In mathematical optimization theory, duality or the duality principle is the principle that optimization problems may be viewed from either of two perspectives, the primal problem or the dual problem. If the primal is a minimization problem then the dual is a maximization problem (and vice versa). Any feasible solution to the primal (minimization) problem is at least as large as any feasible solution to the dual (maximization) problem. Therefore, the solution to the primal is an upper bound to the solution of the dual, and the solution of the dual is a lower bound to the solution of the primal.[1] This fact is called weak duality.

In general, the optimal values of the primal and dual problems need not be equal. Their difference is called the duality gap. For convex optimization problems, the duality gap is zero under a constraint qualification condition. This fact is called strong duality.

Dual problem

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Usually the term "dual problem" refers to the Lagrangian dual problem but other dual problems are used – for example, the Wolfe dual problem and the Fenchel dual problem. The Lagrangian dual problem is obtained by forming the Lagrangian of a minimization problem by using nonnegative Lagrange multipliers to add the constraints to the objective function, and then solving for the primal variable values that minimize the original objective function. This solution gives the primal variables as functions of the Lagrange multipliers, which are called dual variables, so that the new problem is to maximize the objective function with respect to the dual variables under the derived constraints on the dual variables (including at least the nonnegativity constraints).

In general given two dual pairs of separated locally convex spaces   and   and the function  , we can define the primal problem as finding   such that   In other words, if   exists,   is the minimum of the function   and the infimum (greatest lower bound) of the function is attained.

If there are constraint conditions, these can be built into the function   by letting   where   is a suitable function on   that has a minimum 0 on the constraints, and for which one can prove that  . The latter condition is trivially, but not always conveniently, satisfied for the characteristic function (i.e.   for   satisfying the constraints and   otherwise). Then extend   to a perturbation function   such that  .[2]

The duality gap is the difference of the right and left hand sides of the inequality

 

where   is the convex conjugate in both variables and   denotes the supremum (least upper bound).[2][3][4]

Duality gap

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The duality gap is the difference between the values of any primal solutions and any dual solutions. If   is the optimal dual value and   is the optimal primal value, then the duality gap is equal to  . This value is always greater than or equal to 0 (for minimization problems). The duality gap is zero if and only if strong duality holds. Otherwise the gap is strictly positive and weak duality holds.[5]

In computational optimization, another "duality gap" is often reported, which is the difference in value between any dual solution and the value of a feasible but suboptimal iterate for the primal problem. This alternative "duality gap" quantifies the discrepancy between the value of a current feasible but suboptimal iterate for the primal problem and the value of the dual problem; the value of the dual problem is, under regularity conditions, equal to the value of the convex relaxation of the primal problem: The convex relaxation is the problem arising replacing a non-convex feasible set with its closed convex hull and with replacing a non-convex function with its convex closure, that is the function that has the epigraph that is the closed convex hull of the original primal objective function.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16]

Linear case

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Linear programming problems are optimization problems in which the objective function and the constraints are all linear. In the primal problem, the objective function is a linear combination of n variables. There are m constraints, each of which places an upper bound on a linear combination of the n variables. The goal is to maximize the value of the objective function subject to the constraints. A solution is a vector (a list) of n values that achieves the maximum value for the objective function.

In the dual problem, the objective function is a linear combination of the m values that are the limits in the m constraints from the primal problem. There are n dual constraints, each of which places a lower bound on a linear combination of m dual variables.

Relationship between the primal problem and the dual problem

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In the linear case, in the primal problem, from each sub-optimal point that satisfies all the constraints, there is a direction or subspace of directions to move that increases the objective function. Moving in any such direction is said to remove slack between the candidate solution and one or more constraints. An infeasible value of the candidate solution is one that exceeds one or more of the constraints.

In the dual problem, the dual vector multiplies the constraints that determine the positions of the constraints in the primal. Varying the dual vector in the dual problem is equivalent to revising the upper bounds in the primal problem. The lowest upper bound is sought. That is, the dual vector is minimized in order to remove slack between the candidate positions of the constraints and the actual optimum. An infeasible value of the dual vector is one that is too low. It sets the candidate positions of one or more of the constraints in a position that excludes the actual optimum.

This intuition is made formal by the equations in Linear programming: Duality.

Nonlinear case

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In nonlinear programming, the constraints are not necessarily linear. Nonetheless, many of the same principles apply.

To ensure that the global maximum of a non-linear problem can be identified easily, the problem formulation often requires that the functions be convex and have compact lower level sets. This is the significance of the Karush–Kuhn–Tucker conditions. They provide necessary conditions for identifying local optima of non-linear programming problems. There are additional conditions (constraint qualifications) that are necessary so that it will be possible to define the direction to an optimal solution. An optimal solution is one that is a local optimum, but possibly not a global optimum.

Lagrange duality

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Motivation.[17] Suppose we want to solve the following nonlinear programming problem:

 

The problem has constraints; we would like to convert it to a program without constraints. Theoretically, it is possible to do it by minimizing the function J(x), defined as

 

where I is an infinite step function: I[u]=0 if u≤0, and I[u]=∞ otherwise. But J(x) is hard to solve as it is not continuous. It is possible to "approximate" I[u] by λu, where λ is a positive constant. This yields a function known as the lagrangian:

 

Note that, for every x,

 .

Proof:

  • If x satisfies all constraints fi(x)≤0, then L(x,λ) is maximized when taking λ=0, and its value is then f(x);
  • If x violates some constraint, fi(x)>0 for some i, then L(x,λ)→∞ when λi→∞.

Therefore, the original problem is equivalent to:

 .

By reversing the order of min and max, we get:

 .

The dual function is the inner problem in the above formula:

 .

The Lagrangian dual program is the program of maximizing g:

 .

The optimal solution to the dual program is a lower bound for the optimal solution of the original (primal) program; this is the weak duality principle. If the primal problem is convex and bounded from below, and there exists a point in which all nonlinear constraints are strictly satisfied (Slater's condition), then the optimal solution to the dual program equals the optimal solution of the primal program; this is the strong duality principle. In this case, we can solve the primal program by finding an optimal solution λ* to the dual program, and then solving:

 .

Note that, to use either the weak or the strong duality principle, we need a way to compute g(λ). In general this may be hard, as we need to solve a different minimization problem for every λ. But for some classes of functions, it is possible to get an explicit formula for g(). Solving the primal and dual programs together is often easier than solving only one of them. Examples are linear programming and quadratic programming. A better and more general approach to duality is provided by Fenchel's duality theorem.[18]: Sub.3.3.1 

Another condition in which the min-max and max-min are equal is when the Lagrangian has a saddle point: (x∗, λ∗) is a saddle point of the Lagrange function L if and only if x∗ is an optimal solution to the primal, λ∗ is an optimal solution to the dual, and the optimal values in the indicated problems are equal to each other.[18]: Prop.3.2.2 

The strong Lagrange principle

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Given a nonlinear programming problem in standard form

 

with the domain   having non-empty interior, the Lagrangian function   is defined as

 

The vectors   and   are called the dual variables or Lagrange multiplier vectors associated with the problem. The Lagrange dual function   is defined as

 

The dual function g is concave, even when the initial problem is not convex, because it is a point-wise infimum of affine functions. The dual function yields lower bounds on the optimal value   of the initial problem; for any   and any   we have  .

If a constraint qualification such as Slater's condition holds and the original problem is convex, then we have strong duality, i.e.  .

Convex problems

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For a convex minimization problem with inequality constraints,

 

the Lagrangian dual problem is

 

where the objective function is the Lagrange dual function. Provided that the functions   and   are continuously differentiable, the infimum occurs where the gradient is equal to zero. The problem

 

is called the Wolfe dual problem. This problem may be difficult to deal with computationally, because the objective function is not concave in the joint variables  . Also, the equality constraint   is nonlinear in general, so the Wolfe dual problem is typically a nonconvex optimization problem. In any case, weak duality holds.[19]

History

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According to George Dantzig, the duality theorem for linear optimization was conjectured by John von Neumann immediately after Dantzig presented the linear programming problem. Von Neumann noted that he was using information from his game theory, and conjectured that two person zero sum matrix game was equivalent to linear programming. Rigorous proofs were first published in 1948 by Albert W. Tucker and his group. (Dantzig's foreword to Nering and Tucker, 1993)

Applications

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In support vector machines (SVMs), the formulating the primal problem of SVMs as the dual problem can be used to implement Kernel trick, but the latter has higher time complexity in the historical cases.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Boyd, Stephen P.; Vandenberghe, Lieven (2004). Convex Optimization (pdf). Cambridge University Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-521-83378-3. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Boţ, Radu Ioan; Wanka, Gert; Grad, Sorin-Mihai (2009). Duality in Vector Optimization. Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-02885-4.
  3. ^ Csetnek, Ernö Robert (2010). Overcoming the failure of the classical generalized interior-point regularity conditions in convex optimization. Applications of the duality theory to enlargements of maximal monotone operators. Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH. ISBN 978-3-8325-2503-3.
  4. ^ Zălinescu, Constantin (2002). Convex analysis in general vector spaces. River Edge, NJ: World Scientific Publishing Co., Inc. pp. 106–113. ISBN 981-238-067-1. MR 1921556.
  5. ^ Borwein, Jonathan; Zhu, Qiji (2005). Techniques of Variational Analysis. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-2026-3.
  6. ^ Ahuja, Ravindra K.; Magnanti, Thomas L.; Orlin, James B. (1993). Network Flows: Theory, Algorithms and Applications. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-617549-X.
  7. ^ Bertsekas, Dimitri; Nedic, Angelia; Ozdaglar, Asuman (2003). Convex Analysis and Optimization. Athena Scientific. ISBN 1-886529-45-0.
  8. ^ Bertsekas, Dimitri P. (1999). Nonlinear Programming (2nd ed.). Athena Scientific. ISBN 1-886529-00-0.
  9. ^ Bertsekas, Dimitri P. (2009). Convex Optimization Theory. Athena Scientific. ISBN 978-1-886529-31-1.
  10. ^ Bonnans, J. Frédéric; Gilbert, J. Charles; Lemaréchal, Claude; Sagastizábal, Claudia A. (2006). Numerical optimization: Theoretical and practical aspects. Universitext (Second revised ed. of translation of 1997 French ed.). Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. xiv+490. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-35447-5. ISBN 3-540-35445-X. MR 2265882.
  11. ^ Hiriart-Urruty, Jean-Baptiste; Lemaréchal, Claude (1993). Convex analysis and minimization algorithms, Volume I: Fundamentals. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences]. Vol. 305. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. xviii+417. ISBN 3-540-56850-6. MR 1261420.
  12. ^ Hiriart-Urruty, Jean-Baptiste; Lemaréchal, Claude (1993). "14 Duality for Practitioners". Convex analysis and minimization algorithms, Volume II: Advanced theory and bundle methods. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences]. Vol. 306. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. xviii+346. ISBN 3-540-56852-2. MR 1295240.
  13. ^ Lasdon, Leon S. (2002) [Reprint of the 1970 Macmillan]. Optimization theory for large systems. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc. pp. xiii+523. ISBN 978-0-486-41999-2. MR 1888251.
  14. ^ Lemaréchal, Claude (2001). "Lagrangian relaxation". In Jünger, Michael; Naddef, Denis (eds.). Computational combinatorial optimization: Papers from the Spring School held in Schloß Dagstuhl, May 15–19, 2000. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Vol. 2241. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. 112–156. doi:10.1007/3-540-45586-8_4. ISBN 3-540-42877-1. MR 1900016. S2CID 9048698.
  15. ^ Minoux, Michel (1986). Mathematical programming: Theory and algorithms. Egon Balas (forward); Steven Vajda (trans) from the (1983 Paris: Dunod) French. Chichester: A Wiley-Interscience Publication. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. pp. xxviii+489. ISBN 0-471-90170-9. MR 0868279. (2008 Second ed., in French: Programmation mathématique : Théorie et algorithmes, Éditions Tec & Doc, Paris, 2008. xxx+711 pp. ).
  16. ^ Shapiro, Jeremy F. (1979). Mathematical programming: Structures and algorithms. New York: Wiley-Interscience [John Wiley & Sons]. pp. xvi+388. ISBN 0-471-77886-9. MR 0544669.
  17. ^ David Knowles (2010). "Lagrangian Duality for Dummies" (PDF).
  18. ^ a b Nemirovsky and Ben-Tal (2023). "Optimization III: Convex Optimization" (PDF).
  19. ^ Geoffrion, Arthur M. (1971). "Duality in Nonlinear Programming: A Simplified Applications-Oriented Development". SIAM Review. 13 (1): 1–37. doi:10.1137/1013001. JSTOR 2028848.

References

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Books

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