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Autori principali: Bennett, Jonathan, Gutierrez, Susana, Nakamura, Shohei, Oliveira, Itamar
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.14886
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author Bennett, Jonathan
Gutierrez, Susana
Nakamura, Shohei
Oliveira, Itamar
author_facet Bennett, Jonathan
Gutierrez, Susana
Nakamura, Shohei
Oliveira, Itamar
contents The purpose of this paper is to expose and investigate natural phase-space formulations of two longstanding problems in the restriction theory of the Fourier transform. These problems, often referred to as the Stein and Mizohata--Takeuchi conjectures, assert that Fourier extension operators associated with rather general (codimension 1) submanifolds of Euclidean space, may be effectively controlled by the classical X-ray transform via weighted $L^2$ inequalities. Our phase-space formulations, which have their origins in recent work of Dendrinos, Mustata and Vitturi, expose close connections with a conjecture of Flandrin from time-frequency analysis, and rest on the identification of an explicit ``geometric" Wigner transform associated with an arbitrary (smooth strictly convex) submanifold $S$ of $\mathbb{R}^n$. Our main results are certain natural ``Sobolev variants" of the Stein and Mizohata--Takeuchi conjectures, and involve estimating the Sobolev norms of such Wigner transforms by geometric forms of classical bilinear fractional integrals. Our broad geometric framework allows us to explore the role of the curvature of the submanifold in these problems, and in particular we obtain bounds that are independent of any lower bound on the curvature; a feature that is uncommon in the wider restriction theory of the Fourier transform. Finally, we provide a further illustration of the effectiveness of our analysis by establishing a form of Flandrin's conjecture in the plane with an $\varepsilon$-loss. While our perspective comes primarily from Euclidean harmonic analysis, the procedure used for constructing phase-space representations of extension operators is well-known in optics.
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A phase-space approach to weighted Fourier extension inequalities
Bennett, Jonathan
Gutierrez, Susana
Nakamura, Shohei
Oliveira, Itamar
Classical Analysis and ODEs
The purpose of this paper is to expose and investigate natural phase-space formulations of two longstanding problems in the restriction theory of the Fourier transform. These problems, often referred to as the Stein and Mizohata--Takeuchi conjectures, assert that Fourier extension operators associated with rather general (codimension 1) submanifolds of Euclidean space, may be effectively controlled by the classical X-ray transform via weighted $L^2$ inequalities. Our phase-space formulations, which have their origins in recent work of Dendrinos, Mustata and Vitturi, expose close connections with a conjecture of Flandrin from time-frequency analysis, and rest on the identification of an explicit ``geometric" Wigner transform associated with an arbitrary (smooth strictly convex) submanifold $S$ of $\mathbb{R}^n$. Our main results are certain natural ``Sobolev variants" of the Stein and Mizohata--Takeuchi conjectures, and involve estimating the Sobolev norms of such Wigner transforms by geometric forms of classical bilinear fractional integrals. Our broad geometric framework allows us to explore the role of the curvature of the submanifold in these problems, and in particular we obtain bounds that are independent of any lower bound on the curvature; a feature that is uncommon in the wider restriction theory of the Fourier transform. Finally, we provide a further illustration of the effectiveness of our analysis by establishing a form of Flandrin's conjecture in the plane with an $\varepsilon$-loss. While our perspective comes primarily from Euclidean harmonic analysis, the procedure used for constructing phase-space representations of extension operators is well-known in optics.
title A phase-space approach to weighted Fourier extension inequalities
topic Classical Analysis and ODEs
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.14886