Sard's theorem

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Template:Short description In mathematics, Sard's theorem, also known as Sard's lemma or the Morse–Sard theorem, is a result in mathematical analysis that asserts that the set of critical values (that is, the image of the set of critical points) of a smooth function f from one Euclidean space or manifold to another is a null set, i.e., it has Lebesgue measure 0. This makes the set of critical values "small" in the sense of a generic property. The theorem is named for Anthony Morse and Arthur Sard.

Statement

More explicitly,[1] let

f:nm

be Ck, (that is, k times continuously differentiable), where kmax{nm+1,1}. Let Xn denote the critical set of f, which is the set of points xn at which the Jacobian matrix of f has rank <m. Then the image f(X) has Lebesgue measure 0 in m.

Intuitively speaking, this means that although X may be large, its image must be small in the sense of Lebesgue measure: while f may have many critical points in the domain n, it must have few critical values in the image m.

More generally, the result also holds for mappings between differentiable manifolds M and N of dimensions m and n, respectively. The critical set X of a Ck function

f:NM

consists of those points at which the differential

df:TNTM

has rank less than m as a linear transformation. If kmax{nm+1,1}, then Sard's theorem asserts that the image of X has measure zero as a subset of M. This formulation of the result follows from the version for Euclidean spaces by taking a countable set of coordinate patches. The conclusion of the theorem is a local statement, since a countable union of sets of measure zero is a set of measure zero, and the property of a subset of a coordinate patch having zero measure is invariant under diffeomorphism.

Variants

There are many variants of this lemma, which plays a basic role in singularity theory among other fields. The case m=1 was proven by Anthony P. Morse in 1939,[2] and the general case by Arthur Sard in 1942.[1]

A version for infinite-dimensional Banach manifolds was proven by Stephen Smale.[3]

The statement is quite powerful, and the proof involves analysis. In topology it is often quoted — as in the Brouwer fixed-point theorem and some applications in Morse theory — in order to prove the weaker corollary that “a non-constant smooth map has at least one regular value”.

In 1965 Sard further generalized his theorem to state that if f:NM is C and if ArN is the set of points xN such that dfx has rank less or equal than r, then the Hausdorff dimension of f(Ar) is at most r.[4][5]

See also

References

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Further reading

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