Hermite–Hadamard inequality

{{distinguish|Hadamard's inequality}}

In mathematics, the Hermite–Hadamard inequality, named after Charles Hermite and Jacques Hadamard and sometimes also called Hadamard's inequality, states that if a function f : [ab] → R is convex, then the following chain of inequalities hold:

: f\left( \frac{a+b}{2}\right) \le \frac{1}{b - a}\int_a^b f(x)\,dx \le \frac{f(a) + f(b)}{2}.

The inequality has been generalized to higher dimensions: if \Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^n is a bounded, convex domain and f:\Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R} is a positive convex function, then

: \frac{1}

\Omega
\int_\Omega f(x) \, dx \leq \frac{c_n}
\partial \Omega
\int_{\partial \Omega} f(y) \, d\sigma(y)

where c_n is a constant depending only on the dimension.

References

{{Convex analysis and variational analysis}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hermite-Hadamard inequality}}

Category:Inequalities (mathematics)

Category:Theorems involving convexity