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{{Short description|Condition for a mathematical function to map some value to itself}}
In [[mathematics]], a '''fixed-point theorem''' is a result saying that a [[function (mathematics)|function]] ''F'' will have at least one [[fixed point (mathematics)|fixed point]] (a point ''x'' for which ''F''(''x'') = ''x''), under some conditions on ''F'' that can be stated in general terms
| editor = Brown, R. F.
| title = Fixed Point Theory and Its Applications
| year = 1988
| publisher = American Mathematical Society
| isbn
}}
| year = 2003▼
▲}}</ref>
== In mathematical analysis ==
The [[Banach fixed-point theorem]] (1922) gives a general criterion guaranteeing that, if it is satisfied, the procedure of [[iteration|iterating]] a function yields a fixed point.<ref>{{cite book
| author = Giles, John R.
| title = Introduction to the Analysis of Metric Spaces
| year = 1987
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
| isbn
}}</ref>
By contrast, the [[Brouwer fixed-point theorem]] (1911) is a non-[[Constructivism (mathematics)|constructive result]]: it says that any [[continuous function
For example, the [[cosine]] function is continuous in [−1,&
The [[Lefschetz fixed-point theorem]]<ref>{{cite journal |author=Solomon Lefschetz |title=On the fixed point formula |journal=[[Annals of Mathematics|Ann. of Math.]] |year=1937 |volume=38 |pages=819–822 |doi=10.2307/1968838 |issue=4}}</ref> (and the [[Nielsen theory|Nielsen fixed-point theorem]])<ref>{{cite book
| last1=Fenchel | first1=Werner | author1link=Werner Fenchel
| last2=Nielsen | first2=Jakob | author2link=Jakob Nielsen (mathematician)▼
| editor-last=Schmidt | editor-first=Asmus L.▼
| title=Discontinuous groups of isometries in the hyperbolic plane▼
| series=De Gruyter Studies in mathematics▼
| volume=29▼
▲| author2link=Jakob Nielsen (mathematician)
| publisher=Walter de Gruyter & Co.▼
| ___location=Berlin▼
▲| editor-first=Asmus L.
▲| title=Discontinuous groups of isometries in the hyperbolic plane
▲| series=De Gruyter Studies in mathematics
▲| volume=29
▲| publisher=Walter de Gruyter & Co.
▲| ___location=Berlin
}}</ref> from [[algebraic topology]] is notable because it gives, in some sense, a way to count fixed points.
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| author = Barnsley, Michael.
| title = Fractals Everywhere
| url = https://archive.org/details/fractalseverywhe0000barn
| url-access = registration
| year = 1988
| publisher = Academic Press, Inc.
| isbn
}}</ref>
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| title = A one-sentence proof that every prime ''p'' ≡ 1 (mod 4) is a sum of two squares
| volume = 97
| year = 1990
}}.</ref> == List of fixed-point theorems ==
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*[[Atiyah–Bott fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Banach fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Bekić's theorem]]
*[[Borel fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Bourbaki–Witt theorem]]
*[[Browder fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Brouwer fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Rothe's fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Caristi fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Diagonal lemma]], also known as the fixed-point lemma, for producing self-referential sentences of [[first-order logic]]
*[[Lawvere's fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Discrete fixed-point theorem]]s
*[[Earle-Hamilton fixed-point theorem]]
*[[Fixed-point combinator]], which shows that every term in untyped [[lambda calculus]] has a fixed point
*[[Fixed-point lemma for normal functions]]
*[[Fixed-point property]]
*[[Fixed-point theorems in infinite-dimensional spaces]]
*[[Injective metric space]]
*[[Kakutani fixed-point theorem]]
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*[[Tychonoff fixed-point theorem]]
{{div col end}}
== See also ==
* [[Trace formula (disambiguation)|Trace formula]]
== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
*{{cite book
| author1 = Agarwal, Ravi P.
| author2 = Meehan, Maria | author3 = O'Regan, Donal | title = Fixed Point Theory and Applications | year = 2001
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
| isbn
}}
*{{cite book
| author1 = Aksoy, Asuman|author1-link=Asuman Aksoy
| author2 = Khamsi, Mohamed A. | title = Nonstandard Methods in fixed point theory | url = https://archive.org/details/nonstandardmetho0000akso
| url-access = registration | year = 1990 | publisher = Springer Verlag
| isbn
}}
*{{cite book
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| year = 2005
| publisher = Springer Verlag
| isbn
}}
*{{cite book
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| year = 1989
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
| isbn
}}
*{{cite book
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| year = 1990
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
| isbn
}}
*{{cite book
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| isbn = 978-0-471-41825-2
}}
▲ |author1=Kirk, William A. |author2=Sims, Brailey | title = Handbook of Metric Fixed Point Theory
*{{cite book |author1=Šaškin, Jurij A |author2=Minachin, Viktor |author3=Mackey, George W. |title=Fixed Points |year=1991 |publisher=American Mathematical Society |isbn=0-8218-9000-X |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/fixedpoints0002shas }}
==External links==
*[http://www.math-linux.com/spip.php?article60 Fixed Point Method]
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Closure operators]]
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