Minkowski inequality - Wikipedia
- ️Thu Jun 23 2022
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In mathematical analysis, the Minkowski inequality establishes that the Lp spaces are normed vector spaces. Let be a measure space, let
and let
and
be elements of
Then
is in
and we have the triangle inequality
with equality for if and only if
and
are positively linearly dependent; that is,
for some
or
Here, the norm is given by:
if or in the case
by the essential supremum
The Minkowski inequality is the triangle inequality in In fact, it is a special case of the more general fact
where it is easy to see that the right-hand side satisfies the triangular inequality.
Like Hölder's inequality, the Minkowski inequality can be specialized to sequences and vectors by using the counting measure:
for all real (or complex) numbers and where
is the cardinality of
(the number of elements in
).
In probabilistic terms, given the probability space and
denote the expectation operator for every real- or complex-valued random variables
and
on
Minkowski's inequality reads
The inequality is named after the German mathematician Hermann Minkowski.
Proof by Hölder's inequality
[edit]
First, we prove that has finite
-norm if
and
both do, which follows by
Indeed, here we use the fact that is convex over
(for
) and so, by the definition of convexity,
This means that
Now, we can legitimately talk about If it is zero, then Minkowski's inequality holds. We now assume that
is not zero. Using the triangle inequality and then Hölder's inequality, we find that
We obtain Minkowski's inequality by multiplying both sides by
Proof by a direct convexity argument
[edit]
Given , one has, by convexity,
By integration this leads to
One takes then
to reach the conclusion.
Minkowski's integral inequality
[edit]
Suppose that and
are two 𝜎-finite measure spaces and
is measurable. Then Minkowski's integral inequality is:[1][2]
with obvious modifications in the case If
and both sides are finite, then equality holds only if
a.e. for some non-negative measurable functions
and
If is the counting measure on a two-point set
then Minkowski's integral inequality gives the usual Minkowski inequality as a special case: for putting
for
the integral inequality gives
If the measurable function is non-negative then for all
[3]
This notation has been generalized to
for with
Using this notation, manipulation of the exponents reveals that, if
then
When the reverse inequality holds:
We further need the restriction that both and
are non-negative, as we can see from the example
and
The reverse inequality follows from the same argument as the standard Minkowski, but uses that Holder's inequality is also reversed in this range.
Using the Reverse Minkowski, we may prove that power means with such as the harmonic mean and the geometric mean are concave.
Generalizations to other functions
[edit]
The Minkowski inequality can be generalized to other functions beyond the power function
The generalized inequality has the form
Various sufficient conditions on have been found by Mulholland[4] and others. For example, for
one set of sufficient conditions from Mulholland is
is continuous and strictly increasing with
is a convex function of
is a convex function of
- Cauchy–Schwarz inequality – Mathematical inequality relating inner products and norms
- Hölder's inequality – Inequality between integrals in Lp spaces
- Mahler's inequality – inequality relating geometric mean of two finite sequences of positive numbers to the sum of each separate geometric mean
- Young's convolution inequality – Mathematical inequality about the convolution of two functions
- Young's inequality for products – Mathematical concept
- ^ Stein 1970, §A.1.
- ^ Hardy, Littlewood & Pólya 1988, Theorem 202.
- ^ Bahouri, Chemin & Danchin 2011, p. 4.
- ^ Mulholland, H. P. (1949). "On Generalizations of Minkowski's Inequality in the Form of a Triangle Inequality". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. s2-51 (1): 294–307. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-51.4.294.
- Bahouri, Hajer; Chemin, Jean-Yves; Danchin, Raphaël (2011). Fourier Analysis and Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften. Vol. 343. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-16830-7. OCLC 704397128.
- Hardy, G. H.; Littlewood, J. E.; Pólya, G. (1988). Inequalities. Cambridge Mathematical Library (second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-35880-9.
- Minkowski, H. (1953). Geometrie der Zahlen. Chelsea..
- Stein, Elias (1970). Singular integrals and differentiability properties of functions. Princeton University Press..
- M.I. Voitsekhovskii (2001) [1994], "Minkowski inequality", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- Lohwater, Arthur J. (1982). "Introduction to Inequalities".
- Bullen, P. S. (2003). "The Power Means". Handbook of Means and Their Inequalities. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. pp. 175–265. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-0399-4_3. ISBN 978-90-481-6383-0. Retrieved 2022-06-23.