New constructions for local approximation of Lipschitz functions. II (Q875256)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
New constructions for local approximation of Lipschitz functions. II
scientific article

    Statements

    New constructions for local approximation of Lipschitz functions. II (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    13 April 2007
    0 references
    In a former paper, the author presented a new generalized differentiability notion for Lipschitz functions \(f: \mathbb{R}^n\to\mathbb{R}\) according to \[ \begin{multlined} Df(x_0)= \text{conv}\Biggl\{v\in\mathbb{R}^n\mid\exists g\in \mathbb{R}^n,\| g\|= 1,\exists r(x_0,\cdot,g)\in \eta(x_0),\;\exists\alpha_k\to +0:\\ v= \lim_{k\to\infty}\,{1\over \alpha_k} \int^{\alpha_k}_0\nabla f(r(x_0,\tau, g))\,d\tau\Biggr\},\end{multlined} \] where \(\eta(x_0)\) is the set of all smooth curves \(r(x_0,\tau,g)\) which converges (for \(\tau\to+ 0\)) against \(x_0\) from the direction \(g\). It was shown that \(Df(x_0)\) is a closed bounded set which is contained in the Clarke subdifferential \(\partial_{\text{Cl}}f(x_0)\). Moreover, if \(f\) is a d.c.-function (i.e. if \(f\) is represented as the difference of two convex functions \(f_1\) and \(f_2\)) then \[ \partial f_1(x_0)-\partial f_2(x_0)\subset Df(x_0)= \partial_{Cl}f(x_0). \] In the present paper, two further approximations are introduced according to \[ \begin{multlined} D_\alpha f(x_0)= \overline{\text{conv}}\Biggl\{v\in\mathbb{R}^n\mid \exists g\in\mathbb{R}^n,\| f\|= 1,\exists r(x_0,\cdot g)\in \eta(x_0):\\ v={1\over \alpha} \int^\alpha_0\nabla f(r(x_0, \tau,g))\,d\tau\Biggr\}\end{multlined} \] and \(\widetilde D_\delta f(x_0)= \overline{\text{conv}}\bigcup_{\alpha\in[0, \delta]} D_\alpha f(x_0)\). Obviously, for \(\alpha= 0\) it is \(D_0 f(x_0)= \widetilde D_0 f(x_0)= Df(x_0)\). For convex functions, the set \(\widetilde D_\delta f(x_0)\) recalls the \(\varepsilon\)-subdifferential of \(f\). It is shown that \(D_\alpha f(\cdot)\) is a Lipschitz set-valued mapping. Moreover, the set-valued mapping \(\widetilde D_\delta f(\cdot)\) is a uniform continuous extension of the Clarke subdifferential mapping \(\partial_{\text{Cl}}f(\cdot)\) if \(f\) is a d.c.-function. At the end of the paper, the author presents a simple optimization algorithm where each accumulation point of the generated sequence is a stationary point with respect of the Clarke subdifferential.
    0 references
    0 references
    Lipschitz functions
    0 references
    Lipschitz set-valued mappings
    0 references
    directional derivatives
    0 references
    \(\varepsilon\) -subdifferential for convex functions
    0 references
    continuous extension of Clarke subdifferential
    0 references
    optimization process
    0 references
    0 references