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Lipschitz continuity

In mathematical analysis, Lipschitz continuity, named after German mathematician Rudolf Lipschitz, is a strong form of uniform continuity for functions. Intuitively, a Lipschitz continuous function is limited in how fast it can change: there exists a real number such that, for every pair of points on the graph of this function, the absolute value of the slope of the line connecting them is not greater than this real number; the smallest such bound is called the Lipschitz constant of the function (or modulus of uniform continuity). For instance, every function that has bounded first derivatives is Lipschitz continuous.[1]

For a Lipschitz continuous function, there exists a double cone (white) whose origin can be moved along the graph so that the whole graph always stays outside the double cone

In the theory of differential equations, Lipschitz continuity is the central condition of the Picard–Lindelöf theorem which guarantees the existence and uniqueness of the solution to an initial value problem. A special type of Lipschitz continuity, called contraction, is used in the Banach fixed-point theorem.[2]

We have the following chain of strict inclusions for functions over a closed and bounded non-trivial interval of the real line:

Continuously differentiableLipschitz continuous-Hölder continuous,

where . We also have

Lipschitz continuousabsolutely continuousuniformly continuous.

Definitions

Given two metric spaces (X, dX) and (Y, dY), where dX denotes the metric on the set X and dY is the metric on set Y, a function f : XY is called Lipschitz continuous if there exists a real constant K ≥ 0 such that, for all x1 and x2 in X,

 [3]

Any such K is referred to as a Lipschitz constant for the function f and f may also be referred to as K-Lipschitz. The smallest constant is sometimes called the (best) Lipschitz constant[4] of f or the dilation or dilatation[5]: p. 9, Definition 1.4.1 [6][7] of f. If K = 1 the function is called a short map, and if 0 ≤ K < 1 and f maps a metric space to itself, the function is called a contraction.

In particular, a real-valued function f : RR is called Lipschitz continuous if there exists a positive real constant K such that, for all real x1 and x2,

 

In this case, Y is the set of real numbers R with the standard metric dY(y1, y2) = |y1y2|, and X is a subset of R.

In general, the inequality is (trivially) satisfied if x1 = x2. Otherwise, one can equivalently define a function to be Lipschitz continuous if and only if there exists a constant K ≥ 0 such that, for all x1x2,

 

For real-valued functions of several real variables, this holds if and only if the absolute value of the slopes of all secant lines are bounded by K. The set of lines of slope K passing through a point on the graph of the function forms a circular cone, and a function is Lipschitz if and only if the graph of the function everywhere lies completely outside of this cone (see figure).

A function is called locally Lipschitz continuous if for every x in X there exists a neighborhood U of x such that f restricted to U is Lipschitz continuous. Equivalently, if X is a locally compact metric space, then f is locally Lipschitz if and only if it is Lipschitz continuous on every compact subset of X. In spaces that are not locally compact, this is a necessary but not a sufficient condition.

More generally, a function f defined on X is said to be Hölder continuous or to satisfy a Hölder condition of order α > 0 on X if there exists a constant M ≥ 0 such that

 

for all x and y in X. Sometimes a Hölder condition of order α is also called a uniform Lipschitz condition of order α > 0.

For a real number K ≥ 1, if

 

then f is called K-bilipschitz (also written K-bi-Lipschitz). We say f is bilipschitz or bi-Lipschitz to mean there exists such a K. A bilipschitz mapping is injective, and is in fact a homeomorphism onto its image. A bilipschitz function is the same thing as an injective Lipschitz function whose inverse function is also Lipschitz.

Examples

Lipschitz continuous functions that are everywhere differentiable
  • The function   defined for all real numbers is Lipschitz continuous with the Lipschitz constant K = 1, because it is everywhere differentiable and the absolute value of the derivative is bounded above by 1. See the first property listed below under "Properties".
  • Likewise, the sine function is Lipschitz continuous because its derivative, the cosine function, is bounded above by 1 in absolute value.
Lipschitz continuous functions that are not everywhere differentiable
  • The function   defined on the reals is Lipschitz continuous with the Lipschitz constant equal to 1, by the reverse triangle inequality. More generally, a norm on a vector space is Lipschitz continuous with respect to the associated metric, with the Lipschitz constant equal to 1.
Lipschitz continuous functions that are everywhere differentiable but not continuously differentiable
  • The function  , whose derivative exists but has an essential discontinuity at  .
Continuous functions that are not (globally) Lipschitz continuous
  • The function f(x) = x defined on [0, 1] is not Lipschitz continuous. This function becomes infinitely steep as x approaches 0 since its derivative becomes infinite. However, it is uniformly continuous,[8] and both Hölder continuous of class C0, α for α ≤ 1/2 and also absolutely continuous on [0, 1] (both of which imply the former).
Differentiable functions that are not (locally) Lipschitz continuous
  • The function f defined by f(0) = 0 and f(x) = x3/2sin(1/x) for 0<x≤1 gives an example of a function that is differentiable on a compact set while not locally Lipschitz because its derivative function is not bounded. See also the first property below.
Analytic functions that are not (globally) Lipschitz continuous
  • The exponential function becomes arbitrarily steep as x → ∞, and therefore is not globally Lipschitz continuous, despite being an analytic function.
  • The function f(x) = x2 with domain all real numbers is not Lipschitz continuous. This function becomes arbitrarily steep as x approaches infinity. It is however locally Lipschitz continuous.

Properties

  • An everywhere differentiable function g : R → R is Lipschitz continuous (with K = sup |g′(x)|) if and only if it has bounded first derivative; one direction follows from the mean value theorem. In particular, any continuously differentiable function is locally Lipschitz, as continuous functions are locally bounded so its gradient is locally bounded as well.
  • A Lipschitz function g : R → R is absolutely continuous and therefore is differentiable almost everywhere, that is, differentiable at every point outside a set of Lebesgue measure zero. Its derivative is essentially bounded in magnitude by the Lipschitz constant, and for a < b, the difference g(b) − g(a) is equal to the integral of the derivative g′ on the interval [ab].
    • Conversely, if f : I → R is absolutely continuous and thus differentiable almost everywhere, and satisfies |f′(x)| ≤ K for almost all x in I, then f is Lipschitz continuous with Lipschitz constant at most K.
    • More generally, Rademacher's theorem extends the differentiability result to Lipschitz mappings between Euclidean spaces: a Lipschitz map f : U → Rm, where U is an open set in Rn, is almost everywhere differentiable. Moreover, if K is the best Lipschitz constant of f, then   whenever the total derivative Df exists.
  • For a differentiable Lipschitz map   the inequality   holds for the best Lipschitz constant   of  . If the domain   is convex then in fact  .[further explanation needed]
  • Suppose that {fn} is a sequence of Lipschitz continuous mappings between two metric spaces, and that all fn have Lipschitz constant bounded by some K. If fn converges to a mapping f uniformly, then f is also Lipschitz, with Lipschitz constant bounded by the same K. In particular, this implies that the set of real-valued functions on a compact metric space with a particular bound for the Lipschitz constant is a closed and convex subset of the Banach space of continuous functions. This result does not hold for sequences in which the functions may have unbounded Lipschitz constants, however. In fact, the space of all Lipschitz functions on a compact metric space is a subalgebra of the Banach space of continuous functions, and thus dense in it, an elementary consequence of the Stone–Weierstrass theorem (or as a consequence of Weierstrass approximation theorem, because every polynomial is locally Lipschitz continuous).
  • Every Lipschitz continuous map is uniformly continuous, and hence a fortiori continuous. More generally, a set of functions with bounded Lipschitz constant forms an equicontinuous set. The Arzelà–Ascoli theorem implies that if {fn} is a uniformly bounded sequence of functions with bounded Lipschitz constant, then it has a convergent subsequence. By the result of the previous paragraph, the limit function is also Lipschitz, with the same bound for the Lipschitz constant. In particular the set of all real-valued Lipschitz functions on a compact metric space X having Lipschitz constant ≤ K  is a locally compact convex subset of the Banach space C(X).
  • For a family of Lipschitz continuous functions fα with common constant, the function   (and  ) is Lipschitz continuous as well, with the same Lipschitz constant, provided it assumes a finite value at least at a point.
  • If U is a subset of the metric space M and f : U → R is a Lipschitz continuous function, there always exist Lipschitz continuous maps M → R which extend f and have the same Lipschitz constant as f (see also Kirszbraun theorem). An extension is provided by
 
where k is a Lipschitz constant for f on U.

Lipschitz manifolds

A Lipschitz structure on a topological manifold is defined using an atlas of charts whose transition maps are bilipschitz; this is possible because bilipschitz maps form a pseudogroup. Such a structure allows one to define locally Lipschitz maps between such manifolds, similarly to how one defines smooth maps between smooth manifolds: if M and N are Lipschitz manifolds, then a function   is locally Lipschitz if and only if for every pair of coordinate charts   and  , where U and V are open sets in the corresponding Euclidean spaces, the composition

 
is locally Lipschitz. This definition does not rely on defining a metric on M or N.[9]

This structure is intermediate between that of a piecewise-linear manifold and a topological manifold: a PL structure gives rise to a unique Lipschitz structure.[10] While Lipschitz manifolds are closely related to topological manifolds, Rademacher's theorem allows one to do analysis, yielding various applications.[9]

One-sided Lipschitz

Let F(x) be an upper semi-continuous function of x, and that F(x) is a closed, convex set for all x. Then F is one-sided Lipschitz[11] if

 

for some C and for all x1 and x2.

It is possible that the function F could have a very large Lipschitz constant but a moderately sized, or even negative, one-sided Lipschitz constant. For example, the function

 

has Lipschitz constant K = 50 and a one-sided Lipschitz constant C = 0. An example which is one-sided Lipschitz but not Lipschitz continuous is F(x) = ex, with C = 0.

See also

References

  1. ^ Sohrab, H. H. (2003). Basic Real Analysis. Vol. 231. Birkhäuser. p. 142. ISBN 0-8176-4211-0.
  2. ^ Thomson, Brian S.; Bruckner, Judith B.; Bruckner, Andrew M. (2001). Elementary Real Analysis. Prentice-Hall. p. 623.
  3. ^ Searcóid, Mícheál Ó (2006), "Lipschitz Functions", Metric Spaces, Springer undergraduate mathematics series, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-1-84628-369-7
  4. ^ Benyamini, Yoav; Lindenstrauss, Joram (2000). Geometric Nonlinear Functional Analysis. American Mathematical Society. p. 11. ISBN 0-8218-0835-4.
  5. ^ Burago, Dmitri; Burago, Yuri; Ivanov, Sergei (2001). A Course in Metric Geometry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-2129-6.
  6. ^ Mahroo, Omar A; Shalchi, Zaid; Hammond, Christopher J (2014). "'Dilatation' and 'dilation': trends in use on both sides of the Atlantic". British Journal of Ophthalmology. 98 (6): 845–846. doi:10.1136/bjophthalmol-2014-304986.
  7. ^ Gromov, Mikhael (1999). "Quantitative Homotopy Theory". In Rossi, Hugo (ed.). Prospects in Mathematics: Invited Talks on the Occasion of the 250th Anniversary of Princeton University, March 17-21, 1996, Princeton University. American Mathematical Society. p. 46. ISBN 0-8218-0975-X.
  8. ^ Robbin, Joel W., Continuity and Uniform Continuity (PDF)
  9. ^ a b Rosenberg, Jonathan (1988). "Applications of analysis on Lipschitz manifolds". Miniconferences on harmonic analysis and operator algebras (Canberra, 1987). Canberra: Australian National University. pp. 269–283. MR954004
  10. ^ "Topology of manifolds", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  11. ^ Donchev, Tzanko; Farkhi, Elza (1998). "Stability and Euler Approximation of One-sided Lipschitz Differential Inclusions". SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization. 36 (2): 780–796. doi:10.1137/S0363012995293694.

lipschitz, continuity, mathematical, analysis, named, after, german, mathematician, rudolf, lipschitz, strong, form, uniform, continuity, functions, intuitively, lipschitz, continuous, function, limited, fast, change, there, exists, real, number, such, that, e. In mathematical analysis Lipschitz continuity named after German mathematician Rudolf Lipschitz is a strong form of uniform continuity for functions Intuitively a Lipschitz continuous function is limited in how fast it can change there exists a real number such that for every pair of points on the graph of this function the absolute value of the slope of the line connecting them is not greater than this real number the smallest such bound is called the Lipschitz constant of the function or modulus of uniform continuity For instance every function that has bounded first derivatives is Lipschitz continuous 1 For a Lipschitz continuous function there exists a double cone white whose origin can be moved along the graph so that the whole graph always stays outside the double cone In the theory of differential equations Lipschitz continuity is the central condition of the Picard Lindelof theorem which guarantees the existence and uniqueness of the solution to an initial value problem A special type of Lipschitz continuity called contraction is used in the Banach fixed point theorem 2 We have the following chain of strict inclusions for functions over a closed and bounded non trivial interval of the real line Continuously differentiable Lipschitz continuous a displaystyle alpha Holder continuous where 0 lt a 1 displaystyle 0 lt alpha leq 1 We also have Lipschitz continuous absolutely continuous uniformly continuous Contents 1 Definitions 2 Examples 3 Properties 4 Lipschitz manifolds 5 One sided Lipschitz 6 See also 7 ReferencesDefinitions EditGiven two metric spaces X dX and Y dY where dX denotes the metric on the set X and dY is the metric on set Y a function f X Y is called Lipschitz continuous if there exists a real constant K 0 such that for all x1 and x2 in X d Y f x 1 f x 2 K d X x 1 x 2 displaystyle d Y f x 1 f x 2 leq Kd X x 1 x 2 3 Any such K is referred to as a Lipschitz constant for the function f and f may also be referred to as K Lipschitz The smallest constant is sometimes called the best Lipschitz constant 4 of f or the dilation or dilatation 5 p 9 Definition 1 4 1 6 7 of f If K 1 the function is called a short map and if 0 K lt 1 and f maps a metric space to itself the function is called a contraction In particular a real valued function f R R is called Lipschitz continuous if there exists a positive real constant K such that for all real x1 and x2 f x 1 f x 2 K x 1 x 2 displaystyle f x 1 f x 2 leq K x 1 x 2 In this case Y is the set of real numbers R with the standard metric dY y1 y2 y1 y2 and X is a subset of R In general the inequality is trivially satisfied if x1 x2 Otherwise one can equivalently define a function to be Lipschitz continuous if and only if there exists a constant K 0 such that for all x1 x2 d Y f x 1 f x 2 d X x 1 x 2 K displaystyle frac d Y f x 1 f x 2 d X x 1 x 2 leq K For real valued functions of several real variables this holds if and only if the absolute value of the slopes of all secant lines are bounded by K The set of lines of slope K passing through a point on the graph of the function forms a circular cone and a function is Lipschitz if and only if the graph of the function everywhere lies completely outside of this cone see figure A function is called locally Lipschitz continuous if for every x in X there exists a neighborhood U of x such that f restricted to U is Lipschitz continuous Equivalently if X is a locally compact metric space then f is locally Lipschitz if and only if it is Lipschitz continuous on every compact subset of X In spaces that are not locally compact this is a necessary but not a sufficient condition More generally a function f defined on X is said to be Holder continuous or to satisfy a Holder condition of order a gt 0 on X if there exists a constant M 0 such that d Y f x f y M d X x y a displaystyle d Y f x f y leq Md X x y alpha for all x and y in X Sometimes a Holder condition of order a is also called a uniform Lipschitz condition of order a gt 0 For a real number K 1 if 1 K d X x 1 x 2 d Y f x 1 f x 2 K d X x 1 x 2 for all x 1 x 2 X displaystyle frac 1 K d X x 1 x 2 leq d Y f x 1 f x 2 leq Kd X x 1 x 2 quad text for all x 1 x 2 in X then f is called K bilipschitz also written K bi Lipschitz We say f is bilipschitz or bi Lipschitz to mean there exists such a K A bilipschitz mapping is injective and is in fact a homeomorphism onto its image A bilipschitz function is the same thing as an injective Lipschitz function whose inverse function is also Lipschitz Examples EditLipschitz continuous functions that are everywhere differentiable The function f x x 2 5 displaystyle f x sqrt x 2 5 defined for all real numbers is Lipschitz continuous with the Lipschitz constant K 1 because it is everywhere differentiable and the absolute value of the derivative is bounded above by 1 See the first property listed below under Properties Likewise the sine function is Lipschitz continuous because its derivative the cosine function is bounded above by 1 in absolute value Lipschitz continuous functions that are not everywhere differentiable The function f x x displaystyle f x x defined on the reals is Lipschitz continuous with the Lipschitz constant equal to 1 by the reverse triangle inequality More generally a norm on a vector space is Lipschitz continuous with respect to the associated metric with the Lipschitz constant equal to 1 Lipschitz continuous functions that are everywhere differentiable but not continuously differentiable The function f x x 2 sin 1 x if x 0 0 if x 0 displaystyle f x begin cases x 2 sin 1 x amp text if x neq 0 0 amp text if x 0 end cases whose derivative exists but has an essential discontinuity at x 0 displaystyle x 0 Continuous functions that are not globally Lipschitz continuous The function f x x defined on 0 1 is not Lipschitz continuous This function becomes infinitely steep as x approaches 0 since its derivative becomes infinite However it is uniformly continuous 8 and both Holder continuous of class C0 a for a 1 2 and also absolutely continuous on 0 1 both of which imply the former Differentiable functions that are not locally Lipschitz continuous The function f defined by f 0 0 and f x x3 2sin 1 x for 0 lt x 1 gives an example of a function that is differentiable on a compact set while not locally Lipschitz because its derivative function is not bounded See also the first property below Analytic functions that are not globally Lipschitz continuous The exponential function becomes arbitrarily steep as x and therefore is not globally Lipschitz continuous despite being an analytic function The function f x x2 with domain all real numbers is not Lipschitz continuous This function becomes arbitrarily steep as x approaches infinity It is however locally Lipschitz continuous Properties EditAn everywhere differentiable function g R R is Lipschitz continuous with K sup g x if and only if it has bounded first derivative one direction follows from the mean value theorem In particular any continuously differentiable function is locally Lipschitz as continuous functions are locally bounded so its gradient is locally bounded as well A Lipschitz function g R R is absolutely continuous and therefore is differentiable almost everywhere that is differentiable at every point outside a set of Lebesgue measure zero Its derivative is essentially bounded in magnitude by the Lipschitz constant and for a lt b the difference g b g a is equal to the integral of the derivative g on the interval a b Conversely if f I R is absolutely continuous and thus differentiable almost everywhere and satisfies f x K for almost all x in I then f is Lipschitz continuous with Lipschitz constant at most K More generally Rademacher s theorem extends the differentiability result to Lipschitz mappings between Euclidean spaces a Lipschitz map f U Rm where U is an open set in Rn is almost everywhere differentiable Moreover if K is the best Lipschitz constant of f then D f x K displaystyle Df x leq K whenever the total derivative Df exists For a differentiable Lipschitz map f U R m displaystyle f U to mathbb R m the inequality D f W 1 U K displaystyle Df W 1 infty U leq K holds for the best Lipschitz constant K displaystyle K of f displaystyle f If the domain U displaystyle U is convex then in fact D f W 1 U K displaystyle Df W 1 infty U K further explanation needed Suppose that fn is a sequence of Lipschitz continuous mappings between two metric spaces and that all fn have Lipschitz constant bounded by some K If fn converges to a mapping f uniformly then f is also Lipschitz with Lipschitz constant bounded by the same K In particular this implies that the set of real valued functions on a compact metric space with a particular bound for the Lipschitz constant is a closed and convex subset of the Banach space of continuous functions This result does not hold for sequences in which the functions may have unbounded Lipschitz constants however In fact the space of all Lipschitz functions on a compact metric space is a subalgebra of the Banach space of continuous functions and thus dense in it an elementary consequence of the Stone Weierstrass theorem or as a consequence of Weierstrass approximation theorem because every polynomial is locally Lipschitz continuous Every Lipschitz continuous map is uniformly continuous and hence a fortiori continuous More generally a set of functions with bounded Lipschitz constant forms an equicontinuous set The Arzela Ascoli theorem implies that if fn is a uniformly bounded sequence of functions with bounded Lipschitz constant then it has a convergent subsequence By the result of the previous paragraph the limit function is also Lipschitz with the same bound for the Lipschitz constant In particular the set of all real valued Lipschitz functions on a compact metric space X having Lipschitz constant K is a locally compact convex subset of the Banach space C X For a family of Lipschitz continuous functions fa with common constant the function sup a f a displaystyle sup alpha f alpha and inf a f a displaystyle inf alpha f alpha is Lipschitz continuous as well with the same Lipschitz constant provided it assumes a finite value at least at a point If U is a subset of the metric space M and f U R is a Lipschitz continuous function there always exist Lipschitz continuous maps M R which extend f and have the same Lipschitz constant as f see also Kirszbraun theorem An extension is provided byf x inf u U f u k d x u displaystyle tilde f x inf u in U f u k d x u dd where k is a Lipschitz constant for f on U Lipschitz manifolds EditA Lipschitz structure on a topological manifold is defined using an atlas of charts whose transition maps are bilipschitz this is possible because bilipschitz maps form a pseudogroup Such a structure allows one to define locally Lipschitz maps between such manifolds similarly to how one defines smooth maps between smooth manifolds if M and N are Lipschitz manifolds then a function f M N displaystyle f M to N is locally Lipschitz if and only if for every pair of coordinate charts ϕ U M displaystyle phi U to M and ps V N displaystyle psi V to N where U and V are open sets in the corresponding Euclidean spaces the compositionps 1 f ϕ U f ϕ 1 ps V N displaystyle psi 1 circ f circ phi U cap f circ phi 1 psi V to N is locally Lipschitz This definition does not rely on defining a metric on M or N 9 This structure is intermediate between that of a piecewise linear manifold and a topological manifold a PL structure gives rise to a unique Lipschitz structure 10 While Lipschitz manifolds are closely related to topological manifolds Rademacher s theorem allows one to do analysis yielding various applications 9 One sided Lipschitz EditLet F x be an upper semi continuous function of x and that F x is a closed convex set for all x Then F is one sided Lipschitz 11 if x 1 x 2 T F x 1 F x 2 C x 1 x 2 2 displaystyle x 1 x 2 T F x 1 F x 2 leq C Vert x 1 x 2 Vert 2 for some C and for all x1 and x2 It is possible that the function F could have a very large Lipschitz constant but a moderately sized or even negative one sided Lipschitz constant For example the function F R 2 R F x y 50 y cos x displaystyle begin cases F mathbf R 2 to mathbf R F x y 50 y cos x end cases has Lipschitz constant K 50 and a one sided Lipschitz constant C 0 An example which is one sided Lipschitz but not Lipschitz continuous is F x e x with C 0 See also EditContraction mapping Function reducing distance between all points Dini continuity Modulus of continuity Quasi isometry Johnson Lindenstrauss lemma For any integer n 0 any finite subset X Rn and any real number 0 lt e lt 1 there exists a 1 e bi Lipschitz function f R n R d displaystyle f mathbb R n to mathbb R d where d 15 ln X e 2 displaystyle d lceil 15 ln X varepsilon 2 rceil References Edit Sohrab H H 2003 Basic Real Analysis Vol 231 Birkhauser p 142 ISBN 0 8176 4211 0 Thomson Brian S Bruckner Judith B Bruckner Andrew M 2001 Elementary Real Analysis Prentice Hall p 623 Searcoid Micheal o 2006 Lipschitz Functions Metric Spaces Springer undergraduate mathematics series Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 1 84628 369 7 Benyamini Yoav Lindenstrauss Joram 2000 Geometric Nonlinear Functional Analysis American Mathematical Society p 11 ISBN 0 8218 0835 4 Burago Dmitri Burago Yuri Ivanov Sergei 2001 A Course in Metric Geometry American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 2129 6 Mahroo Omar A Shalchi Zaid Hammond Christopher J 2014 Dilatation and dilation trends in use on both sides of the Atlantic British Journal of Ophthalmology 98 6 845 846 doi 10 1136 bjophthalmol 2014 304986 Gromov Mikhael 1999 Quantitative Homotopy Theory In Rossi Hugo ed Prospects in Mathematics Invited Talks on the Occasion of the 250th Anniversary of Princeton University March 17 21 1996 Princeton University American Mathematical Society p 46 ISBN 0 8218 0975 X Robbin Joel W Continuity and Uniform Continuity PDF a b Rosenberg Jonathan 1988 Applications of analysis on Lipschitz manifolds Miniconferences on harmonic analysis and operator algebras Canberra 1987 Canberra Australian National University pp 269 283 MR954004 Topology of manifolds Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Donchev Tzanko Farkhi Elza 1998 Stability and Euler Approximation of One sided Lipschitz Differential Inclusions SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization 36 2 780 796 doi 10 1137 S0363012995293694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lipschitz continuity amp oldid 1131523833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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