7
$\begingroup$

This is the third question in a series whose purpose has been to flesh out an example of the optimality of the p-Lebesgue differentiation theorem for Sobolev functions. This theorem says that for $f \in W^{1,p}_{loc}(\mathbb{R}^N;\mathbb{R})$,

$\lim_{r\to0} \frac{1}{r^{N+p}}\int_{B(0,r)} |f(x+h)-f(x)-\nabla f(x)h|^p\;dx = 0$

for $\mathcal{L}^N$ almost every $x\in \mathbb{R}^N$.

EDIT: The previously mentioned lower bound is true, but it is not infinite, and thus does not serve as a counterexample to the question at hand. Therefore, the real question is about the optimality of the p-Lebesgue differentiation theorem for Sobolev functions. Can one find $f \in W^{1,1}$ or $f \in W^{1,p-\epsilon}$ (and $f \notin W^{1,p}$) such that the above limit is plus infinity on a set of positive measure?

$\endgroup$
1
  • $\begingroup$ I removed the new tag 'sobolev' as I assume it was inadvertently created as 'sobolev-spaces' is also used. If you should have intentionally created it, sorry abouth this. $\endgroup$
    – user9072
    Commented Apr 19, 2013 at 11:22

1 Answer 1

6
$\begingroup$

It depends on the values of $p$ and $N$ - sometimes there will be counterexamples and sometimes there will not. For instance, any function $f \in W^{1,q}$ for $q>N$ is classically differentiable almost everywhere, and hence the above result is true for all $1\leq p < \infty$. When $1\leq q < N$, then the result holds for all $1\leq p \leq q^\ast$, and this is optimal.

To see these claims, check Evan's proof of differentiability of $W^{1,q}$ for $q>N$ and observe that it is a clever use of Morrey's embedding to show that

$\frac{|f(y)-f(x)-\nabla f(x)(y-x)|}{|y-x|} \leq C \frac{1}{r^N}\int_{B(x,r)}|\nabla f(y)-\nabla f(x)|^q\;dy$,

and the right hand side goes to zero by the classical Lebesgue differentiation theorem for $\nabla f \in L^q$.

A similar proof allows one to use the Sobolev-Gagliardo-Nirenberg embedding to let $f \in W^{1,q}$ and consider the function $u(y)=f(y)-f(x)-\nabla f(x)(y-x)$ which has average value on a ball $\frac{1}{\alpha(N)r^N} \int_{B(x,r)} u(y)\;dy= \frac{1}{\alpha(N)r^N} \int_{B(x,r)} f(y)\;dy - f(x)$ to deduce that

\begin{align*} \lim_{r\to 0}\frac{1}{r^{N+q^\ast}}\int_{B(x,r)} |f(y)-\frac{1}{\alpha(N)r^N}\int_{B(x,r)}f(y)dy-\nabla f(x)(y-x)|^{q^\ast}\;dy =0, \end{align*} and thus, writing \begin{align*} \frac{1}{r^{N+q^\ast}}&\int_{B(x,r)} |f(y)-f(x)-\nabla f(x)(y-x)|^{q^\ast}\;dy \newline &\leq \frac{C}{r^{N+q^\ast}}\int_{B(x,r)} |f(y)-\frac{1}{\alpha(N)r^N}\int_{B(x,r)}f(y)dy-\nabla f(x)(y-x)|^{q^\ast}\;dy \newline &\;\;+\left[\frac{\tilde{C}}{r^{N+1}}\int_{B(x,r)}|f(y)- f(x)-\nabla f(x)(y-x)|\;dy \right]^{q^\ast} \end{align*}

and applying the standard theorem on $L^q$ differentiability the second term tends to zero. Thus, there is a possible improvement of differentiability theorems for Sobolev functions. To see that this is optimal, just take a function $f \in W^{1,q}$ and $f \notin L^p$ of any open set (for $p>q^\ast$. Then the above integral is plus infinity. For example, consider the function

$g_\epsilon(x) = |x|^{1-\frac{N}{q}+\epsilon}$.

Then $\int_{B(0,r)} |g_\epsilon|^p\;dx = |S^{N-1}|\int_0^1 r^{p(1-\frac{N}{q}+\epsilon)+N-1}\;dr$,

and $|g|^q$ will be not be integrable if

$p(1-\frac{N}{q}+\epsilon)+N-1 \leq -1$,

which is equivalent to

$p \geq \frac{Nq}{N-q-\epsilon q}$.

Now for any $p>\frac{Nq}{N-q}$, we can find an $\epsilon>0$ small such that

$p \geq \frac{Nq}{N-q-\epsilon q}$

and necessarily $g_\epsilon \in W^{1,q}$ by construction, since

\begin{align*} \int_{B(0,r)} |\nabla g_\epsilon|^q\;dx \leq C \int_0^1 r^{-N+\epsilon q+N-1}\;dr <\infty \end{align*}

Now, let $f_\epsilon(x):= \sum_n \frac{1}{2^n} g_\epsilon(x-x_n)$

for $\{x_n\}$ be a dense sequence of some bounded open set, and then we have

$\int_{B(x,r)}|f_\epsilon(x+h)-f_\epsilon(x)-\nabla f_\epsilon(x)h|^p\;dh = +\infty$,

for every $x$ in this set, since $f \notin L^p$ and the result is demonstrated.

$\endgroup$

You must log in to answer this question.

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