# Elliptic theory for sets with higher co-dimensional boundaries

**Authors:** Guy R. David, Joseph Feneuil, Svitlana Mayboroda

arXiv: 1702.05503 · 2023-09-26

## TL;DR

This paper develops an elliptic theory for sets with higher co-dimensional boundaries, introducing degenerate elliptic operators and harmonic measure concepts that extend classical results to more complex geometric contexts.

## Contribution

It introduces a new elliptic framework for higher co-dimensional sets, including definitions, estimates, and properties of solutions and harmonic measure, extending classical harmonic analysis results.

## Key findings

- Established maximum principle and regularity estimates for solutions.
- Defined and analyzed the Green function and harmonic measure.
- Proved properties like doubling, non-degeneracy, and change-of-pole formulas.

## Abstract

Many geometric and analytic properties of sets hinge on the properties of harmonic measure, notoriously missing for sets of higher co-dimension. The aim of this manuscript is to develop a version of elliptic theory, associated to a linear PDE, which ultimately yields a notion analogous to that of the harmonic measure, for sets of codimension higher than 1.   To this end, we turn to degenerate elliptic equations. Let $\Gamma \subset \mathbb R^n$ be an Ahlfors regular set of dimension $d<n-1$ (not necessarily integer) and $\Omega = \mathbb R^n \setminus \Gamma$. Let $L = - {\rm div} A\nabla$ be a degenerate elliptic operator with measurable coefficients such that the ellipticity constants of the matrix $A$ are bounded from above and below by a multiple of ${\rm dist}(\cdot, \Gamma)^{d+1-n}$. We define weak solutions; prove trace and extension theorems in suitable weighted Sobolev spaces; establish the maximum principle, De Giorgi-Nash-Moser estimates, the Harnack inequality, the H\"older continuity of solutions (inside and at the boundary). We define the Green function and provide the basic set of pointwise and/or $L^p$ estimates for the Green function and for its gradient. With this at hand, we define harmonic measure associated to $L$, establish its doubling property, non-degeneracy, change-of-the-pole formulas, and, finally, the comparison principle for local solutions.   In another article to appear, we will prove that when $\Gamma$ is the graph of a Lipschitz function with small Lipschitz constant, we can find an elliptic operator $L$ for which the harmonic measure given here is absolutely continuous with respect to the $d$-Hausdorff measure on $\Gamma$ and vice versa. It thus extends Dahlberg's theorem to some sets of codimension higher than 1.

## Full text

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## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.05503/full.md

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