Difference between revisions of "Norm"
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Also called <math>\infty-</math>norm<br/> | Also called <math>\infty-</math>norm<br/> | ||
<math>\|x\|_\infty=\sup(\{x_i\}_{i=1}^n)</math> | <math>\|x\|_\infty=\sup(\{x_i\}_{i=1}^n)</math> | ||
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+ | ==Equivalence of norms== | ||
+ | Given two norms <math>\|\cdot\|_1</math> and <math>\|\cdot\|_2</math> on a [[Vector space|vector space]] {{M|V}} we say they are equivalent if: | ||
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+ | <math>\exists c,C\in\mathbb{R}\ \forall x\in V:\ c\|x\|_1\le\|x\|_2\le C\|x\|_1</math> | ||
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+ | We may write this as <math>\|\cdot\|_1\sim\|\cdot\|_2</math> - this is an [[Equivalence relation]] | ||
+ | {{Todo|proof}} | ||
+ | ===Examples=== | ||
+ | *Any two norms on <math>\mathbb{R}^n</math> are equivalent | ||
+ | *The norms <math>\|\cdot\|_{L^1}</math> and <math>\|\cdot\|_\infty</math> on <math>\mathcal{C}([0,1],\mathbb{R})</math> are not equivalent. | ||
==Examples== | ==Examples== |
Revision as of 03:04, 8 March 2015
Contents
[hide]Definition
A norm on a vector space (V,F) is a function ∥⋅∥:V→R such that:
- ∀x∈V ∥x∥≥0
- ∥x∥=0⟺x=0
- ∀λ∈F,x∈V ∥λx∥=|λ|∥x∥ where |⋅| denotes absolute value
- ∀x,y∈V ∥x+y∥≤∥x∥+∥y∥ - a form of the triangle inequality
Often parts 1 and 2 are combined into the statement
- ∥x∥≥0 and ∥x∥=0⟺x=0 so only 3 requirements will be stated.
I don't like this
Common norms
The 1-norm
∥x∥1=n∑i=1|xi| - it's just a special case of the p-norm.
The 2-norm
∥x∥2=√n∑i=1x2i - Also known as the Euclidean norm (see below) - it's just a special case of the p-norm.
The p-norm
∥x∥p=(n∑i=1|xi|p)1p (I use this notation because it can be easy to forget the p in p√)
The supremum-norm
Also called ∞−norm
∥x∥∞=sup({xi}ni=1)
Equivalence of norms
Given two norms ∥⋅∥1 and ∥⋅∥2 on a vector space V we say they are equivalent if:
∃c,C∈R ∀x∈V: c∥x∥1≤∥x∥2≤C∥x∥1
We may write this as ∥⋅∥1∼∥⋅∥2 - this is an Equivalence relation
TODO: proof
Examples
- Any two norms on Rn are equivalent
- The norms ∥⋅∥L1 and ∥⋅∥∞ on C([0,1],R) are not equivalent.
Examples
The Euclidean Norm
TODO: Migrate this norm to its own page
The Euclidean norm is denoted ∥⋅∥2
Here for x∈Rn we have:
∥x∥2=√n∑i=1x2i
Proof that it is a norm
TODO: proof
Part 4 - Triangle inequality
Let x,y∈Rn
∥x+y∥22=n∑i=1(xi+yi)2 =n∑i=1x2i+2n∑i=1xiyi+n∑i=1y2i ≤n∑i=1x2i+2√n∑i=1x2i√n∑i=1y2i+n∑i=1y2i using the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality
=(√n∑i=1x2i+√n∑i=1y2i)2 =(∥x∥2+∥y∥2)2
Thus we see: ∥x+y∥22≤(∥x∥2+∥y∥2)2, as norms are always ≥0 we see:
∥x+y∥2≤∥x∥2+∥y∥2 - as required.