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Non-analytic smooth function

In mathematics, smooth functions (also called infinitely differentiable functions) and analytic functions are two very important types of functions. One can easily prove that any analytic function of a real argument is smooth. The converse is not true, as demonstrated with the counterexample below.

One of the most important applications of smooth functions with compact support is the construction of so-called mollifiers, which are important in theories of generalized functions, such as Laurent Schwartz's theory of distributions.

The existence of smooth but non-analytic functions represents one of the main differences between differential geometry and analytic geometry. In terms of sheaf theory, this difference can be stated as follows: the sheaf of differentiable functions on a differentiable manifold is fine, in contrast with the analytic case.

The functions below are generally used to build up partitions of unity on differentiable manifolds.

An example function edit

Definition of the function edit

 
The non-analytic smooth function f(x) considered in the article.

Consider the function

 

defined for every real number x.

The function is smooth edit

The function f has continuous derivatives of all orders at every point x of the real line. The formula for these derivatives is

 

where pn(x) is a polynomial of degree n − 1 given recursively by p1(x) = 1 and

 

for any positive integer n. From this formula, it is not completely clear that the derivatives are continuous at 0; this follows from the one-sided limit

 

for any nonnegative integer m.

Detailed proof of smoothness

By the power series representation of the exponential function, we have for every natural number   (including zero)

 

because all the positive terms for   are added. Therefore, dividing this inequality by   and taking the limit from above,

 

We now prove the formula for the nth derivative of f by mathematical induction. Using the chain rule, the reciprocal rule, and the fact that the derivative of the exponential function is again the exponential function, we see that the formula is correct for the first derivative of f for all x > 0 and that p1(x) is a polynomial of degree 0. Of course, the derivative of f is zero for x < 0. It remains to show that the right-hand side derivative of f at x = 0 is zero. Using the above limit, we see that

 

The induction step from n to n + 1 is similar. For x > 0 we get for the derivative

 

where pn+1(x) is a polynomial of degree n = (n + 1) − 1. Of course, the (n + 1)st derivative of f is zero for x < 0. For the right-hand side derivative of f (n) at x = 0 we obtain with the above limit

 

The function is not analytic edit

As seen earlier, the function f is smooth, and all its derivatives at the origin are 0. Therefore, the Taylor series of f at the origin converges everywhere to the zero function,

 

and so the Taylor series does not equal f(x) for x > 0. Consequently, f is not analytic at the origin.

Smooth transition functions edit

 
The smooth transition g from 0 to 1 defined here.

The function

 

has a strictly positive denominator everywhere on the real line, hence g is also smooth. Furthermore, g(x) = 0 for x ≤ 0 and g(x) = 1 for x ≥ 1, hence it provides a smooth transition from the level 0 to the level 1 in the unit interval [0, 1]. To have the smooth transition in the real interval [a, b] with a < b, consider the function

 

For real numbers a < b < c < d, the smooth function

 

equals 1 on the closed interval [b, c] and vanishes outside the open interval (a, d), hence it can serve as a bump function.

A smooth function which is nowhere real analytic edit

 
Approximation of the smooth-everywhere, but nowhere-analytic function mentioned here. This partial sum is taken from k=20 to 2500.

A more pathological example is an infinitely differentiable function which is not analytic at any point. It can be constructed by means of a Fourier series as follows. Define for all  

 

Since the series   converges for all  , this function is easily seen to be of class C, by a standard inductive application of the Weierstrass M-test to demonstrate uniform convergence of each series of derivatives.

We now show that   is not analytic at any dyadic rational multiple of π, that is, at any   with   and  . Since the sum of the first   terms is analytic, we need only consider  , the sum of the terms with  . For all orders of derivation   with  ,   and   we have

 

where we used the fact that   for all  , and we bounded the first sum from below by the term with  . As a consequence, at any such  

 

so that the radius of convergence of the Taylor series of   at   is 0 by the Cauchy-Hadamard formula. Since the set of analyticity of a function is an open set, and since dyadic rationals are dense, we conclude that  , and hence  , is nowhere analytic in  .

Application to Taylor series edit

For every sequence α0, α1, α2, . . . of real or complex numbers, the following construction shows the existence of a smooth function F on the real line which has these numbers as derivatives at the origin.[1] In particular, every sequence of numbers can appear as the coefficients of the Taylor series of a smooth function. This result is known as Borel's lemma, after Émile Borel.

With the smooth transition function g as above, define

 

This function h is also smooth; it equals 1 on the closed interval [−1,1] and vanishes outside the open interval (−2,2). Using h, define for every natural number n (including zero) the smooth function

 

which agrees with the monomial xn on [−1,1] and vanishes outside the interval (−2,2). Hence, the k-th derivative of ψn at the origin satisfies

 

and the boundedness theorem implies that ψn and every derivative of ψn is bounded. Therefore, the constants

 

involving the supremum norm of ψn and its first n derivatives, are well-defined real numbers. Define the scaled functions

 

By repeated application of the chain rule,

 

and, using the previous result for the k-th derivative of ψn at zero,

 

It remains to show that the function

 

is well defined and can be differentiated term-by-term infinitely many times.[2] To this end, observe that for every k

 

where the remaining infinite series converges by the ratio test.

Application to higher dimensions edit

 
The function Ψ1(x) in one dimension.

For every radius r > 0,

 

with Euclidean norm ||x|| defines a smooth function on n-dimensional Euclidean space with support in the ball of radius r, but  .

Complex analysis edit

This pathology cannot occur with differentiable functions of a complex variable rather than of a real variable. Indeed, all holomorphic functions are analytic, so that the failure of the function f defined in this article to be analytic in spite of its being infinitely differentiable is an indication of one of the most dramatic differences between real-variable and complex-variable analysis.

Note that although the function f has derivatives of all orders over the real line, the analytic continuation of f from the positive half-line x > 0 to the complex plane, that is, the function

 

has an essential singularity at the origin, and hence is not even continuous, much less analytic. By the great Picard theorem, it attains every complex value (with the exception of zero) infinitely many times in every neighbourhood of the origin.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Exercise 12 on page 418 in Walter Rudin, Real and Complex Analysis. McGraw-Hill, New Delhi 1980, ISBN 0-07-099557-5
  2. ^ See e.g. Chapter V, Section 2, Theorem 2.8 and Corollary 2.9 about the differentiability of the limits of sequences of functions in Amann, Herbert; Escher, Joachim (2005), Analysis I, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, pp. 373–374, ISBN 3-7643-7153-6

External links edit

  • "Infinitely-differentiable function that is not analytic". PlanetMath.

analytic, smooth, function, mathematics, smooth, functions, also, called, infinitely, differentiable, functions, analytic, functions, very, important, types, functions, easily, prove, that, analytic, function, real, argument, smooth, converse, true, demonstrat. In mathematics smooth functions also called infinitely differentiable functions and analytic functions are two very important types of functions One can easily prove that any analytic function of a real argument is smooth The converse is not true as demonstrated with the counterexample below One of the most important applications of smooth functions with compact support is the construction of so called mollifiers which are important in theories of generalized functions such as Laurent Schwartz s theory of distributions The existence of smooth but non analytic functions represents one of the main differences between differential geometry and analytic geometry In terms of sheaf theory this difference can be stated as follows the sheaf of differentiable functions on a differentiable manifold is fine in contrast with the analytic case The functions below are generally used to build up partitions of unity on differentiable manifolds Contents 1 An example function 1 1 Definition of the function 1 2 The function is smooth 1 3 The function is not analytic 1 4 Smooth transition functions 2 A smooth function which is nowhere real analytic 3 Application to Taylor series 4 Application to higher dimensions 5 Complex analysis 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksAn example function editDefinition of the function edit nbsp The non analytic smooth function f x considered in the article Consider the function f x e 1 x if x gt 0 0 if x 0 displaystyle f x begin cases e frac 1 x amp text if x gt 0 0 amp text if x leq 0 end cases nbsp defined for every real number x The function is smooth edit The function f has continuous derivatives of all orders at every point x of the real line The formula for these derivatives is f n x p n x x 2 n f x if x gt 0 0 if x 0 displaystyle f n x begin cases displaystyle frac p n x x 2n f x amp text if x gt 0 0 amp text if x leq 0 end cases nbsp where pn x is a polynomial of degree n 1 given recursively by p1 x 1 and p n 1 x x 2 p n x 2 n x 1 p n x displaystyle p n 1 x x 2 p n x 2nx 1 p n x nbsp for any positive integer n From this formula it is not completely clear that the derivatives are continuous at 0 this follows from the one sided limit lim x 0 e 1 x x m 0 displaystyle lim x searrow 0 frac e frac 1 x x m 0 nbsp for any nonnegative integer m Detailed proof of smoothnessBy the power series representation of the exponential function we have for every natural number m displaystyle m nbsp including zero 1 x m x 1 x m 1 m 1 x n 0 1 n 1 x n m 1 x e 1 x x gt 0 displaystyle frac 1 x m x Bigl frac 1 x Bigr m 1 leq m 1 x sum n 0 infty frac 1 n Bigl frac 1 x Bigr n m 1 xe frac 1 x qquad x gt 0 nbsp because all the positive terms for n m 1 displaystyle n neq m 1 nbsp are added Therefore dividing this inequality by e 1 x displaystyle e frac 1 x nbsp and taking the limit from above lim x 0 e 1 x x m m 1 lim x 0 x 0 displaystyle lim x searrow 0 frac e frac 1 x x m leq m 1 lim x searrow 0 x 0 nbsp We now prove the formula for the nth derivative of f by mathematical induction Using the chain rule the reciprocal rule and the fact that the derivative of the exponential function is again the exponential function we see that the formula is correct for the first derivative of f for all x gt 0 and that p1 x is a polynomial of degree 0 Of course the derivative of f is zero for x lt 0 It remains to show that the right hand side derivative of f at x 0 is zero Using the above limit we see that f 0 lim x 0 f x f 0 x 0 lim x 0 e 1 x x 0 displaystyle f 0 lim x searrow 0 frac f x f 0 x 0 lim x searrow 0 frac e frac 1 x x 0 nbsp The induction step from n to n 1 is similar For x gt 0 we get for the derivative f n 1 x p n x x 2 n 2 n p n x x 2 n 1 p n x x 2 n 2 f x x 2 p n x 2 n x 1 p n x x 2 n 2 f x p n 1 x x 2 n 1 f x displaystyle begin aligned f n 1 x amp biggl frac p n x x 2n 2n frac p n x x 2n 1 frac p n x x 2n 2 biggr f x amp frac x 2 p n x 2nx 1 p n x x 2n 2 f x amp frac p n 1 x x 2 n 1 f x end aligned nbsp where pn 1 x is a polynomial of degree n n 1 1 Of course the n 1 st derivative of f is zero for x lt 0 For the right hand side derivative of f n at x 0 we obtain with the above limit lim x 0 f n x f n 0 x 0 lim x 0 p n x x 2 n 1 e 1 x 0 displaystyle lim x searrow 0 frac f n x f n 0 x 0 lim x searrow 0 frac p n x x 2n 1 e 1 x 0 nbsp The function is not analytic edit As seen earlier the function f is smooth and all its derivatives at the origin are 0 Therefore the Taylor series of f at the origin converges everywhere to the zero function n 0 f n 0 n x n n 0 0 n x n 0 x R displaystyle sum n 0 infty frac f n 0 n x n sum n 0 infty frac 0 n x n 0 qquad x in mathbb R nbsp and so the Taylor series does not equal f x for x gt 0 Consequently f is not analytic at the origin Smooth transition functions edit nbsp The smooth transition g from 0 to 1 defined here The function g x f x f x f 1 x x R displaystyle g x frac f x f x f 1 x qquad x in mathbb R nbsp has a strictly positive denominator everywhere on the real line hence g is also smooth Furthermore g x 0 for x 0 and g x 1 for x 1 hence it provides a smooth transition from the level 0 to the level 1 in the unit interval 0 1 To have the smooth transition in the real interval a b with a lt b consider the function R x g x a b a displaystyle mathbb R ni x mapsto g Bigl frac x a b a Bigr nbsp For real numbers a lt b lt c lt d the smooth function R x g x a b a g d x d c displaystyle mathbb R ni x mapsto g Bigl frac x a b a Bigr g Bigl frac d x d c Bigr nbsp equals 1 on the closed interval b c and vanishes outside the open interval a d hence it can serve as a bump function A smooth function which is nowhere real analytic edit nbsp Approximation of the smooth everywhere but nowhere analytic function mentioned here This partial sum is taken from k 20 to 2500 A more pathological example is an infinitely differentiable function which is not analytic at any point It can be constructed by means of a Fourier series as follows Define for all x R displaystyle x in mathbb R nbsp F x k N e 2 k cos 2 k x displaystyle F x sum k in mathbb N e sqrt 2 k cos 2 k x nbsp Since the series k N e 2 k 2 k n displaystyle sum k in mathbb N e sqrt 2 k 2 k n nbsp converges for all n N displaystyle n in mathbb N nbsp this function is easily seen to be of class C by a standard inductive application of the Weierstrass M test to demonstrate uniform convergence of each series of derivatives We now show that F x displaystyle F x nbsp is not analytic at any dyadic rational multiple of p that is at any x p p 2 q displaystyle x pi cdot p cdot 2 q nbsp with p Z displaystyle p in mathbb Z nbsp and q N displaystyle q in mathbb N nbsp Since the sum of the first q displaystyle q nbsp terms is analytic we need only consider F gt q x displaystyle F gt q x nbsp the sum of the terms with k gt q displaystyle k gt q nbsp For all orders of derivation n 2 m displaystyle n 2 m nbsp with m N displaystyle m in mathbb N nbsp m 2 displaystyle m geq 2 nbsp and m gt q 2 displaystyle m gt q 2 nbsp we have F gt q n x k N k gt q e 2 k 2 k n cos 2 k x k N k gt q e 2 k 2 k n e n n 2 n a s n displaystyle F gt q n x sum k in mathbb N atop k gt q e sqrt 2 k 2 k n cos 2 k x sum k in mathbb N atop k gt q e sqrt 2 k 2 k n geq e n n 2n quad mathrm as n to infty nbsp where we used the fact that cos 2 k x 1 displaystyle cos 2 k x 1 nbsp for all 2 k gt 2 q displaystyle 2 k gt 2 q nbsp and we bounded the first sum from below by the term with 2 k 2 2 m n 2 displaystyle 2 k 2 2m n 2 nbsp As a consequence at any such x R displaystyle x in mathbb R nbsp lim sup n F gt q n x n 1 n displaystyle limsup n to infty left frac F gt q n x n right 1 n infty nbsp so that the radius of convergence of the Taylor series of F gt q displaystyle F gt q nbsp at x displaystyle x nbsp is 0 by the Cauchy Hadamard formula Since the set of analyticity of a function is an open set and since dyadic rationals are dense we conclude that F gt q displaystyle F gt q nbsp and hence F displaystyle F nbsp is nowhere analytic in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Application to Taylor series editMain article Borel s lemma For every sequence a0 a1 a2 of real or complex numbers the following construction shows the existence of a smooth function F on the real line which has these numbers as derivatives at the origin 1 In particular every sequence of numbers can appear as the coefficients of the Taylor series of a smooth function This result is known as Borel s lemma after Emile Borel With the smooth transition function g as above define h x g 2 x g 2 x x R displaystyle h x g 2 x g 2 x qquad x in mathbb R nbsp This function h is also smooth it equals 1 on the closed interval 1 1 and vanishes outside the open interval 2 2 Using h define for every natural number n including zero the smooth function ps n x x n h x x R displaystyle psi n x x n h x qquad x in mathbb R nbsp which agrees with the monomial xn on 1 1 and vanishes outside the interval 2 2 Hence the k th derivative of psn at the origin satisfies ps n k 0 n if k n 0 otherwise k n N 0 displaystyle psi n k 0 begin cases n amp text if k n 0 amp text otherwise end cases quad k n in mathbb N 0 nbsp and the boundedness theorem implies that psn and every derivative of psn is bounded Therefore the constants l n max 1 a n ps n ps n 1 ps n n n N 0 displaystyle lambda n max bigl 1 alpha n psi n infty psi n 1 infty ldots psi n n infty bigr qquad n in mathbb N 0 nbsp involving the supremum norm of psn and its first n derivatives are well defined real numbers Define the scaled functions f n x a n n l n n ps n l n x n N 0 x R displaystyle f n x frac alpha n n lambda n n psi n lambda n x qquad n in mathbb N 0 x in mathbb R nbsp By repeated application of the chain rule f n k x a n n l n n k ps n k l n x k n N 0 x R displaystyle f n k x frac alpha n n lambda n n k psi n k lambda n x qquad k n in mathbb N 0 x in mathbb R nbsp and using the previous result for the k th derivative of psn at zero f n k 0 a n if k n 0 otherwise k n N 0 displaystyle f n k 0 begin cases alpha n amp text if k n 0 amp text otherwise end cases qquad k n in mathbb N 0 nbsp It remains to show that the function F x n 0 f n x x R displaystyle F x sum n 0 infty f n x qquad x in mathbb R nbsp is well defined and can be differentiated term by term infinitely many times 2 To this end observe that for every k n 0 f n k n 0 k 1 a n n l n n k ps n k n k 2 1 n 1 l n n k 2 1 a n l n 1 ps n k l n 1 lt displaystyle sum n 0 infty f n k infty leq sum n 0 k 1 frac alpha n n lambda n n k psi n k infty sum n k 2 infty frac 1 n underbrace frac 1 lambda n n k 2 leq 1 underbrace frac alpha n lambda n leq 1 underbrace frac psi n k infty lambda n leq 1 lt infty nbsp where the remaining infinite series converges by the ratio test Application to higher dimensions edit nbsp The function PS1 x in one dimension For every radius r gt 0 R n x PS r x f r 2 x 2 displaystyle mathbb R n ni x mapsto Psi r x f r 2 x 2 nbsp with Euclidean norm x defines a smooth function on n dimensional Euclidean space with support in the ball of radius r but PS r 0 gt 0 displaystyle Psi r 0 gt 0 nbsp Complex analysis editThis pathology cannot occur with differentiable functions of a complex variable rather than of a real variable Indeed all holomorphic functions are analytic so that the failure of the function f defined in this article to be analytic in spite of its being infinitely differentiable is an indication of one of the most dramatic differences between real variable and complex variable analysis Note that although the function f has derivatives of all orders over the real line the analytic continuation of f from the positive half line x gt 0 to the complex plane that is the function C 0 z e 1 z C displaystyle mathbb C setminus 0 ni z mapsto e frac 1 z in mathbb C nbsp has an essential singularity at the origin and hence is not even continuous much less analytic By the great Picard theorem it attains every complex value with the exception of zero infinitely many times in every neighbourhood of the origin See also editBump function Fabius function Flat function MollifierNotes edit Exercise 12 on page 418 in Walter Rudin Real and Complex Analysis McGraw Hill New Delhi 1980 ISBN 0 07 099557 5 See e g Chapter V Section 2 Theorem 2 8 and Corollary 2 9 about the differentiability of the limits of sequences of functions in Amann Herbert Escher Joachim 2005 Analysis I Basel Birkhauser Verlag pp 373 374 ISBN 3 7643 7153 6External links edit Infinitely differentiable function that is not analytic PlanetMath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Non analytic smooth function amp oldid 1181576618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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