Misplaced Pages

Quasi-derivative

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Generalization of a derivative of a function between two Banach spaces

In mathematics, the quasi-derivative is one of several generalizations of the derivative of a function between two Banach spaces. The quasi-derivative is a slightly stronger version of the Gateaux derivative, though weaker than the Fréchet derivative.

Let f : AF be a continuous function from an open set A in a Banach space E to another Banach space F. Then the quasi-derivative of f at x0A is a linear transformation u : EF with the following property: for every continuous function g : → A with g(0)=x0 such that g′(0) ∈ E exists,

lim t 0 + f ( g ( t ) ) f ( x 0 ) t = u ( g ( 0 ) ) . {\displaystyle \lim _{t\to 0^{+}}{\frac {f(g(t))-f(x_{0})}{t}}=u(g'(0)).}

If such a linear map u exists, then f is said to be quasi-differentiable at x0.

Continuity of u need not be assumed, but it follows instead from the definition of the quasi-derivative. If f is Fréchet differentiable at x0, then by the chain rule, f is also quasi-differentiable and its quasi-derivative is equal to its Fréchet derivative at x0. The converse is true provided E is finite-dimensional. Finally, if f is quasi-differentiable, then it is Gateaux differentiable and its Gateaux derivative is equal to its quasi-derivative.

References

  • Dieudonné, J (1969). Foundations of modern analysis. Academic Press.
Functional analysis (topicsglossary)
Spaces
Properties
Theorems
Operators
Algebras
Open problems
Applications
Advanced topics
Analysis in topological vector spaces
Basic concepts
Derivatives
Measurability
Integrals
Results
Related
Functional calculus
Applications
Stub icon

This mathematical analysis–related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: