I am not sure about the term "strictly" subharmonic.
What I want is a function $\psi\in C^{\infty}(\mathbb{R}^3)$ with $\Delta\psi>0$ and $\lim\limits_{|x|\rightarrow\infty}\psi(x)=0$.
I tried several times but still failed at the origin. I took $\psi=\exp\left(-\frac{1}{|x|}\right)-1$ with $$\Delta\psi=\frac{1}{|x|^4}\exp\left(-\frac{1}{|x|}\right)>0$$
at every point $x\not=0$, and the boundary value does vanish, but $\Delta\psi(0)=0$.
Also, is this possible in $\mathbb{R}^2$? I want to use the comparison principle for the elliptic operator Laplacian $\Delta$ to disprove it, but that can only tell me $\psi<0$. How can I make use of the dimension? Or is this also possible?
Any help is desired.
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