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Solving $x\partial_x f = 0$ over 'normal' functions is the same as solving $\partial_x f = 0$, i.e. one gets $f(x)=c_1$ as the complete answer. But over distributions (if my calculations are correct), $$ f(x) = (c_2-c_1)H(x)+c_1 $$ is the complete solution (with H being the Heaviside step function). For another comparison point, $x^2\partial_x f=0$ has solution $$ f(x) = (c_2-c_1)H(x)+c_1+c_3\delta(x) $$ (with $\delta$ the Dirac $\delta$ function/distribution).

My main question: are my computations correct? Are these in fact the most general solutions? [I have 3 different arguments showing that these are indeed solutions, although I am not sure that any of these constitute proper proofs, the last time I did anything with distributions was almost 20 years ago].

Motivation: What I am actually trying to do is to get a differential equation for the density function for the Pareto Distribution (where 'distribution' here is used in a different sense). The only remaining problem is to properly take care of the 'jump' at $x_m$. The above should give me what I am missing to get there.

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    $\begingroup$ A solution is supported on the origin, so by a theorem (of Schwartz?) it is a finite linear combination of $\delta$ and it's derivatives. It is easy to check which, among these, which solve the equation. $\endgroup$ Apr 20, 2011 at 2:40
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    $\begingroup$ I mean: The derivative of a solution... $\endgroup$ Apr 20, 2011 at 2:45
  • $\begingroup$ Great, that's the kind of theorem I was looking for. A reference would be most appreciated. $\endgroup$ Apr 20, 2011 at 2:52
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    $\begingroup$ You'll find the theorem proved in Walter Rudin's book on distributions (Theorem 6.25) $\endgroup$ Apr 20, 2011 at 3:28

3 Answers 3

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Your answer seems correct to me. The equation $x.u=0$ (where $u$ is a distribution) has solution $u=c_{1}\delta_{0}$. Then the equation $\partial_{x}v=c_{1}\delta_{0}$ has solution $v=c_{1}H+c_{2}$... You can find the first result for example in the book by Friedlander and Joshi (thm 2.7.1).

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  • $\begingroup$ This answer is correct. The fact that $xu=0$ has only the functions $c_1\delta_0$ as solutions follows from how every smooth test function $\phi(x)$ with $\phi(0)=0$ can be written as $\phi(x)=x\psi(x)$ where $\psi(x)$ is another test function. You can see this by Taylor expanding: $\phi(x)=0+x\int^1_0\phi'(tx)dt$ -- in higher dimensions you should put in a cutoff to make sure this $\psi$ has compact support. Finally, to show $v'(x)=c_1\delta_0$ has only Heaviside solutions, observe that the only solutions to $v'(x)=0$ are constants, which can be proven by mollifying the distribution $v$. $\endgroup$
    – Phil Isett
    Apr 22, 2012 at 3:56
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Let us work in $\mathbb R^n$. The distribution solutions of the equation $$ (x\cdot \partial _x) u=0 $$ are the distributions which are homogeneous of degree 0. Here $x\cdot \partial_x=\sum_{1\le j\le n}x_j\partial_{x_j}$ and the previous equation is the so-called Euler equation for homogeneous distributions with degree 0. The fact that $u$ satisfies the first equation is equivalent to $$\forall \lambda >0,\quad u(\lambda x) =u(x), $$ which means with brackets of duality $ \langle u(x),\phi(x/\lambda)\rangle\lambda^{-n}=\langle u(x),\phi(x)\rangle. $ In one dimension, the homogeneous distributions with degree 0 are $$ a H(x)+bH(-x), $$ where $H$ is the Heaviside function (characteristic function of $\mathbb R_+$). In fact the restriction to $\mathbb R_+$ (resp. $\mathbb R_-$) must be constant (respectively $a,b$) so that $u(x)-a H(x)-bH(-x)$ is homogeneous of degree 0 and supported at the origin. Since the distributions supported at 0 are finite linear combinations of derivatives of the Dirac mass and the Dirac mass in one dimension is homogeneous with degree $-1$, $u(x)-a H(x)-bH(-x)=0$.

Note that the solutions of $$ (x\cdot \partial _x) u=\mu u $$ are the distributions homogeneous with degree $\mu$, which means also for all $\lambda >0$ $$ \langle u(x),\phi(x/\lambda)\rangle\lambda^{-n}=\lambda ^\mu\langle u(x),\phi(x)\rangle. $$ A simple example of a distribution homogeneous of degree $-n$ is the Dirac mass at 0 in $\mathbb R^n$.

Bazin.

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Of course, since the questioner does not divulge their arguments, their correctness cannot be confirmed or denied. In any case, there are some correct assertions which are fairly intuitive, and which follow from the definitions rather easily. A useful and simple example is that, for a smooth function f and distribution u, if f.u=0 then the support of u is contained in the zero-set of f.

A second example is the iconic fact that distributions supported at a point are finite linear combinations of derivatives of Dirac's delta. This is proven many places: Rudin's functional analysis, my notes on functional analysis, ...

This is subsumed by the idea is that distributions supported on a sub-manifold are locally values of distributions on the submanifold on transversal derivatives. (This is also in a small note on my functional analysis page. It is folkloric...)

There are also useful and interesting things that can be said about homogeneous distributions, or equivariant ones... but this seems not in the questioner's interest.

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