Next Article in Journal
Robustness of Consensus of Two-Layer Ring Networks
Next Article in Special Issue
Examining Nonlinear Fredholm Equations in Lebesgue Spaces with Variable Exponents
Previous Article in Journal
Relapse after Orthodontic-Surgical Treatment: A Retrospective Longitudinal Study
Previous Article in Special Issue
Existence and Nonexistence of Positive Solutions for Perturbations of the Anisotropic Eigenvalue Problem
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Three Convergence Results for Inexact Iterates of Uniformly Locally Nonexpansive Mappings

by
Simeon Reich
* and
Alexander J. Zaslavski
*
Department of Mathematics, The Technion—Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Symmetry 2023, 15(5), 1084; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym15051084
Submission received: 20 April 2023 / Revised: 4 May 2023 / Accepted: 12 May 2023 / Published: 15 May 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nonlinear Analysis and Its Applications in Symmetry II)

Abstract

:
In 2006, together with D. Butnariu, we showed that if all iterates of a nonexpansive self-mapping of a complete metric space converge, then all its inexact iterates with summable computational errors converge too. In a recent paper of ours, we have extended this result to uniformly locally nonexpansive self-mappings of a complete metric space. In the present paper, we establish analogous results for uniformly locally nonexpansive mappings which take a nonempty closed subset of a complete metric space into the space. In the particular case of a Banach space, if the operator is symmetric, then the set of all limit points of its iterates is also symmetric.

1. Introduction

For more than sixty years now, considerable research activity has been devoted to the fixed point theory of nonexpansive mappings in Banach and complete metric spaces [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. The starting point of this research was Banach’s classical theorem [13], which asserts that a strict contraction possesses a unique fixed point. This research activity also encompasses the study of the asymptotic behavior of (inexact) orbits of a nonexpansive mapping and their convergence to its fixed points. It includes studies of feasibility, common fixed points, iterative methods, and variational inequalities, which find important applications in engineering, medical science, and the natural sciences [12,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22].
In 2006, together with D. Butnariu [3] we showed that if all iterates of a nonexpansive self-mapping of a complete metric space converge, then all its inexact iterates with summable computational errors converge too. In [23], we have extended this result to uniformly locally nonexpansive self-mappings of a complete metric space. In the present paper, we establish analogous results for uniformly locally nonexpansive mappings which take a nonempty closed subset of a complete metric space into the space. In the particular case of a Banach space, if the operator is symmetric, then the set of all limit points of its iterates is also symmetric.
Let ( Z , d ) be a complete metric space. For each point ξ Z and each nonempty set E Z , put
d ( ξ , E ) : = inf { d ( ξ , η ) : η E } .
For each point ξ Z and each number r > 0 , set
B ( ξ , r ) : = { η X : d ( ξ , η ) r } .
For each mapping S : Z Z , let S 0 ξ = ξ for all ξ Z , S 1 = S and S i + 1 = S S i for each integer i 0 . We denote the set of all fixed points of S by F ( S ) .
The convergence of the inexact orbits of nonexpansive mappings in metric spaces in the presence of summable computational errors was studied in [3], and the following result has been obtained there (see also Theorem 2.72 on page 97 of [24]).
Theorem 1.
Let the mapping S : Z Z satisfy
d ( S ( ξ ) , S ( η ) ) d ( ξ , η )   f o r   a l l   ξ , η Z
and for each ξ Z , let the sequence { S n ξ } n = 1 converge in ( Z , d ) .
Assume that { ξ n } n = 0 Z ; the sequence { r n } n = 0 ( 0 , ) satisfies
n = 0 r n <
and that
d ( ξ n + 1 , S ( ξ n ) ) r n , n = 0 , 1 , .
Then, the sequence { ξ n } n = 1 converges to a fixed point of S in ( Z , d ) .
The result stated above has found important applications. It is, for instance, an essential ingredient in the study of superiorization and the perturbation resilience of algorithms. See [14,15,16,19] and the references mentioned therein.
In this paper, our goal is to extend this result to uniformly locally nonexpansive mappings which take a nonempty closed subset of a complete metric space into the space.
At this juncture, we present the following example, which demonstrates one of the possible applications of the results of [3] and the results of the current paper. Assume that ( Z , · ) is a Banach space, d ( ξ , η ) = ξ η for each pair of points ξ , η Z , a mapping S : Z Z satisfies
d ( S ( ξ ) , S ( η ) ) d ( ξ , η )   f o r   a l l   ξ , η Z
and that for each point ξ Z , the sequence { S n ( ξ ) } n = 1 converges in the norm topology. Let ξ 0 Z , { β n } n = 0 be a summable sequence of positive numbers, { w n } n = 0 Z be a norm bounded sequence, and let for any nonnegative integer n,
ξ n + 1 = S ( ξ n + β n w n ) .
Then, it follows from Theorem 1 that the sequence { ξ n } n = 0 converges in the norm topology of Z and that its limit is a fixed point of S. If we need to find an approximate fixed point of S, then we construct the sequence { ξ n } n = 1 defined above. With an appropriate choice of the bounded sequence { w n } n = 0 , the sequence { ξ n } n = 1 possesses some useful property. For example, the sequence { g ( ξ n ) } n = 1 can be decreasing, where g is a given function.

2. The Main Results

Assume that ( Z , d ) is a complete metric space, K Z is a nonempty closed set, Δ > 0 , and that a mapping S : K Z satisfies
d ( S ( ξ ) , S ( η ) ) d ( ξ , η )
for each pair of points ξ , η K satisfying d ( ξ , η ) Δ .
In this paper, we establish the following three results.
Theorem 2.
Assume that if a point ξ K and S i ( ξ ) K for each integer i 1 , then the sequence { S i ( ξ ) } i = 1 converges. Assume further that a sequence { y i } i = 0 K satisfies
i = 0 d ( y i + 1 , S ( y i ) ) <
and
lim inf i d ( y i , X K ) > 0 .
Then, the sequence { y i } i = 0 converges to a fixed point of S.
Theorem 2 is proven in Section 4 below.
Theorem 3.
Let F be a nonempty subset of K and assume that if ξ K and S i ( ξ ) K for each integer i 1 , then
lim i d ( S i ( ξ ) , F ) = 0 .
Let a sequence { y i } i = 0 satisfy relations (2) and (3). Then
lim i d ( x i , F ) = 0 .
Theorem 3 is proved in Section 5.
Theorem 4.
Assume that if ξ K and S i ( ξ ) K for each integer i 1 , then there exists a nonempty compact set E ( ξ ) K such that
lim i d ( S i ( ξ ) , E ( ξ ) ) = 0 .
Let a sequence { y i } i = 0 K satisfy relations (2) and (3). Then, there exists a compact set E X such that lim i d ( y i , E ) = 0 .
Theorem 4 is proven in Section 6.

3. An Auxiliary Result

Lemma 1.
Assume that a sequence { ξ i } i = 0 K satisfies
i = 0 d ( ξ i + 1 , S ( ξ i ) ) < ,
n 0 1 is an integer,
0 < Δ 0 < Δ ,
i = n 0 d ( ξ i + 1 , S ( ξ i ) ) < Δ 0
and
d ( ξ i , X K ) > Δ 0 f o r a l l i n t e g e r s i n 0 .
Assume further that
η n 0 = ξ n 0 ,
and that if i n 0 is an integer and η i K is defined, then
η i + 1 = S ( η i ) .
Then, η i K for every integer i > n 0 , and for each integer n > n 0 , we have
d ( ξ n , η n ) i = n 0 + 1 n d ( ξ i , S ( ξ i 1 ) ) .
Proof. 
In view of (4), (6), and (7), η n 0 + 1 X is well defined and
d ( ξ n 0 + 1 , η n 0 + 1 ) = d ( ξ n 0 + 1 , S ( η n 0 ) ) = d ( ξ n 0 + 1 , S ( ξ n 0 ) ) < Δ 0 .
By (5) and (9),
η n 0 + 1 K .
Assume that q > n 0 is an integer, η n K is defined for all integers n = n 0 , , q , and that for all integers n = n 0 + 1 , , q , inequality (8) holds. (In view of (9) and (10), our assumptions do hold for q = n 0 + 1 .) It follows from (8) with n = q that
d ( ξ q , η q ) < Δ 0 , η q K .
This implies that
η q + 1 = S ( η q )
is well defined. Relations (1), (4), (8) and (11) imply that
d ( ξ q + 1 , S ( η q ) ) d ( ξ q + 1 , S ( ξ q ) ) + d ( S ( ξ q ) , S ( η q ) )
d ( ξ q + 1 , S ( ξ q ) ) + d ( ξ q , η q )
d ( ξ q + 1 , S ( ξ q ) ) + n = n 0 + 1 q d ( ξ n , S ( ξ n 1 ) )
= n = n 0 + 1 q + 1 d ( ξ n , S ( ξ n 1 ) ) .
By (4) and the above relation, we have
d ( ξ q + 1 , η q + 1 ) n = n 0 + 1 q + 1 d ( ξ n , S ( ξ n 1 ) ) < Δ 0 .
When combined with (5), this implies that
η q + 1 K .
Thus, we see that the assumption made regarding q holds for q + 1 too. Summing up, we have shown using mathematical induction that η n K is well defined for all integers n > n 0 and that (8) holds for all integers n > n 0 . This completes the proof of Lemma 1. □

4. Proof of Theorem 2

We may assume without any loss of generality that there exists a number Δ 0 ( 0 , Δ ) , such that
d ( ξ i , X K ) > Δ 0   for   all   integers   i 0 .
Let ϵ ( 0 , Δ 0 ) be given. There exists an integer n 0 > 1 such that
i = n 0 d ( y i + 1 , S ( y i ) ) < ϵ / 2 < Δ 0 / 2 .
Set
z n 0 = y n 0
and for each integer i n 0 , if z i K is defined, then set
z i + 1 = S ( z i ) .
Lemma 1 and relation (12) imply that z n K for each integer n > n 0 , and for every integer n > n 0 , we have
d ( z n , y n ) n = n 0 + 1 n d ( y i , S ( y i 1 ) ) < ϵ / 2 .
By our assumptions, there exists
ξ = lim n z n .
It follows from (13) and (14) that for all sufficiently large natural numbers n, we have
d ( y n , ξ ) d ( y n , z n ) + d ( z n , ξ ) < ϵ / 2 + d ( z n , ξ ) ϵ .
Since ϵ is an arbitrary number in the interval ( 0 , Δ 0 ) , we find that { y n } n = 0 is a Cauchy sequence, and therefore, it converges. It is not difficult to see that its limit is a fixed point of S. This completes the proof of Theorem 2.

5. Proof of Theorem 3

By (3), we may assume without any loss of generality that there exists a number Δ 0 ( 0 , Δ ) such that
B ( y i , Δ 0 ) K   for   all   integers   i 0 .
Let ϵ ( 0 , Δ 0 ) be given. By (2), there exists an integer n 0 1 such that
i = n 0 d ( y i + 1 , S ( y i ) ) < ϵ / 2 .
Set
z n 0 = y n 0
and for each integer i n 0 , if z i K is defined, then set
z i + 1 = S ( z i ) .
Lemma 1 implies that for each integer n > n 0 , z n K is well defined and
d ( z n , y n ) i = n 0 + 1 d ( y i , S ( y i 1 ) ) < ϵ / 2 .
By our assumptions, we have
lim n d ( z n , F ) = 0 .
Thus, we see that for all sufficiently large natural numbers n,
d ( y n , F ) d ( y n , z n ) + d ( z n , F ) < ϵ / 2 + d ( z n , F ) < ϵ .
Theorem 3 is proven.

6. Proof of Theorem 4

By (3), we may assume without any loss of generality that there exists a number Δ 0 ( 0 , Δ ) such that
B ( y i , Δ 0 ) K   for   all   integers   i 0 .
Let ϵ ( 0 , Δ 0 ) be given. By (3), there exists an integer n 0 1 such that
i = n 0 d ( y i + 1 , S ( y i ) ) < ϵ / 2 .
Set
z n 0 = y n 0
and for each integer n n 0 , if z n K is defined, then set
z n + 1 = S ( z n ) .
Lemma 1 implies that for each integer n > n 0 , z n K is well defined and
d ( z n , y n ) i = n 0 + 1 d ( y i + 1 , S ( y i 1 ) ) < ϵ / 2 .
By our assumptions, there exists a nonempty compact set E 0 K such that
lim n d ( z n , E 0 ) = 0 .
Clearly, for every sufficiently large natural number n > n 0 ,
d ( y n , E 0 ) d ( y n , z n ) + d ( z n , E 0 ) < ϵ .
Thus, we have shown that there exists a compact set E 0 such that
d ( y n , E 0 ) < ϵ
for every sufficiently large natural number n. We may assume that E 0 is finite. Thus for every ϵ > 0 , there exists a finite set E ϵ such that
d ( y n , E ϵ ) < ϵ
for every sufficiently large natural number n. This implies that each subsequence of { y i } i = 0 has a convergent subsequence. Denote by E the set of all limit points of the sequence { y i } i = 0 . It is not difficult to see that E is compact and that
lim i d ( y i , E ) = 0 ,
as asserted.
This completes the proof of Theorem 4.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed equally to this work. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The first author was partially supported by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant No. 820/17), by the Fund for the Promotion of Research at the Technion (Grant 2001893), and by the Technion General Research Fund (Grant 2016723).

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Both authors are grateful to the editors and to two anonymous referees for their useful comments and helpful suggestions.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Betiuk-Pilarska, A.; Domínguez Benavides, T. Fixed points for nonexpansive mappings and generalized nonexpansive mappings on Banach lattices. Pure Appl. Func. Anal. 2016, 1, 343–359. [Google Scholar]
  2. Bruck, R.E.; Kirk, W.A.; Reich, S. Strong and weak convergence theorems for locally nonexpansive mappings in Banach spaces. Nonlinear Anal. 1982, 6, 151–155. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Butnariu, D.; Reich, S.; Zaslavski, A.J. Convergence to Fixed Points of Inexact Orbits of Bregman-Monotone and of Nonexpansive Operators in Banach Spaces. In Fixed Point Theory and Its Applications; Yokohama Publishers: Yokohama, Japan, 2006; pp. 11–32. [Google Scholar]
  4. de Blasi, F.S.; Myjak, J. Sur la convergence des approximations successives pour les contractions non linéaires dans un espace de Banach. C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris 1976, 283, 185–187. [Google Scholar]
  5. Goebel, K.; Kirk, W.A. Topics in Metric Fixed Point Theory; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, 1990. [Google Scholar]
  6. Goebel, K.; Reich, S. Uniform Convexity, Hyperbolic Geometry, and Nonexpansive Mappings; Marcel Dekker: New York, NY, USA; Basel, Switzerland, 1984. [Google Scholar]
  7. Jachymski, J. Extensions of the Dugundji-Granas and Nadler’s theorems on the continuity of fixed points. Pure Appl. Funct. Anal. 2017, 2, 657–666. [Google Scholar]
  8. Kirk, W.A. Contraction Mappings and Extensions. In Handbook of Metric Fixed Point Theory; Kluwer: Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 2001; pp. 1–34. [Google Scholar]
  9. Kubota, R.; Takahashi, W.; Takeuchi, Y. Extensions of Browder’s demiclosedness principle and Reich’s lemma and their applications. Pure Appl. Func. Anal. 2016, 1, 63–84. [Google Scholar]
  10. Edelstein, M. An extension of Banach’s contraction principle. Proc. Am. Math. Soc. 1961, 12, 7–10. [Google Scholar]
  11. Rakotch, E. A note on contractive mappings. Proc. Am. Math. Soc. 1962, 13, 459–465. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Zaslavski, A.J. Approximate Solutions of Common Fixed Point Problems; Springer Optimization and Its Applications; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  13. Banach, S. Sur les opérations dans les ensembles abstraits et leur application aux équations intégrales. Fund. Math. 1922, 3, 133–181. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Butnariu, D.; Davidi, R.; Herman, G.T.; Kazantsev, I.G. Stable convergence behavior under summable perturbations of a class of projection methods for convex feasibility and optimization problems. IEEE J. Sel. Top. Signal Process. 2007, 1, 540–547. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Censor, Y.; Davidi, R.; Herman, G.T. Perturbation resilience and superiorization of iterative algorithms. Inverse Probl. 2010, 26, 12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  16. Censor, Y.; Davidi, R.; Herman, G.T.; Schulte, R.W.; Tetruashvili, L. Projected subgradient minimization versus superiorization. J. Optim. Theory Appl. 2014, 160, 730–747. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Censor, Y.; Zaknoon, M. Algorithms and convergence results of projection methods for inconsistent feasibility problems: A review. Pure Appl. Func. Anal. 2018, 3, 565–586. [Google Scholar]
  18. Gibali, A. A new split inverse problem and an application to least intensity feasible solutions. Pure Appl. Funct. Anal. 2017, 2, 243–258. [Google Scholar]
  19. Nikazad, T.; Davidi, R.; Herman, G.T. Accelerated Perturbation-Resilient Block-Iterative Projection Methods with Application to Image Reconstruction. Inverse Probl. 2012, 28, 19p. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  20. Takahashi, W. The split common fixed point problem and the shrinking projection method for new nonlinear mappings in two Banach spaces. Pure Appl. Funct. Anal. 2017, 2, 685–699. [Google Scholar]
  21. Takahashi, W. A general iterative method for split common fixed point problems in Hilbert spaces and applications. Pure Appl. Funct. Anal. 2018, 3, 349–369. [Google Scholar]
  22. Ostrowski, A.M. The Round-Off Stability of Iterations. Z. Angew. Math. Mech. 1967, 47, 77–81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Reich, S.; Zaslavski, A.J. Convergence of inexact iterates of uniformly locally nonexpansive mappings with summable errors. JP J. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2022, 18, 1–11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Reich, S.; Zaslavski, A.J. Genericity in Nonlinear Analysis, Developments in Mathematics; Springer: New York, NY, USA, 2014; Volume 34. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Reich, S.; Zaslavski, A.J. Three Convergence Results for Inexact Iterates of Uniformly Locally Nonexpansive Mappings. Symmetry 2023, 15, 1084. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym15051084

AMA Style

Reich S, Zaslavski AJ. Three Convergence Results for Inexact Iterates of Uniformly Locally Nonexpansive Mappings. Symmetry. 2023; 15(5):1084. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym15051084

Chicago/Turabian Style

Reich, Simeon, and Alexander J. Zaslavski. 2023. "Three Convergence Results for Inexact Iterates of Uniformly Locally Nonexpansive Mappings" Symmetry 15, no. 5: 1084. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym15051084

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop