مأخوذة هادامار

(تم التحويل من Hadamard's lemma)

In mathematics, Hadamard's lemma, named after Jacques Hadamard, is essentially a first-order form of Taylor's theorem, in which we can express a smooth, real-valued function exactly in a convenient manner.

Statement

Hadamard's lemma[1] — Let f be a smooth, real-valued function defined on an open, star-convex neighborhood U of a point a in n-dimensional Euclidean space. Then f(x) can be expressed, for all xU, in the form: f(x)=f(a)+i=1n(xiai)gi(x), where each gi is a smooth function on U, a=(a1,,an), and x=(x1,,xn).

Proof

Proof

Let xU. Define h:[0,1] by h(t)=f(a+t(xa)) for all t[0,1].

Then h(t)=i=1nfxi(a+t(xa))(xiai), which implies h(1)h(0)=01h'(t)dt=01i=1nfxi(a+t(xa))(xiai)dt=i=1n(xiai)01fxi(a+t(xa))dt.

But additionally, h(1)h(0)=f(x)f(a), so by letting gi(x)=01fxi(a+t(xa))dt, the theorem has been proven.

Consequences and applications

Corollary[1] — If f: is smooth and f(0)=0 then f(x)/x is a smooth function on . Explicitly, this conclusion means that the function that sends x to {f(x)/x if x0limt0f(t)/t if x=0 is a well-defined smooth function on .

Proof

By Hadamard's lemma, there exists some gC() such that f(x)=f(0)+xg(x) so that f(0)=0 implies f(x)/x=g(x).

Corollary[1] — If y,zn are distinct points and f:n is a smooth function that satisfies f(z)=0=f(y) then there exist smooth functions gi,hiC(n) (i=1,,3n2) satisfying gi(z)=0=hi(y) for every i such that f=igihi.

Proof

By applying an invertible affine linear change in coordinates, it may be assumed without loss of generality that z=(0,,0) and y=(0,,0,1). By Hadamard's lemma, there exist g1,,gnC(n) such that f(x)=i=1nxigi(x). For every i=1,,n, let αi:=gi(y) where 0=f(y)=i=1nyigi(y)=gn(y) implies αn=0. Then for any x=(x1,,xn)n, f(x)=i=1nxigi(x)=i=1n[xi(gi(x)αi)]+i=1n1[xiαi] using gi(x)=(gi(x)αi)+αi and αn=0=[i=1nxi(gi(x)αi)]+[i=1n1xixnαi]+[i=1n1xi(1xn)αi] using xi=xnxi+xi(1xn). Each of the 3n2 terms above has the desired properties.

See also

Citations

  1. ^ أ ب ت Nestruev 2020, pp. 17-18.

References

  • Nestruev, Jet (2002). Smooth manifolds and observables. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 0-387-95543-7.
  • Nestruev, Jet (10 September 2020). Smooth Manifolds and Observables. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 220. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-030-45649-8. OCLC 1195920718.