Rectifiability, analytic capacity, and singular integrals (Q1126745): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 03:19, 5 March 2024

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Rectifiability, analytic capacity, and singular integrals
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    Rectifiability, analytic capacity, and singular integrals (English)
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    6 August 1998
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    A survey of the remarkable progress made in the field in question in recent time. In a clear and vivid manner, the author discusses the material around the following ``principles'': 1) The analytic capacity of a one-dimensional compact subset \(E\) of the complex plane \(\mathbb{C}\) is zero if and only if \(E\) is purely unrectifiable. 2) The analytic capacity of a one-dimensional compact subset \(E\) of \(\mathbb{C}\) is positive if and only if the Cauchy integral operator is \(L^2\)-bounded on a large part of \(E\). 3) Singular integrals behave nicely on an \(m\)-dimensional subset \(E\) of \(\mathbb{R}^n\) if and only if \(E\) is rectifiable in a sense. Table of contents: 1. Analytic capacity; finite length. 2. Analytic capacity; infinite length. 3. Singular integrals on regular sets. 4. Existence of principal values. 5. Calderón-Zygmund theory on nonhomogeneous spaces. Section 1 is mainly devoted to the David theorem saying that principle 1) becomes a true statement if the one-dimensional Hausdorff measure of \(E\) is finite. The key elements of the proof are outlined. The rest of the material is presented without proofs.
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    rectifiable set
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    Menger curvature
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    singular integrals
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    analytic capacity
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    Cauchy integral
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    Calderón-Zygmund theory
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    Hausdorff measure
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