Using Banach's Fixed Point Theorem, show that the following system has at least one solution: x

Kapalci

Kapalci

Answered question

2022-06-29

Using Banach's Fixed Point Theorem, show that the following system has at least one solution:
x = 0.000001 x 2 + 10 sin y + 1
y = 0.000001 y 3 0.01 cos x 1
Here is what I have tried:
Consider the function defined by
f ( x , y ) = ( 0.000001 x 2 + 10 sin y + 1 , 0.000001 y 3 0.01 cos x 1 )
and show that it has a fixed point. If it does, then that fixed point is clearly a solution to our system.
I used the standard Euclidean distance between two points and attempted to show that
d ( f ( x 1 , y 1 ) , f ( x 2 , y 2 ) ) d ( ( x 1 , y 1 ) , ( x 2 , y 2 ) )
In doing so, I greatly struggle to manipulate the left-hand side so that it is clearly less than or equal to the right-hand side of the inequality above. I tremendously appreciate any advice, and if there is a smarter way to approach this, I appreciate any hints you are willing to offer.

Answer & Explanation

Ethen Valentine

Ethen Valentine

Beginner2022-06-30Added 15 answers

Idea: the mean value theorem shows that if f is continuous on [ a , b ], differentiable on ( a , b ), and f ( x ) M on ( a , b ), then | f ( x ) f ( y ) | M | x y | on ( a , b ). See if you can adapt that to a function of two variables.

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