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ON THE LOWEST EIGENVALUE OF THE FRACTIONAL LAPLACIAN FOR THE INTERSECTION OF TWO DOMAINS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2022

ANH TUAN DUONG*
Affiliation:
School of Applied Mathematics and Informatics, Hanoi University of Science and Technology, 1 Dai Co Viet, Hai Ba Trung, Ha Noi, Vietnam
VAN HOANG NGUYEN
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, FPT University, Ha Noi, Vietnam e-mail: vanhoang0610@yahoo.com and hoangnv47@fe.edu.vn
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Abstract

We extend a result of Lieb [‘On the lowest eigenvalue of the Laplacian for the intersection of two domains’, Invent. Math. 74(3) (1983), 441–448] to the fractional setting. We prove that if A and B are two bounded domains in $\mathbb R^N$ and $\lambda _s(A)$, $\lambda _s(B)$ are the lowest eigenvalues of $(-\Delta )^s$, $0<s<1$, with Dirichlet boundary conditions, there exists some translation $B_x$ of B such that $\lambda _s(A\cap B_x)< \lambda _s(A)+\lambda _s(B)$. Moreover, without the boundedness assumption on A and B, we show that for any $\varepsilon>0$, there exists some translation $B_x$ of B such that $\lambda _s(A\cap B_x)< \lambda _s(A)+\lambda _s(B)+\varepsilon .$

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Australian Mathematical Publishing Association Inc.

1 Introduction

Let $\Omega $ be an open subset of $\mathbb {R}^N$ . Denote by $\lambda (\Omega )$ the lowest eigenvalue of the Laplace operator $-\Delta $ in $\Omega $ with Dirichlet boundary conditions. It is well known that if $\lambda (\Omega )$ is small, then $\Omega $ must be ‘large’. For example, when $\Omega $ is empty, then $\lambda (\Omega )=+\infty $ . The Faber–Krahn inequality for the Laplace operator states that

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda(\Omega)\geq C_N\lvert \Omega\rvert^{-{2}/{N}}, \end{align*} $$

where $C_N$ is the lowest eigenvalue of a ball with unit volume and $\lvert \Omega \rvert $ is the volume of $\Omega $ [Reference Faber3, Reference Krahn5]. In other words, among all domains with fixed volume, the ball has the smallest $\lambda $ .

Geometrically, when $\lambda (\Omega )$ is small, $\Omega $ is not only large, but also ‘fat’ in some sense. As shown in [Reference Lieb6], the inequality $\lambda (\Omega )\geq \alpha _NR^{-2}$ , where R is the radius of the largest ball contained in $\Omega $ , is not true when $N>1$ . This implies that $\Omega $ need not contain any ball of fixed radius R, even if $\lambda (\Omega )$ is sufficiently small. Nevertheless, if $\lambda (\Omega )$ is small, then $\Omega $ contains ‘most of’ a ball of radius $R\sim \lambda ^{-1/2}(\Omega )$ . This assertion is derived from the following inequality: for any $\varepsilon \in (0,1)$ , there exists $\alpha _N(\varepsilon )$ , with $\alpha _N(\varepsilon )\to 0$ as $\varepsilon \to 1$ , such that

(1.1) $$ \begin{align} \lambda(\Omega)\geq \alpha_N(\varepsilon)R^{-2}, \end{align} $$

where R is the largest radius such that $\lvert \Omega \cap B_R\rvert \geq \varepsilon \lvert B_R\rvert $ for some ball $B_R$ . More precisely, fix $\varepsilon \in (0,1)$ ( $\varepsilon $ may be close to $1$ ) and let $R>0$ be the largest radius such that $\lvert \Omega \cap B_R\rvert \geq \varepsilon \lvert B_R\rvert $ for some ball $B_R$ . By (1.1),

$$ \begin{align*} R>\sqrt{\alpha_N(\varepsilon)}\lambda^{-{1}/{2}}(\Omega). \end{align*} $$

This means that $\Omega $ contains ‘most of’ the ball $B_{\sqrt {\alpha _N(\varepsilon )}\lambda ^{-{1}/{2}}(\Omega )}$ of large radius when $\lambda (\Omega )$ is small.

The inequality (1.1) follows from [Reference Lieb6, Corollary 2] which is a consequence of the following theorem.

Theorem 1.1. Let A and B be nonempty open sets in $\mathbb R^N$ , $N\geq 1$ , and let $\lambda (A)$ , $\lambda (B)$ be the corresponding lowest eigenvalues of the Laplacian $-\Delta $ with Dirichlet boundary conditions. Let $B_x=x+B$ denote B translated by $x\in \mathbb R^N$ . Let $\varepsilon>0$ . Then, there exists an x such that

(1.2) $$ \begin{align} \lambda(A\cap B_x)<\lambda(A)+\lambda(B)+\varepsilon. \end{align} $$

If A and B are both bounded, then there is an $x\in \mathbb R^N$ such that

(1.3) $$ \begin{align} \lambda(A\cap B_x)<\lambda(A)+\lambda(B). \end{align} $$

Moreover, the mapping $x\mapsto \lambda (A\cap B_x)$ is upper-semicontinuous, so that the set of x for which (1.2) or (1.3) holds is open.

Lieb [Reference Lieb6] used Theorem 1.1 to prove two important corollaries: a lower bound for $\sup _x\{\mathrm {Volume}(A\cap B_x) \}$ in terms of $\lambda (A)$ when B is a ball (see [Reference Lieb6, Corollary 2]) and a compactness lemma for certain sequences in $W^{1,p}(\mathbb R^N) $ that under some conditions, a bounded sequence in $W^{1,p}(\mathbb R^N) $ has a nonzero weak limit (see [Reference Lieb6, Lemma 6]).

Inspired by [Reference Lieb6], our purpose in this paper is to generalise the main result in [Reference Lieb6] for the fractional Laplacian $(-\Delta )^s$ , $0<s<1$ . The fractional Laplacian $(-\Delta )^s$ is defined as a nonlocal pseudodifferential operator on the space of rapidly decreasing functions by

$$ \begin{align*} (-\Delta)^su(x)=c_{N,s}P.V.\int_{\mathbb{R}^N}\frac{u(x)-u(\xi)}{\lvert x-\xi\rvert^{N+2s}}\,d\xi=c_{N,s} \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0}\int_{\mathbb{R}^N\setminus B(x,\varepsilon)}\frac{u(x)-u(\xi)}{\lvert x-\xi\rvert^{N+2s}}\,d\xi, \end{align*} $$

where $c_{N,s}$ is a normalisation constant. By using the Fourier transform, the fractional Laplacian can also be defined as

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal F ((-\Delta)^su)(\xi)=\lvert \xi\rvert^{2s}\mathcal F u(\xi). \end{align*} $$

In the distributional sense, the fractional Laplacian can be extended on $\mathcal L_s(\mathbb R^N)$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal L_s(\mathbb{R}^N)=\bigg\{u\in L_{\mathrm{loc}}^1(\mathbb R^N): \int_{\mathbb R^N}\frac{\lvert u(x)\rvert}{(\lvert x\rvert +1)^{N+2s}}\,dx<\infty\bigg\}, \end{align*} $$

by

$$ \begin{align*} ((-\Delta)^su,\varphi)=(u,(-\Delta)^s\varphi),\quad \varphi\in C_0^\infty(\mathbb R^N). \end{align*} $$

Some elementary properties of the fractional Laplacian can be found in [Reference Di Nezza, Palatucci and Valdinoci2]. Recent progress on the eigenvalue bounds for the fractional Laplacian and the fractional Schrödinger operator can be found in the survey [Reference Frank, Palatucci and Kuusi4] and the references given therein.

Denote by $\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb {R}^N)$ the space of functions $f\in L^2(\mathbb R^N)$ such that

(1.4) $$ \begin{align} \lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(x)-f(y))^2}{\lvert x-y\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dx\,dy<\infty. \end{align} $$

For $A\subset \mathbb {R}^N$ , we define the space $H_0^s(A)$ as the completion of $C_0^\infty (A)$ with norm $ \lVert \cdot \rVert _{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}$ and

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A)=\inf\{\lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}: f\in H_0^s(A), \lVert f\rVert_{L^2(A)}=1 \mbox{ and } f\not\equiv 0\}. \end{align*} $$

We can now state our main result.

Theorem 1.2. Let $0<s<1$ . Suppose that A and B are two nonempty open sets in $\mathbb R^N$ , $N\geq 1$ . Let $\lambda _s(A)$ and $\lambda _s(B)$ be the corresponding lowest eigenvalues of the fractional Laplacian $(-\Delta )^s$ with Dirichlet boundary conditions. Then, the following assertions hold.

  1. (i) For any $\varepsilon>0$ , there exists an $x\in \mathbb R^N$ such that

    $$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)<\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B)+\varepsilon, \end{align*} $$

    where $B_x$ is the translate of B by x.

  2. (ii) In addition, if A and B are bounded, then there is an $x\in \mathbb R^N$ such that

    $$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)<\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B). \end{align*} $$
  3. (iii) The mapping $x\mapsto \lambda _s(A\cap B_x)$ is upper-semicontinuous.

As applications of Theorem 1.2, by the same arguments as [Reference Lieb6, Corollary 2], we can first prove a lower bound for $\sup _x\{\mathrm {Volume}(A\cap B_x) \}$ in terms of $\lambda _s (A)$ when B is a ball.

Corollary 1.3. Let A be a nonempty open set in $\mathbb R^N$ , $N\geq 1$ . Let $B_r$ be a ball of radius r. Given $\delta $ with $0<\delta <1$ , put

$$ \begin{align*} \sigma_{N,s}(\delta)=\alpha_{N,s}w_N^{-2s/N}(\delta^{-2s/N}-1)>0, \end{align*} $$

where $w_N$ is the volume of the unit ball and $\alpha _{N,s}$ is the lowest eigenvalue of $(-\Delta )^s$ on a ball of unit volume. Suppose that for $R>0$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A)\leq \sigma_{N,s}(\delta)R^{-2s}. \end{align*} $$

Then, for every r with $0<r<R$ , there is an $x\in \mathbb R^N$ and a ball $B(x,r)$ of radius r centred at x such that

$$ \begin{align*} \lvert A\cap B(x,r)\rvert>\delta \lvert B_r\rvert = \delta w_Nr^N. \end{align*} $$

Second, we can use Theorem 1.2 to give a different proof of the compactness lemma (see [Reference Bellazzini, Frank and Visciglia1, Lemma 2.1]) in the space $H^s(\mathbb R^N)$ with $0<s<1$ . The proof is similar to the one of [Reference Lieb6, Lemma 6] and we omit the details. The proof of Theorem 1.2 is inspired by the approach in [Reference Lieb6]. However, because of the presence of the fractional Laplacian, some difficulties arise. For instance, the product rule for derivatives cannot be applied and one needs to use delicate integral estimates (see the proof below).

The rest of this paper is devoted to the proof of Theorem 1.2.

2 Proof of Theorem 1.2

In this section, we give the proof of our main result. We begin with the first assertion in Theorem 1.2.

2.1 Proof of assertion (i)

By the definition,

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A)&=\inf\{\lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)} : f\in H_0^s(A), \lVert f\rVert_{L^2(A)}=1 \mbox{ and } f\not\equiv 0\}\\ &=\inf\{\lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}: f\in C_0^\infty(A), \lVert f\rVert_{L^2(A)}=1 \mbox{ and } f\not\equiv 0\}, \end{align*} $$

where we have used the density of $C_0^{\infty }(A)$ in $H_0^s(A)$ .

For $\varepsilon>0$ , there are real-valued functions $f\in C^\infty _0(A)$ and $g\in C^\infty _0(B)$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert f\rVert_{L^2(A)}=1 ,\quad \lVert g\rVert_{L^2(B)}=1, \end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*}\lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}<\lambda_s(A)+\frac{\varepsilon}{2} \quad\mbox{and}\quad \lVert g\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}<\lambda_s(B)+\frac{\varepsilon}{2}. \end{align*} $$

Following [Reference Lieb6], given $x\in \mathbb R^N$ , we define $h_x(y)=f(y)g(y-x)$ , for $y\in \mathbb R^N$ , and note that $h_x(y)$ belongs to $C^\infty _0(A\cap B_x)$ . Put

$$ \begin{align*} D(x):=\lVert h_x\rVert^2_{L^2(\mathbb R^N)}. \end{align*} $$

By Fubini’s theorem,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}D(x)\,dx=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}f^2(y)g^2(y-x)\,dx\,dy=1. \end{align*} $$

We next estimate $\lVert h_x\rVert _{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}$ . In the local case $s=1$ , by using the product rule $\nabla h_x(y)=\nabla f(y)g(y-x)+f(y) \nabla g(y-x)$ , Lieb proved that

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N} \int_{\mathbb R^N}\lvert \nabla h_x\rvert^2\,dy\,dx= \int_{\mathbb R^N}\lvert \nabla f\rvert^2\,dx+\int_{\mathbb R^N}\lvert \nabla g\rvert^2\,dx. \end{align*} $$

This is the key estimate in the proof of Lieb [Reference Lieb6]. However, in the case of the fractional Laplacian, one cannot use the product rule as above. Instead, we use the integral representation of the fractional norm and some integral estimates. We shall establish the following inequality:

(2.1) $$ \begin{align} \int_{\mathbb R^N}\lVert h_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}\,dx\leq \lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}+ \lVert g\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}, \end{align} $$

which is also the key in our proof. From the definition (1.4),

(2.2) $$ \begin{align} \begin{split} \lVert h_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)} &=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(y)g(y-x)-f(z)g(z-x))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy\\ &=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(y)-f(z))g(y-x)+f(z)(g(y-x)-g(z-x))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy\\ &=I_1(x)+I_2(x)+2I_3(x), \end{split} \end{align} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*} &I_1(x):=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(y)-f(z))^2g^2(y-x)}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy,\\ &I_2(x):=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{f^2(z)(g(y-x)-g(z-x))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy,\\ &I_3(x):=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(y)-f(z))f(z)g(y-x)(g(y-x)-g(z-x))}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy. \end{align*} $$

By Fubini’s theorem,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}I_1(x)\,dx= \iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(y)-f(z))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy\int_{\mathbb R^N}g^2(y-x)\,dx=\lVert f\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}. \end{align*} $$

However, by a change of variable,

$$ \begin{align*} I_2(x)&=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{f^2(z)(g(y-x)-g(z-x))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy\\ &=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{f^2(z+x)(g(y)-g(z))^2}{\lvert y-z\rvert^{N+2s}}\,dz\,dy. \end{align*} $$

Using Fubini’s theorem again,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}I_2(x)\,dx=\lVert g\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}. \end{align*} $$

For $I_3$ , after a change of variable $y=z+h$ , we obtain

$$ \begin{align*} I_3(x)&=\iint_{\mathbb R^{2N}}\frac{(f(z+h)-f(z))f(z)}{\lvert h\rvert^{N+2s}}g(z-x+h)(g(z-x+h)-g(z-x))\,dz\,dh. \end{align*} $$

It follows from Fubini’s theorem that

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}I_3(x)\,dx=\int_{\mathbb R^{N}}\frac{K(h)}{\lvert h\rvert^{N+2s}}L(h)\,dh, \end{align*} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*} K(h)=\int_{\mathbb R^{N}}g(z-x+h)(g(z-x+h)-g(z-x))\,dx =\int_{\mathbb R^{N}}g(x)(g(x)-g(x-h))\,dx \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} L(h)=\int_{\mathbb R^{N}}(f(z+h)-f(z))f(z)\,dz. \end{align*} $$

Applying Hölder’s inequality,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}g(x)g(x-h)\,dx\leq \bigg(\int_{\mathbb R^N}g^2(x)\,dx\int_{\mathbb R^N}g^2(x-h)\,dx\bigg)^{1/2}=\int_{\mathbb R^N}g^2(x)\,dx. \end{align*} $$

This implies that $K(h)\geq 0$ . In the same way, we also obtain $L(h)\leq 0.$ Consequently,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}I_3(x)\,dx\leq 0. \end{align*} $$

Combining the integral estimates of $I_1,I_2, I_3$ and (2.2), we arrive at the estimate (2.1). Using (2.1) and the choice of f and g, we obtain

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N}\lVert h_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}\,dx <\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B)+\varepsilon. \end{align*} $$

Hence,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^N} [\lVert h_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}-(\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B)+\varepsilon)D(x)]\,dx<0, \end{align*} $$

which yields $0\leq \lVert h_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}<(\lambda _s(A)+\lambda _s(B)+\varepsilon )D(x)$ on a set of positive measure. By the definition, we get

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)<\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B)+\varepsilon, \end{align*} $$

for x in a set of positive measure. The existence of x is proved.

2.2 Proof of assertion (ii)

Suppose that A and B are bounded. Then the embedding $L^2(A)\to H^s_0(A)$ is compact (see, for example, [Reference Di Nezza, Palatucci and Valdinoci2]). It follows that there is a function $\tilde {f}\in H^s_0(A)$ such that $\lVert \tilde {f}\rVert _{L^2(A)}=1$ and

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A)=\lVert \tilde{f}\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}. \end{align*} $$

Similarly, there exists $\tilde {g}\in H^s_0(B)$ satisfying $\lVert \tilde {g}\rVert _{L^2(B)}=1$ and

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(B)=\lVert \tilde{g}\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}. \end{align*} $$

As above, we also define

$$ \begin{align*} \tilde{h}_x(y)=\tilde{f}(y)\tilde{g}(y-x) \quad\mbox{and}\quad \tilde{D}(x)=\int_{\mathbb R^N}\tilde{h}^2_x\,dy. \end{align*} $$

Applying Fubini’s theorem,

(2.3) $$ \begin{align} \int_{\mathbb R^N}\tilde{D}(x) \,dx=1. \end{align} $$

This implies that $\tilde {D}(x)<\infty $ for almost all $x\in \mathbb R^N$ or $\tilde {h}_x\in L^2(\mathbb R^N)$ for almost all $x\in \mathbb R^N$ .

Define again $\lVert \tilde {h}_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}$ as in (2.2). Using the same argument as for $\lVert h_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}$ above, we also obtain

(2.4) $$ \begin{align} \int_{\mathbb R^{N}}\lVert \tilde{h}_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}\,dx\leq \lVert \tilde{f}\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}+ \lVert \tilde{g}\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}<\infty. \end{align} $$

This implies that $\lVert \tilde {h}_x\rVert _{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}<\infty $ for almost all $x\in \mathbb R^N$ or $\tilde {h}_x\in \overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)$ for almost all $x\in \mathbb R^N$ .

Combining (2.3) and (2.4), we arrive at

$$ \begin{align*} \int_{\mathbb R^{N}}(\lVert \tilde{h}_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}-(\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B))\tilde{D}(x))\,dx\leq 0, \end{align*} $$

which gives

$$ \begin{align*} 0\leq \lVert \tilde{h}_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}\leq (\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B))\tilde{D}(x) \end{align*} $$

on a set of positive measure. Consequently,

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)\leq \lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B) \quad\mbox{ with } x\mbox{ in a set of positive measure}. \end{align*} $$

It remains to show the strict inequality. It is sufficient to prove that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert \tilde{h}_x\rVert ^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}= (\lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B))\tilde{D}(x) \end{align*} $$

is not true for almost all x. Indeed, denote by $\chi _A$ the characteristic function of the set A. Put

$$ \begin{align*} \chi(x)=\chi_A*\chi_B(x)=\lvert A\cap B_x\rvert. \end{align*} $$

Then, $\chi \in C_0(\mathbb R^N)$ . Given any $\varepsilon>0$ , there exists an open set C such that $0<\chi (x)<\varepsilon $ and both $\tilde {f}(y)$ and $\tilde {g}(y-x)$ are positive in $A\cap B_x$ for all $x\in C$ (we can choose connected components of A and B if necessary). Hence, $\tilde {D}(x)>0$ on C and if $\lVert \tilde {h}_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}= (\lambda _s(A)+\lambda _s(B))\tilde {D}(x)$ on C, then

(2.5) $$ \begin{align} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)\leq \lambda_s(A)+\lambda_s(B). \end{align} $$

However, by the fractional Faber–Krahn inequality (see, for example, [Reference Frank, Palatucci and Kuusi4]),

(2.6) $$ \begin{align} C_{N,s}\varepsilon^{-2s/N}<\lambda_s(A\cap B_x). \end{align} $$

Letting $\varepsilon \downarrow 0$ , we obtain a contradiction from (2.5) and (2.6).

2.3 Proof of assertion (iii)

It is not difficult to see that

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda_s(A\cap B_x)=\inf\bigg\{\frac{\lVert h_x\rVert^2_{\overset{.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}}{D(x)}: h_x=f(\cdot)g(\cdot-x), f\in C^\infty_0(A), g\in C^\infty_0(B)\bigg\}, \end{align*} $$

where the function ${\lVert h_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}}/{D(x)}$ is the quotient of two continuous functions and then is extended to an upper-semicontinuous function by putting ${\lVert h_x\rVert ^2_{\overset {.}{H^s}(\mathbb R^N)}}/{D(x)}=\infty $ if $D(x)=0$ . Hence, $x\mapsto \lambda _s(A\cap B_x)$ is upper-semicontinuous.

Acknowledgement

This work was initiated and done when the second author visited Vietnam Institute for Advanced Study in Mathematics (VIASM) in 2022. He would like to thank the institute for hospitality and support during the visit.

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