Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the existence of a uniform attractor for the non-autonomous suspension bridge equation with time delay by using the energy function and uniform asymptotic compactness of the process.
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1 Introduction
A one-dimensional simply supported beam suspended by hangers was modeled as a suspension bridge in [1] by Lazer and McKenna, which described the vibration of the roadbed in the vertical plane. In [1,2,3], the authors investigated the existence of periodic solutions, the property of traveling wave solutions, and the numerical mountain pass solutions for the suspension bridge equations. Ma and Zhong [4,5,6] showed the existence of both weak and strong solutions as well as the global attractors for the singled and coupled autonomous suspension bridge equations, respectively. For the non-autonomous case, Ma et al. [7, 8] studied their uniform attractors and pullback attractors. Existence of global attractors for the suspension bridge equations with nonlinear damping was achieved in [9].
However, the above-mentioned models have a drawback, that is, the torsional oscillations in suspension bridges were not described; see [10], for example, the collapse of Tacoma narrow bridge. In the last several decades, the spectacular collapse of the Tacoma narrow bridge has successfully attracted the attention of many engineers, physicists, and mathematicians. They tried their best to explain such an amazing event, and their explanations were mainly based on the aero elastic effects such as the frequency of the vortex shedding, parametric resonance, and flutter theory, but none of their explanations was universally accepted. In 2014, Arioli and Gazzola [11] gave a new explanation about this phenomenon, i.e., the appearance of torsional oscillations during the collapse of Tacoma narrow bridge led to the internal resonances, due to the bridge structure itself. Successively, Ferrero and Gazzola [12] suggested that one should regard a rectangular plate \(\varOmega =(0,\pi )\times (-l,l)\) (\(l\ll \pi \)) as a model of suspension bridges, and the plate was assumed to be hinged on its vertical edges
along with the free horizontal edges
where \(0<\sigma <\frac{1}{2}\) is the Poisson ratio. They introduced in [12] the following equation as the model of the nonlinear suspension bridges:
where \(u(x,y,t)\) is the vertical displacement of the plate in the downward direction, \(u_{t}(x,y,t)\) is a damped term, δ is a positive constant, \(f(x,y,u)\) is a restoring force due to the hangers of the suspension bridge, \(g(x,y,t)\) is the external force including both gravity and live as well as dead loads. More works related to the suspension bridge equations can be referred to [13,14,15]. For instance, Al-Gwaiz et al. [13] studied the bending and stretching energies about the rectangular plate model suggested in [12]. Berchio et al. [14] investigated the structural instability of nonlinear plate modeling suspension bridges. For more details on these suspension bridge equations, we refer to the new book [15] published by Gazzola. Besides, Messaoudi et al. [16] obtained the global attractor of nonlinear suspension bridges equations.
Time delays arise usually in physical, chemical, biological, thermal phenomena and so on. In recent years, the partial differential equations with time delay effects have become an active area of research, see [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28] and the references therein. For example, in [19], the authors showed that a small delay in a boundary control could turn such a well-behaved hyperbolic system into a wild one, so the delay was a source leading to instability of the system. Nicasise and Pignotti in [20] studied the following wave equation with time delay in an open bounded set \(\varOmega \subset \mathbb{R}^{n}\):
and they proved, under the assumptions that the weight of the feedback is larger than the weight of the delay (\(a_{1}< a_{0}\)), that the energy is exponentially stable. However, they also produced a sequence of delays, which led to the instability of the corresponding solution. The same results were obtained for the case of boundary delay, see [21]. The time delay in a Timoshenko-type system of the form
was proposed by Said-Houari and Laskri in [22]. They arrived at an exponential decay result under the assumption \(\mu _{2}< \mu _{1}\). The authors in [23] considered the well-posedness and exponential stability of wave equation with a strong damping and a strong time delay.
Recently, Park [24] considered the suspension bridge equations with time delay in a bounded domain \(\varOmega \subset \mathbb{R}^{2}\)
and obtained the existence of the finite dimensional global attractors under the conditions that \(0<|a_{1}|<a_{0}\). Also, we would like to recommend many more literature sources such as [25,26,27,28] and the references therein. In this paper, we consider the existence of uniform attractors for the following nonlinear plate modeling suspension bridges with time delay in \(\varOmega =(0,\pi )\times (-l,l)\):
with boundary conditions
and initial conditions
where \(\gamma _{1}>0\) is the damped coefficient, \(\gamma _{2}\in \mathbb{R}\), \(\partial _{t}u(x,y,t-h)\) is the delay term, and \(h>0\) represents the time delay. \(u_{0}^{\tau }\), \(u_{1}^{\tau }\), \(\phi _{0}\) are given initial data belonging to suitable space. g and f are external forces. Since we have in mind a long narrow rectangle, that is, \(l\ll \pi \), it is reasonable to assume that the forcing term does not depend on y, see [12]. So, we now assume that \(g(x,y,t)=g(x,t) \in L^{2}_{\mathrm{loc}}(\mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))\).
As introduced in [23,24,25], our equation can be regarded as a Kelvin–Voight linear model for a viscoelastic material in the presence of a time delay response in connection with the stress-strain. Besides, the action of any external force \(g(x,y,t)\) on the plate Ω is transmitted through hangers to the sustaining cables, and this may yield certain delay, see, for example, [25]. It is well known that the presence of delay may lead to instability of the system, and hence it could affect the existence of compact attractors. For these purposes, we will continue to focus on the well-posedness and existence of uniform attractors under the suitable conditions. We extend the results of [25] from the autonomous case to the non-autonomous case.
The paper is organized as follows. In Sect. 2, we present some fundamental and basic results. In Sect. 3, firstly, we show the well-posedness by using maximal monotone operator theory. Secondly, we obtain a uniformly absorbing set. Finally, we establish the existence of a uniform attractor for the process generated by the related problem to (1.2)–(1.4).
2 Preliminaries
We first review some notations about functions spaces and give hypothesis for problem (1.2)–(1.4). From now on, let \(c_{i}\), \(i=0,1,2, \ldots \) , denote the different positive constants throughout the paper.
As in [12], let us introduce the space
equipped with the inner product and norm
It was proven that \(\|\cdot \|_{H_{\ast }^{2}}\) is a norm on \(H_{\ast }^{2}\) which is equivalent to the usual \(H^{2}(\varOmega )\)-norm. Moreover, \(H _{\ast }^{2}\) is a Hilbert space when endowed with the scalar product \((\cdot ,\cdot )_{H_{\ast }^{2}}\).
We define the phase space
equipped with the inner product and norm, respectively
where
With regard to problem (1.2)–(1.4), we impose the following assumptions:
-
(H1)
Nonlinear term \(f\in C^{1}(\mathbb{R})\) satisfies
$$ \textstyle\begin{cases} \vert f(s_{1})-f(s_{2}) \vert \leq c_{0}( \vert s_{1} \vert ^{p}+ \vert s_{2} \vert ^{p}) \vert s_{1}-s_{2} \vert ,& \forall s_{1},s_{2}\in \mathbb{R}, p>0 , \\ -c_{1}\leq F(s)\leq sf(s),&\forall s\in \mathbb{R}, \end{cases} $$where \(F(s)=\int _{0}^{s}f(v)\, dv \).
-
(H2)
The coefficients \(\gamma _{1}\) and \(\gamma _{2}\) satisfy \(0< c|\gamma _{2}|\leq \gamma _{1}\), where c is a proper positive constant.
As in [20], we introduce the function
then differentiation with respect to t, we can see that
Thus, problem (1.2)–(1.4) is equivalent to
with boundary conditions
and initial conditions
Lemma 2.1
([12])
Let \(u\in H_{\ast }^{2}(\varOmega )\) and suppose \(1\leq p< +\infty \). Then there exists a positive constant \(c_{\lambda }=c_{\lambda }(\varOmega ,p)\) such that
To prove the existence of uniform attractors corresponding to (2.3)–(2.5), we also need the following abstract results.
Let X be a complete metric space and Σ be a parameter set.
The operators \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\), \(\sigma \in \varSigma \) are said to be a family of processes in X with symbol space Σ if, for any \(\sigma \in \varSigma \),
Let \(\{T(r)|r\geq 0\}\) be the translation semigroup on Σ, we say that a family of processes \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\},\sigma \in \varSigma \) satisfies the translation identity if
and
By \(\mathcal{B}(E)\) we denote the collection of all bounded subsets of E.
Definition 2.2
A bounded set \(B_{0}\in \mathcal{B}(E)\) is said to be a bounded uniformly (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) absorbing set of \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\) (\(\sigma \in \varSigma \), \(t\geq \tau \), \(\tau \in \mathbb{R}\)) if, for any \(\tau \in \mathbb{R}\) and \(B\in \mathcal{B}(E)\), there exists a time \(T_{0}=T_{0}(B,\tau )\geq \tau \) such that
for all \(t\geq T_{0}\).
Definition 2.3
Let E be a Banach space and \(B\in \mathcal{B}(E)\), Σ be a symbol space. We call a function \(\psi (\cdot ,\cdot ;\cdot ,\cdot )\) defined on \((E\times E)\times ( \varSigma \times \varSigma )\) to be a contractive function on \(B\times B\) if, for any sequence \(\{x_{n}\}_{n=1}^{\infty }\subset B\) and any \(\{\sigma _{n}\}\subset \varSigma \), there is a subsequence \(\{x_{n_{k}} \}_{k=1}^{\infty }\subset \{x_{n}\}_{n=1}^{\infty }\) and \(\{\sigma _{n_{k}}\}_{k=1}^{\infty }\subset \{\sigma _{n}\}_{n=1}^{\infty }\) such that
We denote the set of all contractive functions on \(B\times B\) by \(\operatorname{Contr}(B, \varSigma )\).
Lemma 2.4
([32])
Let \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\) (\(\sigma \in \varSigma \), \(t\geq \tau \), \(\tau \in \mathbb{R}\)) be a family of processes satisfying the translation identity (2.8)–(2.9) on a Banach space E and having a bounded uniformly (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) absorbing set \(B_{0}\in \mathcal{B}(E)\). Moreover, assume that for any \(\varepsilon >0\) there exist \(T=T(B_{0},\varepsilon )\) and \(\psi _{T} \in \operatorname{Contr}(B_{0},\varSigma )\) such that
Then \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\), \(\sigma \in \varSigma \) is uniformly (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) asymptotically compact in E.
Let X be a Banach space with spatial, the space \(L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2}( \mathbb{R}^{+};X)\) denotes all functions with spatial values in Banach space X and time variable locally 2-power integrable in the Bochner sense. \(L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R}^{+};X)\) is a set of all translation bound functions in \(L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2}(\mathbb{R}^{+};X)\) satisfying
for all \(\sigma \in L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R}^{+};X)\).
Theorem 2.5
Let E be a complete metric space, \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\), \(\sigma \in \varSigma \) be a family of processes on E satisfying the translation identity (2.8)–(2.9). Then \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\}\), \(\sigma \in \varSigma \) has a compactly uniform attractor (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) attractor \(\mathcal{A}_{\varSigma }\) in E and satisfies
if and only if \(\{U_{\sigma }(t,\tau )\},\sigma \in \varSigma \)
-
(i)
has a bounded uniformly (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) absorbing set \(B_{0}\);
-
(ii)
is uniformly (w.r.t. \(\sigma \in \varSigma \)) asymptotically compact.
To describe the asymptotic behavior of the solutions to our problem, we set \(g_{0}\in L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))\) and define the symbol space \(\mathcal{H}(\sigma _{0})\), \(\mathcal{H}(\sigma _{0})= \mathcal{H}(g_{0})=[g_{0}(x,s+r)|r\in \mathbb{R}^{+}]_{L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2,w} ( \mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))}\), where \([~]\) denotes the closure of a set in a topological space \(L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2,w}(\mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))\), and \(L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2,w}(\mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))\) denotes the space \(L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{2,w}(\mathbb{R}^{+};L^{2}(\varOmega ))\) endowed with local weak convergence topology. Therefore, for any \(g(x,t)\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\), (2.3)–(2.5) with \(g_{0}\) instead of g possesses a corresponding process \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\) acting on \(\mathcal{H}\). The translation semigroup \(\{T(r)|r\geq 0\}\) satisfies (2.8), (2.9), that is, \(T(r)\mathcal{H}(g_{0})=\mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) and \(U_{g}(t+r,\tau +r)=U _{T(r)g(t)}(t,\tau )\), \(\forall g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\), \(t\geq \tau \), \(\tau \in \mathbb{R}\), \(r\geq 0\).
Proposition 2.6
([29])
If E is a reflexive separable Banach space, then
-
(1)
for all \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\), \(\|g\|_{L_{b}^{2}( \mathbb{R^{+}};L^{2}(\varOmega ))}\leq \|g_{0}\|_{L_{b}^{2}( \mathbb{R^{+}};L^{2}(\varOmega ))}\),
-
(2)
the translation group \(T(t)\) is weakly continuous on \(\mathcal{H}(g _{0})\),
-
(3)
\(T(t)\mathcal{H}(g_{0})=\mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) for all \(t\in \mathbb{R}\).
3 Uniform attractors in \(\mathcal{H}\)
Firstly, we establish the well-posedness of problem (2.3)–(2.5).
Set \(U=(u,v,z)^{T}\), where \(v=\partial _{t}u\), initial data \(U_{ \tau }=(u_{0}^{\tau },u_{1}^{\tau },\phi _{0})^{T}\), then problem (2.3)–(2.5) is given by
where
The domain of the operator A is defined as follows:
where (3.2) is the following boundary conditions:
For convenience, we denote \(d\theta =dx\,dy\).
Lemma 3.1
([33])
Suppose that \(0<|\gamma _{2}|\leq \gamma _{1}\), the operator \(A:D(A)\subset \mathcal{H}\rightarrow \mathcal{H} \) is monotone and maximal.
By the semigroup theory, see [33], we have the following result.
Theorem 3.2
Assume that condition (H1) holds and \(g\in L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R}_{\tau };L^{2}(\varOmega ))\). Let \(U_{\tau } \in \mathcal{H}\) be given and assume that \(\gamma _{1}>\frac{3}{2}| \gamma _{2}|\), then problem (3.1) has a unique global solution \(U=(u,\partial _{t}u,\phi )\in C(\mathbb{R}_{\tau };\mathcal{H})\), where \(\mathbb{R}_{\tau }=\{t\in \mathbb{R},t\geq \tau \}\).
Proof
Thanks to Lemma 3.1 and F satisfying locally Lipschitz, we can apply the Hille–Yosida theorem to get the existence of a unique weak local solution for problem (3.1),
In order to prove that the solution is global and \(U\in C([\tau , \infty ],\mathcal{H})\), namely we need to prove that \(\|U(t)\|_{ \mathcal{H}}\) is uniformly bounded with respect to time.
Multiplying (2.3)1 by \(\partial _{t}u\) and integrating over Ω, we obtain
Multiplying (2.3)2 by \(|\gamma _{2}|z\) and integrating over \((0,1)\times \varOmega \), we get
Thus
Furthermore, we have
Set
Combining (3.3)–(3.5), we get that
Exploiting Young’s inequality, we obtain
Substituting (3.8) into (3.7), we find that
Integrating (3.9) over \([\tau ,t] \), \(\gamma _{1}>\frac{3}{2}|\gamma _{2}|\), we can deduce that
By Proposition 2.6, we know that \(\|g\|^{2}_{L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R} _{\tau };L^{2}(\varOmega ))}\leq \|g_{0}\|^{2}_{L_{b}^{2}(\mathbb{R}_{ \tau };L^{2}(\varOmega ))}\), one sees that
Applying (H1), \(E_{1}(t)\) satisfies
namely
Using (3.10) and (3.11), it yields that
□
Owing to Theorem 3.2, we know that (2.3)–(2.5) is well-posed for all \(g(s)\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) and generates a family of processes \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\},g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) given by \(U_{g}(t,\tau )U _{\tau }=U(t)\), where \(U(t)\) is the solution of (2.3)–(2.5), and \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) satisfies (2.7).
In what follows, we denote by \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\) the family of processes generated by (2.3)–(2.5).
Secondly, we prove the existence of a uniformly absorbing set in \(\mathcal{H}\). We introduce a Lyapunov functional
where \(M, N>0\) are constants which will be determined later, and
Lemma 3.3
Assume that N is small enough and M is large enough, there exist \(\delta _{1},\delta _{2}>0\) such that
Proof
On the one hand, by (H1)2 and the above-mentioned functionals, choosing M large enough and N small enough such that \(\frac{M-N}{2}>0\), \(\frac{M-Nc_{\lambda }}{2}>0\), we can deduce that
On the other hand, according to (H1)1, we have
Exploiting Young’s inequality, Sobolev’s embedding Theorem, and (3.14), we can get that
□
Lemma 3.4
The function \(\varPsi _{1}(t)=(\partial _{t}u,u)\) satisfies
Proof
According to (2.3)1, we can see that
Using Young’s inequality, Hölder’s inequality, and (2.6), for any \(\xi >0\), we can obtain that
By assumption (H1), we have
Substituting the above inequalities into (3.16), we get (3.15). □
Lemma 3.5
The functional \(\varPhi _{1}(t)=h\int _{\varOmega }\int _{0}^{1}|z|^{2}e^{-\rho h}\,d\rho \,d\theta \) satisfies
Proof
Direct differentiation (2.3)2 leads to
□
Theorem 3.6
(Uniformly (w.r.t. \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\)) absorbing set)
Under the assumption of Theorem 3.2, the family of processes \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) of system (2.3)–(2.5) possesses a bounded uniformly (w.r.t. \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\)) absorbing set B in \(\mathcal{H}\).
Proof
Exploiting (3.9), (3.15), (3.17), Lemma 3.4, and Lemma 3.5, direct computation yields
Choosing ξ and N small enough, M large enough such that
Thus, there exist positive constants \(\beta _{1}\), \(\beta _{2}\), \(\beta _{3}\), \(\beta _{4}\), \(\beta _{5}\), β such that
Applying Lemma 3.3, we can get
where \(\nu =\frac{\beta }{\delta _{2}}\). Integrating (3.21) over \([\tau ,t]\) and using (3.20), we can see that
Now, for any bounded set \(B\subseteq \mathcal{H}\) and for any \((u_{0}^{\tau },u_{1}^{\tau },\phi _{0})\in B\), there exists a constant \(C_{B}>0\) such that \(L_{1}(\tau )\leq C_{B}\), then for any \(t\geq t _{0}\), we have
From (3.23), it is easy to see that
that is, \(B=B(0,r)=\{(u(t),\partial _{t}u(t),z(t))\in \mathcal{H}:\|(u(t), \partial _{t}u(t),z(t))\|^{2}_{\mathcal{H}}\leq r^{2}\}\subseteq \mathcal{H}\) is a uniformly absorbing ball for any \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\). The proof is complete. □
Next, we will verify that the family of processes \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g \in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) corresponding to (2.3)–(2.5) is uniformly (w.r.t. \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\)) asymptotically compact in \(\mathcal{H}\).
Theorem 3.7
Assume that condition (H1) holds and \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\). Let \(\gamma _{1}>2|\gamma _{2}|\), then the family of processes \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) corresponding to (2.3)–(2.5) is uniformly (w.r.t. \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\)) asymptotically compact in \(\mathcal{H}\).
Proof
We consider two symbols \(g^{1},g^{2}\in \mathcal{H}(g _{0})\), and let \((u^{i},\partial _{t}u^{i},z^{i})\) be solutions of (2.3) corresponding to the initial data \((u_{0}^{i},u_{1}^{i},\phi ^{i}_{0})\) and the symbols \(g^{1}\), \(g^{2}\), respectively.
Let \(u=u^{1}-u^{2}\), \(z=z^{1}-z^{2}\), \(u_{0}^{\tau }=u_{0}^{1\tau }-u _{0}^{2\tau }\), \(u_{1}^{\tau }=u_{1}^{1\tau }-u_{1}^{2\tau }\), \(\phi _{0}= \phi ^{1}_{0}-\phi ^{2}_{0}\). Therefore, \((u,z)\) satisfies
with boundary conditions
We introduce the function
and
where \(\varPsi _{2}(t)=(\partial _{t}u,u)\), \(\varPhi _{2}(t)=h\int _{\varOmega } \int _{0}^{1}|z|^{2}e^{-\rho h}\,d\rho \,d\theta \).
It is easy to see that \(L_{2}(t)\) and \(E_{2}(t)\) are equivalent, so there exist two positive constants \(\lambda _{1}\) and \(\lambda _{2}\) depending on M, N such that
where \(M>0\) large enough and \(N>0\) small enough.
Multiplying (3.24)1 by \(\partial _{t}u\) and (3.24)2 by \(|\gamma _{2}|z\), then integrating over Ω and \((0,1)\times \varOmega \), respectively, we obtain that
Using (H1)1, we find that
where \(c_{B}\), \(c_{\gamma _{2}}\) are positive constants.
Substituting (3.28), (3.29) into (3.27), we get
Similar to the proof of (3.15) and (3.17), we have
and
Using (3.30)–(3.32), direct computation
Choose ξ and N small enough, M large enough such that
Then there exists \(\varpi >0\) such that
Exploiting (3.26), from (3.34), we obtain
where \(\varrho =\frac{\varpi }{\lambda _{2}}\). Integrating (3.35) over \([\tau ,t]\), we can deduce that
Let \(T>\tau \) large enough such that
Together with (3.26), (3.36), and (3.37), it yields
Subsequently, we will show \(\psi _{T}(\cdot ,\cdot ;\cdot ,\cdot ) \in \operatorname{Contr}(B,\mathcal{H}(g_{0}))\) for every fixed \(T>\tau \). Because of the existence of a uniformly absorbing set, we can obtain that, for any fixed \(T>\tau \) and any bounded set B depending on T,
is bounded in \(\mathcal{H}\). Let the sequence \({(u_{0n}^{\tau },u_{1n} ^{\tau },\phi _{0n})}\in B\), \(g_{n}\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\), \(n=1,2, \ldots \) . Since B is bounded, the corresponding sequence of solutions \({(u_{n}(t),\partial _{t}u_{n}(t),z_{n}(t))}\) of system (2.3)–(2.5) is uniformly bounded in \(\mathcal{H}\). Hence, \({(u_{n},\partial _{t}u_{n},z _{n})}\) is bounded in \(C([\tau ,T];\mathcal{H})\), which implies that \({u_{n}}\) is bounded in \(C([\tau ,T];H^{2}(\varOmega ))\).
It follows that from the compact embedding of \(C([\tau ,T];H^{2}( \varOmega ))\cap C^{1}([\tau ,T];L^{2}(\varOmega ))\) into \(C([\tau ,T];L ^{2}(\varOmega ))\), there exists a subsequence \(\{u_{n_{k}}\}\) that converges in \(C([\tau ,T];L^{2}(\varOmega ))\), \(\forall T>\tau \). So
On the other hand, by \(g^{n}\), \(g^{m}\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\), we arrive at
Hence, combining with (3.38)–(3.39), we get that \(\psi _{T}\in \operatorname{Contr}(B, \mathcal{H}(g_{0}))\), and then this completes the proof of Theorem 3.7. □
Theorem 3.8
(Uniform attractor)
Assume that conditions (H1)–(H2) hold and \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\). Then the family of processes \(\{U_{g}(t,\tau )\}\), \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\) corresponding to (2.3)–(2.5) has a compactly uniform attractor (w.r.t. \(g\in \mathcal{H}(g_{0})\)) \(\mathcal{A}_{\varSigma }\) in \(\mathcal{H}\).
Proof
From Theorem 3.6 and Theorem 3.7 we know that the conditions of Theorem 2.5 are all satisfied. □
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The authors express their gratitude to the anonymous referees for their valuable comments and suggestions.
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This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 11561064, 11761062).
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Wang, Sp., Ma, Qz. Uniform attractors for the non-autonomous suspension bridge equation with time delay. J Inequal Appl 2019, 180 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13660-019-2133-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13660-019-2133-4