Differentiation in Fréchet spaces

In mathematics, in particular in functional analysis and nonlinear analysis, it is possible to define the derivative of a function between two Fréchet spaces. This notion of differentiation, as it is Gateaux derivative between Fréchet spaces, is significantly weaker than the derivative in a Banach space, even between general topological vector spaces. Nevertheless, it is the weakest notion of differentiation for which many of the familiar theorems from calculus hold. In particular, the chain rule is true. With some additional constraints on the Fréchet spaces and functions involved, there is an analog of the inverse function theorem called the Nash–Moser inverse function theorem, having wide applications in nonlinear analysis and differential geometry.

Mathematical details edit

Formally, the definition of differentiation is identical to the Gateaux derivative. Specifically, let   and   be Fréchet spaces,   be an open set, and   be a function. The directional derivative of   in the direction   is defined by

 
if the limit exists. One says that   is continuously differentiable, or   if the limit exists for all   and the mapping
 
is a continuous map.

Higher order derivatives are defined inductively via

 
A function is said to be   if   It is   or smooth if it is   for every  

Properties edit

Let   and   be Fréchet spaces. Suppose that   is an open subset of     is an open subset of   and     are a pair of   functions. Then the following properties hold:

  • Fundamental theorem of calculus. If the line segment from   to   lies entirely within   then
     
  • The chain rule. For all   and  
     
  • Linearity.   is linear in  [citation needed] More generally, if   is   then   is multilinear in the  's.
  • Taylor's theorem with remainder. Suppose that the line segment between   and   lies entirely within   If   is   then
     
    where the remainder term is given by
     
  • Commutativity of directional derivatives. If   is   then
     
    for every permutation σ of  

The proofs of many of these properties rely fundamentally on the fact that it is possible to define the Riemann integral of continuous curves in a Fréchet space.

Smooth mappings edit

Surprisingly, a mapping between open subset of Fréchet spaces is smooth (infinitely often differentiable) if it maps smooth curves to smooth curves; see Convenient analysis. Moreover, smooth curves in spaces of smooth functions are just smooth functions of one variable more.

Consequences in differential geometry edit

The existence of a chain rule allows for the definition of a manifold modeled on a Frèchet space: a Fréchet manifold. Furthermore, the linearity of the derivative implies that there is an analog of the tangent bundle for Fréchet manifolds.

Tame Fréchet spaces edit

Frequently the Fréchet spaces that arise in practical applications of the derivative enjoy an additional property: they are tame. Roughly speaking, a tame Fréchet space is one which is almost a Banach space. On tame spaces, it is possible to define a preferred class of mappings, known as tame maps. On the category of tame spaces under tame maps, the underlying topology is strong enough to support a fully fledged theory of differential topology. Within this context, many more techniques from calculus hold. In particular, there are versions of the inverse and implicit function theorems.

See also edit

References edit

  • 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.