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arxiv: 2312.16368 · v3 · submitted 2023-12-27 · 🧮 math.AP

On existence, uniqueness and radiality of normalized solutions to Schr\"{o}dinger-Poisson equations with non-autonomous nonlinearity

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 05:34 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords Schrödinger-Poisson equationsnormalized solutionsnon-autonomous nonlinearityexistenceuniquenessradial symmetryimplicit function theorem
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The pith

Normalized solutions to the Schrödinger-Poisson equation with non-autonomous nonlinearity exist in three growth regimes and are unique and radially symmetric for small mass.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper studies normalized solutions of the Schrödinger-Poisson equation with a nonlinearity f(x,u) that depends explicitly on position. It splits the admissible nonlinearities into three classes according to whether their growth is L2-supercritical, L2-subcritical but slower than cubic, or L2-subcritical but faster than cubic. Separate arguments establish existence in each class. When the prescribed L2-mass c is small, an implicit-function argument further yields uniqueness together with radial symmetry about some point in space.

Core claim

We establish the existence of solutions using three different methods depending on f(x,u). Furthermore, we demonstrate the uniqueness and radial symmetry of normalized solutions using an implicit function framework when c is small.

What carries the argument

Case-by-case variational constructions for existence together with an implicit-function argument on the mass constraint that yields uniqueness and radial symmetry for small c.

Load-bearing premise

The non-autonomous nonlinearity must satisfy growth conditions that place it cleanly into one of the three distinguished cases.

What would settle it

A function f(x,u) that meets the growth bounds of one case yet admits no normalized solution, or admits two distinct normalized solutions even for arbitrarily small c.

read the original abstract

We investigate the existence, uniqueness, and radial symmetry of normalized solutions to the Schr\"{o}dinger Poisson equation with non-autonomous nonlinearity $f(x,u)$: \begin{equation} -\triangle u+(|x|^{-1}*|u|^2)u=f(x,u)+\lambda u, \nonumber \end{equation} subject to the constraint $\mathcal{S}_c=\{u\in H^1(\mathbb{R}^3)|\int_{\mathbb{R}^3}u^2=c>0 \}$. We consider three cases based on the behavior of $f(x,u)$: the $L^2$ supercritical case, the $L^2$ subcritical case with growth speed less than three power times, and the $L^2$ subcritical case with growth speed more than three power times. We establish the existence of solutions using three different methods depending on $f(x,u)$. Furthermore, we demonstrate the uniqueness and radial symmetry of normalized solutions using an implicit function framework when $c$ is small.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript investigates existence, uniqueness, and radial symmetry of normalized solutions to the Schrödinger-Poisson equation −Δu + (|x|⁻¹ * |u|²)u = f(x,u) + λu under the fixed-mass constraint ∫u² = c > 0. It distinguishes three regimes for the non-autonomous nonlinearity f (L²-supercritical; L²-subcritical with growth slower than cubic; L²-subcritical with growth faster than cubic), claims case-specific existence proofs for each regime, and asserts uniqueness plus radial symmetry for sufficiently small c via an implicit-function framework.

Significance. If the detailed arguments hold, the results would extend the literature on normalized solutions from autonomous to non-autonomous nonlinearities and supply a uniform small-mass uniqueness/radiality statement. The case-by-case existence strategy and implicit-function approach are standard tools in the field, so the contribution would be incremental but potentially useful for researchers working on mass-constrained variational problems.

minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: the three existence methods are invoked but never named; the introduction should state explicitly which variational or topological tool is applied in each growth regime.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their report summarizing our manuscript. No specific major comments or objections were raised in the provided referee report, so we have no individual points to address or rebut at this time.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation self-contained from abstract

full rationale

Only the abstract is available, which describes case-by-case existence proofs via standard variational methods for three growth regimes of f(x,u) and uniqueness/radiality via an implicit-function framework for small c. No equations, self-citations, fitted parameters, or ansatzes are exhibited that reduce any claimed result to its own inputs by construction. The approach is consistent with independent techniques for normalized Schrödinger-Poisson problems and does not invoke load-bearing self-referential definitions or prior-author uniqueness theorems.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review; no free parameters or invented entities are mentioned. The work relies on standard functional-analytic background for H¹ spaces and variational methods.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The nonlinearity f(x,u) satisfies growth and regularity conditions that place it in one of the three stated L² regimes.
    Abstract states that the choice of existence method depends on this classification.
  • standard math The problem is well-posed in H¹(ℝ³) with the L²-mass constraint S_c.
    Standard Sobolev-space setting for such equations.

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