DOCUMENTA MATHEMATICA, Extra Volume ICM III (1998), 31-38

Robert R. Jensen

Title: Viscosity Solutions of Elliptic Partial Differential Equations

In my talk and its associated paper I shall discuss some recent results connected with the uniqueness of viscosity solutions of nonlinear elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations. By now, most researchers in partial differential equations are familiar with the definition of viscosity solution, introduced by M.~G.~Crandall and P.~L.~Lions in their seminal paper, ``Condition d'unicit\'e pour les solutions generalis\'ees des \'equations de Hamilton-Jacobi du premier order,'' {\sl C.~R.~Acad.~Sci.~Paris\/} 292 (1981), 183--186. Initially, the application of this definition was restricted to nonlinear first order partial differential equations---i.e., Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equations---and it was shown that viscosity solutions satisfy a maximum principle, implying uniqueness. In 1988 an extended definition of viscosity solution was applied to second order partial differential equations, establishing a maximum principle for these solutions and a corresponding uniqueness result. In the following years numerous researchers obtained maximum principles for viscosity solutions under weaker and weaker hypotheses. However, in all of these papers it was necessary to assume some minimal modulus of spatial continuity in the nonlinear operator, depending on the regularity of the solution, and to assume either uniform ellipticity or strong monotonicity in the case of elliptic operators. The results I shall discuss are related to attempts to weaken these assumptions on the partial differential operators---e.g., operators with only measurable spatial regularity, and operators with degenerate ellipticity.

1991 Mathematics Subject Classification: 35, 49, 60

Keywords and Phrases: nonlinear, elliptic, partial differential equations, viscosity solution, stochastic process

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