\documentclass[reqno]{amsart}
\usepackage{hyperref}
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\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2012 (2012), No. 124, pp. 1--17.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu}
\thanks{\copyright 2012 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{9mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2012/124\hfil Bifurcation for the $p$-Laplacian]
{Bifurcation along curves for the $p$-Laplacian with radial symmetry}

\author[F. Genoud \hfil EJDE-2012/124\hfilneg]
{Fran\c cois Genoud} 

\address{Fran\c cois Genoud \newline
Department of Mathematics and the Maxwell Institute for
Mathematical Sciences, Heriot-Watt University,
Edinburgh EH14 4AS, United Kingdom}
\email{F.Genoud@hw.ac.uk}

\thanks{Submitted March 7, 2012. Published July 31, 2012.}
\thanks{This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical
 Sciences Research Council, \hfill\break\indent [EP/H030514/1].}
\subjclass[2000]{35J66, 35J92, 35B32}
\keywords{Dirichlet problem; radial $p$-Laplacian; bifurcation; solution curve}

\begin{abstract}
 We study the global structure of the set of radial solutions of a nonlinear
 Dirichlet eigenvalue problem involving the $p$-Laplacian with $p>2$, in the unit
 ball of $\mathbb{R}^N$, $N \geqslant 1$. We show that all non-trivial radial
 solutions lie on smooth curves of respectively positive and negative solutions,
 bifurcating from the first eigenvalue of a weighted $p$-linear problem.
 Our approach involves a local bifurcation result of Crandall-Rabinowitz type,
 and global continuation arguments relying on monotonicity properties of the
 equation.
 An important part of the analysis is dedicated to the delicate issue of
 differentiability of the inverse $p$-Laplacian, and holds for all $p>1$.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{corollary}[theorem]{Corollary}
\newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition}
\newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}
\newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition}
\allowdisplaybreaks

\section{Introduction}

In this article we consider the nonlinear Dirichlet problem
\begin{equation}\label{dir.eq}
 \begin{gathered}
-\Delta_p (u) = \lambda f(|x|,u) \quad  \text{in }  \Omega,\\
u =0 \quad \text{on }  \partial \Omega,
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\Delta_p(u):=\operatorname{div}(|\nabla u|^{p-2}\nabla u)$ 
is the $p$-Laplacian, $p>1$, $\lambda \geqslant0$, and $\Omega$ is the
 unit ball in $\mathbb{R}^N$, $N\geqslant1$.
The function $f$ is continuous, such that $f(r,0)=0$ for all $r\in[0,1]$, and will
be subject to various additional assumptions.

We look for $C^1$ radial solutions by studying the
problem
\begin{equation}\label{dirad.eq}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(u'))' = \lambda r^{N-1} f(r,u), \quad 0<r<1,\\
u'(0) = u(1) = 0,
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\phi_p(\xi):=|\xi|^{p-2}\xi, \ \xi\in\mathbb{R}$, and $'$ denotes
differentiation with respect to $r$. By a solution of \eqref{dirad.eq}
will be meant a couple $(\lambda,u)$,
with $\lambda \in \mathbb{R}$ and $u\in C^1[0,1]$, such that
$\phi_p(u')\in C^1[0,1]$, that satisfies \eqref{dirad.eq}.
Note that, since $f(r,0)=0$ for all $r\in[0,1]$, $(\lambda,0)$ is a solution for
all $\lambda\in\mathbb{R}$. Such solutions will be called trivial. We are
interested in existence and bifurcation of non-trivial solutions of
\eqref{dirad.eq}.

Bifurcation results for quasilinear equations in bounded domains have been
considered for instance in \cite{gs,dm,t} --- further references can be found in
these papers. Del Pino and Man\'asevich \cite{dm} prove global bifurcation from
the first eigenvalue of the $p$-Laplacian in a general bounded domain,
and global bifurcation from every eigenvalue in the radial case.
They also obtain nodal properties of solutions along the
bifurcating continua. These results generalize the well-known results of
Rabinowitz \cite{rab} to the quasilinear setting, using degree theoretic
arguments.

More recently, Girg and Tak\'a\v c \cite{t}
obtained results in the spirit of Dancer \cite{dan}, about bifurcation from the
first eigenvalue of a homogeneous quasilinear problem,
in the cones of positive and negative solutions.
They consider a large class of quasilinear problems in a general bounded domain
$\Omega$ and they allow the
asymptotic problems as $|u|\to0/\infty$ to depend on $x\in\Omega$.
They also prove their results using topological arguments, combined with a
technical asymptotic analysis.

The last contribution we want to mention here, which is probably the most closely
related to our work, is the paper \cite{gs} by Garc\'ia-Meli\'an and Sabina 
de Lis. The famous
Crandall-Rabinowitz theorem \cite{cr} is extended in \cite{gs} to $p$-Laplacian
equations, in the radial setting, see \cite[Theorem~1]{gs}.
This result yields a continuous local branch of solutions
bifurcating from every eigenvalue of the $p$-Laplacian, and uniqueness of the
branch in a neighbourhood of the bifurcation point. Garc\'ia-Meli\'an and
Sabina de Lis then use this local result to obtain further information about the
global structure of the continua of solutions obtained by the topological method
in \cite{dm}.
In particular, they show that there exist
two unbounded continua $\mathcal{C}^\pm$ of respectively
positive and negative solutions, which only meet at the bifurcation point
$(\lambda_0,0) \in \mathbb{R}\times C^1[0,1]$,
where $\lambda_0$ is the first eigenvalue of the homogeneous problem
\begin{equation}\label{hom}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(u'))' = \lambda r^{N-1} \phi_p(u), \quad 0<r<1,\\
u'(0) = u(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
Since \cite[Theorem~1]{gs} is only a local result, it is not known from \cite{gs}
whether the global continua $\mathcal{C}^\pm$ are actually continuous curves or
only connected sets. In fact, the picture obtained from \cite{gs} is somewhat
hybrid, due to a mixture of
analytical arguments (essentially the implicit function theorem) used to get local
bifurcation, and the topological method yielding the global continua
$\mathcal{C}^\pm$ in \cite{dm}.

Our main purpose in this paper is to show that, under additional assumptions
on the function $f$ in \eqref{dirad.eq}
--- in particular monotonicity assumptions ---,
it is possible to describe the global structure of
solutions bifurcating from the first eigenvalue using purely analytical arguments.
We obtain smooth curves of respectively positive and negative
solutions, parametrized by the bifurcation parameter $\lambda$.

Besides, we consider
a more general homogeneous problem than \eqref{hom} in the limit $|u|\to0$. In fact,
we allow both asymptotics as $|u|\to0/\infty$ to depend on $r\in[0,1]$, 
in the same spirit as \cite{t}. The asymptotic problems as $|u|\to0/\infty$
 --- see equations \eqref{eigen} below --- are weighted homogeneous problems
respectively associated with the asymptotes
$$
f_0(r):=\lim_{\xi\to0}\frac{f(r,\xi)}{\phi_p(\xi)}>0 \quad\text{and}\quad
f_\infty(r):=\lim_{|\xi|\to\infty}\frac{f(r,\xi)}{\phi_p(\xi)}>0, \quad r\in[0,1].
$$
The properties of \eqref{eigen} with $f_0$ enable us to obtain a
local bifurcation theorem as in \cite{gs}, while
the asymptotic problem \eqref{eigen} with $f_\infty$ governs
the behaviour as $|u|\to\infty$.

We will consider two different situations. In the first case, 
we will assume that $f(r,\xi)>0$
for all $(r,\xi)\in[0,1]\times\mathbb{R}^*$ and $f(r,0)=0$ for all $r\in[0,1]$. 
It follows that the set
of non-trivial solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq} is a smooth curve of positive 
solutions ---
see Theorem~\ref{main.thm}. If we rather assume $f(r,\xi)\xi>0$ for
$(r,\xi)\in [0,1]\times\mathbb{R}^*$ and $f(r,0)\equiv0$,
then we get two smooth curves of respectively positive and
negative solutions, containing all non-trivial solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq} --- 
see Theorem~\ref{main2.thm}.
Furthermore, if $N=1$, we
are also able to deal with the case where $f$ is `sublinear' at infinity, that is,
$f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi)\to0$ as $|\xi|\to\infty$, uniformly for $r\in[0,1]$.

A one-dimensional problem similar to \eqref{dirad.eq} was studied by Rynne in
\cite{r10}, from which the present work is substantially inspired. In particular, 
the explicit
form we get for the inverse $p$-Laplacian in the radial setting allows us to study
the differentiability of this operator following arguments of \cite{br}, where the
one-dimensional $p$-Laplacian was considered. This differentiability issue is
 probably the most delicate part of the analysis. It should be noted that the 
results regarding the inverse $p$-Laplacian in Section~\ref{inverse.sec} hold 
for any $p>1$, while we had to restrict ourselves to $p>2$ in the bifurcation 
analysis for other reasons --- see Remark~\ref{diff.rem}.

We conclude this section with a brief description of the contents of the paper. In
Section~\ref{results.sec}, we give some information about the
functional setting, our precise hypotheses,
and we state our main results, Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and
\ref{main2.thm}. Then, in Section~\ref{inverse.sec}, we study an integral operator
corresponding to the inverse of the $p$-Laplacian in \eqref{dirad.eq}. The main
results about this operator are Theorems~\ref{Spcont.thm} and \ref{Sp.thm}. It should
be noted that \cite{gs} already dealt with differentiability results similar to those of
Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm}. However, we believe that the discussion in \cite{gs} is incomplete
and so Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm} is of importance in its own right. In
Section~\ref{prop.sec}, we establish some {\it a priori} properties of solutions
of \eqref{dirad.eq}, notably positivity/negativity, as well as the asymptotic  behaviour of
solutions  $(\lambda,u)$ as $|u|\to0/\infty$.
Section~\ref{cranrab.sec} is devoted to the local bifurcation analysis,
where we establish, in particular, a Crandall-Rabinowitz-type result,
Lemma~\ref{cranrab.lem}. Finally, the proofs of Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and
\ref{main2.thm} are completed in Section~\ref{global.sec}, where we show that
the local branches of solutions obtained in Section~\ref{cranrab.sec} can be extended
globally.

\section{Setting and main results}\label{results.sec}

We will work in various function spaces. We will denote by $L^1(0,1)$
the Banach space of real Lebesgue integrable functions
over $(0,1)$ and by $W^{1,1}(0,1)$ the Sobolev space of functions $u\in L^1(0,1)$
having a weak derivative $u' \in L^1(0,1)$. For $n=0,1$,
$C^n[0,1]$ will denote the space of $n$ times continuously differentiable
functions, with the usual sup-type norm $|\cdot|_n$.

In our operator formulation of \eqref{dirad.eq},
it will be convenient to use the shorthand notation
$$
X_p := \{u\in C^1[0,1] : \phi_p(u') \in C^1[0,1] \ \text{and} \ u'(0)=u(1)=0\} ,
\quad Y:=C^0[0,1].
$$

An important part of our discussion in the next section will concern the
differentiability of an integral operator, that will depend on the value of $p>1$.
This analysis will rely on results in \cite{br}, and we borrow the following notation
from there:
\begin{equation}\label{bp.eq}
B_p := \begin{cases} 
C^1[0,1], & 1< p \leqslant 2,\\
W^{1,1}(0,1), & p>2.
\end{cases}
\end{equation}

However, our main results require $p\geqslant2$ and, apart from 
Section~\ref{inverse.sec},
we will suppose $p>2$ throughout the paper --- the results are well known for $p=2$.

Denoting by $\partial_2f$ the partial derivative of $f$ with respect to 
$\xi\in\mathbb{R}$,
we make the following hypotheses on the continuous function 
$f:[0,\infty)\times\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$:
\begin{itemize}

\item[(H1)] $f(r,\cdot)\in C^1(\mathbb{R})$ for all $r\in [0,1]$ and
$\partial_2f \in C^0([0,1]\times\mathbb{R})$;

\item[(H2)] $f(r,\xi)>0$ for $(r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times\mathbb{R}^*$ and $f(r,0)\equiv0$;

\item[(H3)] $(p-1)f(r,\xi) \geqslant \partial_2f(r,\xi)\xi$ for 
$(r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times[0,\infty)$, and there
exist $\delta,\epsilon>0$ such that $(p-1)f(r,\xi) > \partial_2f(r,\xi)\xi$
for all $(r,\xi)\in(1-\delta,1]\times (0,\epsilon)$.

\end{itemize}
It follows from (H3) that, for any fixed $r\in[0,1]$, the mapping
$\xi \mapsto f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi)$
is decreasing on $(0,\infty)$. Therefore, for each $r\in[0,1]$
there exist $f_0(r)$ and $f_\infty(r)$
such that
$$f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) \to f_{0/\infty}(r) \quad\text{as} \ \xi \to 0^+/+\infty,$$
with
\begin{equation}\label{gbounds}
0\leqslant f_\infty(r) \leqslant f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) \leqslant f_0(r),
\quad\text{for all} \ (r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times(0,\infty).
\end{equation}
We will further suppose that $f_0(r)$ is finite for all $r\in[0,1]$, that
$f_0, f_\infty \in C^0[0,1]$, and (for $p>2$):
\begin{itemize}
\item[(H4)] $\lim_{\xi\to0^+}|f(\cdot,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) - f_0|_0
= \lim_{\xi\to0^+}|\partial_2 f(\cdot,\xi)/\xi^{p-2} - (p-1) f_0|_0 = 0$;
\item[(H5)] $\lim_{\xi\to\infty}|f(\cdot,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) - f_\infty|_0 = 0$.
\end{itemize}

\begin{remark}\label{sign.rem}\rm \quad
\begin{itemize}
\item[(i)] Note that (H2) and \eqref{gbounds} imply $f_0>0$ on $[0,1]$.
\item[(ii)] Also, (H3) implies that, for $r\in(1-\delta,1]$,
the function $\xi \mapsto f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi)$
is not constant on $(0,\infty)$. In particular, 
$f_\infty \not\equiv f_0$ on $[0,1]$.
\end{itemize}
\end{remark}

To state our main results,
we need to relate problem \eqref{dirad.eq} to the homogeneous
eigenvalue problems corresponding to the asymptotes $f_0, f_\infty \in C^0[0,1]$:
\begin{equation}\label{eigen} %\tag{$\mathrm{E}_{0/\infty}$}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(v'))' = \lambda r^{N-1} f_{0/\infty}(r)\phi_p(v), \quad 0<r<1,\\
v'(0) = v(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}

The following result follows from \cite[Sec.~5]{w}.

\begin{lemma}\label{eigen.lem}
If $f_{0/\infty}>0$ on $[0,1]$ then problem \eqref{eigen} has a simple
eigenvalue $\lambda_{0/\infty}>0$ with a corresponding eigenfunction
$v_{0/\infty}>0$ in $[0,1)$, and no other eigenvalue having a positive
eigenfunction. Furthermore, $f_\infty  \substack{\leqslant \\ \not\equiv}  f_0$ 
implies $\lambda_0<\lambda_\infty$.
\end{lemma}

We know from Remark \ref{sign.rem} that $f_0>0$ and $0\leqslant f_\infty \ \substack{\leqslant \\ \not\equiv} \ f_0$. For $\lambda_\infty$ to be well-defined, we will still make the following assumption.
\begin{itemize}
\item[(H6)] Either\\
(a) $N\geqslant1$ is arbitrary and $f_\infty>0$ on $[0,1]$, or\\
(b) $N=1$ and $f_\infty\equiv0$ on $[0,1]$.\\
If (a) holds, $\lambda_\infty>0$ is defined in Lemma~\ref{eigen.lem};
if (b) holds, we set $\lambda_\infty=\infty$.
\end{itemize}

We are now in a position to state our first result about the solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq}.
From now on, we will refer to the collection of hypotheses (H1) to (H6) as (H).

\begin{theorem}\label{main.thm}
Suppose that $p > 2$. If {\rm (H)} holds,
there exists
$u\in C^1((\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty), Y)$ such that $u(\lambda) \in X_p$, 
$u(\lambda)>0$ on $[0,1)$
and, for any $\lambda \in (\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$, $(\lambda,u(\lambda))$ 
is the unique non-trivial solution of \eqref{dirad.eq}. Furthermore,
\begin{equation}\label{asympt.eq}
\lim_{\lambda\to\lambda_0} |u(\lambda)|_0=0 \quad\text{and}\quad
\lim_{\lambda\to\lambda_\infty} |u(\lambda)|_0=\infty.
\end{equation}
\end{theorem}

We will see in the proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm} that the condition (H2) forces
the solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq} to be positive. If, instead of (H2) to (H5),
we suppose:
\begin{itemize}
\item[(H2')] $f(r,\xi)\xi>0$ for $(r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times\mathbb{R}^*$ and $f(r,0)\equiv0$;

\item[(H3')] in addition to (H3),
$(p-1)f(r,\xi) \leqslant \partial_2f(r,\xi)\xi$ for $(r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times(-\infty,0]$ and
$(p-1)f(r,\xi) < \partial_2f(r,\xi)\xi$ for all $(r,\xi)\in(1-\delta,1]\times (-\epsilon,0)$;

\item[(H4')] $\lim_{\xi\to0}|f(\cdot,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) - f_0|_0
= \lim_{\xi\to0}|\partial_2 f(\cdot,\xi)/|\xi|^{p-2} - (p-1) f_0|_0 = 0$;

\item[(H5')] $\lim_{|\xi|\to\infty}|f(\cdot,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) - f_\infty|_0 = 0$,
\end{itemize}
then the solutions need not be positive any more and we have the following result.
We refer to the collection of hypotheses (H1), (H2') to (H5') and (H6) as (H').

\begin{theorem}\label{main2.thm}
Suppose that $p > 2$. If {\rm (H')} holds,
there exist $u_\pm\in C^1((\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty), Y)$ such that
$u_\pm(\lambda) \in X_p$, $\pm u_\pm(\lambda)>0$ on $[0,1)$ and,
for any $\lambda \in (\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$, $(\lambda,u_\pm(\lambda))$ are the only
non-trivial solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq}.
Furthermore, both $u_-$ and $u_+$ satisfy the limits in \eqref{asympt.eq}.
\end{theorem}

We will prove Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and \ref{main2.thm} by giving the detailed
arguments for the case where (H) holds, and explaining what needs to be modified
to account for (H').

\begin{remark}\rm
Theorems~\ref{main.thm}-\ref{main2.thm} yield
a complete description of the set of solutions of \eqref{dirad.eq}, hence
the set of radial solutions of \eqref{dir.eq}. Under the additional assumption
that $f(r,\xi)$ is non-increasing in $r\in[0,1]$, it follows from
\cite[Theorem~1,~p.~51]{bro} that positive solutions
$u\in W_0^{1,p}(\Omega)\cap C^1(\overline{\Omega})$
of \eqref{dir.eq}
are radial, and hence satisfy \eqref{dirad.eq}. Thus in this case,
Theorems~\ref{main.thm}-\ref{main2.thm}  characterize all
positive solutions of \eqref{dir.eq}.
\end{remark}

As immediate corollaries of Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and \ref{main2.thm}, 
we have the following results of existence and uniqueness/multiplicity 
for the problem
\begin{equation}\label{diradf.eq}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(u'))' =  r^{N-1} f(r,u), \quad 0<r<1,\\
u'(0) = u(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}

\begin{corollary}\label{cor1}
Let $p>2$, suppose that {\rm (H)} holds, and that $1\in(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$. 
Then problem \eqref{diradf.eq} has a unique non-trivial solution $u\in X_p$, 
such that $u>0$ on $[0,1)$.
\end{corollary}

\begin{corollary}\label{cor2}
Let $p>2$, suppose that {\rm (H')} holds, and that 
$1\in(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$.
Then problem \eqref{diradf.eq} has exactly two non-trivial solutions 
$u_\pm\in X_p$, satisfying
 $\pm u_\pm>0$ on $[0,1)$.
\end{corollary}


\subsection*{Notation}
For $h\in C^0([0,1]\times\mathbb{R})$, we define the Nemitskii mapping $h:Y\to Y$ by
$h(u)(r):=h(r,u(r))$. Then $h:Y\to Y$ is bounded and continuous. We will always use
the same symbol for a function and for the induced Nemitskii mapping.

When computing estimates, the symbol $C$ will denote positive constants which
may change from line to line. Their exact values are not essential to the analysis.


\section{The inverse $p$-Laplacian}\label{inverse.sec}

In this section we study an integral operator corresponding to the inverse of
the $p$-Laplacian in the radial setting. Although our main goal in this paper is the
proof of Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and \ref{main2.thm}, which requires $p\geqslant2$,
the results in this section will be stated in greater generality, for $p>1$.
Let us start by introducing some useful
notation. For $p>1$, we let
$$
p^*:=\tfrac{1}{p-1} \quad\text{and}\quad p':=\tfrac{p}{p-1}=p^*+1.
$$
Then for $\xi,\eta\in\mathbb{R}$, the continuous function $\phi_p:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$
satisfies
\begin{equation}\label{phi.eq}
 \phi_p(\xi)=\eta \iff \xi=\phi_{p'}(\eta)=\phi_{p^*+1}(\eta).
\end{equation}

For any $h\in C^0[0,1]$, the problem
\begin{equation}\label{heq.eq}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(u'))' =  r^{N-1} h(r), \quad 0<r<1,\\
u'(0) = u(1) = 0,
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
has a unique solution $u(h) \in X_p$, given by
\begin{equation}\label{formula.eq}
u(h)(r)=\int_r^1 \phi_{p'} \Big( \int_0^s \Big(\frac{t}{s}\Big)^{N-1} h(t) \,\mathrm{d} t 
\Big) \,\mathrm{d} s.
\end{equation}
The formula \eqref{formula.eq} defines a mapping
$$
S_p:C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1], \quad h\mapsto S_p(h)=u(h),
$$ 
that we shall now study.
It will be convenient to rewrite $S_p$ as
\begin{equation}\label{comp.eq}
S_p=T_p \circ J = \mathcal{I} \circ \Phi_{p'} \circ J,
\end{equation}
where we define the following operators:
\begin{align*}
J: C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1], \quad
J(h)(s)  &:= \int_0^s \Big(\frac{t}{s}\Big)^{N-1} h(t) \,\mathrm{d} t;
\\  %\label{J.eq}\notag 
\Phi_q: C^0[0,1] \to C^0[0,1], \quad
\Phi_q(g)(s)  &:= \phi_q(g(s)), \quad\text{for any }  q>1; \\ %\label{Phi.eq}\notag 
\mathcal{I}:C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1], \quad
\mathcal{I}(k)(r)  &:= \int_r^1 k(s) \,\mathrm{d} s;\\ %\label{defofI.eq}\notag
T_p:C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1], \quad
 T_p  &:=\mathcal{I}\circ\Phi_{p'} \quad\text{for any }  p>1. 
\end{align*}

It is clear that $\Phi_q, \mathcal{I}$ and $T_p$ are continuous and bounded,
for any $q,p>1$, and that $\mathcal{I}$ is linear. Furthermore, $S_p$ is
 $p^*$-homogeneous.


\begin{remark} \rm
For $1<q<2$, $\Phi_q$ does not map $C^1[0,1]$ into itself, which causes
trouble in differentiating $S_p$ for $p>2$ (i.e. $p'<2$). Nevertheless, if $g\in C^1[0,1]$
has only simple zeros, then $\Phi_q$ maps a neighbourhood of $g$ in $C^1[0,1]$
continuously into $L^1(0,1)$ (see Lemma~2.1 in \cite{br}).
\end{remark}

The following lemma gives important properties of $J$.

\begin{lemma}\label{J.lem} \quad 
\begin{itemize}
\item[(i)] $J: C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1]$ is well-defined.
\item[(ii)] $J: C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1]$ is a bounded linear operator,
with norm $\Vert J\Vert \leqslant 2$.
\item[(iii)] $J$ is Fr\'echet differentiable on $C^0[0,1]$ with $DJ=J$.
\item[(iv)] $J: C^0[0,1] \to C^0[0,1]$ is compact.
\end{itemize}
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof} (i) Using de l'Hospital's rule, we get
$$
\lim_{s\to0} J(s)=\tfrac{1}{N-1}\lim_{s\to0}sh(s)=0,
$$
and it follows that $J(h)\in C^0[0,1]$ for all $h\in C^0[0,1]$.
Furthermore,
$$
\lim_{s\to0}\frac{J(s)}{s}=\lim_{s\to0}\frac{s^{N-1}h(s)}{Ns^{N-1}}=\frac{h(0)}{N},
$$
and so $J(h)\in C^1[0,1]$, with $J'(0)=h(0)/N$.

(ii) We first have
\begin{equation*}\label{estJ0.eq}
|J(h)|_0
\leqslant \sup_{0\leqslant s\leqslant 1} 
\Big| \int_0^s \Big(\frac{t}{s}\Big)^{N-1} \,\mathrm{d} t \Big| |h|_0
\leqslant  \frac{|h|_0}{N}.
\end{equation*}
Then, since
\begin{equation} \label{diffJ.eq}
\begin{split}
J(h)'(s)
&=(1-N)s^{-N}\int_0^s t^{N-1} h(t) \,\mathrm{d} t + h(s)  \\
&=(1-N)s^{-1}J(h)(s)+h(s) \quad \text{for all} \ s\in(0,1],
\end{split}
\end{equation}
we have
\begin{equation*}\label{estJ1.eq}
|J(h)'|_0
\leqslant  \sup_{0\leqslant s\leqslant 1}
\big| (1-N)s^{-N} \int_0^s t^{N-1} \,\mathrm{d} t \big| |h|_0 + |h|_0
\leqslant  \frac{2N-1}{N} |h|_0.
\end{equation*}
It follows that $J$ is bounded, with norm
$$
\Vert J\Vert:=\sup_{|h|_0=1} |J(h)|_1\leqslant \frac1N + \frac{2N-1}{N}=2.
$$

(iii) follows from (ii).

(iv) follows from (ii) and the compact embedding $C^1[0,1] \hookrightarrow C^0[0,1]$.
\end{proof}

We can now state important properties of $S_p$, following from the above results.

\begin{theorem}\label{Spcont.thm}
The mapping $S_p: C^0[0,1] \to C^1[0,1]$ defined by \eqref{comp.eq} is continuous, 
bounded and compact.
\end{theorem}

The following result is a simple adaptation of \cite[Theorem~3.2]{br} 
to the present context. This is the first step towards the differentiability 
of $S_p$.

\begin{proposition}\label{Tp.prop} \quad
\begin{itemize}
\item[(i)] Suppose $1<p<2$. Then $T_p: C^0[0,1] \to B_p$ is $C^1$, and for all
$g,\bar g$ in $C^0[0,1]$,
\begin{equation}\label{derivofTp.eq}
DT_p(g)\bar g = p^*\mathcal{I} (|g|^{p^*-1}\bar g).
\end{equation}

\item[(ii)] Suppose $p>2$ and let $g_0\in C^1[0,1]$ have only simple zeros
(i.e. $g_0(s)=0 \Rightarrow g_0'(s)\neq0$). Then $T_p: C^1[0,1] \to B_p$ is $C^1$
on a neighbourhood $U_0$ of $g_0$ in $C^1[0,1]$, and \eqref{derivofTp.eq} holds
for all $g\in U_0, \ \bar g \in C^1[0,1]$.
\end{itemize}
\end{proposition}

We can now prove the main result of this section,
about the differentiability of $S_p$.
Its statement and proof are very similar to those of
Theorem~3.4 in \cite{br}.

\begin{theorem}\label{Sp.thm} \quad
\begin{itemize}
\item[(i)] Suppose $1<p<2$. Then $S_p: C^0[0,1] \to B_p$ is $C^1$, and for all
$h,\bar h$ in $C^0[0,1]$,
\begin{equation}\label{DSp.eq}
DS_p(h)\bar h = p^*\mathcal{I} (|u(h)'|^{2-p}J(\bar h)),
\end{equation}
where $u(h)=S_p(h)$. Furthermore,
\begin{equation} \label{lineariz.eq}
v=DS_p(h)\bar h  \Longrightarrow  v \in B_p  \text{ and } 
\begin{cases}
-(r^{N-1}|u(h)'(r)|^{p-2}v'(r))' = p^*r^{N-1}\bar h(r),\\
v'(0) = v(1) = 0,
\end{cases}
\end{equation}
\item[(ii)] Suppose $p>2$ and let $h_0\in C^0[0,1]$ be such that
$u(h_0)'(r)=0 \Rightarrow h_0(r)\neq0$. Then there exists a neighbourhood $V_0$
of $h_0$ in $C^0[0,1]$ such that the mapping
 $h\mapsto |u(h)'|^{2-p}: V_0 \to L^1(0,1)$
is continuous, $S_p:V_0 \to B_p$ is $C^1$, and $DS_p$ satisfies
\eqref{DSp.eq} and \eqref{lineariz.eq}, for all $h\in V_0$, $\bar h \in C^0[0,1]$.
\end{itemize}
\end{theorem}

\begin{proof} (i) In view of \eqref{comp.eq},
the differentiability of $S_p: C^0[0,1] \to B_p$ follows from
Lemma~\ref{J.lem}(iii) and Proposition~\ref{Tp.prop}(i). 
Then, for $h,\bar h \in C^0[0,1]$,
$$
DS_p(h)\bar h = DT_p(J(h))J(\bar h) = p^*\mathcal{I}(|J(h)|^{p^*-1}J(\bar h)).
$$
Now letting $u(h)=S_p(h)$ and differentiating \eqref{formula.eq} yields
$$
u(h)'=\phi_{p'}(J(h))=\phi_{p^*+1}(J(h))  \Longrightarrow 
|u(h)'|^{2-p}=|J(h)|^{p^*-1},
$$
proving \eqref{DSp.eq}, from which the continuity of $DS_p$ follows.
 We will prove below that \eqref{lineariz.eq} holds in both cases (i) and (ii).

(ii) The case $p>2$ is more delicate and uses Proposition~\ref{Tp.prop}(ii). 
We define
$g_0:=J(h_0)\in C^1[0,1]$ and $u_0:=u(h_0)$. Then
$$
-\phi_p(u_0'(r))=g_0(r) \quad\text{and}\quad -(r^{N-1}\phi_p(u_0'(r)))'
=r^{N-1}h_0(r), \quad 0\leqslant r\leqslant 1.
$$
We will show that $g_0$ has only simple zeros.
First remark that
$$
g_0(r)=0   \Longrightarrow  \phi_p(u_0'(r))=0  \Longrightarrow  u_0'(r)=0
  \Longrightarrow  h_0(r)\neq 0,
$$
by our hypothesis. But now by \eqref{diffJ.eq},
\begin{equation}\label{dg0.eq}
g_0'(r)=(1-N)r^{-1}g_0(r)+h_0(r), \quad 0\leqslant r\leqslant 1.
\end{equation}
Therefore, if $g_0(r)=0$ with $r>0$, then $g_0'(r)=h_0(r)\neq0$. On the other hand,
if $g_0(0)=0$, it follows from \eqref{dg0.eq} that $Ng_0'(0)=h_0(0)\neq0$.
Hence, $g_0$ has only simple zeros. Apart from our statement \eqref{lineariz.eq},
which is slightly more precise than its analogue in \cite{br},
the proof then follows that of \cite[Theorem~3.4]{br}, using
Proposition~\ref{Tp.prop}(ii) and the analogue of
\cite[Lemma~2.1]{br} for the present setting.

To prove statement \eqref{lineariz.eq}, let $v=DS_p(h)\bar h$, $h,\bar h \in C^0[0,1]$.
Then, from \eqref{DSp.eq},
$$
v(r)=p^*\int_r^1|u(h)'(s)|^{2-p}\int_0^s\Big(\frac{t}{s}\Big)^{N-1}\bar h(t) 
\,\mathrm{d} t \,\mathrm{d} s, \quad r\in[0,1].
$$
Since $|u(h)'|^{2-p} \in L^1(0,1)$ in both cases (i) and (ii), it follows that
 $v(1)=0$.
Furthermore,
\begin{equation}\label{flat}
v'(r)=-p^*|u(h)'(r)|^{2-p}\int_0^r\Big(\frac{t}{r}\Big)^{N-1}\bar h(t) 
\,\mathrm{d} t, \quad r\in[0,1] ,
\end{equation}
from which the equation in \eqref{lineariz.eq} easily follows.
 But \eqref{flat} also implies
$$
|v'(r)|\leqslant C_1 |u(h)'(r)|^{2-p}r, \quad r\in[0,1].
$$
Now since $u(h)'(r)=-\phi_{p'}(\int_0^r(t/r)^{N-1} h(t) \,\mathrm{d} t)$, 
it follows that $|u(h)'(r)|\leqslant C_2 r^{p'-1}$, so that
$$
|v'(r)|\leqslant C r^{(p'-1)(2-p)+1} = C r^{p^*}, \quad r \in [0,1],
$$
showing that $v'(0)=0$ and finishing the proof.
\end{proof}

\begin{remark}\rm
Note that Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm} reduces to well-known results for $p=2$.
\end{remark}

\section{Properties of solutions}\label{prop.sec}

In this section we discuss some {\it a priori} properties of solutions.
We first study the sign of solutions and then
we determine their behaviour as $|u|_0\to0/\infty$.

By the results of
Section~\ref{inverse.sec}, $(\lambda,u) \in [0,\infty)\times X_p$ is a solution of
\eqref{dirad.eq} if and only if
\begin{equation}\label{dirop.eq}
F(\lambda,u) := u - \lambda^{p^*} S_p(f(u)) = 0, \quad 
(\lambda,u)\in [0,\infty)\times Y.
\end{equation}
Note that $F:[0,\infty)\times Y\to Y$ is continuous. 
Furthermore, $F(0,u)=0 \implies u=0$, so we will only consider solutions in
$$
\mathcal{S} := \{(\lambda,u) \in (0,\infty) \times Y:
(\lambda,u) \text{ is a solution of \eqref{dirop.eq} with }u\not\equiv0 \}.
$$

\subsection{The case where (H) holds}

We start with the positivity of solutions.

\begin{proposition}\label{pos.prop}
Let $(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}$.
Then $u>0$ on $[0,1)$, $u$ is decreasing and satisfies $u'(1)<0$.
\end{proposition}

\begin{proof} Equation \eqref{dirop.eq} yields
$$
u(r)=\lambda^{p^*}\int_r^1\phi_{p'}\Big(\int_0^s
\Big(\frac{t}{s}\Big)^{N-1} f(t,u(t)) \,\mathrm{d} t\Big) \,\mathrm{d} s.
$$
Since $u\not\equiv0$ is continuous, it follows from (H2) that $u(0)>0$.
Furthermore,
$$
\phi_p(u'(r)) = -\lambda \int_0^r\Big(\frac{t}{r}\Big)^{N-1} f(t,u(t)) 
\,\mathrm{d} t \leqslant 0, \quad r \in [0,1],
$$
showing that $u'(r) \leqslant 0$ for all $r\in[0,1]$, so $u$ is decreasing on $[0,1]$.
Finally,
$$
\phi_p(u'(1)) = -\lambda \int_0^1 t^{N-1} f(t,u(t)) \,\mathrm{d} t < 0.
$$
This implies $u'(1)<0$, from which $u>0$ on $[0,1)$ now follows.
\end{proof}

For the following results, we will use the function 
$g:[0,1]\times\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ defined by
\begin{equation}\label{gdef}
g(r,\xi) :=
\begin{cases} f(r,\xi)/\phi_p(\xi) , \quad \xi\neq0,\\
f_0(r), \quad \xi=0.
\end{cases}
\end{equation}
It follows from our assumptions that $g \in C^0([0,1]\times\mathbb{R})$ and 
$g$ satisfies
\begin{equation}\label{boundsforg}
0\leqslant f_\infty(r) \leqslant g(r,\xi) \leqslant f_0(r), 
\quad (r,\xi) \in [0,1]\times\mathbb{R}.
\end{equation}

\begin{lemma}\label{asympt.lem}
Consider a sequence $\{(\lambda_n,u_n)\} \subset \mathcal{S}$.
Suppose that $|u_n|_0\to0/\infty$ as $n\to\infty$. 
Then $\lambda_n\to\lambda_{0/\infty}$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Setting $v_n:=u_n/|u_n|_0$, we have
\begin{equation}\label{eqforvn}
v_n=S_p(\lambda_ng(u_n)\phi_p(v_n))
\end{equation}
or, equivalently,
\begin{equation}\label{slforvn}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(v_n'))' = \lambda_n r^{N-1} g(u_n)\phi_p(v_n), \quad 0<r<1,\\
v_n'(0) = v_n(1) = 0,
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $u\mapsto g(u)$ denotes the Nemitskii mapping induced by $g$.
Since $v_n>0$ in $[0,1)$ for all $n$,
it follows from \eqref{boundsforg}, \eqref{slforvn}, and the Sturmian-type comparison
theorem in \cite[Sec. 4]{w} that
\begin{equation}\label{lambounds.eq}
0<\lambda_0 \leqslant \lambda_n \leqslant \lambda_\infty\leqslant\infty.
\end{equation}

Let us first suppose that hypothesis (H6)(a) holds.
Then $\lambda_\infty<\infty$ and we can suppose that
$\lambda_n\to\bar\lambda \in [\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty]$ as $n\to\infty$. 
Now $|v_n|_0=1$ for all $n$, so $\{\lambda_ng(u_n)\phi_p(v_n)\}$ 
is bounded in $C^0[0,1]$ and
$\{S_p(\lambda_ng(u_n)\phi_p(v_n))\}$ is bounded in $C^1[0,1]$.
Therefore, by \eqref{eqforvn}, we can suppose that $|v_n-\bar v|_0 \to 0$ as 
$n\to\infty$, for some $\bar v \in C^0[0,1]$. It then follows by fairly 
standard arguments (see e.g. the proof of \cite[Lemma~5.4]{d}) that
$$
g(u_n)\phi_p(v_n) \to
f_{0/\infty}\phi_p(\bar v) \quad \text{provided }  |u_n|_0\to0/\infty.
$$
Hence $\bar v$ satisfies $\bar v=S_p(\bar\lambda f_{0/\infty}\phi_p(\bar v))$ if
$|u_n|_0\to0/\infty$; that is,
\begin{equation}\label{slforvbar}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}\phi_p(\bar v'))' =  \bar\lambda r^{N-1} f_{0/\infty}\phi_p(\bar v),
 \quad 0<r<1,\\
\bar v'(0) = \bar v(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
Now the proof of
Proposition~\ref{pos.prop} shows that $\bar v>0$ in $[0,1)$ and it follows 
from the properties of the eigenvalue problem \eqref{slforvbar} 
(see \cite[Sec.~5]{w}) that $\bar\lambda=\lambda_{0/\infty}$.

We next suppose that hypothesis (H6)(b) holds; i.e., $N=1$ and
$f_\infty\equiv0$. We first prove that
$\lambda_n\to\infty$ if $|u_n|_0\to\infty$. Indeed, if we suppose instead 
that $\{\lambda_n\}$ is
bounded, then the above argument yields a $\bar v \in C^0[0,1]$ such that
$v_n \to \bar v$ in $C^0[0,1]$ (up to a subsequence), and it follows that
$g(u_n)\phi_p(v_n)\to0$ in $C^0[0,1]$. Then \eqref{eqforvn} implies $\bar v=0$,
contradicting $|\bar v|_0=1$.

Regarding the behaviour as $|u_n|_0\to0$, the argument for the case $f_\infty>0$
will hold in exactly the same way for $f_\infty\equiv0$ if we can show 
that $\{\lambda_n\}$ is bounded. It follows from \eqref{eqforvn} that
$$
1 =|v_n|_0=v_n(0)=
\lambda_n^{p^*} \int_0^1 \phi_{p'} 
\Big( \int_0^s g(u_n)\phi_p(v_n)\,\mathrm{d} t\Big) \,\mathrm{d} s.
$$
Since $u_n, v_n$ are decreasing on $[0,1]$ and, for any fixed $t\in[0,1]$,
the mapping $\xi \mapsto f(t,\xi)/\xi^{p-1}$ is decreasing on $(0,\infty)$, we have
\begin{align*}
\lambda_n^{-p^*} & =\int_0^1 \phi_{p'} 
\Big( \int_0^s g(u_n)\phi_p(v_n)\,\mathrm{d} t\Big) \,\mathrm{d} s \\
& \geqslant \int_0^{1/2} \phi_{p'} 
 \Big( \int_0^s	\phi_p(v_n(1/2))\frac{f(t,u_n(0))}{u_n(0)^{p-1}}  
 \,\mathrm{d} t\Big) \,\mathrm{d} s \\
& \geqslant Cv_n(1/2)\min_{0\leqslant t \leqslant\frac12}
\Big(\frac{f(t,u_n(0))}{u_n(0)^{p-1}}\Big)^{p^*}.
\end{align*}
Since $N=1$, it follows from \eqref{dirad.eq} that $u$ is concave for all
$(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}$. Hence, there is a constant $M>0$ (independent of $n$) 
such that $v_n(1/2)\geqslant M|v_n|_0=M$ for all $n$.
Furthermore,
$f(t,u_n(0))/u_n(0)^{p-1}\to f_0(t)>0$ uniformly for $t\in[0,\frac12]$ and so there
exists $\delta>0$ such that $\lambda_n^{-p^*}\geqslant\delta$ for $n$ large enough.
Therefore, $\{\lambda_n\}$ is bounded.

Note that the arguments above only show that $\lambda_{n_k}\to\lambda_{0/\infty}$
for a subsequence $\{\lambda_{n_k}\}$.
Since they can be applied to any subsequence of $\{\lambda_n\}$,
it follows that the whole sequence must converge. This concludes the proof.
\end{proof}

\begin{remark}\label{lambounds.rem}\rm
The proof of \eqref{lambounds.eq} shows that
$\lambda_0\leqslant\lambda\leqslant\lambda_\infty$ for all
 $(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}$.
\end{remark}

\subsection{The case where (H') holds}

In this case we consider solutions in the sets
$$
\mathcal{S}^\pm := \{(\lambda,u) \in (0,\infty) \times Y:
(\lambda,u) \ \text{is a solution of} \ \eqref{dirop.eq} \ \text{with} \
u\not\equiv0, \ \text{and} \  \pm u \geqslant0 \}.
$$
The following result can be proved as Proposition~\ref{pos.prop}, using (H2') instead
of (H2).
\begin{proposition}\label{pos'.prop}
Let $(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}^\pm$.
Then $\pm u>0$ on $[0,1)$, $\pm u$ is decreasing and satisfies $\pm u'(1)<0$.
\end{proposition}

Regarding the asymptotic behaviour, we have
\begin{lemma}\label{asympt'.lem}
Consider a sequence $\{(\lambda_n,u_n)\} \subset \mathcal{S}^\pm$.
Suppose that $|u_n|_0\to0/\infty$ as $n\to\infty$. Then $\lambda_n\to\lambda_{0/\infty}$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The proof is the same as for Lemma~\ref{asympt.lem} in the case where
$\{(\lambda_n,u_n)\} \subset \mathcal{S}^+$. In case $u_n\leqslant0$,
 as similar proof can be carried
out, setting $v_n:=-u_n/|u_n|_0\geqslant0$ and remarking that,
 with this new definition,
$v_n$ still satisfies \eqref{eqforvn}.
\end{proof}

\begin{remark}\label{lambounds'.rem}\rm
We also have
$\lambda_0\leqslant\lambda\leqslant\lambda_\infty$ for all 
$(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}^\pm$.
\end{remark}

\section{Local bifurcation}\label{cranrab.sec}

To prove Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and \ref{main2.thm}, we begin with a local 
bifurcation result in the spirit of Crandall and Rabinowitz \cite{cr}. 
This will allow us to start off the bifurcating branch from the line of trivial 
solutions at the point $(\lambda_0,0)$
in $\mathbb{R}\times Y$. Crandall and Rabinowitz' original result pertained
to semilinear equations, i.e. $p=2$. A first generalization to $p>2$ was given
in \cite{gs} for a problem very similar to \eqref{dirad.eq}. 
The main difference in our setting is that we allow the asymptote $f_0$ 
to depend on $r$, so that we get the weighted eigenvalue problem \eqref{eigen} with $f_0$ 
instead of problem \eqref{hom}.

In the following, we assume  the principal eigenfunction $v_0$ given in
Lemma~\ref{eigen.lem} is normalized so that
$$
\int_0^1 r^{N-1} f_0(r) |v_0(r)|^p \,\mathrm{d} r = 1.
$$
We define the subspace
$$
Z:=\{z \in Y:  \int_0^1 r^{N-1} f_0 |v_0|^{p-2}v_0 z \,\mathrm{d} r = 0\}
$$
and we remark that
\begin{equation}\label{decomp}
Y=\mathrm{span}\{v_0\}\oplus W.
\end{equation}
To be able to discuss later cases (H) and (H'),
it will be convenient to state our local bifurcation result more generally,
in terms of the function
$G: \mathbb{R}^2 \times Z \to Y$ defined by
$$
G(s,\lambda,z):=
\begin{cases}
v_0+z - S_p(\lambda f(sv_0+sz)/\phi_p(s)), & s\neq0,\\
v_0+z - S_p(\lambda f_0\phi_p(v_0+z)), & s=0.
\end{cases}
$$
Note that $G(s,\lambda,z)=F(\lambda,s(v_0+z))/s$ for all $s\neq0$, where
$F:\mathbb{R}\times Y \to Y$ was defined in \eqref{dirop.eq}. It follows from
the definitions of $\lambda_0$ and $v_0$ that $G(0,\lambda_0,0)=0$.

\begin{lemma}\label{cranrab.lem}
Let $p>2$ and
suppose that (H1) and (H4) hold. There exist $\varepsilon>0$, a neighbourhood
$U$ of $(\lambda_0,0)$ in $\mathbb{R}\times Z$  and a continuous mapping
$s \mapsto (\lambda(s),z(s)): (-\varepsilon,\varepsilon) \to U$ such that
$(\lambda(0),z(0))=(\lambda_0,0)$ and
$$
\{(s,\lambda,z)\in(-\varepsilon,\varepsilon) \times U: G(s,\lambda,z)=0\}
=\{(s,\lambda(s),z(s)):s\in(-\varepsilon,\varepsilon)\}.
$$
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Our proof follows that of \cite[Theorem~1]{gs} but we give it here for
completeness. Under hypotheses (H1) and (H4), it is easily seen that $G$ is continuous.
It follows from Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm}(ii) that $S_p$ is $C^1$ in a neighbourhood
of $\lambda_0 f_0 \phi_p(v_0)$ in $Y$. A routine verification then shows that there
is a neighbourhood $U$ of $(0,\lambda_0,0)$ in $\mathbb{R}^2\times Z$ 
such that the mapping
$(\lambda,z) \mapsto G(s,\lambda,z)$ is differentiable in
$$
A_s:=\{(\lambda,z) \in \mathbb{R}\times Z: (s,\lambda,z) \in U\},
$$
for any $s\in\mathbb{R}$ such that $A_s \neq\emptyset$. 
Furthermore, the Fr\'echet derivative
$D_{(\lambda,z)} G$ is continuous on $U$. Since
\begin{equation}\label{opeigen}
v_0=S_p(\lambda_0 f_0 \phi_p(v_0)),
\end{equation}
it follows from \eqref{DSp.eq} that
\begin{equation} \label{derivG.eq}
\begin{split}
& D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0)(\bar\lambda,\bar z) \\
&= \bar z - \lambda_0(p^*)^{-1} DS_p(\lambda_0 f_0 \phi_p(v_0))f_0|v_0|^{p-2} \bar z
-p^* (\bar\lambda/\lambda_0)v_0, \quad  (\bar\lambda, \bar z) \in \mathbb{R} \times Z.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
To conclude the proof using the implicit function theorem as stated in Appendix~A
of \cite{cr}, we need only check that
$D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0): \mathbb{R} \times Z \to Y$ is an isomorphism.

Let us first show that the mapping
$$
L\bar z :=  \lambda_0(p^*)^{-1} DS_p(\lambda_0 f_0 \phi_p(v_0))f_0|v_0|^{p-2} \bar z
$$
leaves the subspace $Z$ invariant. Suppose $\bar z \in Z$ and let $z=L\bar z$.
By \eqref{lineariz.eq} and \eqref{opeigen}, we have
\begin{equation}\label{eqforz}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}|v_0'|^{p-2}z')' =\lambda_0 r^{N-1} f_0|v_0|^{p-2}\bar z, \quad 0<r<1,\\
z'(0) = z(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
Multiplying both sides of the equation by $v_0$ and integrating by parts 
twice yields
$$
\int_0^1 r^{N-1} f_0 |v_0|^{p-2}v_0 z \,\mathrm{d} r =
\int_0^1 r^{N-1} f_0 |v_0|^{p-2}v_0 \bar z \,\mathrm{d} r = 0,
$$
showing that $z \in Z$. In view of the decomposition \eqref{decomp},
$$
D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0)(\bar\lambda,\bar z)=0 \implies
\bar\lambda=0  \text{ and }  \bar z = L \bar z.
$$
Then $\bar z$ is a solution of \eqref{eqforz} and an argument similar to the proof
of \cite[Theorem~7]{gs} shows that there exists $c\in\mathbb{R}$ such that 
$\bar z= c v_0$.
Since $\bar z \in Z$, it follows that $c=0$, showing that the null space
$N(D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0))=\{0\}$.

Finally, from \eqref{decomp} and the invariance of $Z$ under $L$,
$D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0)$ is isomorphically equivalent to the operator
$T: \mathbb{R}\times Z \to \mathbb{R}\times Z$ defined by
$$
T(\bar\lambda,\bar z)=(\bar\lambda,\bar z) -((1+p^*/\lambda_0)\bar\lambda, L\bar z).
$$
It follows from Theorem~\ref{Spcont.thm} that
$T$ is a compact perturbation of the identity on
$\mathbb{R}\times Z$. Therefore, the triviality of 
$N(D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0))$ implies that
$D_{(\lambda,z)}G(0,\lambda_0,0)$ is an isomorphism, finishing the proof.
\end{proof}

\begin{remark}\rm
As noted earlier, the above result was presented in \cite{gs} in the case where
$f_0\equiv1$.
However, the proof relies heavily on the differentiability properties of 
the integral operator
$S_p$, given by Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm}, and the arguments establishing
these properties in \cite{gs} seem incomplete. Hence, in addition to 
the slightly more general context considered here, our work completes the proof of
\cite[Theorem~1]{gs}.
\end{remark}

\begin{remark}\label{diff.rem}\rm
Since the differentiability results in Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm} cover the whole 
range $p>1$, we first had some hope to obtain bifurcation for all $p>1$. 
It turns out that the integration by parts arguments involved in the 
proof of Lemma~\ref{cranrab.lem} require at least
$p\geqslant 1+1/N$ (for the boundary terms to vanish). 
Moreover, the differentiability of the function $G$ in the present functional 
setting requires $p\geqslant2$, and we have not
been able to find another suitable setting allowing for $p<2$.
\end{remark}

We can now state the local bifurcation results for equation \eqref{dirop.eq}.

\begin{theorem}\label{loc1.thm}
Let $p>2$ and suppose that {\rm (H)} holds. 
There exist $\varepsilon_0\in(0,\varepsilon)$ and a neighbourhood $U_0$ of
$(\lambda_0,0)$ in $\mathbb{R}\times Y$ such that
\begin{equation}\label{loc1.eq}
\{(\lambda,u) \in U_0: F(\lambda,u)=0\}=\{(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s))): 
s \in [0,\varepsilon_0)\}.
\end{equation}
\end{theorem}

\begin{proof}
It follows from Lemma~\ref{cranrab.lem} that $(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s)))$ 
is a solution of \eqref{dirop.eq} for all $s \in [0,\varepsilon)$.
To prove the reverse inclusion in \eqref{loc1.eq},
let us first remark that, by Proposition~\ref{pos.prop},
$s\in(-\varepsilon,0)$ yields no solutions of \eqref{dirop.eq}. 
Furthermore, a compactness
argument similar to that in \cite[p.~39]{gs} shows that any solution in
a small enough neighbourhood of $(\lambda_0,0)$ in $\mathbb{R}\times Y$
 must have the form
$(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s)))$ for some $s \in [0,\varepsilon)$. 
This completes the proof.
\end{proof}

\begin{theorem}\label{loc2.thm}
Let $p>2$ and suppose that {\rm (H')} holds. 
There exist $\varepsilon_1\in(0,\varepsilon)$ and a neighbourhood
$U_1$ of $(\lambda_0,0)$ in $\mathbb{R}\times Y$ such that
\begin{equation}\label{loc2.eq}
\{(\lambda,u) \in U_1: F(\lambda,u)=0\}=\{(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s))): 
s \in (-\varepsilon_1,\varepsilon_1)\},
\end{equation}
with
\begin{equation}\label{loc2-.eq}
\{(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s))): s \in (-\varepsilon_1,0)\}\subset\mathcal{S}^-
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}\label{loc2+.eq}
\{(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s))): s \in (0,\varepsilon_1)\}\subset\mathcal{S}^+.
\end{equation}
\end{theorem}

\begin{proof}
The local characterization of solutions in \eqref{loc2.eq} follows similarly to
\eqref{loc1.eq} in Theorem~\ref{loc1.thm}. For $\varepsilon_1>0$ small enough,
statements \eqref{loc2-.eq} and
\eqref{loc2+.eq} follow from the construction of the solutions
 $(\lambda(s),s(v_0+z(s)))$.
\end{proof}

\section{Global continuation}\label{global.sec}

Our goal in this final section is to complete the proofs of
 Theorems~\ref{main.thm} and \ref{main2.thm}. 
Namely, we will first show that the local curves of solutions obtained
in Section~\ref{cranrab.sec} can be parametrized by $\lambda$ and then 
we will prove that they can be extended globally.

\subsection{Proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm}}

We begin with a non-degeneracy result implying that, in fact, through any non-trivial
solution of \eqref{dirop.eq}, there passes a (local) continuous curve of solutions,
parametrized by $\lambda$.

\begin{lemma}\label{IFT.lem}
The function $F \in C([0,\infty)\times Y, Y)$ defined in \eqref{dirop.eq} 
is continuously differentiable in a neighbourhood of any point 
$(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}$, with
$$
D_u F(\lambda,u) v = v - \lambda DS_p(\lambda f(u)) \partial_2 f(u) v, \quad v\in Y.
$$
Furthermore, for any $(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}$, $D_u F(\lambda,u):Y\to Y$ 
is an isomorphism.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The statement about the differentiability of $F$ follows from Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm}(ii)
and Proposition~\ref{pos.prop}. Furthermore, we see that
$D_u F(\lambda,u):Y\to Y$ is a compact perturbation of the identity. Therefore,
to show that it is an isomorphism, we only need to prove that
$N(D_u F(\lambda,u))=\{0\}$.
Let $v\in N(D_u F(\lambda,u))$. By \eqref{lineariz.eq}, we have
\begin{equation}\label{eqforv}
\begin{gathered}
-(r^{N-1}|u'|^{p-2}v')' =  p^* \lambda r^{N-1} \partial_2 f(u) v, \quad 0<r<1,\\
v'(0) = v(1) = 0.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
Multiplying the equation in \eqref{eqforv} by $u$, that in \eqref{dirad.eq} by $v$,
subtracting and integrating by parts yield
\begin{equation}\label{lagrange}
r^{N-1}|u'|^{p-2}(uv'-u'v)(r)=\lambda\int_0^r s^{N-1}[f(u)-p^*\partial_2f(u)u]v\,\mathrm{d} s,
\quad r\in[0,1].
\end{equation}
Suppose that $v\not\equiv0$, and let $r_1>0$ be the smallest
positive zero of $v$. Without loss of generality, we can suppose $v>0$ on $(0,r_1)$.
If $r_1<1$, we have $u(r_1)v'(r_1)<0$. However by (H3),
\begin{equation*}\label{signofv}
r_1^{N-1}|u'(r_1)|^{p-2}u(r_1)v'(r_1)=
\lambda\int_0^{r_1} s^{N-1}[f(u)-p^*\partial_2f(u)u]v\,\mathrm{d} s \geqslant 0,
\end{equation*}
a contradiction. If $r_1=1$, (H3) and Proposition~\ref{pos.prop} imply
$$
0=|u'(1)|^{p-2}u(1)v'(1)=
\lambda \int_0^{1} s^{N-1}[f(u)-p^*\partial_2f(u)u]v\,\mathrm{d} s > 0,
$$
again a contradiction. Hence, $v\not\equiv0$ is impossible and so
$N(D_u F(\lambda,u))=\{0\}$.
\end{proof}

By Remark~\ref{lambounds.rem}, Theorem~\ref{loc1.thm} and Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem},
the implicit function theorem yields a maximal open interval 
$(\lambda_0,\widetilde\lambda)$ with
$\lambda_0<\widetilde\lambda\leqslant\lambda_\infty$ and a mapping
$u \in C^1((\lambda_0,\widetilde\lambda),Y)$ such that 
$(\lambda,u(\lambda))\in\mathcal{S}$ for all
$\lambda\in(\lambda_0,\widetilde\lambda)$, and 
$\lim_{\lambda\to\lambda_0}u(\lambda)=0$.
Let us show that $\widetilde\lambda=\lambda_\infty$. Suppose by contradiction that
$\lambda_0<\widetilde\lambda<\lambda_\infty\leqslant\infty$, and consider a sequence 
$\lambda_n\to\widetilde\lambda$.
If $|u(\lambda_n)|_0$ is unbounded, it follows by Lemma~\ref{asympt.lem} that
$\widetilde\lambda=\lambda_\infty$ and we are done. On the other hand, if
 $|u(\lambda_n)|_0$ is
bounded, a compactness argument similar to that yielding the convergence of
$\{v_n\}$ in the proof of Lemma~\ref{asympt.lem} shows that there exists
$\widetilde u\in Y$ such that $u(\lambda_n)\to\widetilde u$ (up to a subsequence), and
\begin{equation*}
\widetilde u = S_p(\widetilde\lambda f(\widetilde u)).
\end{equation*}
Note that, by Lemma~\ref{asympt.lem}, we cannot have $u\equiv0$.
Hence, $(\widetilde\lambda,\widetilde u)\in\mathcal{S}$, 
$F(\widetilde\lambda,\widetilde u)=0$, and so by Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem}
and the implicit function theorem, we can extend the curve $u(\lambda)$ 
through the point
$(\widetilde\lambda,\widetilde u)$, contradicting the maximality of 
$\widetilde\lambda$. Therefore,
$\widetilde\lambda=\lambda_\infty$, and we have a solution curve
$$
\mathcal{S}_0:=\{(\lambda,u(\lambda)):\lambda\in(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)\}
\subset\mathcal{S}.
$$

We next prove that $\lim_{\lambda\to\lambda_\infty}|u(\lambda)|_0=\infty$. 
In the case where (H6)(a) holds, this readily follows by the above argument 
for if $|u(\lambda)|_0$ were bounded as $\lambda\to\lambda_\infty<\infty$, 
we could continue the solution curve beyond
$\lambda=\lambda_\infty$. In case (H6)(b) holds, the result follows from

\begin{lemma}\label{blowup.lem}
Suppose that {\rm (H6)(b)} holds, and consider
$(\lambda_n,u_n)\in\mathcal{S}$ with $\lambda_n\to\infty$. Then $|u_n|_0\to\infty$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
By contradiction, suppose there exists a constant $R>0$ and a subsequence, 
still denoted by $(\lambda_n,u_n)$, such that $|u_n|_0\leqslant R$ for all $n$. 
Then, by (H2) and (H3),
\begin{align*}
|u_n|_0=u_n(0)	
&= \int_0^1\phi_{p'}\Big(\int_0^s\lambda_n f(t,u_n)\,\mathrm{d} t \Big)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} \int_0^{1/2} \phi_{p'}
 \Big(\int_0^s g(t,u_n)u_n(t)^{p-1}\,\mathrm{d} t \Big)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} u_n(1/2) \int_0^{1/2} \phi_{p'}
 \Big(\int_0^s g(t,R)\,\mathrm{d} t \Big)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} C|u_n|_0,
\end{align*}
where the last inequality follows from the concavity of the solutions $u_n$ 
on $[0,1]$.
Hence $\lambda_n^{p^*}\leqslant C^{-1}<\infty$, a contradiction.
\end{proof}

We still need to prove the uniqueness statement of Theorem~\ref{main.thm}, that is,
$\mathcal{S}_0=\mathcal{S}$. Suppose instead that there exists
$(\bar\lambda,\bar u) \in \mathcal{S}\setminus\mathcal{S}_0$, and let 
$\mathcal{S}_1$ be the connected subset of
$\mathcal{S}$ such that $(\bar\lambda,\bar u) \in \mathcal{S}_1$. 
It follows by Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem}
that $\mathcal{S}_1$ is a smooth curve, parametrized by $\lambda$ in a maximal 
interval $I_1$. In fact, the previous arguments imply that 
$I_1=(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$. Let us
denote by $u_1:(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)\to Y$ the parametrization of
 $\mathcal{S}_1$ and
consider a sequence $\lambda_n\to\lambda_0$. Since $|u_1(\lambda_n)|_0$ is bounded
by Lemma~\ref{asympt.lem}, it follows that there exists $u_0 \in Y$ such that
$u(\lambda_n)\to u_0$ in $Y$ as $n\to\infty$. Then by continuity, we have
\begin{equation*}
u_0=S_p(\lambda_0f(u_0)).
\end{equation*}
Since $u_1(\lambda_n)\geqslant0$ for all $n$, it follows that $u_0\geqslant0$. 
We will show that, in fact,
$u_0\equiv0$. Hence we will have $(\lambda_n,u_1(\lambda_n))\to (\lambda_0,0)$ in 
$Y$ and, by the characterization \eqref{loc1.eq} in Theorem~\ref{loc1.thm},
$\mathcal{S}_1=\mathcal{S}_0$.
If $u_0\not\equiv0$, we set $w_0=u_0/|u_0|_0$. Then $w_0\geqslant0$ and satisfies
\begin{equation}\label{final.eq}
w_0=S_p(\lambda_0g(u_0)\phi_p(w_0)).
\end{equation}
Having in mind (H3) and \eqref{boundsforg}, it follows from the comparison
theorem of \cite[Sec.~4]{w} applied to \eqref{final.eq} and \eqref{eigen} with $f_0$ that
we must have $w_0\equiv0$. This contradiction finishes the proof of
Theorem~\ref{main.thm}.
\qed

\subsection{Proof of Theorem~\ref{main2.thm}}

We start with the analogue of Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem} under hypothesis (H').

\begin{lemma}\label{IFT'.lem}
The function $F \in C([0,\infty)\times Y, Y)$ defined in \eqref{dirop.eq} 
is continuously differentiable in a neighbourhood of any point
 $(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}^\pm$, with
$$
D_u F(\lambda,u) v = v - \lambda DS_p(\lambda f(u)) \partial_2 f(u) v, \quad v\in Y.
$$
Furthermore, for any $(\lambda,u) \in \mathcal{S}^\pm$, 
$D_u F(\lambda,u):Y\to Y$ is an isomorphism.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The proof is almost identical to that of Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem}, so we only indicate
the minor modifications. The differentiability part follows as in Lemma~\ref{IFT.lem},
using Theorem~\ref{Sp.thm}(ii), and Proposition~\ref{pos'.prop} instead of
Proposition~\ref{pos.prop}. The non-singularity of $D_u F(\lambda,u):Y\to Y$ follows in the
same way if $(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}^+$. For $(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}^-$, we proceed in a similar
manner, considering $v\in N(D_u F(\lambda,u))$. Then the identity \eqref{lagrange}
still holds, and we suppose by contradiction that $v>0$ on a maximal interval
$(0,r_2)$, with $v(r_2)=0$ and $v'(r_2)<0$. If $r_2<1$, we have $u(r_2)v'(r_2)>0$
while (H3') implies
\begin{equation*}
r_2^{N-1}|u'(r_2)|^{p-2}u(r_2)v'(r_2)=
\lambda\int_0^{r_2} s^{N-1}[f(u)-p^*\partial_2f(u)u]v\,\mathrm{d} s \leqslant 0,
\end{equation*}
a contradiction. On the other hand, if $r_2=1$, it follows from (H3') and
Proposition~\ref{pos'.prop} that
$$
0=|u'(1)|^{p-2}u(1)v'(1)=
\lambda \int_0^{1} s^{N-1}[f(u)-p^*\partial_2f(u)u]v\,\mathrm{d} s < 0,
$$
another contradiction. Hence $v\equiv0$ and
$N(D_u F(\lambda,u))=\{0\}$.
\end{proof}

Now, similarly to the proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm}, using
Remark~\ref{lambounds'.rem}, Theorem~\ref{loc2.thm} and Lemma~\ref{IFT'.lem},
the implicit function theorem yields maximal open intervals 
$(\lambda_0,\widetilde\lambda_\pm)$
with $\lambda_0<\widetilde\lambda_\pm\leqslant\lambda_\infty$
 and two solution curves
$u_\pm \in C^1((\lambda_0,\widetilde\lambda_\pm),Y)$.
It follows as in the proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm} that
$\widetilde\lambda_\pm=\lambda_\infty$, so we get two global solution curves
$$
\mathcal{S}_0^\pm=\{(\lambda,u_\pm(\lambda)):
\lambda\in(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)\}\subset\mathcal{S}.
$$
Furthermore, $\lim_{\lambda\to\lambda_\infty}|u(\lambda)|_0=\infty$ 
follows as in the proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm}, using the version 
of Lemma~\ref{blowup.lem} holding under hypothesis (H'):

\begin{lemma}\label{blowu'p.lem}
Suppose that {\rm (H6)(b)} holds, and consider
$(\lambda_n,u_n)\in\mathcal{S}^\pm$ such that $\lambda_n\to\infty$. 
Then $|u_n|_0\to\infty$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The proof is the same as that of Lemma~\ref{blowup.lem} when
$(\lambda_n,u_n)\in\mathcal{S}^+$.

For $(\lambda_n,u_n)\in\mathcal{S}^-$, if $|u_n|_0\leqslant R$, 
it follows by (H2') and (H3') that
\begin{align*}
|u_n|_0=-u_n(0)&=-\int_0^1\phi_{p'}\left(\int_0^s\lambda_n f(t,u_n)\,\mathrm{d} t \right)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} \int_0^{1/2} \phi_{p'}
 \Big(\int_0^s g(t,u_n)|u_n(t)|^{p-1}\,\mathrm{d} t \Big)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} |u_n(1/2)| \int_0^{1/2} \phi_{p'}
 \Big(\int_0^s g(t,R)\,\mathrm{d} t \Big)\,\mathrm{d} s\\
&\geqslant \lambda_n^{p^*} C|u_n|_0,
\end{align*}
showing that the sequence $\{\lambda_n\}$ must be bounded, a contradiction.
\end{proof}

Using the characterization \eqref{loc2.eq} in Theorem~\ref{loc2.thm},
it follows similarly to the last part of
the proof of Theorem~\ref{main.thm} that 
$\mathcal{S}=\mathcal{S}_0^-\cup\mathcal{S}_0^+$.
Hence, to finish the proof of Theorem~\ref{main2.thm}, we only need to prove that
$\mathcal{S}_0^-\subset\mathcal{S}^-$ and $\mathcal{S}_0^+\subset\mathcal{S}^+$.

Let $\mathcal{C}_0^\pm:=\mathcal{S}_0^\pm\cap\mathcal{S}^\pm$.
First, we know from Theorem~\ref{loc2.thm}
that, for $\lambda$ close to $\lambda_0$, 
$(\lambda,u_\pm(\lambda))\in\mathcal{S}^\pm$, so that
$\mathcal{C}_0^\pm\neq\emptyset$.
Thus, we need only show that $\mathcal{C}_0^\pm$
is both open and closed in $\mathcal{S}_0^\pm$, for the product topology 
inherited from
$\mathbb{R}\times Y$. We will only consider $\mathcal{C}_0^+$, the proof for
 $\mathcal{C}_0^-$ is similar.

For $(\lambda,u)\in \mathcal{C}_0^+$, it follows from
Proposition~\ref{pos'.prop} that $u>0$ on $[0,1)$ (with $u(1)=0$).
If $(\mu,v)\in \mathcal{S}_0^+$ with
$|\mu-\lambda|+|v-u|_0$ small enough, we will have 
$\lambda\in(\lambda_0,\lambda_\infty)$ and
$0\not\equiv v\geqslant0$ on $[0,1]$, hence $(\mu,v)\in\mathcal{C}_0^+$.
This proves that $\mathcal{C}_0^+$ is open in $\mathcal{S}_0^+$.

Now consider a sequence $\{(\lambda_n,u_n)\}\subset\mathcal{C}_0^+$ 
and suppose there exists
$(\lambda,u)\in \mathcal{S}_0^+$ such that $(\lambda_n,u_n) \to (\lambda,u)$.
By continuity, $F(\lambda,u)=0$, and we have $u\geqslant0$. Since $\lambda>\lambda_0$,
it follows from Lemma~\ref{asympt'.lem} that $u\not\equiv0$. Hence,
$(\lambda,u)\in\mathcal{S}_0^+$ and $\mathcal{C}_0^+$ is closed in $\mathcal{S}_0^+$.
Thus, $\mathcal{C}_0^+=\mathcal{S}_0^+$, and it follows in a similar 
way that $\mathcal{C}_0^-=\mathcal{S}_0^-$,
showing that $\mathcal{S}_0^\pm\subset\mathcal{S}^\pm$, and so actually
$\mathcal{S}_0^\pm=\mathcal{S}^\pm$. This completes the proof 
of Theorem~\ref{main2.thm}.
\qed


\subsection*{Acknowledgements} We are grateful to the anonymous referee for
drawing our attention to the reference \cite{bro}.

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\end{document}




