Jacobian matrix and determinant


In vector calculus, the Jacobian matrix of a vector-valued function in several variables is the matrix of all its first-order partial derivatives. When this matrix is square, that is, when the function takes the same number of variables as input as the number of vector components of its output, its determinant is referred to as the Jacobian determinant. Both the matrix and the determinant are often referred to simply as the Jacobian in literature.
Suppose is a function such that each of its first-order partial derivatives exist on. This function takes a point as input and produces the vector as output. Then the Jacobian matrix of is defined to be an matrix, denoted by, whose th entry is, or explicitly
This matrix, whose entries are functions of, is denoted in various ways; common notations include,,, and . Note also that some authors define the Jacobian as the transpose of the form given above.
The Jacobian matrix represents the differential of at every point where is differentiable. In detail, if is a displacement vector represented by a column matrix, the matrix product is another displacement vector, that is the best approximation of the change of in a neighborhood of, if is differentiable at. This means that the function that maps to is the best linear approximation of for points close to. This linear function is known as the derivative or the differential of at.
When =, the Jacobian matrix is square, so its determinant is a well-defined function of, known as the Jacobian determinant of. It carries important information about the local behavior of. In particular, the function has locally in the neighborhood of a point an inverse function that is differentiable if and only if the Jacobian determinant is nonzero at . The Jacobian determinant also appears when changing the variables in multiple integrals.
When = 1, that is when is a scalar-valued function, the Jacobian matrix reduces to a row vector. This row vector of all first-order partial derivatives of is the transpose of the gradient of, i.e.
. Here we are adopting the convention that the gradient vector is a column vector. Specialising further, when = = 1, that is when is a scalar-valued function of a single variable, the Jacobian matrix has a single entry. This entry is the derivative of the function.
These concepts are named after the mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.

Jacobian matrix

The Jacobian of a vector-valued function in several variables generalizes the gradient of a scalar-valued function in several variables, which in turn generalizes the derivative of a scalar-valued function of a single variable. In other words, the Jacobian matrix of a scalar-valued function in several variables is its gradient and the gradient of a scalar-valued function of a single variable is its derivative.
At each point where a function is differentiable, its Jacobian matrix can also be thought of as describing the amount of "stretching", "rotating" or "transforming" that the function imposes locally near that point. For example, if is used to smoothly transform an image, the Jacobian matrix, describes how the image in the neighborhood of is transformed.
If a function is differentiable at a point, its differential is given in coordinates by the Jacobian matrix. However a function does not need to be differentiable for its Jacobian matrix to be defined, since only its first-order partial derivatives are required to exist.
If is differentiable at a point in, then its differential is represented by. In this case, the linear transformation represented by is the best linear approximation of near the point, in the sense that
where is a quantity that approaches zero much faster than the distance between and does as approaches. This approximation specializes to the approximation of a scalar function of a single variable by its Taylor polynomial of degree one, namely
In this sense, the Jacobian may be regarded as a kind of "first-order derivative" of a vector-valued function of several variables. In particular, this means that the gradient of a scalar-valued function of several variables may too be regarded as its "first-order derivative".
Composable differentiable functions and satisfy the chain rule, namely for in.
The Jacobian of the gradient of a scalar function of several variables has a special name: the Hessian matrix, which in a sense is the "second derivative" of the function in question.

Jacobian determinant

If, then is a function from to itself and the Jacobian matrix is a square matrix. We can then form its determinant, known as the Jacobian determinant. The Jacobian determinant is sometimes simply referred to as "the Jacobian".
The Jacobian determinant at a given point gives important information about the behavior of near that point. For instance, the continuously differentiable function is invertible near a point if the Jacobian determinant at is non-zero. This is the inverse function theorem. Furthermore, if the Jacobian determinant at is positive, then preserves orientation near ; if it is negative, reverses orientation. The absolute value of the Jacobian determinant at gives us the factor by which the function expands or shrinks volumes near ; this is why it occurs in the general substitution rule.
The Jacobian determinant is used when making a change of variables when evaluating a multiple integral of a function over a region within its domain. To accommodate for the change of coordinates the magnitude of the Jacobian determinant arises as a multiplicative factor within the integral. This is because the -dimensional element is in general a parallelepiped in the new coordinate system, and the -volume of a parallelepiped is the determinant of its edge vectors.
The Jacobian can also be used to solve systems of differential equations at an equilibrium point or approximate solutions near an equilibrium point. Its applications include determining the stability of the disease-free equilibrium in disease modelling.

Inverse

According to the inverse function theorem, the matrix inverse of the Jacobian matrix of an invertible function is the Jacobian matrix of the inverse function. That is, if the Jacobian of the function is continuous and nonsingular at the point in, then is invertible when restricted to some neighborhood of and
Conversely, if the Jacobian determinant is not zero at a point, then the function is locally invertible near this point, that is, there is a neighbourhood of this point in which the function is invertible.
The Jacobian conjecture is related to global invertibility in the case of a polynomial function, that is a function defined by n polynomials in n variables. It asserts that, if the Jacobian determinant is a non-zero constant, then the function is invertible and its inverse is a polynomial function.

Critical points

If is a differentiable function, a critical point of is a point where the rank of the Jacobian matrix is not maximal. This means that the rank at the critical point is lower than the rank at some neighbour point. In other words, let be the maximal dimension of the open balls contained in the image of ; then a point is critical if all minors of rank of are zero.
In the case where, a point is critical if the Jacobian determinant is zero.

Examples

Example 1

Consider the function with given by
Then we have
and
and the Jacobian matrix of is
and the Jacobian determinant is

Example 2: polar-Cartesian transformation

The transformation from polar coordinates to Cartesian coordinates, is given by the function with components:
The Jacobian determinant is equal to. This can be used to transform integrals between the two coordinate systems:

Example 3: spherical-Cartesian transformation

The transformation from spherical coordinates to Cartesian coordinates, is given by the function with components:
The Jacobian matrix for this coordinate change is
What this represents in the spherical-Cartesian transformation is the ratio of area of the new basis relative to the original basis.
The determinant is. As an example, since this determinant implies that the differential volume element. This determinant is not a constant, and varies with coordinates. It can be used to transform integrals between the two coordinate systems:

Example 4

The Jacobian matrix of the function with components
is
This example shows that the Jacobian matrix need not be a square matrix.

Example 5

The Jacobian determinant of the function with components
is
From this we see that reverses orientation near those points where and have the same sign; the function is locally invertible everywhere except near points where or. Intuitively, if one starts with a tiny object around the point and apply to that object, one will get a resulting object with approximately times the volume of the original one, with orientation reversed.

Other uses

The Jacobian serves as a linearized design matrix in statistical regression and curve fitting; see non-linear least squares.

Dynamical systems

Consider a dynamical system of the form, where is the derivative of with respect to the evolution parameter , and is differentiable. If, then is a stationary point. By the Hartman–Grobman theorem, the behavior of the system near a stationary point is related to the eigenvalues of, the Jacobian of at the stationary point. Specifically, if the eigenvalues all have real parts that are negative, then the system is stable near the stationary point, if any eigenvalue has a real part that is positive, then the point is unstable. If the largest real part of the eigenvalues is zero, the Jacobian matrix does not allow for an evaluation of the stability.

Newton's method

A square system of coupled nonlinear equations can be solved iteratively by Newton's method. This method uses the Jacobian matrix of the system of equations.

Surface analysis

Let n = 2 so the Jacobian is a 2 × 2 real matrix. Suppose a surface diffeomorphism f: UV in the neighborhood of p in U is written The matrix can be interpreted as a complex number: ordinary, split, or dual. Furthermore, since is invertible, the complex number has a polar decomposition or an alternative planar decomposition.
And again, each such complex number represents a group action on the tangent plane at p. The action is dilation by the norm of the complex number, and rotation respecting angle, hyperbolic angle, or slope, according to the case of Such action corresponds to a conformal mapping.