Riesz transform and \(L^p\)-cohomology for manifolds with Euclidean ends (Q2496923)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Riesz transform and \(L^p\)-cohomology for manifolds with Euclidean ends |
scientific article |
Statements
Riesz transform and \(L^p\)-cohomology for manifolds with Euclidean ends (English)
0 references
25 July 2006
0 references
The authors are here interested in studying boundedness properties of the Riesz transform on some particular Riemannian manifolds. More precisely, they consider smooth Riemannian manifolds \(M\) that are the union of a compact part and a finite number of Euclidean ends, \({\mathbb R}^n\setminus B(0,R)\), for some \(R>0\), each of which carries the standard metric. The Riesz transform on \(M\) is the operator \(T:L^2(M)\to L^2(M;T^*M)\), given by \(T(f)=d\triangle^{-1/2}f\), where \(\triangle\) is the positive Laplace operator on \(M\). It is just well known that \(T\) is always a bounded map for \(p=2\). Their main result is that \(T\) is bounded for \(1<p<n\) and unbounded for \(p\geq n\), if there is more than one end. The method used is to analyze the kernel of \(\triangle^{-1/2}\) to which can be applied the theory of scattering differential operators [Melrose]. Then, analyzing also the kernel of \(T\) they directly arrive to obtain the result. A further result is contained in this paper that relates the boundedness of the Riesz transform in \(L^p\), \(p>2\), to a more general class of manifolds (\(n\)-dimensional complete manifolds satisfying the Nash inequality and under an \(O(r^n)\) upper bound on the volume growth of geodesic balls). They show, in fact, that under suitable hypotheses, the Riesz transform is bounded in \(L^p\) for some \(p>2\), and for the first space of reduced \(L^p\) cohomology of \((M,g)\), i.e., \(H^1_p(M)={{\{\alpha\in L^p(T^*M), d\alpha=0\}}\over{\overline{dC^\infty_0(M)}}}\), one has the isomorphism \(H^1_p(M)\cong\{\alpha\in L^p(M;T^*M)| d\alpha=0\), \(d^*\alpha=0\}\). The paper ends with some concluding remarks and a list of open problems.
0 references
scattering theory
0 references
heat kernel
0 references
Riesz transform
0 references