From English Wikipedia @ Freddythechick
In the field of mathematical analysis for the calculus of variations, Γ-convergence (Gamma-convergence) is a notion of convergence for functionals. It was introduced by Ennio De Giorgi.
Definition
Let
be a topological space and
denote the set of all neighbourhoods of the point
. Let further
be a sequence of functionals on
. The Γ-lower limit and the Γ-upper limit are defined as follows:

.
are said to
-converge to
, if there exist a functional
such that
.
Definition in first-countable spaces
In first-countable spaces, the above definition can be characterized in terms of sequential
-convergence in the following way.
Let
be a first-countable space and
a sequence of functionals on
. Then
are said to
-converge to the
-limit
if the following two conditions hold:
- Lower bound inequality: For every sequence
such that
as
,

- Upper bound inequality: For every
, there is a sequence
converging to
such that

The first condition means that
provides an asymptotic common lower bound for the
. The second condition means that this lower bound is optimal.
Relation to Kuratowski convergence
-convergence is connected to the notion of Kuratowski-convergence of sets. Let
denote the epigraph of a function
and let
be a sequence of functionals on
. Then


where
denotes the Kuratowski limes inferior and
the Kuratowski limes superior in the product topology of
. In particular,
-converges to
in
if and only if
-converges to
in
. This is the reason why
-convergence is sometimes called epi-convergence.
Properties
- Minimizers converge to minimizers: If
-converge to
, and
is a minimizer for
, then every cluster point of the sequence
is a minimizer of
.
-limits are always lower semicontinuous.
-convergence is stable under continuous perturbations: If
-converges to
and
is continuous, then
will
-converge to
.
- A constant sequence of functionals
does not necessarily
-converge to
, but to the relaxation of
, the largest lower semicontinuous functional below
.
Applications
An important use for
-convergence is in homogenization theory. It can also be used to rigorously justify the passage from discrete to continuum theories for materials, for example, in elasticity theory.
See also
References
- A. Braides: Γ-convergence for beginners. Oxford University Press, 2002.
- G. Dal Maso: An introduction to Γ-convergence. Birkhäuser, Basel 1993.