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A Gronwall inequality via the generalized proportional fractional derivative with applications
Journal of Inequalities and Applications volume 2019, Article number: 101 (2019)
Abstract
In this paper, we provide a new version for the Gronwall inequality in the frame of the generalized proportional fractional derivative. Prior to the main results, we introduce the generalized proportional fractional derivative and expose some of its features. As an application, we accommodate the newly defined derivative to prove the uniqueness and obtain a bound in terms of Mittag-Leffler function for the solutions of a nonlinear delay proportional fractional system. An example is presented to demonstrate the applicability of the theory.
1 Introduction
Integral inequalities are a fabulous instrument for developing the qualitative and quantitative properties of differential equations. There has been a continuous growth of interest in such an area of research in order to meet the needs of various applications of these inequalities. Such inequalities have been studied by many researches who in turn used diverse techniques for the sake of exploring and proposing these inequalities [1,2,3]. One of the most important inequalities is the distinguished Gronwall inequality [4,5,6,7,8].
On the other hand, the fractional calculus, which is considered to be the generalization of the traditional calculus dealing with nonnegative integer order integration and differentiation, has been one of the most rapidly growing fields of research because of the interesting results ascertained when the fractional operators are applied to model real world problems [9,10,11,12,13,14]. An attracting particularization of this field is that there are many fractional operators, and this allows the researchers to select the most suitable operator for the sake of modeling the problem under investigation. Besides, because of its simplicity in applications, researchers have paid more attention to recently discovered fractional operators without singular kernels [15, 16], and then many articles considering these types of fractional operators have recently come into view.
In parallel to the increasing interests in the theory of fractional differential equations, many researchers have extended these mathematical inequalities to differential equations containing fractional derivatives involving singular and nonsingular kernels. We refer here to some of these results [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28]. Following this tendency, we provide a new version for Gronwall inequality in the frame of the generalized proportional fractional (GPF) derivatives. More precisely, we prove the following result: If we have
then
where \({}_{0}I^{\alpha ,\rho }\) is the proportional fractional integral of order \(\alpha , \rho >0\), u, v are nonnegative locally integrable functions on \([0,T)\), and \(w(t)\) is a nonnegative, nondecreasing, and continuous function defined on \(t \in [0,T)\) such that \(w(t) \le M \), where M is a constant. The peculiarity of the proportional fractional operators is that their kernels contain an exponential term that comes out naturally in addition to the kernel that appears in the traditional fractional operators.
The structure of the paper is organized as follows: Sect. 2 is devoted to providing essential preliminaries on the GPF derivatives and integrals as well as stating some fundamental lemmas that will be used in the subsequent sections. Section 3 provides the Gronwall inequality within the GPF derivatives. Section 4 discusses some applications on the uniqueness of solutions for a delay system. Moreover, a bound for the solutions is also provided. An example that examines the theoretical results is provided at the end of the paper. Section 5 concludes our results.
2 Preliminaries on GPF derivative and integral
In this section, we set forth some terminologies, definitions, and essential lemmas that will be used throughout the remaining part of the paper. For their justifications and proofs, the reader can consult the paper [29].
A limit-based definition of the so-called conformable derivative was given in [30, 31] as follows:
It is obvious that when the function f is differentiable, the conformable derivative of f reads
The main drawback of this derivative is that when the order of the derivative is 0 or \(\alpha \rightarrow 0\), the function f is not obtained. That is, \(D^{0}f\neq f\). In order to overcome this problem and benefit from the proportional derivative for controller output with two tuning parameters [32], Anderson et al. defined the modified conformable derivative as follows.
Definition 1
For \(\rho \in [0,1]\), let the functions \(\kappa _{0}, \kappa _{1}:[0,1] \times \mathbb{R}\rightarrow [0,\infty )\) be continuous such that, for all \(t \in \mathbb{R}\), we have
and \(\kappa _{1}(\rho ,t)\neq 0\), \(\rho \in [0,1)\), \(\kappa _{0}(\rho ,t) \neq 0\), \(\rho \in (0,1]\). Then, the proportional derivative of order ρ is defined by
For more details about the control theory of the proportional derivative and its component functions \(\kappa _{0}\) and \(\kappa _{1}\), we refer the reader to [32, 33]. We shall restrict ourselves to the case when \(\kappa _{1}(\rho ,t)=1-\rho \) and \(\kappa _{0}(\rho ,t)= \rho \). Therefore, (5) becomes
It is easy to figure out that \(\lim_{\rho \rightarrow 0^{+}}D^{\rho }f(t)= f(t)\) and \(\lim_{\rho \rightarrow 1^{-}}D^{\rho }f(t)= f^{\prime }(t)\). Thus, the derivative (6) is somehow considered to be more general than the conformable derivative which evidently does not tend to the original functions as ρ tends to 0.
The GPF integral and derivative are defined as follows.
Definition 2
([29])
For \(0<\rho \le 1\), \(\alpha \in \mathbb{C}\), and \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )>0\), the GPF integral of f of order α is
Definition 3
([29])
For \(0<\rho \le 1\), \(\alpha \in \mathbb{C}\), \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )\geq 0\), and \(n=[\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\), then the GPF derivative of f of order α is
If we let \(\rho =1\) in Definition 3, then one can obtain the left Riemann–Liouville fractional derivative [11, 13, 14]. Moreover, it is obvious that
Proposition 1
([29])
Let \(\alpha , \beta \in \mathbb{C}\) be such that \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )\geq 0\) and \(\operatorname{Re}(\beta )>0\). Then, for any \(\rho >0\), we have
-
(1)
\(({{}_{a}I}^{\alpha ,\rho } e^{\frac{\rho -1}{ \rho }t} (t-a)^{\beta -1} )(x)=\frac{\varGamma (\beta )}{\varGamma ( \beta +\alpha )\rho ^{\alpha }}e^{\frac{\rho -1}{\rho }x}(x-a)^{\alpha +\beta -1}\), \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )>0\).
-
(2)
\(({{}_{a}D}^{\alpha ,\rho } e^{\frac{\rho -1}{ \rho }t} (t-a)^{\beta -1} )(x)=\frac{\rho ^{\alpha }\varGamma (\beta )}{ \varGamma (\beta -\alpha )}e^{\frac{\rho -1}{\rho }x}(x-a)^{\beta -1- \alpha }\), \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )\geq 0\).
In the following lemmas, we expose some features of the GPF operator.
Lemma 1
([29])
If \(\rho >0\), \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )>0\), and \(\operatorname{Re}(\beta )>0\), then, for f is continuous and defined for \(t \geq a\), we have
Lemma 2
([29])
Let \(0\leq m< [\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\) and f be integrable in each interval \([a,t]\), \(t>a\). Then
Corollary 1
([29])
Let \(0<\operatorname{Re}(\beta ) < \operatorname{Re}(\alpha )\) and \(m-1<\operatorname{Re}( \beta )\leq m\). Then we have
Lemma 3
([29])
Let f be integrable on \(t\geq a\) and \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )>0\), \(\rho >0\), \(n=[\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\). Then we have
Lemma 4
([29])
Let \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )>0\), \(n=[\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]\), \(f \in L _{1}(a,b)\), and \(( {}_{a}I^{\alpha ,\rho }f)(t)\in AC^{n}[a,b]\). Then
Definition 4
([29])
For \(0<\rho \le 1\) and \(\alpha \in \mathbb{C}\) with \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )\geq 0\), we define the GPF derivative of Caputo type starting at a by
where \(n = [\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\).
Proposition 2
([29])
Let \(\alpha , \beta \in \mathbb{C}\) be such that \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha ) > 0\) and \(\operatorname{Re}(\beta )>0\). Then, for any \(\rho \in (0,1]\) and \(n = [\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\), we have
For \(k=0,1,\ldots ,n-1\), we have \(({{}_{a}^{C}D}^{\alpha ,\rho } e ^{\frac{\rho -1}{\rho }t} (t-a)^{k} )(x)=0\).
Lemma 5
([29])
For \(\rho \in (0,1]\) and \(n = [\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )] +1\), we have
We state the following relation that links the Caputo and Riemann–Liouville GPF derivatives.
Proposition 3
([29])
For any \(\alpha \in \mathbb{C}\) with \(\operatorname{Re}(\alpha ) > 0\) and \(\rho \in (0,1]\), \(n = [\operatorname{Re}(\alpha )]+1\), we have
3 Gronwall inequality via GPF derivative
In this section, we prove a Gronwall inequality within GPF derivative. Besides, a particular version expressed by means of Mittag-Leffler functions is provided.
Lemma 6
(Generalized proportional fractional Gronwall inequality)
Let \(\alpha , \rho >0\), \(u(t)\), \(v(t)\) be nonnegative functions locally integrable on \([0,T)\) and \(w(t)\) be a nonnegative, nondecreasing, and continuous function defined on \(t \in [0,T)\) such that \(w(t) \le M \), where M is a constant. If
then
Proof
Define
It follows that \(u(t)\le v(t)+Bu(t)\), which implies that \(u(t)\le \sum_{k=0}^{m-1}B^{k}v(t)+B^{m}u(t)\). We claim that
and \(B^{m}u(t)\to 0\) as \(m \to \infty \) for \(t \in [0,T)\). It is easy to see that (18) is valid for \(m=1\). Assume that it is true for \(m=k\), that is,
If \(m=k+1\), then
Upon changing variables \(s=\nu +z(t-\nu )\), however, we obtain
Therefore, (19) becomes
Furthermore, one can figure out that
To complete the proof, we let \(m \to \infty \) in
to reach at \(u(t)\le v(t)+\sum_{k=1}^{\infty }B^{k}v(t)\). By the help of the semigroup property and the definition of B, we get (17). This completes the proof. □
For \(w(t)\equiv b\) in Lemma 6, we have the following corollary.
Corollary 2
Let \(\alpha , \rho >0\), \(b>0\), \(u(t)\), \(v(t)\) be nonnegative functions locally integrable on \([0,T)\) and \(w(t)\equiv b\ge 0\). If
then
Let \(E_{\alpha }(\lambda ,z)=\sum_{k=0}^{\infty }\frac{\lambda ^{k}z ^{k \alpha }}{\varGamma (\alpha k+1)}\) be the Mittag-Leffler function in one parameter which was introduced in [11]. The following immediate consequence of Lemma 6 plays a key role in our later analysis.
Corollary 3
Under the hypothesis of Lemma 6, assume further that \(v(t)\) is a nondecreasing function for \(t \in [0,T)\), then
Proof
From (17) and the assumption that \(v(t)\) is a nondecreasing function for \(t \in [0,T)\), we may write
or
Using Proposition 1 and \(e^{\frac{\rho -1}{\rho }(t-s)} \leq 1\), it follows that
The proof is complete. □
4 Applications of Gronwall inequality via GPF derivative
Let \(\mathbb{R}^{m}\) be an m-dimensional Euclidean space. We prove our main results for the system
where \({{}_{0}^{C}D}^{\alpha ,\rho }\) denotes the GPF derivative of Caputo type of order \(\alpha \in (0,1)\), the state vector \(x: [-\tau ,T] \to \mathbb{R}^{m}\), the constant matrices \(A_{0}\) and \(A_{1}\) are of appropriate dimensions, the nonlinearity \(f:[0,T]\times \mathbb{R} ^{m} \times \mathbb{R}^{m} \to \mathbb{R}^{m}\), and the initial function \(\varphi :[-\tau ,0] \to \mathbb{R}^{m}\). By virtue of the results obtained in the previous sections, we prove the uniqueness and obtain an estimate for the solutions of system (24). Moreover, a numerical example is presented to demonstrate the applicability of the main results.
Let \(\vert \cdot \vert \) be any Euclidean norm and \(\Vert \cdot \Vert \) be the matrix norm induced by this vector. Denote by \(\mathcal{C}:=C([-\tau ,0],\mathbb{R}^{m})\) the set of all continuous functions. Clearly, the space \(\mathcal{C}\) is a Banach space induced by the norm \(\Vert z \Vert _{\mathcal{C}}:= \sup_{ t \in [-\tau ,0] }|z(t)|\).
Throughout the remaining part of the paper, we make use of the following assumptions:
-
(H.1)
The nonlinearity \(f \in C([0,T]\times \mathbb{R}^{m} \times \mathbb{R}^{m},\mathbb{R}^{m})\) satisfies the Lipschitz condition. That is, there exists a positive constant \(L_{1}>0\) such that
$$\begin{aligned}& \bigl\Vert f\bigl(t,x(t),x(t-\tau )\bigr)-f\bigl(t,y(t),y(t-\tau )\bigr) \bigr\Vert \\& \quad \le L_{1} \bigl( \bigl\Vert x(t)-y(t) \bigr\Vert + \bigl\Vert x(t-\tau )-y(t-\tau ) \bigr\Vert \bigr) \end{aligned}$$for \(t \in [0,T]\).
-
(H.2)
There exists a positive constant \(L_{2}\) such that \(\| f(t,x(t),x(t-\tau ))\| \le L_{2}\).
In what follows, we provide a representation for the solutions of system (24) that will be useful in the subsequent analysis.
Lemma 7
The function \(x: [-\tau ,0] \to \mathbb{R}^{m}\) is a solution of system (24) if and only if
Proof
For \(t \in [-\tau ,0]\), it is clear that \(x(t)=\varphi (t)\) is the solution of (24). We apply the operator \({{}_{0}D}^{\alpha , \rho }\) on both sides of equation (25) with Proposition 1 and Lemma 3 to obtain, for \(t \in [0,T]\),
By using the relation of the Caputo and Riemann–Liouville GPF derivatives in Proposition 3, it follows that
For system (24), we can see that \(x(t)=\varphi (t)\), \(t \in [-\tau ,0]\). For \(t \in [0,T]\), we apply the operator \({{}_{0}I}^{\alpha ,\rho }\) on both sides of equation (24) to get
In view of Lemma 5, one can easily see that
□
4.1 Uniqueness of solutions
The first main application in this paper is provided in the following theorem.
Theorem 1
Let condition (H.1) hold. If x and y are two solutions for system (24), then \(x=y\).
Proof
Let x and y be two solutions of system (24). Denote \(z=x-y\). Then, one can easily figure out that \(z(t)=0\) for \(t \in [- \tau ,0]\). This implies that system (24) has a unique solution for \(t \in [-\tau ,0]\).
For \(t \in [0,T]\), however, we have
If \(t \in [0,\tau ]\), then \(z(t-\tau )=0\). Therefore,
This implies
By applying the result of Corollary 3, we have
which implies that \(x(t)=y(t)\) for \(t \in I_{\tau }\).
For \(t \in [\tau ,T]\), we get
It follows that
Let \(\bar{z}(t)=\sup_{\theta \in [-\tau ,0]}\| z(t+\theta ) \|\), then we get
By applying the result of Corollary 3, we obtain
Hence, we end up with \(x(t)=y(t)\) for \(t \in [-\tau ,T]\). □
4.2 Bound for solutions
In this subsection, we provide a bound for the solution of system (24).
Theorem 2
Let condition (H.2) hold. Then the following estimate for the solution \(x(t)\) of system (24) is valid:
Proof
For \(t \in [0,T]\), the solution of system (24) has the form
Using the fact \(e^{\frac{\rho -1}{\rho }t}\leq 1\) for all \(t\in [0,T]\), it follows that
By assumption (H.2) and Proposition 1, the above inequality can be rewritten as follows:
Let \(v(t)=\Vert \varphi \Vert +(L_{2}+(\Vert A_{0}\Vert +\Vert A_{1} \Vert )\Vert \varphi \Vert ) \frac{T^{\alpha }}{\rho ^{\alpha }\varGamma (\alpha +1)}\), then v is a nondecreasing function. Therefore, Corollary 3 with \(w(t)= \|A_{0}\|+\|A_{1}\|\) implies that
Hence, the solution x of (24) satisfies the estimate
The proof is complete. □
Example 1
Consider the nonlinear delay proportional fractional system of the form
This corresponds to equation (24) with \(\alpha = 1/2\), \(\rho = 1/3\), \(A_{0}=3\), \(A_{1}=1\), \(T=1\), and \(\tau = 2\). The nonlinearity has the form \(f(t,x(t),x(t-\tau )) = 2\cos x(t)-\cos x(t-2)\). Therefore, we have
Then assumption (H.1) holds with \(L_{1}=2\). By the consequence of Lemma 7, system (36) has a unique solution. Moreover,
which implies that assumption (H.2) is satisfied with \(L_{2}=3\). By Theorem 2, the solution x of system (36) has the estimate
5 Conclusion
One of the most important issues in the theory of differential equations is finding qualitative properties of these equations. Integral equations are significant tools that facilitate exploring such properties. In this paper, we established the Gronwall inequality within the scope of fractional proportional operators. This inequality helped in proving the uniqueness of solutions to delay differential equations involving fractional proportional derivatives and in finding bounds of these solutions. In addition to what has been done in this paper, one can use the established Gronwall inequality to discuss some other qualitative properties of these solutions such as the stability in the sense of Ulam or Ulam–Hyers.
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The authors would like to express their sincere thanks to the editor and the anonymous referees for their recommendations. We believe that their valuable comments have improved the contents of the paper.
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The first and second authors would like to thank Prince Sultan University for funding this work through research group Nonlinear Analysis Methods in Applied Mathematics (NAMAM), group number RG-DES-2017-01-17.
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Alzabut, J., Abdeljawad, T., Jarad, F. et al. A Gronwall inequality via the generalized proportional fractional derivative with applications. J Inequal Appl 2019, 101 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13660-019-2052-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13660-019-2052-4