\documentclass[reqno]{amsart} \usepackage{hyperref} \AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small \emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations}, Vol. 2014 (2014), No. 72, pp. 1--6.\newline ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu \newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu} \thanks{\copyright 2014 Texas State University - San Marcos.} \vspace{9mm}} \begin{document} \title[\hfilneg EJDE-2014/72\hfil Boundary differentiability] {Boundary differentiability for inhomogeneous infinity Laplace equations} \author[G. Hong \hfil EJDE-2014/72\hfilneg] {Guanghao Hong} \address{Guanghao Hong \newline School of Mathematics and Statistics, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, 710049, China} \email{ghhongmath@gmail.com} \thanks{Submitted December 17, 2013. Published March 16, 2014.} \subjclass[2000]{35J25, 35J70, 49N60} \keywords{Boundary regularity; infinity Laplacian; comparison principle; \hfill\break\indent monotonicity} \begin{abstract} We study the boundary regularity of the solutions to inhomogeneous infinity Laplace equations. We prove that if $u\in C(\bar{\Omega})$ is a viscosity solution to $\Delta_{\infty}u:=\sum_{i,j=1}^n u_{x_i}u_{x_j}u_{x_ix_j}=f$ with $f\in C(\Omega)\cap L^{\infty}(\Omega)$ and for $x_0\in \partial\Omega$ both $\partial\Omega$ and $g:=u|_{\partial\Omega}$ are differentiable at $x_0$, then $u$ is differentiable at $x_0$. \end{abstract} \maketitle \numberwithin{equation}{section} \newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section] \newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma} \newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition} \allowdisplaybreaks \section{Introduction} Infinity Laplace equation $\Delta_{\infty}u=0$ arose as the Euler equation of $L^{\infty}$ variational problem of $|\nabla u|$, or equivalently, absolutely minimizing Lipschitz extension (AML) problem. This problem was initially studied by Aronsson \cite{a1} at the classical solutions level from 1960's. In 1993, Jensen \cite{j1} proved that a function $u(x)\in C(\Omega)$ is an AML: $$ \text{for any}\ V\subset\subset \Omega,\ Lip(u,V)=Lip(u,\partial V) $$ if and only if $u(x)$ is a viscosity solution to $\Delta_{\infty}u=0$. Moreover, for any bounded domain $\Omega\subset \mathbb{R}^n$ and $g\in C(\partial\Omega)$, the Dirichlet problem: \begin{equation} \label{e1} \Delta_{\infty}u=0 \text{ in } \Omega,\quad u=g \text{ on } \partial\Omega \end{equation} has an unique viscosity solution. Such an solution is called an infinity harmonic function. In 2001, Crandall, Evans and Gariepy \cite{c2} proved that a function $u(x)\in C(\Omega)$ is an infinity harmonic function if and only if $u$ satisfies the following \textit{comparison with cone property}: for any $V\subset\subset\Omega$ and and $c(x)=a+b|x-x_0|$, \begin{gather*} u(x)\leq c(x) \text{ on } \partial\{V\backslash \{x_0\}\} \Rightarrow u(x) \leq c(x)\ \text{in } V, \\ u(x)\geq c(x) \text{ on } \partial\{V\backslash \{x_0\}\} \Rightarrow u(x)\geq c(x)\ \text{in } V. \end{gather*} This comparison property turns out to be a very useful tool in the study of many aspects of this equation. Especially, it implies the following conclusions as a direct result \cite{c2}. \begin{lemma} \label{lem1} Let $u(x)\in C(\Omega)$ satisfy comparison with cone property, $x_0\in\Omega$, $00$ fixed, for every $j$ there exists a maximal direction $e_j\in \mathbb{R}^n$ with $|e_j|=1$ such that $u(x_0+Rr_j e_j)=\max_{x\in \partial B_{Rr_j}(x_0)}u(x)$. The sequence $\{e_j\}$ must have an accumulating point say $e^+$, then $v(Re^+)=Re^+$. For all $R$, we will have the same $e^+$. By considering the minimum directions we will get an $e^-$ and moreover $e^-=-e^+$. So $v$ is tight on the line $te^+$, $t\in(-\infty, \infty)$. Finally, a Lipschitz function on $\mathbb{R}^n$ that is tight on a line must be linear. However, this result does not imply the differentiability of $u$ in general since for different sequences $r_j$ one may get different linear functions $v$ although they must have same slope $S(x_0)$. Ten years later, by using much deeper pde techniques Evans and Smart \cite{ev1} proved that the blow-up limits are unique and accomplished the proof of interior differentiability. The continuously differentiability is still left open as the most prominent problem in this field although in 2 dimension $C^1$ and $C^{1,\alpha}$ regularity was achieved by Savin \cite{s1} and Evans-Savin \cite{ev1} respectively. Boundary regularity for infinity harmonic function was initially studied by Wang and Yu \cite{w1}. They proved the following result. \begin{theorem} \label{thm1} For $n\geq 2$, let $\Omega\subset R^n$ be a bounded domain with $\partial\Omega\in C^1$ and $g\in C^1(R^n)$. Assume that $u\in C(\bar{\Omega})$ is the viscosity solution of the infinity Laplace equation \eqref{e1}. Then $u$ is differentiable on the boundary, i.e., for any $x_0\in \partial\Omega$, there exists $Du(x_0)\in R^n$ such that $$ u(x)=u(x_0)+Du(x_0)\cdot (x-x_0)+o(|x-x_0|),\quad \forall x\in \bar{\Omega}. $$ \end{theorem} The boundary differentiability is much easier than interior differentiability. They defined the slope functions near and on the boundary by $$ S^+_r(x)=\sup_{y\in \partial(B(x,r)\cap\Omega)\backslash\{x\}} \frac{u(y)-u(x)}{|y-x|}\ \text{and}\ S^-_r(x) =\sup_{y\in \partial(B(x,r)\cap\Omega)\backslash\{x\}}\frac{u(x)-u(y)}{|y-x|} $$ for $x\in \bar{\Omega}$ and $r>0$ small. $S^{\pm}_r(x)$ are still monotone and have limits $S^{\pm}(x)$. But $S^+(x)\neq S^-(x)$ in general if $x\in \partial \Omega$. Denote $S(x):=\max\{S^+(x), S^-(x)\}$. $S(x)$ is upper-semicontinuous $\forall x\in\bar{\Omega}$ with the assumption that both $\partial\Omega$ and $g$ are $C^1$. They applied a similar argument as in \cite{c1} and proved that any blow-up limit of $u$ at a boundary point $x_0$ is a linear function $v(x)=e\cdot x$ with $|e|=S(x_0)$ on the half space $\mathbb{R}^n_+=\{x_n>0\}$. But this time it is very easy to prove the uniqueness of blow-up limits since the tangential part of $e$ is already given by the boundary data. So $e=(\sqrt{S(x_0)^2-|D_Tg(x_0)|^2}, D_Tg(x_0))$ or $e=(-\sqrt{S(x_0)^2-|D_Tg(x_0)|^2}, D_Tg(x_0))$. The former happens when $S(x_0)=S^+(x_0)$ and the latter happens when $S(x_0)=S^-(x_0)$. It is not natural to put $C^1$ assumption on the boundary conditions in order to prove merely differentiability of a solution. In a recent work \cite{h1} we improved Wang-Yu's Theorem to the following sharp version. \begin{theorem} \label{thm2} Let $\Omega\subset R^n$ be a domain and $u\in C(\bar{\Omega})$ is an infinity harmonic function in $\Omega$. Assume that for $x_0\in \partial\Omega$, $\partial \Omega$ and $g:=u|_{\partial \Omega}$ are differentiable at $x_0$. Then $u$ is differentiable at $x_0$. \end{theorem} Under this weaker assumption, it is not true that $S(x)$ is upper-semicontinuous at $x_0$. However we managed to show that $\limsup_{x\to x_0} S(x)\leq S(x_0)$ if $x\to x_0$ in a non-tangentially way. This is enough to imply $Lip(v, \mathbb{R}^n_+)\leq S(x_0)$. The inhomogeneous infinity Laplace Equation $\Delta_{\infty}u=f$ was studied by Lu and Wang \cite{l2}. They proved existence and uniqueness of a viscosity solution of the Dirichlet problem \begin{equation} \label{e2} \Delta_{\infty}u=f \text{ in } \Omega,\quad u=g \text{ on } \partial\Omega \end{equation} under the conditions that $\Omega\subset \mathbb{R}^n$ is bounded, $f\in C(\Omega)$ with $\inf_{\Omega}f>0$ or $\sup_{\Omega}f<0$ and $g\in C(\partial\Omega)$. They also proved some comparison principles and stability results. Lindgren \cite{l1} investigated the interior regularity of viscosity solutions of \eqref{e2}. He proved that the blow-ups are linear if $f\in C(\Omega)\cap L^{\infty}(\Omega)$ and $u$ is differentiable if $f\in C^1(\Omega)\cap L^{\infty}(\Omega)$. For inhomogeneous equation \eqref{e2}, the slope functions $S^{\pm}_r(x)$ is not monotone anymore, but so is $S^{\pm}_r(x)+r$ \cite[Corollary 1]{l1}. Hence the limits $S^{\pm}(x):=\lim_{r\to 0}S^{\pm}_r(x)$ still exist and the arguments in \cite{c1} and \cite{ev1} work. In this paper, we combine the techniques used in \cite{h1,l1,w1} to prove boundary differentiability for inhomogeneous infinity Laplace equation. \begin{theorem} \label{thm3} Let $\Omega\subset R^n$ and $u\in C(\bar{\Omega})$ is a viscosity solution of the inhomogeneous infinity Laplace equation \eqref{e2}. Assume that $f\in C(\Omega)\cap L^{\infty}(\Omega)$ and for $x_0\in \partial\Omega$, both $\partial \Omega$ and $g$ are differentiable at $x_0$. Then $u$ is differentiable at $x_0$. \end{theorem} \section{Proof of Theorem \ref{thm3}} Without lost of generality, we may assume that $x_0=0$ and the tangential plane of $\partial\Omega$ at $0$ is $\{x=(x',x_n)\in R^n:x_n=0\}$. Denote $B(x,r):=\{y\in R^n: |y-x|f(x')\}, $$ where $f\in C(\hat{B}(r_0))$ is differentiable at $0$ with $f(0)=Df(0)=0$. Denote $\hat{g}(x')=g(x',f(x'))$ for $x'\in\hat{B}(r_0)$, then $\hat{g}(x')\in C(\hat{B}(r_0))$ is differentiable at $0$. We will prove the following easier conclusion first and then apply it to prove Theorem \ref{thm3}. \begin{proposition} \label{prop1} Assume that $u$, $f$, $\Omega$ and $g$ satisfy the conditions in Theorem \ref{thm3}. We assume additionally $\hat{g}(x')\in C^1(\hat{B}(r_0))$. Then $u$ is differentiable at $0$. \end{proposition} For $x\in \bar{\Omega}\cap B_{r_0/2}$ and $00$, there exists $r(\epsilon, u)>0$, such that $$ \sup_{x\in \bar{\Omega}\cap B(r)}S(x)\leq S(0)+\epsilon. $$ \end{lemma} \begin{proof} For $\epsilon>0$, since $\hat{g}(x')\in C^1(\hat{B}(r_0))$ and $|D\hat{g}(0)|\leq S(0)$, there exists $r_1>0$ such that \begin{equation} \label{e3} \sup_{x\neq y\in \partial\Omega \cap B(r_1)} \frac{|u(x)-u(y)|}{|x-y|}\leq \sup_{x\neq y\in \partial\Omega \cap B(r_1)} \frac{|\hat{g}(x')-\hat{g}(y')|}{|x'-y'|} \leq S(0)+\frac{\epsilon}{3}. \end{equation} Since $\lim_{r\to 0}S_r(0)=S(0)$, there exists $00$, such that $$ \sup_{x\in\bar{\Omega}\cap B(r)\cap \{x_n\geq \theta|x'|\}}S(x)\leq S(0)+\epsilon. $$ \end{lemma} The proof of Lemma \ref{lem4} is essentially same as the proof of \cite[Lemma 2]{h1} for the homogeneous equation. Several places need minor modification, but this can be easily justified. So we omit the proof and refer the readers to \cite{h1}. 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