Hopf maximum principle

The Hopf maximum principle is a maximum principle in the theory of second order elliptic partial differential equations and has been described as the "classic and bedrock result" of that theory. Generalizing the maximum principle for harmonic functions which was already known to Gauss in 1839, Eberhard Hopf proved in 1927 that if a function satisfies a second order partial differential inequality of a certain kind in a domain of Rn and attains a maximum in the domain then the function is constant. The simple idea behind Hopf's proof, the comparison technique he introduced for this purpose, has led to an enormous range of important applications and generalizations.

Mathematical formulation

Let u = u(x), x = (x1, , xn) be a C2 function which satisfies the differential inequality

 Lu = \sum_{ij} a_{ij}(x)\frac{\partial^2 u}{\partial x_i\partial x_j} + 
\sum_i b_i\frac{\partial u}{\partial x_i} \geq 0

in an open domain Ω, where the symmetric matrix aij = aji(x) is locally uniformly positive definite in Ω and the coefficients aij, bi = bi(x) are locally bounded. If u takes a maximum value M in Ω then u M.

It is usually thought that the Hopf maximum principle applies only to linear differential operators L. In particular, this is the point of view taken by Courant and Hilbert's Methoden der mathematischen Physik. In the later sections of his original paper, however, Hopf considered a more general situation which permits certain nonlinear operators L and, in some cases, leads to uniqueness statements in the Dirichlet problem for the mean curvature operator and the Monge–Ampère equation.

References

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