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Let $\mathbb{D}^n$ be the closed $n$-dimensional unit ball, and let $f:\mathbb{D}^n \to \mathbb{R}^n$ be smooth. Suppose that $df$ is invertible outside a set of Hausdorff dimension $\le n-1$, and that $\text{rank}(df) \ge n-1 $ on $\partial \mathbb{D}^n$.

Question: Do there exist $f_n \in C^{\infty}(\mathbb{D}^n, \mathbb{R}^n)$ such that $f_n \to f$ in $W^{1,2}(\mathbb{D}^n, \mathbb{R}^n)$ and $\text{rank}(df_n) \ge n-1 $ everywhere on the interior $ \text{Int}(\mathbb{D}^n) $?

Easier question:

My intuition is that the set of points where the rank is less than $n-1$ should be very small (generically). Indeed, it is the set where all the $n-1$-minors of $df$ vanish; these are $n^2$ (independent?) equations. Thus, I expect that typically, the Hausdorff dimension of this set would be zero. Can we prove that?

That is, can we find $f_n \in C^{\infty}(\mathbb{D}^n, \mathbb{R}^n)$ such that $f_n \to f$ in $W^{1,2}(\mathbb{D}^n, \mathbb{R}^n)$ and $\dim_{\mathcal H}(\{ p \, | \, \text{rank}(df_n)_p < n-1 \})=0$?

Edit 2:

As commented by Dap, the algebraic set of matrices of rank $\le n-2$ has codimension 4. So, for $n \ge 5$ we shouldn't expect to get dimension $0$ just by generic modifications and dimension arguments. However, we may get dimension $0$ for dimension $n=4$. (Can this be formalized?)

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  • $\begingroup$ How small can the set where $df$ is not invertible can be? I do not know if I can prove anything if its dimension is $n-1$, but if the set is rather small and $n\geq 4$, I think there can be an approximation. If such a claim is correct, it would contradict the answer by Dmitri Panov. $\endgroup$ Oct 14, 2019 at 3:25
  • $\begingroup$ Regarding the intuition: the algebraic set of matrices of rank $\leq n-2$ has codimension $4.$ So for $n\geq 5$ you can't expect to get dimension $0$ just by crude generic modifications and dimension arguments (conversely, you can get dimension $0$ for $n=4$ by dimension arguments). $\endgroup$
    – Dap
    Oct 28, 2019 at 19:51
  • $\begingroup$ @PiotrHajlasz Dear Piotr, do you think that if the singular set can be arbitrarily bad (we do not assume anything on it), than probably no approximation should exist? $\endgroup$ Nov 5, 2019 at 6:28

2 Answers 2

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I believe the answer is positive.

First step: reduce to the case that $\mathrm{rank}(df_x)\geq n-1$ except on a finite union of submanifolds of dimension at most $n-4.$

Proof: For $r=0,\dots,n-2,$ let $M_r\subset \mathbb R^{n\times n}$ be the set of matrices of rank exactly $r.$ Each of these is a smooth manifold of dimension at most $n^2-4.$ For each such $r,$ consider the map $\phi_r:\mathrm{int}(\mathbb D^n)\times M_r\to\mathbb R^{n\times n}$ defined by $\phi_r(x,M)=M-df_x.$ A preimage $\phi_r^{-1}(\{N\})$ consists of pairs $(x,df_x+N)$ where $x$ is such that $df_x+N$ has rank $r$ i.e. such that $x\mapsto f(x)+Nx$ has a derivative of rank $r.$ By the preimage theorem, if $N$ is regular for $\phi_r$ then this preimage is a manifold of codimension at least $4.$ Since this preimage is actually a graph of the smooth function $x\mapsto df_x+N,$ projecting away the second component doesn't affect the codimension. A similar argument can be applied to the boundary of $\mathbb D^n.$ By Sard's theorem, almost all $N$ are regular values for all these maps. Take a small such $N$ so that $x\mapsto f(x)+Nx$ is approximately $f.$ $\square$

Actually it will be useful to also require $\mathrm{rank}(df_0)\geq n-1,$ which is easy enough because it holds for almost all $N$ - just pick $N$ outside $(\bigcup_r M_r)-df_0.$

Second step: given $\epsilon>0,$ we can construct a diffeo $\phi$ from $\mathrm{int}(\mathbb D^n)$ to a subset of the points $x$ with $\mathrm{rank}(df_x)\geq n-1,$ such that $\max_x|d\phi_x|= O(1/\epsilon),$ and the set where $\phi(x)\neq x$ has measure $O(\epsilon^3).$ The implicit constants here are allowed to depend on $f.$

Proof: Let $E$ denote the exceptional set $\{x\in\mathrm{int}(\mathbb D^n)\mid \mathrm{rank}(df_x)<n-1\}.$ The idea is to push $E$ away from the origin in a radial direction, out of the disc.

Let $\epsilon>0.$ Define $$R_0=\min_{x\in E}|x|.$$ Define $E'$ to be the set of points $v\in S^{n-1}$ such that $\lambda v\in E$ for some $0\leq \lambda < 1$ - the radial projection of $E$ to the boundary of the disc. I will argue that the $\epsilon$-neighborhood of $E'$ in $S^{n-1}$ (the set of points at distance at most $\epsilon$ from $E'$) has $(n-1)$-dimensional volume at most $O(\epsilon^3).$ The homeomorphism $\phi:(v,r)\mapsto rv$ from $S^{n-1}\times (R_0/2,1)$ to $\{x\in D^n\mid |x|\in(R_0/2,1)\}$ is a diffeo. So the preimage of the the at-most-$(n-4)$-dimensional manifold $E$ still has Minkowski dimension $n-4.$ It can therefore be covered by a set of $N(\epsilon)$ balls $B((v_i,r_i),\epsilon)$ such that $N(\epsilon) \epsilon^{n-4}=O(1).$ The projected balls $B(v_i,\epsilon)\subset S^{n-1}$ cover $E'$ and still satisfy $N(\epsilon) \epsilon^{n-4}=O(1).$ This means the $(n-1)$-dimensional volume is at most $O(1)N(\epsilon) \epsilon^{n-1}=O(\epsilon^3).$ Doubling the radii gives a set $\bigcup_i B(v_i,2\epsilon)$ still of $(n-1)$-dimensional volume $O(\epsilon^3),$ and containing the $\epsilon$-neighborhood of $E'.$

We will need a function $h:S^{n-1}\to[R_0/4,2]$ such that:

  1. $h$ is smooth
  2. $h\leq R_0/2$ on $E'$
  3. $h\geq 1$ except on the $\epsilon$-neighborhood of $E'$
  4. $h$ has Lipschitz constant $O(1/\epsilon)$

To construct such a function, first define $g(v)=R_0/4$ for $v\in E',$ and $g(v)=2$ for $v$ not in the $\epsilon$-neighborhood of $E'.$ Note that $g$ has Lipschitz constant at most $2/\epsilon.$ By the Kirszbraun theorem, $g$ extends to a function $S^{n-1}\to [R_0/4,2]$ with the same Lipschitz constant.

However $g$ may not be smooth. To deal with this, we can think of $S^{n-1}$ as the symmetric space $SO(n)/SO(n-1),$ so $g$ is a function on $SO(n)$ invariant under the right action of $SO(n-1)$ (specifically, $SO(n-1)$ is the stabilizer of $(1,0,0,\dots,0),$ and a rotation $\rho\in SO(n)$ corresponds to the point $\rho\cdot (1,0,0,\dots,0)\in S^{n-1}$). Convolve by left multiplication by a smooth mollifier $SO(n)\to\mathbb R$ supported on a small ball around the identity. The resulting function is still invariant under the right $SO(n-1)$ action, so corresponds to a function $h:S^{n-1}\to [R_0/4,2].$ This function $h$ will be smooth (basically by the implicit function theorem). It is a convex combination of rotated versions of $g,$ where each rotation moves points by no more than $R_0\epsilon/8$ say. This ensures conditions (2.) and (3.), and also (4.) because the set of functions with Lipschitz constant $\leq 2/\epsilon$ is convex.

Let $\psi:\mathbb R\to\mathbb R$ be a smooth function with $\psi(x)=x$ for $x\leq 0,$ and $\psi(x)<R_0/2$ and $0<\psi'(x)\leq 1$ everywhere. Define $\phi:\mathrm{int}(\mathbb D^n)\to \mathrm{int}(\mathbb D^n)$ by $\phi(0)=0$ and $$\phi(rv)=(\psi(r-h(v))+h(v))v$$ for unit vectors $v$ and real $0<r<1.$ Then $\phi(rv)=rv$ if $r\leq h(v),$ in particular for $r\leq R_0/4$ or $h(v)\geq 1.$ So $\phi(x)=x$ in a neighborhood of zero, which ensures $\phi$ is smooth at zero. And $\phi(rv)=rv$ for all $0<r<1$ and $v\not\in E'$; since $E'$ has $(n-1)$-dimensional measure $O(\epsilon^3),$ the set of $x$ of the form $rv$ with $v\not\in E'$ has $n$-dimensional measure $O(\epsilon^3).$ (The probability that a uniformly chosen $x\in D^n$ satisfies $x/|x|\in E'$ is the same as the probability that a uniformly chosen $v\in S^{n-1}$ lies in $E'.$)

The Lipschitz constant of $\phi$ can be bounded by bounding the derivatives of $\phi$ along a path through $(r,v)$ with $r>R_0/4$ and $|\dot r|,|\dot v|\leq 1.$ Writing $h=h(v)$ and $\psi=\psi(r-h),$ the chain rule gives $|\dot h|=O(1/\epsilon)$ and hence $|\dot\psi|=O(1/\epsilon).$ So $$\frac{d}{dt} \phi(rv) = (\dot\psi+\dot h)v + (\psi+h)\dot v = O(1/\epsilon)$$ which means $\max_x|d\phi_x|=O(1/\epsilon).$ $\square$

The integral of $|d(f\circ \phi)-df|^2$ is at most the maximum value of the integrand, $O(1/\epsilon^2),$ multiplied by the volume of the set where the integrand can be non-zero, $O(\epsilon^3),$ giving $O(\epsilon)$ overall. The integral of $|(f\circ \phi)-f|^2$ is even better: $O(\epsilon^3).$ So $\|f-f\circ \phi\|^2_{W^{1,2}}=O(\epsilon).$ And the rank of $f\circ \phi$ will be $\geq n-1$ everywhere.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thank you. Just to be sure I understand: For small ranks $r$, $\phi_r^{-1}(N)$ will be empty for generic $N $, right? We have $\dim(\phi_r^{-1}(N))=n-(n-r)^2 \ge 0 \iff n \ge (n-r)^2 \iff r \ge n-\sqrt{n}$. (So, $r < n-\sqrt{n}$ corresponds to the case of Sard's theorem where the dimension of the source is smaller than the dimension of the target ). $\endgroup$ Nov 2, 2019 at 6:58
  • $\begingroup$ @AsafShachar: that's right - in other words in Sard's theorem take "critical point" to mean "derivative is not surjective" to get a stronger notion of "regular value". (I just learnt from Wikipedia that this is not the standard meaning of "critical point".) $\endgroup$
    – Dap
    Nov 4, 2019 at 11:07
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks. I have some more questions on the second part: (1) Why $g(v)=\infty$ except on a set of dimension at most $n-4,$ implies that $h(v)=2$ except on a set of $(n-1)$-dimensional measure at most $O(\epsilon^3)$? In particular, do you claim that $g(v)=\infty \Rightarrow h(v)=2$? I don't see why... (2) I don't understand how $\phi(rv)$ is defined when $g(v)=\infty$. (It should be "$(\psi(-\infty)+\infty)v$". Should I interpret this as $v$?... $\endgroup$ Nov 5, 2019 at 6:22
  • $\begingroup$ cont': (3) I don't understand the last sentence "And the Lipschitz constant of $\phi$ will be $O(1/\epsilon)$ because this $g$ has Lipschitz constant at most $1/\epsilon.$"The definition of $g$ does not involve $\epsilon$ at all. Should this be related to the relation between $\psi$ and $\epsilon$ in the definition of $\psi$?BTW, I just wanted to say that the idea you suggested is very nice, and that you have answered many many question of mine lately. $\endgroup$ Nov 5, 2019 at 6:24
  • $\begingroup$ If I will ever write a paper which uses most of them (which I am not really sure at the moment...) I will invite you to be a coauthor, if you would be interested, or give you credit in any other way you may want (that is, only if you would want any. I see you are anonymous here...) $\endgroup$ Nov 5, 2019 at 6:32
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This is not a complete answer, it requires some literature search. But I believe still that the answer to this question is negative and the proper setting of this question is within singularity theory and things like stable singularities.

Namely, if you go to the book

Singularity Theory I. Author(s): V. I. Arnold, V. V. Goryunov, O. V. Lyashko, V. A. Vasil’ev (auth.) Series: Encyclopedia of Mathematical Sciences 6

and look on page 160, there is a theorem, attributed to Porteuos (Porteous, I.R.: The second-order decomposition of $\Sigma^2$ Topology 11, 325-334 (1972).),

Theorem. A generic map $f: N^n\to P^n$ can be written, in suitable coordinates in a neighborhood of an elliptic [resp. hyperbolic] singular point 0 as

$$y_1=x_1,\ldots, y_{n-2}=x_{n-2}, \, y_{n-1}=x_{n-1}x_n,\,y_n=x_{n-1}^2-x_n^2+x_{n-3}x_{n-1}+x_{n-2}x_n$$ [resp $y_n=x_{n-1}^2+x_n^2+...$]

This formula makes sense starting from $n=4$. Note that the rank of the map at $(0,\ldots, 0)$ is $n-2$. So I interpret this theorem that the map $\mathbb R^4\to \mathbb R^4$ given by the above formula can not be perturbed in such a way so to get rid of a point where the rank of the differential equals $2$. This result is about small smooth perturbations, but I doubt that involving the functional space $W^{1,2}$ will make any difference.

ADDED: Easier question.

Concerning the second part of the question, it should follow from the result called "Strong tranversality Theorem" in the book of Arnol'd, Varchenko, Gussein-Zade, page 38 "Singularities of differentiable maps, volume 1"

Theorem.(Thom) Let $M^n$ be a closed manifold and $C$ a closed submanifold of the space of jets $J^k(M,N)$. Then the set of maps $f:M\to N$ whose $k$-jet extensions are transversal to $C$ is an open everywhere dense set in the set of all smooth maps from $M$ to $N$.

In the case under consideration it is enough to consider $1$-jets, since we are only interested in the condition on the rank of the differential. Now this theorem will give you codimension 4, as was noticed in the comments.

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    $\begingroup$ Actually, approximation in the $W^{1,2}$ makes a huge difference so, although this is a very nice example, I do not think it answers the question. $\endgroup$ Oct 14, 2019 at 3:19
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks for your comment Piotr. You might be right, I don't understand how bad this $W^{1,2}$ is. Yet I'll leave this example so far, since at least it shows why one can't take $C^2$, or maybe $C^3$-small perturbations (I believe). As for the whole question, I still doubt that the answer will be positive. This would amount to proving some kind of h-principle. But who knows. I would still try to look for some topological obstructions $\endgroup$ Oct 14, 2019 at 11:33

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