The original functional was J[x]=int_0^1 (x)*f(x)*f′(x)dx with h(x)=x.

mriteyl

mriteyl

Answered question

2022-10-02

The original functional was   J [ x ] = 0 1 x f ( x ) f ( x ) d x with   h ( x ) = x. Solved for the Gateau derivative:   J [ f , h ] = 0 1 x f ( x ) h ( x ) d x + 0 1 x f ( x ) h ( x ) d x. To use the Euler method,   L = x f x + x f x such that   L f = x 2 , L f = x 2 , d d x L f = 2 x. However, I must have made a mistake that I can't see with that because it yields   x 2 2 x = 0 which doesn't tell me anything about what   f must be.

Answer & Explanation

Abigayle Lynn

Abigayle Lynn

Beginner2022-10-03Added 12 answers

The functional is
J [ f ] = 0 1 L ( x , f ( x ) , f ( x ) ) d x = 0 1 x f ( x ) f ( x ) d x
The Euler-Lagrange equation for this functional, with L = x f f is given by
f L ( x , f , f ) d d x f L ( x , f , f ) = f ( x f f ) d d x f ( x f f ) = x f d d x ( x f ) = f
Therefore, the functional has a stationary point for f ( x ) 0.
At f = 0, J [ f ] = 0, which is not necessarily an extreme value. That is to say, there exist f 1 ( x ) and f 2 ( x ) for which L [ f 1 ] > 0 and L [ f 2 ] < 0 (e.g., f 1 ( x ) = x and f 2 ( x ) = 1 x).

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