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Volume 22 Number 1 >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10525/600

Title: A Note on Coercivity of Lower Semicontinuous Functions and Nonsmooth Critical Point Theory
Authors: Corvellec, J.
Keywords: Slope
Variational Principle
Coercivity
Weak Slope
Nonsmooth Critical Point Theory
Issue Date: 1996
Publisher: Institute of Mathematics and Informatics Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
Citation: Serdica Mathematical Journal, Vol. 22, No 1, (1996), 57p-68p
Abstract: The first motivation for this note is to obtain a general version of the following result: let E be a Banach space and f : E → R be a differentiable function, bounded below and satisfying the Palais-Smale condition; then, f is coercive, i.e., f(x) goes to infinity as ||x|| goes to infinity. In recent years, many variants and extensions of this result appeared, see [3], [5], [6], [9], [14], [18], [19] and the references therein. A general result of this type was given in [3, Theorem 5.1] for a lower semicontinuous function defined on a Banach space, through an approach based on an abstract notion of subdifferential operator, and taking into account the “smoothness” of the Banach space. Here, we give (Theorem 1) an extension in a metric setting, based on the notion of slope from [11] and coercivity is considered in a generalized sense, inspired by [9]; our result allows to recover, for example, the coercivity result of [19], where a weakened version of the Palais-Smale condition is used. Our main tool (Proposition 1) is a consequence of Ekeland’s variational principle extending [12, Corollary 3.4], and deals with a function f which is, in some sense, the “uniform” Γ-limit of a sequence of functions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10525/600
ISSN: 1310-6600
Appears in Collections:Volume 22 Number 1

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