Roughness of exponential dichotomy under unbounded perturbation in linear partial functional differential equations
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 06:22 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
If the Yosida distances d_Y(A, A_1) and d_Y(B, B_1) are sufficiently small, then the perturbed equation admits an exponential dichotomy whenever the original does.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
If d_Y(A, A_1) and d_Y(B, B_1) are sufficiently small, then the perturbed equation u'(t)=A_1 u(t) + B_1 u_t also admits an exponential dichotomy whenever the original equation u'(t)=A u(t) + B u_t admits one. The proofs are based on estimates of the Yosida distance between the generators of the solution semigroups associated with the two equations in the phase space C([-r,0],X), without assuming any relation between their domains.
What carries the argument
The Yosida distance d_Y(U,V) := limsup as mu to +infty of the operator norm of U_mu minus V_mu, used to control the distance between semigroup generators in the phase space C([-r,0],X).
If this is right
- The exponential dichotomy property transfers from the original equation to the perturbed one when both Yosida distances are small enough.
- The transfer holds for the full class of linear partial functional differential equations with fixed delay r>0.
- No domain inclusion or equality between the generators is required for the estimates to go through.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same distance could be used to obtain roughness statements for other qualitative properties such as asymptotic stability or existence of invariant manifolds.
- Concrete models in population dynamics or viscoelasticity could be checked by computing Yosida approximations of their operators.
- The method may adapt to time-dependent or nonlinear perturbations once the linear case is settled.
Load-bearing premise
The central estimates rely on the Yosida distance between the generators of the solution semigroups without any relation assumed between their domains.
What would settle it
An explicit pair of operators A,A1,B,B1 with arbitrarily small d_Y(A,A1) and d_Y(B,B1) for which the original equation has an exponential dichotomy but the perturbed one does not.
read the original abstract
This paper is concerned with the roughness of exponential dichotomies under unbounded perturbations of a class of linear partial functional differential equations \begin{equation}\label{pfde-000-1star} u'(t)=Au(t)+Bu_t, \end{equation} where $A$ is a linear operator on a Banach space $\mathbb{X}$ and $B$ is a linear operator from $C([-r,0],\mathbb{X})$ into $\mathbb{X}$, where $r>0$ is a given constant. To quantify the size of unbounded perturbations, we introduce the \textit{Yosida distance} between linear operators $U$ and $V$, defined by $d_Y(U,V):=\limsup_{\mu\to +\infty} \| U_\mu-V_\mu\|$, where $U_\mu$ and $V_\mu$ are the Yosida approximations of $U$ and $V$, respectively. We show that if $d_Y(A, A_1)$ and $d_Y(B, B_1)$ are sufficiently small, then the perturbed equation \begin{equation}\label{pfde-000-2star} u'(t)=A_1u(t)+B_1u_t \end{equation} also admits an exponential dichotomy whenever \eqref{pfde-000-1star} admits one. The proofs are based on estimates of the Yosida distance between the generators of the solution semigroups associated with \eqref{pfde-000-1star} and \eqref{pfde-000-2star} in the phase space $C([-r,0],\mathbb{X})$, without assuming any relation between their domains.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper establishes a roughness result for exponential dichotomies in linear partial functional differential equations of the form u'(t) = A u(t) + B u_t on a Banach space X, where A generates a semigroup and B maps the delay space C([-r,0],X) into X. It introduces the Yosida distance d_Y(U,V) = limsup_{μ→∞} ||U_μ - V_μ|| and proves that if d_Y(A,A_1) and d_Y(B,B_1) are sufficiently small, then the perturbed equation with (A_1,B_1) inherits an exponential dichotomy from the original whenever the latter possesses one. The argument proceeds by estimating the Yosida distance between the generators G and G_1 of the associated solution semigroups on the phase space C([-r,0],X) and invoking standard roughness theorems for dichotomies.
Significance. If the central estimates hold, the result extends classical roughness theorems for dichotomies to a class of unbounded perturbations without requiring domain compatibility between the unperturbed and perturbed operators. This is potentially useful for applications involving partial differential equations with delays where domains may differ. The introduction of the Yosida distance as a quantitative measure for unbounded perturbations is a methodological contribution.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract (and the paragraph on proofs): the central claim requires that d_Y(G,G_1) ≤ C (d_Y(A,A_1) + d_Y(B,B_1)) for some C independent of the operators, so that smallness of the input distances implies smallness of the phase-space distance and hence dichotomy transfer. When dom(A) and dom(A_1) share no common dense subspace, it is not immediate that the Yosida approximants G_μ constructed from the resolvent of A and the action of B satisfy the required limsup bound; the identity relating (λ-G)^{-1} to (λ-A)^{-1} and B may fail to pass to the limit in a manner that controls ||G_μ - G1_μ||. This estimate is load-bearing for the roughness conclusion and must be verified explicitly.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and for isolating the load-bearing estimate on the Yosida distance between the phase-space generators. We address this point directly below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (and the paragraph on proofs): the central claim requires that d_Y(G,G_1) ≤ C (d_Y(A,A_1) + d_Y(B,B_1)) for some C independent of the operators, so that smallness of the input distances implies smallness of the phase-space distance and hence dichotomy transfer. When dom(A) and dom(A_1) share no common dense subspace, it is not immediate that the Yosida approximants G_μ constructed from the resolvent of A and the action of B satisfy the required limsup bound; the identity relating (λ-G)^{-1} to (λ-A)^{-1} and B may fail to pass to the limit in a manner that controls ||G_μ - G1_μ||. This estimate is load-bearing for the roughness conclusion and must be verified explicitly.
Authors: The manuscript derives precisely this bound without assuming any relation between dom(A) and dom(A_1). The generator G of the solution semigroup on C([-r,0],X) is defined via the resolvent identity that expresses (λ-G)^{-1} in terms of (λ-A)^{-1} and the (bounded) operator B; the same holds for G_1. Subtracting the two identities and taking operator norms yields ||G_μ - G1_μ|| ≤ K (||A_μ - A1_μ|| + ||B_μ - B1_μ||) for a constant K depending only on the dichotomy constants, r, and the uniform bound on the resolvents for large μ. Because each Yosida approximant is constructed separately from its own resolvent, the estimate passes to the limsup as μ→∞ independently of whether the domains intersect densely. The resulting inequality d_Y(G,G_1) ≤ C (d_Y(A,A_1) + d_Y(B,B_1)) is therefore valid under the paper’s hypotheses. We will add one clarifying sentence in the abstract and a short remark after the statement of the main theorem to make the domain-independence explicit. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity; derivation is self-contained operator estimate
full rationale
The paper defines the Yosida distance d_Y and claims to derive an upper bound on d_Y(G,G_1) (where G,G_1 are phase-space generators) in terms of d_Y(A,A_1) and d_Y(B,B_1), then invokes standard roughness theorems for the dichotomy transfer. This chain consists of explicit estimates on Yosida approximants and semigroup generators; it does not reduce any quantity to a fitted parameter, a self-referential definition, or a load-bearing self-citation. The argument is presented as a direct consequence of the operator estimates in the phase space without domain overlap assumptions, making the derivation independent of its own outputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math The solution operators generate C0-semigroups on the phase space C([-r,0],X)
- standard math Exponential dichotomy is defined via the usual splitting with exponential decay rates on the phase space
invented entities (1)
-
Yosida distance d_Y(U,V)
no independent evidence
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
On the well-posedness of linear evolution equations under unbounded nonautonomous perturbations
If the norm of the time-dependent unbounded perturbation operators is continuous, the nonautonomous evolution equation admits an evolution family, unique under additional differentiability and bounded derivative conditions.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
M. Adimy and K. Ezzinbi. A class of linear partial neutral f unctional-differential equations with nondense domain. Journal of Differential Equations 147 (1998), no. 2, 285–332
work page 1998
- [2]
- [3]
- [4]
-
[5]
A. Batkai and S. Piazzera. Semigroups for Delay Equations . Research Notes in Mathematics
-
[6]
A K Peters, Ltd., W ellesley, MA, 2005
work page 2005
-
[7]
X.-Q. Bui and N.V. Minh. Yosida distance and existence of i nvariant manifolds in the infinite- dimensional dynamical systems. To appear in Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. arXiv preprint https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.12080
- [8]
-
[9]
S.-N. Chow and H. Leiva. Unbounded perturbation of the exp onential dichotomy for evolution equations. Journal of Differential Equations 129 (1996), no. 2, 509–531
work page 1996
-
[10]
W.A. Coppel. Dichotomies in Stability Theory . Lecture Notes in Mathematics 629. Springer- Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1978
work page 1978
-
[11]
G. Da Prato and A. Lunardi. Stability, instability and ce nter manifold theorem for fully nonlinear autonomous parabolic equations in Banach space. Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis 101 (1998), 115–141
work page 1998
-
[12]
Ju.L. Daleckii and M.G. Krein. Stability of Solutions of Differential Equations in Banach Spaces. American Mathematical Society Translations, 1974
work page 1974
-
[13]
O. Diekmann, S.A. van Gils, S.M. Verduyn Lunel, and H.O. W alther. Delay Equations . Springer-Verlag, New York-Heidelberg-Berlin, 1995
work page 1995
- [14]
-
[15]
N. Dunford and J.T. Schwartz. Linear Operators General Theory, Part I . Wiley, New York, 1988
work page 1988
-
[16]
Y. Hino, S. Murakami, T. Naito, and N.V. Minh. A variation -of-constants formula for abstract functional differential equations in the phase space. Journal of Differential Equations 179 (2002), 336–355
work page 2002
-
[17]
K.J. Engel and R. Nagel. One-Parameter Semigroups for Linear Evolution Equations . Grad- uate Texts in Mathematics 194. Springer, 2000
work page 2000
-
[18]
J. Hale. Theory of Functional Differential Equations (second edition). Applied Mathematical Sciences 3. Springer-Verlag, New York-Heidelberg, 1977
work page 1977
-
[19]
D. Henry. Geometric Theory of Semilinear Parabolic Equations . Lecture Notes in Mathematics 840 (1981). Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1981
work page 1981
-
[20]
N.T. Huy. Exponential dichotomy of evolution equations and admissibility of function spaces on a half-line. Journal of Functional Analysis 235 (2006), no. 1, 330–354
work page 2006
-
[21]
N.T. Huy and N.V. Minh. Exponential dichotomy of differen ce equations and applications to evolution equations on the half-line. Computers & Mathematics with Applications 42, 301– 311
-
[22]
A. Lunardi. Analytic Semigroups and Optimal Regularity in Parabolic Pr oblems. Birkh¨ auser, Basel, 1995
work page 1995
-
[23]
N.V. Minh, F. R¨ abiger, and R. Schnaubelt. Exponential s tability, exponential expansiveness and exponential dichotomy of evolution equations on the hal f line. Integral Equations and Operator Theory 32 (1998), 332–353
work page 1998
-
[24]
S. Murakami and N.V. Minh. Some invariant manifolds for a bstract functional differential equations and linearized stabilities. Vietnam Journal of Mathematics 30 (2002), 437–458
work page 2002
-
[25]
A. Pazy. Semigroups of Linear Operators and Applications to Partial Differential Equations . Applied Mathematical Sciences 44. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1983
work page 1983
-
[26]
J. Pr¨ uss. Perturbations of exponential dichotomies fo r hyperbolic evolution equations. Op- erator Semigroups Meet Complex Analysis, Harmonic Analysi s and Mathematical Physics , 453–461, Operator Theory: Advances and Applications 250. Birkh¨ auser/Springer, Cham, 2015. UNBOUNDED PERTURBATION OF LINEAR PFDE VIA YOSIDA DISTANCE 1 9
work page 2015
-
[27]
C.C. Travis and G.F. W ebb. Existence and stability for pa rtial functional differential equa- tions. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 200 (1974), 394–418
work page 1974
-
[28]
C.C. Travis and G.F. W ebb. Existence, stability and comp actness in the α-norm for partial functional differential equations. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 240 (1978), 129–143
work page 1978
-
[29]
C.C. Travis and G.F. W ebb. Partial functional differenti al equations with deviating argument in time variable. Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 56 (1976), 397–409
work page 1976
-
[30]
J. W u. Theory and Applications of Partial Functional Differential Equations. Applied Math- ematical Sciences 119. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1996
work page 1996
-
[31]
J. Yang, J. Gimeno, and R. de la Llave. Persistence and smo oth dependence on parameters of periodic orbits in functional differential equations close to an ODE or an evolutionary PDE. Journal of Differential Equations 338 (2022), 76–127
work page 2022
-
[32]
K. Yosida. Functional Analysis. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1995
work page 1995
-
[33]
L. Zhou, K. Lu, and W. Zhang. Equivalences between nonuni form exponential dichotomy and admissibility. Journal of Differential Equations 262 (2017), no. 1, 682–747. F aculty of Fundamental Sciences, PHENIKAA University, Hanoi 121 16, Vietnam Email address : quang.buixuan@phenikaa-uni.edu.vn Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Arka nsas...
work page 2017
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.