In mathematics, Schwartz space
is the function space of all functions whose derivatives of all orders are rapidly decreasing. This space has the important property that the Fourier transform is an automorphism on this space. This property enables one, by duality, to define the Fourier transform for elements in the dual space
of
, that is, for tempered distributions. A function in the Schwartz space is sometimes called a Schwartz function.
Schwartz space is named after French mathematician Laurent Schwartz.
Definition
Let
be the set of non-negative integers, and for any
, let
be the
-fold Cartesian product.
The Schwartz space or space of rapidly decreasing functions on
is the function space where
is the function space of smooth functions from
into
, and Here,
denotes the supremum, and we used multi-index notation, i.e.
and
.
To put common language to this definition, one could consider a rapidly decreasing function as essentially a function
such that
,
,
, ... all exist everywhere on
and go to zero as
faster than any reciprocal power of
. In particular,
is a subspace of
.
Examples of functions in the Schwartz space
- If
is a multi-index, and a is a positive real number, then
.
- Any smooth function
with compact support is in
. This is clear since any derivative of
is continuous and supported in the support of
, so
has a maximum in
by the extreme value theorem.
- Because the Schwartz space is a vector space, any polynomial
can be multiplied by a factor
for
a real constant, to give an element of the Schwartz space. In particular, there is an embedding of polynomials into a Schwartz space.
Properties
Analytic properties
- From Leibniz's rule, it follows that
is also closed under pointwise multiplication:
implies
. In particular, this implies that
is an
-algebra. More generally, if
and
is a bounded smooth function with bounded derivatives of all orders, then
.
- The Fourier transform is a linear isomorphism
.
- If
then
is Lipschitz continuous and hence uniformly continuous on
.
is a distinguished locally convex Fréchet Schwartz TVS over the complex numbers.
- Both
and its strong dual space are also:
- complete Hausdorff locally convex spaces,
- nuclear Montel spaces,
- ultrabornological spaces,
- reflexive barrelled Mackey spaces.
Relation of Schwartz spaces with other topological vector spaces
- If
, then
is a dense subset of
.
- The space of all bump functions,
, is included in
.
See also
References
Sources
- Hörmander, L. (1990). The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators I, (Distribution theory and Fourier Analysis) (2nd ed.). Berlin: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-52343-X.
- Reed, M.; Simon, B. (1980). Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics: Functional Analysis I (Revised and enlarged ed.). San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-585050-6.
- Stein, Elias M.; Shakarchi, Rami (2003). Fourier Analysis: An Introduction (Princeton Lectures in Analysis I). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-11384-X.
- Trèves, François (2006) [1967]. Topological Vector Spaces, Distributions and Kernels. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-45352-1. OCLC 853623322.
This article incorporates material from Space of rapidly decreasing functions on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
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