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I'm trying to find asymptotics for an oscillatory integral on $\mathbb{S}^{n-1}$, for which my advisor said I should use stationary phase arguments. The particular, he claims that:

If $\lambda\gg 1$, then $$I(\lambda,x) = \int_{\mathbb{S}^{n-1}}(x\cdot y)e^{i\lambda(x\cdot y)}\,d\sigma(y),$$ is $\mathcal{O}(|x|(\lambda |x|)^{-\frac{n-1}{2}})$ when $|x|\geq \lambda^{-1}$.

When I hear stationary phase, I think of working with operators of the form $$ L = \frac{\nabla_y(x\cdot y)}{i\lambda |\nabla_y (x\cdot y)|^2} \cdot \nabla_y, $$ since then $L^N[e^{i\lambda (x\cdot y)}] = e^{i\lambda (x\cdot y)}$, for any $N \geq 1$, and I can use integration by parts to move these operators over to the $(x\cdot y)$ term. However, wouldn't that require that the integral be defined over an $n$-dimensional region, rather than an $(n-1)$-dimensional surface?

I wouldn't be struggling so much if the gradient $\nabla_y$ could be taken in Cartesian coordinates. But we have a surface integral in $d\sigma(y)$, meaning that we would need to parametrize our surface with $n-1$ parameters, say $\omega = (\omega_1, \ldots, \omega_{n-1}) \in \Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^{n-1}$, with any derivates now being taken in these new variables. Specifically $\nabla_y$ would generate an $n$-vector, while $\nabla_{\omega}$ would generate an $n-1$-vector. So how should I go about applying the same kind of stationary phase arguments to this new integral? $$ I(\lambda, x) = \int_{\Omega} (x \cdot y(\omega)) e^{i\lambda (x\cdot y(\omega))} \,dV(\omega) $$ Now that $y$ depends on $\omega$, the gradients $\nabla_\omega (x\cdot y(\omega))$ become much trickier to get a grasp on. I'm particularly struggling trying to argue how we can find regions where $|\nabla_\omega (x\cdot y(\omega))| > 0$, so that our $L$ type operators are properly defined.

Am I going about this all wrong? If I can get the big-oh asymptotics I mentioned above in some other way, it doesn't really matter. I just need to prove these results as a lemma to something bigger. Any help is much appreciated!

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1 Answer 1

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You have $ I(\lambda, x)=x\cdot\int_{\mathbb S^{n-1}} ye^{i \lambda x\cdot y} d\sigma(y)=x\cdot J(x,\lambda) $ and you claim that for $\vert x\vert \lambda \ge 1$, you have $$ J(x,\lambda)=O((\vert x\vert \lambda)^{-\frac{n-1}{2}}). $$ Indeed, using coordinate charts and a finite partition of unity, you are reduced to the case where $$ J(x,\lambda)=\int_{\mathbb R^{n-1}} a(z) e^{i\lambda (x'\cdot z+ x_n\sqrt{1- \vert z\vert^2})}dz, \quad\text{$a\in C^\infty_0(\mathbb R^{n-1})$ supported near $0$, $x=(x', x_n)\in \mathbb R^{n-1}\times \mathbb R$}. $$ Let us set $\phi(x,z)=x'\cdot z+ x_n\sqrt{1- \vert z\vert^2}$. We have $$ \frac{\partial \phi}{\partial z}= x'-(1- \vert z\vert^2)^{-1/2} z x_n, $$ which vanishes at $z=0$ when $x'=0$. Then you calculate the Hessian of $\phi$ at $z=0$ and get $$ \phi''_{zz}=-x_n. $$ The stationary phase in $n-1$ dimensions gives the sought estimate with $O((\vert x_n\vert \lambda)^{-\frac{n-1}{2}})$ (note that you know that $\vert x_n\vert \lambda \ge 1$, since you are near $x'=0$).

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  • $\begingroup$ I'm still reading through this carefully, but thank you! I have a couple small clarification questions, though, so if you don't mind I'll just enumerate them here in a series of separate comments: $\endgroup$
    – Patch
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 6:20
  • $\begingroup$ 1) By bringing the integral inside of the dot product, you are effectively making $\mathbf{J}(x,\lambda)$ a vector-valued function, correct? But isn't your cutoff function, $a(z)$ a scalar-valued function? Should I just be interpreting $a(z)$ as one scalar component of $\mathbf{J}(x,\lambda)$? If not, then wouldn't this seem to contradict the definition for $\mathbf{J}(x,\lambda)$ you had earlier? $\endgroup$
    – Patch
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 6:21
  • $\begingroup$ 2) Assuming we have clarified the issue with $\mathbf{J}(x,\lambda)$ above, lets call $J_k(x, \lambda)$ the $k$-th component of the vector. Then I can see how stationary phase around $(x,z) = (0,0)$ gives us the $(|x_n| \lambda)^{(n-1)/2}$ behavior, but this would only be asymptotic behavior in each coordinate. Moreover, every $J_k$ would satisfy the same big-oh bounds involving the absolute value $|x_n|$ only; so how do I put these all together to get a uniform bound involving the norm, $|x|$? $\endgroup$
    – Patch
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 6:21
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    $\begingroup$ @Patch (1) $J$ is indeed vector-valued, but you can handle each coordinate separately. (2) You start with $x$ such that $\vert x\vert \lambda\ge 1$; then you look at the stationary phase method with an integral near a given point $y_0$ of the sphere. You check if you have a stationary point: if not you get a better estimate with $O((\vert x\vert \lambda)^{-N})$ for all $N$. If you land on a stationary point, you check the Hessian. Note that the choice of $y_0$ in the answer above is $e_n$. $\endgroup$
    – Bazin
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 9:53
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks, again!! $\endgroup$
    – Patch
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 16:43

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