Skip to main content

Theory and Modern Applications

Single upper-solution or lower-solution method for Langevin equations with two fractional orders

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the existence and uniqueness of nonnegative solutions for Langevin equations with two fractional orders:

$$\textstyle\begin{cases} {}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}-\gamma)x(t)=f(t,x(t)),& 0< t< 1, \\ x^{(k)}(0)=\mu_{k},& 0\leq k< l, \\ x^{(\alpha+k)}(0)=\nu_{k},& 0\leq k< n, \end{cases} $$

where \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}\) and \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}\) denote the Caputo fractional derivatives, \(f:[0,1]\times \mathbf{R}\rightarrow\mathbf{R}\) is a continuous function, and \(m-1<\alpha\leq m\), \(n-1<\beta\leq n\), \(l=\max\{ m,n\}\), \({n, m}\in \mathbf{N}\), \(\gamma>0\), \(\mu_{j}\ge0\), \(\forall j \in\{0,\ldots,m-1\} \), \(\nu_{i}-\gamma\mu_{i}\ge0\), \(\forall i\in\{0,\ldots,n-1\}\). By using a single upper-solution or lower-solution method and monotone iterative approach, several existence and uniqueness results of nonnegative solutions are obtained. Moreover, an example is given to illustrate the main results.

1 Introduction

In 1908, Paul Langevin gave an elaborate description of Brownian motion, and thus Langevin equations were proposed, see [9, 12]. Langevin equations can also describe many stochastic problems in fluctuating environments. In 1966, Kube gave a generalized Langevin equation for modeling anomalous diffusive processes in a complex and viscoelastic environment [10, 11]. An important extension of the topic is fractional Langevin equation, which was introduced by Mainardi and collaborators [16, 17] in the early 1990s. A lot of fractional Langevin equations have been established, e.g., fractional Langevin equations for modeling of single-file diffusion [6] and for a free particle driven by power law type of noise [18]. So fractional Langevin equations have been studied widely, see [1–9, 13, 15, 16, 19–26] for example. Recently, there have been many papers considering fractional Langevin equations involving two fractional orders, see [1–6, 8, 13, 21, 24–26]. Most of these articles studied the existence and uniqueness of solutions for Langevin equations, and some good results have been given by using the Banach contraction principle, Krasnoselskii’s fixed point theorem, Schauder’s fixed point theorem, Leray–Schauder nonlinear alternative, Leray–Schauder degree, and so on.

In [26], by using the Leray–Schauder nonlinear alternative, the authors studied the following initial value problem of Langevin equations with two fractional orders:

$$\textstyle\begin{cases} {}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}+\gamma)x(t)=f(t,x(t)),\quad 0< t< 1, \\ x^{(k)}(0)=\mu_{k},\quad 0\leq k< l, \\ x^{(\alpha+k)}(0)=\nu_{k},\quad 0\leq k< n, \end{cases} $$

where \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}\) and \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}\) denote the Caputo fractional derivatives, \(f:[0,1]\times\mathbf{R}\rightarrow R\) is a continuous function, \(\gamma\in\mathbf{R}\), \({n,m}\in\mathbf{N}^{+}\), \(m-1<\alpha\leq m\), \(n-1<\beta\leq n\), \(l=\max\{m,n\}\). The existence of solutions was given. Further, the uniqueness of solutions was also obtained by means of the Banach contraction principle. Recently, the author [4] studied this problem by introducing a new norm

$$\|f\|_{p,\alpha}=\sup_{t\in[0,1]} \biggl( \int_{0}^{t} \frac{|f(s)|^{p}}{(t-s)^{\alpha}}\,ds \biggr)^{\frac{1}{p}},\quad \alpha\in(0,1), p\geq1 $$

for a measurable function \(f : [0,1]\rightarrow\mathbf{R}\) and got the existence, uniqueness of solutions for this problem via the Banach contraction principle.

We can find that there are few papers devoted to the study of nonnegative solutions for Langevin equations involving two fractional orders. In this paper we use a single upper-solution or lower-solution method and a monotone iterative approach to consider the following initial value problem of Langevin equations involving two fractional orders:

$$ \textstyle\begin{cases} {}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}-\gamma)x(t)=f(t,x(t)),\quad 0< t< 1, \\ x^{(k)}(0)=\mu_{k},\quad 0\leq k< l, \\ x^{(\alpha+k)}(0)=\nu_{k},\quad 0\leq k< n, \end{cases} $$
(1.1)

where \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\alpha}_{t}\) and \({}^{c}_{0}D^{\beta}_{t}\) denote the Caputo fractional derivatives, \(f:[0,1]\times\mathbf{R}\rightarrow R\) is a continuous function, and some initial conditions are given: \(m-1<\alpha \leq m\), \(n-1<\beta\leq n\), \(l=\max\{ m,n\}\), \({n,m}\in\mathbf{N}^{+}\), \(\gamma>0\), \(\mu_{j}\ge0\), \(\forall j \in\{0,\ldots,m-1\} \), \(\nu _{i}-\gamma\mu_{i}\ge0\), \(\forall i\in\{0,\ldots,n-1\}\). In [14], by using e-positive operators and Altman fixed point theory, we gave some existence and uniqueness results of solutions for (1.1). Different from the above-mentioned results, in this paper we establish the existence and uniqueness of nonnegative solutions for problem (1.1), which are new results on initial value problems for Langevin equations. It should be pointed out that we only use single lower-solution or single upper-solution to get the existence and uniqueness of nonnegative solutions for problem (1.1). This method is novel and our results are new.

In this paper, we always assume that the function f satisfies the following two conditions:

(H1):

\(f:[0,1]\times[0,\infty)\rightarrow[0,\infty)\) is continuous;

(H2):

\(f(t,x)\) is increasing in \(x\in[0,\infty)\) for each \(t\in[0,1]\).

2 Preliminaries

In order to obtain our results, we first list necessary definitions, lemmas, and basic results.

Definition 2.1

([4, 26])

For a function \(x(t)\), the Riemann–Liouville fractional integral of order \(\alpha>0\) is

$$ _{a} I^{\alpha}_{t}x(t)= \int_{a}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x(u)\,du. $$
(2.1)

Definition 2.2

([4, 26])

For a continuous function \(x(t)\), the Caputo fractional derivative of order \(\alpha>0\) is

$$ {}^{c}_{a} D^{\alpha}_{t}x(t)= \int_{a}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{n-\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(n-\alpha )}x^{(n)}(u) \,du, \quad n=[\alpha]+1, $$
(2.2)

where \([\alpha]\) denotes the integer part of the real number α.

Lemma 2.1

([26])

\(x{(t)}\) is a solution of problem (1.1) if and only if \(x(t)\) is a solution of the integral equation

$$ x(t)= \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x(u)\bigr) \,du+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x(u)\,du+ \phi(t), $$
(2.3)

where

$$ \phi(t)=\sum_{i=0}^{n-1} \frac{\nu_{i}-\gamma\mu_{i}}{\Gamma(\alpha +i+1)}{t^{\alpha+i}}+\sum_{j=0}^{m-1} \frac{\mu_{j}}{\Gamma (j+1)}{t^{j}}. $$
(2.4)

Define an operator \(T: C[0,1]\rightarrow C[0,1]\) by

$$ Tx(t)= \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x(u)\bigr) \,du+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x(u)\,du+\phi(t). $$
(2.5)

From Lemma 2.1, we can see that \(x(t)\) is a solution of problem (1.1) if and only if x is a fixed point of T.

3 Main results

In this section, we apply a single upper-solution or lower-solution method and a monotone iterative approach to study problem (1.1), and we obtain some new results on the existence results of unique nonnegative solutions.

Let \(E=C[0,1]\) be the Banach space with the norm \(\| x\| =\max_{t\in[0,1]}|x(t)|\), and θ denotes the zero element in E. Given the usual normal cone \(P=\{x\in E:x(t)\geq0,\forall t\in[0,1]\}\). Then \(x\leq y\) if and only if \(x(t)\leq y(t)\), \(\forall t\in[0,1]\). For \(x,y\in P\) with \(x\leq y\), we have \(\|x\|\leq\|y\|\). Define

$$D_{1}=\bigl\{ x\in E: x(t)\geq\phi(t), t\in[0,1]\bigr\} . $$

Theorem 3.1

Assume (H1), (H2), and

(H3):

there exists a constant \(\sigma>0 \) such that, for \(x, y\in [0,\infty)\) with \(y\geq x\),

$$f(t,y)-f(t,x)\leq\sigma(y-x),\quad \forall t\in[0,1]. $$

If

$$\tau:=\frac{\sigma}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\frac{\gamma}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)}< 1, $$

then problem (1.1) has a unique nonnegative solution in \(D_{1}\).

Proof

Since \(\mu_{j}\ge0\) for \(j \in\{0,\ldots,m-1\} \) and \(\nu _{i}-\gamma\mu_{i}\geq0\) for \(i\in\{0,\ldots,n-1\}\), we obtain \(\phi (t)\geq 0\), \(t\in[0,1]\). From (H1), \(T\phi(t)\geq\phi(t)\), \(\forall t\in[0,1]\). For \(x,y\in D_{1}\) with \(x\leq y\), we have \(y(t)\ge x(t)\ge0\), \(t\in[0,1]\), from (H2),

$$\begin{aligned} Ty(t) =& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,y(u)\bigr) \,du+{\gamma} \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}y(u)\,du+\phi(t) \\ \ge& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x(u)\bigr) \,du+{\gamma} \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x(u)\,du+\phi(t) \\ =& Tx(t), \end{aligned}$$

which means that T is increasing in \(D_{1}\). Hence, for \(t\in[0,1]\), by (H3),

$$\begin{aligned} 0 \leq& Ty(t)-Tx(t) \\ =& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha +\beta)}\bigl(f\bigl(u,y(u) \bigr)-f\bigl(u,x(u)\bigr)\bigr)\,du \\ &{}+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)}\bigl(y(u)-x(u)\bigr) \,du \\ \le& \int_{0}^{t}\sigma\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}\bigl(y(u)-x(u) \bigr)\,du \\ &{}+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)}\bigl(y(u)-x(u)\bigr) \,du \\ =& \int_{0}^{t} \biggl(\sigma\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}+\gamma \frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)} \biggr) \bigl(y(u)-x(u)\bigr)\,du \\ =&L\bigl(y(t)-x(t)\bigr), \end{aligned}$$

where

$$ Lx(t):= \int_{0}^{t} \biggl(\sigma\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha +\beta)}+\gamma \frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)} \biggr)x(u)\,du,\quad \forall t\in[0,1]. $$
(3.1)

We know that L is a positive linear bounded operator, and its norm

$$\begin{aligned} \|L\| \leq&\max_{t\in[0,1]} \int_{0}^{t} \biggl(\sigma\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha +\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}+\gamma \frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma (\alpha)} \biggr)\,du \\ =&\max_{t\in[0,1]} \biggl(\sigma\frac{t^{\alpha+\beta}}{\Gamma(\alpha +\beta+1)}+\gamma \frac{t^{\alpha}}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)} \biggr) \\ =&\frac{\sigma}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\frac{\gamma}{\Gamma(\alpha +1)}=\tau< 1. \end{aligned}$$

Therefore,

$$ Ty-Tx\leq L(y-x) \quad \mbox{for } x,y\in D_{1} \mbox{ with } x\leq y. $$
(3.2)

Let

$$x_{0}=\phi,\qquad x_{n}=Tx_{n-1}\quad (n=1, 2, \ldots). $$

Because T is increasing in \(D_{1}\), we get

$$ \phi=x_{0}\leq x_{1}\leq\cdots\leq x_{n}\leq \cdots. $$
(3.3)

Further, by (3.2),

$$\begin{aligned} \theta \leq& x_{n+p}-x_{n}=Tx_{n+p-1}-Tx_{n-1} \\ \leq&L(x_{n+p-1}-x_{n-1}) \\ \leq&L^{2}(x_{n+p-2}-x_{n-2}) \\ \leq&\cdots\leq L^{n}(x_{p}-x_{0}), \end{aligned}$$

and thus,

$$\begin{aligned} \Vert x_{n+p}-x_{n} \Vert \leq& \bigl\Vert L^{n}(x_{p}-x_{0}) \bigr\Vert \\ \leq& \bigl\Vert L^{n} \bigr\Vert \cdot \Vert x_{p}-x_{0} \Vert \\ \leq& \tau^{n} \Vert x_{p}-x_{0} \Vert \quad (n, p=1, 2, \ldots). \end{aligned}$$

Since \(\tau\in(0,1)\), \(\{x_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy sequence in \(D_{1}\). Because \(D_{1}\) is a close set in E, so it is complete. Hence, there exists \(x^{*}\in D_{1}\) such that \(x_{n}\rightarrow x^{*}\) as \(n\rightarrow\infty\). By (3.3), \(x_{n}\leq x^{*}\) and then \(Tx_{n}\leq Tx^{*}\), that is, \(x_{n+1}\leq Tx^{*}\), which implies

$$\theta\leq Tx^{*}-Tx_{n}\leq L\bigl(x^{*}-x_{n}\bigr). $$

Also,

$$\bigl\Vert Tx^{*}-x_{n+1} \bigr\Vert = \bigl\Vert Tx^{*}-Tx_{n} \bigr\Vert \leq \bigl\Vert L\bigl(x^{*}-x_{n} \bigr) \bigr\Vert \leq \Vert L \Vert \cdot \bigl\Vert x^{*}-x_{n} \bigr\Vert \leq\tau \bigl\Vert x^{*}-x_{n} \bigr\Vert . $$

Because \(x_{n}\rightarrow x^{*}\) as \(n\rightarrow\infty\), we get \(\| Tx^{*}-x^{*}\|=0\), and thus \(Tx^{*}=x^{*}\). That is, \(x^{*}\) is a fixed point of T. Therefore, \(x^{*}\) is a nonnegative solution of problem (1.1).

In the following, we show that the solution \(x^{*}\) of problem (1.1) is a unique solution in \(D_{1}\).

Suppose that \(\overline{x}\in D_{1}\) is the other solution of problem (1.1). Then xÌ… is a fixed point of T in \(D_{1}\). Since \(\overline{x}\geq x_{0}\), we get \(T\overline{x}\geq Tx_{0}\), that is, \(\overline{x}\geq x_{1}\). In general, \(\overline{x}\geq x_{n}\) (\(n=0, 1, 2, \ldots\)). Let \(n\rightarrow\infty\), we have \(\overline{x}\geq x^{*}\), and by (3.2),

$$\theta\leq\overline{x}-x_{n+1}=T\overline{x}-Tx_{n}\leq L( \overline {x}-x_{n})\leq\cdots\leq L^{n}(\overline{x}-x_{0}). $$

Also,

$$\Vert \overline{x}-x_{n+1} \Vert \leq \bigl\Vert L^{n}( \overline{x}-x_{0}) \bigr\Vert \leq\tau^{n} \Vert \overline{x}-x_{0} \Vert \rightarrow0\quad \mbox{as } n\rightarrow \infty. $$

So \(\|\overline{x}-x^{*}\|=0\), and thus \(\overline{x}=x^{*}\). □

Let \(L_{1}=\max\{f(t,0):t\in[0,1]\}\) and

$$C_{1}=\frac{L_{1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}, \qquad C=\sum_{i=0}^{n-1} \frac{\nu _{i}-\gamma\mu_{i}}{\Gamma(\alpha+i+1)}+\sum_{j=0}^{m-1} \frac{\mu_{j}}{\Gamma(j+1)}. $$

Then \(L_{1}, C_{1}, C\geq0\). Take

$$ R\geq\frac{C+C_{1}}{1-\tau}. $$
(3.4)

Define

$$D_{2}=\bigl\{ x\in E: x(t)\leq R, t\in[0,1]\bigr\} . $$

Theorem 3.2

Assume that (H1)–(H3) hold. If

$$\tau:=\frac{\sigma}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\frac{\gamma}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)}< 1, $$

then problem (1.1) has a unique nonnegative solution in \(D_{2}\).

Proof

Like the proof of Theorem 3.1, T is increasing in \(D_{2}\) and (3.2) holds. By (H3), we obtain

$$ f(t,x)\leq\sigma x+f(t,0)\quad \mbox{for } x\geq0, t\in[0,1]. $$
(3.5)

Let

$$v_{0}(t)= R,\qquad v_{n}(t)=Tv_{n-1}(t),\quad n=1, 2, \ldots. $$

From (3.4), (3.5), we have

$$\begin{aligned} Tv_{0}(t) =& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,v_{0}(u) \bigr)\,du+{\gamma} \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}v_{0}(u) \,du+\phi(t) \\ \leq& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}\sigma R \,du+ \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}f(u,0) \,du+ {\gamma} \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)}R \,du+C \\ \leq& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}\sigma R \,du+ \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}L_{1} \,du+ {\gamma} \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)}R \,du+C \\ =&R \biggl(\sigma\frac{t^{\alpha+\beta}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\gamma \frac{t^{\alpha}}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)} \biggr)+L_{1}\frac{t^{\alpha+\beta }}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)} +C \\ \leq&R \biggl(\sigma\frac{1}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\gamma\frac {1}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)} \biggr)+C_{1}+C \\ =&R\tau+C_{1}+C\leq R=v_{0}(t), \end{aligned}$$

so from the fact that T is increasing on \(D_{2}\), we can easily get

$$ \cdots\leq v_{n}\leq\cdots\leq v_{1}\leq v_{0}=R. $$
(3.6)

Further, by (3.2),

$$\begin{aligned} \theta \leq& v_{n}-v_{n+p}=Tv_{n-1}-Tv_{n+p-1} \\ \leq&L(v_{n-1}-v_{n+p-1}) \\ \leq&L^{2}(v_{n-2}-v_{n+p-2}) \\ \leq&\cdots\leq L^{n}(v_{0}-v_{p}), \end{aligned}$$

and thus

$$\begin{aligned} \Vert v_{n}-v_{n+p} \Vert \leq& \bigl\Vert L^{n}(v_{0}-v_{p}) \bigr\Vert \\ \leq& \bigl\Vert L^{n} \bigr\Vert \cdot \bigl\Vert v_{0}-v_{p} \bigr\Vert \\ \leq& \tau^{n} \Vert v_{0}-v_{p} \Vert , \quad n, p=1, 2, \ldots. \end{aligned}$$

Note that \(\tau\in(0,1)\), \(\{v_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy sequence in \(D_{2}\). Because \(D_{2}\) is a close set in E, so it is complete. Hence, there exists \(v^{*}\in D_{2}\) such that \(v_{n}\rightarrow v^{*}\) as \(n\rightarrow\infty\). From (3.6), \(v_{n}\geq v^{*}\) and then \(Tv_{n}\geq Tv^{*}\), that is, \(v_{n+1}\geq Tv^{*}\). So we have

$$\theta\leq Tv_{n}-Tv^{*}\leq L\bigl(x^{*}-x_{n}\bigr), $$

then we can obtain

$$\bigl\Vert Tv_{n}-Tv^{*} \bigr\Vert = \bigl\Vert v_{n+1}-Tv^{*} \bigr\Vert \leq \bigl\Vert L\bigl(v_{n}-v^{*} \bigr) \bigr\Vert \leq \Vert L \Vert \cdot \bigl\Vert v_{n}-v^{*} \bigr\Vert \leq\tau \bigl\Vert v_{n}-v^{*} \bigr\Vert . $$

Hence, from \(v_{n}\rightarrow v^{*}\) as \(n\rightarrow\infty\), we have \(\| Tv^{*}-v^{*}\|=0\), and thus \(Tv^{*}=v^{*}\). That is, \(v^{*}\) is a fixed point of T. Therefore, \(v^{*}\) is a nonnegative solution of problem (1.1).

In the following, we show that \(v^{*}\) is a unique solution of problem (1.1) in \(D_{2}\).

Suppose that vÌ… is the other solution of problem (1.1) in \(D_{2}\). Then vÌ… is a fixed point of T in \(D_{2}\). Since \(\overline{v}\geq v_{0}\), we get \(T\overline{v}\geq Tv_{0}\), that is, \(\overline{v}\geq v_{1}\). In general, \(\overline{v}\geq v_{n}\) (\(n=0, 1, 2, \ldots\)). Let \(n\rightarrow\infty\), we have \(\overline{v}\geq v^{*}\), and by (3.2),

$$\theta\leq\overline{v}-v_{n+1}=T\overline{v}-Tv_{n}\leq L( \overline {v}-v_{n})\leq\cdots\leq L^{n}(\overline{v}-v_{0}). $$

Therefore,

$$\Vert \overline{v}-v_{n+1} \Vert \leq \bigl\Vert L^{n}( \overline{v}-v_{0}) \bigr\Vert \leq \tau^{n} \Vert \overline{v}-v_{0} \Vert \rightarrow0\quad \mbox{as } n\rightarrow \infty. $$

So \(\|\overline{v}-v^{*}\|=0\), and thus \(\overline{v}=v^{*}\). □

Define

$$D=\bigl\{ x\in E: \phi(t)\leq x(t)\leq R, t\in[0,1]\bigr\} , $$

where \(\phi, R\) are given as in (2.4) and (3.4), respectively. From Theorems 3.1 and 3.2, we can obtain the following.

Theorem 3.3

Assume that (H1)–(H3) hold. If

$$\tau:=\frac{\sigma}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta+1)}+\frac{\gamma}{\Gamma(\alpha+1)}< 1, $$

then problem (1.1) has a unique nonnegative solution in D.

Remark 3.1

In Theorem 3.1, \(T\phi\geq\phi\), we call ϕ a lower solution of operator T. In Theorem 3.2, \(TR\leq R\), we call R an upper solution of T. From these results, we see that we get the existence and uniqueness of nonnegative solutions for Langevin equations with boundary conditions only via using single lower solution or single upper solution. So we can call the method to be a single lower-solution or single upper-solution method.

Corollary 3.4

Assume (H1)–(H3) and there exists \(j_{0}\in\{ 0,\ldots,m-1\}\) such that \(\mu_{j_{0}}\neq0\). If \(\tau<1\), then problem (1.1) has a unique positive solution in \(D_{i}\) (\(i=1,2\)).

Proof

By Theorems 3.1 and 3.2, problem (1.1) has a unique nonnegative solution \(x^{*}\) in \(D_{i}\) (\(i=1,2\)). Further,

$$x^{*}(t)= \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x^{*}(u)\bigr) \,du+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x^{*}(u)\,du+\phi(t). $$

Since \(\mu_{j_{0}}\neq0\), we can know that \(\mu_{j_{0}}>0\) and thus \(\phi (t)>0\), \(\forall t\in(0,1]\). Further, the solution \(x^{*}(t)\geq\phi(t)>0\) for \(t\in(0,1]\). So problem (1.1) has a unique positive solution in \(D_{i}\) (\(i=1,2\)). □

Corollary 3.5

Assume (H1)–(H3) and there exists \(i_{0}\in\{ 0,\ldots,n-1\}\) such that \(\nu_{i_{0}}-\gamma\mu_{i_{0}}\neq0\). If \(\tau<1\), then problem (1.1) has a unique positive solution in \(D_{i}\) (\(i=1,2\)).

Proof

The proof of this theorem is similar to the proof of Corollary 3.4. □

Corollary 3.6

Assume (H1)–(H3) and there exists \(t_{0}\in [0,1]\) such that \(f(t_{0},0)\neq0\). If \(\tau<1\), then problem (1.1) has a unique positive solution in \(D_{i}\) (\(i=1,2\)).

Proof

By Theorem 3.1, problem (1.1) has a nonnegative solution

$$x^{*}(t)= \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x^{*}(u)\bigr) \,du+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x^{*}(u)\,du+\phi(t). $$

If \(\phi(t)\not\equiv0\) for \(t\in[0,1]\), then \(x^{*}\) is a positive solution. If \(\phi(t)\equiv0\) for \(t\in[0,1]\), then

$$x^{*}(t)= \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta )}f\bigl(u,x^{*}(u)\bigr) \,du+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha )}x^{*}(u)\,du. $$

Suppose \(x^{*}(t)\equiv0\) for \(t\in[0,1]\), then

$$\int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}f(u,0)\,du=0, $$

and thus

$$(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}f(u,0)=0,\quad \mbox{a.e. }(u). $$

Since \((t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}\not\equiv0\), a.e. \((u)\), we obtain \(f(u,0)=0\), a.e. \((u)\). On the other hand, as \(f(t_{0},0)\neq0\), for certain \(t_{0}\in[0,1]\) and \(f(t_{0},x)\ge0\), we have \(f(t_{0},0)>0\). The continuity of f implies that there is a set \(B\subset[0,1]\) with \(t_{0}\in B\) and \(\mu(B)>0\), where μ is the Lebesgue measure such that \(f(t,0)>0\), \(\forall t\in B\). This leads to a contradiction. Therefore, \(x^{*}(t)>0\) for \(t\in(0,1)\). That is, problem (1.1) has a unique positive solution. □

4 An example

We present an example to better illustrate our main results.

Example 4.1

Consider the following initial value problem:

$$ \textstyle\begin{cases} {}^{c}_{0}D^{\frac{1}{2}}_{t} ({}^{c}_{0}D^{\frac{3}{2}}_{t}-\Gamma (\frac{3}{2}) )x(t)=\frac{\arctan x(t)+t^{3}}{(t+2)^{2}},\quad 0< t< 1, \\ x^{(0)}(0)=x^{(1)}(0)=\frac{1}{2}, \\ x^{(\frac{3}{2})}(0)=\Gamma(\frac{3}{2}). \end{cases} $$
(4.1)

In this example, \(\alpha=\frac{3}{2}\), \(\beta=\frac{1}{2}\), \(\mu_{0}=\mu _{1}=\frac{1}{2}\), \(\nu_{0}=\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})\), \(\gamma=\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})\), \(m=2\), \(n=1\), \(l=2\), and \(f(t,x)=\frac {\arctan x+t^{3}}{(t+2)^{2}}\). It is not difficult to see that \(f(t,x)\) satisfies the conditions (H1), (H2) and for \(x,y\in[0,\infty)\), with \(y\ge x\), then, by the mean value theorem for function arctanz in \([x,y]\), there exists \(\varepsilon\in(x,y)\) such that

$$f(t,y)-f(t,x)=\frac{\arctan y-\arctan x}{(t+2)^{2}}=\frac{1}{1+\varepsilon ^{2}}\cdot\frac{1}{(t+2)^{2}}(y-x) \le\frac{1}{4}(y-x), \quad \forall t\in[0,1]. $$

Choosing \(\sigma=\frac{1}{4}\). Further,

$$\tau=\frac{\frac{1}{4}}{\Gamma(\frac{3}{2}+\frac{1}{2}+1)}+\frac{\Gamma (\frac{3}{2})}{\Gamma(\frac{3}{2}+1)}=\frac{1}{8}+ \frac{2}{3}=\frac{19}{24}< 1. $$

Since \(f(t,0)=\frac{t^{3}}{(t+2)^{2}}\), we get \(L_{1}=\max\{f(t,0):t\in [0,1]\}=\frac{1}{9}\), and thus

$$C_{1}=\frac{\frac{1}{9}}{\Gamma(\frac{3}{2}+\frac{1}{2}+1)}=\frac{1}{18},\qquad C= \frac{\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})-\frac{1}{2}\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})}{\Gamma (\frac{3}{2}+1)}+\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2}=\frac{4}{3}. $$

We also know \(\phi(t)=\frac{1}{3}t^{\frac{3}{2}}+\frac{1}{2}t^{\frac{1}{2}}+\frac{1}{2}\). Therefore, \(R\geq\frac{\frac{4}{3}+\frac{1}{18}}{1-\frac{1}{18}}=\frac{20}{3}>\phi(t)\). In addition, \(\mu_{0}=\mu_{1}=\frac{1}{2}>0\), \(\nu_{0}-\gamma\mu_{0}=\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})-\frac{1}{2}\Gamma(\frac {3}{2})=\frac{1}{2}\Gamma(\frac{3}{2})=\frac{\sqrt{\pi}}{4}>0\), and \(f(t,0)\neq0\), \(\forall t\in(0,1]\).

Thus, from Corollaries 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6, we know that problem (4.1) has a unique positive solution \(x^{*}\) in \(D_{1}\), \(D_{2}\), and D. Moreover,

$$\begin{aligned} x^{*}(t) =& \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha+\beta-1}}{\Gamma(\alpha+\beta)}\cdot \frac{\arctan x^{*}(u)+u^{3}}{(u+2)^{2}}\,du \\ &{}+\gamma \int_{0}^{t}\frac{(t-u)^{\alpha -1}}{\Gamma(\alpha)}x^{*}(u)\,du+\phi(t), \quad t\in[0,1]. \end{aligned}$$

References

  1. Ahmad, B., Nieto, J.J.: Solvability of nonlinear Langevin equation involving two fractional orders with Dirichlet boundary conditions. Int. J. Differ. Equ. 2010, 649486 (2010)

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  2. Ahmad, B., Nieto, J.J., Alsaedi, A.: A nonlocal three-point inclusion problem of Langevin equation with two different fractional orders. Adv. Differ. Equ. 2012, 54 (2012)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  3. Ahmad, B., Nieto, J.J., Alsaedi, A., El-Shahed, M.: A study of nonlinear Langevin equation involving two fractional orders in different intervals. Nonlinear Anal., Real World Appl. 13, 599–606 (2012)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  4. Baghani, O.: On fractional Langevin equation involving two fractional orders. Commun. Nonlinear Sci. Numer. Simul. 42, 675–681 (2017)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  5. Chen, A., Chen, Y.: Existence of solutions to nonlinear Langevin equation involving two fractional orders with boundary value conditions. Bound. Value Probl. 2011, 516481 (2011)

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  6. Eab, C.H., Lim, S.C.: Fractional generalized Langevin equation approach to single-file diffusion. Physica A 389, 2510–2521 (2010)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  7. Fa, K.S.: Generalized Langevin equation with fractional derivative and long-time correlation function. Phys. Rev. E 73, 061104 (2006)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  8. Gao, Z., Yu, X., Wang, J.R.: Nonlocal problems for Langevin-type differential equations with two fractional-order derivatives. Bound. Value Probl. 2016, 52 (2016)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  9. Guo, P., Zeng, C., Li, C., Chen, Y.Q.: Numerics for the fractional Langevin equation driven by the fractional Brownian motion. Fract. Calc. Appl. Anal. 16, 123–141 (2013)

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  10. Kubo, R.: The fluctuation–dissipation theorem. Rep. Prog. Phys. 29, 255–284 (1966)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  11. Kubo, R., Toda, M., Hashitsume, N.: Statistical Physics II, 2nd edn. Springer, Berlin (1991)

    Book  Google Scholar 

  12. Langevin, P.: On the theory of Brownian motion. C. R. Acad. Sci. 146, 530 (1908)

    Google Scholar 

  13. Li, B., Sun, S., Sun, Y.: Existence of solutions for fractional Langevin equation with infinite-point boundary conditions. J. Appl. Math. Comput. 53, 683–692 (2017)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  14. Li, P., Zhai, C.: Some uniqueness results for Langevin equations involving two fractional orders. Ann. Pure Appl. Math. 17(1), 43–56 (2018)

    Google Scholar 

  15. Lutz, E.: Fractional Langevin equation. Phys. Rev. E 64, 051106 (2001)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  16. Mainardi, F., Pironi, P.: The fractional Langevin equation: Brownian motion revisited. Extr. Math. 10, 140–154 (1966)

    MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  17. Mainardi, F., Pironi, P., Tampieri, F.: On a generalization of the Basset problem via fractional calculus. In: Tabarrok, B., Dost, S. (eds.) Proceedings CANCAM 95, vol. 2, pp. 836–837. University of Victoria, Victoria (1995)

    Google Scholar 

  18. Sandev, T., Tomovski, Z.: Langevin equation for a free particle driven by power law type of noises. Phys. Lett. A 378, 1–9 (2014)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  19. Studsutad, W., Tariboon, J.: Nonlinear fractional integro-differential Langevin equation involving two fractional orders with three-point multi-term fractional integral boundary conditions. J. Appl. Math. Comput. 43, 507–522 (2013)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  20. Torres, C.: Existence of solution for fractional Langevin equation: variational approach. Int. Quantum Electron. Conf. 104, 206–207 (2014)

    MATH  Google Scholar 

  21. Wang, G., Zhang, L., Song, G.: Boundary value problem of a nonlinear Langevin equation with two different fractional orders and impulses. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2012, 200 (2012)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  22. Wang, J., Feckan, M., Zhou, Y.: Presentation of solutions of impulsive fractional Langevin equations and existence result. Eur. Phys. J. Spec. Top. 222, 1855–1872 (2013)

    Google Scholar 

  23. Wang, J., Li, X.: Ulam–Hyers stability of fractional Langevin equations. Appl. Math. Comput. 258, 72–83 (2015)

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  24. Wang, J., Peng, S., O’Regan, D.: Local stable manifold of Langevin differential equations with two fractional derivatives. Adv. Differ. Equ. 2017, 355 (2017)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  25. Wang, X., Li, C.: Existence result for nonlocal Dirichlet conditions of nonlinear Langevin equation with two different fractional orders. JP J. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 7, 177–191 (2012)

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  26. Yu, T., Deng, K., Luo, M.: Existence and uniqueness of solutions of initial value problems for nonlinear Langevin equation involving two fractional orders. Commun. Nonlinear Sci. Numer. Simul. 19, 1661–1668 (2014)

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

Download references

Funding

The research was supported by the Youth Science Foundation of China (11201272) and Shanxi Province Science Foundations of China (11201272, 11801322), Shanxi Scholarship Council of China (2016-009).

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

The authors declare that the study was realized in collaboration with the same responsibility. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Chengbo Zhai.

Ethics declarations

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Additional information

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Zhai, C., Li, P. & Li, H. Single upper-solution or lower-solution method for Langevin equations with two fractional orders. Adv Differ Equ 2018, 360 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-018-1837-y

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-018-1837-y

MSC

Keywords