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MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus (4 Viewers)

leehuan

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Re: Several Variable Calculus

My lecture slides. I haven't used a maths textbook before at uni. I'm just going to have to take it up with the lecturer
 

leehuan

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Re: Several Variable Calculus

Can someone compute the directional derivative at (0,0) of this function?





(Assume u is a unit vector already)
 

seanieg89

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Re: Several Variable Calculus

The partial derivatives are all zero, but the directional derivatives are as you say for u1 nonzero, and zero if u1=0.

This is one of those funny functions that you don't see the full weirdness of by just looking at 2d slices of its graph. Each partial derivative exists at the origin, but the function f isn't even continuous at the origin!
 

leehuan

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They are, but so what? These are not the hypotheses of Clairaut's theorem.
Maybe it was just my unwillingness to compute any second order partial derivatives because the first order partial derivatives were thoroughly untidy.

Is there any easy way of contradicting the criteria of Clairaut's theorem then?
 

glittergal96

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Sorry about alt, am on phone. Showing that typical Clairaut hypotheses don't hold doesn't prove that mixed partials differ because its not iff. Just compute mixed partials at 0, it really shouldn't take long.

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leehuan

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Oh, that was done in a previous part. I understand your point there...



...albeit this was the question. It's the last part that's of interest.
 

InteGrand

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Oh, that was done in a previous part. I understand your point there...



...albeit this was the question. It's the last part that's of interest.
It didn't work because the hypotheses of Clairaut's Theorem were not satisfied by that ƒ (I assume you know what typical hypotheses are for it).
 
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leehuan

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It didn't work because the hypotheses of Clariaut's Theorem were not satisfied by that ƒ (I assume you know what typical hypotheses are for it).
Goes back up to the above query I suppose. Is the only way of really proving it formally just to brute those second order derivatives?
 

InteGrand

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Goes back up to the above query I suppose. Is the only way of really proving it formally just to brute those second order derivatives?
You could probably also do it by computing the second partial derivatives at (x,y) ≠ (0, 0) and investigating their limit as (x, y) -> (0, 0), but there's no need to do that since you've already computed the mixed second-partials at the origin in an earlier part of the question (part b)).
 

leehuan

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I suppose what's really bugging me is the fact that d) is actually asking to explain why b) is true. Looks like more of just a grind rather than testing some nice stuff but I suppose I'll just have to deal with it.
 

seanieg89

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It really doesn't take that long, especially since to prove discontinuity you can just show that approaching the origin via different axes gives a different result, so most terms in the mixed partials drop out from x or y being zero.

I would definitely go via this route rather than by restating the fact that the mixed partials do not match and using the contrapositive of Clairaut based on the wording of the question.

"Because the conclusion of Clairaut's theorem is not true" is NOT what I would consider a good answer to "Why does Clairaut's theorem not work here?".
 

leehuan

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c) Give a simple formula for f(x)

 
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