Gradient and Directional Derivative
Original post is The Gradient and Directional Derivative from Mathematics School, Oregon State University. Here I thank the author(s) sincerely.
Some notes and changes of symbols were made by myself.
Gradient
The gradient of a function $w=f(x,y)$ is the vector function:
\[\nabla f(x,y) = \langle \frac{\partial f}{\partial x}(x,y), \frac{\partial f}{\partial y}(x,y) \rangle\]This definition generalizes in a natural way to functions of more than three variables.
Gradient Examples
For the function $z=f(x,y)=4x^2+y^2$, the gradient is
\[\nabla f(x,y) = \langle 8x, 2y \rangle\]For the function $w=g(x,y,z)=\exp(xyz)+\sin(xy)$, the gradient is
\[\nabla g(x, y, z) = \langle yz \exp(xyz) + y \cos(xy), xz \exp{xyz}, xy \exp(xyz) \rangle\]Geometric Description of the Gradient Vector
There is a nice way to describe the gradient geometrically. Consider $z=f(x,y)=4x^2+y^2$. The surface defined by this function is an elliptical paraboloid (椭圆抛物面). This is a bowl-shaped surface. The bottom of the bowl lies at the origin. The figure below shows the level curves, defined by $f(x,y)=c$, of the surface. The level curves are the ellipses $4x^2+y^2=c$.
- 注:A level set of a real-valued function $f$ of $n$ real variables is defined as $L_c(f) = \left \{ (x_1, \dots, x_n) \mid f(x_1, \dots, x_n) = c \right \}$ where $c$ is a constant.
- When $n=2$, a level set is generally a curve, called a level curve, contour line or isoline
- When $n=3$, a level set is called a level surface
- When $n>3$, a level set is called a level hypersurface
The gradient vector $\langle 8x,2y \rangle$ is plotted at the 3 points $(\sqrt{1.25}, 0)$, $(1,1)$, $(0, \sqrt{5})$. As the plot shows, the gradient vector at $(x,y)$ is normal to the level curve through $(x,y)$. As we will see below, the gradient vector points in the direction of greatest rate of increase of $f(x,y)$.
- 注:In geometry, a normal is an object such as a line or vector that is perpendicular to a given object
In three dimensions the level curves are level surfaces. Again, the gradient vector at $(x,y,z)$ is normal to level surface through $(x,y,z)$.
Directional Derivative
For a function $z=f(x,y)$, the partial derivative with respect to $x$ gives the rate of change of $f$ in the $x$ direction and the partial derivative with respect to $y$ gives the rate of change of $f$ in the $y$ direction. How do we compute the rate of change of $f$ in an arbitrary direction?
The rate of change of a function of several variables in the direction $u$ is called the directional derivative in the direction $u$. Here $u$ is assumed to be a unit vector. Assuming $w=f(x,y,z)$ and $u = \langle u_1,u_2,u_3 \rangle$, we have
\[D_u f(x,y,z) = \nabla f(x,y,z) \cdot u = \frac{\partial f(x,y,z)}{\partial x} u_1 + \frac{\partial f(x,y,z)}{\partial y} u_2 + \frac{\partial f(x,y,z)}{\partial z} u_3\]Hence, the directional derivative is the dot product of the gradient and the vector $u$. Note that if $u$ is a unit vector in the $x$ direction, i.e $u=\langle 1,0,0 \rangle$, then the directional derivative is simply the partial derivative with respect to $x$. For a general direction, the directional derivative is a combination of the all three partial derivatives.
注:更宽泛的一个定义是:不要求 $u$ 是 unit vector,有 $D_u f(x) = \nabla f(x) \cdot \frac{u}{\vert u \vert}$
Directional Derivative Example
What is the directional derivative in the direction $<1,2>$ of the function $z=f(x,y)=4x^2+y^2$ at the point $(1,1)$?
The gradient is $\langle 8x,2y \rangle$, which is $\langle 8,2 \rangle$ at the point $(1,1)$. The direction $u$ is $\langle 2,1 \rangle$. Hence,
\[D_u f(1,1) = \nabla f(1, 1) \cdot \frac{u}{\vert u \vert} = \langle 8, 2 \rangle \cdot \langle \frac{2}{\sqrt{5}}, \frac{1}{\sqrt{5}} \rangle = \frac{18}{\sqrt{5}}\]
Comments