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Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality

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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. It has an elementary form, a complex form, and a general form.

Augustin Louis Cauchy wrote the first paper about the elementary form in 1821. The general form was discovered by Viktor Bunyakovsky in 1849 and independently by Hermann Schwarz in 1888.

Contents

Elementary Form

For any real numbers a_1, \ldots, a_n and b_1, \ldots, b_n, \biggl( \sum_{i=1}^{n}a_ib_i \biggr)^2 \le \biggl(\sum_{i=1}^{n}a_i^2 \biggr) \biggl(\sum_{i=1}^{n}b_i^2 \biggr), with equality when there exist constants \mu, \lambda not both zero such that for all 1 \le i \le n, \mu a_i = \lambda b_i.

Discussion

Consider the vectors \mathbf{a} = \langle a_1, \ldots a_n \rangle and {} \mathbf{b} = \langle b_1, \ldots b_n \rangle. If \theta is the angle formed by \mathbf{a} and \mathbf{b}, then the left-hand side of the inequality is equal to the square of the dot product of \mathbf{a} and \mathbf{b}, or \left( ||\mathbf{a}|| \cdot ||\mathbf{b}|| \cos\theta \right)^2. The right hand side of the inequality is equal to \left( ||\mathbf{a}|| \cdot ||\mathbf{b}|| \right)^2. The inequality then follows from |\cos\theta | \le 1, with equality when one of \mathbf{a,b} is a multiple of the other, as desired.

Complex Form

The inequality sometimes appears in the following form.

Let a_1, \ldots, a_n and b_1, \ldots, b_n be complex numbers. Then \biggl| \sum_{i=1}^na_ib_i \biggr|^2 \le \biggl(\sum_{i=1}^{n}|a_i^2| \biggr) \biggl( \sum_{i=1}^n |b_i^2| \biggr) . This appears to be more powerful, but it follows from \biggl| \sum_{i=1}^n a_ib_i \biggr| ^2 \le \biggl( \sum_{i=1}^n |a_i| \cdot |b_i| \biggr)^2 \le \biggl(\sum_{i=1}^n |a_i^2| \...

General Form

Let V be a vector space, and let \langle \cdot, \cdot \rangle : V \times V \to \mathbb{R} be an inner product. Then for any \mathbf{a,b} \in V, \langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle^2 \le \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle , with equality if and only if there exist constants \mu, \lambda not both zero such that \mu\mathbf{a} = \lambda\mathbf{b}.

Proof 1

Consider the polynomial of t \langle t\mathbf{a + b}, t\mathbf{a + b} \rangle = t^2\langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle + 2t\langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle + \langle... This must always be greater than or equal to zero, so it must have a non-positive discriminant, i.e., \langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle^2 must be less than or equal to \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle, with equality when \mathbf{a = 0} or when there exists some scalar -t such that -t\mathbf{a} = \mathbf{b}, as desired.

Proof 2

We consider \langle \mathbf{a-b, a-b} \rangle = \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle + \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle - 2 \langle \mathbf{a,b} \ran... Since this is always greater than or equal to zero, we have \langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle \le \frac{1}{2} \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle + \frac{1}{2} \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle . Now, if either \mathbf{a} or \mathbf{b} is equal to \mathbf{0}, then \langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle^2 = \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle = 0. Otherwise, we may normalize so that \langle \mathbf {a,a} \rangle = \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle = 1, and we have \langle \mathbf{a,b} \rangle \le 1 = \langle \mathbf{a,a} \rangle^{1/2} \langle \mathbf{b,b} \rangle^{1/2} , with equality when \mathbf{a} and \mathbf{b} 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 f,g : [a,b] \mapsto \mathbb{R}, \biggl( \int_{a}^b f(x)g(x)dx \biggr)^2 \le \int_{a}^b \bigl[ f(x) \bigr]^2dx \cdot \int_a^b \bigl[ g(x) \bigr]^2 dx with equality when there exist constants \mu, \lambda not both equal to zero such that for t \in [a,b], \mu \int_a^t f(x)dx = \lambda \int_a^t g(x)dx .

Problems

Introductory

  • Consider the function f(x)=\frac{(x+k)^2}{x^2+1},x\in (-\infty,\infty), where k is a positive integer. Show that f(x)\le k^2+1. (Source)
  • (APMO 1991 #3) Let a_1, a_2, \cdots, a_n, b_1, b_2, \cdots, b_n be positive real numbers such that a_1 + a_2 + \cdots + a_n = b_1 + b_2 + \cdots + b_n. Show that
\frac {a_1^2}{a_1 + b_1} + \frac {a_2^2}{a_2 + b_2} + \cdots + \frac {a_n^2}{a_n + b_n} \geq \frac {a_1 + a_2 + \cdots + a_n}...

Intermediate

  • Let ABC be a triangle such that

\left( \cot \frac{A}{2} \right)^2 + \left( 2 \cot \frac{B}{2} \right)^2 + \left( 3 \cot \frac{C}{2} \right)^2 = \left( \frac{... where s and r denote its semiperimeter and inradius, respectively. Prove that triangle ABC is similar to a triangle T whose side lengths are all positive integers with no common divisor and determine those integers. (Source)

Olympiad

  • P is a point inside a given triangle ABC. D, E, F are the feet of the perpendiculars from P to the lines BC, CA, AB, respectively. Find all P for which

\frac{BC}{PD} + \frac{CA}{PE} + \frac{AB}{PF} is least.

(Source)

Other Resources

Books

Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad algebra problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Algebra by Richard Rusczyk and Mathew Crawford. Over 1600 problems!
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