Let $\phi$ be a nonnegative $C_c^\infty(B(0,1))$ function, where $B(0,1)\in \mathbb R^n$ is the unit ball, and $\int \phi =1$. Let $\phi_{\epsilon}(x) =\epsilon^{-n} \phi(x/\epsilon).$ For any $L^2$ function $u$, we can get a $C^\infty$ approximation by taking $u\ast \phi_\epsilon.$ The problem I am focusing on here is: do we have $ \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \|u\ast \phi_\epsilon - u\|_{L^2(\mathbb R^n)} =0$ uniformly in $\{u\in H^s(\mathbb R^n): \|u\|_{H^s} \leq 1\} ?$
Clearly, this is not true for $s< 1/2,$ since for this range of $s,$ the indicator function $\chi$ of $B(0,1)$ lies in $H^s.$ This can be used to construct a example for how uniform convergence fails, due to the ineffectiveness of mollification against jump discontinuities.
Also, clearly this is true for $s\geq 1,$ because the mollification error can be easily estimated by the (weak) gradient of $u.$
What about the range of value in the middle, $s\in [1/2,1)?$ do we have uniform convergence for these $s?$