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Quasiconvexity is not invariant under transposition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2007

Stefan Müller
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, Inselstr. 22-26, 04103 Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

An example is given of a quasiconvex f : M2×3 → R such that the transposed function f̃ : M3×2 → R given by f̃(F) = f(FT) is not quasiconvex. For f̃ one can take Sverák's quartic polynomial that is rank-one convex but not quasiconvex. The proof is closely related to the observation that the map vv1v2v3 is weakly continuous from L3(R3; R3) into distributions provided that A(Dv) = (∂2v1, ∂3v1, ∂1v2, ∂3v2, ∂1v3, ∂2v3) is compact in W−1,3(R3; R6).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 2000

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