fbpx
Wikipedia

Differential (mathematics)

In mathematics, differential refers to several related notions[1] derived from the early days of calculus, put on a rigorous footing, such as infinitesimal differences and the derivatives of functions.[2]

The term is used in various branches of mathematics such as calculus, differential geometry, algebraic geometry and algebraic topology.

Introduction edit

The term differential is used nonrigorously in calculus to refer to an infinitesimal ("infinitely small") change in some varying quantity. For example, if x is a variable, then a change in the value of x is often denoted Δx (pronounced delta x). The differential dx represents an infinitely small change in the variable x. The idea of an infinitely small or infinitely slow change is, intuitively, extremely useful, and there are a number of ways to make the notion mathematically precise.

Using calculus, it is possible to relate the infinitely small changes of various variables to each other mathematically using derivatives. If y is a function of x, then the differential dy of y is related to dx by the formula

 
where  denotes the derivative of y with respect to x. This formula summarizes the intuitive idea that the derivative of y with respect to x is the limit of the ratio of differences Δyx as Δx becomes infinitesimal.

Basic notions edit

History and usage edit

Infinitesimal quantities played a significant role in the development of calculus. Archimedes used them, even though he did not believe that arguments involving infinitesimals were rigorous.[3] Isaac Newton referred to them as fluxions. However, it was Gottfried Leibniz who coined the term differentials for infinitesimal quantities and introduced the notation for them which is still used today.

In Leibniz's notation, if x is a variable quantity, then dx denotes an infinitesimal change in the variable x. Thus, if y is a function of x, then the derivative of y with respect to x is often denoted dy/dx, which would otherwise be denoted (in the notation of Newton or Lagrange) or y. The use of differentials in this form attracted much criticism, for instance in the famous pamphlet The Analyst by Bishop Berkeley. Nevertheless, the notation has remained popular because it suggests strongly the idea that the derivative of y at x is its instantaneous rate of change (the slope of the graph's tangent line), which may be obtained by taking the limit of the ratio Δyx as Δx becomes arbitrarily small. Differentials are also compatible with dimensional analysis, where a differential such as dx has the same dimensions as the variable x.

Calculus evolved into a distinct branch of mathematics during the 17th century CE, although there were antecedents going back to antiquity. The presentations of, e.g., Newton, Leibniz, were marked by non-rigorous definitions of terms like differential, fluent and "infinitely small". While many of the arguments in Bishop Berkeley's 1734 The Analyst are theological in nature, modern mathematicians acknowledge the validity of his argument against "the Ghosts of departed Quantities"; however, the modern approaches do not have the same technical issues. Despite the lack of rigor, immense progress was made in the 17th and 18th centuries. In the 19th century, Cauchy and others gradually developed the Epsilon, delta approach to continuity, limits and derivatives, giving a solid conceptual foundation for calculus.

In the 20th century, several new concepts in, e.g., multivariable calculus, differential geometry, seemed to encapsulate the intent of the old terms, especially differential; both differential and infinitesimal are used with new, more rigorous, meanings.

Differentials are also used in the notation for integrals because an integral can be regarded as an infinite sum of infinitesimal quantities: the area under a graph is obtained by subdividing the graph into infinitely thin strips and summing their areas. In an expression such as

 
the integral sign (which is a modified long s) denotes the infinite sum, f(x) denotes the "height" of a thin strip, and the differential dx denotes its infinitely thin width.

Approaches edit

There are several approaches for making the notion of differentials mathematically precise.

  1. Differentials as linear maps. This approach underlies the definition of the derivative and the exterior derivative in differential geometry.[4]
  2. Differentials as nilpotent elements of commutative rings. This approach is popular in algebraic geometry.[5]
  3. Differentials in smooth models of set theory. This approach is known as synthetic differential geometry or smooth infinitesimal analysis and is closely related to the algebraic geometric approach, except that ideas from topos theory are used to hide the mechanisms by which nilpotent infinitesimals are introduced.[6]
  4. Differentials as infinitesimals in hyperreal number systems, which are extensions of the real numbers that contain invertible infinitesimals and infinitely large numbers. This is the approach of nonstandard analysis pioneered by Abraham Robinson.[7]

These approaches are very different from each other, but they have in common the idea of being quantitative, i.e., saying not just that a differential is infinitely small, but how small it is.

Differentials as linear maps edit

There is a simple way to make precise sense of differentials, first used on the Real line by regarding them as linear maps. It can be used on  ,  , a Hilbert space, a Banach space, or more generally, a topological vector space. The case of the Real line is the easiest to explain. This type of differential is also known as a covariant vector or cotangent vector, depending on context.

Differentials as linear maps on R edit

Suppose   is a real-valued function on  . We can reinterpret the variable   in   as being a function rather than a number, namely the identity map on the real line, which takes a real number   to itself:  . Then   is the composite of   with  , whose value at   is  . The differential   (which of course depends on  ) is then a function whose value at   (usually denoted  ) is not a number, but a linear map from   to  . Since a linear map from   to   is given by a   matrix, it is essentially the same thing as a number, but the change in the point of view allows us to think of   as an infinitesimal and compare it with the standard infinitesimal  , which is again just the identity map from   to   (a   matrix with entry  ). The identity map has the property that if   is very small, then   is very small, which enables us to regard it as infinitesimal. The differential   has the same property, because it is just a multiple of  , and this multiple is the derivative   by definition. We therefore obtain that  , and hence  . Thus we recover the idea that   is the ratio of the differentials   and  .

This would just be a trick were it not for the fact that:

  1. it captures the idea of the derivative of   at   as the best linear approximation to   at  ;
  2. it has many generalizations.

Differentials as linear maps on Rn edit

If   is a function from   to  , then we say that   is differentiable[8] at   if there is a linear map   from   to   such that for any  , there is a neighbourhood   of   such that for  ,

 

We can now use the same trick as in the one-dimensional case and think of the expression   as the composite of   with the standard coordinates   on   (so that   is the  -th component of  ). Then the differentials   at a point   form a basis for the vector space of linear maps from   to   and therefore, if   is differentiable at  , we can write   as a linear combination of these basis elements:

 

The coefficients   are (by definition) the partial derivatives of   at   with respect to  . Hence, if   is differentiable on all of  , we can write, more concisely:

 

In the one-dimensional case this becomes

 
as before.

This idea generalizes straightforwardly to functions from   to  . Furthermore, it has the decisive advantage over other definitions of the derivative that it is invariant under changes of coordinates. This means that the same idea can be used to define the differential of smooth maps between smooth manifolds.

Aside: Note that the existence of all the partial derivatives of   at   is a necessary condition for the existence of a differential at  . However it is not a sufficient condition. For counterexamples, see Gateaux derivative.

Differentials as linear maps on a vector space edit

The same procedure works on a vector space with a enough additional structure to reasonably talk about continuity. The most concrete case is a Hilbert space, also known as a complete inner product space, where the inner product and its associated norm define a suitable concept of distance. The same procedure works for a Banach space, also known as a complete Normed vector space. However, for a more general topological vector space, some of the details are more abstract because there is no concept of distance.

For the important case of a finite dimension, any inner product space is a Hilbert space, any normed vector space is a Banach space and any topological vector space is complete. As a result, you can define a coordinate system from an arbitrary basis and use the same technique as for  .

Differentials as germs of functions edit

This approach works on any differentiable manifold. If

  1. U and V are open sets containing p
  2.   is continuous
  3.   is continuous

then f is equivalent to g at p, denoted  , if and only if there is an open   containing p such that   for every x in W. The germ of f at p, denoted  , is the set of all real continuous functions equivalent to f at p; if f is smooth at p then   is a smooth germ. If

  1.  ,     and   are open sets containing p
  2.  ,  ,   and   are smooth functions
  3.  
  4.  
  5. r is a real number

then

  1.  
  2.  
  3.  

This shows that the germs at p form an algebra.

Define   to be the set of all smooth germs vanishing at p and   to be the product of ideals  . Then a differential at p (cotangent vector at p) is an element of  . The differential of a smooth function f at p, denoted  , is  .

A similar approach is to define differential equivalence of first order in terms of derivatives in an arbitrary coordinate patch. Then the differential of f at p is the set of all functions differentially equivalent to   at p.

Algebraic geometry edit

In algebraic geometry, differentials and other infinitesimal notions are handled in a very explicit way by accepting that the coordinate ring or structure sheaf of a space may contain nilpotent elements. The simplest example is the ring of dual numbers R[ε], where ε2 = 0.

This can be motivated by the algebro-geometric point of view on the derivative of a function f from R to R at a point p. For this, note first that f − f(p) belongs to the ideal Ip of functions on R which vanish at p. If the derivative f vanishes at p, then f − f(p) belongs to the square Ip2 of this ideal. Hence the derivative of f at p may be captured by the equivalence class [f − f(p)] in the quotient space Ip/Ip2, and the 1-jet of f (which encodes its value and its first derivative) is the equivalence class of f in the space of all functions modulo Ip2. Algebraic geometers regard this equivalence class as the restriction of f to a thickened version of the point p whose coordinate ring is not R (which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip) but R[ε] which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip2. Such a thickened point is a simple example of a scheme.[5]

Algebraic geometry notions edit

Differentials are also important in algebraic geometry, and there are several important notions.

Synthetic differential geometry edit

A fifth approach to infinitesimals is the method of synthetic differential geometry[9] or smooth infinitesimal analysis.[10] This is closely related to the algebraic-geometric approach, except that the infinitesimals are more implicit and intuitive. The main idea of this approach is to replace the category of sets with another category of smoothly varying sets which is a topos. In this category, one can define the real numbers, smooth functions, and so on, but the real numbers automatically contain nilpotent infinitesimals, so these do not need to be introduced by hand as in the algebraic geometric approach. However the logic in this new category is not identical to the familiar logic of the category of sets: in particular, the law of the excluded middle does not hold. This means that set-theoretic mathematical arguments only extend to smooth infinitesimal analysis if they are constructive (e.g., do not use proof by contradiction). Some[who?] regard this disadvantage as a positive thing, since it forces one to find constructive arguments wherever they are available.

Nonstandard analysis edit

The final approach to infinitesimals again involves extending the real numbers, but in a less drastic way. In the nonstandard analysis approach there are no nilpotent infinitesimals, only invertible ones, which may be viewed as the reciprocals of infinitely large numbers.[7] Such extensions of the real numbers may be constructed explicitly using equivalence classes of sequences of real numbers, so that, for example, the sequence (1, 1/2, 1/3, ..., 1/n, ...) represents an infinitesimal. The first-order logic of this new set of hyperreal numbers is the same as the logic for the usual real numbers, but the completeness axiom (which involves second-order logic) does not hold. Nevertheless, this suffices to develop an elementary and quite intuitive approach to calculus using infinitesimals, see transfer principle.

Differential geometry edit

The notion of a differential motivates several concepts in differential geometry (and differential topology).

Other meanings edit

The term differential has also been adopted in homological algebra and algebraic topology, because of the role the exterior derivative plays in de Rham cohomology: in a cochain complex   the maps (or coboundary operators) di are often called differentials. Dually, the boundary operators in a chain complex are sometimes called codifferentials.

The properties of the differential also motivate the algebraic notions of a derivation and a differential algebra.

See also edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Differential". Wolfram MathWorld. Retrieved February 24, 2022. The word differential has several related meaning in mathematics. In the most common context, it means "related to derivatives." So, for example, the portion of calculus dealing with taking derivatives (i.e., differentiation), is known as differential calculus.
    The word "differential" also has a more technical meaning in the theory of differential k-forms as a so-called one-form.
  2. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries - English. Archived from the original on January 3, 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  3. ^ Boyer 1991.
  4. ^ Darling 1994.
  5. ^ a b Eisenbud & Harris 1998.
  6. ^ See Kock 2006 and Moerdijk & Reyes 1991.
  7. ^ a b See Robinson 1996 and Keisler 1986.
  8. ^ See, for instance, Apostol 1967.
  9. ^ See Kock 2006 and Lawvere 1968.
  10. ^ See Moerdijk & Reyes 1991 and Bell 1998.

References edit

differential, mathematics, this, article, about, mathematical, notion, derived, from, historic, concept, infinitesimal, difference, other, uses, differential, disambiguation, mathematics, differential, refers, several, related, notions, derived, from, early, d. This article is about the Mathematical notion derived from the historic concept of infinitesimal difference For other uses see Differential disambiguation In mathematics differential refers to several related notions 1 derived from the early days of calculus put on a rigorous footing such as infinitesimal differences and the derivatives of functions 2 The term is used in various branches of mathematics such as calculus differential geometry algebraic geometry and algebraic topology Contents 1 Introduction 1 1 Basic notions 2 History and usage 3 Approaches 3 1 Differentials as linear maps 3 1 1 Differentials as linear maps on R 3 1 2 Differentials as linear maps on Rn 3 1 3 Differentials as linear maps on a vector space 3 2 Differentials as germs of functions 3 3 Algebraic geometry 3 3 1 Algebraic geometry notions 3 4 Synthetic differential geometry 3 5 Nonstandard analysis 4 Differential geometry 5 Other meanings 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 ReferencesIntroduction editThe term differential is used nonrigorously in calculus to refer to an infinitesimal infinitely small change in some varying quantity For example if x is a variable then a change in the value of x is often denoted Dx pronounced delta x The differential dx represents an infinitely small change in the variable x The idea of an infinitely small or infinitely slow change is intuitively extremely useful and there are a number of ways to make the notion mathematically precise Using calculus it is possible to relate the infinitely small changes of various variables to each other mathematically using derivatives If y is a function of x then the differential dy of y is related to dx by the formulady dydxdx displaystyle dy frac dy dx dx nbsp where dydx displaystyle frac dy dx nbsp denotes the derivative of y with respect to x This formula summarizes the intuitive idea that the derivative of y with respect to x is the limit of the ratio of differences Dy Dx as Dx becomes infinitesimal Basic notions edit In calculus the differential represents a change in the linearization of a function The total differential is its generalization for functions of multiple variables In traditional approaches to calculus the differentials e g dx dy dt etc are interpreted as infinitesimals There are several methods of defining infinitesimals rigorously but it is sufficient to say that an infinitesimal number is smaller in absolute value than any positive real number just as an infinitely large number is larger than any real number The differential is another name for the Jacobian matrix of partial derivatives of a function from Rn to Rm especially when this matrix is viewed as a linear map More generally the differential or pushforward refers to the derivative of a map between smooth manifolds and the pushforward operations it defines The differential is also used to define the dual concept of pullback Stochastic calculus provides a notion of stochastic differential and an associated calculus for stochastic processes The integrator in a Stieltjes integral is represented as the differential of a function Formally the differential appearing under the integral behaves exactly as a differential thus the integration by substitution and integration by parts formulae for Stieltjes integral correspond respectively to the chain rule and product rule for the differential History and usage editSee also History of calculus Infinitesimal quantities played a significant role in the development of calculus Archimedes used them even though he did not believe that arguments involving infinitesimals were rigorous 3 Isaac Newton referred to them as fluxions However it was Gottfried Leibniz who coined the term differentials for infinitesimal quantities and introduced the notation for them which is still used today In Leibniz s notation if x is a variable quantity then dx denotes an infinitesimal change in the variable x Thus if y is a function of x then the derivative of y with respect to x is often denoted dy dx which would otherwise be denoted in the notation of Newton or Lagrange ẏ or y The use of differentials in this form attracted much criticism for instance in the famous pamphlet The Analyst by Bishop Berkeley Nevertheless the notation has remained popular because it suggests strongly the idea that the derivative of y at x is its instantaneous rate of change the slope of the graph s tangent line which may be obtained by taking the limit of the ratio Dy Dx as Dx becomes arbitrarily small Differentials are also compatible with dimensional analysis where a differential such as dx has the same dimensions as the variable x Calculus evolved into a distinct branch of mathematics during the 17th century CE although there were antecedents going back to antiquity The presentations of e g Newton Leibniz were marked by non rigorous definitions of terms like differential fluent and infinitely small While many of the arguments in Bishop Berkeley s 1734 The Analyst are theological in nature modern mathematicians acknowledge the validity of his argument against the Ghosts of departed Quantities however the modern approaches do not have the same technical issues Despite the lack of rigor immense progress was made in the 17th and 18th centuries In the 19th century Cauchy and others gradually developed the Epsilon delta approach to continuity limits and derivatives giving a solid conceptual foundation for calculus In the 20th century several new concepts in e g multivariable calculus differential geometry seemed to encapsulate the intent of the old terms especially differential both differential and infinitesimal are used with new more rigorous meanings Differentials are also used in the notation for integrals because an integral can be regarded as an infinite sum of infinitesimal quantities the area under a graph is obtained by subdividing the graph into infinitely thin strips and summing their areas In an expression such as f x dx displaystyle int f x dx nbsp the integral sign which is a modified long s denotes the infinite sum f x denotes the height of a thin strip and the differential dx denotes its infinitely thin width Approaches editThere are several approaches for making the notion of differentials mathematically precise Differentials as linear maps This approach underlies the definition of the derivative and the exterior derivative in differential geometry 4 Differentials as nilpotent elements of commutative rings This approach is popular in algebraic geometry 5 Differentials in smooth models of set theory This approach is known as synthetic differential geometry or smooth infinitesimal analysis and is closely related to the algebraic geometric approach except that ideas from topos theory are used to hide the mechanisms by which nilpotent infinitesimals are introduced 6 Differentials as infinitesimals in hyperreal number systems which are extensions of the real numbers that contain invertible infinitesimals and infinitely large numbers This is the approach of nonstandard analysis pioneered by Abraham Robinson 7 These approaches are very different from each other but they have in common the idea of being quantitative i e saying not just that a differential is infinitely small but how small it is Differentials as linear maps edit There is a simple way to make precise sense of differentials first used on the Real line by regarding them as linear maps It can be used on R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp a Hilbert space a Banach space or more generally a topological vector space The case of the Real line is the easiest to explain This type of differential is also known as a covariant vector or cotangent vector depending on context Differentials as linear maps on R edit Suppose f x displaystyle f x nbsp is a real valued function on R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp We can reinterpret the variable x displaystyle x nbsp in f x displaystyle f x nbsp as being a function rather than a number namely the identity map on the real line which takes a real number p displaystyle p nbsp to itself x p p displaystyle x p p nbsp Then f x displaystyle f x nbsp is the composite of f displaystyle f nbsp with x displaystyle x nbsp whose value at p displaystyle p nbsp is f x p f p displaystyle f x p f p nbsp The differential d f displaystyle operatorname d f nbsp which of course depends on f displaystyle f nbsp is then a function whose value at p displaystyle p nbsp usually denoted dfp displaystyle df p nbsp is not a number but a linear map from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Since a linear map from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is given by a 1 1 displaystyle 1 times 1 nbsp matrix it is essentially the same thing as a number but the change in the point of view allows us to think of dfp displaystyle df p nbsp as an infinitesimal and compare it with the standard infinitesimal dxp displaystyle dx p nbsp which is again just the identity map from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp a 1 1 displaystyle 1 times 1 nbsp matrix with entry 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp The identity map has the property that if e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is very small then dxp e displaystyle dx p varepsilon nbsp is very small which enables us to regard it as infinitesimal The differential dfp displaystyle df p nbsp has the same property because it is just a multiple of dxp displaystyle dx p nbsp and this multiple is the derivative f p displaystyle f p nbsp by definition We therefore obtain that dfp f p dxp displaystyle df p f p dx p nbsp and hence df f dx displaystyle df f dx nbsp Thus we recover the idea that f displaystyle f nbsp is the ratio of the differentials df displaystyle df nbsp and dx displaystyle dx nbsp This would just be a trick were it not for the fact that it captures the idea of the derivative of f displaystyle f nbsp at p displaystyle p nbsp as the best linear approximation to f displaystyle f nbsp at p displaystyle p nbsp it has many generalizations Differentials as linear maps on Rn edit If f displaystyle f nbsp is a function from Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp then we say that f displaystyle f nbsp is differentiable 8 at p Rn displaystyle p in mathbb R n nbsp if there is a linear map dfp displaystyle df p nbsp from Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp such that for any e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 nbsp there is a neighbourhood N displaystyle N nbsp of p displaystyle p nbsp such that for x N displaystyle x in N nbsp f x f p dfp x p lt e x p displaystyle left f x f p df p x p right lt varepsilon left x p right nbsp We can now use the same trick as in the one dimensional case and think of the expression f x1 x2 xn displaystyle f x 1 x 2 ldots x n nbsp as the composite of f displaystyle f nbsp with the standard coordinates x1 x2 xn displaystyle x 1 x 2 ldots x n nbsp on Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp so that xj p displaystyle x j p nbsp is the j displaystyle j nbsp th component of p Rn displaystyle p in mathbb R n nbsp Then the differentials dx1 p dx2 p dxn p displaystyle left dx 1 right p left dx 2 right p ldots left dx n right p nbsp at a point p displaystyle p nbsp form a basis for the vector space of linear maps from Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp and therefore if f displaystyle f nbsp is differentiable at p displaystyle p nbsp we can write d fp displaystyle operatorname d f p nbsp as a linear combination of these basis elements dfp j 1nDjf p dxj p displaystyle df p sum j 1 n D j f p dx j p nbsp The coefficients Djf p displaystyle D j f p nbsp are by definition the partial derivatives of f displaystyle f nbsp at p displaystyle p nbsp with respect to x1 x2 xn displaystyle x 1 x 2 ldots x n nbsp Hence if f displaystyle f nbsp is differentiable on all of Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp we can write more concisely d f f x1dx1 f x2dx2 f xndxn displaystyle operatorname d f frac partial f partial x 1 dx 1 frac partial f partial x 2 dx 2 cdots frac partial f partial x n dx n nbsp In the one dimensional case this becomesdf dfdxdx displaystyle df frac df dx dx nbsp as before This idea generalizes straightforwardly to functions from Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp to Rm displaystyle mathbb R m nbsp Furthermore it has the decisive advantage over other definitions of the derivative that it is invariant under changes of coordinates This means that the same idea can be used to define the differential of smooth maps between smooth manifolds Aside Note that the existence of all the partial derivatives of f x displaystyle f x nbsp at x displaystyle x nbsp is a necessary condition for the existence of a differential at x displaystyle x nbsp However it is not a sufficient condition For counterexamples see Gateaux derivative Differentials as linear maps on a vector space edit The same procedure works on a vector space with a enough additional structure to reasonably talk about continuity The most concrete case is a Hilbert space also known as a complete inner product space where the inner product and its associated norm define a suitable concept of distance The same procedure works for a Banach space also known as a complete Normed vector space However for a more general topological vector space some of the details are more abstract because there is no concept of distance For the important case of a finite dimension any inner product space is a Hilbert space any normed vector space is a Banach space and any topological vector space is complete As a result you can define a coordinate system from an arbitrary basis and use the same technique as for Rn displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp Differentials as germs of functions edit This approach works on any differentiable manifold If U and V are open sets containing p f U R displaystyle f colon U to mathbb R nbsp is continuous g V R displaystyle g colon V to mathbb R nbsp is continuousthen f is equivalent to g at p denoted f pg displaystyle f sim p g nbsp if and only if there is an open W U V displaystyle W subseteq U cap V nbsp containing p such that f x g x displaystyle f x g x nbsp for every x in W The germ of f at p denoted f p displaystyle f p nbsp is the set of all real continuous functions equivalent to f at p if f is smooth at p then f p displaystyle f p nbsp is a smooth germ If U1 displaystyle U 1 nbsp U2 displaystyle U 2 nbsp V1 displaystyle V 1 nbsp and V2 displaystyle V 2 nbsp are open sets containing p f1 U1 R displaystyle f 1 colon U 1 to mathbb R nbsp f2 U2 R displaystyle f 2 colon U 2 to mathbb R nbsp g1 V1 R displaystyle g 1 colon V 1 to mathbb R nbsp and g2 V2 R displaystyle g 2 colon V 2 to mathbb R nbsp are smooth functions f1 pg1 displaystyle f 1 sim p g 1 nbsp f2 pg2 displaystyle f 2 sim p g 2 nbsp r is a real numberthen r f1 pr g1 displaystyle r f 1 sim p r g 1 nbsp f1 f2 U1 U2 R pg1 g2 V1 V2 R displaystyle f 1 f 2 colon U 1 cap U 2 to mathbb R sim p g 1 g 2 colon V 1 cap V 2 to mathbb R nbsp f1 f2 U1 U2 R pg1 g2 V1 V2 R displaystyle f 1 f 2 colon U 1 cap U 2 to mathbb R sim p g 1 g 2 colon V 1 cap V 2 to mathbb R nbsp This shows that the germs at p form an algebra Define Ip displaystyle mathcal I p nbsp to be the set of all smooth germs vanishing at p and Ip2 displaystyle mathcal I p 2 nbsp to be the product of ideals IpIp displaystyle mathcal I p mathcal I p nbsp Then a differential at p cotangent vector at p is an element of Ip Ip2 displaystyle mathcal I p mathcal I p 2 nbsp The differential of a smooth function f at p denoted dfp displaystyle mathrm d f p nbsp is f f p p Ip2 displaystyle f f p p mathcal I p 2 nbsp A similar approach is to define differential equivalence of first order in terms of derivatives in an arbitrary coordinate patch Then the differential of f at p is the set of all functions differentially equivalent to f f p displaystyle f f p nbsp at p Algebraic geometry edit In algebraic geometry differentials and other infinitesimal notions are handled in a very explicit way by accepting that the coordinate ring or structure sheaf of a space may contain nilpotent elements The simplest example is the ring of dual numbers R e where e2 0 This can be motivated by the algebro geometric point of view on the derivative of a function f from R to R at a point p For this note first that f f p belongs to the ideal Ip of functions on R which vanish at p If the derivative f vanishes at p then f f p belongs to the square Ip2 of this ideal Hence the derivative of f at p may be captured by the equivalence class f f p in the quotient space Ip Ip2 and the 1 jet of f which encodes its value and its first derivative is the equivalence class of f in the space of all functions modulo Ip2 Algebraic geometers regard this equivalence class as the restriction of f to a thickened version of the point p whose coordinate ring is not R which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip but R e which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip2 Such a thickened point is a simple example of a scheme 5 Algebraic geometry notions edit Differentials are also important in algebraic geometry and there are several important notions Abelian differentials usually mean differential one forms on an algebraic curve or Riemann surface Quadratic differentials which behave like squares of abelian differentials are also important in the theory of Riemann surfaces Kahler differentials provide a general notion of differential in algebraic geometry Synthetic differential geometry edit A fifth approach to infinitesimals is the method of synthetic differential geometry 9 or smooth infinitesimal analysis 10 This is closely related to the algebraic geometric approach except that the infinitesimals are more implicit and intuitive The main idea of this approach is to replace the category of sets with another category of smoothly varying sets which is a topos In this category one can define the real numbers smooth functions and so on but the real numbers automatically contain nilpotent infinitesimals so these do not need to be introduced by hand as in the algebraic geometric approach However the logic in this new category is not identical to the familiar logic of the category of sets in particular the law of the excluded middle does not hold This means that set theoretic mathematical arguments only extend to smooth infinitesimal analysis if they are constructive e g do not use proof by contradiction Some who regard this disadvantage as a positive thing since it forces one to find constructive arguments wherever they are available Nonstandard analysis edit The final approach to infinitesimals again involves extending the real numbers but in a less drastic way In the nonstandard analysis approach there are no nilpotent infinitesimals only invertible ones which may be viewed as the reciprocals of infinitely large numbers 7 Such extensions of the real numbers may be constructed explicitly using equivalence classes of sequences of real numbers so that for example the sequence 1 1 2 1 3 1 n represents an infinitesimal The first order logic of this new set of hyperreal numbers is the same as the logic for the usual real numbers but the completeness axiom which involves second order logic does not hold Nevertheless this suffices to develop an elementary and quite intuitive approach to calculus using infinitesimals see transfer principle Differential geometry editThe notion of a differential motivates several concepts in differential geometry and differential topology The differential Pushforward of a map between manifolds Differential forms provide a framework which accommodates multiplication and differentiation of differentials The exterior derivative is a notion of differentiation of differential forms which generalizes the differential of a function which is a differential 1 form Pullback is in particular a geometric name for the chain rule for composing a map between manifolds with a differential form on the target manifold Covariant derivatives or differentials provide a general notion for differentiating of vector fields and tensor fields on a manifold or more generally sections of a vector bundle see Connection vector bundle This ultimately leads to the general concept of a connection Other meanings editThe term differential has also been adopted in homological algebra and algebraic topology because of the role the exterior derivative plays in de Rham cohomology in a cochain complex C d displaystyle C bullet d bullet nbsp the maps or coboundary operators di are often called differentials Dually the boundary operators in a chain complex are sometimes called codifferentials The properties of the differential also motivate the algebraic notions of a derivation and a differential algebra See also editDifferential equation Differential form Differential of a functionNotes editCitations edit Differential Wolfram MathWorld Retrieved February 24 2022 The word differential has several related meaning in mathematics In the most common context it means related to derivatives So for example the portion of calculus dealing with taking derivatives i e differentiation is known as differential calculus The word differential also has a more technical meaning in the theory of differential k forms as a so called one form differential Definition of differential in US English by Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on January 3 2014 Retrieved 13 April 2018 Boyer 1991 Darling 1994 a b Eisenbud amp Harris 1998 See Kock 2006 and Moerdijk amp Reyes 1991 a b See Robinson 1996 and Keisler 1986 See for instance Apostol 1967 See Kock 2006 and Lawvere 1968 See Moerdijk amp Reyes 1991 and Bell 1998 References editApostol Tom M 1967 Calculus 2nd ed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 00005 1 Bell John L 1998 Invitation to Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis PDF Boyer Carl B 1991 Archimedes of Syracuse A History of Mathematics 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 54397 8 Darling R W R 1994 Differential forms and connections Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46800 8 Eisenbud David Harris Joe 1998 The Geometry of Schemes Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 98637 1 Keisler H Jerome 1986 Elementary Calculus An Infinitesimal Approach 2nd ed Kock Anders 2006 Synthetic Differential Geometry PDF 2nd ed Cambridge University Press Lawvere F W 1968 Outline of synthetic differential geometry PDF published 1998 Moerdijk I Reyes G E 1991 Models for Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis Springer Verlag Robinson Abraham 1996 Non standard analysis Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 04490 3 Weisstein Eric W Differentials MathWorld nbsp This article includes a list of related items that share the same name or similar names If an internal link incorrectly led you here you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Differential mathematics amp oldid 1209918810, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.