Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2003
We discuss the problem of the uniqueness of the solution to the Cauchy problem for second-order, linear, uniformly parabolic differential equations. For most uniqueness theorems the solution must be uniformly bounded with respect to the time variable $t$, but some authors have shown an interest in relaxing the growth conditions in time.
In 1997, Chung proved that, in the case of the heat equation, uniqueness holds under the restriction: $|u(x,t)|\leq C\exp[(a/t)^{\alpha}+a|x|^2]$, for some constants $C,a>0$, $0\lt\alpha\lt1$. The proof of Chung’s theorem is based on ultradistribution theory, in particular it relies heavily on the fact that the coefficients are constants and that the solution is smooth. Therefore, his method does not work for parabolic operators with arbitrary coefficients. In this paper we prove a uniqueness theorem for uniformly parabolic equations imposing the same growth condition as Chung on the solution $u(x,t)$. At the centre of the proof are the maximum principle, Gaussian-type estimates for short cylinders and a boot-strapping argument.
AMS 2000 Mathematics subject classification: Primary 35K15