Gelfand-Shilov spaces for the Hankel transform (Q1196256)
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English | Gelfand-Shilov spaces for the Hankel transform |
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Gelfand-Shilov spaces for the Hankel transform (English)
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15 December 1992
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The integral transform \(H_ \gamma\), related to \((0,\infty)\), with the kernel \((tx)^{-\gamma/2} t^ \gamma J_ \gamma(\sqrt{xt})\), \(\gamma>- 1\), is called in this paper the Hankel-Clifford transform (in short HC- transform). The integral transform with the kernel \((1-z)^{- 1}(xtz)^{-\gamma/2} t^ \gamma I_ \gamma(2\sqrt{xtz}/(1-z))\) is a generalization of \(H_ \gamma\) and is denoted by \(G_{z,\gamma}\). The author of this paper follows the Gelfand-Shilov idea; they constructed the spaces: \(S_ \alpha\), \(S^ \beta\) and \(S^ \beta_ \alpha\) in order to extend the Fourier transform to a larger class of generalized functions than tempered distributions. Denote by \(S^ +\) the Schwartz space defined on \((0,\infty)\). The author introduces the spaces: \(G_ \alpha\), \(G^ \beta\) and \(G^ \beta_ \alpha\) in order to extend \(H_ \gamma\) transform to a larger class then \(S^ +\). These spaces are sequentially complete and locally convex, contained in \(S^ +\) with a topology stronger than that induced by \(S^ +\). He gives the relation between the Gelfand-Shilov spaces and the introduced spaces \(G_ \alpha\), \(G^ \beta\) and \(G^ \beta_ \alpha\). The main result is in Theorem 3.5: \(G_{z,\gamma}\) is an isomorphism from \(G_ \alpha\), \(G^ \beta\) and \(G^ \beta_ \alpha\) onto \(G^ \alpha\), \(G_ \beta\) and \(G^ \alpha_ \beta\), respectively. The paper is written clear and worked out in all details.
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Hankel-Clifford transform
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HC-transform
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Schwartz space
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Gelfand-Shilov spaces
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