For the sake of concreteness, we consider the linear Schrodinger equation
$$
\partial_t u = i\Delta u, \ \ \ \ u(0, x) = u_0(x).
$$
The solution is typically obtained by taking the Fourier transform of both sides, giving $\widehat{\partial_t u}(t, \xi) = -i|\xi|^2 \hat{u}(t,  \xi)$. 

The next step is where I have questions. Assuming that everything is nice enough (for instance, in Tao's book, he assumes $u_0$ is Schwartz), a dominated convergence argument gives $\widehat{\partial_t u}(t, \xi) =  \partial_t \hat{u}(t, \xi)$, and then we get an ODE that solves to 
$$
\hat{u}(t, \xi) =e^{-i|\xi|^2}\hat{u}_0(\xi) \implies u(t, x) = e^{it\Delta}u_0(x).
$$
This is then referred to as "*the* solution to the Schrodinger equation, with initial data $u_0$." 

**My question**: How do we know that there are no other solutions, that may not satisfy the right decay/smoothness criteria to  justify pulling the Fourier transform into the time derivative of $u$? I agree that there are no other solutions $u$ that are "nice enough" to justify this. But how do we rule out the existence of solutions $u$ such that $\partial_t \hat{u} \neq \widehat{\partial_t u}$? For instance, I don't understand how just assuming $u_0$ Schwartz is enough to guarantee this. 

Any help is much appreciated.