Malgrange Preparation Theorem
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In mathematics, the Malgrange preparation theorem is an analogue of the
Weierstrass preparation theorem In mathematics, the Weierstrass preparation theorem is a tool for dealing with analytic functions of several complex variables, at a given point ''P''. It states that such a function is, up to multiplication by a function not zero at ''P'', a p ...
for
smooth function In mathematical analysis, the smoothness of a function (mathematics), function is a property measured by the number of Continuous function, continuous Derivative (mathematics), derivatives it has over some domain, called ''differentiability cl ...
s. It was conjectured by
René Thom René Frédéric Thom (; 2 September 1923 – 25 October 2002) was a French mathematician, who received the Fields Medal in 1958. He made his reputation as a topologist, moving on to aspects of what would be called singularity theory; he became w ...
and proved by .


Statement of Malgrange preparation theorem

Suppose that ''f''(''t'',''x'') is a smooth complex function of ''t''∈R and ''x''∈R''n'' near the origin, and let ''k'' be the smallest integer such that :f(0,0)=0, (0,0)=0, \dots, (0,0)=0, (0,0)\ne0. Then one form of the preparation theorem states that near the origin ''f'' can be written as the product of a smooth function ''c'' that is nonzero at the origin and a smooth function that as a function of ''t'' is a polynomial of degree ''k''. In other words, :f(t,x) = c(t,x)\left(t^k+a_(x)t^+\cdots+a_0(x) \right) where the functions ''c'' and ''a'' are smooth and ''c'' is nonzero at the origin. A second form of the theorem, occasionally called the Mather division theorem, is a sort of "division with remainder" theorem: it says that if ''f'' and ''k'' satisfy the conditions above and ''g'' is a smooth function near the origin, then we can write :g=qf+r where ''q'' and ''r'' are smooth, and as a function of ''t'', ''r'' is a polynomial of degree less than ''k''. This means that :r(x)=\sum_t^jr_j(x) for some smooth functions ''r''''j''(''x''). The two forms of the theorem easily imply each other: the first form is the special case of the "division with remainder" form where ''g'' is ''t''''k'', and the division with remainder form follows from the first form of the theorem as we may assume that ''f'' as a function of ''t'' is a polynomial of degree ''k''. If the functions ''f'' and ''g'' are real, then the functions ''c'', ''a'', ''q'', and ''r'' can also be taken to be real. In the case of the Weierstrass preparation theorem these functions are uniquely determined by ''f'' and ''g'', but uniqueness no longer holds for the Malgrange preparation theorem.


Proof of Malgrange preparation theorem

The Malgrange preparation theorem can be deduced from the Weierstrass preparation theorem. The obvious way of doing this does not work: although smooth functions have a
formal power series In mathematics, a formal series is an infinite sum that is considered independently from any notion of convergence, and can be manipulated with the usual algebraic operations on series (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, partial sum ...
expansion at the origin, and the Weierstrass preparation theorem applies to formal power series, the formal power series will not usually converge to smooth functions near the origin. Instead one can use the idea of decomposing a smooth function as a sum of analytic functions by applying a partition of unity to its Fourier transform. For a proof along these lines see or


Algebraic version of the Malgrange preparation theorem

The Malgrange preparation theorem can be restated as a theorem about
modules Broadly speaking, modularity is the degree to which a system's components may be separated and recombined, often with the benefit of flexibility and variety in use. The concept of modularity is used primarily to reduce complexity by breaking a sy ...
over rings of smooth, real-valued germs. If ''X'' is a
manifold In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a n ...
, with ''p''∈''X'', let ''C''''p''(''X'') denote the ring of real-valued germs of smooth functions at ''p'' on ''X''. Let ''M''''p''(''X'') denote the unique maximal ideal of ''C''''p''(''X''), consisting of germs which vanish at p. Let ''A'' be a ''C''''p''(''X'')-module, and let ''f'':''X'' → ''Y'' be a smooth function between manifolds. Let ''q'' = ''f''(''p''). ''f'' induces a ring homomorphism ''f''*:''C''''q''(Y) → ''C''''p''(''X'') by composition on the right with ''f''. Thus we can view ''A'' as a ''C''''q''(''Y'')-module. Then the Malgrange preparation theorem says that if ''A'' is a finitely-generated ''C''''p''(''X'')-module, then ''A'' is a finitely-generated ''C''''q''(''Y'')-module if and only if ''A''/''M''''q''(''Y'')A is a finite-dimensional real vector space.


References

* * * * * *{{citation, mr=0232401 , last=Mather, first= John N., authorlink=John Mather (mathematician) , title=Stability of ''C'' mappings. I. The division theorem. , journal=Ann. of Math. , series= 2, volume=87, year= 1968 , pages=89–104 , doi=10.2307/1970595, issue=1, publisher=The Annals of Mathematics, Vol. 87, No. 1, jstor=1970595 Singularity theory Theorems in analysis