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Forced oscillation of higher-order nonlinear neutral difference equations with positive and negative coefficients
Advances in Difference Equations volume 2012, Article number: 110 (2012)
Abstract
In this paper, we study the forced oscillation of the higher-order nonlinear difference equation of the form
where , τ, and are integers, are constants, , , , and are real sequences with . By taking all possible values of τ, and into consideration, we establish some new oscillation criteria for the above equation in two cases: (i) , ; (ii) , .
MSC:39A10.
1 Introduction
Qualitative theory of difference equations has received much attention in recent years due to its extensive applications in computer, probability theory, queuing problems, statistical problems, stochastic time series, combinatorial analysis, number theory, electrical networks, genetics in biology, economics, psychology, sociology, and so on [1, 2].
In this paper, we consider the oscillation of the following m th-order forced nonlinear difference equation of the form
where , τ, and are integers, , , , and are real sequences defined on with , are constants, and
As usual, a solution of Eq. (1) is said to be oscillatory, if for every integer , there exists such that ; otherwise, it is called nonoscillatory.
For the continuous version of Eq. (1), many authors have studied its oscillation (see monograph [3] and references therein). To the best of our knowledge, little has been known about the forced oscillation of Eq. (1) with positive and negative coefficients ( or ) and mixed nonlinearities (). For some particular cases of Eq. (1), there have been many oscillation results in [4–19], to name a few. Motivated by the work in [20–22], we study the forced oscillation of Eq. (1) in this paper.
The main contribution of this paper is that we establish some new oscillation criteria for Eq. (1) with positive and negative coefficients and mixed nonlinearities. Unlike some existing results in the literature, all possible values of delays τ, and are considered.
2 Main results
Throughout this paper, we denote
By the straightforward computation, it is not difficult to see that
and
where is an integer. We also denote if .
The following two facts can be easily proved.
Fact 1. Set , where , and . If , obtains its maximum .
Fact 2. Set , where , and . If , obtains its minimum .
We now present the main results of this paper as follows.
Theorem 1 Assume that, , and. If
where
all solutions of Eq. (1) are oscillatory.
Proof Assume to the contrary that there exists a nontrivial solution of Eq. (1) such that is nonoscillatory. That is, does not change sign eventually. Without loss of generality, let , , for , where is sufficiently large. By the straightforward computation, we have
where
Noting that
we can get from (2), (3) and (4) that
Since for due to (4), we get from (11) that
Noting that , we have that . Therefore, we get from (12) that
By Fact 2 and (13), it is not difficult to see that
where is defined by (8).
On the other hand, similar to the above analysis, we have that
Since , we have that . By (15), we get
By Fact 1 and (16), we have that
where is defined by (9).
Multiplying on both sides of (10), by (14), (17) and (5), we have that there exists a constant such that
which contradicts (7). For the case when is eventually negative, we can similarly get a contradiction to (6). This completes the proof of Theorem 1. □
Theorem 2 Assume that, , and. If
where
all solutions of Eq. (1) are oscillatory.
Proof Suppose to the contrary that there exists a nontrivial solution of Eq. (1) such that is nonoscillatory. We may let , , for , where is sufficiently large. By the straightforward computation, we get from Eq. (1) that
where
Noticing that for , we get from (11) that
Since , we have that . Thus, we can get from (23) that
By Fact 1 and (24), it is easy to see that
where is defined by (20).
On the other hand, similar to the computation of (11), we can get
Noting that implies , we get from (26) that
By Fact 2 and (27), we have that
where is defined by (21).
Multiplying on both sides of (22), from (25), (28) and (5), we have that there exists a constant such that
This is a contradiction to (18). For the case when is eventually negative, we can similarly get a contradiction to (19). This completes the proof of Theorem 2. □
By Theorems 1 and 2, the following two corollaries are immediate.
Corollary 1 Assume that, and. If
whereis defined by (9), all solutions of Eq. (1) are oscillatory for any constant.
Proof In fact, we have that for any constant since . So, we can drop in the estimation of (10). The other proof runs as that of Theorem 1, and hence it is omitted. □
Corollary 2 Assume that, and. If
whereis defined by (20), all nontrivial solutions of Eq. (1) are oscillatory.
Proof For this case, we have that for any constant since . Therefore, we can drop in the estimation of (22). The other proof runs as that of Theorem 2. □
For other cases of and that are not covered by Theorem 1 and Theorem 2, the above method usually does not give sufficient conditions for the oscillation of all solutions of Eq. (1). However, when assuming that the solutions of Eq. (1) satisfy appropriate conditions, sufficient conditions for such solutions can also be derived. In the following, we are focused on the oscillation of all solutions of Eq. (1) satisfying for some . Here, means that there exists a constant such that for .
Theorem 3 Assume that, , and (6) and (7) hold. All solutions satisfyingare oscillatory if one of the following conditions holds:
-
(i)
, , and
(29) -
(ii)
, , and
(30) -
(iii)
, , (29) and (30) hold.
Proof Assume that there exists a nontrivial solution of Eq. (1) such that is nonoscillatory. Without loss of generality, let , , for , where is sufficiently large.
-
(i)
For the case , we have that . Therefore, we get from (12) that
(31)
By Fact 2 and (31), and noting that for and some constant , we get
where is defined by (8). Multiplying on both sides of (10), from (32), (17), (5) and (29), we get a contradiction to (7).
-
(ii)
For the case , we have that . By (15), we get
(33)
By Fact 1 and (33), and noting that for , we have that
where is defined by (9). Multiplying on both sides of (10), from (14), (34) and (5), we can get a contradiction to (7).
-
(iii)
Multiplying on both sides of (10), from (32), (34), (29) and (30), we derive a contradiction. The proof of Theorem 3 is complete. □
Theorem 4 Assume that, , (18) and (19) hold. All solutions satisfyingare oscillatory if one of the following conditions holds:
-
(i)
, , and
(35) -
(ii)
, , and
(36) -
(iii)
, , (35) and (36) hold.
Proof The proof is similar to that of Theorem 2 and Theorem 3, and hence it is omitted. □
3 Examples
We here work out two simple examples to illustrate the importance of Theorem 1 and Theorem 2.
Example 1 Consider the following third-order neutral difference equation:
where is a constant. It is evident that , , , , , , , and . If we choose , we have . By the straightforward computation, we have that
By Theorem 1, we have that every solution of Eq. (37) is oscillatory if
It is not difficult to see that the above two inequalities hold for appropriate .
Example 2 Consider the following third-order neutral difference equation:
where is a constant. It is obvious that , , , , , , , and . We also choose . By the straightforward computation, we have that
By Theorem 2, we have that every solution of Eq. (38) is oscillatory if
It is not difficult to see that the above two inequalities hold for appropriate .
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank the reviewers for their helpful and valuable comments on this paper. This work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (grant nos. ZR2010AL002 and JQ201119) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 61174217).
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Authors’ contributions
YS framed the problem. YG solved the problem. BZ and HL made necessary changes in the proof of the theorems. All authors read and approved the manuscript.
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Gao, Y., Sun, Y., Zha, B. et al. Forced oscillation of higher-order nonlinear neutral difference equations with positive and negative coefficients. Adv Differ Equ 2012, 110 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1847-2012-110
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1847-2012-110
Keywords
- forced oscillation
- neutral difference equation
- positive and negative coefficients
- higher-order