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Hartman uniform distribution of means

Background: for a discrete abelian group $G$, a character of $G$ is a homomorphism $\chi:G\to \mathbf S^1$, $\mathbf S^1$ being the circle group $\{z\in \mathbb C:|z|=1\}$ with ordinary multiplication....
John Griesmer's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
151 views

Some operators on spheres

Let $S_2$ be the unit sphere in $\mathbb R^3$ equipped with normalized Haar measure. For a continuous function f and $\delta\in (-1,1)$ define $T_\delta f(x):=\int_{\{y:<x,y>=\delta\}}f(y)d_\...
A beginner mathmatician's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
123 views

Proving a Fourier transform inequality for functions with mixed variable bounded support

I'm working on a problem involving the Fourier transform and have encountered an inequality that I am unsure how to prove. I would greatly appreciate any help or guidance you can provide. Let $\gamma\...
Julian Bejarano's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
105 views

Let $A:=\{f\in C^1(\mathbb{R}): \hat{f}, \hat{f'} \in L^1(\mathbb{R})\}$. Schwartz space is dense in $A$ wrt $\|f\|:= \|\hat{f}\|_1+\|\hat{f'}\|_1$?

Let $A:=\{f\in C^1(\mathbb{R}): \hat{f}, \hat{f'} \in L^1(\mathbb{R})\}$, where $\hat{f}$ is the Fourier transform of $f$. Then is it true that Schwartz space $\mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R})$ is dense in $A$ ...
mathlover's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
133 views

A question about the maximal function

Let $n>4$, $f\in C^{\infty}(\mathbb{R}^{n})$ and 0 denote the origin of $\mathbb{R}^{n}$. We define a weighted maximal function by $$Mf(x)=\sup_{0<r<1}r^{4-n}\int_{B_{r}(x)}|f|$$ which is ...
Xin Qian's user avatar
  • 155
1 vote
1 answer
137 views

Can functions with "big" discontinuities be in $H^1$?

How can I prove that the function: $$u:\Omega\to\mathbb{R},\ u(x)=\begin{cases} 0, x\in\omega \\[3mm] v(x), x\in\Omega\setminus\omega\end{cases}$$ is not in $H^1(\Omega)$, knowing that $v\geq 1$ is ...
Bogdan's user avatar
  • 1,759
0 votes
1 answer
161 views

Does convolution with $(1+|x|)^{-n}$ define an operator $L^p(\mathbb R^n) \to L^p(\mathbb R^n)$

Suppose that $f : \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R^n$ is a locally integrable function. I am interested in the integral $$ x \to \int_{\mathbb R^n} ( 1 + |y| )^{-n} f(x-y) \;dy $$ If the decay of the ...
AlpinistKitten's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
495 views

Fixing the duality $L^\infty(X)= L^1(X)^*$ for Radon measure spaces

Consider the following fragment from Folland's book "A course in abstract harmonic analysis": Let me denote the Borel subsets of $X$ by $\mathscr{B}(X)$. Folland claims that if $\mu$ is a ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
2 votes
1 answer
261 views

Qualitative difference between "continuous" and "discontinuous" states on $M(G)$

Let $G$ be a locally compact Abelian group (we can think that $G={\mathbb R}$). Let $C_0(G)$ be the space of continuous functions $u:G\to{\mathbb C}$ vanishing at infinity with the usual $\sup$-norm, ...
Sergei Akbarov's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
64 views

Characterization of elements of Hardy Space

Let $\Omega\subset\mathbb{C}^n$ be a $C^{\infty}$ bounded domain. Let $H^2(\partial\Omega)$ denote the Hardy space, and $S(.,.)$ denote its Szego Kernel. We know that $$ \forall f\in H^2(\partial\...
Naruto's user avatar
  • 63
2 votes
1 answer
128 views

Regarding basis of holomorphic Hardy space

Let $\Omega\subset\mathbb{C}^n$ be any $C^{\infty}$ bounded domain and let $H^2(\partial\Omega)$ denotes a holomorphic Hardy space which is a $L^2(\partial\Omega)$ closure of $A^{\infty}(\Omega)(=\...
Naruto's user avatar
  • 63
5 votes
1 answer
299 views

About weak integrals: Appendix of Folland's book "A course in abstract harmonic analysis"

Consider the following fragment from Folland's book "A course in abstract harmonic analysis": All integrals are here to interpreted in the weak sense (see p285 in Folland's book). Why is ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
0 votes
0 answers
75 views

Extracting the point mass measure of some type of positive measures

Let us consider the measure algebra $M(\mathbb{R})$ consisting of all Radon measures on the reals. Let $\delta_0$ be the point mass measure concentrated on 0, which is also the multiplicative ...
ABB's user avatar
  • 4,058
0 votes
1 answer
88 views

An equation in the convolution measure algebra on reals

Let us consider the measure algebra $M(\mathbb{R})$ consisting of all Radon measures on reals. Let $\mu$ be a Radon measure in $M(\mathbb{R})$ and $\delta_0$ be the point mass measure concentrated on ...
ABB's user avatar
  • 4,058
5 votes
1 answer
495 views

Unifying two definitions of $L^\infty$

Let $X$ be a locally compact Hausdorff space and $\mu$ a Radon measure on $X$. Definitions: A subset $E\subseteq X$ is called locally Borel if $F \cap E$ is Borel for every Borel set $F\subseteq X$ ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
2 votes
1 answer
223 views

Show that $V_G: L^2(G\times G, \mu \times \mu)\to L^2(G\times G, \mu \times \mu)$ defined by $V_G(f)(x,y) = f(xy,y)$ is well-defined

Let $G$ be a locally compact Hausdorff group and let $\mu$ be a right Haar measure on $G$. Then $\mu\times \mu$ (the Radon product of measures) is a right Haar measure on $G \times G$ and we can ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
2 votes
0 answers
164 views

(Generalized) Uncentered Maximal Function $\tilde Mf$ in Stein's Harmonic Analysis

It is well known that on $\Bbb R^n$, equipped with the usual Lebesgue measure, the standard Hardy-Littlewood maximal function $Mf(x)$ (with respect to averaging on cubes or balls centered at $x$) is ...
BigbearZzz's user avatar
  • 1,245
7 votes
1 answer
1k views

Properties of convolutions

Consider the function $$f_{n}(x)=e^{-x^2}x^n.$$ and the function $$h_p(x):=e^{-\vert x \vert^p}.$$ My goal is to analyze $$ F_p(y):=\frac{(f_2*h_p)(y)}{(f_0*h_p)(y)}- \left(\frac{(f_1*h_p)(y) }{(f_0*...
Landauer's user avatar
  • 173
1 vote
2 answers
226 views

Number theory on Banach space $L^2(\mathbb R)$ meets linear independence?

Consider an orthonormal basis $(\varphi_k)$ of $L^2(\mathbb R)$ with Lebesgue measure. I came along a nice number theoretic question in analysis: Write $$f_k(x):=\int_{\left\lvert y \right\rvert \...
Andres's user avatar
  • 25
1 vote
1 answer
52 views

Infinitely many independent functions that are only frequency localized?

A function $f \in L^2(\mathbb R^d)$ will be called $K$-frequency localized if the following inequality holds $$\int_{\mathbb R^d} \lvert \widehat{f}(x) \rvert^2 x^2 \ dx \le K \int_{\mathbb R^d} \...
Alex Derek's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
311 views

Differentiation on $[0,1]$

EDIT: Perhaps a more reasonable question after thinking about the answer I got would have been. Is there a set $N$ of measure $1-\varepsilon$ and a disjoint partition of that set $N$ with finitely ...
Sascha's user avatar
  • 536
2 votes
1 answer
1k views

Pointwise convergence implies uniform convergence?

Let $K$ be an integral kernel of a bounded operator $S:L^2(\mathbb{R}^n) \rightarrow L^2(\mathbb{R}^n) $ defined like $$(Sf)(x)= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n}K(x,y)f(y)dy.$$ Assume that $K\in C^{\text{bounded}...
BaoLing's user avatar
  • 329
4 votes
1 answer
495 views

Weil's Haar measure construction from below

Weil's construction of a Haar measure on a locally compact group rests on approximating a function from above by sums of translates of another function. I would need to know something similar for an ...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
193 views

$\int_{R^2}\varphi(x)d\mu(x)=0$ $\Leftrightarrow$ $\sum_{n\in \mathbb Z^2} d\mu(x-2\pi n)=0$

Let $\mu$ be a finite measure supported by $\Gamma $ (a smoth finite curve) and absolutely continuous with respect to the length measure on $\Gamma$ such that $\Gamma \cap (\Gamma+x)$ is a finite ...
Akram Akram's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
313 views

Spherical decreasing rearrangement on the sphere

On $\mathbb{R}^n$, we have the concept of spherically decreasing rearragement of a function, which means, given a function $f$, one can design a radial and decreasing function $f^*$ such that $\Vert f^...
guest's user avatar
  • 21
0 votes
0 answers
405 views

What does the Plancherel theorem say about positive-definite distributions?

I'm trying to understand the answer to this MO question: Bochner's theorem for measures of positive type, which suggests a relationship between Bochner's theorem and the Plancherel theorem. The ...
Tian An's user avatar
  • 3,799
5 votes
0 answers
286 views

$f, \hat{f} \in L^{p}\cap L^{\infty} \implies f\in B(\mathbb R)$ (algebra of Fourier- Stieltjes transforms )?

For a bounded complex Borel measure $\mu$ on $\mathbb R$, we define, its Fourier-Stieltjes transform, $\hat{\mu}(y)= \int_{\mathbb R} e^{-2\pi ix\cdot y} d\mu(x); (y\in \mathbb R).$ Let $1\leq p \leq ...
Inquisitive's user avatar
  • 1,051
1 vote
0 answers
129 views

Differentiability of $f*g$ on the circle, for integrable f, bounded g, and some decay of the Fourier coefficients of f

If $f\in L^1(\mathbb{T})$ and $g\in L^\infty(\mathbb{T})$ where $\mathbb{T}$ is the circle, such that $\hat{f}\in L^{p}(\mathbb{Z})$ for some $1\leq p<\infty$, do we have that $f*g$ is ...
Alin Galatan's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
154 views

A problem concerning measures on locally compact spaces

I am stuck on a question for quite sometime now, although in the text it is said to be "apparent". The problem goes as the following : Let $X$ and $Y$ be locally compact Hausdorff spaces. Then $M(X)$ ...
CB_Student's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
720 views

Pointwise limit at Lebesgue's point

Dear MOs, I am sorry if this problem is too elementary for someone. I just want to get confirmation. Suppose $f\in L^1(R^d)$. Since almost all points are Lebesgue points by the Lebesgue ...
Anand's user avatar
  • 1,649