9
$\begingroup$

While I was studying the book Variation et Optimisation de formes by Antoine Henrot and Michel Pierre, I encountered a section about the capacity associated to the $H^1$ norm, which is defined for every compact by:

$$ \operatorname{cap}(K)=\inf \lbrace \|v\|_{H^1(\Bbb{R}^N)} : v\in C_0^\infty(\Bbb{R}^N), v \geq 1 \text{ on }K\rbrace.$$

The definition can be extended to open sets and then to every set of $\Bbb{R}^N$, relative capacity with respect to an open set can be defined by restricting the integral and the smooth function space to an open set D, etc.

The capacity has some strange properties which are unnatural at a first sight, like the fact that the capacity of $\partial K$ is the same as the capacity of $K$ for a compact $K$.

I want to understand better what capacity really means, and for that I tried to find all sort of books about potential theory (even the ones referred in the mentioned book), and all seem to have the same way of dealing with the subject: the setting is very general and abstract and the definition presented above just as a particular case.

Do you know any book, article or course notes which deal with this specific capacity in detail explaining:

  • the definition and the intuition behind the capacity;

  • examples of capacity computation for simple sets (using capacitary potentials);

  • the connection between the capacity and the Sobolev spaces ?

In the mentioned book the study of capacity is made in section 3.3. It contains all the definitions and all the needed properties of the capacity, but I still feel that I need a better understanding. That's why I asked this question.

$\endgroup$
1
  • 4
    $\begingroup$ I think the following lecture notes could be useful for your first two points (not the third, which I'm not familiar with unfortunately): emis.de/journals/SAT/papers/14/14.pdf It's only for capacity on $\mathbb{C}$ though. Also, for intuition: the capacity of a set is defined in a way to mimic the concept of capacity of a capacitator in physics/electrical engineering: if a set has positive capacity, the condensator obtained by having a perfect conductor of that set has positive capacity. This should help for calculating examples. A condensator also has the mentioned property of the boundary. $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 1, 2012 at 18:26

4 Answers 4

6
$\begingroup$

Maz'ya's book contains a fruitful treatment of Capacity and Weighted capacity and its relation with Sobolev spaces theory, in particular the (weighted) Sobolev inequality or Poincare inequality. Heinonen's book contains the treatment of modulus and capacity in metric setting.

  1. Maz'ya, Vladimir Sobolev spaces with applications to elliptic partial differential equations. Second, revised and augmented edition. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences], 342. Springer, Heidelberg, 2011. xxviii+866 pp.

2.Heinonen, Juha Lectures on analysis on metric spaces. Universitext. Springer-Verlag, New York, 2001. x+140 pp.

3.Heinonen, Juha; Kilpeläinen, Tero; Martio, Olli Nonlinear potential theory of degenerate elliptic equations. Unabridged republication of the 1993 original. Dover Publications, Inc., Mineola, NY, 2006. xii+404 pp.

$\endgroup$
10
$\begingroup$

I think the best treatment of basic facts about capacity from the perspective of Sobolev spaces is in Chapter 4 of

L. C. Evans, R. F. Gariepy, Measure theory and fine properties of functions. Revised edition. Textbooks in Mathematics. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 2015. (MathSciNet review).

The book of Maz'ya (see Changyu Guo's answer) is very comprehensive, but difficult to read and I would not recommend it as an introduction. The book by Heinonen is about analysis on metric spaces so this is a different story and the book by Heinonen, Kilpelainen and Martio deals with a quite advanced nonlinear potential theory. This being said, if you want to learn basic results about capacity theory read Evans and Gariepy!

$\endgroup$
3
$\begingroup$

Ransford's textbook on this topic is great. Here is how he describes the goal of his book in the preface, which I think he accomplishes very well.

When first learning potential theory, as a new graduate student, I experienced some difficulty with the literature then available. The choice lay between several excellent but encyclopaedic treatises on the subject, from which it was hard work to extract what was needed, and several equally excellent books on complex variable, each containing a useful chapter on potential theory, but which did not go nearly far enough. This book is an attempt to bridge that gap—indeed it was consciously written as the book that I should have liked to read all those years ago.

Thomas Ransford, Potential Theory in the Complex Plane, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995. London Mathematical Society Student Texts.

$\endgroup$
2
$\begingroup$

Also a very good book: Title: Condenser Capacities and Symmetrization in Geometric Function Theory Author(s): Vladimir N. Dubinin (auth.) Publisher: Birkhäuser Basel Year: 2014 ISBN: 978-3-0348-0842-2,978-3-0348-0843-9

$\endgroup$

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .