Abstract

We derive new representations for the generalised Jacobian of a locally Lipschitz map between finite dimensional real Euclidean spaces as the lower limit (i.e., limit inferior) of the classical derivative of the map where it exists. The new representations lead to significantly shorter proofs for the basic properties of the subgradient and the generalised Jacobian including the chain rule. We establish that a sequence of locally Lipschitz maps between finite dimensional Euclidean spaces converges to a given locally Lipschitz map in the L-topology—that is, the weakest refinement of the sup norm topology on the space of locally Lipschitz maps that makes the generalised Jacobian a continuous functional—if and only if the limit superior of the sequence of directional derivatives of the maps in a given vector direction coincides with the generalised directional derivative of the given map in that direction, with the convergence to the limit superior being uniform for all unit vectors. We then prove our main result that the subspace of Lipschitz C ∞ maps between finite dimensional Euclidean spaces is dense in the space of Lipschitz maps equipped with the L-topology, and, for a given Lipschitz map, we explicitly construct a sequence of Lipschitz C ∞ maps converging to it in the L-topology, allowing global smooth approximation of a Lipschitz map and its differential properties. As an application, we obtain a short proof of the extension of Green’s theorem to interval-valued vector fields. For infinite dimensions, we show that the subgradient of a Lipschitz map on a Banach space is upper continuous, and, for a given real-valued Lipschitz map on a separable Banach space, we construct a sequence of Gateaux differentiable functions that converges to the map in the sup norm topology such that the limit superior of the directional derivatives in any direction coincides with the generalised directional derivative of the Lipschitz map in that direction.

Highlights

  • Lipschitz maps between metric spaces provide a fundamental class of functions in pure and appliedJournal of the ACM, Vol 69, No 1, Article 8

  • We present a simple example of a sequence of C1 functions that converges in the sup norm topology and in the L-topology, but not in the Lipschitz norm, to a Lipschitz map

  • We first observe that the proof of Lemma 5.1 extends to the case of a sequence of Gateaux differentiable maps on a Banach space converging in the sup norm topology to a Lipschitz map

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Lipschitz maps between metric spaces (i.e., maps named after Rudolph Lipschitz that increase distances by at most a given factor) provide a fundamental class of functions in pure and applied. Use the L-topology on the space of locally Lipschitz maps which was introduced in the work of Edalat [21] and is defined using the Scott topology on the space of Scott (equivalently upper) continuous functions from a finite dimensional Euclidean space to the domain of non-empty, convex and compact subsets of the space. We will provide an elementary self-contained account of these results for the reader To this end, given a Lipschitz map between finite dimensional Euclidean spaces, we take its convolution with a sequence of Gaussian probability distributions, as our test functions, and explicitly construct a sequence of C∞ maps convergent to it in the L-topology, implying that the limit superior of the directional derivatives of the functions in the sequence in a given vector direction coincide with the generalised directional derivative of the Lipschitz map in that direction, with the convergence to limit superior being uniform for all unit vectors. An attempt has been made to use more elementary mathematical notions and results in the earlier sections related to real-valued Lipschitz maps on finite dimensional Euclidean spaces and employ more advanced and recent results in analysis only in the later sections relating to vector Lipschitz maps and Lipschitz maps on Banach spaces

Notation and Terminology
DOMAIN THEORY
GENERALISED JACOBIAN AS LOWER LIMIT OF DERIVATIVES
Representation by Lower Limit
Basic Properties of Generalised Jacobian
SMOOTH APPROXIMATION OF SUBGRADIENT
Subgradient Operator as Lower Limit of Derivative Operator
EXTENSION OF FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM OF LINE INTEGRALS
SMOOTH APPROXIMATION OF GENERALISED JACOBIAN
SUBGRADIENT ON BANACH SPACES
Approximation of Subgradient on Separable Banach Spaces
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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