1 Introduction and preliminaries

One of the celebrated generalizations of the Banach contraction (mapping) principle was given by Geraghty [1].

Theorem 1.1 (Geraghty [1])

Let (X,d) be a complete metric space and T:XX be an operator. Suppose that there exists β:(0,)[0,1) satisfying the condition

β( t n )1implies t n 0.
(1)

If T satisfies the following inequality:

d(Tx,Ty)β ( d ( x , y ) ) d(x,y),for any x,yX,
(2)

then T has a unique fixed point.

Let S denote the set of all functions β:(0,)[0,1) satisfying (1). This nice result of Geraghty [1] has been studied by a number of authors, see e.g. [210] and references therein.

In the following Harandi and Emami [2] reconsidered Theorem 1.1 in the framework of partially ordered metric spaces (see also [11]).

Theorem 1.2 Let (X,,d) be a partially ordered complete metric space. Let f:XX be an increasing mapping such that there exists an element x 0 X with x 0 f x 0 . If there exists αS such that

d(fx,fy)α ( d ( x , y ) ) d(x,y),
(3)

for each x,yX with xy, then f has a fixed point provided that either f is continuous or X is such that if an increasing sequence { x n }x in X; then x n x, for all n. Besides, if for each x,yX there exists zX which is comparable to x and y, then f has a unique fixed point.

Very recently, Gordji et al. [12] supposedly improved and extended Theorem 1.2 in the following way via the auxiliary function defined below. Let Ψ denote the class of the functions ψ:[0,)[0,) which satisfy the following conditions:

( ψ 1 ) ψ is nondecreasing;

( ψ 2 ) ψ is subadditive, that is, ψ(s+t)ψ(s)+ψ(t);

( ψ 3 ) ψ is continuous;

( ψ 4 ) ψ(t)=0t=0.

The following is the main theorem of Gordji et al. [12].

Theorem 1.3 Let (X,,d) be a partially ordered complete metric space. Let f:XX be a nondecreasing mapping such that there exists x 0 X with x 0 f x 0 . Suppose that there exist αS and ψΨ such that

ψ ( d ( f x , f y ) ) α ( ψ ( d ( x , y ) ) ) ψ ( d ( x , y ) ) ,
(4)

for all x,yX with xy. Assume that either f is continuous or X is such that if an increasing sequence { x n } converges to x, then x n x for each n1. Then f has a fixed point.

2 Main results

We start this section with the following lemma, which is the skeleton of this note.

Lemma 2.1 Let (X,d) be a metric space and ψΨ. Then, a function d ψ :X×X[0,) defined by d ψ (x,y)=ψ(d(x,y)) forms a metric on X. Moreover, (X,d) is complete if and only if (X, d ψ ) is complete.

Proof

  1. (1)

    If x=y, then d(x,y)=0. Due to ( ψ 4 ), we have ψ(d(x,y))=0. The converse is obtained analogously.

  2. (2)

    d ψ (x,y)=ψ(d(x,y))=ψ(d(y,x))= d ψ (y,x).

  3. (3)

    Since ψ is nondecreasing, we have ψ(d(x,y))ψ(d(x,z)+d(z,y)). Regarding the subadditivity of ψ, we derived

    d ψ ( x , y ) = ψ ( d ( x , y ) ) ψ ( d ( x , z ) + d ( z , y ) ) ψ ( d ( x , z ) ) + ψ ( d ( z , y ) ) = d ψ ( x , z ) + d ψ ( z , y ) .

Notice that the completeness of (X, d ψ ) follows from ( ψ 3 ) and ( ψ 4 ). □

The following is the main result of this note.

Theorem 2.2 Theorem  1.3 is a consequence of Theorem  1.2.

Proof Due to Lemma 2.1, we derived the result that (X, d ψ ) is a complete metric space. Furthermore, the condition (4) turns into

d ψ (fx,fy)α ( d ψ ( x , y ) ) d ψ (x,y).
(5)

Hence all conditions of Theorem 1.2 are satisfied. □

3 The best proximity case

Let A and B be two nonempty subsets of a metric space (X,d). We denote by A 0 and B 0 the following sets:

A 0 = { x A : d ( x , y ) = d ( A , B )  for some  y B } , B 0 = { y B : d ( x , y ) = d ( A , B )  for some  x A } ,
(6)

where d(A,B)=inf{d(x,y):xA,yB}.

In [13, 14], the author introduces the following definition.

Definition 3.1 Let (A,B) be a pair of nonempty subsets of a metric space (X,d) with A 0 . Then the pair (A,B) is said to have the P-property if and only if, for any x 1 , x 2 A 0 and y 1 , y 2 B 0 ,

d( x 1 , y 1 )=d(A,B)andd( x 2 , y 2 )=d(A,B)d( x 1 , x 2 )=d( y 1 , y 2 ).
(7)

Caballero et al. proved the following result.

Theorem 3.2 (See [8])

Let (A,B) be a pair of nonempty closed subsets of a complete metric space (X,d) such that A 0 is nonempty. Let T:AB be a Geraghty contraction, i.e. there exists βS such that

d(Tx,Ty)β ( d ( x , y ) ) d(x,y),for any x,yA.
(8)

Suppose that T is continuous and satisfies T( A 0 ) B 0 . Suppose also that the pair (A,B) has the P-property. Then there exists a unique x in A such that d( x ,T x )=d(A,B).

Inspired by Gordji et al. [12] and Caballero et al. [8], Karapinar [7] reported the following result.

Theorem 3.3 Let (A,B) be a pair of nonempty closed subsets of a complete metric space (X,d) such that A 0 is nonempty. Let T:AB be ψ-Geraghty contraction, i.e. there exists βS such that

ψ ( d ( T x , T y ) ) α ( ψ ( d ( x , y ) ) ) ψ ( d ( x , y ) ) ,for any x,yA.
(9)

Suppose that T is continuous and satisfies T( A 0 ) B 0 . Suppose also that the pair (A,B) has the P-property. Then there exists a unique x in A such that d( x ,T x )=d(A,B).

The following lemmas belong to Akbar and Gabeleh [15].

Lemma 3.4 [15]

Let (A,B) be a pair of nonempty closed subsets of a complete metric space (X,d) such that A 0 is nonempty and (A,B) has the P-property. Then ( A 0 , B 0 ) is a closed pair of subsets of X.

Lemma 3.5 [15]

Let (A,B) be a pair of nonempty closed subsets of a metric space (X,d) such that A 0 is nonempty. Assume that the pair (A,B) has the P-property. Then there exists a bijective isometry g: A 0 B 0 such that d(x,gx)=dist(A,B).

Very recently, by using Lemma 3.4 and Lemma 3.5, Akbar and Gabeleh [15] proved that the best proximity point results via P-property can be obtained from the associate results in fixed point theory. In particular they proved the following theorem.

Theorem 3.6 Theorem  3.2 is a consequence of Theorem  1.1.

As a consequence of Theorem 2.2 we can observe the following result.

Corollary 3.7 Theorem  3.3 is a consequence of Theorem  3.2.

Regarding the analogy, we omit the proof.

Theorem 3.8 Theorem  3.3 is a consequence of Theorem  1.1.