We can then get :

$\int_{B} e^{pu}\leq \sum_{k=1}^{\infty}\frac{p^{k}}{k!} (C_{k})^{k} \parallel u \parallel_{W^{2,2}}^{k}$.

So that it suffices to control $C_{k}$. But based on my calculation, $C_{k} \sim k$, from which it seems this argument would fail.

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    $\begingroup$ I believe you are looking for the Moser-Trudinger inequality... Have a look at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birnbaum%E2%80%93Orlicz_space (the Wikipedia entry on the Moser-Trudinger inequality is not that illuminating by itself) $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2016 at 1:28
  • $\begingroup$ The edit seems to have incorporated the answer to the OP's question. May I suggest dismembering it and making it into a proper answer? $\endgroup$ Commented May 31, 2016 at 0:56
  • $\begingroup$ @PedroLauridsenRibeiro Hi, please feel free to edit the original post. $\endgroup$
    – user40184
    Commented May 31, 2016 at 1:07
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    $\begingroup$ Done, I essentially reverted your question to its original form (apart only from a couple of corrections). I also picked a version of the Trudinger inequality which applies more directly to your hypotheses (with a proper reference to the excellent book of Gilbarg and Trudinger) and completed the argument you sketched based on my comment above. Finally, I made a few remarks about why you really need $u\in W^{2,2}_0(B)$ for the estimate to work. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 15, 2016 at 15:02

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As pointed in my comment above, what you seem to be looking for is Trudinger's inequality (see e.g. formula (7.40), pp. 162 of the book Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order by D. Gilbarg and N.S. Trudinger (Springer-Verlag, 1998)), with the proviso that in fact you need $u\in W^{2,2}_0(B)=$ closure of $\mathscr{C}^\infty_c(B)$ in $W^{2,2}(B)$. Since $B$ has Lipschitz boundary, Trudinger's inequality states that for all $u\in W^{2,2}_0(B)$ there are constants $C_1,C_2>0$ such that $$\tag{1}\label{e1}\int_B\exp\left(\left(\frac{|u(x)|}{C_1\|D^2 u\|_2}\right)^2\right)\mathrm{d}x\leq C_2|B|\ ,$$ where $|B|$ stands for the Lebesgue measure of $B$. Notice that if $u$ is constant on $B$ then $\|D^2 u\|_2=0$ and in this case the left hand side of the above inequality equals $+\infty$, hence the need for taking $u\in W^{2,2}_0(B)$.

It is not difficult to infer from inequality \eqref{e1} that $e^u\in L^q(B)$ for all $q>0$. To that end, set $a=C_1\|D^2 u\|_2$ ($>0$!) and notice that whenever $|u(x)|\geq a^2 q$ we have that $e^{q|u(x)|}\leq e^{(\frac{|u(x)|}{a})^2}$ and whenever $|u(x)|\leq a^2 q$ we have that $e^{q|u(x)|}\leq e^{a^2q^2}$. Therefore $$\int_B |e^{u(x)}|^q\mathrm{d}x\leq\int_B e^{q|u(x)|}\mathrm{d}x\leq e^{a^2q^2}|B|+\int_B e^{(\frac{|u(x)|}{a})^2}\mathrm{d}x\leq (e^{a^2q^2}+C_2)|B|<\infty\ ,$$ as desired.

Trudinger's inequality can indeed be seen as a sharpening of Sobolev's embedding theorem. Interestingly, Trudinger's original argument (On Imbeddings into Orlicz Spaces and Some Applications, J. Math. Mech. 17 (1967) 473-483) is not far off what you were trying to do - it consisted in controlling each individual term in the power series for the exponential but that involved estimating the action of certain Riesz potentials.

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