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Mathematics-Online lexicon:

Directional Derivative


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The directional derivative, i.e. the derivative in direction of a vector $ v$, is given as

$\displaystyle \partial_v f(x) = \lim_{h\to0} \frac{f(x+hv)-f(x)}{h}
. $

With the chain rule it may be calculated as

$\displaystyle \left(\frac{d}{dt} f(x+tv)\right)_{t=0} = f^\prime(x)v .
$

Especially $ \partial_{e_\nu} f$ coincides with the $ \nu $-th partial derivative.

The directional derivative is the rate of change of $ f$ along the straight line through $ x$ in direction $ v .$ It is maximal when $ v$ has the same direction as    grad$ \,f(x)$ and least when $ v$ points in the opposite direction.

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see also:


[Examples]

  automatically generated 5/30/2011