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Sign function

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Signum function

In mathematics, the sign function or signum function (from signum, Latin for "sign") is a function that has the value −1, +1 or 0 according to whether the sign of a given real number is positive or negative, or the given number is itself zero. In mathematical notation the sign function is often represented as or .[1]

Definition

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The signum function of a real number is a piecewise function which is defined as follows:[1]

The law of trichotomy states that every real number must be positive, negative or zero. The signum function denotes which unique category a number falls into by mapping it to one of the values −1, +1 or 0, which can then be used in mathematical expressions or further calculations.

For example:

Basic properties

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Any real number can be expressed as the product of its absolute value and its sign function:

It follows that whenever is not equal to 0 we have

Similarly, for any real number , We can also be certain that: and so

Some algebraic identities

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The signum can also be written using the Iverson bracket notation:

The signum can also be written using the floor and the absolute value functions: If is accepted to be equal to 1, the signum can also be written for all real numbers as

Properties in mathematical analysis

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Discontinuity at zero

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The sign function is not continuous at .

Although the sign function takes the value −1 when is negative, the ringed point (0, −1) in the plot of indicates that this is not the case when . Instead, the value jumps abruptly to the solid point at (0, 0) where . There is then a similar jump to when is positive. Either jump demonstrates visually that the sign function is discontinuous at zero, even though it is continuous at any point where is either positive or negative.

These observations are confirmed by any of the various equivalent formal definitions of continuity in mathematical analysis. A function , such as is continuous at a point if the value can be approximated arbitrarily closely by the sequence of values where the make up any infinite sequence which becomes arbitrarily close to as becomes sufficiently large. In the notation of mathematical limits, continuity of at requires that as for any sequence for which The arrow symbol can be read to mean approaches, or tends to, and it applies to the sequence as a whole.

This criterion fails for the sign function at . For example, we can choose to be the sequence which tends towards zero as increases towards infinity. In this case, as required, but and for each so that . This counterexample confirms more formally the discontinuity of at zero that is visible in the plot.

Despite the sign function having a very simple form, the step change at zero causes difficulties for traditional calculus techniques, which are quite stringent in their requirements. Continuity is a frequent constraint. One solution can be to approximate the sign function by a smooth continuous function; others might involve less stringent approaches that build on classical methods to accommodate larger classes of function.

Smooth approximations and limits

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The signum function coincides with the limits and as well as,

Here, is the Hyperbolic tangent and the superscript of -1, above it, is shorthand notation for the inverse function of the Trigonometric function, tangent.

For , a smooth approximation of the sign function is Another approximation is which gets sharper as ; note that this is the derivative of . This is inspired from the fact that the above is exactly equal for all nonzero if , and has the advantage of simple generalization to higher-dimensional analogues of the sign function (for example, the partial derivatives of ).

See Heaviside step function § Analytic approximations.

Differentiation and integration

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The signum function is differentiable everywhere except when Its derivative is zero when is non-zero:

This follows from the differentiability of any constant function, for which the derivative is always zero on its domain of definition. The signum acts as a constant function when it is restricted to the negative open region where it equals -1. It can similarly be regarded as a constant function within the positive open region where the corresponding constant is +1. Although these are two different constant functions, their derivative is equal to zero in each case.

It is not possible to define a classical derivative at , because there is a discontinuity there. Nevertheless, the signum function has a definite integral between any pair of finite values a and b, even when the interval of integration includes zero. The resulting integral for a and b is then equal to the difference between their absolute values:

Conversely, the signum function is the derivative of the absolute value function, except where there is an abrupt change in gradient before and after zero:

We can understand this as before by considering the definition of the absolute value on the separate regions and For example, the absolute value function is identical to in the region whose derivative is the constant value +1, which equals the value of there.

Because the absolute value is a convex function, there is at least one subderivative at every point, including at the origin. Everywhere except zero, the resulting subdifferential consists of a single value, equal to the value of the sign function. In contrast, there are many subderivatives at zero, with just one of them taking the value . A subderivative value 0 occurs here because the absolute value function is at a minimum. The full family of valid subderivatives at zero constitutes the subdifferential interval , which might be thought of informally as "filling in" the graph of the sign function with a vertical line through the origin, making it continuous as a two dimensional curve.

In integration theory, the signum function is a weak derivative of the absolute value function. Weak derivatives are equivalent if they are equal almost everywhere, making them impervious to isolated anomalies at a single point. This includes the change in gradient of the absolute value function at zero, which prohibits there being a classical derivative.

Although it is not differentiable at in the ordinary sense, under the generalized notion of differentiation in distribution theory, the derivative of the signum function is two times the Dirac delta function. This can be demonstrated using the identity [2] where is the Heaviside step function using the standard formalism. Using this identity, it is easy to derive the distributional derivative:[3]

Fourier transform

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The Fourier transform of the signum function is[4] where means taking the Cauchy principal value.

Generalizations

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Complex signum

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The signum function can be generalized to complex numbers as: for any complex number except . The signum of a given complex number is the point on the unit circle of the complex plane that is nearest to . Then, for , where is the complex argument function.

For reasons of symmetry, and to keep this a proper generalization of the signum function on the reals, also in the complex domain one usually defines, for :

Another generalization of the sign function for real and complex expressions is ,[5] which is defined as: where is the real part of and is the imaginary part of .

We then have (for ):

Polar decomposition of matrices

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Thanks to the Polar decomposition theorem, a matrix ( and ) can be decomposed as a product where is a unitary matrix and is a self-adjoint, or Hermitian, positive definite matrix, both in . If is invertible then such a decomposition is unique and plays the role of 's signum. A dual construction is given by the decomposition where is unitary, but generally different than . This leads to each invertible matrix having a unique left-signum and right-signum .

In the special case where and the (invertible) matrix , which identifies with the (nonzero) complex number , then the signum matrices satisfy and identify with the complex signum of , . In this sense, polar decomposition generalizes to matrices the signum-modulus decomposition of complex numbers.

Signum as a generalized function

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At real values of , it is possible to define a generalized function–version of the signum function, such that everywhere, including at the point , unlike , for which . This generalized signum allows construction of the algebra of generalized functions, but the price of such generalization is the loss of commutativity. In particular, the generalized signum anticommutes with the Dirac delta function[6] in addition, cannot be evaluated at ; and the special name, is necessary to distinguish it from the function . ( is not defined, but .)

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b "Signum function - Maeckes". www.maeckes.nl.
  2. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Sign". MathWorld.
  3. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Heaviside Step Function". MathWorld.
  4. ^ Burrows, B. L.; Colwell, D. J. (1990). "The Fourier transform of the unit step function". International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. 21 (4): 629–635. doi:10.1080/0020739900210418.
  5. ^ Maple V documentation. May 21, 1998
  6. ^ Yu.M.Shirokov (1979). "Algebra of one-dimensional generalized functions". Theoretical and Mathematical Physics. 39 (3): 471–477. Bibcode:1979TMP....39..471S. doi:10.1007/BF01017992. Archived from the original on 2012-12-08.