1. Introduction
The notion of distance, as a natural extension of one of the oldest and natural quantitative concepts, can be thought of as the length of a gap. Metric spaces are regarded as the one of the most significant mathematical frameworks for the study of distance, in that they are intuitive and simple structures that allow us to consider distances between points of a set. These were formalized in 1906 by Fréchet [
1]. And in 1922, Banach [
2] gave a constructive method to obtain a fixed point for a self-map in metric spaces.
In 1990, Murphy [
3] pioneered the novel
and operator theory (see [
4,
5] and references therein). In 2014, in the spades of novel generalizations, Ma [
6] obtained
-valued metric spaces and later proved fixed point results in the setting of
metric spaces. The Banach contraction principle has seen further generalizations in the settings of cone metric spaces. One can see Perov [
28] and Zabrejko [
27] for foundational works, and the reintroduction by Huang and Zhang [
29] as the so-called cone metric spaces. In this context, the cone’s solidness is a desirable property for the establishment of fixed point theorems. In 2023, Xu, Cheng, and Han [
5] introduced a novel approach to fixed point theory by establishing common fixed point results in cone
b-metric spaces over Banach algebras, without requiring the solidness of the underlying cone, only maintaining normality of the cone. Their work focused on contractions with vector-valued coefficients and introduced a kind of new convergence of sequences, termed it
wrtn-convergence, that is, ’with respect to the norm’ convergence.
In some cases distances arise between elements of two different sets, rather than between points of a unique set. Such type of distances are abundant in mathematics and applied sciences. And so in 2016, Mutlu and Gürdal [
20] formalized these distances under the name bipolar metric spaces and later [
25] defined
contractive mappings and multivalued mappings, respectively, and established fixed point theorems in the context of bipolar metric spaces. In 2021, Gaba, Aphane, and Ayidi [
12] introduced
-contractractions in Bipolar metric spaces and recovered well-known classical results.
Motivated by the above results, we give fixed point results for -valued bipolar b-metric spaces without requiring the solidity of the underlying cone under ()–type contractions.
2. Preliminaries
The following basic concepts from literature in are necessary for proving results.
A complex algebra , together with a conjugate linear involution map , is called a ★-algebra if and for all . Moreover, the pair is called a unital ★-algebra if contains an identity element .
By a Banach ★-algebra, we mean a complete normed unital ★-algebra such that the norm on is submultiplicative and satisfies for all . Further, if for all , we have in a Banach ★-algebra , then is known as a -algebra.
A positive element of
is an element
such that
and its spectrum satisfies
, where
The set of all positive elements will be denoted by
. Such elements allow us to define a partial ordering ⪰ on the elements of
. That is,
If
is positive, then we write
, where
is the zero element of
. Each positive element
p of a
-algebra
has a unique positive square root denoted by
in
. From now on, by
we mean a unital
-algebra with identity element
. Further,
Definition 1. [17] A subset of is called a cone if:
- (1)
is non-empty, closed, and ,
- (2)
, and
- (3)
- (4)
.
For a given cone , we can define a partial ordering ⪯ with respect to by if and only if . We denote if and , while will stand for , where denotes the interior of .
The cone is called normal if there is a number such that for all , implies . The least positive number satisfying the above is called the normal constant of .
Definition 2. [3] Let be a unital -algebra, and let denote the positive cone of , consisting of all positive elements such that for some . A map is called a positive function if it satisfies the following properties:
For all , .
For all , if , then , where ⪯ denotes the partial order induced by the positive cone.
, where is the zero element of .
Example 1.
Let be the positive cone of a unital -algebra . Define the functions as follows:
For both functions, condition and follow directly from the definition. For condition 3, when , we have , when the inequality holds because dominates for any and .
Definition 3. [6] Consider a unital with a unital , a set , and . A distance function with the following
if and only if , for all
for all
for all
Then is known as valued b–metric space.
Definition 4 ([
20])
. Let Φ
and Ψ
be two non-empty subsets of a set V, and let be a function such that:
if and only if ;
, for all ;
, for all and .
Then, the triplet is called a bipolar metric space.
In 2022, Mani, Gnanaprakasam, Haq, Baloch, and jarad [
31], gave the following:
Definition 5. [31] Consider a unital with a unital , two sets , and . A distance function with the following
if and only if , for all ;
, for all ;
for all .
is called bipolar metric and is called valued bipolar metric space.
Definition 6 ([
32])
. Let be a bipolar metric space. A function is called a bipolar b-metric if there exists a constant such that:
if and only if ;
, for all ;
, for all and .
Then is called a bipolar b-metric space.
Remark 1. The space is said to be joint if otherwise disjoint.
Example 2. [32] Consider and as } where and
It can be easily verified that conditions 1 and 2 of definition 1.4 holds.
Using , one can prove that:
where .
Thus, is a complete -algebra valued bipolar b-metric space.
If we take , , , and , then:
for all . So, it is not a -algebra valued bipolar metric space.
Definition 7. Let and be -algebra valued bipolar b-metric spaces, where and are -algebra valued metrics on and , respectively.
- (1)
A function is called a contravariant map from to , and denoted by , if :
- (2)
-
Moreover, if and are -algebra valued bipolar b-metrics on and , respectively, then the notation:
denotes a contravariant map between -algebra valued bipolar b-metric spaces, where the distances and respect the -algebra structure.
Definition 8. [31] Let and be two -algebra valued bipolar metric spaces,
- (1)
T is called left continuous at a point if, for every , there exists a such that:
- (2)
T is called right continuous at a point if, for every , there exists a such that:
- (3)
T is called continuous if it is left continuous at every and right continuous at every .
- (4)
A map T is called a continuous contravariant map if it satisfies the same continuity conditions as a covariant map, with:
Definition 9.
Let be a positive function on the positive cone of a -algebra . Then F satisfies the combined condition:
and
Equivalently, for with , and ,
This linear combination ensures that F is additive and homogeneous on commuting elements in the positive cone.
Definition 10.
Let be a positive function on the positive cone of a -algebra . Then F satisfies the linearity condition:
for all such that (commutative elements), and for all .
In this paper, motivated by the above results, we prove fixed point theorems on metric spaces in the following settings:
(C1) The underlying cone is non-solid. Unlike many prior results that assume solidness of the cone, this work addresses cases where the cone lacks interior points. Non-solid cones can lead to situations where convergence results fail, as observed in certain applications in quantum mechanics.
(C2) The contractions considered are -contractions, extending the applicability of contraction mappings in this context.
(C3) Applications to the Ulam-Hyers Stability problem are provided, illustrating the utility of the theoretical results in practical and analytical settings.
3. Main Results
Definition 11. Let be a -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space in a non-solid cone . Let , where for all , and if and only if , then:
Elements of Φ are left elements, of Ψ are right elements, and of are central elements.
A left sequence converges to if and only if :
A right sequence converges to if and only if:
A bisequence is a pair of sequences on .
A bisequence is convergent if both and converge to a common point . This is called biconvergence.
A bisequence is a Cauchy bisequence if and only if:
The space is -complete if every Cauchy bisequence is convergent.
Remark 2. Here, means ’ with respect to the norm of .’ Convergence is defined with respect to the norm inherent in
Proposition 1. In a valued bipolar b-metric space, every convergent bisequence is a Cauchy bisequence.
Proof. Let
be a biconvergent bisequence in a
-algebra valued bipolar
b-metric space
, which converges to some
, then:
By normality condition, we have:
Since
and
, then
Additionally, Thus as Hence, is a Cauchy bisequence. □
Proposition 2. In valued bipolar b-metric space, every convergent Cauchy bisequence is biconvergent.
Proof. Let
be a
valued bipolar
b-metric space, and
be a convergent Cauchy bisequence, such that
and
, then
By normality condition, we have:
Since
is a convergent Cauchy bisequence, we have
and
and
, we also have:
Thus as This implies . Hence, □
Definition 12.
Let be -algebra valued bipolar b-metric space and be a contravariant map such that there exists constants , with . Then T is called )- contraction if there exits two positive functions such that
whenever and
Theorem 1. Let be a -complete -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, where:
- (i)
is the -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric,
- (ii)
is the positive cone of a unital -algebra ,
- (iii)
the cone isnon-solid(i.e., it has an empty interior, ).
Suppose a mapping satisfies the following conditions:
- (1)
There exist constants such that:
- (2)
-
There exist positive functions such that:
- (3)
For all , the contraction condition holds:
Then, the mapping T has a unique fixed point such that:
Proof. Define
and
. Then
Applying the contraction, we get:
Therefore,
for all integers
Therefore, we consider:
Applying the contraction again, we get:
Therefore, by monotonicity of
and
, we have:
Substituting
into
, we get
Similarly, by expanding the recursive terms
and
, we get:
and
Substituting
and
into
, we get:
Clearly, for
, the general pattern emerges as:
As
, it follows that:
and as
the geometric series converges:
Thus
By setting
we see that
Therefore, for all positive integers
,
-
if
, from the recursive definitions:
we have
and
Substituting
into
we get:
After
k recursive substitutions:
For
, the geometric series converges:
-
Substituting
into
we get:
After
k recursive expansions:
For
, the geometric series converges:
Since
this means that
can be made arbitrarily small by larger values of
m and
n, and hence
is a Cauchy bisequence with respect to
. Since
is complete,
converges, and as a convergent Cauchy bisequence, in particular it biconverges, it follows that
and
, where
. Since
T is continuous,
. Therefore,
. Hence
z is fixed point of
If
is any other fixed point of
T, then
and
This implies , which is not true by monotonicity of and , unless . Hence, . Similar arguments hold if . □
4. Consequences
Corollary 1 (
-Type-Contractions)
. Let be a -complete -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, and let be a contravariant map satisfying the contraction condition:
where . By setting and , where and are tuplets of elements in satisfying , the contraction becomes:
for all . Then function has a unique fixed point.
Corollary 2 (Vector-Valued Contractions)
. Let be a -complete -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, and let be a contravariant map. Suppose T satisfies the contraction condition:
where , are positive functions of a unital -algebra , is a vector-valued contraction coefficient satisfying , where is the spectral radius of k. By setting and , the contraction condition simplifies to:
for all . Then T has a unique fixed point.
Corollary 3 (Kannan-Type Contractions)
. Let be a -complete -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, and let be a contravariant map. Suppose T satisfies the contraction condition:
where are positive functions of a unital -algebra , and , , . By setting and , the contraction condition becomes:
for all . Then T has a unique fixed point.
5. Examples
Example 3.
Let , , and , the space of complex matrices, with . Define the bipolar b-metric map by and the mapping by For any , the contraction condition is given by:
One can easily verify that is -complete valued bipolar metric space, where More so, we have:
Applying the contractraction gives:
For the right-hand side of the contraction we have:
Summing these terms gives:
where Applying yields:
We observe that each term in involves grows quadratically, while the right-hand side involves a linear combination , and , and since , and T is continuous, the contraction is satisfied for all So, all the assumptions of Theorem 4.4 have occurred. Hence, T has a unique fixed point. The fixed point equation follows as:
Thus, is the unique fixed point. However, as if T were not contravariant, Theorem 4.4 cannot be applied.
6. Applications
6.1. Ulam-Hyers Stability Problem for Non-Solid Cones
Let
be a
-complete
-algebra-valued bipolar
b-metric space, where
is a non-solid cone of the
-algebra
. A mapping
is said to satisfy the Ulam-Hyers stability if for any
and any
-solution
satisfying:
there exist a unique
such that
Any point
, which is a solution of equation (
19), is called an
-solution of the mapping
T.
Theorem 2. Let be a -complete -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, where is a non-solid cone of the -algebra and be a contravariant mapping satisfying definition (12), then the fixed point equation (20) of T is Ulam-Hyers stable.
Proof. Suppose
is an
-solution, that is:
and define the sequence
such that
, for
.
By the contraction condition (12), we have:
Expanding recursively for
k-steps, we obtain:
Since
, the geometric series converges:
Thus:
and the corresponding norm satisfies:
Since
is a Cauchy sequence, and
is
-complete, the sequence
converges to a unique fixed point
. By continuity of
T, this limit satisfies:
Finally, using the contraction condition and the
-solution property, we have:
Simplifying this yields the Ulam-Hyers stability inequality:
This concludes the proof. □
Theorem 3.
Let be a -algebra-valued bipolar b-metric space, where is a non-solid cone in the -algebra . Consider the Fredholm integral operator:
where , and assume the following:
-
The kernel satisfies:
- (a)
for all and ,
- (b)
, where is continuous.
The function θ satisfies:
, with:
-
The operator T satisfies:
where , , and .
Then integral equation has a unique solution in
Proof. Let
and
be two normed linear spaces of essentially bounded measurable functions, where
are disjoint Lebesgue measurable subsets such that
,
be the space of square-integrable functions with values in the positive cone
of the
-algebra
. Define the bipolar
b-metric map
as:
where
,
, and
is the norm in
. Then
is a complete
-algebra-valued bipolar
b-metric space. Define
by
above. Then, let
. By definition, this implies
Therefore,
Since , the kernel alternates the domain of evaluation from into , ensuring Thus when
Let
. By definition, this implies
Therefore,
Since , the kernel alternates the domain of evaluation from into , ensuring: Therefore, T is contravariant.
For any
therefore,
and
, where
Since
, the mapping
T is a contravariant contraction. Now, all the conditions of Theorem 3.4 are satisfied. Hence, the integral equation has a unique solution. □
7. Conclusions
In this paper, we established the existence and uniqueness of fixed point results under the - valued bipolar b-metric spaces, where the underlying cone is non-solid. To achieve this, we used (-contractions, which are positive and monotone functions. The obtained results were used to extend the Ulam - Hyers’ stability problem and Fredholm integral equations. Some examples were given to demonstrate our research results. It will be an open problem to generalize our outcomes to other types of new contractive conditions in this context.
Author Contributions
Investigation: A.T; methodology: A.T. and M.; supervision: M.; writing original draft: A.T.; Writing review and editing: A.T. and M.. All have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This study is supported via funding from Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University.
Data Availability Statement
Not applicable.
Acknowledgments
1.) Authors are thankful to their anonymous reviewers and 2) the support from Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
- M. M. Fréchet, Sur quelques points du calcul functional, Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo, 22, 1–72, 1906.
- S. Banach, Sur les opérations dans les ensembles abstraits et leur application aux équations intégrales, Fund. Math., 3 (1922), 133–181. [CrossRef]
- G. J. Murphy, C*-Algebras and Operator Theory, Academic Press, Waltham, MA, USA, 1990.
- R. G. Douglas, Banach Algebra Techniques in Operator Theory, Springer, Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 1998. [CrossRef]
- Q. H. Xu, T. Bieke, and Q. Chen, Introduction to Operator Theory, Springer, Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 1998. [CrossRef]
- M. Kumar, P. Kumar, A. Mutlu, R. Ramaswamy, A. Abdelnaby, S. Radenović, Ulam–Hyers Stability and Well-Posedness of Fixed Point Problems in C*-Algebra Valued Bipolar b-Metric Spaces. Mathematics, 11(10), 2323, 2023. [CrossRef]
- Z. Ma and L. Jiang, C*-algebra-valued b-metric spaces and related fixed point theorems, Fixed Point Theory Appl., 2015, Article ID 222. [CrossRef]
- A. Mutlu and U. Gürdal, Bipolar metric spaces and some fixed point theorems, J. Nonlinear Sci. Appl., 9 (2016), 5362–5373. [CrossRef]
- A. Mutlu, U. Gürdal, and K. Ozkan, Fixed point theorems for multivalued mappings on bipolar metric spaces, Fixed Point Theory, 21 (2020), 271–280. [CrossRef]
- Z. Ma, L. Jiang, and H. Sun, C*-algebra-valued metric spaces and related fixed point theorems, Fixed Point Theory Appl., 2014, Article ID 206. [CrossRef]
- S. Omran and I. Masmali, On the (α-ψ) contractive mappings in C*-algebra-valued metric spaces and fixed point theorems, J. Math., 6 (2021), 7865976. [CrossRef]
- U. Gaba, M. Aphane, H. Aydi, (α,BK)-contractions in bipolar metric spaces. Journal of Mathematics, 2021. [CrossRef]
- Y. U. Gaba, M. Aphane, and V. Sihag, On two Banach-type fixed points in bipolar metric spaces, Abstract and Applied Analysis, 2021, Article ID 4846877. [CrossRef]
- U. Gürdal, Çift Kutuplu Metrik Uzaylar ve Sabit Nokta Teoremleri, Doctoral Dissertation, Manisa Celâl Bayar University, 2018.
- U. Gürdal, A. Mutlu, and K. Özkan, Fixed point results for αψ-contractive mappings in bipolar metric spaces, J. Inequalities & Special Functions, 11 (1), 64–75.
- G. N. V. Kishore, R. P. Agarwal, B. Srinivasa Rao, and R. V. N. Srinivasa Rao, Caristi-type cyclic contraction and common fixed point theorems in bipolar metric spaces with applications, Fixed Point Theory and Applications, 2018, Article ID 1. [CrossRef]
- J. Fernández, N. Malviya, A. Savić, M. Paunović, and Z. D. Mitrović, The extended cone b-metric-like spaces over Banach algebra and some applications, Mathematics, 10 (1) (2022), 149. [CrossRef]
- G. N. V. Kishore and S. Srinivas, Fixed point theory in bipolar metric spaces: Applications to nonlinear equations, J. Nonlinear Sci. Appl., 13 (3), 567–579.
- G. N. V. Kishore, R. Srinivasa Rao, and B. Srinivasa Rao, Recent developments in bipolar metric spaces, Mathematics and Applications, 15 (2), 2022.
- S. Sedghi, M. Sımkha, M., U. Gürdal, U., A. Mutlu, Fixed Point Theorems for Contravariant Maps in Bipolar b-Metric Spaces with Integration Application. Proceedings of International Mathematical Sciences, 6(1), 29-43, 2016.
- A. Mutlu, Fixed point theorems in bipolar metric spaces, Nonlinear Studies, 23 (3), 2016.
- S. Xu, S. Cheng, Y. Han, Non-solid cone b-metric spaces over Banach algebras and fixed point results of contractions with vector-valued coefficients. Open Mathematics, 21(1), 20220569, 2023. [CrossRef]
- U. Gürdal, R. Yapali, and A. Mutlu, Generalized Kuratowski closure operators in the bipolar metric setting, Proc. Int. Math. Sci., 6 (1), 1–17, 2024.
- J. K. Kim and M. Kumar, ψ-type contraction and Jaggi-type hybrid contraction in bipolar metric spaces, Nonlinear Funct. Anal. Appl., 28 (3), 703–717.
- U.T. Gürdal, A. Mutlu, K. Özkan, Fixed point results for α-ψ)-contractive mappings in bipolar metric spaces. J. Inequal. Spec. Funct, 11(1), 64-75, 2020.
- B. Alamri, Fixed point results in F-bipolar metric spaces with applications, Mathematics, 11 (10), 2399–2412. [CrossRef]
- P. Zabrejko, K-metric and K-normed linear spaces: survey, Collect. Math. 48, no. 4–6, 825–859, 1997.
- A. I. Perov, The Cauchy problem for systems of ordinary differential equations, Priblizhen. Metody Reshen. Difer. Uravn., 2 (1964), 115–134 (in Russian).
- L. Huang and X. Zhang, Cone metric spaces and fixed point theorems of contractive mappings, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 332 (2007), 1468–1476.
- S. Rezapour and R. Hamlbarani, Some notes on the paper “Cone metric spaces and fixed point theorems of contractive mappings”, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 345 (2008), 719–724.
- G. Mani, A. J. Gnanaprakasam, A. U. Haq, I. A. Baloch, and F. Jarad, Coupled fixed point theorems on C*-algebra-valued bipolar metric spaces, AIMS Math., 7 (2022), 7552–7568.
- M. Kumar, P. Kumar, A. Mutlu, R. Ramaswamy, O. A. A. Abdelnaby, and S. Radenović, Ulam–Hyers stability and well-posedness of fixed point problems in C*-algebra-valued bipolar b-metric spaces, Mathematics, 11 (2023), 2323. [CrossRef]
|
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).