In mathematics, the reduced derivative is a generalization of the notion of derivative that is well-suited to the study of functions of bounded variation. Although functions of bounded variation have derivatives in the sense of Radon measures, it is desirable to have a derivative that takes values in the same space as the functions themselves. Although the precisedefinition of the reduced derivative is quite involved, its key properties are quite easy to remember:
it is a multiple of the usual derivative wherever it exists;
at jump points, it is a multiple of the jump vector.
The notion of reduced derivative appears to have been introduced by Alexander Mielke and Florian Theil in 2004.
Definition
Let X be a separable, reflexiveBanach space with norm || || and fix T> 0. Let BV− denote the space of all left-continuous functions z : → X with bounded variation on . For any function of timef, use subscripts +/− to denote the right/left continuous versions of f, i.e. For any sub-interval of , let Var denote the variation of z over , i.e., the supremum The first step in the construction of the reduced derivative is the “stretch” time so that z can be linearly interpolated at its jump points. To this end, define The “stretched time” functionτ̂ is left-continuous ; moreover, τ̂− and τ̂+ are strictly increasing and agree except at the jump points of z. Setting T̂ = τ̂, this “stretch” can be inverted by Using this, the stretched version of z is defined by where θ ∈ and The effect of this definition is to create a new function ẑ which “stretches out” the jumps of z by linear interpolation. A quick calculation shows that ẑ is not just continuous, but also lies in a Sobolev space: The derivative of ẑwith respect toτ is defined almost everywhere with respect to Lebesgue measure. The reduced derivative of z is the pull-back of this derivative by the stretching function τ̂ : → . In other words, Associated with this pull-back of the derivative is the pull-back of Lebesgue measure on , which defines the differential measureμz:
Properties
The reduced derivative rd is defined only μz-almost everywhere on .