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Brouwer fixed-point theorem

Brouwer's fixed-point theorem is a fixed-point theorem in topology, named after L. E. J. (Bertus) Brouwer. It states that for any continuous function mapping a compact convex set to itself there is a point such that . The simplest forms of Brouwer's theorem are for continuous functions from a closed interval in the real numbers to itself or from a closed disk to itself. A more general form than the latter is for continuous functions from a convex compact subset of Euclidean space to itself.

Among hundreds of fixed-point theorems,[1] Brouwer's is particularly well known, due in part to its use across numerous fields of mathematics. In its original field, this result is one of the key theorems characterizing the topology of Euclidean spaces, along with the Jordan curve theorem, the hairy ball theorem, the invariance of dimension and the Borsuk–Ulam theorem.[2] This gives it a place among the fundamental theorems of topology.[3] The theorem is also used for proving deep results about differential equations and is covered in most introductory courses on differential geometry. It appears in unlikely fields such as game theory. In economics, Brouwer's fixed-point theorem and its extension, the Kakutani fixed-point theorem, play a central role in the proof of existence of general equilibrium in market economies as developed in the 1950s by economics Nobel prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Gérard Debreu.

The theorem was first studied in view of work on differential equations by the French mathematicians around Henri Poincaré and Charles Émile Picard. Proving results such as the Poincaré–Bendixson theorem requires the use of topological methods. This work at the end of the 19th century opened into several successive versions of the theorem. The case of differentiable mappings of the n-dimensional closed ball was first proved in 1910 by Jacques Hadamard[4] and the general case for continuous mappings by Brouwer in 1911.[5]

Statement

The theorem has several formulations, depending on the context in which it is used and its degree of generalization. The simplest is sometimes given as follows:

In the plane
Every continuous function from a closed disk to itself has at least one fixed point.[6]

This can be generalized to an arbitrary finite dimension:

In Euclidean space
Every continuous function from a closed ball of a Euclidean space into itself has a fixed point.[7]

A slightly more general version is as follows:[8]

Convex compact set
Every continuous function from a convex compact subset K of a Euclidean space to K itself has a fixed point.[9]

An even more general form is better known under a different name:

Schauder fixed point theorem
Every continuous function from a convex compact subset K of a Banach space to K itself has a fixed point.[10]

Importance of the pre-conditions

The theorem holds only for functions that are endomorphisms (functions that have the same set as the domain and codomain) and for sets that are compact (thus, in particular, bounded and closed) and convex (or homeomorphic to convex). The following examples show why the pre-conditions are important.

The function f as an endomorphism

Consider the function

 

with domain [-1,1]. The range of the function is [0,2]. Thus, f is not an endomorphism.

Boundedness

Consider the function

 

which is a continuous function from   to itself. As it shifts every point to the right, it cannot have a fixed point. The space   is convex and closed, but not bounded.

Closedness

Consider the function

 

which is a continuous function from the open interval (−1,1) to itself. Since x = 1 is not part of the interval, there is not a fixed point of f(x) = x. The space (−1,1) is convex and bounded, but not closed. On the other hand, the function f does have a fixed point for the closed interval [−1,1], namely f(1) = 1.

Convexity

Convexity is not strictly necessary for BFPT. Because the properties involved (continuity, being a fixed point) are invariant under homeomorphisms, BFPT is equivalent to forms in which the domain is required to be a closed unit ball  . For the same reason it holds for every set that is homeomorphic to a closed ball (and therefore also closed, bounded, connected, without holes, etc.).

The following example shows that BFPT does not work for domains with holes. Consider the function  , which is a continuous function from the unit circle to itself. Since -x≠x holds for any point of the unit circle, f has no fixed point. The analogous example works for the n-dimensional sphere (or any symmetric domain that does not contain the origin). The unit circle is closed and bounded, but it has a hole (and so it is not convex) . The function f does have a fixed point for the unit disc, since it takes the origin to itself.

A formal generalization of BFPT for "hole-free" domains can be derived from the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem.[11]

Notes

The continuous function in this theorem is not required to be bijective or even surjective.

Illustrations

The theorem has several "real world" illustrations. Here are some examples.

  1. Take two sheets of graph paper of equal size with coordinate systems on them, lay one flat on the table and crumple up (without ripping or tearing) the other one and place it, in any fashion, on top of the first so that the crumpled paper does not reach outside the flat one. There will then be at least one point of the crumpled sheet that lies directly above its corresponding point (i.e. the point with the same coordinates) of the flat sheet. This is a consequence of the n = 2 case of Brouwer's theorem applied to the continuous map that assigns to the coordinates of every point of the crumpled sheet the coordinates of the point of the flat sheet immediately beneath it.
  2. Take an ordinary map of a country, and suppose that that map is laid out on a table inside that country. There will always be a "You are Here" point on the map which represents that same point in the country.
  3. In three dimensions a consequence of the Brouwer fixed-point theorem is that, no matter how much you stir a delicious cocktail in a glass (or think about milk shake), when the liquid has come to rest, some point in the liquid will end up in exactly the same place in the glass as before you took any action, assuming that the final position of each point is a continuous function of its original position, that the liquid after stirring is contained within the space originally taken up by it, and that the glass (and stirred surface shape) maintain a convex volume. Ordering a cocktail shaken, not stirred defeats the convexity condition ("shaking" being defined as a dynamic series of non-convex inertial containment states in the vacant headspace under a lid). In that case, the theorem would not apply, and thus all points of the liquid disposition are potentially displaced from the original state.[citation needed]

Intuitive approach

Explanations attributed to Brouwer

The theorem is supposed to have originated from Brouwer's observation of a cup of gourmet coffee.[12] If one stirs to dissolve a lump of sugar, it appears there is always a point without motion. He drew the conclusion that at any moment, there is a point on the surface that is not moving.[13] The fixed point is not necessarily the point that seems to be motionless, since the centre of the turbulence moves a little bit. The result is not intuitive, since the original fixed point may become mobile when another fixed point appears.

Brouwer is said to have added: "I can formulate this splendid result different, I take a horizontal sheet, and another identical one which I crumple, flatten and place on the other. Then a point of the crumpled sheet is in the same place as on the other sheet."[13] Brouwer "flattens" his sheet as with a flat iron, without removing the folds and wrinkles. Unlike the coffee cup example, the crumpled paper example also demonstrates that more than one fixed point may exist. This distinguishes Brouwer's result from other fixed-point theorems, such as Stefan Banach's, that guarantee uniqueness.

One-dimensional case

 

In one dimension, the result is intuitive and easy to prove. The continuous function f is defined on a closed interval [ab] and takes values in the same interval. Saying that this function has a fixed point amounts to saying that its graph (dark green in the figure on the right) intersects that of the function defined on the same interval [ab] which maps x to x (light green).

Intuitively, any continuous line from the left edge of the square to the right edge must necessarily intersect the green diagonal. To prove this, consider the function g which maps x to f(x) − x. It is ≥ 0 on a and ≤ 0 on b. By the intermediate value theorem, g has a zero in [ab]; this zero is a fixed point.

Brouwer is said to have expressed this as follows: "Instead of examining a surface, we will prove the theorem about a piece of string. Let us begin with the string in an unfolded state, then refold it. Let us flatten the refolded string. Again a point of the string has not changed its position with respect to its original position on the unfolded string."[13]

History

The Brouwer fixed point theorem was one of the early achievements of algebraic topology, and is the basis of more general fixed point theorems which are important in functional analysis. The case n = 3 first was proved by Piers Bohl in 1904 (published in Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik).[14] It was later proved by L. E. J. Brouwer in 1909. Jacques Hadamard proved the general case in 1910,[4] and Brouwer found a different proof in the same year.[5] Since these early proofs were all non-constructive indirect proofs, they ran contrary to Brouwer's intuitionist ideals. Although the existence of a fixed point is not constructive in the sense of constructivism in mathematics, methods to approximate fixed points guaranteed by Brouwer's theorem are now known.[15][16]

Prehistory

 
For flows in an unbounded area, or in an area with a "hole", the theorem is not applicable.
 
The theorem applies to any disk-shaped area, where it guarantees the existence of a fixed point.

To understand the prehistory of Brouwer's fixed point theorem one needs to pass through differential equations. At the end of the 19th century, the old problem[17] of the stability of the solar system returned into the focus of the mathematical community.[18] Its solution required new methods. As noted by Henri Poincaré, who worked on the three-body problem, there is no hope to find an exact solution: "Nothing is more proper to give us an idea of the hardness of the three-body problem, and generally of all problems of Dynamics where there is no uniform integral and the Bohlin series diverge."[19] He also noted that the search for an approximate solution is no more efficient: "the more we seek to obtain precise approximations, the more the result will diverge towards an increasing imprecision".[20]

He studied a question analogous to that of the surface movement in a cup of coffee. What can we say, in general, about the trajectories on a surface animated by a constant flow?[21] Poincaré discovered that the answer can be found in what we now call the topological properties in the area containing the trajectory. If this area is compact, i.e. both closed and bounded, then the trajectory either becomes stationary, or it approaches a limit cycle.[22] Poincaré went further; if the area is of the same kind as a disk, as is the case for the cup of coffee, there must necessarily be a fixed point. This fixed point is invariant under all functions which associate to each point of the original surface its position after a short time interval t. If the area is a circular band, or if it is not closed,[23] then this is not necessarily the case.

To understand differential equations better, a new branch of mathematics was born. Poincaré called it analysis situs. The French Encyclopædia Universalis defines it as the branch which "treats the properties of an object that are invariant if it is deformed in any continuous way, without tearing".[24] In 1886, Poincaré proved a result that is equivalent to Brouwer's fixed-point theorem,[25] although the connection with the subject of this article was not yet apparent.[26] A little later, he developed one of the fundamental tools for better understanding the analysis situs, now known as the fundamental group or sometimes the Poincaré group.[27] This method can be used for a very compact proof of the theorem under discussion.

Poincaré's method was analogous to that of Émile Picard, a contemporary mathematician who generalized the Cauchy–Lipschitz theorem.[28] Picard's approach is based on a result that would later be formalised by another fixed-point theorem, named after Banach. Instead of the topological properties of the domain, this theorem uses the fact that the function in question is a contraction.

First proofs

 
Jacques Hadamard helped Brouwer to formalize his ideas.

At the dawn of the 20th century, the interest in analysis situs did not stay unnoticed. However, the necessity of a theorem equivalent to the one discussed in this article was not yet evident. Piers Bohl, a Latvian mathematician, applied topological methods to the study of differential equations.[29] In 1904 he proved the three-dimensional case of our theorem,[14] but his publication was not noticed.[30]

It was Brouwer, finally, who gave the theorem its first patent of nobility. His goals were different from those of Poincaré. This mathematician was inspired by the foundations of mathematics, especially mathematical logic and topology. His initial interest lay in an attempt to solve Hilbert's fifth problem.[31] In 1909, during a voyage to Paris, he met Henri Poincaré, Jacques Hadamard, and Émile Borel. The ensuing discussions convinced Brouwer of the importance of a better understanding of Euclidean spaces, and were the origin of a fruitful exchange of letters with Hadamard. For the next four years, he concentrated on the proof of certain great theorems on this question. In 1912 he proved the hairy ball theorem for the two-dimensional sphere, as well as the fact that every continuous map from the two-dimensional ball to itself has a fixed point.[32] These two results in themselves were not really new. As Hadamard observed, Poincaré had shown a theorem equivalent to the hairy ball theorem.[33] The revolutionary aspect of Brouwer's approach was his systematic use of recently developed tools such as homotopy, the underlying concept of the Poincaré group. In the following year, Hadamard generalised the theorem under discussion to an arbitrary finite dimension, but he employed different methods. Hans Freudenthal comments on the respective roles as follows: "Compared to Brouwer's revolutionary methods, those of Hadamard were very traditional, but Hadamard's participation in the birth of Brouwer's ideas resembles that of a midwife more than that of a mere spectator."[34]

Brouwer's approach yielded its fruits, and in 1910 he also found a proof that was valid for any finite dimension,[5] as well as other key theorems such as the invariance of dimension.[35] In the context of this work, Brouwer also generalized the Jordan curve theorem to arbitrary dimension and established the properties connected with the degree of a continuous mapping.[36] This branch of mathematics, originally envisioned by Poincaré and developed by Brouwer, changed its name. In the 1930s, analysis situs became algebraic topology.[37]

Reception

 
John Nash used the theorem in game theory to prove the existence of an equilibrium strategy profile.

The theorem proved its worth in more than one way. During the 20th century numerous fixed-point theorems were developed, and even a branch of mathematics called fixed-point theory.[38] Brouwer's theorem is probably the most important.[39] It is also among the foundational theorems on the topology of topological manifolds and is often used to prove other important results such as the Jordan curve theorem.[40]

Besides the fixed-point theorems for more or less contracting functions, there are many that have emerged directly or indirectly from the result under discussion. A continuous map from a closed ball of Euclidean space to its boundary cannot be the identity on the boundary. Similarly, the Borsuk–Ulam theorem says that a continuous map from the n-dimensional sphere to Rn has a pair of antipodal points that are mapped to the same point. In the finite-dimensional case, the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem provided from 1926 a method for counting fixed points. In 1930, Brouwer's fixed-point theorem was generalized to Banach spaces.[41] This generalization is known as Schauder's fixed-point theorem, a result generalized further by S. Kakutani to set-valued functions.[42] One also meets the theorem and its variants outside topology. It can be used to prove the Hartman-Grobman theorem, which describes the qualitative behaviour of certain differential equations near certain equilibria. Similarly, Brouwer's theorem is used for the proof of the Central Limit Theorem. The theorem can also be found in existence proofs for the solutions of certain partial differential equations.[43]

Other areas are also touched. In game theory, John Nash used the theorem to prove that in the game of Hex there is a winning strategy for white.[44] In economics, P. Bich explains that certain generalizations of the theorem show that its use is helpful for certain classical problems in game theory and generally for equilibria (Hotelling's law), financial equilibria and incomplete markets.[45]

Brouwer's celebrity is not exclusively due to his topological work. The proofs of his great topological theorems are not constructive,[46] and Brouwer's dissatisfaction with this is partly what led him to articulate the idea of constructivity. He became the originator and zealous defender of a way of formalising mathematics that is known as intuitionism, which at the time made a stand against set theory.[47] Brouwer disavowed his original proof of the fixed-point theorem. The first algorithm to approximate a fixed point was proposed by Herbert Scarf.[48] A subtle aspect of Scarf's algorithm is that it finds a point that is almost fixed by a function f, but in general cannot find a point that is close to an actual fixed point. In mathematical language, if ε is chosen to be very small, Scarf's algorithm can be used to find a point x such that f(x) is very close to x, i.e.,  . But Scarf's algorithm cannot be used to find a point x such that x is very close to a fixed point: we cannot guarantee   where   Often this latter condition is what is meant by the informal phrase "approximating a fixed point"[citation needed].

Proof outlines

A proof using degree

Brouwer's original 1911 proof relied on the notion of the degree of a continuous mapping, stemming from ideas in differential topology. Several modern accounts of the proof can be found in the literature, notably Milnor (1965).[49][50]

Let   denote the closed unit ball in   centered at the origin. Suppose for simplicity that   is continuously differentiable. A regular value of   is a point   such that the Jacobian of   is non-singular at every point of the preimage of  . In particular, by the inverse function theorem, every point of the preimage of   lies in   (the interior of  ). The degree of   at a regular value   is defined as the sum of the signs of the Jacobian determinant of   over the preimages of   under  :

 

The degree is, roughly speaking, the number of "sheets" of the preimage f lying over a small open set around p, with sheets counted oppositely if they are oppositely oriented. This is thus a generalization of winding number to higher dimensions.

The degree satisfies the property of homotopy invariance: let   and   be two continuously differentiable functions, and   for  . Suppose that the point   is a regular value of   for all t. Then  .

If there is no fixed point of the boundary of  , then the function

 

is well-defined, and

 

defines a homotopy from the identity function to it. The identity function has degree one at every point. In particular, the identity function has degree one at the origin, so   also has degree one at the origin. As a consequence, the preimage   is not empty. The elements of   are precisely the fixed points of the original function f.

This requires some work to make fully general. The definition of degree must be extended to singular values of f, and then to continuous functions. The more modern advent of homology theory simplifies the construction of the degree, and so has become a standard proof in the literature.

A proof using the hairy ball theorem

The hairy ball theorem states that on the unit sphere S in an odd-dimensional Euclidean space, there is no nowhere-vanishing continuous tangent vector field w on S. (The tangency condition means that w(x) ⋅ x = 0 for every unit vector x.) Sometimes the theorem is expressed by the statement that "there is always a place on the globe with no wind". An elementary proof of the hairy ball theorem can be found in Milnor (1978).

In fact, suppose first that w is continuously differentiable. By scaling, it can be assumed that w is a continuously differentiable unit tangent vector on S. It can be extended radially to a small spherical shell A of S. For t sufficiently small, a routine computation shows that the mapping ft(x) = t x + w(x) is a contraction mapping on A and that the volume of its image is a polynomial in t. On the other hand, as a contraction mapping, ft must restrict to a homeomorphism of S onto (1 + t2)½ S and A onto (1 + t2)½ A. This gives a contradiction, because, if the dimension n of the Euclidean space is odd, (1 + t2)n/2 is not a polynomial.

If w is only a continuous unit tangent vector on S, by the Weierstrass approximation theorem, it can be uniformly approximated by a polynomial map u of A into Euclidean space. The orthogonal projection on to the tangent space is given by v(x) = u(x) - u(x) ⋅ x. Thus v is polynomial and nowhere vanishing on A; by construction v/||v|| is a smooth unit tangent vector field on S, a contradiction.

The continuous version of the hairy ball theorem can now be used to prove the Brouwer fixed point theorem. First suppose that n is odd. If there were a fixed-point-free continuous self-mapping f of the closed unit ball B of the n-dimensional Euclidean space V, set

 

Since f has no fixed points, it follows that, for x in the interior of B, the vector w(x) is non-zero; and for x in S, the scalar product
xw(x) = 1 – xf(x) is strictly positive. From the original n-dimensional space Euclidean space V, construct a new auxiliary
(n + 1)-dimensional space W = V x R, with coordinates y = (x, t). Set

 

By construction X is a continuous vector field on the unit sphere of W, satisfying the tangency condition yX(y) = 0. Moreover, X(y) is nowhere vanishing (because, if x has norm 1, then xw(x) is non-zero; while if x has norm strictly less than 1, then t and w(x) are both non-zero). This contradiction proves the fixed point theorem when n is odd. For n even, one can apply the fixed point theorem to the closed unit ball B in n + 1 dimensions and the mapping F(x,y) = (f(x),0). The advantage of this proof is that it uses only elementary techniques; more general results like the Borsuk-Ulam theorem require tools from algebraic topology.[51]

A proof using homology or cohomology

The proof uses the observation that the boundary of the n-disk Dn is Sn−1, the (n − 1)-sphere.

 
Illustration of the retraction F

Suppose, for contradiction, that a continuous function f : DnDn has no fixed point. This means that, for every point x in Dn, the points x and f(x) are distinct. Because they are distinct, for every point x in Dn, we can construct a unique ray from f(x) to x and follow the ray until it intersects the boundary Sn−1 (see illustration). By calling this intersection point F(x), we define a function F : Dn → Sn−1 sending each point in the disk to its corresponding intersection point on the boundary. As a special case, whenever x itself is on the boundary, then the intersection point F(x) must be x.

Consequently, F is a special type of continuous function known as a retraction: every point of the codomain (in this case Sn−1) is a fixed point of F.

Intuitively it seems unlikely that there could be a retraction of Dn onto Sn−1, and in the case n = 1, the impossibility is more basic, because S0 (i.e., the endpoints of the closed interval D1) is not even connected. The case n = 2 is less obvious, but can be proven by using basic arguments involving the fundamental groups of the respective spaces: the retraction would induce a surjective group homomorphism from the fundamental group of D2 to that of S1, but the latter group is isomorphic to Z while the first group is trivial, so this is impossible. The case n = 2 can also be proven by contradiction based on a theorem about non-vanishing vector fields.

For n > 2, however, proving the impossibility of the retraction is more difficult. One way is to make use of homology groups: the homology Hn−1(Dn) is trivial, while Hn−1(Sn−1) is infinite cyclic. This shows that the retraction is impossible, because again the retraction would induce an injective group homomorphism from the latter to the former group.

The impossibility of a retraction can also be shown using the de Rham cohomology of open subsets of Euclidean space En. For n ≥ 2, the de Rham cohomology of U = En – (0) is one-dimensional in degree 0 and n - 1, and vanishes otherwise. If a retraction existed, then U would have to be contractible and its de Rham cohomology in degree n - 1 would have to vanish, a contradiction.[52]

A proof using Stokes' theorem

As in the proof of Brouwer's fixed-point theorem for continuous maps using homology, it is reduced to proving that there is no continuous retraction F from the ball B onto its boundary ∂B. In that case it can be assumed that F is smooth, since it can be approximated using the Weierstrass approximation theorem or by convolving with non-negative smooth bump functions of sufficiently small support and integral one (i.e. mollifying). If ω is a volume form on the boundary then by Stokes' theorem,

 

giving a contradiction.[53][54]

More generally, this shows that there is no smooth retraction from any non-empty smooth oriented compact manifold M onto its boundary. The proof using Stokes' theorem is closely related to the proof using homology, because the form ω generates the de Rham cohomology group Hn-1(∂M) which is isomorphic to the homology group Hn-1(∂M) by de Rham's theorem.[55]

A combinatorial proof

The BFPT can be proved using Sperner's lemma. We now give an outline of the proof for the special case in which f is a function from the standard n-simplex,   to itself, where

 

For every point   also   Hence the sum of their coordinates is equal:

 

Hence, by the pigeonhole principle, for every   there must be an index   such that the  th coordinate of   is greater than or equal to the  th coordinate of its image under f:

 

Moreover, if   lies on a k-dimensional sub-face of   then by the same argument, the index   can be selected from among the k + 1 coordinates which are not zero on this sub-face.

We now use this fact to construct a Sperner coloring. For every triangulation of   the color of every vertex   is an index   such that  

By construction, this is a Sperner coloring. Hence, by Sperner's lemma, there is an n-dimensional simplex whose vertices are colored with the entire set of n + 1 available colors.

Because f is continuous, this simplex can be made arbitrarily small by choosing an arbitrarily fine triangulation. Hence, there must be a point   which satisfies the labeling condition in all coordinates:   for all  

Because the sum of the coordinates of   and   must be equal, all these inequalities must actually be equalities. But this means that:

 

That is,   is a fixed point of  

A proof by Hirsch

There is also a quick proof, by Morris Hirsch, based on the impossibility of a differentiable retraction. The indirect proof starts by noting that the map f can be approximated by a smooth map retaining the property of not fixing a point; this can be done by using the Weierstrass approximation theorem or by convolving with smooth bump functions. One then defines a retraction as above which must now be differentiable. Such a retraction must have a non-singular value, by Sard's theorem, which is also non-singular for the restriction to the boundary (which is just the identity). Thus the inverse image would be a 1-manifold with boundary. The boundary would have to contain at least two end points, both of which would have to lie on the boundary of the original ball—which is impossible in a retraction.[56]

R. Bruce Kellogg, Tien-Yien Li, and James A. Yorke turned Hirsch's proof into a computable proof by observing that the retract is in fact defined everywhere except at the fixed points.[57] For almost any point, q, on the boundary, (assuming it is not a fixed point) the one manifold with boundary mentioned above does exist and the only possibility is that it leads from q to a fixed point. It is an easy numerical task to follow such a path from q to the fixed point so the method is essentially computable.[58] gave a conceptually similar path-following version of the homotopy proof which extends to a wide variety of related problems.

A proof using oriented area

A variation of the preceding proof does not employ the Sard's theorem, and goes as follows. If   is a smooth retraction, one considers the smooth deformation   and the smooth function

 

Differentiating under the sign of integral it is not difficult to check that φ(t) = 0 for all t, so φ is a constant function, which is a contradiction because φ(0) is the n-dimensional volume of the ball, while φ(1) is zero. The geometric idea is that φ(t) is the oriented area of gt(B) (that is, the Lebesgue measure of the image of the ball via gt, taking into account multiplicity and orientation), and should remain constant (as it is very clear in the one-dimensional case). On the other hand, as the parameter t passes form 0 to 1 the map gt transforms continuously from the identity map of the ball, to the retraction r, which is a contradiction since the oriented area of the identity coincides with the volume of the ball, while the oriented area of r is necessarily 0, as its image is the boundary of the ball, a set of null measure.[59]

A proof using the game Hex

A quite different proof given by David Gale is based on the game of Hex. The basic theorem regarding Hex, first proven by John Nash, is that no game of Hex can end in a draw; the first player always has a winning strategy (although this theorem is nonconstructive, and explicit strategies have not been fully developed for board sizes of dimensions 10 x 10 or greater). This turns out to be equivalent to the Brouwer fixed-point theorem for dimension 2. By considering n-dimensional versions of Hex, one can prove in general that Brouwer's theorem is equivalent to the determinacy theorem for Hex.[60]

A proof using the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem

The Lefschetz fixed-point theorem says that if a continuous map f from a finite simplicial complex B to itself has only isolated fixed points, then the number of fixed points counted with multiplicities (which may be negative) is equal to the Lefschetz number

 

and in particular if the Lefschetz number is nonzero then f must have a fixed point. If B is a ball (or more generally is contractible) then the Lefschetz number is one because the only non-zero simplicial homology group is:   and f acts as the identity on this group, so f has a fixed point.[61][62]

A proof in a weak logical system

In reverse mathematics, Brouwer's theorem can be proved in the system WKL0, and conversely over the base system RCA0 Brouwer's theorem for a square implies the weak König's lemma, so this gives a precise description of the strength of Brouwer's theorem.

Generalizations

The Brouwer fixed-point theorem forms the starting point of a number of more general fixed-point theorems.

The straightforward generalization to infinite dimensions, i.e. using the unit ball of an arbitrary Hilbert space instead of Euclidean space, is not true. The main problem here is that the unit balls of infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces are not compact. For example, in the Hilbert space 2 of square-summable real (or complex) sequences, consider the map f : ℓ2 → ℓ2 which sends a sequence (xn) from the closed unit ball of ℓ2 to the sequence (yn) defined by

 

It is not difficult to check that this map is continuous, has its image in the unit sphere of ℓ2, but does not have a fixed point.

The generalizations of the Brouwer fixed-point theorem to infinite dimensional spaces therefore all include a compactness assumption of some sort, and also often an assumption of convexity. See fixed-point theorems in infinite-dimensional spaces for a discussion of these theorems.

There is also finite-dimensional generalization to a larger class of spaces: If   is a product of finitely many chainable continua, then every continuous function   has a fixed point,[63] where a chainable continuum is a (usually but in this case not necessarily metric) compact Hausdorff space of which every open cover has a finite open refinement  , such that   if and only if  . Examples of chainable continua include compact connected linearly ordered spaces and in particular closed intervals of real numbers.

The Kakutani fixed point theorem generalizes the Brouwer fixed-point theorem in a different direction: it stays in Rn, but considers upper hemi-continuous set-valued functions (functions that assign to each point of the set a subset of the set). It also requires compactness and convexity of the set.

The Lefschetz fixed-point theorem applies to (almost) arbitrary compact topological spaces, and gives a condition in terms of singular homology that guarantees the existence of fixed points; this condition is trivially satisfied for any map in the case of Dn.

Equivalent results

There are several fixed-point theorems which come in three equivalent variants: an algebraic topology variant, a combinatorial variant and a set-covering variant. Each variant can be proved separately using totally different arguments, but each variant can also be reduced to the other variants in its row. Additionally, each result in the top row can be deduced from the one below it in the same column.[64]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ E.g. F & V Bayart Théorèmes du point fixe on Bibm@th.net December 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ See page 15 of: D. Leborgne Calcul différentiel et géométrie Puf (1982) ISBN 2-13-037495-6
  3. ^ More exactly, according to Encyclopédie Universalis: Il en a démontré l'un des plus beaux théorèmes, le théorème du point fixe, dont les applications et généralisations, de la théorie des jeux aux équations différentielles, se sont révélées fondamentales. Luizen Brouwer by G. Sabbagh
  4. ^ a b Jacques Hadamard: Note sur quelques applications de l’indice de Kronecker in Jules Tannery: Introduction à la théorie des fonctions d’une variable (Volume 2), 2nd edition, A. Hermann & Fils, Paris 1910, pp. 437–477 (French)
  5. ^ a b c Brouwer, L. E. J. (1911). "Über Abbildungen von Mannigfaltigkeiten". Mathematische Annalen (in German). 71: 97–115. doi:10.1007/BF01456931. S2CID 177796823.
  6. ^ D. Violette Applications du lemme de Sperner pour les triangles Bulletin AMQ, V. XLVI N° 4, (2006) p 17. June 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Page 15 of: D. Leborgne Calcul différentiel et géométrie Puf (1982) ISBN 2-13-037495-6.
  8. ^ This version follows directly from the previous one because every convex compact subset of a Euclidean space is homeomorphic to a closed ball of the same dimension as the subset; see Florenzano, Monique (2003). General Equilibrium Analysis: Existence and Optimality Properties of Equilibria. Springer. p. 7. ISBN 9781402075124. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  9. ^ V. & F. Bayart Point fixe, et théorèmes du point fixe on Bibmath.net. December 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ C. Minazzo K. Rider Théorèmes du Point Fixe et Applications aux Equations Différentielles 2018-04-04 at the Wayback Machine Université de Nice-Sophia Antipolis.
  11. ^ Belk, Jim. "Why is convexity a requirement for Brouwer fixed points?". Math StackExchange. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  12. ^ The interest of this anecdote rests in its intuitive and didactic character, but its accuracy is dubious. As the history section shows, the origin of the theorem is not Brouwer's work. More than 20 years earlier Henri Poincaré had proved an equivalent result, and 5 years before Brouwer P. Bohl had proved the three-dimensional case.
  13. ^ a b c This citation comes originally from a television broadcast: Archimède, Arte, 21 septembre 1999
  14. ^ a b Bohl, P. (1904). "Über die Bewegung eines mechanischen Systems in der Nähe einer Gleichgewichtslage". J. Reine Angew. Math. 127 (3/4): 179–276.
  15. ^ Karamardian, Stephan (1977). Fixed points: algorithms and applications. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-398050-2.
  16. ^ Istrăţescu, Vasile (1981). Fixed point theory. Dordrecht-Boston, Mass.: D. Reidel Publishing Co. ISBN 978-90-277-1224-0.
  17. ^ See F. Brechenmacher L'identité algébrique d'une pratique portée par la discussion sur l'équation à l'aide de laquelle on détermine les inégalités séculaires des planètes CNRS Fédération de Recherche Mathématique du Nord-Pas-de-Calais
  18. ^ Henri Poincaré won the King of Sweden's mathematical competition in 1889 for his work on the related three-body problem: Jacques Tits Célébrations nationales 2004 Site du Ministère Culture et Communication
  19. ^ Henri Poincaré Les méthodes nouvelles de la mécanique céleste T Gauthier-Villars, Vol 3 p 389 (1892) new edition Paris: Blanchard, 1987.
  20. ^ Quotation from Henri Poincaré taken from: P. A. Miquel La catégorie de désordre 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, on the website of l'Association roumaine des chercheurs francophones en sciences humaines
  21. ^ This question was studied in: Poincaré, H. (1886). "Sur les courbes définies par les équations différentielles". Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées. 2 (4): 167–244.
  22. ^ This follows from the Poincaré–Bendixson theorem.
  23. ^ Multiplication by 1/2 on ]0, 1[2 has no fixed point.
  24. ^ "concerne les propriétés invariantes d'une figure lorsqu’on la déforme de manière continue quelconque, sans déchirure (par exemple, dans le cas de la déformation de la sphère, les propriétés corrélatives des objets tracés sur sa surface". From C. Houzel M. Paty Poincaré, Henri (1854–1912) 2010-10-08 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopædia Universalis Albin Michel, Paris, 1999, p. 696–706
  25. ^ Poincaré's theorem is stated in: V. I. Istratescu Fixed Point Theory an Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers (réédition de 2001) p 113 ISBN 1-4020-0301-3
  26. ^ Voitsekhovskii, M.I. (2001) [1994], "Brouwer theorem", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, ISBN 1-4020-0609-8
  27. ^ Dieudonné, Jean (1989). A History of Algebraic and Differential Topology, 1900–1960. Boston: Birkhäuser. pp. 17–24. ISBN 978-0-8176-3388-2.
  28. ^ See for example: Émile Picard Sur l'application des méthodes d'approximations successives à l'étude de certaines équations différentielles ordinaires 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine Journal de Mathématiques p 217 (1893)
  29. ^ J. J. O'Connor E. F. Robertson Piers Bohl
  30. ^ Myskis, A. D.; Rabinovic, I. M. (1955). "Первое доказательство теоремы о неподвижной точке при непрерывном отображении шара в себя, данное латышским математиком П.Г.Болем" [The first proof of a fixed-point theorem for a continuous mapping of a sphere into itself, given by the Latvian mathematician P. G. Bohl]. Успехи математических наук (in Russian). 10 (3): 188–192.
  31. ^ J. J. O'Connor E. F. Robertson Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer
  32. ^ Freudenthal, Hans (1975). "The cradle of modern topology, according to Brouwer's inedita". Historia Mathematica. 2 (4): 495–502 [p. 495]. doi:10.1016/0315-0860(75)90111-1.
  33. ^ Freudenthal, Hans (1975). "The cradle of modern topology, according to Brouwer's inedita". Historia Mathematica. 2 (4): 495–502 [p. 495]. doi:10.1016/0315-0860(75)90111-1. ... cette dernière propriété, bien que sous des hypothèses plus grossières, ait été démontré par H. Poincaré
  34. ^ Freudenthal, Hans (1975). "The cradle of modern topology, according to Brouwer's inedita". Historia Mathematica. 2 (4): 495–502 [p. 501]. doi:10.1016/0315-0860(75)90111-1.
  35. ^ If an open subset of a manifold is homeomorphic to an open subset of a Euclidean space of dimension n, and if p is a positive integer other than n, then the open set is never homeomorphic to an open subset of a Euclidean space of dimension p.
  36. ^ J. J. O'Connor E. F. Robertson Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer.
  37. ^ The term algebraic topology first appeared 1931 under the pen of David van Dantzig: J. Miller Topological algebra on the site Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (2007)
  38. ^ V. I. Istratescu Fixed Point Theory. An Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers (new edition 2001) ISBN 1-4020-0301-3.
  39. ^ "... Brouwer's fixed point theorem, perhaps the most important fixed point theorem." p xiii V. I. Istratescu Fixed Point Theory an Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers (new edition 2001) ISBN 1-4020-0301-3.
  40. ^ E.g.: S. Greenwood J. Cao Brouwer’s Fixed Point Theorem and the Jordan Curve Theorem University of Auckland, New Zealand.
  41. ^ Schauder, J. (1930). "Der Fixpunktsatz in Funktionsräumen". Studia Mathematica. 2: 171–180. doi:10.4064/sm-2-1-171-180.
  42. ^ Kakutani, S. (1941). "A generalization of Brouwer's Fixed Point Theorem". Duke Mathematical Journal. 8 (3): 457–459. doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-41-00838-4.
  43. ^ These examples are taken from: F. Boyer Théorèmes de point fixe et applications CMI Université Paul Cézanne (2008–2009) Archived copy at WebCite (August 1, 2010).
  44. ^ For context and references see the article Hex (board game).
  45. ^ P. Bich Une extension discontinue du théorème du point fixe de Schauder, et quelques applications en économie June 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Institut Henri Poincaré, Paris (2007)
  46. ^ For a long explanation, see: Dubucs, J. P. (1988). "L. J. E. Brouwer : Topologie et constructivisme". Revue d'Histoire des Sciences. 41 (2): 133–155. doi:10.3406/rhs.1988.4094.
  47. ^ Later it would be shown that the formalism that was combatted by Brouwer can also serve to formalise intuitionism, with some modifications. For further details see constructive set theory.
  48. ^ H. Scarf found the first algorithmic proof: Voitsekhovskii, M.I. (2001) [1994], "Brouwer theorem", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, ISBN 1-4020-0609-8.
  49. ^ Milnor 1965, pp. 1–19
  50. ^ Teschl, Gerald (2019). "10. The Brouwer mapping degree". Topics in Linear and Nonlinear Functional Analysis (PDF). Graduate Studies in Mathematics. American Mathematical Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  51. ^ Milnor 1978
  52. ^ Madsen & Tornehave 1997, pp. 39–48
  53. ^ Boothby 1971
  54. ^ Boothby 1986
  55. ^ Dieudonné 1982
  56. ^ Hirsch 1988
  57. ^ Kellogg, Li & Yorke 1976.
  58. ^ Chow, Mallet-Paret & Yorke 1978.
  59. ^ Kulpa 1989
  60. ^ David Gale (1979). "The Game of Hex and Brouwer Fixed-Point Theorem". The American Mathematical Monthly. 86 (10): 818–827. doi:10.2307/2320146. JSTOR 2320146.
  61. ^ Hilton & Wylie 1960
  62. ^ Spanier 1966
  63. ^ Eldon Dyer (1956). "A fixed point theorem". Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 7 (4): 662–672. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1956-0078693-4.
  64. ^ Nyman, Kathryn L.; Su, Francis Edward (2013), "A Borsuk–Ulam equivalent that directly implies Sperner's lemma", The American Mathematical Monthly, 120 (4): 346–354, doi:10.4169/amer.math.monthly.120.04.346, JSTOR 10.4169/amer.math.monthly.120.04.346, MR 3035127

References

  • Boothby, William M. (1971). "On two classical theorems of algebraic topology". Amer. Math. Monthly. 78: 237–249. JSTOR 2317520. MR 0283792.
  • Boothby, William M. (1986). An introduction to differentiable manifolds and Riemannian geometry. Pure and Applied Mathematics. Vol. 120 (Second ed.). Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-116052-1. MR 0861409.
  • Bredon, Glen E. (1993). Topology and geometry. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 139. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-97926-3. MR 1224675.
  • Chow, Shui Nee; Mallet-Paret, John; Yorke, James A. (1978). "Finding zeroes of maps: Homotopy methods that are constructive with probability one". Mathematics of Computation. 32 (143): 887–899. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1978-0492046-9. MR 0492046.
  • Dieudonné, Jean (1982). "8. Les théorèmes de Brouwer". Éléments d'analyse. Cahiers Scientifiques (in French). Vol. IX. Paris: Gauthier-Villars. pp. 44–47. ISBN 2-04-011499-8. MR 0658305.
  • Dieudonné, Jean (1989). A history of algebraic and differential topology, 1900–1960. Birkhäuser. pp. 166–203. ISBN 0-8176-3388-X. MR 0995842.
  • Gale, D. (1979). "The Game of Hex and Brouwer Fixed-Point Theorem". The American Mathematical Monthly. 86 (10): 818–827. doi:10.2307/2320146. JSTOR 2320146.
  • Hirsch, Morris W. (1988). Differential Topology. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-90148-0. (see p. 72–73 for Hirsch's proof utilizing non-existence of a differentiable retraction)
  • Hilton, Peter J.; Wylie, Sean (1960). Homology theory: An introduction to algebraic topology. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521094224. MR 0115161.
  • Istrăţescu, Vasile I. (1981). Fixed Point Theory. Mathematics and its Applications. Vol. 7. Dordrecht–Boston, MA: D. Reidel. ISBN 978-90-277-1224-0. MR 0620639.
  • Karamardian, S., ed. (1977). Fixed Points: Algorithms and Applications. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-398050-2.
  • Kellogg, R. Bruce; Li, Tien-Yien; Yorke, James A. (1976). "A constructive proof of the Brouwer fixed point theorem and computational results". SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis. 13 (4): 473–483. Bibcode:1976SJNA...13..473K. doi:10.1137/0713041. MR 0416010.
  • Kulpa, Władysław (1989). "An integral theorem and its applications to coincidence theorems". Acta Universitatis Carolinae. Mathematica et Physica. 30 (2): 83–90.
  • Leoni, Giovanni (2017). A First Course in Sobolev Spaces: Second Edition. Graduate Studies in Mathematics. 181. American Mathematical Society. pp. 734. ISBN 978-1-4704-2921-8
  • Madsen, Ib; Tornehave, Jørgen (1997). From calculus to cohomology: de Rham cohomology and characteristic classes. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58059-5. MR 1454127.
  • Milnor, John W. (1965). Topology from the differentiable viewpoint. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. MR 0226651.
  • Milnor, John W. (1978). "Analytic proofs of the 'hairy ball theorem' and the Brouwer fixed-point theorem" (PDF). Amer. Math. Monthly. 85 (7): 521–524. JSTOR 2320860. MR 0505523. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  • Sobolev, Vladimir I. (2001) [1994], "Brouwer theorem", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Spanier, Edwin H. (1966). Algebraic topology. New York-Toronto-London: McGraw-Hill.

External links

  • Brouwer's Fixed Point Theorem for Triangles at cut-the-knot
  • Brouwer theorem, from PlanetMath with attached proof.
  • Reconstructing Brouwer at MathPages
  • Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem at Math Images.

brouwer, fixed, point, theorem, brouwer, fixed, point, theorem, fixed, point, theorem, topology, named, after, bertus, brouwer, states, that, continuous, function, displaystyle, mapping, compact, convex, itself, there, point, displaystyle, such, that, displays. Brouwer s fixed point theorem is a fixed point theorem in topology named after L E J Bertus Brouwer It states that for any continuous function f displaystyle f mapping a compact convex set to itself there is a point x 0 displaystyle x 0 such that f x 0 x 0 displaystyle f x 0 x 0 The simplest forms of Brouwer s theorem are for continuous functions f displaystyle f from a closed interval I displaystyle I in the real numbers to itself or from a closed disk D displaystyle D to itself A more general form than the latter is for continuous functions from a convex compact subset K displaystyle K of Euclidean space to itself Among hundreds of fixed point theorems 1 Brouwer s is particularly well known due in part to its use across numerous fields of mathematics In its original field this result is one of the key theorems characterizing the topology of Euclidean spaces along with the Jordan curve theorem the hairy ball theorem the invariance of dimension and the Borsuk Ulam theorem 2 This gives it a place among the fundamental theorems of topology 3 The theorem is also used for proving deep results about differential equations and is covered in most introductory courses on differential geometry It appears in unlikely fields such as game theory In economics Brouwer s fixed point theorem and its extension the Kakutani fixed point theorem play a central role in the proof of existence of general equilibrium in market economies as developed in the 1950s by economics Nobel prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Gerard Debreu The theorem was first studied in view of work on differential equations by the French mathematicians around Henri Poincare and Charles Emile Picard Proving results such as the Poincare Bendixson theorem requires the use of topological methods This work at the end of the 19th century opened into several successive versions of the theorem The case of differentiable mappings of the n dimensional closed ball was first proved in 1910 by Jacques Hadamard 4 and the general case for continuous mappings by Brouwer in 1911 5 Contents 1 Statement 2 Importance of the pre conditions 2 1 The function f as an endomorphism 2 2 Boundedness 2 3 Closedness 2 4 Convexity 2 5 Notes 3 Illustrations 4 Intuitive approach 4 1 Explanations attributed to Brouwer 4 2 One dimensional case 5 History 5 1 Prehistory 5 2 First proofs 5 3 Reception 6 Proof outlines 6 1 A proof using degree 6 2 A proof using the hairy ball theorem 6 3 A proof using homology or cohomology 6 4 A proof using Stokes theorem 6 5 A combinatorial proof 6 6 A proof by Hirsch 6 7 A proof using oriented area 6 8 A proof using the game Hex 6 9 A proof using the Lefschetz fixed point theorem 6 10 A proof in a weak logical system 7 Generalizations 8 Equivalent results 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksStatement EditThe theorem has several formulations depending on the context in which it is used and its degree of generalization The simplest is sometimes given as follows In the plane Every continuous function from a closed disk to itself has at least one fixed point 6 dd This can be generalized to an arbitrary finite dimension In Euclidean space Every continuous function from a closed ball of a Euclidean space into itself has a fixed point 7 dd A slightly more general version is as follows 8 Convex compact set Every continuous function from a convex compact subset K of a Euclidean space to K itself has a fixed point 9 dd An even more general form is better known under a different name Schauder fixed point theorem Every continuous function from a convex compact subset K of a Banach space to K itself has a fixed point 10 dd Importance of the pre conditions EditThe theorem holds only for functions that are endomorphisms functions that have the same set as the domain and codomain and for sets that are compact thus in particular bounded and closed and convex or homeomorphic to convex The following examples show why the pre conditions are important The function f as an endomorphism Edit Consider the function f x x 1 displaystyle f x x 1 with domain 1 1 The range of the function is 0 2 Thus f is not an endomorphism Boundedness Edit Consider the function f x x 1 displaystyle f x x 1 which is a continuous function from R displaystyle mathbb R to itself As it shifts every point to the right it cannot have a fixed point The space R displaystyle mathbb R is convex and closed but not bounded Closedness Edit Consider the function f x x 1 2 displaystyle f x frac x 1 2 which is a continuous function from the open interval 1 1 to itself Since x 1 is not part of the interval there is not a fixed point of f x x The space 1 1 is convex and bounded but not closed On the other hand the function f does have a fixed point for the closed interval 1 1 namely f 1 1 Convexity Edit Convexity is not strictly necessary for BFPT Because the properties involved continuity being a fixed point are invariant under homeomorphisms BFPT is equivalent to forms in which the domain is required to be a closed unit ball D n displaystyle D n For the same reason it holds for every set that is homeomorphic to a closed ball and therefore also closed bounded connected without holes etc The following example shows that BFPT does not work for domains with holes Consider the function f x x displaystyle f x x which is a continuous function from the unit circle to itself Since x x holds for any point of the unit circle f has no fixed point The analogous example works for the n dimensional sphere or any symmetric domain that does not contain the origin The unit circle is closed and bounded but it has a hole and so it is not convex The function f does have a fixed point for the unit disc since it takes the origin to itself A formal generalization of BFPT for hole free domains can be derived from the Lefschetz fixed point theorem 11 Notes Edit The continuous function in this theorem is not required to be bijective or even surjective Illustrations EditThe theorem has several real world illustrations Here are some examples Take two sheets of graph paper of equal size with coordinate systems on them lay one flat on the table and crumple up without ripping or tearing the other one and place it in any fashion on top of the first so that the crumpled paper does not reach outside the flat one There will then be at least one point of the crumpled sheet that lies directly above its corresponding point i e the point with the same coordinates of the flat sheet This is a consequence of the n 2 case of Brouwer s theorem applied to the continuous map that assigns to the coordinates of every point of the crumpled sheet the coordinates of the point of the flat sheet immediately beneath it Take an ordinary map of a country and suppose that that map is laid out on a table inside that country There will always be a You are Here point on the map which represents that same point in the country In three dimensions a consequence of the Brouwer fixed point theorem is that no matter how much you stir a delicious cocktail in a glass or think about milk shake when the liquid has come to rest some point in the liquid will end up in exactly the same place in the glass as before you took any action assuming that the final position of each point is a continuous function of its original position that the liquid after stirring is contained within the space originally taken up by it and that the glass and stirred surface shape maintain a convex volume Ordering a cocktail shaken not stirred defeats the convexity condition shaking being defined as a dynamic series of non convex inertial containment states in the vacant headspace under a lid In that case the theorem would not apply and thus all points of the liquid disposition are potentially displaced from the original state citation needed Intuitive approach EditExplanations attributed to Brouwer Edit The theorem is supposed to have originated from Brouwer s observation of a cup of gourmet coffee 12 If one stirs to dissolve a lump of sugar it appears there is always a point without motion He drew the conclusion that at any moment there is a point on the surface that is not moving 13 The fixed point is not necessarily the point that seems to be motionless since the centre of the turbulence moves a little bit The result is not intuitive since the original fixed point may become mobile when another fixed point appears Brouwer is said to have added I can formulate this splendid result different I take a horizontal sheet and another identical one which I crumple flatten and place on the other Then a point of the crumpled sheet is in the same place as on the other sheet 13 Brouwer flattens his sheet as with a flat iron without removing the folds and wrinkles Unlike the coffee cup example the crumpled paper example also demonstrates that more than one fixed point may exist This distinguishes Brouwer s result from other fixed point theorems such as Stefan Banach s that guarantee uniqueness One dimensional case Edit In one dimension the result is intuitive and easy to prove The continuous function f is defined on a closed interval a b and takes values in the same interval Saying that this function has a fixed point amounts to saying that its graph dark green in the figure on the right intersects that of the function defined on the same interval a b which maps x to x light green Intuitively any continuous line from the left edge of the square to the right edge must necessarily intersect the green diagonal To prove this consider the function g which maps x to f x x It is 0 on a and 0 on b By the intermediate value theorem g has a zero in a b this zero is a fixed point Brouwer is said to have expressed this as follows Instead of examining a surface we will prove the theorem about a piece of string Let us begin with the string in an unfolded state then refold it Let us flatten the refolded string Again a point of the string has not changed its position with respect to its original position on the unfolded string 13 History EditThe Brouwer fixed point theorem was one of the early achievements of algebraic topology and is the basis of more general fixed point theorems which are important in functional analysis The case n 3 first was proved by Piers Bohl in 1904 published in Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 14 It was later proved by L E J Brouwer in 1909 Jacques Hadamard proved the general case in 1910 4 and Brouwer found a different proof in the same year 5 Since these early proofs were all non constructive indirect proofs they ran contrary to Brouwer s intuitionist ideals Although the existence of a fixed point is not constructive in the sense of constructivism in mathematics methods to approximate fixed points guaranteed by Brouwer s theorem are now known 15 16 Prehistory Edit For flows in an unbounded area or in an area with a hole the theorem is not applicable The theorem applies to any disk shaped area where it guarantees the existence of a fixed point To understand the prehistory of Brouwer s fixed point theorem one needs to pass through differential equations At the end of the 19th century the old problem 17 of the stability of the solar system returned into the focus of the mathematical community 18 Its solution required new methods As noted by Henri Poincare who worked on the three body problem there is no hope to find an exact solution Nothing is more proper to give us an idea of the hardness of the three body problem and generally of all problems of Dynamics where there is no uniform integral and the Bohlin series diverge 19 He also noted that the search for an approximate solution is no more efficient the more we seek to obtain precise approximations the more the result will diverge towards an increasing imprecision 20 He studied a question analogous to that of the surface movement in a cup of coffee What can we say in general about the trajectories on a surface animated by a constant flow 21 Poincare discovered that the answer can be found in what we now call the topological properties in the area containing the trajectory If this area is compact i e both closed and bounded then the trajectory either becomes stationary or it approaches a limit cycle 22 Poincare went further if the area is of the same kind as a disk as is the case for the cup of coffee there must necessarily be a fixed point This fixed point is invariant under all functions which associate to each point of the original surface its position after a short time interval t If the area is a circular band or if it is not closed 23 then this is not necessarily the case To understand differential equations better a new branch of mathematics was born Poincare called it analysis situs The French Encyclopaedia Universalis defines it as the branch which treats the properties of an object that are invariant if it is deformed in any continuous way without tearing 24 In 1886 Poincare proved a result that is equivalent to Brouwer s fixed point theorem 25 although the connection with the subject of this article was not yet apparent 26 A little later he developed one of the fundamental tools for better understanding the analysis situs now known as the fundamental group or sometimes the Poincare group 27 This method can be used for a very compact proof of the theorem under discussion Poincare s method was analogous to that of Emile Picard a contemporary mathematician who generalized the Cauchy Lipschitz theorem 28 Picard s approach is based on a result that would later be formalised by another fixed point theorem named after Banach Instead of the topological properties of the domain this theorem uses the fact that the function in question is a contraction First proofs Edit Jacques Hadamard helped Brouwer to formalize his ideas At the dawn of the 20th century the interest in analysis situs did not stay unnoticed However the necessity of a theorem equivalent to the one discussed in this article was not yet evident Piers Bohl a Latvian mathematician applied topological methods to the study of differential equations 29 In 1904 he proved the three dimensional case of our theorem 14 but his publication was not noticed 30 It was Brouwer finally who gave the theorem its first patent of nobility His goals were different from those of Poincare This mathematician was inspired by the foundations of mathematics especially mathematical logic and topology His initial interest lay in an attempt to solve Hilbert s fifth problem 31 In 1909 during a voyage to Paris he met Henri Poincare Jacques Hadamard and Emile Borel The ensuing discussions convinced Brouwer of the importance of a better understanding of Euclidean spaces and were the origin of a fruitful exchange of letters with Hadamard For the next four years he concentrated on the proof of certain great theorems on this question In 1912 he proved the hairy ball theorem for the two dimensional sphere as well as the fact that every continuous map from the two dimensional ball to itself has a fixed point 32 These two results in themselves were not really new As Hadamard observed Poincare had shown a theorem equivalent to the hairy ball theorem 33 The revolutionary aspect of Brouwer s approach was his systematic use of recently developed tools such as homotopy the underlying concept of the Poincare group In the following year Hadamard generalised the theorem under discussion to an arbitrary finite dimension but he employed different methods Hans Freudenthal comments on the respective roles as follows Compared to Brouwer s revolutionary methods those of Hadamard were very traditional but Hadamard s participation in the birth of Brouwer s ideas resembles that of a midwife more than that of a mere spectator 34 Brouwer s approach yielded its fruits and in 1910 he also found a proof that was valid for any finite dimension 5 as well as other key theorems such as the invariance of dimension 35 In the context of this work Brouwer also generalized the Jordan curve theorem to arbitrary dimension and established the properties connected with the degree of a continuous mapping 36 This branch of mathematics originally envisioned by Poincare and developed by Brouwer changed its name In the 1930s analysis situs became algebraic topology 37 Reception Edit John Nash used the theorem in game theory to prove the existence of an equilibrium strategy profile The theorem proved its worth in more than one way During the 20th century numerous fixed point theorems were developed and even a branch of mathematics called fixed point theory 38 Brouwer s theorem is probably the most important 39 It is also among the foundational theorems on the topology of topological manifolds and is often used to prove other important results such as the Jordan curve theorem 40 Besides the fixed point theorems for more or less contracting functions there are many that have emerged directly or indirectly from the result under discussion A continuous map from a closed ball of Euclidean space to its boundary cannot be the identity on the boundary Similarly the Borsuk Ulam theorem says that a continuous map from the n dimensional sphere to Rn has a pair of antipodal points that are mapped to the same point In the finite dimensional case the Lefschetz fixed point theorem provided from 1926 a method for counting fixed points In 1930 Brouwer s fixed point theorem was generalized to Banach spaces 41 This generalization is known as Schauder s fixed point theorem a result generalized further by S Kakutani to set valued functions 42 One also meets the theorem and its variants outside topology It can be used to prove the Hartman Grobman theorem which describes the qualitative behaviour of certain differential equations near certain equilibria Similarly Brouwer s theorem is used for the proof of the Central Limit Theorem The theorem can also be found in existence proofs for the solutions of certain partial differential equations 43 Other areas are also touched In game theory John Nash used the theorem to prove that in the game of Hex there is a winning strategy for white 44 In economics P Bich explains that certain generalizations of the theorem show that its use is helpful for certain classical problems in game theory and generally for equilibria Hotelling s law financial equilibria and incomplete markets 45 Brouwer s celebrity is not exclusively due to his topological work The proofs of his great topological theorems are not constructive 46 and Brouwer s dissatisfaction with this is partly what led him to articulate the idea of constructivity He became the originator and zealous defender of a way of formalising mathematics that is known as intuitionism which at the time made a stand against set theory 47 Brouwer disavowed his original proof of the fixed point theorem The first algorithm to approximate a fixed point was proposed by Herbert Scarf 48 A subtle aspect of Scarf s algorithm is that it finds a point that is almost fixed by a function f but in general cannot find a point that is close to an actual fixed point In mathematical language if e is chosen to be very small Scarf s algorithm can be used to find a point x such that f x is very close to x i e d f x x lt e displaystyle d f x x lt varepsilon But Scarf s algorithm cannot be used to find a point x such that x is very close to a fixed point we cannot guarantee d x y lt e displaystyle d x y lt varepsilon where f y y displaystyle f y y Often this latter condition is what is meant by the informal phrase approximating a fixed point citation needed Proof outlines EditA proof using degree Edit Brouwer s original 1911 proof relied on the notion of the degree of a continuous mapping stemming from ideas in differential topology Several modern accounts of the proof can be found in the literature notably Milnor 1965 49 50 Let K B 0 displaystyle K overline B 0 denote the closed unit ball in R n displaystyle mathbb R n centered at the origin Suppose for simplicity that f K K displaystyle f K to K is continuously differentiable A regular value of f displaystyle f is a point p B 0 displaystyle p in B 0 such that the Jacobian of f displaystyle f is non singular at every point of the preimage of p displaystyle p In particular by the inverse function theorem every point of the preimage of f displaystyle f lies in B 0 displaystyle B 0 the interior of K displaystyle K The degree of f displaystyle f at a regular value p B 0 displaystyle p in B 0 is defined as the sum of the signs of the Jacobian determinant of f displaystyle f over the preimages of p displaystyle p under f displaystyle f deg p f x f 1 p sign det d f x displaystyle operatorname deg p f sum x in f 1 p operatorname sign det df x The degree is roughly speaking the number of sheets of the preimage f lying over a small open set around p with sheets counted oppositely if they are oppositely oriented This is thus a generalization of winding number to higher dimensions The degree satisfies the property of homotopy invariance let f displaystyle f and g displaystyle g be two continuously differentiable functions and H t x t f 1 t g displaystyle H t x tf 1 t g for 0 t 1 displaystyle 0 leq t leq 1 Suppose that the point p displaystyle p is a regular value of H t displaystyle H t for all t Then deg p f deg p g displaystyle deg p f deg p g If there is no fixed point of the boundary of K displaystyle K then the function g x x f x sup x K x f x displaystyle g x frac x f x sup x in K left x f x right is well defined andH t x x t f x sup x K x t f x displaystyle H t x frac x tf x sup x in K left x tf x right defines a homotopy from the identity function to it The identity function has degree one at every point In particular the identity function has degree one at the origin so g displaystyle g also has degree one at the origin As a consequence the preimage g 1 0 displaystyle g 1 0 is not empty The elements of g 1 0 displaystyle g 1 0 are precisely the fixed points of the original function f This requires some work to make fully general The definition of degree must be extended to singular values of f and then to continuous functions The more modern advent of homology theory simplifies the construction of the degree and so has become a standard proof in the literature A proof using the hairy ball theorem Edit The hairy ball theorem states that on the unit sphere S in an odd dimensional Euclidean space there is no nowhere vanishing continuous tangent vector field w on S The tangency condition means that w x x 0 for every unit vector x Sometimes the theorem is expressed by the statement that there is always a place on the globe with no wind An elementary proof of the hairy ball theorem can be found in Milnor 1978 In fact suppose first that w is continuously differentiable By scaling it can be assumed that w is a continuously differentiable unit tangent vector on S It can be extended radially to a small spherical shell A of S For t sufficiently small a routine computation shows that the mapping ft x t x w x is a contraction mapping on A and that the volume of its image is a polynomial in t On the other hand as a contraction mapping ft must restrict to a homeomorphism of S onto 1 t2 S and A onto 1 t2 A This gives a contradiction because if the dimension n of the Euclidean space is odd 1 t2 n 2 is not a polynomial If w is only a continuous unit tangent vector on S by the Weierstrass approximation theorem it can be uniformly approximated by a polynomial map u of A into Euclidean space The orthogonal projection on to the tangent space is given by v x u x u x x Thus v is polynomial and nowhere vanishing on A by construction v v is a smooth unit tangent vector field on S a contradiction The continuous version of the hairy ball theorem can now be used to prove the Brouwer fixed point theorem First suppose that n is odd If there were a fixed point free continuous self mapping f of the closed unit ball B of the n dimensional Euclidean space V set w x 1 x f x x 1 x x f x displaystyle mathbf w mathbf x 1 mathbf x cdot mathbf f mathbf x mathbf x 1 mathbf x cdot mathbf x mathbf f mathbf x Since f has no fixed points it follows that for x in the interior of B the vector w x is non zero and for x in S the scalar product x w x 1 x f x is strictly positive From the original n dimensional space Euclidean space V construct a new auxiliary n 1 dimensional space W V x R with coordinates y x t Set X x t t w x x w x displaystyle mathbf X mathbf x t t mathbf w mathbf x mathbf x cdot mathbf w mathbf x By construction X is a continuous vector field on the unit sphere of W satisfying the tangency condition y X y 0 Moreover X y is nowhere vanishing because if x has norm 1 then x w x is non zero while if x has norm strictly less than 1 then t and w x are both non zero This contradiction proves the fixed point theorem when n is odd For n even one can apply the fixed point theorem to the closed unit ball B in n 1 dimensions and the mapping F x y f x 0 The advantage of this proof is that it uses only elementary techniques more general results like the Borsuk Ulam theorem require tools from algebraic topology 51 A proof using homology or cohomology Edit The proof uses the observation that the boundary of the n disk Dn is Sn 1 the n 1 sphere Illustration of the retraction F Suppose for contradiction that a continuous function f Dn Dn has no fixed point This means that for every point x in Dn the points x and f x are distinct Because they are distinct for every point x in Dn we can construct a unique ray from f x to x and follow the ray until it intersects the boundary Sn 1 see illustration By calling this intersection point F x we define a function F Dn Sn 1 sending each point in the disk to its corresponding intersection point on the boundary As a special case whenever x itself is on the boundary then the intersection point F x must be x Consequently F is a special type of continuous function known as a retraction every point of the codomain in this case Sn 1 is a fixed point of F Intuitively it seems unlikely that there could be a retraction of Dn onto Sn 1 and in the case n 1 the impossibility is more basic because S0 i e the endpoints of the closed interval D1 is not even connected The case n 2 is less obvious but can be proven by using basic arguments involving the fundamental groups of the respective spaces the retraction would induce a surjective group homomorphism from the fundamental group of D2 to that of S1 but the latter group is isomorphic to Z while the first group is trivial so this is impossible The case n 2 can also be proven by contradiction based on a theorem about non vanishing vector fields For n gt 2 however proving the impossibility of the retraction is more difficult One way is to make use of homology groups the homology Hn 1 Dn is trivial while Hn 1 Sn 1 is infinite cyclic This shows that the retraction is impossible because again the retraction would induce an injective group homomorphism from the latter to the former group The impossibility of a retraction can also be shown using the de Rham cohomology of open subsets of Euclidean space En For n 2 the de Rham cohomology of U En 0 is one dimensional in degree 0 and n 1 and vanishes otherwise If a retraction existed then U would have to be contractible and its de Rham cohomology in degree n 1 would have to vanish a contradiction 52 A proof using Stokes theorem Edit As in the proof of Brouwer s fixed point theorem for continuous maps using homology it is reduced to proving that there is no continuous retraction F from the ball B onto its boundary B In that case it can be assumed that F is smooth since it can be approximated using the Weierstrass approximation theorem or by convolving with non negative smooth bump functions of sufficiently small support and integral one i e mollifying If w is a volume form on the boundary then by Stokes theorem 0 lt B w B F w B d F w B F d w B F 0 0 displaystyle 0 lt int partial B omega int partial B F omega int B dF omega int B F d omega int B F 0 0 giving a contradiction 53 54 More generally this shows that there is no smooth retraction from any non empty smooth oriented compact manifold M onto its boundary The proof using Stokes theorem is closely related to the proof using homology because the form w generates the de Rham cohomology group Hn 1 M which is isomorphic to the homology group Hn 1 M by de Rham s theorem 55 A combinatorial proof Edit The BFPT can be proved using Sperner s lemma We now give an outline of the proof for the special case in which f is a function from the standard n simplex D n displaystyle Delta n to itself where D n P R n 1 i 0 n P i 1 and P i 0 for all i displaystyle Delta n left P in mathbb R n 1 mid sum i 0 n P i 1 text and P i geq 0 text for all i right For every point P D n displaystyle P in Delta n also f P D n displaystyle f P in Delta n Hence the sum of their coordinates is equal i 0 n P i 1 i 0 n f P i displaystyle sum i 0 n P i 1 sum i 0 n f P i Hence by the pigeonhole principle for every P D n displaystyle P in Delta n there must be an index j 0 n displaystyle j in 0 ldots n such that the j displaystyle j th coordinate of P displaystyle P is greater than or equal to the j displaystyle j th coordinate of its image under f P j f P j displaystyle P j geq f P j Moreover if P displaystyle P lies on a k dimensional sub face of D n displaystyle Delta n then by the same argument the index j displaystyle j can be selected from among the k 1 coordinates which are not zero on this sub face We now use this fact to construct a Sperner coloring For every triangulation of D n displaystyle Delta n the color of every vertex P displaystyle P is an index j displaystyle j such that f P j P j displaystyle f P j leq P j By construction this is a Sperner coloring Hence by Sperner s lemma there is an n dimensional simplex whose vertices are colored with the entire set of n 1 available colors Because f is continuous this simplex can be made arbitrarily small by choosing an arbitrarily fine triangulation Hence there must be a point P displaystyle P which satisfies the labeling condition in all coordinates f P j P j displaystyle f P j leq P j for all j displaystyle j Because the sum of the coordinates of P displaystyle P and f P displaystyle f P must be equal all these inequalities must actually be equalities But this means that f P P displaystyle f P P That is P displaystyle P is a fixed point of f displaystyle f A proof by Hirsch Edit There is also a quick proof by Morris Hirsch based on the impossibility of a differentiable retraction The indirect proof starts by noting that the map f can be approximated by a smooth map retaining the property of not fixing a point this can be done by using the Weierstrass approximation theorem or by convolving with smooth bump functions One then defines a retraction as above which must now be differentiable Such a retraction must have a non singular value by Sard s theorem which is also non singular for the restriction to the boundary which is just the identity Thus the inverse image would be a 1 manifold with boundary The boundary would have to contain at least two end points both of which would have to lie on the boundary of the original ball which is impossible in a retraction 56 R Bruce Kellogg Tien Yien Li and James A Yorke turned Hirsch s proof into a computable proof by observing that the retract is in fact defined everywhere except at the fixed points 57 For almost any point q on the boundary assuming it is not a fixed point the one manifold with boundary mentioned above does exist and the only possibility is that it leads from q to a fixed point It is an easy numerical task to follow such a path from q to the fixed point so the method is essentially computable 58 gave a conceptually similar path following version of the homotopy proof which extends to a wide variety of related problems A proof using oriented area Edit A variation of the preceding proof does not employ the Sard s theorem and goes as follows If r B B displaystyle r colon B to partial B is a smooth retraction one considers the smooth deformation g t x t r x 1 t x displaystyle g t x tr x 1 t x and the smooth function f t B det D g t x d x displaystyle varphi t int B det Dg t x dx Differentiating under the sign of integral it is not difficult to check that f t 0 for all t so f is a constant function which is a contradiction because f 0 is the n dimensional volume of the ball while f 1 is zero The geometric idea is that f t is the oriented area of gt B that is the Lebesgue measure of the image of the ball via gt taking into account multiplicity and orientation and should remain constant as it is very clear in the one dimensional case On the other hand as the parameter t passes form 0 to 1 the map gt transforms continuously from the identity map of the ball to the retraction r which is a contradiction since the oriented area of the identity coincides with the volume of the ball while the oriented area of r is necessarily 0 as its image is the boundary of the ball a set of null measure 59 A proof using the game Hex Edit A quite different proof given by David Gale is based on the game of Hex The basic theorem regarding Hex first proven by John Nash is that no game of Hex can end in a draw the first player always has a winning strategy although this theorem is nonconstructive and explicit strategies have not been fully developed for board sizes of dimensions 10 x 10 or greater This turns out to be equivalent to the Brouwer fixed point theorem for dimension 2 By considering n dimensional versions of Hex one can prove in general that Brouwer s theorem is equivalent to the determinacy theorem for Hex 60 A proof using the Lefschetz fixed point theorem Edit The Lefschetz fixed point theorem says that if a continuous map f from a finite simplicial complex B to itself has only isolated fixed points then the number of fixed points counted with multiplicities which may be negative is equal to the Lefschetz number n 1 n Tr f H n B displaystyle displaystyle sum n 1 n operatorname Tr f H n B and in particular if the Lefschetz number is nonzero then f must have a fixed point If B is a ball or more generally is contractible then the Lefschetz number is one because the only non zero simplicial homology group is H 0 B displaystyle H 0 B and f acts as the identity on this group so f has a fixed point 61 62 A proof in a weak logical system Edit In reverse mathematics Brouwer s theorem can be proved in the system WKL0 and conversely over the base system RCA0 Brouwer s theorem for a square implies the weak Konig s lemma so this gives a precise description of the strength of Brouwer s theorem Generalizations EditThe Brouwer fixed point theorem forms the starting point of a number of more general fixed point theorems The straightforward generalization to infinite dimensions i e using the unit ball of an arbitrary Hilbert space instead of Euclidean space is not true The main problem here is that the unit balls of infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces are not compact For example in the Hilbert space ℓ2 of square summable real or complex sequences consider the map f ℓ2 ℓ2 which sends a sequence xn from the closed unit ball of ℓ2 to the sequence yn defined by y 0 1 x 2 2 and y n x n 1 for n 1 displaystyle y 0 sqrt 1 x 2 2 quad text and quad y n x n 1 text for n geq 1 It is not difficult to check that this map is continuous has its image in the unit sphere of ℓ2 but does not have a fixed point The generalizations of the Brouwer fixed point theorem to infinite dimensional spaces therefore all include a compactness assumption of some sort and also often an assumption of convexity See fixed point theorems in infinite dimensional spaces for a discussion of these theorems There is also finite dimensional generalization to a larger class of spaces If X displaystyle X is a product of finitely many chainable continua then every continuous function f X X displaystyle f X rightarrow X has a fixed point 63 where a chainable continuum is a usually but in this case not necessarily metric compact Hausdorff space of which every open cover has a finite open refinement U 1 U m displaystyle U 1 ldots U m such that U i U j displaystyle U i cap U j neq emptyset if and only if i j 1 displaystyle i j leq 1 Examples of chainable continua include compact connected linearly ordered spaces and in particular closed intervals of real numbers The Kakutani fixed point theorem generalizes the Brouwer fixed point theorem in a different direction it stays in Rn but considers upper hemi continuous set valued functions functions that assign to each point of the set a subset of the set It also requires compactness and convexity of the set The Lefschetz fixed point theorem applies to almost arbitrary compact topological spaces and gives a condition in terms of singular homology that guarantees the existence of fixed points this condition is trivially satisfied for any map in the case of Dn Equivalent results EditThere are several fixed point theorems which come in three equivalent variants an algebraic topology variant a combinatorial variant and a set covering variant Each variant can be proved separately using totally different arguments but each variant can also be reduced to the other variants in its row Additionally each result in the top row can be deduced from the one below it in the same column 64 Algebraic topology Combinatorics Set coveringBrouwer fixed point theorem Sperner s lemma Knaster Kuratowski Mazurkiewicz lemmaBorsuk Ulam theorem Tucker s lemma Lusternik Schnirelmann theoremSee also EditBanach fixed point theorem Infinite compositions of analytic functions Nash equilibrium Poincare Miranda theorem equivalent to the Brouwer fixed point theorem Topological combinatoricsNotes Edit E g F amp V Bayart Theoremes du point fixe on Bibm th net Archived December 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine See page 15 of D Leborgne Calcul differentiel et geometrie Puf 1982 ISBN 2 13 037495 6 More exactly according to Encyclopedie Universalis Il en a demontre l un des plus beaux theoremes le theoreme du point fixe dont les applications et generalisations de la theorie des jeux aux equations differentielles se sont revelees fondamentales Luizen Brouwer by G Sabbagh a b Jacques Hadamard Note sur quelques applications de l indice de Kronecker in Jules Tannery Introduction a la theorie des fonctions d une variable Volume 2 2nd edition A Hermann amp Fils Paris 1910 pp 437 477 French a b c Brouwer L E J 1911 Uber Abbildungen von Mannigfaltigkeiten Mathematische Annalen in German 71 97 115 doi 10 1007 BF01456931 S2CID 177796823 D Violette Applications du lemme de Sperner pour les triangles Bulletin AMQ V XLVI N 4 2006 p 17 Archived June 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine Page 15 of D Leborgne Calcul differentiel et geometrie Puf 1982 ISBN 2 13 037495 6 This version follows directly from the previous one because every convex compact subset of a Euclidean space is homeomorphic to a closed ball of the same dimension as the subset see Florenzano Monique 2003 General Equilibrium Analysis Existence and Optimality Properties of Equilibria Springer p 7 ISBN 9781402075124 Retrieved 2016 03 08 V amp F Bayart Point fixe et theoremes du point fixe on Bibmath net Archived December 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine C Minazzo K Rider Theoremes du Point Fixe et Applications aux Equations Differentielles Archived 2018 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Universite de Nice Sophia Antipolis Belk Jim Why is convexity a requirement for Brouwer fixed points Math StackExchange Retrieved 22 May 2015 The interest of this anecdote rests in its intuitive and didactic character but its accuracy is dubious As the history section shows the origin of the theorem is not Brouwer s work More than 20 years earlier Henri Poincare had proved an equivalent result and 5 years before Brouwer P Bohl had proved the three dimensional case a b c This citation comes originally from a television broadcast Archimede Arte 21 septembre 1999 a b Bohl P 1904 Uber die Bewegung eines mechanischen Systems in der Nahe einer Gleichgewichtslage J Reine Angew Math 127 3 4 179 276 Karamardian Stephan 1977 Fixed points algorithms and applications New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 398050 2 Istrăţescu Vasile 1981 Fixed point theory Dordrecht Boston Mass D Reidel Publishing Co ISBN 978 90 277 1224 0 See F Brechenmacher L identite algebrique d une pratique portee par la discussion sur l equation a l aide de laquelle on determine les inegalites seculaires des planetes CNRS Federation de Recherche Mathematique du Nord Pas de Calais Henri Poincare won the King of Sweden s mathematical competition in 1889 for his work on the related three body problem Jacques Tits Celebrations nationales 2004 Site du Ministere Culture et Communication Henri Poincare Les methodes nouvelles de la mecanique celeste T Gauthier Villars Vol 3 p 389 1892 new edition Paris Blanchard 1987 Quotation from Henri Poincare taken from P A Miquel La categorie de desordre Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine on the website of l Association roumaine des chercheurs francophones en sciences humaines This question was studied in Poincare H 1886 Sur les courbes definies par les equations differentielles Journal de Mathematiques Pures et Appliquees 2 4 167 244 This follows from the Poincare Bendixson theorem Multiplication by 1 2 on 0 1 2 has no fixed point concerne les proprietes invariantes d une figure lorsqu on la deforme de maniere continue quelconque sans dechirure par exemple dans le cas de la deformation de la sphere les proprietes correlatives des objets traces sur sa surface From C Houzel M Paty Poincare Henri 1854 1912 Archived 2010 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Universalis Albin Michel Paris 1999 p 696 706 Poincare s theorem is stated in V I Istratescu Fixed Point Theory an Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers reedition de 2001 p 113 ISBN 1 4020 0301 3 Voitsekhovskii M I 2001 1994 Brouwer theorem Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press ISBN 1 4020 0609 8 Dieudonne Jean 1989 A History of Algebraic and Differential Topology 1900 1960 Boston Birkhauser pp 17 24 ISBN 978 0 8176 3388 2 See for example Emile Picard Sur l application des methodes d approximations successives a l etude de certaines equations differentielles ordinaires Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Journal de Mathematiques p 217 1893 J J O Connor E F Robertson Piers Bohl Myskis A D Rabinovic I M 1955 Pervoe dokazatelstvo teoremy o nepodvizhnoj tochke pri nepreryvnom otobrazhenii shara v sebya dannoe latyshskim matematikom P G Bolem The first proof of a fixed point theorem for a continuous mapping of a sphere into itself given by the Latvian mathematician P G Bohl Uspehi matematicheskih nauk in Russian 10 3 188 192 J J O Connor E F Robertson Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer Freudenthal Hans 1975 The cradle of modern topology according to Brouwer s inedita Historia Mathematica 2 4 495 502 p 495 doi 10 1016 0315 0860 75 90111 1 Freudenthal Hans 1975 The cradle of modern topology according to Brouwer s inedita Historia Mathematica 2 4 495 502 p 495 doi 10 1016 0315 0860 75 90111 1 cette derniere propriete bien que sous des hypotheses plus grossieres ait ete demontre par H Poincare Freudenthal Hans 1975 The cradle of modern topology according to Brouwer s inedita Historia Mathematica 2 4 495 502 p 501 doi 10 1016 0315 0860 75 90111 1 If an open subset of a manifold is homeomorphic to an open subset of a Euclidean space of dimension n and if p is a positive integer other than n then the open set is never homeomorphic to an open subset of a Euclidean space of dimension p J J O Connor E F Robertson Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer The term algebraic topology first appeared 1931 under the pen of David van Dantzig J Miller Topological algebra on the site Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics 2007 V I Istratescu Fixed Point Theory An Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers new edition 2001 ISBN 1 4020 0301 3 Brouwer s fixed point theorem perhaps the most important fixed point theorem p xiii V I Istratescu Fixed Point Theory an Introduction Kluwer Academic Publishers new edition 2001 ISBN 1 4020 0301 3 E g S Greenwood J CaoBrouwer s Fixed Point Theorem and the Jordan Curve Theorem University of Auckland New Zealand Schauder J 1930 Der Fixpunktsatz in Funktionsraumen Studia Mathematica 2 171 180 doi 10 4064 sm 2 1 171 180 Kakutani S 1941 A generalization of Brouwer s Fixed Point Theorem Duke Mathematical Journal 8 3 457 459 doi 10 1215 S0012 7094 41 00838 4 These examples are taken from F Boyer Theoremes de point fixe et applications CMI Universite Paul Cezanne 2008 2009 Archived copy at WebCite August 1 2010 For context and references see the article Hex board game P Bich Une extension discontinue du theoreme du point fixe de Schauder et quelques applications en economie Archived June 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine Institut Henri Poincare Paris 2007 For a long explanation see Dubucs J P 1988 L J E Brouwer Topologie et constructivisme Revue d Histoire des Sciences 41 2 133 155 doi 10 3406 rhs 1988 4094 Later it would be shown that the formalism that was combatted by Brouwer can also serve to formalise intuitionism with some modifications For further details see constructive set theory H Scarf found the first algorithmic proof Voitsekhovskii M I 2001 1994 Brouwer theorem Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press ISBN 1 4020 0609 8 Milnor 1965 pp 1 19 Teschl Gerald 2019 10 The Brouwer mapping degree Topics in Linear and Nonlinear Functional Analysis PDF Graduate Studies in Mathematics American Mathematical Society Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Milnor 1978 Madsen amp Tornehave 1997 pp 39 48 Boothby 1971 Boothby 1986 Dieudonne 1982 Hirsch 1988 Kellogg Li amp Yorke 1976 Chow Mallet Paret amp Yorke 1978 Kulpa 1989 David Gale 1979 The Game of Hex and Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 86 10 818 827 doi 10 2307 2320146 JSTOR 2320146 Hilton amp Wylie 1960 Spanier 1966 Eldon Dyer 1956 A fixed point theorem Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 7 4 662 672 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 1956 0078693 4 Nyman Kathryn L Su Francis Edward 2013 A Borsuk Ulam equivalent that directly implies Sperner s lemma The American Mathematical Monthly 120 4 346 354 doi 10 4169 amer math monthly 120 04 346 JSTOR 10 4169 amer math monthly 120 04 346 MR 3035127References EditBoothby William M 1971 On two classical theorems of algebraic topology Amer Math Monthly 78 237 249 JSTOR 2317520 MR 0283792 Boothby William M 1986 An introduction to differentiable manifolds and Riemannian geometry Pure and Applied Mathematics Vol 120 Second ed Academic Press ISBN 0 12 116052 1 MR 0861409 Bredon Glen E 1993 Topology and geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 139 Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 97926 3 MR 1224675 Chow Shui Nee Mallet Paret John Yorke James A 1978 Finding zeroes of maps Homotopy methods that are constructive with probability one Mathematics of Computation 32 143 887 899 doi 10 1090 S0025 5718 1978 0492046 9 MR 0492046 Dieudonne Jean 1982 8 Les theoremes de Brouwer Elements d analyse Cahiers Scientifiques in French Vol IX Paris Gauthier Villars pp 44 47 ISBN 2 04 011499 8 MR 0658305 Dieudonne Jean 1989 A history of algebraic and differential topology 1900 1960 Birkhauser pp 166 203 ISBN 0 8176 3388 X MR 0995842 Gale D 1979 The Game of Hex and Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem The American Mathematical Monthly 86 10 818 827 doi 10 2307 2320146 JSTOR 2320146 Hirsch Morris W 1988 Differential Topology New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 90148 0 see p 72 73 for Hirsch s proof utilizing non existence of a differentiable retraction Hilton Peter J Wylie Sean 1960 Homology theory An introduction to algebraic topology New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521094224 MR 0115161 Istrăţescu Vasile I 1981 Fixed Point Theory Mathematics and its Applications Vol 7 Dordrecht Boston MA D Reidel ISBN 978 90 277 1224 0 MR 0620639 Karamardian S ed 1977 Fixed Points Algorithms and Applications Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 398050 2 Kellogg R Bruce Li Tien Yien Yorke James A 1976 A constructive proof of the Brouwer fixed point theorem and computational results SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis 13 4 473 483 Bibcode 1976SJNA 13 473K doi 10 1137 0713041 MR 0416010 Kulpa Wladyslaw 1989 An integral theorem and its applications to coincidence theorems Acta Universitatis Carolinae Mathematica et Physica 30 2 83 90 Leoni Giovanni 2017 A First Course in Sobolev Spaces Second Edition Graduate Studies in Mathematics 181 American Mathematical Society pp 734 ISBN 978 1 4704 2921 8 Madsen Ib Tornehave Jorgen 1997 From calculus to cohomology de Rham cohomology and characteristic classes Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 58059 5 MR 1454127 Milnor John W 1965 Topology from the differentiable viewpoint Charlottesville University Press of Virginia MR 0226651 Milnor John W 1978 Analytic proofs of the hairy ball theorem and the Brouwer fixed point theorem PDF Amer Math Monthly 85 7 521 524 JSTOR 2320860 MR 0505523 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Sobolev Vladimir I 2001 1994 Brouwer theorem Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Spanier Edwin H 1966 Algebraic topology New York Toronto London McGraw Hill External links EditBrouwer s Fixed Point Theorem for Triangles at cut the knot Brouwer theorem from PlanetMath with attached proof Reconstructing Brouwer at MathPages Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem at Math Images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brouwer fixed point theorem amp oldid 1141051509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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