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Generalized trapezium-type inequalities in the settings of fractal sets for functions having generalized convexity property
Advances in Difference Equations volume 2020, Article number: 657 (2020)
Abstract
In the paper, we extend some previous results dealing with the Hermite–Hadamard inequalities with fractal sets and several auxiliary results that vary with local fractional derivatives introduced in the recent literature. We provide new generalizations for the third-order differentiability by employing the local fractional technique for functions whose local fractional derivatives in the absolute values are generalized convex and obtain several bounds and new results applicable to convex functions by using the generalized Hölder and power-mean inequalities.
As an application, numerous novel cases can be obtained from our outcomes. To ensure the feasibility of the proposed method, we present two examples to verify the method. It should be pointed out that the investigation of our findings in fractal analysis and inequality theory is vital to our perception of the real world since they are more realistic models of natural and man-made phenomena.
1 Introduction
Fractals are mathematical developments that present self-similarity over a scope of scales and noninteger (fractal) measurements. Attributable to these properties, Yang [1] contemplated a new investigation to tackle some nondifferentiable problems that can be utilized to productively assess the geometrical multifaceted nature, and the anomaly of shapes and examples seen in human disease through the utilization of customary Euclidean geometry in such figurings is all the more challenging [2, 3]. The use of fractal analysis in image processing, machine learning, cryptography, electrochemical processes, physics, diagnostic imagining, neuroscience, image analysis, acoustic, physiology, and Riemann zeta zeros has shown considerable guarantee for estimating forms that have changed as ordinary-partial differential equations [4–8]. Regardless of the benefits of fractal mathematics and various examinations exhibiting its pertinence to porous media, aquifer, turbulence, and more other media commonly displaying fractal properties, numerous specialists and researchers stay uninformed of its latent capacity involving local fractional articulations. Moreover, local fractional derivatives and integrals are viably applied numerous conditions, for instance, the Fokker–Planck equation, the diffusion and relaxation equation in fractal space, the fractal heat conduction equation, and the local fractional diffusion equation [9]. Moreover, fractional calculus (integrals and derivatives) has gained significant interest throughout the past three decades due chiefly to its incontestable utilities in numerous areas of science and technology [10, 11]. The fractional operator does indeed provide many potentially helpful tools for numerous problems involving special functions of mathematical science and their extensions and generalizations in one and several variables. Fractional integrals are utilized for depiction of various hereditary and memory effects of different processes and constituents in physical processes like seepage flow in fluid dynamic traffic model and nonlinear oscillations of earthquake [12, 13].
Fractional integrals have been analyzed for integral inequalities and solution of fractional differential and difference equations. The Hermite–Hadamard inequality [14] is one of such type inequalities, extensively used in the literature and providing a necessary and sufficient condition for a function to be convex.
Now we recall the Hermite–Hadamard inequality. Let \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \subseteq \mathbb{R}\rightarrow \mathbb{R}\) be a convex function. Then we have the double inequality
for all \(\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}\in \Omega \) with \(\eta _{1}\neq \eta _{2}\).
Recently, generalizations, extensions, improvements, and variants of the Hermite–Hadamard inequality have attracted the attention of many researchers due to its wide applications in pure and applied mathematics. The main purpose of the paper is presenting the fundamental basis of fractals and illustrating analysis of fractal sets and related estimations, in particular, establishing the integral inequalities for the functions whose local fractional differentiation in the absolute values are generalized convex.
Local fractional inequalities and their fertile applications in pure and applied mathematics have attracted the attention of many researchers [15, 16]. For example, Mo et al. [17] derived the generalized Hermite–Hadamard inequality for generalized convex functions. Chen et al. [18] explored it extensively by using the Hölder inequality and some other related variants in a fractal domain. The concept of a generalized harmonically convex function was introduced by Sun [19].
In this paper, we investigate new concepts of differentiation and integration taking into account the fractal sets and generalized convex functions. We present other important auxiliary results, handled by this new approach for higher-order local differentiability, which enable us to give certain estimates of the difference between the left and middle parts of the Hermite–Hadamard inequality. On fractal sets, we carry out two examples illustrating the applicability of the proposed methodology. As an application, we derived some novel cases in local fractional trapezoid form. Generalized new special cases show an impressive performance of the local fractional integration. Some special cases are correlated with existing results on classical convexity.
2 Preliminaries
In this section, we present a different concept of differentiation, which consolidates the ideas of fractional differentiation and fractal derivative. We denote the sets of natural numbers, positive integers, rational numbers, and real numbers by \(\mathbb{N}\), \(\mathbb{Z}\), \(\mathbb{Q}\), and \(\mathbb{R}\), respectively.
Whenever we consider the α̌-type set \(\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) of real line numbers, we implicitly suppose that \(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\). Two binary operations, the addition “+” and the multiplication “⋅” (which is conventionally omitted), on the α̌-type set \(\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) of real line numbers are characterized as follows. Let \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}, \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\). Then the addition “+” and multiplication “⋅” are defined by \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}=(\zeta _{1}+ \zeta _{2})^{\check{\alpha }}\) and \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}=(\zeta _{1} \cdot \zeta _{2})^{\check{\alpha }}\), respectively.
We have the following statements:
• If \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }},+)\) is an Abelian group and \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }},\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}, \zeta _{3}^{ \check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\). then
\((i)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((ii)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}= \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((iii)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+(\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}+ \zeta _{3}^{\check{\alpha }}) =(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{2}^{ \check{\alpha }})+\zeta _{3}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((iv)\) \(0^{\check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}=\zeta _{1}^{ \check{\alpha }}+0^{\check{\alpha }}=\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\) (where \(0^{\check{\alpha }}\) is the additive identity of \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }},+)\));
\((v)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}+(-\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}) =(- \zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }})+\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}=0^{ \check{\alpha }}\) (where \(-\zeta ^{\check{\alpha }}\) is the inverse element of \(\zeta ^{\check{\alpha }}\));
•• If \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\setminus \{0^{\check{\alpha }}\},\cdot )\) is an Abelian group and \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }},\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}, \zeta _{3}^{ \check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\), then
\((vi)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }} \in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((vii)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}= \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((viii)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot (\zeta _{2}^{ \check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{3}^{\check{\alpha }}) =(\zeta _{1}^{ \check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }})\cdot \zeta _{3}^{ \check{\alpha }}\);
\((ix)\) \(1^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}=\zeta _{1}^{ \check{\alpha }}\cdot 1^{\check{\alpha }}=\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\) (where \(1^{\check{\alpha }}\) is the multiplicative identity of \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }},\cdot )\));
\((x)\) \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot (\frac{1}{\zeta _{1}})^{ \check{\alpha }} =(\frac{1}{\zeta _{1}})^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{1}^{ \check{\alpha }}=1^{\check{\alpha }}\) (where \((\frac{1}{\zeta })^{\check{\alpha }}\) is the inverse element of \(\zeta ^{\check{\alpha }}\)).
••• The distributive law: \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot (\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}+ \zeta _{3}^{\check{\alpha }}) =\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{2}^{ \check{\alpha }}+\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\cdot \zeta _{3}^{ \check{\alpha }}\) for all \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}, \zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\).
Proposition 2.1
We have:
\((i)\) \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}, +, \cdot )\) is a field;
\((ii)\) Both the additive identity \(0^{\check{\alpha }}\) and the multiplication identity \(1^{\check{\alpha }}\) are unique;
\((iii)\) Both the additive inverse element and the multiplicative inverse element are unique;
\((iv)\) For each \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\setminus \{0^{\check{\alpha }}\}\), its inverse element \((\frac{1}{\zeta _{1}})^{\check{\alpha }}\) can be written as \(\frac{1^{\check{\alpha }}}{\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}}\) or as \(\frac{1}{\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}}\); for each \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\), its inverse element \((-\zeta _{1})^{\check{\alpha }}\) can be written as \(-\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}\);
\((v)\) The order “<” in \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}, +)\) is defined as follows: \(\zeta _{1}^{\check{\alpha }}<\zeta _{2}^{\check{\alpha }}\in \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) if and only if \(\zeta _{1}<\zeta _{2}\in \mathbb{R}\). In particular, \((\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }},+,\cdot ,<)\) is an ordered field like \((\mathbb{R},+,\cdot ,<)\).
Now let us demonstrate the idea of the local fractional continuity.
Definition 2.2
Let \(\mathcal{G}:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) be a nondifferentiable mapping. Then \(\rho \rightarrow \mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\) is said to be locally fractional continuous at \(\epsilon _{\circ }\) if for any \(\epsilon >0\), there exists \(\kappa >0\) such that
whenever \(\vert \epsilon -\epsilon _{\circ }\vert <\kappa \). If \(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\) is locally continuous on \((\eta _{1},\eta _{2})\), then we write \(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\in \mathbb{C}_{\check{\alpha }}(\eta _{1}, \eta _{2})\).
Definition 2.3
The local fractional derivative of \(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\) of order α̌ at \(\epsilon =\epsilon _{\circ }\) is defined by
where \(\Delta ^{\check{\alpha }}(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )-\mathcal{G}( \epsilon _{\circ })) =\Gamma (\check{\alpha }+1)(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )- \mathcal{G}(\epsilon _{\circ }))\). We also write \(\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}(\epsilon )=\mathcal{D}_{\epsilon }^{ \check{\alpha }}\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\). If there exists \(\mathcal{G}^{(k+1)\check{\alpha }}(\epsilon )= \overbrace{\mathcal{D}_{\epsilon }^{\check{\alpha }}\cdots \mathcal{D}_{\epsilon }^{\check{\alpha }}}^{(k+1) \text{ times}} \mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\) for all \(\epsilon \in \Omega \subseteq \mathbb{R}\), then we write \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{(k+1)\check{\alpha }}(\mathcal{\Omega })\), where \(k=0,1,2,\ldots \) .
Definition 2.4
Let \(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\in \mathbb{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\), and let \(\Delta =\{\varrho _{0},\varrho _{1},\ldots ,\varrho _{N}\} (N\in \mathbb{N})\) be a partition of \([\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\) such that \(\eta _{1}=\varrho _{0}<\varrho _{1}<\cdots <\varrho _{N}=\eta _{2}\). Then the local fractional integral of \(\mathcal{G}\) on \([\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\) of order α̌ is defined by
where \(\delta \varrho =\max \{\Delta \varrho _{1},\Delta \varrho _{2}, \ldots ,\Delta \varrho _{N-1}\}\) and \(\Delta \varrho _{j}=\varrho _{j+1}-\varrho _{j}\) (\(j=0,\ldots ,N-1\)). It follows that \({}_{\eta _{1}}\mathcal{I}_{\eta _{2}}^{(\check{\alpha })}\mathcal{G}( \epsilon )=0\) if \(\eta _{1}=\eta _{2}\) and \({}_{\eta _{1}}\mathcal{I}_{\eta _{2}}^{(\check{\alpha })}\mathcal{G}( \epsilon )= - {}_{\eta _{2}}\mathcal{I}_{\eta _{1}}^{(\check{\alpha })} \mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\) if \(\eta _{1}<\eta _{2}\). If for all \(\epsilon \in [\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), there exists \({}_{\eta _{1}}\mathcal{I}_{\eta _{2}}^{(\check{\alpha })}\mathcal{G}( \epsilon )\), then we write \(\mathcal{G}(\epsilon )\in \mathcal{I}_{\epsilon }^{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\).
Lemma 2.5
(See [1])
We have:
\((1)\) If \(\mathcal{G}(u)=\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}(u)\in \mathbb{C}_{ \check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), then
\((2)\) If \(\mathcal{G}(u), \mathcal{H}(u)\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\) and \(\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}(u),\mathcal{H}^{(\check{\alpha })}(u) \in \mathbb{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), then
Lemma 2.6
(See [1])
We have the formulas
The following analogue of the classical Hölder inequality for a fractal set \(\mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) was established in [18].
Lemma 2.7
(See [18])
Let \(\omega ,\rho >1\) with \(\omega ^{-1}+\rho ^{-1}=1\), and let \(\mathcal{G},\mathcal{H}\in \mathbb{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\). Then
Definition 2.8
(See [17])
A function \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \subseteq \mathbb{R}\rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{ \check{\alpha }}\) is said to be a generalized convex function on Ω if
for all \(\delta _{1},\delta _{2}\in \Omega \) and \(\rho \in [0,1]\).
We provide two examples for generalized convex functions:
\((1)\) \(\mathcal{G}(\delta )= \delta ^{\check{\alpha }\mu }\) for \(\delta \geq 0\) and \(\mu >1\).
\((2)\) \(\mathcal{G}(\delta )=E_{\check{\alpha }}(\delta ^{\check{\alpha }})\) for \(\delta \in \mathbb{R}\), where \(E_{\check{\alpha }}(\delta ^{\check{\alpha }})=\sum_{i=0}^{ \infty }\frac{\delta ^{\check{\alpha } i}}{\Gamma (1+i\check{\alpha })}\) is the Mittag-Leffler function.
Recently, the fractal theory has achieved a considerable interest. Mo et al. [17] found the following analogue of the Hermite–Hadamard inequality (1.1) for generalized convex functions:
3 Identity via first-order local differentiable mappings
To establish our main results, we need the following lemma.
Lemma 3.1
Let \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }} \) (\(0< \check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\) and \(\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\). Then we have
where \(\Gamma (x)=\int _{0}^{\infty }t^{x-1}e^{-t}\,dt\) is the Euler gamma function [20–22].
Proof
By using local fractional integration by parts and change of variable we have
and
By adding identities (3.2) and (3.3) we get the desired identity (3.1). □
4 Hermite–Hadamard-type inequalities for first-order differentiable functions
Using Lemma 3.1, we now give some novel generalizations of the Hermite–Hadamard-type inequality for functions with generalized convex local derivatives.
Theorem 4.1
Let \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }} \) (\(0< \check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert \) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
for all \(y\in [\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\).
Proof
It follows from Lemma 3.1 and the modulus property that
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert \) is generalized convex, we get
where we have used the equalities
This completes the proof. □
Some particular remarkable cases of Theorem 4.1 are as follows.
Corollary 4.2
Under the assumptions of Theorem 4.1, if we take \(y=\frac{\eta _{1}+\eta _{2}}{2}\), then we have
Remark 4.3
Using the convexity of \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert \) in Corollary 4.2, we get
Remark 4.4
If we choose \(\check{\alpha }=1\), then Theorem 4.1, Corollary 4.2, and Remark 4.3 reduce to the results for classical convex functions given in [23, 24].
Theorem 4.5
Let \(\rho , \omega >1\) with \(\rho ^{-1}+\omega ^{-1}=1\), let \(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
for all \(y\in [\eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\).
Proof
It follows from Lemma 3.1 and the generalized Hölder integral inequality that
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function, we have
where we have used the equality
This completes the proof. □
Some particular cases of Theorem 4.5 and corollaries are as follows.
Corollary 4.6
Under the assumptions of Theorem 4.5, if we take \(y=\frac{\eta _{1}+\eta _{2}}{2}\), then we have
where in the second inequality, we used the inequality
Theorem 4.7
Let \(\rho , \omega >1\) with \(\rho ^{-1}+\omega ^{-1}=1\), let \(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
for all \(y\in [\eta _{1}, \eta _{2}]\).
Proof
It follows from Lemma 3.1 and the generalized power-mean inequality that
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function, we obtain
Similarly,
Combining (4.6)–(4.8) gives the desired inequality (4.5). This completes the proof. □
Corollary 4.8
Under the assumptions of Theorem 4.7, if we take \(y=\frac{\eta _{1}+\eta _{2}}{2}\), then we have
5 Generalized inequalities for second-order differentiability
This section is devoted to certain generalizations for twice locally differentiable functions, which are connected with the Hermite–Hadamard-type inequality. For this purpose, we need the following lemma.
Lemma 5.1
Let \(\check{\alpha }\in (0,1]\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\) and \(\mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\). Then
Proof
Using local fractional integration by parts and change of variable, we have
and, analogously,
Adding (5.2) and (5.3) and then multiplying both sides by \((\frac{(\eta _{2}-\eta _{1})^{2}}{16} )^{\check{\alpha }}\) give the desired identity. This completes the proof. □
Remark 5.2
If we take \(\check{\alpha }=1\), then Lemma 5.1 reduces to the result presented by Barani et al. [25].
Theorem 5.3
Let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }} \) (\(0< \check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\vert \) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
Proof
From Lemma 5.1 and the modulus property we have
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\vert \) is a generalized convex function on Ω, we have
and
Therefore
where we have used the equality
This completes the proof. □
Theorem 5.4
Let \(\rho , \omega >1\) with \(\rho ^{-1}+\omega ^{-1}=1\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) (\(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
where
Proof
It follows Lemma 5.1 and the generalized power-mean integral inequality that
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(2\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω, we have
and
Therefore
where we have used the equalities
This completes the proof. □
6 Generalized integral inequalities for third-order local differentiable functions
In this section, we present some novel variants of Hermite–Hadamard-type inequality for the functions with generalized convex third local fractional derivatives. For this purpose, we need the following identity.
Lemma 6.1
Let \(\check{\alpha }\in (0,1]\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\) and \(\mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\). Then
Proof
Using the local fractional integration by parts and change of variable leads to
Analogously, we have
Subtracting the above identities side by side and then multiplying the obtained identity by \((\frac{(\eta _{2}-\eta _{1})^{3}}{96} )^{\check{\alpha }}\), we get the desired result. □
Theorem 6.2
Let \(\rho , \omega >1\) with \(\rho ^{-1}+\omega ^{-1}=1\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) (\(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
where
and
Proof
From Lemma 6.1 and the generalized Hölder integral inequality we get
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω, we have
and
It follows from (6.7) that
where we have used the equalities
This completes the proof of Theorem 6.2. □
Corollary 6.3
If we choose \(\rho =1\), then under the assumptions of Theorem 6.2, we get
where \(\Psi _{2}^{*}\) and \(\Psi _{3}^{*}\) are given in (6.5) and (6.6), respectively.
Remark 6.4
Letting \(\check{\alpha }=1\), Theorem 6.2 reduces to Theorem 3.1 of [26].
Theorem 6.5
Let \(\rho , \omega >1\) with \(\rho ^{-1}+\omega ^{-1}=1\), and let a mapping \(\mathcal{G}:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{\check{\alpha }}\) (\(0<\check{\alpha }\leq 1\)) be such that \(\mathcal{G}\in \mathcal{D}_{\check{\alpha }}(\Omega )\), \(\mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\in \mathcal{C}_{\check{\alpha }}[ \eta _{1},\eta _{2}]\), and \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω. Then
where
Proof
Using Lemma 6.1 and the generalized Hölder integral inequality, we have
Since \(\vert \mathcal{G}^{(3\check{\alpha })}\vert ^{\rho }\) is a generalized convex function on Ω, we have
and
It follows that
where we have used the equalities
This completes the proof of Theorem 6.5. □
We have some particular cases of Theorem 6.5.
Corollary 6.6
Under the suppositions of Theorem 6.5, we have the following conclusions.
(1) Choosing \(m=0\), we get
where
(2) Choosing \(m=\rho \), we obtain
where
Remark 6.7
Letting \(\check{\alpha }=1\), Theorem 6.5 reduces to Theorem 3.3 of [26].
7 Examples
Example 7.1
Let \(\alpha =\frac{1}{2}\), \(\eta _{1}=1\), \(\eta _{2}=3\), \(y\in (0,4)\), and \(\mathcal{G}(y)=y^{3\alpha }\). Then all the assumptions of Theorem 4.1 are satisfied.
Clearly,
On the other hand, from Theorem 4.1 we get
It is nice to see that the implication
Example 7.2
Let \(\alpha =1\), \(\eta _{1}=0\), \(\eta _{2}=3\), \(y\in (-1/2,\infty )\), and \(\mathcal{G}(y)=\ln (2y+1)\). Then all the assumptions of Theorem 5.4 are satisfied.
We clearly see that
On the other hand, we have
and
Note that \(0.9684<1.2439\), which gives the desired result in Theorem 5.4.
8 Conclusion
In the paper, we investigated the local fractional differentiation and integration for the generalized convex functions. Under this approach, we have derived three identities related to many well-known inequalities in the literature. For generalized convex functions, we obtained several novel bounds for higher-order local differentiable functions in different forms, which lead to the bounds of several known results in [23, 26]. With reference to the definition of generalized convex functions, there is much to explore in the area of fractal analysis and machine learning by introducing specific values of the fractal parameters. Our ideas and approach may lead to a lot of follow-up research.
Availability of data and materials
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The authors would like to express their sincere thanks to the editor and anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and suggestions.
Funding
The work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants Nos. 61673169, 11971142, 11401192).
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Khan, Z.A., Rashid, S., Ashraf, R. et al. Generalized trapezium-type inequalities in the settings of fractal sets for functions having generalized convexity property. Adv Differ Equ 2020, 657 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-020-03121-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-020-03121-x
MSC
- 26D15
- 26D10
- 90C23
Keywords
- Generalized convex functions
- Hermite–Hadamard inequalty
- Čebyšev inequality
- Generalized Hölder inequality
- Power-mean inequality
- Fractal set