Next Article in Journal
Re-Evaluating the Classical Falling Body Problem
Next Article in Special Issue
Unbiased Least-Squares Modelling
Previous Article in Journal
Possibility Measure of Accepting Statistical Hypothesis
Previous Article in Special Issue
Approximation of Finite Hilbert and Hadamard Transforms by Using Equally Spaced Nodes
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Improved Conditions for Oscillation of Functional Nonlinear Differential Equations

by
Omar Bazighifan
1,2,† and
Mihai Postolache
3,4,5,*,†
1
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Hadhramout University, Hadhramout 50512, Yemen
2
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Education, Seiyun University, Hadhramout 50512, Yemen
3
Center for General Education, China Medical University, Taichung 40402, Taiwan
4
Department of Mathematics and Informatics, University Politehnica of Bucharest, 060042 Bucharest, Romania
5
Romanian Academy, Gh. Mihoc-C. Iacob Institute of Mathematical Statistics and Applied Mathematics, 050711 Bucharest, Romania
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Mathematics 2020, 8(4), 552; https://doi.org/10.3390/math8040552
Submission received: 17 March 2020 / Revised: 1 April 2020 / Accepted: 3 April 2020 / Published: 9 April 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multivariate Approximation for solving ODE and PDE)

Abstract

:
The aim of this work is to study oscillatory properties of a class of fourth-order delay differential equations. New oscillation criteria are obtained by using generalized Riccati transformations. This new theorem complements and improves a number of results reported in the literature. Some examples are provided to illustrate the main results.

1. Introduction

In this article, we investigate the asymptotic behavior of solutions of the fourth-order differential equation
b   x   w   x κ + i = 1 j q i   x   f   w   ϑ i   x   =   0 , x     x 0 .
Throughout this paper, we assume the following conditions hold:
(Z1)
κ are quotient of odd positive integers;
(Z2)
b C 1 [ x 0 , ) , R , b x > 0 , b x 0 and under the condition
x 0 1 b 1 / κ x d x = .
(Z3)
q i C [ x 0 , ) , q x > 0 , i = 1 , 2 , , j ,
(Z4)
ϑ i C [ x 0 , ) , ϑ i x x , lim x ϑ i x = ; i = 1 , 2 , , j ,
(Z4)
f C R , R such that
f x / x κ > 0 , for x 0 .
Definition 1.
The function y C 3 [ ν y , ) , ν y ν 0 , is called a solution of equation (1), if b x w x κ C 1 [ x w , ) , and w x satisfies (1) on [ x w , ) .
Definition 2.
A solution of (1) is called oscillatory if it has arbitrarily large zeros on [ x w , ) , and otherwise is called to be nonoscillatory.
Definition 3.
Equation (1) is said to be oscillatory if all its solutions are oscillatory.
Differential equations arise in modeling situations to describe population growth, biology, economics, chemical reactions, neural networks, and in aeromechanical systems, etc.; see [1].
More and more scholars pay attention to the oscillatory solution of functional differential equations, see [2,3,4,5], especially for the second/third-order, see [6,7,8], or higher-order equations see [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. With the development of the oscillation for the second-order equations, researchers began to study the oscillation for the fourth-order equations, see [18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25].
In the following, we show some previous results in the literature which related to this paper:
Moaaz et al. [21] studied the fourth-order nonlinear differential equations with a continuously distributed delay
b   x   w   x α + a c q   x , ξ   f   w   g   x , ξ   d ξ = 0 ,
by means of the theory of comparison with second-order delay equations, the authors established some oscillation criteria of (4) under the condition
x 0 1 b 1 / κ x d x < .
Cesarano and Bazighifan [22] considered Equation (4), and established some new oscillation criteria by means of Riccati transformation technique.
Agarwal et al. [9] and Baculikova et al. [10] studied the equation
w n 1 x κ + q   x   f   w   ϑ   x = 0
and established some new sufficient conditions for oscillation.
Theorem 1
(See [9]). If there exists a positive function g C 1 x 0 ,   , 0 , , and θ > 1 is a constant such that
lim sup x x 0 x g s q s λ θ g s κ + 1 g s ϑ n 2 s ϑ s κ d s = ,
where λ : = 1 / κ + 1 κ + 1 2 n 1 ! κ , then every solution of (6) is oscillatory.
Theorem 2
(See [10]). Let f x 1 / κ / x 1 for 0 < x 1 such that
lim inf x ϑ i x x q s f ς n 1 ! ϑ n 1 s b 1 / κ ϑ s d s > 1 e
for some ς 0 , 1 , then every solution of (6) is oscillatory.
To prove this, we apply the previous results to the equation
w 4 x + c 0 x 4 w 9 10 x = 0 , x 1 ,
then we get that (9) is oscillatory if
The condition(7)(8)
The condition c 0 > 60 c 0 > 28.7
From above, we see that [10] improved the results in [9].
The motivation in studying this paper is complementary and improves the results in [9,10].
The paper is organized as follows. In Section 2, we state some lemmas, which will be useful in the proof of our results. In Section 3, by using generalized Riccati transformations, we obtain a new oscillation criteria for (1). Finally, some examples are considered to illustrate the main results.
For convenience, we denote
δ x : = x 1 b 1 / κ s d s , F + x : = max 0 , F x ,
ψ x : = g x i = 1 j q i x ϑ i 3 x x 3 κ + ε β 1 1 + κ / κ x 2 2 β 1 κ 2 b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) ,
ϕ x : = g + x g x + κ + 1 β 1 1 / κ ε x 2 2 b 1 κ x δ ( x ) , ϕ * x : = ξ + x ξ x + 2 β 2 δ ( x ) ,
and
ψ * x : = ξ x x b v v i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ d v + β 2 2 β 2 b 1 κ x δ 2 ( x ) ,
where β 1 , β 2 are constants and g , ξ C 1 x 0 , , 0 , .
Remark 1.
We define the generalized Riccati substitutions
π x : = g x b x w κ x w κ x + β 1 δ κ ( x ) ,
and
ϖ x : = ξ x w x w x + β 2 δ ( x ) .

2. Some Auxiliary Lemmas

Next, we begin with the following lemmas.
Lemma 1
([8]). Let β be a ratio of two odd numbers, V > 0 and U are constants. Then,
P β + 1 / β P Q β + 1 / β 1 β Q 1 / β 1 + β P Q , P Q 0 , β 1
and
U w V w β + 1 / β β β ( β + 1 ) β + 1 U β + 1 V β .
Lemma 2
([15]). Suppose that h C n x 0 ,   , 0 , , h n is of a fixed sign on x 0 , , h n not identically zero, and there exists a x 1 x 0 such that
h n 1 x h n x 0 ,
for all x x 1 . If we have lim x h x 0 , then there exists x β x 1 such that
h x β n 1 ! x n 1 h n 1 x ,
for every β 0 , 1 and x x β .
Lemma 3
([19]). If the function u satisfies u ( j ) > 0 for all j = 0 , 1 , , n , and u n + 1 < 0 , then
n ! x n u x n 1 ! x n 1 d d x u x 0 .

3. Oscillation Criteria

In this section, we shall establish some oscillation criteria for Equation (1).
Upon studying the asymptotic behavior of the positive solutions of (1), there are only two cases:
C a s e 1 : w r x > 0 for r = 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 . C a s e 2 : w r x > 0 for r = 0 , 1 , 3   and   w x < 0 .
Moreover, from Equation (1) and condition (3), we have that b x w x κ . In the following, we will first study each case separately.
Lemma 4.
Assume that w be an eventually positive solution of (1) and w r x > 0 for all r = 1 , 2 , 3 . If we have the function π C 1 [ x , ) defined as (10), where g C 1 x 0 , , 0 , , then
π x ψ x + ϕ x π x κ ε x 2 2 b x g x 1 / κ π κ + 1 κ x ,
for all x > x 1 , where x 1 is large enough.
Proof. 
Let w be an eventually positive solution of (1) and w r x > 0 for all r = 1 , 2 , 3 . Thus, from Lemma 2, we get
w x ε 2 x 2 w x ,
for every ε ( 0 , 1 ) and for all large x. From (10), we see that π x > 0 for x x 1 , and
π x = g x b x w κ x w κ x + β 1 δ κ ( x ) + g x b w κ x w κ x κ g x w κ 1 x w x b x w κ x w 2 κ x + κ β 1 g x b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) .
Using (13) and (10), we obtain
π x g + x g x π x + g x b x w x κ w κ x κ g x ε 2 x 2 b x w x κ + 1 w κ + 1 x + κ β 1 g x b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) g x g x π x + g x b x w x κ w κ x κ g x ε 2 x 2 b x π x g x b x β 1 b x δ κ ( x ) κ + 1 κ + κ β 1 g x b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) .
Using Lemma 1 with P = π x / g x b x , Q = β 1 / b x δ κ ( x ) and β = κ , we get
π x g x b x β 1 b x δ κ ( x ) κ + 1 κ π x g x b x κ + 1 κ β 1 1 / κ κ b 1 κ x δ ( x ) κ + 1 π x g x b x β 1 b x δ κ ( x ) .
From Lemma 3, we have that w x x 3 w x and hence
w ϑ i x w x ϑ i 3 x x 3 .
From (1), (14), and (15), we obtain
π x g + x g x π x g x i = 1 j q i x ϑ i 3 x x 3 κ κ g x ε 2 x 2 b x π x g x b x κ + 1 κ κ g x ε 2 x 2 b x β 1 1 / κ κ b 1 κ x δ ( x ) κ + 1 π x g x b x β 1 b x δ κ ( x ) + κ β 1 g x b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) .
This implies that
π x g + x g x + κ + 1 β 1 1 / κ ε x 2 2 b 1 κ x δ ( x ) π x κ ε x 2 2 b 1 / κ x g 1 / κ x π κ + 1 κ x g x i = 1 j q i x ϑ i 3 x x 3 κ + ε β 1 1 + κ / κ x 2 2 β 1 κ 2 b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) .
Thus,
π x   ψ x   +   ϕ   x   π   x   κ ε x 2 2 b x g x 1 / κ π κ + 1 κ x .
The proof is complete. □
Lemma 5.
Assume that w is an eventually positive solution of (1), w r x > 0 for r = 1 , 3 and w x < 0 . If we have the function ϖ C 1 [ x , ) defined as (11), where ξ C 1 x 0 , , 0 , , then
ϖ   x     ψ *   x   +   ϕ *   x   ϖ   x   1 ξ x ϖ 2   x ,
for all x > x 1 , where x 1 is large enough.
Proof. 
Let w be an eventually positive solution of (1), w r > 0 for r = 1 , 3 and w x < 0 . From Lemma 3, we get that w x x w x . By integrating this inequality from ϑ i x to x, we get
w ϑ i x ϑ i x x w x .
Hence, from (3), we have
f w ϑ i x ϑ i κ x x κ w κ x .
Integrating (1) from x to u and using w x > 0 , we obtain
b u w u κ b x w x κ = x u i = 1 j q i s f w ϑ i s d s w κ x x u i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s .
Letting u , we see that
b x w x κ w κ x x i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s
and so
w x w x b x x i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ .
Integrating again from x to ∞, we get
w x w x x b v v i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ d v .
From the definition of ϖ x , we see that ϖ x > 0 for x x 1 . By differentiating, we find
ϖ x = ξ x ξ x ϖ x + ξ x w x w x ξ x ϖ x ξ x β 2 δ ( x ) 2 + ξ x β 2 b 1 / κ x δ 2 ( x ) .
Using Lemma 1 with P = ϖ x / ξ x , Q = β 2 / δ ( x ) and β = 1 , we get
ϖ x ξ x β 2 δ ( x ) 2 ϖ x ξ x 2 β 2 δ ( x ) 2 ϖ x ξ x β 2 δ ( x ) .
From (1), (20), and (21), we obtain
ϖ x ξ x ξ x ϖ x ξ x x b v v i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ d v ξ x ϖ x ξ x 2 β 2 δ ( x ) 2 ϖ x ξ x β 2 δ ( x ) + β 2 ξ x b 1 κ x δ 2 ( x ) .
This implies that
ϖ x ξ + x ξ x + 2 β 2 δ ( x ) ϖ x 1 ξ x ϖ 2 x ξ x x b v v i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ d v + β 2 2 β 2 b 1 κ x δ 2 ( x ) .
Thus,
ϖ   x     ψ *   x   + ϕ *   x   ϖ   x   1 ξ x ϖ 2   x .
The proof is complete. □
Lemma 6.
Assume that w is an eventually positive solution of (1). If there exists a positive function g C x 0 , such that
x 0 ψ s   2 ε s 2 κ b   s   g   s   ϕ s κ + 1 κ + 1 κ + 1 d s = ,
for some ε 0 , 1 , then w does not fulfill Case 1 .
Proof. 
Assume that w is an eventually positive solution of (1). From Lemma 4, we get that (12) holds. Using Lemma 1 with
U = ϕ   x , V = κ ε x 2 / 2 b   x   g   x   1 / κ and x   =   π ,
we get
π   x     ψ   x   + 2 ε x 2 κ b   x   g   x   ϕ x κ + 1 κ + 1 κ + 1 .
Integrating from x 1 to x, we get
x 1 x ψ   s 2 ε s 2 κ b   s   g   s   ϕ s κ + 1 κ + 1 κ + 1 d s π x 1 ,
for every ε 0 , 1 , which contradicts (22). The proof is complete. □
Lemma 7.
Assume that w is an eventually positive solution of (1), w r x > 0 for r = 1 , 3 and w x < 0 . If there exists a positive function ξ C x 0 , such that
x 0 ψ *   s   1 4 ξ   s   ϕ * s 2 d s = ,
then w does not fulfill Case 2 .
Proof. 
Assume that w is an eventually positive solution of (1). From Lemma 5, we get that (17) holds. Using Lemma 1 with
U = ϕ * x , V = 1 / ξ x , κ = 1 and x = ϖ ,
we get
π   x     ψ *   x + 1 4 ξ   x   ϕ *   x 2 .
Integrating from x 1 to x, we get
x 1 x ψ *   s   1 4 ξ   s   ϕ *   s 2 d s     π   x 1 ,
which contradicts (24). The proof is complete.  □
Theorem 3.
Assume that there exist positive functions g , ξ C x 0 , such that (22) and (24) hold, for some ε 0 , 1 . Then, every solution of (1) is oscillatory.
When putting g x = x 3 and ξ x = x into Theorem 3, we get the following oscillation criteria:
Corollary 1.
Let (2) hold. Assume that
lim sup x x 1 x φ s 2 ε s 2 κ b s g s φ ˜ s κ + 1 κ + 1 κ + 1 d s = ,
for some ε 0 , 1 . If
lim sup x x 1 x φ 1 s 1 4 ξ s φ ˜ 1 s 2 d s = ,
where
φ x : = x 3 i = 1 j q i x ϑ i 3 x x 3 κ + ε β 1 1 + κ / κ x 2 2 β 1 κ 2 b 1 κ x δ κ + 1 ( x ) φ ˜ x : = 3 x + κ + 1 β 1 1 / κ ε x 2 2 b 1 κ x δ ( x ) , φ ˜ 1 x : = 1 x + 2 β 2 δ ( x )
and
φ 1 x : = x x b v v i = 1 j q i s ϑ i κ s s κ d s 1 / κ d v + β 2 2 β 2 b 1 κ x δ 2 ( x ) ,
then every solution of (1) is oscillatory.
Example 1.
Consider a differential equation
w 4 x + c 0 x 4 w 1 2 x = 0 , x 1 ,
where c 0 > 0 is a constant. Note that κ = b x = 1 , q x = c 0 / x 4 and ϑ x = x / 2 . Hence, we have
δ x 0 = , φ s = c 0 8 s .
If we set = β 1 = 1 , then condition (26) becomes
lim sup x x 1 x φ s 2 ε s 2 κ b s g s φ ˜ s κ + 1 κ + 1 κ + 1 d s = lim sup x x 1 x c 0 8 s 9 2 s d s = if c 0 > 36 .
Therefore, from Corollary 1, the solutions of Equation (28) are all oscillatory if c 0 > 36 .
Remark 2.
We compare our result with the known related criteria for oscillations of this equation as follows:
1.
By applying Condition (7) in [9] on Equation (28) where θ = 2 , we get
c 0 > 432 .
2.
By applying Condition (8) in [10] on Equation (28) where ς = 1 / 2 , we get
c 0 > 51 .
Therefore, our result improves results [9,10].
Remark 3.
By applying Condition (26) in Equation (9), we find
c 0 > 6.17 .
Therefore, our result improves results [9,10].

4. Conclusions

In this article, we study the oscillatory behavior of a class of nonlinear fourth-order differential equations and establish sufficient conditions for oscillation of a fourth-order differential equation by using Riccati transformation. Furthermore, in future work, we get some Hille and Nehari type and Philos type oscillation criteria of (1).

Author Contributions

O.B.: Writing original draft, and writing review and editing. M.P.: Formal analysis, writing review and editing, funding and supervision. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The authors received no direct funding for this work.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the reviewers for for their useful comments, which led to the improvement of the content of the paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Hale, J.K. Theory of Functional Differential Equations; Springer: New York, NY, USA, 1977. [Google Scholar]
  2. Agarwal, R.; Grace, S.; O’Regan, D. Oscillation Theory for Difference and Functional Differential Equations; Kluwer Academic Publishers: Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 2000. [Google Scholar]
  3. Alzabut, J.; Tunc, C. Existence of Periodic solutions for a type of Rayleigh equation with state-dependent delay. Electron. J. Differ. Equ. 2012, 2012, 1–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  4. Philos, C.G. A new criterion for the oscillatory and asymptotic behavior of delay differential equations. Bull. Acad. Pol. Sci. Sér. Sci. Math. 1981, 39, 61–64. [Google Scholar]
  5. Philos, C.G. On the existence of non-oscillatory solutions tending to zero at ∞ for differential equations with positive delays. Arch. Math. 1981, 36, 168–178. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Bazighifan, O.; Cesarano, C. Some New Oscillation Criteria for Second-Order Neutral Differential Equations with Delayed Arguments. Mathematics 2019, 7, 619. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  7. Cesarano, C.; Bazighifan, O. Qualitative behavior of solutions of second order differential equations. Symmetry 2019, 11, 777. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  8. Agarwal, R.P.; Zhang, C.; Li, T. Some remarks on oscillation of second order neutral differential equations. Appl. Math. Compt. 2016, 274, 178–181. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Agarwal, R.P.; Grace, S.R.; O’Regan, D. Oscillation criteria for certain nth order differential equations with deviating arguments. J. Math. Appl. Anal. 2001, 262, 601–622. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  10. Baculikova, B.; Dzurina, J.; Graef, J.R. On the oscillation of higher-order delay differential equations. J. Math. 2012, 187, 387–400. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Grace, S.R. Oscillation theorems for nth-order differential equations with deviating arguments. J. Math. Appl. Anal. 1984, 101, 268–296. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  12. Xu, Z.; Xia, Y. Integral averaging technique and oscillation of certain even order delay differential equations. J. Math. Appl. Anal. 2004, 292, 238–246. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Bazighifan, O.; Elabbasy, E.M.; Moaaz, O. Oscillation of higher-order differential equations with distributed delay. J. Inequal. Appl. 2019, 55, 1–9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  14. Zhang, C.; Agarwal, R.P.; Bohner, M.; Li, T. New results for oscillatory behavior of even-order half-linear delay differential equations. Appl. Math. Lett. 2013, 26, 179–183. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  15. Zhang, C.; Li, T.; Sun, B.; Thandapani, E. On the oscillation of higher-order half-linear delay differential equations. Appl. Math. Lett. 2011, 24, 1618–1621. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  16. Moaaz, O.; Park, C.; Muhib, A.; Bazighifan, O. Oscillation criteria for a class of even-order neutral delay differential equations. J. Appl. Math. Comput. 2020, 2020, 1–11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Moaaz, O.; Jan, A.; Omar, B. A New Approach in the Study of Oscillation Criteria of Even-Order Neutral Differential Equations. Mathematics 2020, 8, 197. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  18. Bazighifan, O.; Cesarano, C. A Philos-Type Oscillation Criteria for Fourth-Order Neutral Differential Equations. Symmetry 2020, 12, 379. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  19. Chatzarakis, G.E.; Elabbasy, E.M.; Bazighifan, O. An oscillation criterion in 4th-order neutral differential equations with a continuously distributed delay. Adv. Differ. Equ. 2019, 336, 1–9. [Google Scholar]
  20. Cesarano, C.; Pinelas, S.; Al-Showaikh, F.; Bazighifan, O. Asymptotic Properties of Solutions of Fourth-Order Delay Differential Equations. Symmetry 2019, 11, 628. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  21. Moaaz, O.; Elabbasy, E.M.; Bazighifan, O. On the asymptotic behavior of fourth-order functional differential equations. Adv. Differ. Equ. 2017, 2017, 261. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  22. Cesarano, C.; Bazighifan, O. Oscillation of fourth-order functional differential equations with distributed delay. Axioms 2019, 8, 61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  23. Moaaz, O.; El-Nabulsi, R.; Bazighifan, O. Oscillatory behavior of fourth-order differential equations with neutral delay. Symmetry 2020, 12, 371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  24. Parhi, N.; Tripathy, A. On oscillatory fourth order linear neutral differential equations-I. Math. Slovaca 2004, 54, 389–410. [Google Scholar]
  25. Zhang, C.; Li, T.; Saker, S. Oscillation of fourth-order delay differential equations. J. Math. Sci. 2014, 201, 296–308. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Bazighifan, O.; Postolache, M. Improved Conditions for Oscillation of Functional Nonlinear Differential Equations. Mathematics 2020, 8, 552. https://doi.org/10.3390/math8040552

AMA Style

Bazighifan O, Postolache M. Improved Conditions for Oscillation of Functional Nonlinear Differential Equations. Mathematics. 2020; 8(4):552. https://doi.org/10.3390/math8040552

Chicago/Turabian Style

Bazighifan, Omar, and Mihai Postolache. 2020. "Improved Conditions for Oscillation of Functional Nonlinear Differential Equations" Mathematics 8, no. 4: 552. https://doi.org/10.3390/math8040552

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