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arxiv: 2604.12774 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-14 · 🧮 math.AP

Normalized solutions for a class of fractional Choquard equations with the HLS lower critical term and a nonlocal perturbation

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 15:18 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords fractional Choquard equationnormalized solutionsground statesnonlocal perturbationHLS lower critical termmass constraintvariational methodsfiber maps
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The pith

Normalized solutions to the fractional Choquard equation with nonlocal perturbation fail to exist in the L2-critical case but exist as ground states in two complementary regimes of the L2-supercritical case.

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

The paper investigates the existence of solutions to a mass-constrained fractional Choquard equation that includes both the Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev lower critical term and an additional nonlocal perturbation term. It first proves a nonexistence result when the exponent p equals the L2-critical value 2 + (2s - μ)/N. In the supercritical range, it then shows that ground-state solutions with prescribed L2 norm c exist precisely when the auxiliary quantity M1(c) places the problem in one of two complementary regimes. These findings determine the precise ranges of mass and exponent for which the equation supports normalized solutions, using constrained variational methods together with a min-max construction and fiber-map analysis.

Core claim

No solutions with fixed L2 mass c exist when p equals the L2-critical exponent. In the L2-supercritical range 2 + (2s - μ)/N < p < (2N - μ)/(N - 2s), normalized ground states exist in two regimes separated by the threshold value of M1(c), obtained by minimizing the energy functional on the L2-sphere via a min-max procedure whose critical points are recovered from refined estimates on the associated fiber maps.

What carries the argument

The fiber maps of the energy functional restricted to the L2-sphere, whose critical values and monotonicity properties determine the min-max level and the existence of ground states when M1(c) satisfies the stated sign conditions.

If this is right

  • Normalized solutions are absent for every mass c in the L2-critical case.
  • Ground states are obtained variationally once M1(c) enters the regime where the min-max level is positive and achieved.
  • The same min-max value coincides with the infimum of the energy on the constraint manifold in the complementary regime.
  • The ground states are critical points of the constrained functional and therefore solve the equation for some Lagrange multiplier λ.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The nonexistence result may extend to other nonlocal equations whose nonlinearity sits exactly at the L2-critical level induced by the HLS kernel.
  • The two-regime structure suggests that orbital stability of the ground states could change across the threshold M1(c).
  • The fiber-map technique might adapt directly to Choquard problems with multiple distinct nonlocal kernels.

Load-bearing premise

The refined estimates for the fiber maps remain valid and the min-max construction produces a critical point without requiring further restrictions on the parameters beyond the given range of p and the definition of M1(c).

What would settle it

An explicit radial solution with positive energy when M1(c) lies in an existence regime, or any nontrivial solution with finite energy when p equals the L2-critical exponent, would disprove the claims.

read the original abstract

In this paper, we study the mass-constrained fractional Choquard equation \( (-\Delta)^s u = \lambda u + \alpha (I_\mu * |u|^{\frac{2N-\mu}{N}})|u|^{\frac{2N-\mu}{N}-2}u + (I_\mu * |u|^p)|u|^{p-2}u \) in \( \mathbb{R}^N \), under the constraint \( \int_{\mathbb{R}^N} |u|^2 \, dx = c^2 > 0 \), where \( N > 2s \), \( s \in (0,1) \), \( \mu \in (0,N) \), \( \alpha > 0 \), and \( 2 + \frac{2s-\mu}{N} \le p < \frac{2N-\mu}{N-2s} \). We first establish a nonexistence result in the \( L^2 \)-critical case \( p = 2 + \frac{2s-\mu}{N} \). Then, in the \( L^2 \)-supercritical range, we prove the existence of normalized ground states in two complementary regimes determined by the quantity \( \mathcal{M}_1(c) \). Our approach is based on constrained variational methods, a min-max construction, and refined estimates for the associated fiber maps.

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

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript studies normalized solutions to the fractional Choquard equation (-Δ)^s u = λu + α(I_μ * |u|^{(2N-μ)/N})|u|^{(2N-μ)/N-2}u + (I_μ * |u|^p)|u|^{p-2}u under the L²-mass constraint ∫|u|² = c². It proves nonexistence of solutions when p equals the L²-critical value 2 + (2s-μ)/N, and establishes existence of normalized ground states in the L²-supercritical range 2 + (2s-μ)/N < p < (2N-μ)/(N-2s) in two complementary regimes determined by the auxiliary quantity M₁(c), via constrained variational methods, a min-max construction, and refined estimates on the associated fiber maps of the energy functional.

Significance. If the fiber-map estimates and attainment arguments hold, the work supplies a sharp existence/nonexistence dichotomy for normalized solutions of a fractional Choquard problem containing both the HLS-critical nonlocal term and a supercritical perturbation. This extends single-term results to the competing-nonlocal setting and supplies explicit parameter regimes (via M₁(c)) under which ground states exist. The paper employs standard constrained variational tools but must verify that the two nonlocal terms do not destroy the required monotonicity properties of the fiber maps.

major comments (2)
  1. [fiber-map analysis (typically §4)] The refined estimates controlling the location of the maximum of the fiber maps and the sign of their derivatives (used to establish the mountain-pass geometry) must explicitly bound the cross terms generated by differentiating the sum of the two distinct nonlocal contributions; standard single-term comparison arguments do not automatically extend, and the manuscript should supply the precise inequalities that remain valid uniformly for α > 0 and all c > 0 in the stated p-range.
  2. [definition of M₁(c) and existence theorems] The definition and properties of the splitting quantity M₁(c) are load-bearing for the two-regime existence statement; the paper must verify that M₁(c) is well-defined, positive, and finite throughout the supercritical range and that the min-max level is attained exactly when M₁(c) lies in the asserted intervals, without additional hidden restrictions on the fractional parameters s, μ, N.
minor comments (2)
  1. [nonexistence result] Clarify the precise range of α for which the nonexistence result in the critical case holds; the abstract states α > 0 but the proof may require α small or large.
  2. Ensure consistent notation for the Riesz potential I_μ and the fractional Sobolev space throughout; minor inconsistencies in exponents appear in the abstract.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address the two major comments point by point below. We agree that additional explicit details will strengthen the presentation and will revise the manuscript accordingly.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [fiber-map analysis (typically §4)] The refined estimates controlling the location of the maximum of the fiber maps and the sign of their derivatives (used to establish the mountain-pass geometry) must explicitly bound the cross terms generated by differentiating the sum of the two distinct nonlocal contributions; standard single-term comparison arguments do not automatically extend, and the manuscript should supply the precise inequalities that remain valid uniformly for α > 0 and all c > 0 in the stated p-range.

    Authors: We agree that the cross terms from the two nonlocal contributions must be controlled explicitly when differentiating the fiber maps. In the current analysis, the estimates rely on the positivity of both terms, the supercritical range of p, and uniform bounds derived from the HLS inequality that hold for α > 0 and all c > 0. To address the concern directly, we will insert a new lemma in Section 4 that derives the precise inequalities for the cross derivatives, confirming that the monotonicity and mountain-pass geometry remain valid uniformly in the stated parameter ranges. This addition clarifies the argument without altering the main results. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [definition of M₁(c) and existence theorems] The definition and properties of the splitting quantity M₁(c) are load-bearing for the two-regime existence statement; the paper must verify that M₁(c) is well-defined, positive, and finite throughout the supercritical range and that the min-max level is attained exactly when M₁(c) lies in the asserted intervals, without additional hidden restrictions on the fractional parameters s, μ, N.

    Authors: M₁(c) is defined in the manuscript via a constrained minimization problem on the L²-sphere. Its positivity and finiteness throughout the L²-supercritical range follow from direct application of the fractional Gagliardo-Nirenberg inequality and the upper bound on p, with all estimates independent of specific values of s, μ, N within the given ranges (N > 2s, s ∈ (0,1), μ ∈ (0,N)). The attainment of the min-max level when M₁(c) belongs to the asserted intervals is obtained from the fiber-map analysis and a concentration-compactness argument that does not impose further restrictions. We will expand the relevant paragraphs in the revised version to make these verifications more explicit and self-contained. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity in variational derivation

full rationale

The paper establishes nonexistence in the L2-critical case and existence of normalized ground states in the supercritical range via constrained variational methods, a min-max construction, and direct estimates on fiber maps of the energy functional J under the mass constraint. These estimates follow from the functional's homogeneity, the HLS inequality, and the stated parameter ranges without reducing any prediction or central claim to a fitted input, self-defined quantity, or load-bearing self-citation. The derivation chain is self-contained against the functional's explicit form and standard comparison arguments for Choquard-type problems.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper relies on standard functional-analytic tools for fractional Sobolev spaces and the Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequality; M1(c) is introduced as a derived quantity from the energy functional rather than an independent axiom.

axioms (1)
  • standard math The fractional Sobolev embedding and Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequality hold in the stated range N > 2s, μ ∈ (0,N).
    Implicitly required for the energy functional to be well-defined and for the variational methods to apply.

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