Principles of harmonic analysis (Q5900440): Difference between revisions
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5366403
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English | Principles of harmonic analysis |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5366403 |
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Principles of harmonic analysis (English)
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14 November 2008
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The book is intended as a text for a graduate course of abstract harmonic analysis and its applications. It consists of twelve chapters and their titles give a broad picture of the topics covered and their order of development: 1. Haar integration; 2. Banach algebras; 3. Duality for abelian groups; 4. The structure of LCA groups; 5. Operators on Hilbert spaces; 6. Representations; 7. Compact groups; 8. Direct integrals; 9. The Selberg trace formula; 10. The Heisenberg group; 11. \(\text{SL}_2(\mathbb R)\); 12. Wavelets. Three appendices, on topology, measure and integration, and functional analysis, provide further necessary background. The book is based on two fundamental principles of harmonic analysis: the Plancherel formula and the Poisson summation formula. The authors first prove both for locally compact abelian groups. For non-abelian groups they discuss the Plancherel theorem in the general situation for type I groups. The generalization of the Poisson summation formula to non-abelian groups is the Selberg trace formula, which they prove for arbitrary groups admitting uniform lattices. As examples for the application of the trace formula the authors treat the Heisenberg group and the group \(\text{SL}_2(\mathbb R)\). In the former case the trace formula yields a decomposition of the \(L^2\)-space of the Heisenberg group modulo a lattice. In the case of \(\text{SL}_2(\mathbb R)\), the trace formula is used to derive results like the Weil asymptotic law for hyperbolic surfaces and to prove the analytic continuation of the Selberg zeta function. The book can be used as a follow-up to \textit{A. Deitmar}'s previous book [A first course in harmonic analysis. Universitext. New York, NY: Springer (2005; Zbl 1063.43001)] or independently, if the reader has a modest knowledge of Fourier analysis.
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harmonic analysis
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Fourier analysis
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Plancherel theorem
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locally compact abelian (LCA) groups
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Pontryagin duality theorem
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unitary representations
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Banach algebras
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Selberg trace formula
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Heisenberg group
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wavelets
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