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For years I've taught my honors calculus students about functions like (the continuous extension of) $x^2 \sin 1/x$, and for just as many years I've told them that they won't encounter functions like this outside theoretical mathematics.

But now I'm wondering whether simplified mathematical models of Euler's disk (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_Disk) or other idealized physical systems might involve functions in which the amplitude of some oscillatory quantity goes to zero while the frequency goes to infinity in finite time, and in particular, whether there might be "natural" examples of differentiable functions with discontinuous derivatives.

Can anyone point to examples in the existing literature? E.g., is there an exactly solvable differential equation of physical origin with a solution of the form $f(t) = |t|^a \sin |t|^{-b}$ $(t<0)$ such that, defining $f(t)=0$ for $t \geq 0$, one gets a differentiable function whose derivative is discontinuous at 0?

James Propp
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    You should clearly state a question; here it is quite implicit, with no visible question mark. Here I do not quite see what an answer would be. – Benoît Kloeckner Dec 19 '13 at 15:39
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    A related but different question: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/114555/does-physics-need-non-analytic-smooth-functions – András Bátkai Dec 19 '13 at 15:41
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    Of course you were wrong when you taught that "they won't encounter functions like this outside theoretical mathematics". – Alexandre Eremenko Dec 19 '13 at 17:00
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    @Alexandre: Can you offer an example? (You wrote "Of course you were wrong ...", which suggests that you know of at least one!) – James Propp Dec 19 '13 at 19:59
  • James, did not you offer an example yourself? My point was that such a sentence was wrong in principle, I would not say such things when teaching math:-) Especially about a simple elementary function. – Alexandre Eremenko Dec 19 '13 at 20:38
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    @AlexandreEremenko: I think heuristics like the one James Propp mentioned have a lot of pedagogical value. Certainly similar quips are used by mathematicians all the time: for instance when I was first introduced to the Lebesgue integral I was told that with it "any function I will ever want to integrate" I will be able to integrate. Of course this might be offensive to some logician somewhere who researches non-measurable sets! Anyways in the course non-measurable sets were also presented. The point being, rules-of-thumb and counterexamples, with the right context, are helpful. – Sam Hopkins Dec 19 '13 at 23:02
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    Alexandre, is Euler's disk truly an example? Maybe there's some bound on the frequency of the oscillation as one approaches the singularity. I have no idea. But I'm guessing that someone else does. – James Propp Dec 19 '13 at 23:19
  • Also, even if the frequency approaches infinity, that doesn't automatically imply that any particular oscillatory quantity (such as, say, the $z$-coordinate of a particular point on the boundary of the disk) exhibits discontinuously differentiable behavior; that depends on how quickly the amplitude decays to zero. – James Propp Dec 20 '13 at 17:28
  • I just added a bounty to the problem, but my Note explaining the terms of the bounty contains typos. Is there a way to correct them? – James Propp Dec 21 '13 at 18:14
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    You may run into problems defining what is a physical system. For example, in Newtonian gravity, particles can accelerate to unbounded speed in finite time http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.22.4458&rep=rep1&type=pdf , but in our actual universe, particles moving at high speeds are governed by relativity, which will not allow them to exceed $c$. Similarly, it may be that if the Euler's disc equation describe the sort of oscillation that interests you, they do so only in a limit where they are not applicable. – David E Speyer Dec 22 '13 at 16:42
  • @David Speyer: Yes, and quantum physics suggests that there may be a serious mismatch between physical space and the mathematicians' continuum. Any attempt to apply differential equations governing Euler's disk below the Planck scale is misguided. – James Propp Dec 22 '13 at 16:51
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    Judging from the lack of responses this question has received (despite the bounty), I would presume that individual functions that are differentiable but not $C^1$ play little or no role in applied mathematics. It's possible that the space of $C^1$ functions has better properties than the space of differentiable functions in ways that make it a handier context for doing analysis (even for applied mathematicians), but that's a different issue. I am posting this (and the question itself) in order to provoke people who disagree with me to explain why I'm wrong. – James Propp Dec 23 '13 at 15:14
  • Jim: As a counterweight, let me mention that in my (certainly not unbiased, to our previous stimulating interactions) opinion, this is quite an interesting question. It seems to be a very fundamental one in applied mathematics. Such questions often don't fare well on this site: that's a shame. – Pete L. Clark Dec 29 '13 at 05:28

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Here is an example for which we have a "natural" nonlinear PDE for which solutions are known to be everywhere differentiable and conjectured-- but not yet proved-- to be $C^1$.

Suppose that $\Omega$ is a smooth bounded domain in $\mathbb R^d$ and $g$ is a smooth function defined on the boundary, $\partial \Omega$. Consider the prototypical problem in the "$L^\infty$ calculus of variations" which is to find an extension $u$ of $g$ to the closure of $\Omega$ which minimizes $\| Du \|_{L^\infty(\Omega)}$, or equivalently, the Lipschitz constant of $u$ on $\Omega$. When properly phrased, this leads to the infinity Laplace equation $$ -\Delta_\infty u : = \sum_{i,j=1}^d \partial_{ij} u\, \partial_i u \, \partial_j u = 0, $$ which is the Euler-Lagrange equation of the optimization problem.

The (unique, weak) solution of this equation (subject to the boundary condition) characterizes the correct notion of minimal Lipschitz extension. It is known to be everywhere differentiable by a result of Evans and Smart: http://math.mit.edu/~smart/differentiability.ae.pdf.

It is conjectured to be $C^{1,1/3}$, or anyway at least $C^1$. It is known to be $C^{1,\alpha}$ for some $\alpha>0$ in dimension $d=2$ (due to O. Savin), but the problem remains open in dimensions $d\geq 3$.

I am unaware of any other situation in PDE where the regularity gets blocked between differentiability and $C^1$. Typically, if you can prove something is differentiable, the proof can be made quantitative enough to give $C^1$ with a modulus.

  • Is this PDE related to a physical system? – Ben McKay Dec 26 '13 at 08:52
  • No, I am not going to argue that this is among the first PDEs to be encountered in physics. Part of my point is that if you find an everywhere differentiable but not necessary C^1 function, you are in a quite strange situation. In this much I agree with the James Propp. The example I gave is the best example I know of. It is a fairly well-known and well-studied PDE, it comes up in probabilistic game theory, calculus of variations, as a singular limit of problems which definitely do have physical interpretations... – Scott Armstrong Dec 26 '13 at 21:55
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A trivial premise: asking whether a physical phenomenon, in itself, is continuous or differentiable, of course, makes no more sense than asking whether a physical length is rational or irrational. These are mathematical concepts attached to the mathematical models we choose to describe physical objects. The reason why we use real numbers to measure real world, is rather linked to the good mathematical properties of the real numbers as a foundation for mathematical Analysis, than fine properties of the real world, in spite of the homonimy. As I see it, functions that are differentiable but not $C^1$ plays a little role in physics for the simple and only reason, that they play a little role in mathematics.

Existence theorems for all sort of equations in analysis, as well as convergence theorems, produce functions that are either more regular than simply differentiable ($C^k$, $C^{k,\alpha}$ etc) or less (Sobolev classes etc). Here's an old question about the hypothesis of continuous differentiability vs simple diferentiability in differential calculus .

It doesn't mean that functions like $x^2\sin(1/x)$ can't provide a suitable description of certain physical motions. But, a smooth approximation of it may be a good description as well, though maybe more complicated formally, which is a good reason why after all we may prefer the former. I vaguely think to a ping-pong ball bouncing between the table and the racket pushing it conveniently. Or a vibrating string whose length is forcedly shortened to zero, and maybe more relevant phenomena like the behaviour of an object reaching the barrier sound. In any case, at some microscopical scale, it makes no sense to ask which function gives a better model, just because there is nothing to measure by real numbers.

Pietro Majer
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    My personal view is that the question OP put forward is in the wrong forum. So, unsatisfactory answers are obtained unless a mathematical-minded reader is concerned. I think that, for the sake of completeness, he should look in http://physics.stackexchange.com where a more appropriate audience can yield the answer he is looking for. – Jon Dec 28 '13 at 22:55
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    In some sense Sobolev spaces are more natural from a physical point of view: one can measure energies, which are $L^2$ or $H^1$ norms – Piero D'Ancona Jan 27 '16 at 06:28
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Euler's disk, with its shuddering singularity, is probably the best example of the sort of phenomenon the OP was asking about, with several caveats, most of which have been mentioned in other postings on this thread. There are a number of possible models for the behavior of Euler's disk (it's a topic of active research), but at least some of them lead to discontinuously differentiable behavior for natural quantities such as the $x$-coordinate of the unit normal to the disk. For one such model, see Moffatt's article "Euler's disk and its finite-time singularity" (Nature, April 20, 2000).

This answer is based on email correspondence with Andy Ruina, who has permitted me to cite him, on the condition that I mention that his was an off-the-cuff, informal answer. I was hoping to have time to look into this myself and include the exact solution that Moffatt provides (assuming that he does), but I didn't have time to do this before the bounty ended; I was hoping someone else who's better versed in these things than I am would do so. Those who want to pursue this topic might want to read Andy Ruina's essay http://ruina.tam.cornell.edu/research/topics/miscellaneous/comments_on_moffatts_disk.pdf (which I learned about from Veit Elser).

James Propp
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Shock waves are discontinuous solutions to many partial differential equations. The literature is large.

I was going to add Brownian motion as another ubiquitous example but I realize that you want functions that do have derivatives almost everywhere.

Pait
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    Indeed, there are a lot of examples coming from perturbation theory applied in physics. So, I have to agree with the comment by Alexandre Eremenko. – Jon Dec 24 '13 at 16:01
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    I am asking about everywhere differentiable functions with discontinuous derivatives. Shock waves and Brownian motion are not examples of this. Pait and Jon, if you know of any differentiable but not $C^1$ functions coming from perturbation theory or control theory or elsewhere, please provide more details. – James Propp Dec 25 '13 at 16:22
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    Of course, any Green function of the Schroedinger equation does. E.g., for a free particle you will get $t^{-\frac{1}{2}}e^{i\frac{x^2}{2t}}$ but there is plenty of cases. So, starting from Green functions like these you just have a choice to do in perturbation theory. I was also considering a two-level system but with a different parameter rather than time. Dependence on coupling in quantum field theory or just quantum mechanics in perturbation theory generally have the property you are looking for. – Jon Dec 25 '13 at 19:24
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Control theory is full of examples where, to achieve a certain goal, it is necessary to apply controls which are continuous by parts, and that result in solutions of the type you want to the differential equations involved. A practical situation is parking a car.

You can drive down the street by steering and accelerating continuously. In contrast, parallel parking requires a sequence of back-and-forth, stop-and-go, steer-and-straighten maneuvers that are essentially discontinuous. The position and orientation of the car are continuous, but their derivatives are not.

(This requirement is a consequence of the nonholonomic nature of the nonlinear constraints on the car's dynamics. The proof is a beyond the usual calculus content, but the phenomenon is easier to grasp than my previous examples.)

Pait
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  • These are not examples of everywhere-differentiable functions with discontinuous derivatives. They are examples of almost-everywhere differentiable functions (or almost-everywhere twice-differentiable functions), and are not germane to my question. If this is unclear, I'll be glad to elaborate on this point. "Derivatives can't jump, but they can jitter" is a pedagogical mantra I find helpful when talking about everywhere-differentiable functions with discontinuous derivatives. See also the theory of Darboux continuity. – James Propp Dec 25 '13 at 16:12
  • http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darboux's_theorem_(analysis) has a decent discussion of these issues. – James Propp Dec 25 '13 at 16:26