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Metric differential

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In mathematical analysis, a metric differential is a generalization of a derivative for a Lipschitz continuous function defined on a Euclidean space and taking values in an arbitrary metric space. With this definition of a derivative, one can generalize Rademacher's theorem to metric space-valued Lipschitz functions.

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Discussion

Rademacher's theorem states that a Lipschitz map f : Rn → Rm is differentiable almost everywhere in Rn; in other words, for almost every x, f is approximately linear in any sufficiently small range of x. If f is a function from a Euclidean space Rn that takes values instead in a metric space X, it doesn't immediately make sense to talk about differentiability since X has no linear structure a priori. Even if you assume that X is a Banach space and ask whether a Fréchet derivative exists almost everywhere, this does not hold. For example, consider the function f : [0,1] → L1([0,1]), mapping the unit interval into the space of integrable functions, defined by f(x) = χ[0,x], this function is Lipschitz (and in fact, an isometry) since, if 0 ≤ x ≤ y≤ 1, then

| f ( x ) f ( y ) | = 0 1 | χ [ 0 , x ] ( t ) χ [ 0 , y ] ( t ) | d t = x y d t = | x y | ,

but one can verify that limh→0(f(x + h) −  f(x))/h does not converge to an L1 function for any x in [0,1], so it is not differentiable anywhere.

However, if you look at Rademacher's theorem as a statement about how a Lipschitz function stabilizes as you zoom in on almost every point, then such a theorem exists but is stated in terms of the metric properties of f instead of its linear properties.

Definition and existence of the metric differential

A substitute for a derivative of f:Rn → X is the metric differential of f at a point z in Rn which is a function on Rn defined by the limit

M D ( f , z ) ( x ) = lim r 0 d X ( f ( z + r x ) , f ( z ) ) r

whenever the limit exists (here d X denotes the metric on X).

A theorem due to Bernd Kirchheim states that a Rademacher theorem in terms of metric differentials holds: for almost every z in Rn, MD(fz) is a seminorm and

d X ( f ( x ) , f ( y ) ) M D ( f , z ) ( x y ) = o ( | x z | + | y z | ) .

The little-o notation employed here means that, at values very close to z, the function f is approximately an isometry from Rn with respect to the seminorm MD(fz) into the metric space X.

References

Metric differential Wikipedia