Applications of the Painlev\'e-Kuratowski convergence: Lipschitz functions with converging Clarke subdifferentials and convergence of sets defined by converging equations
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 00:44 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Lipschitz functions converge locally uniformly when their Clarke subdifferentials converge in the Painlevé-Kuratowski sense
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We generalise to Lipschitz functions the classical theorem stating that given a sequence of smooth functions with locally uniformly convergent derivatives, we obtain the local uniform convergence of the functions themselves (provided they were convergent at one point). We prove some general real counterparts of the Hurwitz theorem from complex analysis.
What carries the argument
Painlevé-Kuratowski convergence of closed sets, applied to graphs of Clarke subdifferentials of Lipschitz functions and to zero sets of functions
Load-bearing premise
The Clarke subdifferential is well-defined for the Lipschitz functions and the Painlevé-Kuratowski convergence applies directly to the graphs or epigraphs of the subdifferentials.
What would settle it
A sequence of Lipschitz functions whose Clarke subdifferentials converge in the Painlevé-Kuratowski sense but the functions themselves fail to converge locally uniformly even though they agree at one point.
read the original abstract
In this note we investigate three kinds of applications of the Painlev\'e-Kuratowski convergence of closed sets in analysis that are motivated also by questions from singularity theory. Firstly, we generalise to Lipschitz functions the classical theorem stating that given a sequence of smooth functions with locally uniformly convergent derivatives, we obtain the local uniform convergence of the functions themselves (provided they were convergent at one point). Secondly, we prove the reverse theorem for the squared distance function. Next, we turn to the study of the behaviour of the fibres of a given function. We prove some general real counterparts of the Hurwitz theorem from complex analysis (stating that the local uniform convergence of holomorphic functions implies the convergence of their sets of zeroes). From the point of view of singularity theory our two theorems concern the convergence of the sets when their descriptions are convergent. They are also of interest in approximation theory and they give some partial results to the problem of when is the limit of a convergent sequence of real algebraic sets algebraic.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript applies Painlevé-Kuratowski convergence of closed sets to three problems. It generalizes the classical local-uniform convergence result for C^1 functions with locally uniformly convergent derivatives to the Lipschitz case by replacing gradients with Clarke subdifferentials. It proves a converse statement for the squared-distance function. It also establishes real-analytic counterparts of Hurwitz's theorem on convergence of zero sets when the defining equations converge, with remarks on implications for singularity theory and limits of real algebraic sets.
Significance. If the stated theorems hold, the results supply standard, usable extensions of classical convergence theorems into the nonsmooth setting. They directly address questions about convergence of sets defined by converging equations and give partial answers to when limits of algebraic sets remain algebraic. The approach relies on well-established notions (Clarke subdifferential, PK convergence) without introducing new ad-hoc objects.
minor comments (3)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the three applications clearly but does not name the precise hypotheses or conclusions of each theorem; adding one sentence per result would improve immediate readability.
- [§2] Notation for the Painlevé-Kuratowski limit (e.g., PK-lim, limsup, liminf) should be fixed once at the beginning of §2 and used uniformly thereafter.
- [Theorem on zero-set convergence] In the statement of the real Hurwitz-type result, the precise relation between the subdifferential condition and the non-vanishing of the limit function on the boundary of the domain should be restated explicitly.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive report, accurate summary of the manuscript's contributions, and recommendation to accept. No major comments require a point-by-point response.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained
full rationale
The paper extends classical uniform convergence results for C^1 functions to the Lipschitz case by replacing gradients with Clarke subdifferentials and applying Painlevé-Kuratowski set convergence to their graphs. It also gives real-analytic counterparts of Hurwitz's theorem on zero-set convergence under the same hypotheses. These steps rely on externally defined, standard notions (Clarke subdifferential, PK-convergence) whose properties are invoked directly rather than derived from the paper's own fitted quantities or prior self-citations. No equations reduce a claimed prediction to a fitted input by construction, no uniqueness theorem is imported from the author's own work, and no ansatz is smuggled via citation. The central claims therefore remain independent of the inputs they are applied to.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Clarke subdifferential is well-defined and closed for locally Lipschitz functions
- domain assumption Painlevé-Kuratowski convergence preserves relevant properties of epigraphs or graphs under local uniform limits
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
A. Białożyt, A. Denkowska, M. Denkowski, The Kuratowski convergence of medial axis and conflict sets, Annali della Scuola normale superiore di Pisa - Classe di scienze (2024), 21
work page 2024
-
[2]
L. Birbrair, M. Denkowski, Medial axis and singularities, Journal of Geometric Anal- ysis 27 (2017), 2339–2380
work page 2017
-
[3]
Clarke, Generalized gradients and applications, Trans
F. Clarke, Generalized gradients and applications, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 205 (1975), 247-262
work page 1975
-
[4]
Clarke, Optimization and Nonsmooth Analysis, SIAM 1990
F. Clarke, Optimization and Nonsmooth Analysis, SIAM 1990
work page 1990
-
[5]
Z. Denkowska, M. Denkowski,The Kuratowski convergence and connected compo- nents, J. Math. Anal. Appl. vol. 387 (2012), 48-65
work page 2012
-
[6]
M. Denkowski, J.-J. Loeb, On open analytic and subanalytic mappings, Complex Var. Elliptic Eq. vol. 62 no.1 (2017), 27-46
work page 2017
-
[7]
Kuratowski, Topologie 1 et 2, PWN Monogr
K. Kuratowski, Topologie 1 et 2, PWN Monogr. Mat. (1961)
work page 1961
-
[8]
Lebourg, Generic differentiability of lipschitzian functions
G. Lebourg, Generic differentiability of lipschitzian functions. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Volume 256, (1979), 125-145
work page 1979
-
[9]
R. T. Rockafellar, R. Wets, Variational analysis. Springer Verlag, 1998
work page 1998
-
[10]
P. Tworzewski, T. Winiarski, Continuity of intersection of analytic sets, Ann. Polon. Math. 42 (1983), 387–393. 18 DANIEL F ATUŁA Jagiellonian University, F aculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Łojasiewicza 6, 30-348 Kraków, Poland Email address:daniel.fatula@doctoral.uj.edu.pl
work page 1983
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.