What is Gradient: Definition and 720 Discussions

In vector calculus, the gradient of a scalar-valued differentiable function f of several variables is the vector field (or vector-valued function)




f


{\displaystyle \nabla f}
whose value at a point



p


{\displaystyle p}
is the vector whose components are the partial derivatives of



f


{\displaystyle f}
at



p


{\displaystyle p}
. That is, for



f
:


R


n




R



{\displaystyle f\colon \mathbb {R} ^{n}\to \mathbb {R} }
, its gradient




f
:


R


n





R


n




{\displaystyle \nabla f\colon \mathbb {R} ^{n}\to \mathbb {R} ^{n}}
is defined at the point



p
=
(

x

1


,

,

x

n


)


{\displaystyle p=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})}
in n-dimensional space as the vector:





f
(
p
)
=


[







f




x

1





(
p
)













f




x

n





(
p
)



]


.


{\displaystyle \nabla f(p)={\begin{bmatrix}{\frac {\partial f}{\partial x_{1}}}(p)\\\vdots \\{\frac {\partial f}{\partial x_{n}}}(p)\end{bmatrix}}.}
The nabla symbol






{\displaystyle \nabla }
, written as an upside-down triangle and pronounced "del", denotes the vector differential operator.
The gradient is dual to the total derivative



d
f


{\displaystyle df}
: the value of the gradient at a point is a tangent vector – a vector at each point; while the value of the derivative at a point is a cotangent vector – a linear function on vectors. They are related in that the dot product of the gradient of f at a point p with another tangent vector v equals the directional derivative of f at p of the function along v; that is,




f
(
p
)


v

=




f




v




(
p
)
=
d

f


v



(
p
)


{\textstyle \nabla f(p)\cdot \mathbf {v} ={\frac {\partial f}{\partial \mathbf {v} }}(p)=df_{\mathbf {v} }(p)}
.
The gradient vector can be interpreted as the "direction and rate of fastest increase". If the gradient of a function is non-zero at a point p, the direction of the gradient is the direction in which the function increases most quickly from p, and the magnitude of the gradient is the rate of increase in that direction, the greatest absolute directional derivative. Further, the gradient is the zero vector at a point if and only if it is a stationary point (where the derivative vanishes). The gradient thus plays a fundamental role in optimization theory, where it is used to maximize a function by gradient ascent.
The gradient admits multiple generalizations to more general functions on manifolds; see § Generalizations.

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  1. T

    Bernoullis & Pressure Gradient force

    The more I learn about Bernoulli's the less I feel I understand it The problem statement If I had a ball (balloon) filled with fluid at pressure P being acted on by two opposing forces F+ and F- F+ being larger than F- there would be a net force accelerating the ball to the right but the...
  2. S

    Contravariant Four-gradient ESN in Wikipedia appears wrong

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  3. Q

    Fluid Boundary layer in presence of a postive heat gradient

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  4. Summer95

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  5. Pallatinus

    Show that the gradient is perpendicular to a point

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  6. Drakkith

    Directional Derivative at an Angle with a 3d Gradient

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  7. Drakkith

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  8. S

    Metric tensor and gradient in spherical polar coordinates

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  9. S

    I Questions about gradient and scalar product

    I recently learned that the general formula for the dot product between two vectors A and B is: gμνAμBν Well, I now have a few questions: 1. We know how in Cartesian coordinates, the dot product between a vector and itself (in other words A ⋅ A) is equal to the square of the magnitude |A|2...
  10. merav1985

    A Gradient of deformation tensor-rigid body

    Is there a criterion for a gradient of deformation tensor to be describing a rigid body??
  11. Einstein's Cat

    B How Is the Gradient of an Angle Bisector Determined from Two Intersecting Lines?

    Say there are two lines that can be described as y=m1x + c1 and y= m2x + c2; they intercept at the point (x, y). There's a line that will bisect the angle that the two lines form as they intercept and it can be described as y= m3x + c3; this line will also intercept the other two lines at (x...
  12. C

    How to Prove that u and Gradient(f(u)) are Colinear on the Unit Sphere?

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  13. C

    Gradient at roller and pin support

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  14. I

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  15. S

    I Coordinate independent version of "gradient"?

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  16. H

    I How to write the Frenet equations using the vector gradient?

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  17. H

    I Derive the formula for gradient using chain rule

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  18. W

    Can vector fields have gradients, and how are they calculated?

    The force on a magnetic dipole in a magnetic field is the dot product of the magnetic moment and the gradient of the field B, but gradients are operations done on scalar fields to produce vector fields. How does one calculate the gradient of a vector field if field gradients are only defined...
  19. H

    I Use Rolle's theorem to show repeated root has zero gradient

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  20. Ravi Singh choudhary

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  21. K

    I Gradient Derivation: Simplifying Directional Derivatives

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  22. K

    I Why Does the Gradient Point Towards the Greatest Increase?

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  23. J

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  24. M

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  25. perplexabot

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  26. H

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  27. T

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  28. B

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  30. E

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  31. T

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  32. Jason Sylvestre

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  33. ytht100

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  34. L

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  35. T

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  37. D

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  38. S

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  39. E

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  40. H

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  41. H

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  42. M

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  43. C

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  44. EsmeeDijk

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  45. Amrator

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  46. A

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  47. Z

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  48. S

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  49. H

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  50. I

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