Next Article in Journal / Special Issue
Some Results on S-Contractions of Type E
Previous Article in Journal
On Some Inequalities Involving Liouville–Caputo Fractional Derivatives and Applications to Special Means of Real Numbers
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Controlled Metric Type Spaces and the Related Contraction Principle

1
Department of Mathematics and General Sciences, Prince Sultan University, P. O. Box 66833, 11586 Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
2
Department of Mathematics, College of Education in Jubail, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, P. O. 12020, Industrial Jubail 31961, Saudi Arabia
3
Department of Natural Sciences, Community College Al-Riyadh, King Saud University, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia
4
ESSEC Tunis, University of Tunis, Tunis 2058, Tunisia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Mathematics 2018, 6(10), 194; https://doi.org/10.3390/math6100194
Submission received: 11 September 2018 / Revised: 28 September 2018 / Accepted: 30 September 2018 / Published: 8 October 2018
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Fixed Point Theory and Its Applications)

Abstract

:
In this article, we introduce a new extension of b-metric spaces, called controlled metric type spaces, by employing a control function α ( x , y ) of the right-hand side of the b-triangle inequality. Namely, the triangle inequality in the new defined extension will have the form, d ( x , y ) α ( x , z ) d ( x , z ) + α ( z , y ) d ( z , y ) , for   all x , y , z X . Examples of controlled metric type spaces that are not extended b-metric spaces in the sense of Kamran et al. are given to show that our extension is different. A Banach contraction principle on controlled metric type spaces and an example are given to illustrate the usefulness of the structure of the new extension.

1. Introduction

Fixed point theory has widespread applications in different fields science and Engineering [1,2,3,4,5]. The core of the proof of existence and uniqueness theorems for the solutions of ordinary and fractional initial and boundary value problems depends on applying different fixed point theorems. The most applied fixed point theorem is the Banach contraction principle, which has been generalized by either modifying the contractive type condition or by working on a more generalized metric type space (see [6,7,8,9,10,11]). The b-metric space [12,13] and its partial versions, which extends the metric space by modifying the triangle equality metric axiom by inserting a constant multiple s 1 to the right-hand side, is one of the most applied generalizations for metric spaces (see [14,15,16,17,18,19,20]).
Very recently, the authors in [21] introduced a type of extended b-metric spaces by replacing the constant s by a function θ ( x , y ) depending on the parameters of the left-hand side of the triangle inequality. In this article, we shall define a different type extension for b-metric spaces by replacing s by a function α ( x , y ) to act separately on each term in the right-hand side of the triangle inequality as mentioned in the abstract. Then, we give examples to show that this extension is different from extended b-metric spaces in the sense of Kamran et al. [21]. We also prove the corresponding Banach fixed point theorem on controlled metric type spaces and we provide an illustrating example.

2. Preliminary Assertions

In 2017, Kamran et al. [21] initiated the concept of extended b-metric spaces.
Definition 1.
[21] Let X be a nonempty set and θ : X × X [ 1 , ) . An extended b-metric is a function d : X × X [ 0 , ) such that for all x , y , z X :
1. 
d ( x , y ) = 0 x = y ,
2. 
d ( x , y ) = d ( y , x ) ,
3. 
d ( x , y ) θ ( x , y ) [ d ( x , z ) + d ( z , y ) ] .
We generalize the concept of b-metric spaces in a different way as follows:
Definition 2.
Given a nonempty set X and α : X × X [ 1 , ) . The function d : X × X [ 0 , ) is called a controlled metric type if
( d 1 ) d ( x , y ) = 0 if and only if x = y ,
( d 2 ) d ( x , y ) = d ( y , x ) ,
( d 3 ) d ( x , y ) α ( x , z ) d ( x , z ) + α ( z , y ) d ( z , y ) ,
for all x , y , z X . The pair ( X , d ) is called a controlled metric type space.
Remark 1.
If, for all x , y in X, α ( x , y ) = s 1 , then ( X , d ) is a b-metric space, which leads us to conclude that every b-metric space is a controlled metric type space. In addition, a controlled metric type space is not in general an extended b-metric space when taking the same function, that is, in the case θ = α . The following examples explain this fact.
Example 1.
Choose X = { 1 , 2 , } . Take d : X × X [ 0 , ) as
d ( x , y ) = 0 , x = y , 1 x , i f   x   i s   e v e n   a n d   y   i s   o d d , 1 y , i f   x   i s   o d d   a n d   y   i s   e v e n , 1 , o t h e r w i s e .
Consider α : X × X [ 1 , ) as
α ( x , y ) = x , i f   x   i s   e v e n   a n d   y   i s   o d d , y , i f   x   i s   o d d   a n d   y   i s   e v e n , 1 , o t h e r w i s e .
( d 1 ) and ( d 2 ) are clearly true. We shall prove that ( d 3 ) holds.
Case 1: If z = x or z = y , ( d 3 ) is satisfied.
Case 2: If z x and z y , ( d 3 ) holds when x = y . From now on, suppose that x y . Then, we have x y z . It is also obvious that ( d 3 ) holds in all following possible subcases:
Subcase 1: x , z are even and y is odd;
Subcase 2: x is even and y , z are odd;
Subcase 3: x , z are odd and y is even;
Subcase 4: x , z are even and y is odd;
Subcase 5: x , y , z are even;
Subcase 6: x , y are even and z is odd;
Subcase 7: x , y are odd and z is even;
Subcase 8: x , y , z are odd.
Consequently, d is a controlled metric type.
On the other hand, for n = 2 , 3 , , we have
d ( 2 n + 1 , 4 n + 1 ) = 1 > 1 n = α ( 2 n + 1 , 4 n + 1 ) [ d ( 2 n + 1 , 2 n ) + d ( 2 n , 4 n + 1 ) ] ,
that is, d is not an extended b-metric for the same function α = θ .
Example 2.
Take X = { 0 , 1 , 2 } . Consider the function d given as
d ( 0 , 0 ) = d ( 1 , 1 ) = d ( 2 , 2 ) = 0 ,
and
d ( 0 , 1 ) = d ( 1 , 0 ) = 1 , d ( 0 , 2 ) = d ( 2 , 0 ) = 1 2 , d ( 1 , 2 ) = d ( 2 , 1 ) = 2 5 .
Take α : X × X [ 1 , ) to be symmetric and be defined by
α ( 0 , 0 ) = α ( 1 , 1 ) = α ( 2 , 2 ) = α ( 0 , 2 ) = 1 , α ( 1 , 2 ) = 5 4 , α ( 0 , 1 ) = 11 10 .
It is easy to see that d is a controlled metric type.
Note that
d ( 0 , 1 ) = 1 > 99 100 = α ( 0 , 1 ) [ d ( 0 , 2 ) + d ( 2 , 1 ) ] .
Thus, d is not an extended b-metric for the same function α = θ .
We define Cauchy and convergent sequences in controlled metric type spaces as follows:
Definition 3.
Let ( X , d ) be a controlled metric type space and { x n } n 0 be a sequence in X.
(1) We say that the sequence { x n } converges to some x in X , if, for every ϵ > 0 , there exists N = N ( ϵ ) N such that d ( x n , x ) < ϵ for all n N . In this case, we write lim n x n = x .
(2) We say that the sequence { x n } is Cauchy, if, for every ϵ > 0 , there exists N = N ( ϵ ) N such that d ( x m , x n ) < ϵ for all m , n N .
(3) The controlled metric type space ( X , d ) is called complete if every Cauchy sequence is convergent.
Definition 4.
Let ( X , d ) be a controlled metric type space. Let x X and ε > 0 .
( i ) The open ball B ( x , ε ) is
B ( x , ε ) = { y X , d ( x , y ) < ε } .
( i i ) The mapping T : X X is said continuous at x X if for all ε > 0 , there exists δ > 0 such that T ( B ( x , δ ) ) B ( T x , ε ) .
Clearly, if T is continuous at x in the controlled metric type space ( X , d ) , then x n x implies that T x n T x as n .

3. Main Results

Now, we are ready to prove our main result corresponding to the Banach contraction principle on controlled metric type spaces.
Theorem 1.
Let ( X , d ) be a complete controlled metric type space. Let T : X X be a mapping such that
d ( T x , T y ) k d ( x , y ) ,
for all x , y X , where k ( 0 , 1 ) . For x 0 X , take x n = T n x 0 . Suppose that
sup m 1 lim i α ( x i + 1 , x i + 2 ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) α ( x i + 1 , x m ) < 1 k .
In addition, assume that, for every x X , we have
lim n α ( x n , x ) a n d lim n α ( x , x n ) e x i s t a n d a r e f i n i t e .
Then, T has a unique fixed point.
Proof. 
Consider the sequence { x n = T n x 0 } . By using (1), we get
d ( x n , x n + 1 ) k n d ( x 0 , x 1 ) f o r a l l n 0 .
For all natural numbers n < m , we have
d ( x n , x m ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) d ( x n , x n + 1 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) d ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) d ( x n , x n + 1 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n + 1 , x n + 2 ) d ( x n + 1 , x n + 2 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n + 2 , x m ) d ( x n + 2 , x m ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) d ( x n , x n + 1 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n + 1 , x n + 2 ) d ( x n + 1 , x n + 2 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n + 2 , x m ) α ( x n + 2 , x n + 3 ) d ( x n + 2 , x n + 3 ) + α ( x n + 1 , x m ) α ( x n + 2 , x m ) α ( x n + 3 , x m ) d ( x n + 3 , x m ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) d ( x n , x n + 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 2 j = n + 1 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) d ( x i , x i + 1 ) + k = n + 1 m 1 α ( x k , x m ) d ( x m 1 , x m ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) k n d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 2 j = n + 1 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) k i d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 1 α ( x i , x m ) k m 1 d ( x 0 , x 1 ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) k n d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 2 j = n + 1 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) k i d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 1 α ( x i , x m ) k m 1 α ( x m 1 , x m ) d ( x 0 , x 1 ) = α ( x n , x n + 1 ) k n d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 1 j = n + 1 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) k i d ( x 0 , x 1 ) α ( x n , x n + 1 ) k n d ( x 0 , x 1 ) + i = n + 1 m 1 j = 0 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) k i d ( x 0 , x 1 ) .
Above, we make use of that α ( x , y ) 1 . Let
S p = i = 0 p j = 0 i α ( x j , x m ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) k i .
Hence, we have
d ( x n , x m ) d ( x 0 , x 1 ) k n α ( x n , x n + 1 ) + ( S m 1 S n ) .
Condition (2), by using the ration test, guarantees that lim n S n exists and hence the real sequence { S n } is Cauchy. Finally, if we take the limit in the inequality (4) as n , m , we deduce that
lim n , m d ( x n , x m ) = 0 ,
that is, { x n } is a Cauchy sequence in the complete controlled metric type space ( X , d ) , so { x n } converges to some u X . We shall show that u is a fixed point of T . The triangle inequality yields that
d ( u , x n + 1 ) α ( u , x n ) d ( u , x n ) + α ( x n , x n + 1 ) d ( x n , x n + 1 ) .
Using (2), (3) and (5), we deduce that
lim n d ( u , x n + 1 ) = 0 .
Using again the triangle inequality and (1),
d ( u , T u ) α ( u , x n + 1 ) d ( u , x n + 1 ) + α ( x n + 1 , T u ) d ( x n + 1 , T u ) α ( u , x n + 1 ) d ( u , x n + 1 ) + k α ( x n + 1 , T u ) d ( x n , u ) .
Taking the limit as n and taking (3) and (6) into view, we deduce that d ( u , T u ) = 0 , that is, T u = u . Finally, assume that T has two fixed points, say u and v . Thus,
d ( u , v ) = d ( T u , T v ) k d ( u , v ) ,
which holds unless d ( u , v ) = 0 , so u = v . Hence, T has a unique fixed point. □
We illustrate Theorem 1 by the following example.
Example 3.
Consider X = { 0 , 1 , 2 } . Let d be symmetric and given as
d ( x , x ) = 0 f o r   e a c h x X ,
and
d ( 0 , 1 ) = 1 , d ( 0 , 2 ) = 11 20 , d ( 1 , 2 ) = 2 5 .
Take α : X × X [ 1 , ) to be symmetric and be defined by
α ( 0 , 0 ) = α ( 1 , 1 ) = α ( 2 , 2 ) = α ( 0 , 2 ) = 1 , α ( 1 , 2 ) = 49 40 , α ( 0 , 1 ) = 11 10 .
Clearly, d is an α-b-metric. Consider the self map T on X as
T 0 = 2 a n d T 1 = T 2 = 1 .
Choose k = 4 5 . Clearly, (1) holds. For any x 0 X , (2) is satisfied. All hypotheses of Theorem 1 hold, and so the T has a unique fixed point, which is u = 1 .
Note that we can not apply the standard Banach contraction principle on metric spaces.
Definition 5.
Let T : X X . For some x 0 X , let O ( x 0 ) = { x 0 , T x 0 , T 2 x 0 , } be the orbit of x 0 . A function H : X R is said to be T-orbitally lower semi-continuous at v X if for { x n } O ( x 0 ) such that x n v , we have H ( v ) lim n inf H ( x n ) .
Similar to [21], we can employ Definition 5, to state the following consequent of Theorem 1, which generalizes Theorem 1 in [22].
Corollary 1.
Let ( X , d ) be a complete controlled metric type space. Let x 0 X and T : X X be a given mapping. Suppose that there exists k ( 0 , 1 ) such that
d ( T z , T 2 z ) k d ( z , T z ) , f o r e a c h z O ( x 0 ) .
Take x n = T n x 0 . Suppose that
sup m 1 lim i α ( x i + 1 , x i + 2 ) α ( x i , x i + 1 ) α ( x i + 1 , x m ) < 1 k .
Then, x n u X (as n ). Moreover, such u verifies T u = u if and only if the functional x d ( x , T x ) is T orbitally lower semi-continuous at u.
Remark 2.
Notice that the condition (3) is not needed in Corollary 1. It is replaced by the lower semi-continuity condition. In Theorem 2 of Kamran et al. [21], the continuity of d was used. As we see in Theorem 1, the continuity of d is not required and it is replaced by condition (3). In addition, (2) is the analogue of the condition on θ in Theorem 2 of [21] is rewritten differently, but in the correct form.

4. Perspectives

It is an open question regarding the treatment of the cases of Kannan contraction, Chatterjee contraction, Hardy-Rogers contraction, Ćirić contraction and Suzuki contraction.

5. Conclusions

We summarize our conclusions as follow.
(1)
As an extension of b -metric spaces, we defined a controlled metric type space by employing a control function α ( x , y ) 1 to the right-hand side of the triangle inequality.
(2)
We gave an example of a controlled metric type space which is not an extended b -metric space in the sense of Kamran et al. in [21].
(3)
We proved a contraction principle in the newly defined controlled meetric type space and concluded a fixed point result under T -orbitally lower semi-continuity assumption.
(4)
An example is given to illustrate the proven contraction principle.
(5)
Open problems have been stated in the Perspectives Section for possible future works.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed equally in writing this article. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Acknowledgments

The first and last 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.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Abdeljawad, T.; Jarad, F.; Baleanu, D. On the existence and the uniqueness theorem for fractional differential equations with bounded delay within Caputo derivatives, Science in China. Mathematics 2008, 51, 1775–1786. [Google Scholar]
  2. Abdeljawad, T.; Baleanu, D.; Jarad, F. Existence and uniqueness theorem for a class of delay differential equations with left and right Caputo fractional derivatives. J. Math. Phys. 2018, 49, 083507. [Google Scholar]
  3. Kilbas, A.A.; Srivastava, M.H.; Trujillo, J.J. Theory and Application of Fractional Differential Equations; North Holland Mathematics Studies; Elsevier: Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2006. [Google Scholar]
  4. Khamsi, M.A.; Kirk, W.A. An Introduction to Metric Spaces and Fixed point Theory; John Willey and Sons, INC.: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 1996. [Google Scholar]
  5. Mlaiki, N.; Mukheimer, A.; Rohen, Y.; Souayah, N.; Abdeljawad, T. Fixed point theorems for α-ψ-contractive mapping in Sb-metric spaces. J. Math. Anal. 2017, 8, 40–46. [Google Scholar]
  6. Abdeljawad, T. Meir-Keeler α-contractive fixed and common fixed point theorems. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2013, 2013, 19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Abodayeh, K.; Mlaiki, N.; Abdeljawad, T.; Shatanawi, W. Relations between partial metric spaces and M-metric spaces, Caristi Kirk’s Theorem in M-metric type spaces. J. Math. Anal. 2016, 7, 1–12. [Google Scholar]
  8. Patel, D.K.; Abdeljawad, T.; Gopal, D. Common fixed points of generalized Meir-Keeler α-contractions. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2013, 2013, 260. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Samet, B.; Vetro, C.; Verto, P. Fixed point theorems for α-ψ-contractive type mappings. Nonlinear Anal. 2012, 75, 2154–2165. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Souayah, N.; Mlaiki, N.; Mrad, M. The GM-Contraction Principle for Mappings on M-Metric Spaces Endowed With a Graph and Fixed Point Theorems. IEEE Access 2018, 6, 25178–25184. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Souayah, N.; Mlaiki, N. A fixed point theorem in Sb metric spaces. J. Math. Comput. Sci. 2016, 16, 131–139. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Bakhtin, I.A. The contraction mapping principle in almost metric spaces. Funct. Anal. 1989, 30, 26–37. [Google Scholar]
  13. Czerwik, S. Contraction mappings in b-metric spaces. Acta Math. Inform. Univ. Ostra. 1993, 1, 5–11. [Google Scholar]
  14. Abdeljawad, T.; Abodayeh, K.; Mlaiki, N. On fixed point generalizations to partial b-metric spaces. J. Comput. Anal. Appl. 2015, 19, 883–891. [Google Scholar]
  15. Afshari, H.; Atapour, M.; Aydi, H. Generalized α-ψ-Geraghty multivalued mappings on b-metric spaces endowed with a graph. TWMS J. Appl. Eng. Math. 2017, 7, 248–260. [Google Scholar]
  16. Alharbi, N.; Aydi, H.; Felhi, A.; Ozel, C.; Sahmim, S. α-contractive mappings on rectangular b-metric spaces and an application to integral equations. J. Math. Anal. 2018, 9, 47–60. [Google Scholar]
  17. Aydi, H.; Karapinar, E.; Bota, M.F.; Mitrović, S. A fixed point theorem for set-valued quasi-contractions in b-metric spaces. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2012, 2012, 88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Aydi, H.; Bota, M.F.; Karapınar, E.; Moradi, S. A common fixed point for weak ϕ-contractions on b-metric spaces. Fixed Point Theory 2012, 13, 337–346. [Google Scholar]
  19. Aydi, H.; Banković, R.; Mitrović, I.; Nazam, M. Nemytzki-Edelstein-Meir-Keeler type results in b-metric spaces. Discret. Dyn. Nat. Soc. 2018, 2018, 4745764. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Karapınar, E.K.; Czerwik, S.; Aydi, H. (α,ψ)-Meir-Keeler contraction mappings in generalized b-metric spaces. J. Funct. Spaces 2018, 2018, 3264620. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Kamran, T.; Samreen, M.; UL Ain, Q. A Generalization of b-metric space and some fixed point theorems. Mathematics 2017, 5, 1–7. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Hicks, T.L.; Rhodes, B.E. A Banach type fixed point theorem. Math. Jpn. 1979, 24, 327–330. [Google Scholar]

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Mlaiki, N.; Aydi, H.; Souayah, N.; Abdeljawad, T. Controlled Metric Type Spaces and the Related Contraction Principle. Mathematics 2018, 6, 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/math6100194

AMA Style

Mlaiki N, Aydi H, Souayah N, Abdeljawad T. Controlled Metric Type Spaces and the Related Contraction Principle. Mathematics. 2018; 6(10):194. https://doi.org/10.3390/math6100194

Chicago/Turabian Style

Mlaiki, Nabil, Hassen Aydi, Nizar Souayah, and Thabet Abdeljawad. 2018. "Controlled Metric Type Spaces and the Related Contraction Principle" Mathematics 6, no. 10: 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/math6100194

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