Revisiting the Fourier transform on the Heisenberg group (Q2438267)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Revisiting the Fourier transform on the Heisenberg group
scientific article

    Statements

    Revisiting the Fourier transform on the Heisenberg group (English)
    0 references
    10 March 2014
    0 references
    A theorem of \textit{S. Alesker} et al. [American Mathematical Society 226; Advances in the Mathematical Sciences 63, 11--26 (2009; Zbl 1184.42009)] characterizes the Fourier transform on \(\mathbb{R}^n\) as essentially the only transform on the space of tempered distributions which interchanges convolutions and pointwise products. In this paper the authors obtain a similar characterization for the Fourier transform on the Heisenberg group \(\mathbb{H}^n = \mathbb{C}^n \times \mathbb{R}\) equipped with the group law \[ (z,t)(w,s)=(z+w, t+s+\frac{1}{2}\Im (z\cdot\overline{w})). \] The group Fourier transform on \(\mathbb{H}^n\) is defined to be the operator valued function \[ \pi_{\lambda}(f)=\int_{\mathbb{H}^n}f(z,t)\pi_{\lambda}(z,t)\;dz dt \] where \(\pi_{\lambda}(z,t)\) is the Schrödinger representation of \(\mathbb{H}^n\) for each \(\lambda \in \mathbb{R}^{*}=\mathbb{R} \setminus \{ 0\}\) and the Fourier-Weyl transform on \(\mathbb{H}^n\) is defined to be the operator valued function \[ \hat{f}(\lambda, \zeta)=\int_{\mathbb{H}^n}f(z,t)\pi_{\lambda, \zeta}(z,t)\;dz dt \] where \(\pi_{\lambda,\zeta}(z,t)=\chi_{\zeta}(z,t)\pi_{\lambda}(z,t)\) is the representation of \(\mathbb{H}^n\) parametrised by \((\lambda, \zeta) \in \mathbb{R}^{*}\times \mathbb{C}^n\) and \(\chi_{\zeta}(z,t)=e^{i\Re z\cdot\overline{\zeta}}\) is a character. The convolutions \(f*g\) and \(f*_{3}g\) on \(\mathbb{H}^n\) are defined by \[ (f*g)(z,t)=\int_{\mathbb{H}^n}f((z,t)(-w,-s))g(w,s)dwds, \] \[ f*_{3}g(z,t)=\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}f(z,t-s)g(z,s)\;ds \] and a translation on \(\mathbb{H}^n\) is given by \[ (R_{(z,t)}f)(w,s)=f((w,s)(z,t)). \] Let \(\mathcal{S}(\mathbb{H}^n)\) stand for the Schwartz space on \(\mathbb{H}^n\). Denote by \(\hat{\mathcal{S}}(\mathbb{H}^n)\) the image of \(\mathcal{S}(\mathbb{H}^n)\) under the group Fourier transform \(f \rightarrow \pi_{\lambda}(f)\). {Theorem. } Let \(T: \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{H}^n) \rightarrow \hat{\mathcal{S}}(\mathbb{H}^n)\) be a bijection which satisfies (i) \(T(f\ast g)=TfTg\) and (ii) \(T(f*_{3}g)(\lambda)=2\pi\int_{\mathbb{C}^n}\mathcal{F}^{-1}f(w,\lambda) Tg(\lambda, w)\;dw\) where \(\mathcal{F}^{-1}\) stands on the inverse Euclidean Fourier transform on \(\mathbb{C}^n\times \mathbb{R}\) and \(Tg(\lambda, w)\) stands for \(Tg(\lambda, w)=\pi_{\lambda}(-i\lambda^{-1}w,0)Tg(\lambda)\pi_{\lambda}(i\lambda^{-1}w,0)\). Then there exists a map \(\zeta: \mathbb{R}^{*} \rightarrow \mathbb{C}^n\) such that \(Tf(\lambda)=\hat{f}(\lambda, \zeta(\lambda))\). Corollary. If in addition to the hypothesis of the Theorem the map T satisfies \(T(R_{(z,0)}f)(\lambda)=Tf(\lambda)\pi_{\lambda}(z)^{*}\). Then \(Tf(\lambda)=\pi_{\lambda}(f)\).
    0 references
    Heisenberg group
    0 references
    heat kernel
    0 references
    Fourier transform
    0 references
    Fourier-Weyl transform
    0 references
    Schwartz class
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

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