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Fixed point theorems for F-expanding mappings
Fixed Point Theory and Applications volume 2017, Article number: 9 (2016)
Abstract
Recently, Wardowski (Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2012:94, 2012) introduced a new concept of F-contraction and proved a fixed point theorem which generalizes the Banach contraction principle. Following this direction of research, in this paper, we present some new fixed point results for F-expanding mappings, especially on a complete G-metric space.
1 Introduction
Let \((X,d)\) be a metric space. A mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) is said to be expanding if
The condition \(\lambda >1\) is important, the function \(T:\mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}\) defined by \(Tx=x+e^{x}\) satisfies the condition \(\vert Tx-Ty \vert \geqslant \vert x-y \vert \) for all \(x,y\in \mathbb{R}\), and T has no fixed point.
For an expanding map, the following result is well known.
Theorem 1.1
Let \((X,d)\) be a complete metric space, and let \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be surjective and expanding. Then T is bijective and has a unique fixed point.
It follows from the Banach contraction principle and the following very simple observation.
Lemma 1.2
If \(T:X\rightarrow X\) is surjective, then there exists a mapping \(T^{*}:X\rightarrow X\) such that \(T\circ T^{*}\) is the identity map on X.
Proof
For any point \(x\in X\), let \(y_{x}\in X\) be any point such that \(Ty_{x}=x\). Let \(T^{*}x=y_{x}\) for all \(x\in X\). Then \((T\circ T^{*})(x)=T(T^{*}x)=Ty_{x}=x\) for all \(x\in X\). □
In the present paper, we introduce a new type of expanding mappings.
Definition 1.3
Let \(\mathcal{F}\) be the family of all function \(F:(0,+\infty )\rightarrow \mathbb{R}\) such that
- (F1):
-
F is strictly increasing, i.e., for all \(\alpha , \beta \in (0,+\infty )\), if \(\alpha <\beta \), then \(F(\alpha )< F( \beta )\);
- (F2):
-
for each sequence \(\{\alpha_{n}\}\subset (0,+\infty )\), the following holds:
$$ \lim_{n\rightarrow \infty }\alpha_{n}=0\quad \mbox{if and only if} \quad \lim_{n\rightarrow \infty }F(\alpha_{n})=- \infty ; $$ - (F3):
-
there exists \(k\in (0,1)\) such that \(\lim_{\alpha \rightarrow 0_{+}}\alpha^{k}F(\alpha )=0\).
Definition 1.4
Let \((X,d)\) be a metric space. A mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) is called F-expanding if there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
When we consider in (2) the different types of the mapping \(F\in \mathcal{F}\), then we obtain a variety of expanding mappings.
Example 1.5
Let \(F_{1}(\alpha )=\ln \alpha \). It is clear that \(F_{1}\) satisfies (F1), (F2), (F3) for any \(k\in (0,1)\). Each mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) satisfying (2) is an \(F_{1}\)-expanding map such that
It is clear that for \(x,y\in X\) such that \(x=y\), the inequality \(d(Tx,Ty)\geqslant e^{t}d(x,y)\) also holds.
Example 1.6
If \(F_{2}(\alpha )=\ln \alpha +\alpha \), \(\alpha >0\), then \(F_{1}\) satisfies (F1), (F2) and (F3), and condition (2) is of the form
Example 1.7
Consider \(F_{3}(\alpha )=\ln (\alpha^{2}+\alpha )\), \(\alpha >0\). \(F_{3}\) satisfies (F1), (F2) and (F3), and for \(F_{3}\)-expanding T, the following condition holds:
Example 1.8
Consider \(F_{4}(\alpha )=\arctan (-\frac{1}{ \alpha })\), \(\alpha >0\). \(F_{4}\) satisfies (F1), (F2) and (F3), and for \(F_{4}\)-expanding T, the following condition holds:
Here, we have obtained a special type of nonlinear expanding map \(d(Tx,Ty)\geqslant \varphi (d(x, y))d(x,y)\).
Other functions belonging to \(\mathcal{F}\) are, for example, \(F(\alpha )=\ln (\alpha^{n})\), \(n\in \mathbb{N}\), \(\alpha >0\); \(F(\alpha )=\ln (\arctan \alpha )\), \(\alpha >0\).
Now we recall the following.
Definition 1.9
Let \((X,d)\) be a metric space. A mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) is an F-contraction on X if there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
For such mappings, Wardowski [1] proved the following theorem.
Theorem 1.10
Let \((X,d)\) be a complete metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be an F-contraction. Then T has a unique fixed point \(u\in X\) and for every \(x\in X\), a sequence \(\{x_{n}=T ^{n}x\}\) is convergent to u.
2 The result
In this section, we give some fixed point theorem for F-expanding maps.
Theorem 2.1
Let \((X,d)\) be a complete metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be surjective and F-expanding. Then T has a unique fixed point.
Proof
From Lemma 1.2, there exists a mapping \(T^{*}:X\rightarrow X\) such that \(T\circ T^{*}\) is the identity mapping on X. Let \(x,y\in X\) be arbitrary points such that \(x\neq y\), and let \(z=T^{*}x\) and \(w=T^{*}y\) (obviously, \(z\neq w\)). By using (2) applied to z and w, we have
Since \(Tz=T(T^{*}x)=x\) and \(Tw=T(T^{*}y)=y\), then
so \(T^{*}:X\rightarrow X\) is an F-contraction. By Theorem 1.10, \(T^{*}\) has a unique fixed point \(u\in X\). In particular, u is also a fixed point of T because \(T^{*}u=u\) implies that \(Tu=T(T^{*}u)=u\).
Let us observe that T has at most one fixed point. If \(u,v\in X\) and \(Tu=u\neq v=Tv\), then we would get the contradiction
so the fixed point of T is unique. □
Remark 2.2
If T is not surjective, the previous result is false. For example, let \(X=[0,\infty )\) endowed with the metric \(d(x,y)=\vert x-y \vert \) for all \(x,y\in X\), and let \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be defined by \(Tx=2x+1\) for all \(x\in X\). Then T satisfies the condition \(d(Tx,Ty)\geqslant 2d(x,y)\) for all \(x,y\in X\) and T is fixed point free.
3 Applications to G-metric spaces
In 2006 Mustafa and Sims (see [2] and the references therein) introduced the notion of a G-metric space and investigated the topology of such spaces. The G-metric space is as follows.
Definition 3.1
Let X be a nonempty set. A function \(G:X\times X\times X\rightarrow [0,\infty )\) satisfying the following axioms:
- (\(G_{1}\)):
-
\(G(x,y,z)=0\) if \(x=y=z\),
- (\(G_{2}\)):
-
\(G(x,x,y)>0\) for all \(x,y\in X\) with \(x\neq y\),
- (\(G_{3}\)):
-
\(G(x,x,y)\leqslant G(x,y,z)\) for all \(x,y,z\in X\) with \(z\neq y\),
- (\(G_{4}\)):
-
\(G(x,y,z)=G(x,z,y)=G(y,z,x)=\cdots \) (symmetry in all three variables),
- (\(G_{5}\)):
-
\(G(x,y,z)\leqslant G(x,a,a)+G(a,y,z)\) for all \(x,y,z,a\in X\),
is called a G-metric on X, and the pair \((X,G)\) is called a G-metric space.
Recently, Samet et al. [3] observed that some fixed point theorems in the context of G-metric spaces can be concluded from existence results in the setting of quasi-metric spaces. Especially, the following theorem is a simple consequence of Theorem 1.10.
Theorem 3.2
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space, and let \(T:X\rightarrow X\) satisfy one of the following conditions:
-
(a)
T is an F-contraction of type I on a G-metric space X, i.e., there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
$$ G(Tx,Ty,Ty)>0\quad \Rightarrow \quad t+F\bigl(G(Tx,Ty,Ty)\bigr)\leqslant F \bigl(G(x,y,y)\bigr); $$(4) -
(b)
T is an F-contraction of type II on a G-metric space X, i.e., there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y,z\in X\),
$$ G(Tx,Ty,Tz)>0\quad \Rightarrow \quad t+F\bigl(G(Tx,Ty,Tz)\bigr)\leqslant F \bigl(G(x,y,z)\bigr). $$(5)
Then T has a unique fixed point \(u\in X\), and for any \(x\in X\), a sequence \(\{x_{n}=T^{n}x\}\) is G-convergent to u.
The previous ideas lead also to analogous fixed point theorems for F-expanding mappings on G-metric spaces.
Definition 3.3
A mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) from a G-metric space \((X,G)\) into itself is said to be
-
(a)
F-expanding of type I on a G-metric space X if there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
$$ G(x,y,y)>0\quad \Rightarrow \quad F\bigl(G(Tx,Ty,Ty)\bigr)\geqslant F \bigl(G(x,y,y)\bigr)+t; $$(6) -
(b)
F-expanding of type II on a G-metric space X if there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y,z\in X\),
$$ G(x,y,z)>0\quad \Rightarrow \quad F\bigl(G(Tx,Ty,Tz)\bigr)\geqslant F \bigl(G(x,y,z)\bigr)+t. $$(7)
Theorem 3.4
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be a surjective and F-expanding mapping of type I (or type II). Then T has a unique fixed point.
Proof
Let T be an F-expanding mapping of type I. From Lemma 1.2, there exists a mapping \(T^{*}:X\rightarrow X\) such that \(T\circ T^{*}\) is the identity mapping on X. Let \(x,y\in X\) be arbitrary points such that \(x\neq y\), and let \(\xi =T^{*}x\) and \(\eta =T^{*}y\). Obviously, \(\xi \neq \eta \) and \(G(\xi ,\eta ,\eta )>0\). By using (6) applied to ξ and η, we have
Since \(T\xi =T(T^{*}x)=x\) and \(T\eta =T(T^{*}y)=y\), then
so \(T^{*}\) is an F-contraction of type I on a G-metric space \((X,G)\). Theorem 3.2 guarantees that \(T^{*}\) has a unique fixed point \(u\in X\). The point u is also a fixed point of T because \(Tu=T(T^{*}u)=u\).
Now, we prove the uniqueness of the fixed point. Assume that v is another fixed point of T different from u: \(Tu=u\neq v=Tv\). This means \(G(u,v,v)>0\), so by (6)
which is a contradiction, and hence \(u=v\).
For F-expanding mappings of type II, it is necessary to take \(z=y\) and apply the proof for F-expanding mappings of type I. □
As a corollary of Theorem 3.4, taking \(F_{1}\in \mathcal{F}\), see Examples 1.5, we obtain the following.
Corollary 3.5
[2], Corollary 9.1.4
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be surjective, and let there exist \(\lambda >1\) such that
or
Then T has a unique fixed point.
Remark 3.6
If T is not surjective, the previous results are false. Consider \(X=(-\infty ,-1]\cup [1,\infty )\) endowed with the G-metric \(G(x,y,z)=\vert x-y \vert +\vert x-z \vert +\vert y-z \vert \) for all \(x,y,z\in X\) and the mapping \(T:X\rightarrow X\) defined by \(Tx=-2x\). Then \(G(Tx,Ty,Tz)\geqslant 2G(x,y,z)\) for all \(x,y,z\in X\) and T has no fixed point.
Now, we will improve some results contained in the book [2]. We will use the following observation: if \(T:X\rightarrow X\) is a surjective mapping, based on each \(x_{0}\in X\), there exists a sequence \(\{x_{n}\}\) such that \(Tx_{n+1}=x_{n}\) for all \(n\geqslant 0\). Generally, a sequence \(\{x_{n}\}\) verifying the above condition is not necessarily unique.
Theorem 3.7
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space, and let \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be a surjective mapping. Suppose that there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
Then T has a unique fixed point.
Proof
Let \(x_{0}\in X\) be arbitrary. Since T is surjective, there exists \(x_{1}\in X\) such that \(Tx_{1}=x_{0}\). By continuing this process, we can find a sequence \(\{x_{n}=Tx_{n+1}\}\) for all \(n=0,1,2,\ldots\) . If there exists \(n_{0}\in \mathbb{N}\cup \{0\}\) such that \(x_{n_{0}}=x_{n_{0}+1}\), then \(x_{n_{0}+1}\) is a fixed point of T.
Now assume that \(x_{n}\neq x_{n+1}\) for all \(n\geqslant 0\). Then \(G(x_{n+1},x_{n},x_{n})>0\) for all \(n\geqslant 0\), and from (8) with \(x=x_{n+1}\) and \(y=x_{n}\), we have, for all \(n\geqslant 1\),
and hence
Using (9), the following holds for every \(n\geqslant 1\):
From (10) we obtain
which together with (F2) gives
From (F3) there exists \(k\in (0,1)\) such that
By (10), the following holds for all \(n\geqslant 1\):
Letting \(n\rightarrow \infty \) in (13) and using (11), (12), we obtain
Now, let us observe that from (14) there exists \(n_{1}\geqslant 1\) such that
Consequently, we have
Since the series \(\sum_{i=1}^{\infty }\frac{1}{i^{1/k}}\) converges, for any \(\varepsilon >0\), there exists \(n_{2}\geqslant 1\) such that \(\sum_{i=n_{2}}^{\infty }\frac{1}{i^{1/k}}<\varepsilon \). In order to show that \(\{x_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy sequence, we consider \(m>n>\max \{n_{1},n_{2}\}\). From [2], Lemma 3.1.2(4), we get
Therefore by [2], Lemma 3.2.2 and axiom \((G_{4})\), \(\{x_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy in a G-metric space \((X,G)\). From the completeness of \((X,G)\), there exists \(u\in X\) such that \(\{x_{n}\} \rightarrow u\). As T is surjective, there exists \(w\in X\) such that \(u=Tw\). From (8) with \(x=x_{n+1}\) and \(y=w\), we have, for all \(n\geqslant 1\),
and hence
By (F1) from (15), we have
Using the fact that the function G is continuous on each variable ([2], Theorem 3.2.2), taking the limit as \(n\rightarrow \infty \) in the above inequality, we get
that is, \(u=w\). Then u is a fixed point of T because \(u=Tw=Tu\).
To prove uniqueness, suppose that \(u,v\in X\) are two fixed points. If \(Tu=u\neq v=Tv\), then \(G(u,u,v)>0\). So, by (8),
which is a contradiction, because \(t>0\). Hence, \(u=v\). □
Taking \(F_{1}\in \mathcal{F}\), see Example 1.5, we obtain the following.
Corollary 3.8
[2], Theorem 9.1.2
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be a surjective mapping. Suppose that there exists \(\lambda >1\) such that
Then T has a unique fixed point.
Next result does not guarantee the uniqueness of the fixed point.
Theorem 3.9
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space, and let \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be a surjective mapping. Suppose that there exist \(F\in \mathcal{F}\) and \(t>0\) such that for all \(x,y\in X\),
Then T has a fixed point.
Proof
Let \(x_{0}\in X\) be arbitrary. Since T is surjective, there exists \(x_{1}\in X\) such that \(x_{0}=Tx_{1}\). By continuing this process, we can find a sequence \(\{x_{n}=Tx_{n+1}\}\) for all \(n\geqslant 0\). If there exists \(n_{0}\geqslant 0\) such that \(x_{n_{0}}=x_{n_{0}+1}\), then \(x_{n_{0}+1}\) is a fixed point of T.
Now, assume that \(x_{n}\neq x_{n+1}\) for all \(n\geqslant 0\). From (17) with \(x=x_{n+1}\) and \(y=x_{n}\), we have \(G(x_{n+1},Tx_{n+1},T ^{2}x_{n+1})=G(x_{n+1},x_{n},x_{n-1})>0\) and
and hence
From (18), we obtain
which together with (F2) gives
Mimicking the proof of Theorem 3.7, we obtain
and consequently, there exists \(n_{1}\geqslant 1\) such that
Since the series \(\sum_{i=1}^{\infty }\frac{1}{i^{1/k}}\) converges, for any \(\varepsilon >0\), there exists \(n_{2}\geqslant 1\) such that \(\sum_{i=n_{2}}^{\infty }\frac{1}{i^{1/k}}<\varepsilon \). In order to show that \(\{x_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy sequence, we consider \(m>n>\max \{n_{1},n_{2}\}\). From [2], Lemma 3.1.2(4) and axioms (\(G_{3}\)), \((G_{4})\), we get
Therefore, by [2], Lemma 3.2.2, \(\{x_{n}\}\) is a Cauchy in a G-metric space \((X,G)\). From the completeness of \((X,G)\), there exists \(u\in X\) such that \(\{x_{n}\}\rightarrow u\). As T is surjective, there exists \(w\in X\) such that \(u=Tw\). From (17) with \(x=w\) and \(y=x_{n+1}\), we have
so
Using (F1), we have
Using the fact that the function G is continuous on each variable ([2], Theorem 3.2.2), taking the limit as \(n\rightarrow \infty \) in the above inequality, we get
that is, \(w=Tw=T^{2}w\). Hence, \(u=Tu\). □
Taking \(F_{1}\in \mathcal{F}\), see Examples 1.5, we obtain the following.
Corollary 3.10
[2], Theorem 9.1.3
Let \((X,G)\) be a complete G-metric space and \(T:X\rightarrow X\) be a surjective mapping. Suppose that there exists \(\lambda >1\) such that
Then T has, at least, a fixed point.
References
Wardowski, D: Fixed points of a new type of contractive mappings in complete metric spaces. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2012, Article ID 94 (2012)
Agarwal, RP, Karapinar, E, O’Regan, D, Roldán-López-de-Hierro, AF: Fixed Point Theory in Metric Type Spaces. Springer, Switzerland (2015)
Samet, B, Vetro, C, Vetro, F: Remarks on G-metric spaces. Int. J. Anal. 2013, Article ID 917158 (2013)
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Górnicki, J. Fixed point theorems for F-expanding mappings. Fixed Point Theory Appl 2017, 9 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13663-017-0602-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13663-017-0602-3
MSC
- 47H10
- 54H25
Keywords
- fixed point
- F-contraction map
- F-expanding map
- G-metric space