Math 641 Lecture #36 7.22,7.23,7.24 Differentiable Transformations Definitions
Math 641 Lecture #36 7.22,7.23,7.24 Differentiable Transformations Definitions
¶7.22,7.23,7.24
Differentiable Transformations
Definitions (7.22). For an open V ⊂ Rk a map T : V → Rk is differentiable at x ∈ V
if there exists a linear operator A on Rk such that
|T (x + h) − T (x) − Ah|
lim = 0.
h→0 |h|
When T is differentiable at x, the linear operator A is unique, and we write T 0 (x) = A,
and call the linear operator T 0 (x) the derivative or differential of T at x.
When T is differentiable at x, the difference T (x + h) − T (x) is approximated by the
linear function T 0 (x)h.
For a linear operator A : Rk → Rk , Theorem 2.20(e) shows that there is a nonnegative
number ∆(A) such that
m(A(E)) = ∆(A)m(E)
for all Lebesgue measurable subsets E of Rk .
Since the map x → Ax is differentiable where A0 (x) = A, and since every differentiable
transformation can be locally approximated by a constant plus a linear transformation
(a.k.a. an affine map), we might conjecture that
m(T (E))
≈ ∆(T 0 (x))
m(E)
for suitable sets E that are close to x.
This we will prove shortly.
Recall that ∆(A) = | det(A)|.
When T is differentiable at x, the determinant of T 0 (x) is called the Jacobian of T at
x, and is denoted by JT (x).
Thus
∆(T 0 (x)) = |JT (x)|.
To prove the above mentioned conjecture, we will need an elementary result from Topol-
ogy, which we state without proof.
Brouwer’s Fixed Point Theorem. A continuous map f : B(0, 1) → B(0, 1) has a
fixed point, i.e., there exists x ∈ B(0, 1) such that f (x) = x.
Lemma (7.23). Let S = {x : |x| = 1} be the unit sphere in Rk that is the boundary of
the open unit ball B = B(0, 1). If F : B → Rk is continuous, 0 < < 1, and
Thus a is not in F (S), and since a 6∈ F (B), we have a 6= F (x) for every x ∈ B.
We can define a continuous map G : B → B by
a − F (x)
G(x) = .
|a − F (x)|
[Here we used the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, |x · y| ≤ |x| |y|, twice; once with y = a and
then with y = x − F (x).]
This shows that x · G(x) < 0 for x ∈ S, so that x 6= G(x) for all x ∈ S.
On the other hand, if x ∈ B, then x 6= G(x) because |G(x)| = 1 while |x| < 1.
Thus we have a continuous map G : B → B without a fixed point, contradicting
Brouwer’s Fixed Point Theorem.
Theorem (7.24). Suppose V is open in Rk and T : V → Rk is continuous. If T is
differentiable at a point x ∈ V , then
m T (B(x, r))
= ∆ T 0 (x) .
lim
r→0 m(B(x, r)
Remark. The set T (B(x, r)) is Lebesgue measurable; it is σ-compact because B(x, r)
is σ-compact and T is continuous.
Proof. WLOG we assume that x = 0 and T (x) = 0, and set A = T 0 (0).
Case 1: A is one-to-one (i.e., A is invertible). The function
Since F (0) = 0 and F 0 (0) = I, the differentiability of F at 0 implies for each > 0 there
is a δ > 0 such that
|F (0 + x) − F (0) − Ix|
< , 0 < |x| < δ,
|x|
that is,
|F (x) − x| ≤ |x| for 0 < |x| < δ.
When 0 < r < δ, we claim the following inclusions hold:
The first inclusion follows from Lemma 7.23 applied to B(0, r) in place of B(0, 1) because
|F (x) − x| < r for all x with |x| = r.
The second inclusion follows since |F (x) − x| < |x| implies |F (x)| < (1 + )|x|:
|F (x)| − |x| ≤ |F (x)| − |x| ≤ |F (x) − x| < |x|.