Pincherle derivative

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Template:Short description Template:More references In mathematics, the Pincherle derivative[1] T of a linear operator T:๐•‚[x]๐•‚[x] on the vector space of polynomials in the variable x over a field ๐•‚ is the commutator of T with the multiplication by x in the algebra of endomorphisms End(๐•‚[x]). That is, T is another linear operator T:๐•‚[x]๐•‚[x]

T:=[T,x]=TxxT=ad(x)T,

(for the origin of the ad notation, see the article on the adjoint representation) so that

T{p(x)}=T{xp(x)}xT{p(x)}p(x)๐•‚[x].

This concept is named after the Italian mathematician Salvatore Pincherle (1853–1936).

Properties

The Pincherle derivative, like any commutator, is a derivation, meaning it satisfies the sum and products rules: given two linear operators S and T belonging to End(๐•‚[x]),

  1. (T+S)=T+S;
  2. (TS)=TS+TS where TS=TS is the composition of operators.

One also has [T,S]=[T,S]+[T,S] where [T,S]=TSST is the usual Lie bracket, which follows from the Jacobi identity.

The usual derivative, D = d/dx, is an operator on polynomials. By straightforward computation, its Pincherle derivative is

D=(ddx)=Id๐•‚[x]=1.

This formula generalizes to

(Dn)=(dndxn)=nDn1,

by induction. This proves that the Pincherle derivative of a differential operator

=andndxn=anDn

is also a differential operator, so that the Pincherle derivative is a derivation of Diff(๐•‚[x]).

When ๐•‚ has characteristic zero, the shift operator

Sh(f)(x)=f(x+h)

can be written as

Sh=n0hnn!Dn

by the Taylor formula. Its Pincherle derivative is then

Sh=n1hn(n1)!Dn1=hSh.

In other words, the shift operators are eigenvectors of the Pincherle derivative, whose spectrum is the whole space of scalars ๐•‚.

If T is shift-equivariant, that is, if T commutes with Sh or [T,Sh]=0, then we also have [T,Sh]=0, so that T is also shift-equivariant and for the same shift h.

The "discrete-time delta operator"

(δf)(x)=f(x+h)f(x)h

is the operator

δ=1h(Sh1),

whose Pincherle derivative is the shift operator δ=Sh.

See also

References

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