Conditional Extremals

Abstract

Imagine that measurements are made at times t0 and t1 of the trajectory of a physical system whose governing laws are given approximately by a class A of so-called prior vector fields. Because the physical laws are not known precisely, it might be that the measurements are not realised by the integral curve of any prior field. We want to estimate the behaviour of the physical system between times t0 and t1. An integral curve of an arbitrary vector field X is said to be feasible when it interpolates the measurements. When X is critical for L2 distance to A, the feasible curve is called a conditional extremum. When the distance to A is actually minimal, the conditional extremum is a best estimate for the intermediate behaviour of the system. The present paper does some of basic groundwork for investigating mathematical properties of conditional extrema, focusing on cases where A comprises a single prior field A. When A= 0 a conditional extremal is a geodesic arc, but this special case is not very representative. In general, A enters into the Euler-Lagrange equation for conditional extrema, and more can be said when A is conservative or has special symmetry. We characterise conservative priors on simply-connected Riemannian manifolds in terms of their conditional extrema: when time is reversed, a constant is added to the L2 distance. For some symmetric priors on space forms we obtain conditional extrema in terms of the Weierstrass elliptic function. For left-invariant priors on bi-invariant Lie groups, conditional extrema are shown to be right translations of pointwise-products of 1-parameter subgroups.

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