Gateaux derivative
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In mathematics, the Gateaux differential or Gateaux derivative is a generalization of the concept of directional derivative in differential calculus. Named after René Gateaux, a French mathematician who died young in World War I, it is defined for functions between locally convex topological vector spaces such as Banach spaces. Like the Fréchet derivative on a Banach space, the Gateaux differential is often used to formalize the functional derivative commonly used in the calculus of variations and physics.
Unlike other forms of derivatives, the Gateaux differential of a function may be nonlinear. However, often the definition of the Gateaux differential also requires that it be a continuous linear transformation. Some authors, such as Tikhomirov (2001), draw a further distinction between the Gateaux differential (which may be nonlinear) and the Gateaux derivative (which they take to be linear). In most applications, continuous linearity follows from some more primitive condition which is natural to the particular setting, such as imposing complex differentiability in the context of infinite dimensional holomorphy or continuous differentiability in nonlinear analysis.
Definition[]
Suppose and are locally convex topological vector spaces (for example, Banach spaces), is open, and The Gateaux differential of at in the direction is defined as
-
(1)
If the limit exists for all then one says that is Gateaux differentiable at
The limit appearing in (1) is taken relative to the topology of If and are real topological vector spaces, then the limit is taken for real On the other hand, if and are complex topological vector spaces, then the limit above is usually taken as in the complex plane as in the definition of complex differentiability. In some cases, a weak limit is taken instead of a strong limit, which leads to the notion of a weak Gateaux derivative.
Linearity and continuity[]
At each point the Gateaux differential defines a function
This function is homogeneous in the sense that for all scalars
However, this function need not be additive, so that the Gateaux differential may fail to be linear, unlike the Fréchet derivative. Even if linear, it may fail to depend continuously on if and are infinite dimensional. Furthermore, for Gateaux differentials that are linear and continuous in there are several inequivalent ways to formulate their continuous differentiability.
For example, consider the real-valued function of two real variables defined by
Relation with the Fréchet derivative
If is Fréchet differentiable, then it is also Gateaux differentiable, and its Fréchet and Gateaux derivatives agree. The converse is clearly not true, since the Gateaux derivative may fail to be linear or continuous. In fact, it is even possible for the Gateaux derivative to be linear and continuous but for the Fréchet derivative to fail to exist.
Nevertheless, for functions from a complex Banach space to another complex Banach space the Gateaux derivative (where the limit is taken over complex tending to zero as in the definition of complex differentiability) is automatically linear, a theorem of Zorn (1945). Furthermore, if is (complex) Gateaux differentiable at each with derivative
Continuous differentiability
Continuous Gateaux differentiability may be defined in two inequivalent ways. Suppose that is Gateaux differentiable at each point of the open set One notion of continuous differentiability in requires that the mapping on the product space
A stronger notion of continuous differentiability requires that
As a matter of technical convenience, this latter notion of continuous differentiability is typical (but not universal) when the spaces and are Banach, since is also Banach and standard results from functional analysis can then be employed. The former is the more common definition in areas of nonlinear analysis where the function spaces involved are not necessarily Banach spaces. For instance, differentiation in Fréchet spaces has applications such as the Nash–Moser inverse function theorem in which the function spaces of interest often consist of smooth functions on a manifold.
Higher derivatives[]
Whereas higher order Fréchet derivatives are naturally defined as multilinear functions by iteration, using the isomorphisms higher order Gateaux derivative cannot be defined in this way. Instead the th order Gateaux derivative of a function in the direction is defined by
-
(2)
Rather than a multilinear function, this is instead a homogeneous function of degree in
There is another candidate for the definition of the higher order derivative, the function
-
(3)
that arises naturally in the calculus of variations as the of at least in the special case where is scalar-valued. However, this may fail to have any reasonable properties at all, aside from being separately homogeneous in and It is desirable to have sufficient conditions in place to ensure that is a symmetric bilinear function of and and that it agrees with the polarization of
For instance, the following sufficient condition holds (Hamilton 1982). Suppose that is in the sense that the mapping
Properties[]
A version of the fundamental theorem of calculus holds for the Gateaux derivative of provided is assumed to be sufficiently continuously differentiable. Specifically:
- Suppose that is in the sense that the Gateaux derivative is a continuous function Then for any and where the integral is the Gelfand–Pettis integral (the weak integral) (Vainberg (1964)).
Many of the other familiar properties of the derivative follow from this, such as multilinearity and commutativity of the higher-order derivatives. Further properties, also consequences of the fundamental theorem, include:
- (The chain rule)for all and (Importantly, as with simple partial derivatives, the Gateaux derivative does not satisfy the chain rule if the derivative is permitted to be discontinuous.)
- (Taylor's theorem with remainder)
Suppose that the line segment between and lies entirely within If is thenwhere the remainder term is given by
Example[]
Let be the Hilbert space of square-integrable functions on a Lebesgue measurable set in the Euclidean space The functional
Indeed, the above is the limit of
See also[]
- Hadamard derivative
- Derivative (generalizations)
- Differentiable vector-valued functions from Euclidean space
- Differentiation in Fréchet spaces
- Fractal derivative – Generalization of derivative to fractals
- Infinite–dimensional vector function
- Quasi-derivative – Generalization of a derivative of a function between two Banach spaces
- Quaternionic analysis – Study of analytic functions of quaternions, generalizing complex analysis
- Semi-differentiability
References[]
- Gateaux, René (1913), "Sur les fonctionnelles continues et les fonctionnelles analytiques", Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des sciences, Paris, 157: 325–327, retrieved 2 September 2012.
- Gateaux, René (1919), "Fonctions d'une infinité de variables indépendantes", Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France, 47: 70–96.
- Hamilton, R. S. (1982), "The inverse function theorem of Nash and Moser", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 7 (1): 65–222, doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15004-2, MR 0656198
- Hille, Einar; Phillips, Ralph S. (1974), Functional analysis and semi-groups, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, MR 0423094.
- Tikhomirov, V.M. (2001) [1994], "Gâteaux variation", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press.
- Vainberg, M.M. (1964), Variational Methods for the Study of Nonlinear Operators, San Francisco, London, Amsterdam: Holden-Day, Inc, p. 57
- Zorn, Max (1945), "Characterization of analytic functions in Banach spaces", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 46 (4): 585–593, doi:10.2307/1969198, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 1969198, MR 0014190.
- Zorn, Max (1946), "Derivatives and Frechet differentials", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 52 (2): 133–137, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1946-08524-9, MR 0014595.
- Generalizations of the derivative
- Topological vector spaces