Trudinger's theorem
Appearance
(Redirected from Moser–Trudinger inequality)
In mathematical analysis, Trudinger's theorem or the Trudinger inequality (also sometimes called the Moser–Trudinger inequality) is a result of functional analysis on Sobolev spaces. It is named after Neil Trudinger (and Jürgen Moser).
It provides an inequality between a certain Sobolev space norm and an Orlicz space norm of a function. The inequality is a limiting case of Sobolev imbedding and can be stated as the following theorem:
Let be a bounded domain in satisfying the cone condition. Let and . Set
Then there exists the embedding
where
The space
is an example of an Orlicz space.
References
[edit]- Moser, J. (1971), "A Sharp form of an Inequality by N. Trudinger", Indiana Univ. Math. J., 20 (11): 1077–1092, doi:10.1512/iumj.1971.20.20101.
- Trudinger, N. S. (1967), "On imbeddings into Orlicz spaces and some applications", J. Math. Mech., 17: 473–483.