---
title: "Grönwall-Bellman inequality"
firstLetter: "G"
publishDate: 2021-11-07
categories:
- Mathematics
date: 2021-11-07T09:51:57+01:00
draft: false
markup: pandoc
---
# Grönwall-Bellman inequality
Suppose we have a first-order ordinary differential equation
for some function $u(t)$, and that it can be shown from this equation
that the derivative $u'(t)$ is bounded as follows:
$$\begin{aligned}
u'(t)
\le \beta(t) \: u(t)
\end{aligned}$$
Where $\beta(t)$ is known.
Then **Grönwall's inequality** states that the solution $u(t)$ is bounded:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
u(t)
\le u(0) \exp\!\bigg( \int_0^t \beta(s) \dd{s} \bigg)
}
\end{aligned}$$
Grönwall's inequality can be generalized to non-differentiable functions.
Suppose we know:
$$\begin{aligned}
u(t)
\le \alpha(t) + \int_0^t \beta(s) \: u(s) \dd{s}
\end{aligned}$$
Where $\alpha(t)$ and $\beta(t)$ are known.
Then the **Grönwall-Bellman inequality** states that:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
u(t)
\le \alpha(t) + \int_0^t \alpha(s) \: \beta(s) \exp\!\bigg( \int_s^t \beta(r) \dd{r} \bigg) \dd{s}
}
\end{aligned}$$
In the special case where $\alpha(t)$ is non-decreasing with $t$,
the inequality reduces to:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
u(t)
\le \alpha(t) \exp\!\bigg( \int_0^t \beta(s) \dd{s} \bigg)
}
\end{aligned}$$
## References
1. U.H. Thygesen,
*Lecture notes on diffusions and stochastic differential equations*,
2021, Polyteknisk Kompendie.