Symmetry of second derivatives
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In mathematics, the symmetry of second derivatives refers to the possibility of interchanging the order of taking partial derivatives of a function
- f(x1, x2, ..., xn)
- fij
This matrix of second-order partial derivatives of f is called the Hessian matrix of f. The entries in it off the main diagonal are the mixed derivatives; that is, successive partial derivatives with respect to different variables. In most normal circumstances the Hessian matrix is indeed symmetric; but from the point of view of mathematical analysis this isn't a safe statement, without some hypothesis on f that goes further than simply stating the existence of the second derivatives at a particular point. Clairaut's theorem gives a sufficient condition on f for this to occur.
In symbols, the symmetry says that, for example,
- [\frac \left( \frac \right) = \frac \left( \frac \right)]
- [\partial_ f = \partial_ f.]
- Di . Dj = Dj . Di.
One can also apply the theory of distributions to get round any analytic problems with the symmetry. Firstly the derivative of any function can be defined (provided it is integrable), as a distribution. Secondly the use of integration by parts throws the symmetry question back onto the test functions, which are smooth and certainly satisfy the symmetry. One concludes that, in the sense of distributions, the symmetry always holds. (Another approach, where the Fourier transform of a function is defined, is to note that on transforms the partial derivatives become multiplication operators that commute much more obviously).
The fact remains that in the worst case there are counterexamples. In the case of two variables, near (0, 0) one can consider two limiting processes on
- f(h, k) − f(h, 0) − f(0, k) + f(0, 0)
A more sophisticated argument is this: consider the first-order differential operators Di to be infinitesimal operators on Euclidean space. That is, Di in a sense generates the one-parameter group of translations parallel to the xi-axis. These groups certainly all commute with each other, and therefore we expect that the infinitesimal generators do also; the Lie bracket
- [Di, Dj] = 0
Counterexample
Consider the function
- [f(x,y) = \frac]
- [\frac \left( \frac \right) \ne \frac \left( \frac \right)]
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