My question arises from Here.
I have a series of eigenvalue equations in $B_R$. $$ -\Delta \phi_R+H(x) \phi_R=\lambda_R \phi_R, $$ where $\lambda_R \geq 0$ is the first nonzero eigenvalue, with $\phi_R>0$. And $\lambda_R$ is non-increasing, so for bigger ball ($R\rightarrow+\infty$), we have a limit $\lambda_{\infty}$. So I want to discuss that let the $R$ tend to $+\infty$, can we also get a limit function $\Phi$, which satisfies that $$ -\Delta \Phi+H(x) \Phi=\lambda_\infty \Phi, $$ the answer is that we can find a $\phi_{\infty}$, $\phi_R$ is compactly convergent to $\phi_{\infty}$.
My question looks very naive, we did the bootstrap process on the selected compact set $K$ (since $K$ can be covered by a ball, so we get the $C^0$ estimate on $K$ by Harnack inequality, meanwhile take $R \rightarrow +\infty$ then use some regularity results and Arzela-Ascoli to get a convergent subsequence), we note as $$ -\Delta \Phi_K+H(x) \Phi_K=\lambda_\infty \Phi_K, $$
But the answer is that we can find a $\phi_{\infty}$, $\phi_R$ is compactly convergent to $\phi_{\infty}$, which means on every compact set the limit functions are the same, how to prove every $\Phi_K$ is the same, it seems that I misunderstood some essential conceptions, but I can't figure out, could you help me find where I misunderstood?
My attempt is:
If on two compact sets $K_1$ and $K_2$, $\phi_R$ converges to different functions $\phi_{K_1}$ and $\phi_{K_2}$, then we find a bigger compact sets to cover $K_1$ and $K_2$, so we get $\phi_{K_1}=\phi_{K_2}$.