An Extremal Eigenvalue Problem for a Two-Phase Conductor in a Ball
Author
dc.contributor.author
Conca Rosende, Carlos
Author
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Mahadevan, Rajesh
es_CL
Author
dc.contributor.author
Sanz, León
es_CL
Admission date
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2013-12-30T14:12:09Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2013-12-30T14:12:09Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2009
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Appl Math Optim (2009) 60: 173–184
en_US
Identifier
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DOI 10.1007/s00245-008-9061-x
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125901
Abstract
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The pioneering works of Murat and Tartar (Topics in the mathematical
modeling of composite materials. PNLDE 31. Birkhäuser, Basel, 1997) go a long
way in showing, in general, that problems of optimal design may not admit solutions
if microstructural designs are excluded from consideration. Therefore, assuming, tactilely,
that the problem of minimizing the first eigenvalue of a two-phase conducting
material with the conducting phases to be distributed in a fixed proportion in a given
domain has no true solution in general domains, Cox and Lipton only study conditions
for an optimal microstructural design (Cox and Lipton in Arch. Ration. Mech.
Anal. 136:101–117, 1996). Although, the problem in one dimension has a solution
(cf. Kre˘ın in AMS Transl. Ser. 2(1):163–187, 1955) and, in higher dimensions, the
problem set in a ball can be deduced to have a radially symmetric solution (cf. Alvino
et al. in Nonlinear Anal. TMA 13(2):185–220, 1989), these existence results have
been regarded so far as being exceptional owing to complete symmetry. It is still not
clear why the same problem in domains with partial symmetry should fail to have a
solution which does not develop microstructure and respecting the symmetry of the domain.We hope to revive interest in this question by giving a new proof of the result
in a ball using a simpler symmetrization result from Alvino and Trombetti.