A What type of function satisfy a type of growth condition?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on identifying classes of functions that satisfy specific growth conditions, particularly in relation to the zero set defined as ##\mathcal{X} = \{x: f(x) = 0\}##. The original poster seeks to establish bounds of the form ||f(x)|| ≥ g(dist(x, \mathcal{X})), where g is a function like a homogeneous function. For one-dimensional cases, functions of the form x^p with p ≥ 1 are suggested, with g(u) = u being a suitable choice. The conversation also hints at a desire for a broader theoretical framework that encompasses these growth conditions, drawing parallels to Hölder conditions but applied to the inverse of f. Overall, the inquiry aims to deepen the understanding of function classes that meet these growth criteria.
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Let ##f:\mathbb{R}^n\rightarrow\mathbb{R}^n##. Is there any class of function and some type of "growth conditions" such that bounds like below can be established:
\begin{equation}
||f(x)||\geq g\left( \text{dist}(x,\mathcal{X})\right),
\end{equation}
with ##\mathcal{X}:= \{x:f(x)=0\}## (zero set) and some function ##g## (like a homogeneous function).

I am interested to know the class of functions. Any help will help a lot. Thanks in advance
 
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For ##n=1,## any of the form ##x^p## where ##p\ge 1 ## will do. ##g(u)=u## works. This can easily be generalized for ##n\gt 1##.
 
Yes, that is true. But I am looking for more general class of function and a well-established theory on the conditions and properties of such functions. This is a bit similar to holder conditions but on the inverse of ##f##.
 
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