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For other or other uses of differential in calculus, see differential (calculus), and for more general meanings, see differential.
In differential calculus, a differential is traditionally an infinitesimally small change in a variable. For example, if x is a variable, then a change in the value of x is often denoted Δx (or δx when this change is considered to be small). The differential dx represents such a change, but is infinitely small. Although this is not a rigorous mathematical concept, it is extremely useful intuitively, and there are a number of ways to make the notion mathematically precise. The key property of the differential is that if y is a function of x, then the differential dy of y is related to dx by the formula where dy/dx denotes the derivative of y with respect to x. This formula summarizes the intuitive idea that the derivative of y with respect to x is the limit of the ratio Δy/Δx of differences as Δx becomes infinitesimally small. There are several approaches for making the notion of differentials mathematically precise.
These approaches are very different from each other, but they have in common the idea to be quantitative, i.e., to say not just that a differential is infinitesimally small, but how small it is.
[edit] History and usage
Infinitesimal quantities played a significant role in the development of calculus. Archimedes used them, even though he didn't believe that arguments involving infinitesimals were rigorous.[5] Bhāskara II developed the concept of a differential representing infinitesimal change,[6] and Sharaf al-Dīn al-Tūsī used them to find the derivative of cubic polynomials.[7][8] Isaac Newton referred to them as fluxions. However, it was Gottfried Leibniz who coined the term differentials for infinitesimal quantities, and introduced the notation for them which is still used today. In Leibniz's notation, if x is a variable quantity, then dx denotes an infinitesimally small change in the variable x. Thus, if y is a function of x, then the derivative of y with respect to x is often denoted Differentials are also used in the notation for integrals because an integral can be regarded as an infinite sum of infinitesimally small quantities: the area under a graph is obtained by subdividing the graph into infinitesimally thin strips and summing their areas. In an expression such as the integral sign (which is a modified long s) denotes the infinite sum, whereas the differential dx denotes the infinitesimally thin strips. [edit] Differentials as linear mapsThere is a simple way to make precise sense of differentials by regarding them as linear maps. One way to explain this point of view is to regard the variable x in an expression such as f(x) as a function on the real line, the standard coordinate or identity map which takes a real number p to itself (x(p) = p): then f(x) denotes the composite This would just be a trick were it not for the fact that:
For instance if f is a function from We can now use the same trick as in the one dimensional case, and think of the expression The coefficients Djf(p) are (by definition) the partial derivatives of f at p with respect to x1, x2, …, xn. Hence, if f is differentiable on all of In the one-dimensional case this becomes as before. This idea generalizes straightforwardly to functions from Aside: Note that the existence of all the partial derivatives of f(x) at x is a necessary condition for the existence of a differential at x. However it is not a sufficient condition. For counterexamples, see Gateaux derivative. [edit] The algebraic geometry approachIn algebraic geometry, differentials and other infinitesimal notions are handled in a very explicit way by accepting that the coordinate ring or structure sheaf of a space may contain nilpotent elements. The simplest example is the ring of dual numbers R[ε], where ε2 = 0. This can be motivated by the algebro-geometric point of view on the derivative of a function f from R to R at a point p. For this, note first that f−f(p)1 (where 1 is the identity function) belongs to the ideal Ip of functions on R which vanish at p. If the derivative f vanishes at p, then f−f(p)1 belongs to the square Ip2 of this ideal. Hence the derivative of f at p may be captured by the equivalence class [f−f(p)1] in the quotient space Ip/Ip2, and the 1-jet of f (which encodes its value and its first derivative) is the equivalence class of f in the space of all functions modulo Ip2. Algebraic geometers regard this equivalence class as the restriction of f to a thickened version of the point p whose coordinate ring is not R (which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip) but R[ε] which is the quotient space of functions on R modulo Ip2. Such a thickened point is a simple example of a scheme.[10] [edit] Synthetic differential geometryA third approach to infinitesimals is the method of synthetic differential geometry[11] or smooth infinitesimal analysis.[12] This is closely related to the algebraic geometric approach, except that the infinitesimals are more implicit and intuitive. The main idea of this approach is to replace the category of sets with another category of smoothly varying sets which is a topos. In this category, one can define the real numbers, smooth functions, and so on, but the real numbers automatically contain nilpotent infinitesimals, so these do not need to be introduced by hand as in the algebraic geometric approach. However the logic in this new category is not identical to the familiar logic of the category of sets: in particular, the law of the excluded middle does not hold. This means that set-theoretic mathematical arguments only extend to smooth infinitesimal analysis if they are constructive (e.g., do not use proof by contradiction). Some regard this disadvantage as a positive thing, since it forces one to find constructive arguments wherever they are available. [edit] Nonstandard analysisThe final approach to infinitesimals again involves extending the real numbers, but in a less drastic way. In the nonstandard analysis approach there are no nilpotent infinitesimals, only invertible ones, which may be viewed as the reciprocals of infinitely large numbers.[4] Such extensions of the real numbers may be constructed explicitly using equivalence classes of sequences of rational numbers, so that, for example, the sequence (1,1/2,1/3,...1/n,...) represents an infinitesimal. The first-order logic of this new set of hyperreal numbers is the same as the logic for the usual real numbers, but the completeness axiom (which involves second-order logic) does not hold. Nevertheless, this suffices to develop an elementary and quite intuitive approach to calculus using infinitesimals, see transfer principle. [edit] Notes
[edit] References
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