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Local smoothing type estimates on \(L^p\) for large \(p\)
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    Local smoothing type estimates on \(L^p\) for large \(p\) (English)
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    5 November 2001
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    This is one of Wolff's last papers, and in the reviewer's opinion, one of his greatest. In this paper he combines his results on the circular maximal function [presented here in a simplified and improved format from that in Am. J. Math. 119, No. 5, 985-1026 (1997; Zbl 0892.52003)], with oscillatory integral techniques and the ``induction on scales'' argument to obtain a sharp local smoothing estimate for the wave equation in \(R^{2+1}\) in \(L^p\) for all \(p > 74\). In other words, given a solution to the wave equation with initial data in \(L^p_\alpha\), the solution is shown to locally be in \(L^p\) with the sharp loss of derivatives \(\alpha\), namely \(\alpha > 1/2 - 2/p\). Actually Wolff proves a stronger square function estimate, or, more precisely, a \(p\)-function estimate. Let \(f\) be a spacetime function of frequency \(\sim N\) which lives within distance 1 of the light cone (i.e., \(f\) is a solution to the wave equation localized in spacetime). We have the standard decomposition \[ f = \sum_\Theta f_\Theta \] where \(\Theta\) is a partition of the above neighbourhood of the light cone into \(1 \times \sqrt{N} \times N\) sectors and \(f_\Theta\) has Fourier support in \(\Theta\). The main result of the paper is then \[ \|f \|_p \lesssim N^{1/2-2/p+} ( \sum_\Theta \|f_\Theta\|_p^p)^{1/p}. \] The exponent \(1/2 - 2/p\) is sharp. The condition \(p > 74\) is not sharp, and Wolff conjectures it should be improved to \(p \geq 6\). The argument proceeds by decomposing the wave into wave packets. The above \(L^p\) estimate is in some sense controlling the number of points where one has a maximal focussing of wave packets. Using an induction on scales argument (assuming the claim has already been proven at the smaller scale of \(\sqrt{N}\)) and a Lorentz transform rescaling, the claim then reduces to a combinatorial statement about the overlap of wave packet boxes, which by a standard duality argument corresponds to a statement about the number of tangencies of a collection of circles. At this point Wolff recalls the machinery used for the circular maximal function (cell decomposition, circles of Appolonius, bilinear reductions) to obtain the required estimate. As a by-product he obtains a somewhat cleaner proof of his own circular maximal theorem. In the final section some variants of the results are presented, for instance a Strichartz inequality for certain fractal measures.
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    local smoothing conjecture
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    wave equation
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    circular maximal function
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    Strichartz inequality
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    fractal measures
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