smooth map in nLab
Context
Differential geometry
synthetic differential geometry
Introductions
from point-set topology to differentiable manifolds
geometry of physics: coordinate systems, smooth spaces, manifolds, smooth homotopy types, supergeometry
Differentials
Tangency
The magic algebraic facts
Theorems
Axiomatics
Models
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Models for Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis
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smooth algebra (C ∞C^\infty-ring)
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differential equations, variational calculus
Chern-Weil theory, ∞-Chern-Weil theory
Cartan geometry (super, higher)
Contents
Idea
A function which is differentiable function to arbitrary order is called a smooth function.
In the real numbers
Epsilon-delta definition
Let ℝ\mathbb{R} be the real numbers. A function f:ℝ→ℝf:\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} is smooth if it comes with a sequence of functions D (−)f:ℕ→(ℝ→ℝ)D^{(-)}f:\mathbb{N} \to (\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}) and a sequence of functions M (−)f:ℕ→(ℚ +→ℚ +)M^{(-)}f:\mathbb{N} \to (\mathbb{Q}_+ \to \mathbb{Q}_+) in the positive rational numbers, such that
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for every real number x∈ℝx \in \mathbb{R}, (D 0f)(x)=f(x)(D^{0}f)(x) = f(x)
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for every natural number n∈ℕn \in \mathbb{N}, for every positive rational number ϵ∈ℚ +\epsilon \in \mathbb{Q}_+, for every real number h∈ℝh \in \mathbb{R} such that 0<|h|<M nf(ϵ)0 \lt | h | \lt M^{n}f(\epsilon), and for every real number x∈ℝx \in \mathbb{R},
|(D nf)(x+h)−(D nf)(x)−h(D n+1f)(x)|<ϵ|h||(D^{n}f)(x + h) - (D^{n}f)(x) - h (D^{n + 1}f)(x)| \lt \epsilon |h|
Unwrapping the recursive definition above, a function f:ℝ→ℝf:\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} is smooth if it comes with a sequence of functions D (−)f:ℕ→(ℝ→ℝ)D^{(-)}f:\mathbb{N} \to (\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}) and a sequence of functions M (−)f:ℕ→(ℚ +→ℚ +)M^{(-)}f:\mathbb{N} \to (\mathbb{Q}_+ \to \mathbb{Q}_+) in the positive rational numbers, such that
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for every real number x∈ℝx \in \mathbb{R}, (D 0f)(x)=f(x)(D^{0}f)(x) = f(x)
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for every natural number n∈ℕn \in \mathbb{N}, for every positive rational number ϵ∈ℚ +\epsilon \in \mathbb{Q}_+, for every real number h∈ℝh \in \mathbb{R} such that 0<|h|<M nf(ϵ)0 \lt | h | \lt M^{n}f(\epsilon), and for every real number x∈ℝx \in \mathbb{R},
|f(x+h)−∑ i=0 nh i(D if)(x)i!|<ϵ|h n|\left|f(x + h) - \sum_{i=0}^n \frac{h^i (D^{i}f)(x)}{i!}\right| \lt \epsilon |h^n|
Infinitesimal definition
Given a predicate PP on the real numbers ℝ\mathbb{R}, let II denote the set of all elements in ℝ\mathbb{R} for which PP holds. A partial function f:ℝ→ℝf:\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} is equivalently a function f:I→ℝf:I \to \mathbb{R} for any such predicate PP and set II.
A function f:I→ℝf:I \to \mathbb{R} is smooth at a subset S⊆IS \subseteq I with injection j:S↪ℝj:S \hookrightarrow \mathbb{R} if it has a function d −fdx −:ℕ×S→ℝ\frac{d^{-} f}{d x^{-}}:\mathbb{N} \times S \to \mathbb{R} with d 0fdx 0(a)=a\frac{d^0 f}{d x^0}\left(a\right) = a for all a∈Sa \in S, such that for all Archimedean ordered Artinian local ℝ\mathbb{R}-algebras AA with ring homomorphism h A:ℝ→Ah_A:\mathbb{R} \to A and nilradical DD, natural numbers n∈ℕn \in \mathbb{N}, and purely infinitesimal elements ϵ∈D\epsilon \in D such that ϵ n+1=0\epsilon^{n + 1} = 0
f A(h A(j(a))+ϵ)=∑ i=0 n1i!h A(d ifdx i(a))ϵ if_A(h_A(j(a)) + \epsilon) = \sum_{i = 0}^{n} \frac{1}{i!} h_A\left(\frac{d^i f}{d x^i}\left(a\right)\right) \epsilon^i
Equivalently, let ℝ[[ϵ]]\mathbb{R}[[\epsilon]] denote the ring of univariate formal power series on ℝ\mathbb{R}. ℝ[[ϵ]]\mathbb{R}[[\epsilon]] is a Artinian local ℝ\mathbb{R}-algebra with homomorphism h:ℝ→ℝ[[ϵ]]h:\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}[[\epsilon]]. A function f:I→ℝf:I \to \mathbb{R} is smooth at a subset S⊆IS \subseteq I with injection j:S↪ℝj:S \hookrightarrow \mathbb{R} if it has a function d −fdx −:ℕ×S→ℝ\frac{d^{-} f}{d x^{-}}:\mathbb{N} \times S \to \mathbb{R} with d 0fdx 0(a)=a\frac{d^0 f}{d x^0}\left(a\right) = a for all a∈Sa \in S, such that for all natural numbers n∈ℕn \in \mathbb{N}
f A(h(j(a))+ϵ)=∑ i=0 ∞1i!h(d ifdx i(a))ϵ if_A(h(j(a)) + \epsilon) = \sum_{i = 0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{i!} h\left(\frac{d^i f}{d x^i}\left(a\right)\right) \epsilon^i
A function f:I→ℝf:I \to \mathbb{R} is smooth at an element a∈Ia \in I if it is smooth at the singleton subset {a}\{a\}, and a function f:I→ℝf:I \to \mathbb{R} is smooth if it is smooth at the improper subset of II.
Between Cartesian spaces
A function on (some open subset of) a cartesian space ℝ n\mathbb{R}^n with values in the real line ℝ\mathbb{R} is smooth, or infinitely differentiable, if all its derivatives exist at all points. More generally, if A⊆ℝ nA \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n is any subset, a function f:A→ℝf: A \to \mathbb{R} is defined to be smooth if it has a smooth extension to an open subset containing AA.
By coinduction: A function f:ℝ→ℝf : \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} is smooth if (1) its derivative exists and (2) the derivative is itself a smooth function.
For A⊆ℝ nA \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n, a smooth map ϕ:A→ℝ m\phi: A \to \mathbb{R}^m is a function such that π∘ϕ\pi \circ \phi is a smooth function for every linear functional π:ℝ m→ℝ\pi: \mathbb{R}^m \to \mathbb{R}. (In the case of finite-dimensional codomains as here, it suffices to take the π\pi to range over the mm coordinate projections.)
The concept can be generalised from cartesian spaces to Banach spaces and some other infinite-dimensional spaces. There is a locale-based analogue suitable for constructive mathematics which is not described as a function of points but as a special case of a continuous map (in the localic sense).
Between smooth manifolds
A topological manifold whose transition functions are smooth maps is a smooth manifold. A smooth function between smooth manifolds is a function that (co-)restricts to a smooth function between subsets of Cartesian spaces, as above, with respect to any choice of atlases, hence which is a kk-fold differentiable function (see there for more details), for all kk The category Diff is the category whose objects are smooth manifolds and whose morphisms are smooth maps between them.
Between generalized smooth spaces
There are various categories of generalised smooth spaces whose morphisms are generalized smooth functions.
For details see for example at smooth set.
Properties
Basic facts about smooth functions are
Examples
Every analytic functions (for instance a holomorphic function) is also a smooth function.
A crucial property of smooth functions, however, is that they contain also bump functions.
References
An early account, in the context of Cohomotopy, cobordism theory and the Pontryagin-Thom construction:
- Lev Pontrjagin, Chapter I of: Smooth manifolds and their applications in Homotopy theory, Trudy Mat. Inst. im Steklov, No 45, Izdat. Akad. Nauk. USSR, Moscow, 1955 (AMS Translation Series 2, Vol. 11, 1959) (doi:10.1142/9789812772107_0001, pdf)
Last revised on January 19, 2025 at 04:30:16. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.