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Revision as of 14:10, 26 October 2007
The Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality (which is known by other names, including Cauchy's Inequality, Schwarz's Inequality, and the Cauchy-Bunyakovsky-Schwarz Inequality) is a well-known inequality with many elegant applications.
Contents
Elementary Form
For any real numbers
and
,
,
with equality when there exist constants
not both zero such that for all
,
.
Proof
There are several proofs; we will present an elegant one that does not generalize.
Consider the vectors
and
. If
is the angle formed by
and
, then the left-hand side of the inequality is equal to the square of the dot product of
and
, or
. The right hand side of the inequality is equal to
. The inequality then follows from
, with equality when one of
is a multiple of the other, as desired.
Complex Form
The inequality sometimes appears in the following form.
Let
and
be complex numbers. Then
.
This appears to be more powerful, but it follows immediately from
.
General Form
Let
be a vector space, and let
be an inner product. Then for any
,
,
with equality if and only if there exist constants
not both zero such that
.
Proof 1
Consider the polynomial of
.
This must always be greater than or equal to zero, so it must have a non-positive discriminant, i.e.,
must be less than or equal to
, with equality when
or when there exists some scalar
such that
, as desired.
Proof 2
We consider
.
Since this is always greater than or equal to zero, we have
.
Now, if either
or
is equal to
, then
. Otherwise, we may normalize so that
, and we have
,
with equality when
and
may be scaled to each other, as desired.
Examples
The elementary form of the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality is a special case of the general form, as is the Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality for Integrals: for integrable functions
,
,
with equality when there exist constants
not both equal to zero such that for
,
.
Other Resources
Books
- The Cauchy-Schwarz Master Class: An Introduction to the Art of Mathematical Inequalities by J. Michael Steele.
- Problem Solving Strategies by Arthur Engel contains significant material on inequalities.