Linear, second-order problems with Sturm-Liouville-type multi-point boundary conditions
Bryan P. Rynne

TL;DR
This paper analyzes a linear eigenvalue problem with multi-point boundary conditions, showing that its spectral properties are similar to classical Sturm-Liouville problems, and extends previous results to more general boundary conditions.
Contribution
The paper unifies and extends spectral property results for Sturm-Liouville problems with general multi-point boundary conditions under less restrictive hypotheses.
Findings
Spectral properties resemble those of standard Sturm-Liouville problems.
General multi-point boundary conditions can be handled with similar oscillation methods.
Results extend previous special cases to broader boundary condition classes.
Abstract
We consider the linear eigenvalue problem \tag{1} -u" = \lambda u, \quad \text{on }, where , together with the general multi-point boundary conditions \tag{2} \alpha_0^\pm u(\pm 1) + \beta_0^\pm u'(\pm 1) = \sum^{m^\pm}_{i=1} \alpha^\pm_i u(\eta^\pm_i) + \sum_{i=1}^{m^\pm} \beta^\pm_i u'(\eta^\pm_i). We also suppose that: \alpha_0^\pm \ge 0, \quad \alpha_0^\pm + |\beta_0^\pm| > 0, \tag{3} \pm \beta_0^\pm \ge 0, \tag{4} (\frac{\sum_{i=1}^{m^\pm} |\alpha_i^\pm|}{\alpha_0^\pm})^2 + (\frac{\sum_{i=1}^{m^\pm} |\beta_i^\pm|}{\beta_0^\pm})^2 < 1, \tag{5} with the convention that if any denominator in (5) is zero then the corresponding numerator must also be zero, and the corresponding fraction is omitted from (5) (by (3), at least one denominator is nonzero in each condition). In this paper we show that the basic spectral properties of this problem are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectral Theory in Mathematical Physics · Differential Equations and Boundary Problems · Nonlinear Differential Equations Analysis
