Salem sets and restriction properties of Fourier transforms (Q5930044): Difference between revisions
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1587300
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English | Salem sets and restriction properties of Fourier transforms |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1587300 |
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Salem sets and restriction properties of Fourier transforms (English)
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2 December 2001
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The restriction phenomenon is generally studied in higher dimensions. It refers to the ability of an \(L^p\) function to have its Fourier transform meaningfully restricted to certain hypersurfaces or other subsets \(S\) of \(R^n\) for certain \(p>1\), even though the Fourier transform is not continuous or even pointwise defined. In this paper the author shows that this phenomenon occurs in one dimension as well, when \(S\) is a \textit{Salem set} - a set whose Fourier dimension and Hausdorff dimension agree. (A set \(S\) is said to have Fourier dimension at least \(\alpha\) if it supports a probability measure whose Fourier transform decays like \(|\xi|^{-\alpha/2}\)). A quick review of the known theory of Salem sets is given in this nice and short paper. The author proves the natural analogue of the famous Tomas-Stein theorem for Salem sets (or more generally for measures with dimension and Fourier decay estimates), although unlike the situation with hypersurfaces, there is no ``Knapp'' counterexample and the Tomas-Stein argument does not appear to give sharp results. The author also proves an analogous result for ``Bochner-Riesz'' type multipliers, whose symbol decays as a certain power of the distance to \(S\).
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Salem sets
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restriction theorems
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Fourier transform
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Tomas-Stein theorem
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Hausdorff dimension
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Fourier dimension
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