An inverse function theorem in Fréchet spaces (Q631665): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 20:32, 3 July 2024

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An inverse function theorem in Fréchet spaces
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    An inverse function theorem in Fréchet spaces (English)
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    14 March 2011
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    In this very nice paper, the author presents a local inverse function theorem for equations of the type \(F(x)= y\), where \(F\) maps a graded Fréchet space into another one. Among the permitted Fréchet spaces are, for example, the intersections of scales of \(C^k\)-spaces or of Sobolev spaces. In contrast to the classical hard implicit function theorems, where the solution is found by a Newton iteration, here the solution is found by Ekeland's variational principle. Therefore, the smoothness assumptions on \(F\) are essentially weaker (\(F\) has to be continuous and Gâteaux-differentiable, but the derivative need not to be continuous), and the conclusion is weaker (there is local existence, but no local uniqueness). The possibly multivalued inverse map \(F^{-1}\) is shown to be Lipschitz continuous. Just as in the classical hard implicit function theorems, the main difficulty is to overcome the allowed loss of derivatives.
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    Ekeland's variational principle
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    no local uniqueness
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    loss of derivatives
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    inverse function theorem
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    implicit function theorem
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    Fréchet space
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    Nash-Moser theorem
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