Regularity properties of functional equations in several variables. (Q1773292)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Regularity properties of functional equations in several variables.
scientific article

    Statements

    Regularity properties of functional equations in several variables. (English)
    0 references
    26 April 2005
    0 references
    This book is a welcome addition to the functional equations literature. Its main topic is the proving of regularity theorems, which show that any solution of a functional equation satisfying some weak regularity property (e.g. measurability) must satisfy a stronger regularity property (e.g. continuity). The book treats non-composite functional equations with several variables. In this context, the adjective ``several'' means there are more variables in the equation than the (minimum) number of places in the unknown function(s). The author treats essentially five types of regularity theorems: (I) measurability or the Baire property implies continuity, (II) continuity implies almost everywhere differentiability, (III) almost everywhere differentiability implies continuous differentiability, (IV) \(p\)-times continuous differentiability implies \((p+1)\)-times continuous differentiability, and (V) infinite differentiability implies analyticity. The central object of study is the most general non-composite ``explicit'' equation \(f(x) = h(x, y, f(g_1(x, y)),\dots, f(g_n(x, y)))\) for vector functions of vector variables (or on manifolds). Here \(f\) is the unknown function, while \(h\) and the \(g_i\)'s are given. The author does a masterful job of organizing and summarizing the results of the last 50 years (mostly the last 25) and weaving them together into a coherent general theory. There are over 200 references. The book is very carefully written, with apparently very few misprints. (This reviewer could find only one. In the definition of a measure at the bottom of page 42, the condition that \(T\) should be covered by the collection \(H\) is omitted.) The book concludes with a chapter of examples illustrating how the results can be applied to a variety of equations. The author has certainly achieved his stated goal of making these results ``more accessible and easier to use for everyone working with functional equations.''
    0 references
    functional equations
    0 references
    non-composite equation
    0 references
    several variables
    0 references
    regularity theorems
    0 references
    textbook
    0 references
    measurability
    0 references
    Baire property
    0 references
    continuity
    0 references
    differentiability
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references