I've found this page for calculating the minors (Hauptminoren) of the Hessian matrix to determine which of the critical points of the matrix correspond to a maximum, a minimum or a saddle point. They say the matrix is positive definite if all $|q_A| > 0$ and negative if $|q_A|(-1)^k>0$, and a saddle point if otherwise. But what happens if one of $|q_A|$ is zero? No conclusion possible?
Using minors to determine type of extrema
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calculus
multivariable-calculus
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0Yeah, I'd say related. – 2011-06-28
1 Answers
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Classical example is the function
$F: \mathbb{R}^2 \to \mathbb{R} : (x,y) \mapsto x^4+y^4$
which has a minimum at $(0,0)$ but the Hessian matrix is the zero matrix in that point.
On the other hand,
$F: \mathbb{R}^2 \to \mathbb{R} : (x,y) \mapsto x^3+y^3$
also has Hessian matrix equal to the zero matrix in $(0,0)$, but this time you don't have a minimum or maximum.
So, the Hessian alone doesn't allow you to conclude in these cases.