Wavelets, tiling, and spectral sets (Q1847940)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 10:56, 1 February 2024 by Import240129110113 (talk | contribs) (Added link to MaRDI item.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Wavelets, tiling, and spectral sets
scientific article

    Statements

    Wavelets, tiling, and spectral sets (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    27 October 2002
    0 references
    A function \(\phi\) is a wavelet if there exist a set of \(d\times d\) real matrices \(\mathcal D\) and a set \({\mathcal T} \subset {\mathbb R}^d\) such that \(\{|\det (D)|^{1/2} \phi(Dx - \lambda): D \in {\mathcal D}, \lambda \in {\mathcal T}\}\) forms an orthogonal basis for \(L^2({\mathbb R}^d)\). \(\mathcal D\) is the dilation set and \(\mathcal T\) is the translation set. If \(\widehat \phi = \chi_\Omega\) for some \(\Omega \subset {\mathbb R}^d\), then we refer to \(\Omega\) as a wavelet set. A set \(\Omega\) with nonzero and finite measure is called a spectral set if there exists a set \(\mathcal S\) such that \(\{e^{2\pi i s \xi}: s \in {\mathcal S}\}\) is an orthogonal basis for \(L^2(\Omega)\). Then \((\Omega, {\mathcal S})\) is called a spectral pair. The paper under review establishes a tie between wavelet sets and spectral sets. Namely, if \((\Omega, {\mathcal T})\) is a spectral pair and if \(\{D^T(\Omega): D \in {\mathcal D}\}\) tiles \({\mathbb R}^d\), then \(\check \chi_\Omega\) is a wavelet with respect to \(\mathcal D\) and \(\mathcal T\). Conversly, if \(\check \chi_\Omega\) is a wavelet with respect to \(\mathcal D\) and \(\mathcal T\), and if \(0 \in {\mathcal T}\), then \((\Omega, {\mathcal T})\) is a spectral pair and \(\{D^T(\Omega): D \in {\mathcal D}\}\) tiles \({\mathbb R}^d\). Further, the structure of dilation sets of MSF wavelets is studied, and the author provides examples of wavelet sets associated with irregular sets of dilations and translations. In particular, such more general dilation sets (as compared to the typical \({\mathcal D} = \{A^j: j \in {\mathbb Z}\}\)) allow the existence of simple, nonfractal-like, wavelet sets.
    0 references
    wavelets
    0 references
    orthogonal bases
    0 references
    minimally supported frequency wavelets
    0 references
    wavelet set
    0 references
    spectral set
    0 references
    spectral pair
    0 references
    tiling set
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references