Jump to content

Splitting lemma (functions)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, especially in singularity theory, the splitting lemma is a useful result due to René Thom which provides a way of simplifying the local expression of a function usually applied in a neighbourhood of a degenerate critical point.

Formal statement

[edit]

Let be a smooth function germ, with a critical point at 0 (so for ). Let V be a subspace of such that the restriction f |V is non-degenerate, and write B for the Hessian matrix of this restriction. Let W be any complementary subspace to V. Then there is a change of coordinates of the form with , and a smooth function h on W such that

This result is often referred to as the parametrized Morse lemma, which can be seen by viewing y as the parameter. It is the gradient version of the implicit function theorem.

Extensions

[edit]

There are extensions to infinite dimensions, to complex analytic functions, to functions invariant under the action of a compact group, ...

References

[edit]
  • Poston, Tim; Stewart, Ian (1979), Catastrophe Theory and Its Applications, Pitman, ISBN 978-0-273-08429-7.
  • Brocker, Th (1975), Differentiable Germs and Catastrophes, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-20681-5.