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Inequality (mathematics)

In mathematics, an inequality is a relation which makes a non-equal comparison between two numbers or other mathematical expressions.[1] It is used most often to compare two numbers on the number line by their size. The main types of inequality are less than and greater than.

The feasible regions of linear programming are defined by a set of inequalities.

Notation edit

There are several different notations used to represent different kinds of inequalities:

  • The notation a < b means that a is less than b.
  • The notation a > b means that a is greater than b.

In either case, a is not equal to b. These relations are known as strict inequalities,[1] meaning that a is strictly less than or strictly greater than b. Equality is excluded.

In contrast to strict inequalities, there are two types of inequality relations that are not strict:

  • The notation ab or ab means that a is less than or equal to b (or, equivalently, at most b, or not greater than b).
  • The notation ab or ab means that a is greater than or equal to b (or, equivalently, at least b, or not less than b).

The relation not greater than can also be represented by   the symbol for "greater than" bisected by a slash, "not". The same is true for not less than,  

The notation ab means that a is not equal to b; this inequation sometimes is considered a form of strict inequality.[2] It does not say that one is greater than the other; it does not even require a and b to be member of an ordered set.

In engineering sciences, less formal use of the notation is to state that one quantity is "much greater" than another,[3] normally by several orders of magnitude.

  • The notation ab means that a is much less than b.[4]
  • The notation ab means that a is much greater than b.[5]

This implies that the lesser value can be neglected with little effect on the accuracy of an approximation (such as the case of ultrarelativistic limit in physics).

In all of the cases above, any two symbols mirroring each other are symmetrical; a < b and b > a are equivalent, etc.

Properties on the number line edit

Inequalities are governed by the following properties. All of these properties also hold if all of the non-strict inequalities (≤ and ≥) are replaced by their corresponding strict inequalities (< and >) and — in the case of applying a function — monotonic functions are limited to strictly monotonic functions.

Converse edit

The relations ≤ and ≥ are each other's converse, meaning that for any real numbers a and b:

ab and ba are equivalent.

Transitivity edit

The transitive property of inequality states that for any real numbers a, b, c:[6]

If ab and bc, then ac.

If either of the premises is a strict inequality, then the conclusion is a strict inequality:

If ab and b < c, then a < c.
If a < b and bc, then a < c.

Addition and subtraction edit

 
If x < y, then x + a < y + a.

A common constant c may be added to or subtracted from both sides of an inequality.[2] So, for any real numbers a, b, c:

If ab, then a + cb + c and acbc.

In other words, the inequality relation is preserved under addition (or subtraction) and the real numbers are an ordered group under addition.

Multiplication and division edit

 
If x < y and a > 0, then ax < ay.
 
If x < y and a < 0, then ax > ay.

The properties that deal with multiplication and division state that for any real numbers, a, b and non-zero c:

If ab and c > 0, then acbc and a/cb/c.
If ab and c < 0, then acbc and a/cb/c.

In other words, the inequality relation is preserved under multiplication and division with positive constant, but is reversed when a negative constant is involved. More generally, this applies for an ordered field. For more information, see § Ordered fields.

Additive inverse edit

The property for the additive inverse states that for any real numbers a and b:

If ab, then −a ≥ −b.

Multiplicative inverse edit

If both numbers are positive, then the inequality relation between the multiplicative inverses is opposite of that between the original numbers. More specifically, for any non-zero real numbers a and b that are both positive (or both negative):

If ab, then 1/a1/b.

All of the cases for the signs of a and b can also be written in chained notation, as follows:

If 0 < ab, then 1/a1/b > 0.
If ab < 0, then 0 > 1/a1/b.
If a < 0 < b, then 1/a < 0 < 1/b.

Applying a function to both sides edit

 
The graph of y = ln x

Any monotonically increasing function, by its definition,[7] may be applied to both sides of an inequality without breaking the inequality relation (provided that both expressions are in the domain of that function). However, applying a monotonically decreasing function to both sides of an inequality means the inequality relation would be reversed. The rules for the additive inverse, and the multiplicative inverse for positive numbers, are both examples of applying a monotonically decreasing function.

If the inequality is strict (a < b, a > b) and the function is strictly monotonic, then the inequality remains strict. If only one of these conditions is strict, then the resultant inequality is non-strict. In fact, the rules for additive and multiplicative inverses are both examples of applying a strictly monotonically decreasing function.

A few examples of this rule are:

  • Raising both sides of an inequality to a power n > 0 (equiv., −n < 0), when a and b are positive real numbers:
    0 ≤ ab ⇔ 0 ≤ anbn.
    0 ≤ abanbn ≥ 0.
  • Taking the natural logarithm on both sides of an inequality, when a and b are positive real numbers:
    0 < ab ⇔ ln(a) ≤ ln(b).
    0 < a < b ⇔ ln(a) < ln(b).
    (this is true because the natural logarithm is a strictly increasing function.)

Formal definitions and generalizations edit

A (non-strict) partial order is a binary relation ≤ over a set P which is reflexive, antisymmetric, and transitive.[8] That is, for all a, b, and c in P, it must satisfy the three following clauses:

  1. aa (reflexivity)
  2. if ab and ba, then a = b (antisymmetry)
  3. if ab and bc, then ac (transitivity)

A set with a partial order is called a partially ordered set.[9] Those are the very basic axioms that every kind of order has to satisfy. Other axioms that exist for other definitions of orders on a set P include:

  1. For every a and b in P, ab or ba (total order).
  2. For all a and b in P for which a < b, there is a c in P such that a < c < b (dense order).
  3. Every non-empty subset of P with an upper bound has a least upper bound (supremum) in P (least-upper-bound property).

Ordered fields edit

If (F, +, ×) is a field and ≤ is a total order on F, then (F, +, ×, ≤) is called an ordered field if and only if:

  • ab implies a + cb + c;
  • 0 ≤ a and 0 ≤ b implies 0 ≤ a × b.

Both (Q, +, ×, ≤) and (R, +, ×, ≤) are ordered fields, but ≤ cannot be defined in order to make (C, +, ×, ≤) an ordered field,[10] because −1 is the square of i and would therefore be positive.

Besides from being an ordered field, R also has the Least-upper-bound property. In fact, R can be defined as the only ordered field with that quality.[11]

Chained notation edit

The notation a < b < c stands for "a < b and b < c", from which, by the transitivity property above, it also follows that a < c. By the above laws, one can add or subtract the same number to all three terms, or multiply or divide all three terms by same nonzero number and reverse all inequalities if that number is negative. Hence, for example, a < b + e < c is equivalent to ae < b < ce.

This notation can be generalized to any number of terms: for instance, a1a2 ≤ ... ≤ an means that aiai+1 for i = 1, 2, ..., n − 1. By transitivity, this condition is equivalent to aiaj for any 1 ≤ ijn.

When solving inequalities using chained notation, it is possible and sometimes necessary to evaluate the terms independently. For instance, to solve the inequality 4x < 2x + 1 ≤ 3x + 2, it is not possible to isolate x in any one part of the inequality through addition or subtraction. Instead, the inequalities must be solved independently, yielding x < 1/2 and x ≥ −1 respectively, which can be combined into the final solution −1 ≤ x < 1/2.

Occasionally, chained notation is used with inequalities in different directions, in which case the meaning is the logical conjunction of the inequalities between adjacent terms. For example, the defining condition of a zigzag poset is written as a1 < a2 > a3 < a4 > a5 < a6 > ... . Mixed chained notation is used more often with compatible relations, like <, =, ≤. For instance, a < b = cd means that a < b, b = c, and cd. This notation exists in a few programming languages such as Python. In contrast, in programming languages that provide an ordering on the type of comparison results, such as C, even homogeneous chains may have a completely different meaning.[12]

Sharp inequalities edit

An inequality is said to be sharp if it cannot be relaxed and still be valid in general. Formally, a universally quantified inequality φ is called sharp if, for every valid universally quantified inequality ψ, if ψ φ holds, then ψ φ also holds. For instance, the inequality aR. a2 ≥ 0 is sharp, whereas the inequality aR. a2 ≥ −1 is not sharp.[citation needed]

Inequalities between means edit

There are many inequalities between means. For example, for any positive numbers a1, a2, ..., an we have HGAQ, where they represent the following means of the sequence:

  • Harmonic mean :  
  • Geometric mean :  
  • Arithmetic mean :  
  • Quadratic mean :  

Cauchy–Schwarz inequality edit

The Cauchy–Schwarz inequality states that for all vectors u and v of an inner product space it is true that

 
where   is the inner product. Examples of inner products include the real and complex dot product; In Euclidean space Rn with the standard inner product, the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality is
 

Power inequalities edit

A power inequality is an inequality containing terms of the form ab, where a and b are real positive numbers or variable expressions. They often appear in mathematical olympiads exercises.

Examples:

  • For any real x,
     
  • If x > 0 and p > 0, then
     
    In the limit of p → 0, the upper and lower bounds converge to ln(x).
  • If x > 0, then
     
  • If x > 0, then
     
  • If x, y, z > 0, then
     
  • For any real distinct numbers a and b,
     
  • If x, y > 0 and 0 < p < 1, then
     
  • If x, y, z > 0, then
     
  • If a, b > 0, then[13]
     
  • If a, b > 0, then[14]
     
  • If a, b, c > 0, then
     
  • If a, b > 0, then
     

Well-known inequalities edit

Mathematicians often use inequalities to bound quantities for which exact formulas cannot be computed easily. Some inequalities are used so often that they have names:

Complex numbers and inequalities edit

The set of complex numbers   with its operations of addition and multiplication is a field, but it is impossible to define any relation so that   becomes an ordered field. To make   an ordered field, it would have to satisfy the following two properties:

  • if ab, then a + cb + c;
  • if 0 ≤ a and 0 ≤ b, then 0 ≤ ab.

Because ≤ is a total order, for any number a, either 0 ≤ a or a ≤ 0 (in which case the first property above implies that 0 ≤ −a). In either case 0 ≤ a2; this means that i2 > 0 and 12 > 0; so −1 > 0 and 1 > 0, which means (−1 + 1) > 0; contradiction.

However, an operation ≤ can be defined so as to satisfy only the first property (namely, "if ab, then a + cb + c"). Sometimes the lexicographical order definition is used:

  • ab, if
    • Re(a) < Re(b), or
    • Re(a) = Re(b) and Im(a) ≤ Im(b)

It can easily be proven that for this definition ab implies a + cb + c.

Vector inequalities edit

Inequality relationships similar to those defined above can also be defined for column vectors. If we let the vectors   (meaning that   and  , where   and   are real numbers for  ), we can define the following relationships:

  •  , if   for  .
  •  , if   for  .
  •  , if   for   and  .
  •  , if   for  .

Similarly, we can define relationships for  ,  , and  . This notation is consistent with that used by Matthias Ehrgott in Multicriteria Optimization (see References).

The trichotomy property (as stated above) is not valid for vector relationships. For example, when   and  , there exists no valid inequality relationship between these two vectors. However, for the rest of the aforementioned properties, a parallel property for vector inequalities exists.

Systems of inequalities edit

Systems of linear inequalities can be simplified by Fourier–Motzkin elimination.[15]

The cylindrical algebraic decomposition is an algorithm that allows testing whether a system of polynomial equations and inequalities has solutions, and, if solutions exist, describing them. The complexity of this algorithm is doubly exponential in the number of variables. It is an active research domain to design algorithms that are more efficient in specific cases.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Inequality Definition (Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary)". www.mathsisfun.com. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  2. ^ a b "Inequality". www.learnalberta.ca. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  3. ^ Polyanin, A.D.; Manzhirov, A.V. (2006). Handbook of Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists. CRC Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-4200-1051-0. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Much Less". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  5. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Much Greater". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  6. ^ Drachman, Bryon C.; Cloud, Michael J. (2006). Inequalities: With Applications to Engineering. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 2–3. ISBN 0-3872-2626-5.
  7. ^ "ProvingInequalities". www.cs.yale.edu. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  8. ^ Simovici, Dan A. & Djeraba, Chabane (2008). "Partially Ordered Sets". Mathematical Tools for Data Mining: Set Theory, Partial Orders, Combinatorics. Springer. ISBN 9781848002012.
  9. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Partially Ordered Set". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  10. ^ Feldman, Joel (2014). "Fields" (PDF). math.ubc.ca. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  11. ^ Stewart, Ian (2007). Why Beauty Is Truth: The History of Symmetry. Hachette UK. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-4650-0875-9.
  12. ^ Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie (Apr 1988). The C Programming Language. Prentice Hall Software Series (2nd ed.). Englewood Cliffs/NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0131103628. Here: Sect.A.7.9 Relational Operators, p.167: Quote: "a<b<c is parsed as (a<b)<c"
  13. ^ Laub, M.; Ilani, Ishai (1990). "E3116". The American Mathematical Monthly. 97 (1): 65–67. doi:10.2307/2324012. JSTOR 2324012.
  14. ^ Manyama, S. (2010). "Solution of One Conjecture on Inequalities with Power-Exponential Functions" (PDF). Australian Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. 7 (2): 1. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  15. ^ Gärtner, Bernd; Matoušek, Jiří (2006). Understanding and Using Linear Programming. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 3-540-30697-8.

Sources edit

  • Hardy, G., Littlewood J. E., Pólya, G. (1999). Inequalities. Cambridge Mathematical Library, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-05206-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Beckenbach, E. F., Bellman, R. (1975). An Introduction to Inequalities. Random House Inc. ISBN 0-394-01559-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Drachman, Byron C., Cloud, Michael J. (1998). Inequalities: With Applications to Engineering. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-98404-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Grinshpan, A. Z. (2005), "General inequalities, consequences, and applications", Advances in Applied Mathematics, 34 (1): 71–100, doi:10.1016/j.aam.2004.05.001
  • Murray S. Klamkin. "'Quickie' inequalities" (PDF). Math Strategies. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  • Arthur Lohwater (1982). "Introduction to Inequalities". Online e-book in PDF format.
  • Harold Shapiro (2005). "Mathematical Problem Solving". The Old Problem Seminar. Kungliga Tekniska högskolan.
  • . Archived from the original on 2008-02-03.
  • Pachpatte, B. G. (2005). Mathematical Inequalities. North-Holland Mathematical Library. Vol. 67 (first ed.). Amsterdam, the Netherlands: Elsevier. ISBN 0-444-51795-2. ISSN 0924-6509. MR 2147066. Zbl 1091.26008.
  • Ehrgott, Matthias (2005). Multicriteria Optimization. Springer-Berlin. ISBN 3-540-21398-8.
  • Steele, J. Michael (2004). The Cauchy-Schwarz Master Class: An Introduction to the Art of Mathematical Inequalities. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54677-5.

External links edit

inequality, mathematics, this, article, about, relations, greater, than, less, than, relation, equal, inequation, less, than, greater, than, redirect, here, symbol, less, than, sign, symbol, greater, than, sign, song, less, than, song, redirects, here, confuse. This article is about relations greater than and less than For the relation not equal see Inequation Less than and Greater than redirect here For the symbol lt see less than sign For the symbol gt see greater than sign For the song see Less Than song redirects here Not to be confused with Absolute continuity of measures This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message In mathematics an inequality is a relation which makes a non equal comparison between two numbers or other mathematical expressions 1 It is used most often to compare two numbers on the number line by their size The main types of inequality are less than and greater than The feasible regions of linear programming are defined by a set of inequalities Contents 1 Notation 2 Properties on the number line 2 1 Converse 2 2 Transitivity 2 3 Addition and subtraction 2 4 Multiplication and division 2 5 Additive inverse 2 6 Multiplicative inverse 2 7 Applying a function to both sides 3 Formal definitions and generalizations 3 1 Ordered fields 4 Chained notation 5 Sharp inequalities 6 Inequalities between means 7 Cauchy Schwarz inequality 8 Power inequalities 9 Well known inequalities 10 Complex numbers and inequalities 11 Vector inequalities 12 Systems of inequalities 13 See also 14 References 15 Sources 16 External linksNotation editThere are several different notations used to represent different kinds of inequalities The notation a lt b means that a is less than b The notation a gt b means that a is greater than b In either case a is not equal to b These relations are known as strict inequalities 1 meaning that a is strictly less than or strictly greater than b Equality is excluded In contrast to strict inequalities there are two types of inequality relations that are not strict The notation a b or a b means that a is less than or equal to b or equivalently at most b or not greater than b The notation a b or a b means that a is greater than or equal to b or equivalently at least b or not less than b The relation not greater than can also be represented by a b displaystyle a ngtr b nbsp the symbol for greater than bisected by a slash not The same is true for not less than a b displaystyle a nless b nbsp The notation a b means that a is not equal to b this inequation sometimes is considered a form of strict inequality 2 It does not say that one is greater than the other it does not even require a and b to be member of an ordered set In engineering sciences less formal use of the notation is to state that one quantity is much greater than another 3 normally by several orders of magnitude The notation a b means that a is much less than b 4 The notation a b means that a is much greater than b 5 This implies that the lesser value can be neglected with little effect on the accuracy of an approximation such as the case of ultrarelativistic limit in physics In all of the cases above any two symbols mirroring each other are symmetrical a lt b and b gt a are equivalent etc Properties on the number line editInequalities are governed by the following properties All of these properties also hold if all of the non strict inequalities and are replaced by their corresponding strict inequalities lt and gt and in the case of applying a function monotonic functions are limited to strictly monotonic functions Converse edit The relations and are each other s converse meaning that for any real numbers a and b a b and b a are equivalent Transitivity edit The transitive property of inequality states that for any real numbers a b c 6 If a b and b c then a c If either of the premises is a strict inequality then the conclusion is a strict inequality If a b and b lt c then a lt c If a lt b and b c then a lt c Addition and subtraction edit nbsp If x lt y then x a lt y a A common constant c may be added to or subtracted from both sides of an inequality 2 So for any real numbers a b c If a b then a c b c and a c b c In other words the inequality relation is preserved under addition or subtraction and the real numbers are an ordered group under addition Multiplication and division edit nbsp If x lt y and a gt 0 then ax lt ay nbsp If x lt y and a lt 0 then ax gt ay The properties that deal with multiplication and division state that for any real numbers a b and non zero c If a b and c gt 0 then ac bc and a c b c If a b and c lt 0 then ac bc and a c b c In other words the inequality relation is preserved under multiplication and division with positive constant but is reversed when a negative constant is involved More generally this applies for an ordered field For more information see Ordered fields Additive inverse edit The property for the additive inverse states that for any real numbers a and b If a b then a b Multiplicative inverse edit If both numbers are positive then the inequality relation between the multiplicative inverses is opposite of that between the original numbers More specifically for any non zero real numbers a and b that are both positive or both negative If a b then 1 a 1 b All of the cases for the signs of a and b can also be written in chained notation as follows If 0 lt a b then 1 a 1 b gt 0 If a b lt 0 then 0 gt 1 a 1 b If a lt 0 lt b then 1 a lt 0 lt 1 b Applying a function to both sides edit nbsp The graph of y ln x Any monotonically increasing function by its definition 7 may be applied to both sides of an inequality without breaking the inequality relation provided that both expressions are in the domain of that function However applying a monotonically decreasing function to both sides of an inequality means the inequality relation would be reversed The rules for the additive inverse and the multiplicative inverse for positive numbers are both examples of applying a monotonically decreasing function If the inequality is strict a lt b a gt b and the function is strictly monotonic then the inequality remains strict If only one of these conditions is strict then the resultant inequality is non strict In fact the rules for additive and multiplicative inverses are both examples of applying a strictly monotonically decreasing function A few examples of this rule are Raising both sides of an inequality to a power n gt 0 equiv n lt 0 when a and b are positive real numbers 0 a b 0 an bn 0 a b a n b n 0 Taking the natural logarithm on both sides of an inequality when a and b are positive real numbers 0 lt a b ln a ln b 0 lt a lt b ln a lt ln b this is true because the natural logarithm is a strictly increasing function Formal definitions and generalizations editA non strict partial order is a binary relation over a set P which is reflexive antisymmetric and transitive 8 That is for all a b and c in P it must satisfy the three following clauses a a reflexivity if a b and b a then a b antisymmetry if a b and b c then a c transitivity A set with a partial order is called a partially ordered set 9 Those are the very basic axioms that every kind of order has to satisfy Other axioms that exist for other definitions of orders on a set P include For every a and b in P a b or b a total order For all a and b in P for which a lt b there is a c in P such that a lt c lt b dense order Every non empty subset of P with an upper bound has a least upper bound supremum in P least upper bound property Ordered fields edit Main article Ordered field If F is a field and is a total order on F then F is called an ordered field if and only if a b implies a c b c 0 a and 0 b implies 0 a b Both Q and R are ordered fields but cannot be defined in order to make C an ordered field 10 because 1 is the square of i and would therefore be positive Besides from being an ordered field R also has the Least upper bound property In fact R can be defined as the only ordered field with that quality 11 Chained notation editThe notation a lt b lt c stands for a lt b and b lt c from which by the transitivity property above it also follows that a lt c By the above laws one can add or subtract the same number to all three terms or multiply or divide all three terms by same nonzero number and reverse all inequalities if that number is negative Hence for example a lt b e lt c is equivalent to a e lt b lt c e This notation can be generalized to any number of terms for instance a1 a2 an means that ai ai 1 for i 1 2 n 1 By transitivity this condition is equivalent to ai aj for any 1 i j n When solving inequalities using chained notation it is possible and sometimes necessary to evaluate the terms independently For instance to solve the inequality 4x lt 2x 1 3x 2 it is not possible to isolate x in any one part of the inequality through addition or subtraction Instead the inequalities must be solved independently yielding x lt 1 2 and x 1 respectively which can be combined into the final solution 1 x lt 1 2 Occasionally chained notation is used with inequalities in different directions in which case the meaning is the logical conjunction of the inequalities between adjacent terms For example the defining condition of a zigzag poset is written as a1 lt a2 gt a3 lt a4 gt a5 lt a6 gt Mixed chained notation is used more often with compatible relations like lt For instance a lt b c d means that a lt b b c and c d This notation exists in a few programming languages such as Python In contrast in programming languages that provide an ordering on the type of comparison results such as C even homogeneous chains may have a completely different meaning 12 Sharp inequalities editAn inequality is said to be sharp if it cannot be relaxed and still be valid in general Formally a universally quantified inequality f is called sharp if for every valid universally quantified inequality ps if ps f holds then ps f also holds For instance the inequality a R a2 0 is sharp whereas the inequality a R a2 1 is not sharp citation needed Inequalities between means editSee also Inequality of arithmetic and geometric means There are many inequalities between means For example for any positive numbers a1 a2 an we have H G A Q where they represent the following means of the sequence Harmonic mean H n 1 a 1 1 a 2 1 a n displaystyle H frac n frac 1 a 1 frac 1 a 2 cdots frac 1 a n nbsp Geometric mean G a 1 a 2 a n n displaystyle G sqrt n a 1 cdot a 2 cdots a n nbsp Arithmetic mean A a 1 a 2 a n n displaystyle A frac a 1 a 2 cdots a n n nbsp Quadratic mean Q a 1 2 a 2 2 a n 2 n displaystyle Q sqrt frac a 1 2 a 2 2 cdots a n 2 n nbsp Cauchy Schwarz inequality editSee also Cauchy Schwarz inequality The Cauchy Schwarz inequality states that for all vectors u and v of an inner product space it is true that u v 2 u u v v displaystyle langle mathbf u mathbf v rangle 2 leq langle mathbf u mathbf u rangle cdot langle mathbf v mathbf v rangle nbsp where displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle nbsp is the inner product Examples of inner products include the real and complex dot product In Euclidean space Rn with the standard inner product the Cauchy Schwarz inequality is i 1 n u i v i 2 i 1 n u i 2 i 1 n v i 2 displaystyle left sum i 1 n u i v i right 2 leq left sum i 1 n u i 2 right left sum i 1 n v i 2 right nbsp Power inequalities editA power inequality is an inequality containing terms of the form ab where a and b are real positive numbers or variable expressions They often appear in mathematical olympiads exercises Examples For any real x e x 1 x displaystyle e x geq 1 x nbsp If x gt 0 and p gt 0 then x p 1 p ln x 1 1 x p p displaystyle frac x p 1 p geq ln x geq frac 1 frac 1 x p p nbsp In the limit of p 0 the upper and lower bounds converge to ln x If x gt 0 then x x 1 e 1 e displaystyle x x geq left frac 1 e right frac 1 e nbsp If x gt 0 then x x x x displaystyle x x x geq x nbsp If x y z gt 0 then x y z x z y y z x gt 2 displaystyle left x y right z left x z right y left y z right x gt 2 nbsp For any real distinct numbers a and b e b e a b a gt e a b 2 displaystyle frac e b e a b a gt e a b 2 nbsp If x y gt 0 and 0 lt p lt 1 then x p y p gt x y p displaystyle x p y p gt left x y right p nbsp If x y z gt 0 then x x y y z z x y z x y z 3 displaystyle x x y y z z geq left xyz right x y z 3 nbsp If a b gt 0 then 13 a a b b a b b a displaystyle a a b b geq a b b a nbsp If a b gt 0 then 14 a e a b e b a e b b e a displaystyle a ea b eb geq a eb b ea nbsp If a b c gt 0 then a 2 a b 2 b c 2 c a 2 b b 2 c c 2 a displaystyle a 2a b 2b c 2c geq a 2b b 2c c 2a nbsp If a b gt 0 then a b b a gt 1 displaystyle a b b a gt 1 nbsp Well known inequalities editSee also List of inequalities Mathematicians often use inequalities to bound quantities for which exact formulas cannot be computed easily Some inequalities are used so often that they have names Azuma s inequality Bernoulli s inequality Bell s inequality Boole s inequality Cauchy Schwarz inequality Chebyshev s inequality Chernoff s inequality Cramer Rao inequality Hoeffding s inequality Holder s inequality Inequality of arithmetic and geometric means Jensen s inequality Kolmogorov s inequality Markov s inequality Minkowski inequality Nesbitt s inequality Pedoe s inequality Poincare inequality Samuelson s inequality Sobolev inequality Triangle inequalityComplex numbers and inequalities editThe set of complex numbers C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp with its operations of addition and multiplication is a field but it is impossible to define any relation so that C displaystyle mathbb C times leq nbsp becomes an ordered field To make C displaystyle mathbb C times leq nbsp an ordered field it would have to satisfy the following two properties if a b then a c b c if 0 a and 0 b then 0 ab Because is a total order for any number a either 0 a or a 0 in which case the first property above implies that 0 a In either case 0 a2 this means that i2 gt 0 and 12 gt 0 so 1 gt 0 and 1 gt 0 which means 1 1 gt 0 contradiction However an operation can be defined so as to satisfy only the first property namely if a b then a c b c Sometimes the lexicographical order definition is used a b if Re a lt Re b or Re a Re b and Im a Im b It can easily be proven that for this definition a b implies a c b c Vector inequalities editInequality relationships similar to those defined above can also be defined for column vectors If we let the vectors x y R n displaystyle x y in mathbb R n nbsp meaning that x x 1 x 2 x n T displaystyle x x 1 x 2 ldots x n mathsf T nbsp and y y 1 y 2 y n T displaystyle y y 1 y 2 ldots y n mathsf T nbsp where x i displaystyle x i nbsp and y i displaystyle y i nbsp are real numbers for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp we can define the following relationships x y displaystyle x y nbsp if x i y i displaystyle x i y i nbsp for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp x lt y displaystyle x lt y nbsp if x i lt y i displaystyle x i lt y i nbsp for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp x y displaystyle x leq y nbsp if x i y i displaystyle x i leq y i nbsp for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp and x y displaystyle x neq y nbsp x y displaystyle x leqq y nbsp if x i y i displaystyle x i leq y i nbsp for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp Similarly we can define relationships for x gt y displaystyle x gt y nbsp x y displaystyle x geq y nbsp and x y displaystyle x geqq y nbsp This notation is consistent with that used by Matthias Ehrgott in Multicriteria Optimization see References The trichotomy property as stated above is not valid for vector relationships For example when x 2 5 T displaystyle x 2 5 mathsf T nbsp and y 3 4 T displaystyle y 3 4 mathsf T nbsp there exists no valid inequality relationship between these two vectors However for the rest of the aforementioned properties a parallel property for vector inequalities exists Systems of inequalities editSystems of linear inequalities can be simplified by Fourier Motzkin elimination 15 The cylindrical algebraic decomposition is an algorithm that allows testing whether a system of polynomial equations and inequalities has solutions and if solutions exist describing them The complexity of this algorithm is doubly exponential in the number of variables It is an active research domain to design algorithms that are more efficient in specific cases See also editBinary relation Bracket mathematics for the use of similar and signs as brackets Inclusion set theory Inequation Interval mathematics List of inequalities List of triangle inequalities Partially ordered set Relational operators used in programming languages to denote inequalityReferences edit a b Inequality Definition Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary www mathsisfun com Retrieved 2019 12 03 a b Inequality www learnalberta ca Retrieved 2019 12 03 Polyanin A D Manzhirov A V 2006 Handbook of Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists CRC Press p 29 ISBN 978 1 4200 1051 0 Retrieved 2021 11 19 Weisstein Eric W Much Less mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2019 12 03 Weisstein Eric W Much Greater mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2019 12 03 Drachman Bryon C Cloud Michael J 2006 Inequalities With Applications to Engineering Springer Science amp Business Media pp 2 3 ISBN 0 3872 2626 5 ProvingInequalities www cs yale edu Retrieved 2019 12 03 Simovici Dan A amp Djeraba Chabane 2008 Partially Ordered Sets Mathematical Tools for Data Mining Set Theory Partial Orders Combinatorics Springer ISBN 9781848002012 Weisstein Eric W Partially Ordered Set mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2019 12 03 Feldman Joel 2014 Fields PDF math ubc ca Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 2019 12 03 Stewart Ian 2007 Why Beauty Is Truth The History of Symmetry Hachette UK p 106 ISBN 978 0 4650 0875 9 Brian W Kernighan and Dennis M Ritchie Apr 1988 The C Programming Language Prentice Hall Software Series 2nd ed Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 0131103628 Here Sect A 7 9 Relational Operators p 167 Quote a lt b lt c is parsed as a lt b lt c Laub M Ilani Ishai 1990 E3116 The American Mathematical Monthly 97 1 65 67 doi 10 2307 2324012 JSTOR 2324012 Manyama S 2010 Solution of One Conjecture on Inequalities with Power Exponential Functions PDF Australian Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 7 2 1 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Gartner Bernd Matousek Jiri 2006 Understanding and Using Linear Programming Berlin Springer ISBN 3 540 30697 8 Sources editHardy G Littlewood J E Polya G 1999 Inequalities Cambridge Mathematical Library Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 05206 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Beckenbach E F Bellman R 1975 An Introduction to Inequalities Random House Inc ISBN 0 394 01559 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Drachman Byron C Cloud Michael J 1998 Inequalities With Applications to Engineering Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 98404 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Grinshpan A Z 2005 General inequalities consequences and applications Advances in Applied Mathematics 34 1 71 100 doi 10 1016 j aam 2004 05 001 Murray S Klamkin Quickie inequalities PDF Math Strategies Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Arthur Lohwater 1982 Introduction to Inequalities Online e book in PDF format Harold Shapiro 2005 Mathematical Problem Solving The Old Problem Seminar Kungliga Tekniska hogskolan 3rd USAMO Archived from the original on 2008 02 03 Pachpatte B G 2005 Mathematical Inequalities North Holland Mathematical Library Vol 67 first ed Amsterdam the Netherlands Elsevier ISBN 0 444 51795 2 ISSN 0924 6509 MR 2147066 Zbl 1091 26008 Ehrgott Matthias 2005 Multicriteria Optimization Springer Berlin ISBN 3 540 21398 8 Steele J Michael 2004 The Cauchy Schwarz Master Class An Introduction to the Art of Mathematical Inequalities Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54677 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Inequalities mathematics Inequality Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Graph of Inequalities by Ed Pegg Jr AoPS Wiki entry about Inequalities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inequality mathematics amp oldid 1223445447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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