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Article

Oscillation of Fourth-Order Functional Differential Equations with Distributed Delay

by
Clemente Cesarano
1,* and
Omar Bazighifan
2
1
Section of Mathematics, International Telematic University Uninettuno, CorsoVittorio Emanuele II, 39, 00186 Roma, Italy
2
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Hadhramout University, Hadhramout 50512, Yemen
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 20 April 2019 / Revised: 8 May 2019 / Accepted: 10 May 2019 / Published: 18 May 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Special Functions and Their Applications)

Abstract

:
In this paper, the authors obtain some new sufficient conditions for the oscillation of all solutions of the fourth order delay differential equations. Some new oscillatory criteria are obtained by using the generalized Riccati transformations and comparison technique with first order delay differential equation. Our results extend and improve many well-known results for oscillation of solutions to a class of fourth-order delay differential equations. The effectiveness of the obtained criteria is illustrated via examples.

1. Introduction

In this work, we study the oscillation of a fourth-order delay differential equation
b z y z γ + c d q z , δ f y h z , δ   d δ = 0 , z z 0 ,
where γ is a quotient of odd positive integers and we assume that b z C z 0 , , R , b z 0 , q ( z , δ ) , h ( z , δ ) C z 0 , × [ c , d ] , R , q ( z , δ ) is positive , h ( z , δ ) is a nondecreasing function in δ , h ( z , δ ) z lim t h ( z , δ ) = and f C R , R satisfies the following conditions:
A 1 f x y > f x y > f x f y for all x y > 0 . A 2 f u / u γ r > 0 , for u 0 .
By a solution of Equation (1), we mean a function y C [ z y , ) , z y z , which has the property b z y z γ C 1 [ z y , ) and satisfies Equation (1) on [ z y , ) . We consider only those solutions y of Equation (1) which satisfy sup y z : z Z > 0 , for all Z > z y . We assume that (1) possesses such a solution. A solution of (1) is called oscillatory if it has arbitrarily large zeros on [ z y , ) and otherwise it is called to be nonoscillatory. The Equation (1) is said to be oscillatory if all its solutions are oscillatory.
The problem of the oscillation of higher and fourth order differential equations have been widely studied by many authors, who have provided many techniques for obtaining oscillatory criteria for higher and fourth order differential equations. We refer the reader to the related books (see [1,2,3,4]) and to the papers (see [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31] ). In what follows, we present some relevant results that have provided the background and the motivation, for the present work.
In the following, we present some related results that served as a motivation for the contents of this paper.
Tunc and Bazighifan [25] studied the oscillatory behavior of the fourth-order nonlinear differential equation with a continuously distributed delay
b z y z + c d q z , τ f y h z , τ   d τ = 0 , z z 0 .
Moaaz et al. [23] have studied the form
b z x z α + m b q z , δ f x h z , δ   d δ = 0 .
Elabbasy et al. [3] studied the equation
b z x z κ + q z x κ z = 0 , y y 0
under the conditions
y 0 1 b 1 κ z d z = .
Grace et al. [17] studied the oscillation behavior of the fourth-order nonlinear differential equation
r z y z γ + q z f y h z = 0 , z z 0 .
Bazighifan et al. [9] and Zhang et al. [32] consider the oscillatory properties of the higher-order differential equation
b z y n 1 z γ + q z y γ τ z = 0 ,
under the conditions
z 0 1 b 1 γ z d z =
and
z 0 1 b 1 γ z d z < .
Our aim in the present paper is to employ the Riccati technique and comparison technique with first order delay differential equation to establish some new conditions for the oscillation of all solutions of (1). Some examples are presented to illustrate our main results.
We begin with the following lemmas.
Lemma 1. 
(See [5], Lemma 2.1) Let β 1 be a ratio of two numbers. Then
A β + 1 β A B β + 1 β B 1 β β 1 + β   A B , A B 0 ,
and
U y V y β + 1 β β β ( β + 1 ) β + 1 U β + 1 V β , V > 0 .
Lemma 2. 
(See [20], Lemma 1.1) If the function z satisfies y ( i ) > 0 , i = 0 , 1 , , n , and y n + 1 < 0 , then
y z z n / n ! y z z n 1 / n 1 ! .
Lemma 3. 
(See [9], Lemma 1.1) Let x C n x 0 , , R + and assume that x n is of fixed sign and not identically zero on a subray of x , . If moreover, x z > 0 , x n 1 z x n z 0 and lim z x z 0 , then, for every λ 0 , 1 , there exists z λ z such that
x z λ n 1 z n 1 x n 1 z , for z [ z λ , ) .
Lemma 4. 
(See [33], Lemma 2.1) Assume that (2) holds and y is an eventually positive solution of (1). Then there are the following two possible cases eventually:
C 1 y z > 0 , y z > 0 ,   y z > 0 ,   y z > 0 , y 4 z > 0 , b z y z γ < 0 , C 2 y z > 0 , y z > 0 ,   y z < 0 ,   y z > 0 , b z y z γ < 0 ,

2. Main Results

In this section, we shall establish some oscillation criteria for Equation (1). For convenience, we denote
π z : = z 0 1 b 1 γ s d s ,
ϑ + z : = max 0 , ϑ z and Q z = a b q z , δ   d δ .
Theorem 1. 
Let (2) holds and assume that for some constant λ 0 0 , 1 , the differential equation
x z + Q z f λ 0 3 h z , δ 6 b 1 / γ h z , δ f x 1 / γ h z , δ = 0 ,
is oscillatory. If there exists a positive function ϑ C z 0 , such that
z 0 ψ * s 1 4 ϑ s   ϕ * s 2   d s = ,
where
ψ * z : = ϑ z z r b v v c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s 1 / γ d v 1 + b 1 γ z π 2 ( z ) , ϕ * z : = ϑ + z ϑ z + 2 π ( z ) ,
for some μ 0 , 1 , then every solution of (1) is oscillatory.
Proof. 
Assume that (1) has a nonoscillatory solution y . Without loss of generality, we can assume that y z > 0 . From Lemma 4, we get that there exist y two possible cases for z z 1 , where z 1 z 0 is sufficiently large.
Assume that we have Case 1 and A 1 hold. From Lemma 3, we have
y h z , δ λ h 3 z , δ 6 b 1 / γ z b 1 / γ z y h z , δ ,
for every λ 0 , 1 . Using (5) in Equation (1), we see that
x z = b z y z γ is a positive solution of the differential inequality
x z + Q z f λ 0 3 h z , δ 6 b 1 / γ h z , δ f x 1 / γ h z , δ 0 .
By Theorem 1 in [34], we conclude that the corresponding Equation (1) also has a positive solution. This is a contradiction.
Assume that we have Case 2 and A 2 hold. From Lemma 2, we get that y z z y z , by integrating this inequality from h z , δ to z, we get
y h z , δ h z , δ z y z .
Hence, we have
f y h z , δ r h γ s , δ s γ y γ z .
Integrating (1) from z to u and using y z > 0 , we obtain
b u y u γ b z y z γ = z u c d q z , δ f y h z , δ d δ r y γ z z u c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s .
Letting u , we see that
b z y z γ r y γ z z c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s ,
and so,
y z y z r b z z c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s 1 / γ .
Integrating again from z to , we get
y z y z z r b v v c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s 1 / γ d v .
Now, we define
w z = ϑ z y z y z + 1 π ( z ) .
Then w z > 0 for z z 1 . By differentiating and using (6), we find
w z = ϑ z ϑ z w z + ϑ z y z y z ϑ z y z 2 y 2 z ϑ z b 1 γ z π 2 ( z )
Thus, we obtain
w z = ϑ z ϑ z w z + ϑ z y z y z ϑ z w z ρ z 1 π ( z ) 2 ϑ z b 1 γ z π 2 ( z ) .
Using Lemma 1 with A = w z ρ z , B = 1 π ( z ) and γ = 1 , we get
w z ϑ z 1 π ( z ) 2 w z ϑ z 2 1 π ( z ) 2 w z ϑ z 1 π ( z ) .
From (1), (7) and (8), we obtain
w z ϑ z ϑ z w z ϑ z z r b v v c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s 1 / γ d v ϑ z w z ϑ z 2 1 π ( z ) 2 w z ϑ z 1 π ( z ) ϑ z b 1 γ z π 2 ( z ) .
This implies that
w z ϑ + z ϑ z + 2 π ( z ) w z 1 ϑ z w 2 z ϑ z z r b v v c d q z , δ h γ s , δ s γ d δ d s 1 / γ d v 1 + b 1 γ z π 2 ( z ) .
Thus, inequality (9) yields
w z ψ * z + ϕ * z   w z 1 ϑ z w 2 z .
Applying the Lemma 1 with U = ϕ * z , V = 1 ϑ z , γ = 1 and y = w , we get
w z ψ * z + 1 4 ϑ z   ϕ * z 2 .
Integrating from z 1 to z, we get
z 1 z ψ * s 1 4 ϑ s   ϕ * s 2   d s w z 1 ,
this contradicts (4). □
Corollary 1. 
Let (1.2) holds. If
lim z inf h ( z , δ ) z Q ( z ) f λ 0 3 h z , δ 6 b 1 / γ h z , δ   d s > 1 e
and (4) hold for some constant λ 0 , 1 , then every solution of (1) is oscillatory.

3. Example

In this section, we give the following examples to illustrate our main results.
Example 1. 
Consider the fourth-order differential equation
z 3 y z 3 + 0 1 z 3 δ y 3 z δ 3   d δ = 0 .
We note that γ = 3 , b z = z 3 , q z , δ = z 3 δ , c = 0 , d = 1 , h z , c = z 3 , π ( z ) = and Q z = 1 2 z 3 . If we choose ϑ z = r z = 1 , then it easy to see that the condition (4) holds. Hence, by Theorem 1, every solution of Equation (13) is oscillatory.
Example 2. 
Consider the following differential equation of fourth order
y z + 0 1 ν \ z 4 δ y z δ 2   d δ = 0 ,
where ν > 0 is a constant. Let
γ = 1 , b z = 1 , c = 0 , d = 1 , h z , c = z 2 , q z , δ = ν \ z 4 δ .
Then, we get
Q t = 0 1 q z , δ   d δ = ν 2 z 4 .
If we now set k = 1 , thus, by Corollary 1, every solution of Equation (14) is oscillatory, provided ν > 144 λ 0 .
Remark 1. 
Our results supplement and improve the results obtained in [3].

4. Conclusions

The results of this paper are presented in a form which is essentially new and of a high degree of generality. In this paper, using the generalized Riccati transformations and comparison technique, we offer some new sufficient conditions which ensure that any solution of Equation (1) oscillates under the condition (2). Further, we can consider the case of h z , δ z in the future work.

Author Contributions

The authors claim to have contributed equally and significantly in this paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding

The authors received no direct funding for this work.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the reviewers for for their useful comments, which led to the improvement of the content of the paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Cesarano, C.; Bazighifan, O. Oscillation of Fourth-Order Functional Differential Equations with Distributed Delay. Axioms 2019, 8, 61. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms8020061

AMA Style

Cesarano C, Bazighifan O. Oscillation of Fourth-Order Functional Differential Equations with Distributed Delay. Axioms. 2019; 8(2):61. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms8020061

Chicago/Turabian Style

Cesarano, Clemente, and Omar Bazighifan. 2019. "Oscillation of Fourth-Order Functional Differential Equations with Distributed Delay" Axioms 8, no. 2: 61. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms8020061

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