Dictionary Definition
minimum adj : the least possible; "needed to
enforce minimal standards"; "her grades were minimal"; "minimum
wage"; "a minimal charge for the service" [syn: minimal] [ant: maximal, maximal]
Noun
1 the smallest possible quantity [syn: lower limit]
[ant: maximum]
2 the point on a curve where the tangent changes
from negative on the left to positive on the right [ant: maximum] [also: minima (pl)]minima See minimum
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
minima- Plural of minimum
Synonyms
Italian
Adjective
minima sNoun
Extensive Definition
In mathematics, maxima and
minima, known collectively as extrema, are the largest value
(maximum) or smallest value (minimum), that a function
takes in a point either within a given neighbourhood (local
extremum) or on the function domain
in its entirety (global extremum).
Definitions
A real-valued function
f′ defined on the real line is
said to have a local maximum point at the point x∗, if
there exists some ε > 0, such that f(x∗)
≥ f(x) when |x − x∗| < ε. The
value of the function at this point is called maximum of the
function.
On a graph
of a function, its local maxima will look like the tops of
hills.
Similarly, a function has a local minimum point
at x∗, if f(x∗) ≤ f(x) when |x −
x∗| < ε. The value of the function at
this point is called minimum of the function.
On a graph of a function, its local minima will
look like the bottoms of valleys.
A function has a global maximum point at
x∗, if f(x∗) ≥ f(x) for all x.
Similarly, a function has a global minimum point
at x∗, if f(x∗) ≤ f(x) for all
x.
Any global maximum (minimum) point is also a
local maximum (minimum) point; however, a local maximum or minimum
point need not also be a global maximum or minimum point.
Terminology: The terms local and global are
synonymous with relative and absolute respectively. Also extremum
is an inclusive term that includes both maximum and minimum: a
local extremum is a local or relative maximum or minimum, and a
global extremum is a global or absolute maximum or minimum.
Restricted domains: There may be maxima and
minima for a function whose domain
does not include all real numbers.
A real-valued function, whose domain is any set, can have a global maximum and
minimum. There may also be local maxima and local minima points,
but only at points of the domain set where the concept of neighborhood
is defined. A neighborhood plays the role of the set of x such that
|x − x∗| < ε.
A continuous
(real-valued) function on a compact set
always takes maximum and minimum values on that set. An important
example is a function whose domain is a closed (and bounded)
interval of real numbers
(see the graph above). The neighborhood
requirement precludes a local maximum or minimum at an endpoint of
an interval. However, an endpoint may still be a global maximum or
minimum. Thus it is not always true, for finite domains, that a
global maximum (minimum) must also be a local maximum
(minimum).
Terminology: The term optimum can replace either
one of the terms maximum or minimum, depending on the context. Some
optimization problems (see next paragraph) search for a global
maximum value while others search for a global minimum value.
Finding maxima and minima
Finding global maxima and minima is the goal of
optimization.
If a function is continuous on a closed interval, then by the
extreme
value theorem global maxima and minima exist. Furthermore, a
global maximum (or minimum) either must be a local maximum (or
minimum) in the interior of the domain, or must lie on the boundary
of the domain. So a method of finding a global maximum (or minimum)
is to look at all the local maxima (or minima) in the interior, and
also look at the maxima (or minima) of the points on the boundary;
and take the biggest (or smallest) one.
Local extrema can be found by
Fermat's theorem, which states that they must occur at
critical points. One can distinguish whether a critical point
is a local maximum or local minimum by using the first
derivative test or second
derivative test.
For any function that is defined piecewise, one finds maxima
(or minima) by finding the maximum (or minimum) of each piece
separately; and then seeing which one is biggest (or
smallest).
Examples
- The function x2 has a unique global minimum at x = 0.
- The function x3 has no global or local minima or maxima. Although the first derivative (3x2) is 0 at x = 0, this is an inflection point.
- The function x3/3 − x has first derivative x2 − 1 and second derivative 2x. Setting the first derivative to 0 and solving for x gives stationary points at −1 and +1. From the sign of the second derivative we can see that −1 is a local maximum and +1 is a local minimum. Note that this function has no global maximum or minimum.
- The function |x| has a global minimum at x = 0 that cannot be found by taking derivatives, because the derivative does not exist at x = 0.
- The function cos(x) has infinitely many global maxima at 0, ±2π, ±4π, …, and infinitely many global minima at ±π, ±3π, ….
- The function 2 cos(x) − x has infinitely many local maxima and minima, but no global maximum or minimum.
- The function cos(3πx)/x with 0.1 ≤ x ≤ 1.1 has a global maximum at x = 0.1 (a boundary), a global minimum near x = 0.3, a local maximum near x = 0.6, and a local minimum near x = 1.0. (See figure at top of page.)
- The function x3 + 3x2 − 2x + 1 defined over the closed interval (segment) [−4,2] has two extrema: one local maximum at x = −1−√15⁄3, one local minimum at x = −1+√15⁄3, a global maximum at x = 2 and a global minimum at x = −4. (See figure at right)
Functions of more variables
For functions of more than one variable, similar conditions apply.For example, in the (enlargeable) figure at the
right, the necessary conditions for a local maximum are similar to
those of a function with only one variable. The first partial
derivatives as to z (the variable to be maximized) are zero at
the maximum (the glowing dot on top in the figure). The second
partial derivatives are negative. These are only necessary, not
sufficient, conditions for a local maximum because of the
possibility of a saddle
point. For use of these conditions to solve for a maximum, the
function z must also be differentiable
throughout. The
second partial derivative test can help classify the point as a
relative maximum or relative minimum.
A counterexample
However, for identifying global maxima and minima, there are substantial differences between functions of one and several variables. For example, if a differentiable function f defined on the real line has a single critical point, which is a local minimum, then it is also a global minimum (use the intermediate value theorem and Rolle's theorem to prove this by reductio ad absurdum). In two and more dimensions, this argument fails, as the function- f(x,y)= x^2+y^2(1-x)^3,\qquad x,y\in\mathbb,
See also
External links
minima in Catalan: Màxims i mínims
minima in Czech: Extrém funkce
minima in Welsh: Uchafbwyntiau ac
isafbwyntiau
minima in Spanish: Extremos de una función
minima in Italian: Massimo e minimo di una
funzione
minima in Hebrew: נקודת קיצון
minima in Japanese: 極値
minima in Portuguese: Pontos extremos de uma
função
minima in Russian: Экстремум
minima in Slovenian: Ekstrem funkcije
minima in Ukrainian: Екстремум
minima in Chinese: 极值