Flat function
In mathematics, especially real analysis, a flat function is a smooth function all of whose derivatives vanish at a given point . The flat functions are, in some sense, the antitheses of the analytic functions. An analytic function is given by a convergent power series close to some point :
In the case of a flat function we see that all derivatives vanish at , i.e. for all . This means that a meaningful Taylor series expansion in a neighbourhood of is impossible. In the language of Taylor's theorem, the non-constant part of the function always lies in the remainder for all .
The function need not be flat at just one point. Trivially, constant functions on are flat everywhere. But there are other, less trivial, examples.
Example[]
The function defined by
is flat at x = 0. Thus, this is an example of a non-analytic smooth function.
Other example are the family of functions:
References[]
- Glaister, P. (December 1991), A Flat Function with Some Interesting Properties and an Application, The Mathematical Gazette, Vol. 75, No. 474, pp. 438–440, JSTOR 3618627
- Real analysis
- Algebraic geometry
- Differential calculus
- Smooth functions
- Differential structures