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Support (mathematics)

In mathematics, the support of a real-valued function is the subset of the function domain containing the elements which are not mapped to zero. If the domain of is a topological space, then the support of is instead defined as the smallest closed set containing all points not mapped to zero. This concept is used very widely in mathematical analysis.

Formulation Edit

Suppose that   is a real-valued function whose domain is an arbitrary set   The set-theoretic support of   written   is the set of points in   where   is non-zero:

 

The support of   is the smallest subset of   with the property that   is zero on the subset's complement. If   for all but a finite number of points   then   is said to have finite support.

If the set   has an additional structure (for example, a topology), then the support of   is defined in an analogous way as the smallest subset of   of an appropriate type such that   vanishes in an appropriate sense on its complement. The notion of support also extends in a natural way to functions taking values in more general sets than   and to other objects, such as measures or distributions.

Closed support Edit

The most common situation occurs when   is a topological space (such as the real line or  -dimensional Euclidean space) and   is a continuous real- (or complex-) valued function. In this case, the support of  ,  , or the closed support of  , is defined topologically as the closure (taken in  ) of the subset of   where   is non-zero[1][2][3] that is,

 

Since the intersection of closed sets is closed,   is the intersection of all closed sets that contain the set-theoretic support of  

For example, if   is the function defined by

 
then  , the support of  , or the closed support of  , is the closed interval   since   is non-zero on the open interval   and the closure of this set is  

The notion of closed support is usually applied to continuous functions, but the definition makes sense for arbitrary real or complex-valued functions on a topological space, and some authors do not require that   (or  ) be continuous.[4]

Compact support Edit

Functions with compact support on a topological space   are those whose closed support is a compact subset of   If   is the real line, or  -dimensional Euclidean space, then a function has compact support if and only if it has bounded support, since a subset of   is compact if and only if it is closed and bounded.

For example, the function   defined above is a continuous function with compact support   If   is a smooth function then because   is identically   on the open subset   all of  's partial derivatives of all orders are also identically   on  

The condition of compact support is stronger than the condition of vanishing at infinity. For example, the function   defined by

 
vanishes at infinity, since   as   but its support   is not compact.

Real-valued compactly supported smooth functions on a Euclidean space are called bump functions. Mollifiers are an important special case of bump functions as they can be used in distribution theory to create sequences of smooth functions approximating nonsmooth (generalized) functions, via convolution.

In good cases, functions with compact support are dense in the space of functions that vanish at infinity, but this property requires some technical work to justify in a given example. As an intuition for more complex examples, and in the language of limits, for any   any function   on the real line   that vanishes at infinity can be approximated by choosing an appropriate compact subset   of   such that

 
for all   where   is the indicator function of   Every continuous function on a compact topological space has compact support since every closed subset of a compact space is indeed compact.

Essential support Edit

If   is a topological measure space with a Borel measure   (such as   or a Lebesgue measurable subset of   equipped with Lebesgue measure), then one typically identifies functions that are equal  -almost everywhere. In that case, the essential support of a measurable function   written   is defined to be the smallest closed subset   of   such that    -almost everywhere outside   Equivalently,   is the complement of the largest open set on which    -almost everywhere[5]

 

The essential support of a function   depends on the measure   as well as on   and it may be strictly smaller than the closed support. For example, if   is the Dirichlet function that is   on irrational numbers and   on rational numbers, and   is equipped with Lebesgue measure, then the support of   is the entire interval   but the essential support of   is empty, since   is equal almost everywhere to the zero function.

In analysis one nearly always wants to use the essential support of a function, rather than its closed support, when the two sets are different, so   is often written simply as   and referred to as the support.[5][6]

Generalization Edit

If   is an arbitrary set containing zero, the concept of support is immediately generalizable to functions   Support may also be defined for any algebraic structure with identity (such as a group, monoid, or composition algebra), in which the identity element assumes the role of zero. For instance, the family   of functions from the natural numbers to the integers is the uncountable set of integer sequences. The subfamily   is the countable set of all integer sequences that have only finitely many nonzero entries.

Functions of finite support are used in defining algebraic structures such as group rings and free abelian groups.[7]

In probability and measure theory Edit

In probability theory, the support of a probability distribution can be loosely thought of as the closure of the set of possible values of a random variable having that distribution. There are, however, some subtleties to consider when dealing with general distributions defined on a sigma algebra, rather than on a topological space.

More formally, if   is a random variable on   then the support of   is the smallest closed set   such that  

In practice however, the support of a discrete random variable   is often defined as the set   and the support of a continuous random variable   is defined as the set   where   is a probability density function of   (the set-theoretic support).[8]

Note that the word support can refer to the logarithm of the likelihood of a probability density function.[9]

Support of a distribution Edit

It is possible also to talk about the support of a distribution, such as the Dirac delta function   on the real line. In that example, we can consider test functions   which are smooth functions with support not including the point   Since   (the distribution   applied as linear functional to  ) is   for such functions, we can say that the support of   is   only. Since measures (including probability measures) on the real line are special cases of distributions, we can also speak of the support of a measure in the same way.

Suppose that   is a distribution, and that   is an open set in Euclidean space such that, for all test functions   such that the support of   is contained in     Then   is said to vanish on   Now, if   vanishes on an arbitrary family   of open sets, then for any test function   supported in   a simple argument based on the compactness of the support of   and a partition of unity shows that   as well. Hence we can define the support of   as the complement of the largest open set on which   vanishes. For example, the support of the Dirac delta is  

Singular support Edit

In Fourier analysis in particular, it is interesting to study the singular support of a distribution. This has the intuitive interpretation as the set of points at which a distribution fails to be a smooth function.

For example, the Fourier transform of the Heaviside step function can, up to constant factors, be considered to be   (a function) except at   While   is clearly a special point, it is more precise to say that the transform of the distribution has singular support  : it cannot accurately be expressed as a function in relation to test functions with support including   It can be expressed as an application of a Cauchy principal value improper integral.

For distributions in several variables, singular supports allow one to define wave front sets and understand Huygens' principle in terms of mathematical analysis. Singular supports may also be used to understand phenomena special to distribution theory, such as attempts to 'multiply' distributions (squaring the Dirac delta function fails – essentially because the singular supports of the distributions to be multiplied should be disjoint).

Family of supports Edit

An abstract notion of family of supports on a topological space   suitable for sheaf theory, was defined by Henri Cartan. In extending Poincaré duality to manifolds that are not compact, the 'compact support' idea enters naturally on one side of the duality; see for example Alexander–Spanier cohomology.

Bredon, Sheaf Theory (2nd edition, 1997) gives these definitions. A family   of closed subsets of   is a family of supports, if it is down-closed and closed under finite union. Its extent is the union over   A paracompactifying family of supports that satisfies further that any   in   is, with the subspace topology, a paracompact space; and has some   in   which is a neighbourhood. If   is a locally compact space, assumed Hausdorff the family of all compact subsets satisfies the further conditions, making it paracompactifying.

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Folland, Gerald B. (1999). Real Analysis, 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley. p. 132.
  2. ^ Hörmander, Lars (1990). Linear Partial Differential Equations I, 2nd ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. p. 14.
  3. ^ Pascucci, Andrea (2011). PDE and Martingale Methods in Option Pricing. Bocconi & Springer Series. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. p. 678. doi:10.1007/978-88-470-1781-8. ISBN 978-88-470-1780-1.
  4. ^ Rudin, Walter (1987). Real and Complex Analysis, 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 38.
  5. ^ a b Lieb, Elliott; Loss, Michael (2001). Analysis. Graduate Studies in Mathematics. Vol. 14 (2nd ed.). American Mathematical Society. p. 13. ISBN 978-0821827833.
  6. ^ In a similar way, one uses the essential supremum of a measurable function instead of its supremum.
  7. ^ Tomasz, Kaczynski (2004). Computational homology. Mischaikow, Konstantin Michael,, Mrozek, Marian. New York: Springer. p. 445. ISBN 9780387215976. OCLC 55897585.
  8. ^ Taboga, Marco. "Support of a random variable". statlect.com. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  9. ^ Edwards, A. W. F. (1992). Likelihood (Expanded ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 31–34. ISBN 0-8018-4443-6.

References Edit

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Support mathematics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message In mathematics the support of a real valued function f displaystyle f is the subset of the function domain containing the elements which are not mapped to zero If the domain of f displaystyle f is a topological space then the support of f displaystyle f is instead defined as the smallest closed set containing all points not mapped to zero This concept is used very widely in mathematical analysis Contents 1 Formulation 2 Closed support 3 Compact support 4 Essential support 5 Generalization 6 In probability and measure theory 7 Support of a distribution 8 Singular support 9 Family of supports 10 See also 11 Citations 12 ReferencesFormulation EditSuppose that f X R displaystyle f X to mathbb R nbsp is a real valued function whose domain is an arbitrary set X displaystyle X nbsp The set theoretic support of f displaystyle f nbsp written supp f displaystyle operatorname supp f nbsp is the set of points in X displaystyle X nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp is non zero supp f x X f x 0 displaystyle operatorname supp f x in X f x neq 0 nbsp The support of f displaystyle f nbsp is the smallest subset of X displaystyle X nbsp with the property that f displaystyle f nbsp is zero on the subset s complement If f x 0 displaystyle f x 0 nbsp for all but a finite number of points x X displaystyle x in X nbsp then f displaystyle f nbsp is said to have finite support If the set X displaystyle X nbsp has an additional structure for example a topology then the support of f displaystyle f nbsp is defined in an analogous way as the smallest subset of X displaystyle X nbsp of an appropriate type such that f displaystyle f nbsp vanishes in an appropriate sense on its complement The notion of support also extends in a natural way to functions taking values in more general sets than R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp and to other objects such as measures or distributions Closed support EditThe most common situation occurs when X displaystyle X nbsp is a topological space such as the real line or n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional Euclidean space and f X R displaystyle f X to mathbb R nbsp is a continuous real or complex valued function In this case the support of f displaystyle f nbsp supp f displaystyle operatorname supp f nbsp or the closed support of f displaystyle f nbsp is defined topologically as the closure taken in X displaystyle X nbsp of the subset of X displaystyle X nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp is non zero 1 2 3 that is supp f cl X x X f x 0 f 1 0 c displaystyle operatorname supp f operatorname cl X left x in X f x neq 0 right overline f 1 left 0 mathrm c right nbsp Since the intersection of closed sets is closed supp f displaystyle operatorname supp f nbsp is the intersection of all closed sets that contain the set theoretic support of f displaystyle f nbsp For example if f R R displaystyle f mathbb R to mathbb R nbsp is the function defined byf x 1 x 2 if x lt 1 0 if x 1 displaystyle f x begin cases 1 x 2 amp text if x lt 1 0 amp text if x geq 1 end cases nbsp then supp f displaystyle operatorname supp f nbsp the support of f displaystyle f nbsp or the closed support of f displaystyle f nbsp is the closed interval 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 nbsp since f displaystyle f nbsp is non zero on the open interval 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 nbsp and the closure of this set is 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 nbsp The notion of closed support is usually applied to continuous functions but the definition makes sense for arbitrary real or complex valued functions on a topological space and some authors do not require that f X R displaystyle f X to mathbb R nbsp or f X C displaystyle f X to mathbb C nbsp be continuous 4 Compact support EditFunctions with compact support on a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp are those whose closed support is a compact subset of X displaystyle X nbsp If X displaystyle X nbsp is the real line or n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional Euclidean space then a function has compact support if and only if it has bounded support since a subset of R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp is compact if and only if it is closed and bounded For example the function f R R displaystyle f mathbb R to mathbb R nbsp defined above is a continuous function with compact support 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 nbsp If f R n R displaystyle f mathbb R n to mathbb R nbsp is a smooth function then because f displaystyle f nbsp is identically 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp on the open subset R n supp f displaystyle mathbb R n smallsetminus operatorname supp f nbsp all of f displaystyle f nbsp s partial derivatives of all orders are also identically 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp on R n supp f displaystyle mathbb R n smallsetminus operatorname supp f nbsp The condition of compact support is stronger than the condition of vanishing at infinity For example the function f R R displaystyle f mathbb R to mathbb R nbsp defined byf x 1 1 x 2 displaystyle f x frac 1 1 x 2 nbsp vanishes at infinity since f x 0 displaystyle f x to 0 nbsp as x displaystyle x to infty nbsp but its support R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is not compact Real valued compactly supported smooth functions on a Euclidean space are called bump functions Mollifiers are an important special case of bump functions as they can be used in distribution theory to create sequences of smooth functions approximating nonsmooth generalized functions via convolution In good cases functions with compact support are dense in the space of functions that vanish at infinity but this property requires some technical work to justify in a given example As an intuition for more complex examples and in the language of limits for any e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 nbsp any function f displaystyle f nbsp on the real line R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp that vanishes at infinity can be approximated by choosing an appropriate compact subset C displaystyle C nbsp of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp such that f x I C x f x lt e displaystyle left f x I C x f x right lt varepsilon nbsp for all x X displaystyle x in X nbsp where I C displaystyle I C nbsp is the indicator function of C displaystyle C nbsp Every continuous function on a compact topological space has compact support since every closed subset of a compact space is indeed compact Essential support EditIf X displaystyle X nbsp is a topological measure space with a Borel measure m displaystyle mu nbsp such as R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp or a Lebesgue measurable subset of R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp equipped with Lebesgue measure then one typically identifies functions that are equal m displaystyle mu nbsp almost everywhere In that case the essential support of a measurable function f X R displaystyle f X to mathbb R nbsp written e s s s u p p f displaystyle operatorname ess supp f nbsp is defined to be the smallest closed subset F displaystyle F nbsp of X displaystyle X nbsp such that f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp m displaystyle mu nbsp almost everywhere outside F displaystyle F nbsp Equivalently e s s s u p p f displaystyle operatorname ess supp f nbsp is the complement of the largest open set on which f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp m displaystyle mu nbsp almost everywhere 5 e s s s u p p f X W X W is open and f 0 m almost everywhere in W displaystyle operatorname ess supp f X setminus bigcup left Omega subseteq X Omega text is open and f 0 mu text almost everywhere in Omega right nbsp The essential support of a function f displaystyle f nbsp depends on the measure m displaystyle mu nbsp as well as on f displaystyle f nbsp and it may be strictly smaller than the closed support For example if f 0 1 R displaystyle f 0 1 to mathbb R nbsp is the Dirichlet function that is 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp on irrational numbers and 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp on rational numbers and 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp is equipped with Lebesgue measure then the support of f displaystyle f nbsp is the entire interval 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp but the essential support of f displaystyle f nbsp is empty since f displaystyle f nbsp is equal almost everywhere to the zero function In analysis one nearly always wants to use the essential support of a function rather than its closed support when the two sets are different so e s s s u p p f displaystyle operatorname ess supp f nbsp is often written simply as supp f displaystyle operatorname supp f nbsp and referred to as the support 5 6 Generalization EditIf M displaystyle M nbsp is an arbitrary set containing zero the concept of support is immediately generalizable to functions f X M displaystyle f X to M nbsp Support may also be defined for any algebraic structure with identity such as a group monoid or composition algebra in which the identity element assumes the role of zero For instance the family Z N displaystyle mathbb Z mathbb N nbsp of functions from the natural numbers to the integers is the uncountable set of integer sequences The subfamily f Z N f has finite support displaystyle left f in mathbb Z mathbb N f text has finite support right nbsp is the countable set of all integer sequences that have only finitely many nonzero entries Functions of finite support are used in defining algebraic structures such as group rings and free abelian groups 7 In probability and measure theory EditFurther information Support measure theory In probability theory the support of a probability distribution can be loosely thought of as the closure of the set of possible values of a random variable having that distribution There are however some subtleties to consider when dealing with general distributions defined on a sigma algebra rather than on a topological space More formally if X W R displaystyle X Omega to mathbb R nbsp is a random variable on W F P displaystyle Omega mathcal F P nbsp then the support of X displaystyle X nbsp is the smallest closed set R X R displaystyle R X subseteq mathbb R nbsp such that P X R X 1 displaystyle P left X in R X right 1 nbsp In practice however the support of a discrete random variable X displaystyle X nbsp is often defined as the set R X x R P X x gt 0 displaystyle R X x in mathbb R P X x gt 0 nbsp and the support of a continuous random variable X displaystyle X nbsp is defined as the set R X x R f X x gt 0 displaystyle R X x in mathbb R f X x gt 0 nbsp where f X x displaystyle f X x nbsp is a probability density function of X displaystyle X nbsp the set theoretic support 8 Note that the word support can refer to the logarithm of the likelihood of a probability density function 9 Support of a distribution EditIt is possible also to talk about the support of a distribution such as the Dirac delta function d x displaystyle delta x nbsp on the real line In that example we can consider test functions F displaystyle F nbsp which are smooth functions with support not including the point 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp Since d F displaystyle delta F nbsp the distribution d displaystyle delta nbsp applied as linear functional to F displaystyle F nbsp is 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp for such functions we can say that the support of d displaystyle delta nbsp is 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp only Since measures including probability measures on the real line are special cases of distributions we can also speak of the support of a measure in the same way Suppose that f displaystyle f nbsp is a distribution and that U displaystyle U nbsp is an open set in Euclidean space such that for all test functions ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp such that the support of ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is contained in U displaystyle U nbsp f ϕ 0 displaystyle f phi 0 nbsp Then f displaystyle f nbsp is said to vanish on U displaystyle U nbsp Now if f displaystyle f nbsp vanishes on an arbitrary family U a displaystyle U alpha nbsp of open sets then for any test function ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp supported in U a displaystyle bigcup U alpha nbsp a simple argument based on the compactness of the support of ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp and a partition of unity shows that f ϕ 0 displaystyle f phi 0 nbsp as well Hence we can define the support of f displaystyle f nbsp as the complement of the largest open set on which f displaystyle f nbsp vanishes For example the support of the Dirac delta is 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp Singular support EditIn Fourier analysis in particular it is interesting to study the singular support of a distribution This has the intuitive interpretation as the set of points at which a distribution fails to be a smooth function For example the Fourier transform of the Heaviside step function can up to constant factors be considered to be 1 x displaystyle 1 x nbsp a function except at x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp While x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp is clearly a special point it is more precise to say that the transform of the distribution has singular support 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp it cannot accurately be expressed as a function in relation to test functions with support including 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp It can be expressed as an application of a Cauchy principal value improper integral For distributions in several variables singular supports allow one to define wave front sets and understand Huygens principle in terms of mathematical analysis Singular supports may also be used to understand phenomena special to distribution theory such as attempts to multiply distributions squaring the Dirac delta function fails essentially because the singular supports of the distributions to be multiplied should be disjoint Family of supports EditAn abstract notion of family of supports on a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp suitable for sheaf theory was defined by Henri Cartan In extending Poincare duality to manifolds that are not compact the compact support idea enters naturally on one side of the duality see for example Alexander Spanier cohomology Bredon Sheaf Theory 2nd edition 1997 gives these definitions A family F displaystyle Phi nbsp of closed subsets of X displaystyle X nbsp is a family of supports if it is down closed and closed under finite union Its extent is the union over F displaystyle Phi nbsp A paracompactifying family of supports that satisfies further that any Y displaystyle Y nbsp in F displaystyle Phi nbsp is with the subspace topology a paracompact space and has some Z displaystyle Z nbsp in F displaystyle Phi nbsp which is a neighbourhood If X displaystyle X nbsp is a locally compact space assumed Hausdorff the family of all compact subsets satisfies the further conditions making it paracompactifying See also EditBounded function A mathematical function the set of whose values are bounded Bump function Smooth and compactly supported function Support of a module Titchmarsh convolution theoremCitations Edit Folland Gerald B 1999 Real Analysis 2nd ed New York John Wiley p 132 Hormander Lars 1990 Linear Partial Differential Equations I 2nd ed Berlin Springer Verlag p 14 Pascucci Andrea 2011 PDE and Martingale Methods in Option Pricing Bocconi amp Springer Series Berlin Springer Verlag p 678 doi 10 1007 978 88 470 1781 8 ISBN 978 88 470 1780 1 Rudin Walter 1987 Real and Complex Analysis 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill p 38 a b Lieb Elliott Loss Michael 2001 Analysis Graduate Studies in Mathematics Vol 14 2nd ed American Mathematical Society p 13 ISBN 978 0821827833 In a similar way one uses the essential supremum of a measurable function instead of its supremum Tomasz Kaczynski 2004 Computational homology Mischaikow Konstantin Michael Mrozek Marian New York Springer p 445 ISBN 9780387215976 OCLC 55897585 Taboga Marco Support of a random variable statlect com Retrieved 29 November 2017 Edwards A W F 1992 Likelihood Expanded ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 31 34 ISBN 0 8018 4443 6 References EditRudin Walter 1991 Functional Analysis International Series in Pure and Applied Mathematics Vol 8 Second ed New York NY McGraw Hill Science Engineering Math ISBN 978 0 07 054236 5 OCLC 21163277 Treves Francois 2006 1967 Topological Vector Spaces Distributions and Kernels Mineola N Y Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 45352 1 OCLC 853623322 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Support mathematics amp oldid 1176332068 Compact support, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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