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Non-Continuity of Perron Solution

Updated 18 December 2025
  • Non-Continuity of the Perron Solution is characterized by the breakdown of classical harmonic solutions on domains with cusp singularities, despite smooth boundary data.
  • Variational and Sobolev-space methods underpin explicit energy minimization approaches that yield Perron solutions in irregular domains like Lebesgue's.
  • The study reveals non-local boundary effects where even isolated changes in data can trigger discontinuities at singular cusp points.

Lebesgue's Domain refers to a specific class of domains in potential theory, most prominently exemplified by a three-dimensional region bounded by surfaces of revolution around a thin line segment (a "rod") with variable mass density. The notion arises from the analysis of the Dirichlet problem for partial differential equations on non-smooth domains, particularly those with inward-pointing cusp singularities, and plays a pivotal role in understanding non-local and generic failures of boundary regularity in harmonic theory.

1. Geometric and Analytic Definition

Let S={(0,0,z):0z1}S = \{(0, 0, z) : 0 \leq z \leq 1\} denote the interval on the zz-axis in R3\mathbb{R}^3. The domain D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S is considered, and the Newtonian potential of a "thin rod" SS with mass density ρ(z)\rho(z) is defined at each (r,z)(r, z) (with r=x2+y2r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}) by

V(r,z)=01ζr2+(ζz)2dζ,V(r, z) = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{\zeta}{\sqrt{r^2 + (\zeta - z)^2}}\,d\zeta,

where, in Lebesgue's original example, ρ(ζ)=ζ\rho(\zeta) = \zeta. For any fixed zz0, the level set zz1 defines an analytic curve zz2 in the zz3-halfplane, which may be parametrized as zz4 for zz5 in some interval zz6 with zz7 and zz8.

Lebesgue's domain zz9 is formed as the region between two such surfaces of revolution for levels R3\mathbb{R}^30: R3\mathbb{R}^31 This domain exhibits an inward-pointing cusp at the origin R3\mathbb{R}^32 and is bounded by two connected components, R3\mathbb{R}^33 and R3\mathbb{R}^34 (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025).

2. Potential Theory and Boundary Structure

The potential R3\mathbb{R}^35 is smooth and harmonic throughout R3\mathbb{R}^36. The boundary of R3\mathbb{R}^37 in the R3\mathbb{R}^38-plane (R3\mathbb{R}^39) consists of two curves D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S0 and D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S1 with the inner curves meeting at the cusp point D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S2. For a general rod density D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S3 with D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S4, the potential remains smooth off D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S5. In the case of D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S6, explicit integration yields

D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S7

The monotonicity and analytic structure of the level sets are ensured by Lemma 4.1 in (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), which confirms that D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S8 is strictly decreasing for each fixed D=R3SD = \mathbb{R}^3 \setminus S9.

3. Variational and Classical Dirichlet Solutions

Let SS0 be continuous on the boundary of a bounded domain SS1. The variational formulation considers the Sobolev space SS2 and seeks SS3 as the minimizer of the Dirichlet energy

SS4

subject to the boundary condition SS5 in the sense of traces. An explicit variational solution is constructed as SS6, where SS7 continuously extends SS8 and SS9 in the sense of distributions, with ρ(z)\rho(z)0 [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Theorem 2.1]. This solution coincides with the Perron solution, which is built as the infimum of all supersolutions dominating ρ(z)\rho(z)1 [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Theorem 3.2].

Crucially, on Lebesgue's domain, classical harmonic solutions—those continuous up to the entire boundary—may not exist even for boundary data ρ(z)\rho(z)2. This non-existence results from the domain's failure to be Dirichlet-regular at the inward-pointing cusp, as formalized in Proposition 4.2 and Corollary 4.3 of (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025).

4. Singular Boundary Behavior and Non-Local Regularity

A defining feature of Lebesgue's domain is the generic and non-local nature of discontinuity in harmonic extensions at the cusp. Theorem 5.1 of (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025) asserts that if ρ(z)\rho(z)3 is a singular boundary point (such as the cusp), then any non-trivial change in the boundary data—even at a point far from ρ(z)\rho(z)4—can destroy continuity of ρ(z)\rho(z)5 at ρ(z)\rho(z)6. In fact, the set of boundary data for which the solution remains continuous at a singularity is meagre in the sense of Baire category (Corollary 5.2). This demonstrates the robustness and non-locality of singular boundary behavior in domains like Lebesgue's.

A plausible implication is that attempts to guarantee classical (i.e., continuous) solutions for all boundary data must take domain regularity into account, as even smooth data cannot compensate for geometric singularities at the boundary.

5. Main Results and Characterizations

Key results relevant to Lebesgue's domain include:

  • Analyticity of Boundary Curves: For each fixed ρ(z)\rho(z)7, the boundary curves ρ(z)\rho(z)8 arising from level sets of ρ(z)\rho(z)9 are single analytic graphs parametrized in (r,z)(r, z)0 (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025).
  • Dirichlet Energy Minimization: If (r,z)(r, z)1, then

(r,z)(r, z)2

whenever the minimum is finite [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Theorem 2.7].

  • Variational Solution Equals Classical When Possible: If (r,z)(r, z)3 admits a classical harmonic solution (r,z)(r, z)4, then (r,z)(r, z)5; otherwise, the variational/Perron solution need not be continuous throughout (r,z)(r, z)6 [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Proposition 2.3].
  • Vasilesco’s Characterization: A bounded harmonic function (r,z)(r, z)7 on (r,z)(r, z)8 is the Perron solution of (r,z)(r, z)9 if and only if r=x2+y2r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}0 as r=x2+y2r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}1 quasi-everywhere on r=x2+y2r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}2 [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Theorem 3.2].
  • Non-decibility of Classical Solvability: There exist simple (even piecewise-constant) boundary data r=x2+y2r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}3 for which the Dirichlet problem admits no classical solution due to the cusp singularity [(Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025), Proposition 4.2, Corollary 4.3].

6. Significance in Potential Theory and Analysis

Lebesgue's domain serves as a canonical example in classical potential theory illustrating the breakdown of local criteria for boundary regularity. It highlights the distinction between variational and classical solutions in domains with geometric singularities and reveals the generically non-local effect that singular points have on boundary behavior.

The study of Lebesgue's domain also establishes the utility of Sobolev-space and variational methods in handling boundary value problems where classical approaches fail due to irregularity. A key conceptual outcome is that the existence of classical solutions cannot be assured solely by boundary data regularity when the domain exhibits cusp-like singularities. The findings illuminate core aspects of non-locality and Baire-generic properties in the regularity theory of harmonic and elliptic PDEs (Arendt et al., 17 Dec 2025).

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