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FERMAT'S THEOREM (STATIONARY POINTS)


'Fermat's theorem' is a theorem in real analysis, named after Pierre de Fermat. It gives a method to find local maxima and minima of differentiable functions by showing that every local extremum of the function is a stationary point (the function derivative is zero in that point). So, by using Fermat's theorem, the problem of finding a function extremum is reduced to solving an equation.
It is important to note that Fermat's theorem gives only a necessary condition for extreme function values. That is, some stationary points are not extreme values, they are inflection points. To check if a stationary point is an extreme value and to further distinguish between a function maximum and a function minimum it is necessary to analyse the second derivative (if it exists).

Contents
Fermat's theorem
Application to optimization
Intuition
Proof
See also
External links

Fermat's theorem


Let fcolon (a,b)
ightarrow mathbb{R} be a function and suppose that displaystyle x_0 in (a,b) is a local extremum of displaystyle f. If displaystyle f is differentiable at displaystyle x_0 then displaystyle f'(x_0) = 0.

Application to optimization


As a corollary, global extrema of a function ''f'' on a domain ''A'' occur only at boundaries, non-differentiable points, and stationary points.
If x_0 is a global extremum of ''f'', then one of the following is true:

★ 'boundary:' x_0 is in the boundary of ''A''

★ 'non-differentiable:' ''f'' is not differentiable at x_0

★ 'stationary point:' x_0 is a stationary point of ''f''

Intuition


We give the intuition for a function maximum, the reasoning being similar for a function minimum. If displaystyle x_0 in (a,b) is a local maximum then there is a (possibly small) neighborhood of displaystyle x_0 such as the function is increasing before and decreasing after displaystyle x_0. As the derivative is positive for an increasing function and negative for a decreasing function, displaystyle f' is positive before and negative after displaystyle x_0. displaystyle f' doesn't skip values (by Darboux's theorem), so it has to be zero at some point between the positive and negative values. The only point in the neighbourhood where it is possible to have displaystyle f'(x) = 0 is displaystyle x_0.
Note that the theorem (and its proof below) is more general than the intuition in that it doesn't require the function to be differentiable over a neighbourhood around displaystyle x_0. As stated in the theorem, it is sufficient for the function to be differentiable only in the extreme point.

Proof


Suppose that displaystyle x_0 is a local maximum (a similar proof applies if displaystyle x_0 is a local minimum). Then there exists , delta > 0 such that (x_0 - delta,x_0 + delta) subset (a,b) and such that we have f(x_0) > f(x), orall x with displaystyle |x - x_0| < delta . Hence for any h in (0,delta) we notice that it holds
: rac{f(x_0+h) - f(x_0)}{h} le 0.
Since the limit of this ratio as displaystyle h gets close to 0 from above exists and is equal to displaystyle f'(x_0) we conclude that f'(x_0) le 0. On the other hand for h in (-delta,0) we notice that
: rac{f(x_0+h) - f(x_0)}{h} ge 0
but again the limit as displaystyle h gets close to 0 from below exists and is equal to displaystyle f'(x_0) so we also have f'(x_0) ge 0.
Hence we conclude that displaystyle f'(x_0) = 0.

See also



Derivative

Extreme value

Stationary point

Inflection point

Pierre de Fermat

External links







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