Even Fourier multipliers and martingale transforms in infinite dimensions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1782263
DOI10.1016/j.indag.2018.05.014zbMath1406.42015arXiv1710.04958OpenAlexW3098533470MaRDI QIDQ1782263
Publication date: 20 September 2018
Published in: Indagationes Mathematicae. New Series (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.04958
Martingales with discrete parameter (60G42) Multipliers for harmonic analysis in several variables (42B15) Martingales with continuous parameter (60G44) Probability theory on linear topological spaces (60B11)
Related Items
Fourier multipliers and weak differential subordination of martingales in UMD Banach spaces, Martingale decompositions and weak differential subordination in UMD Banach spaces, On the martingale decompositions of Gundy, Meyer, and Yoeurp in infinite dimensions, On strongly orthogonal martingales in UMD Banach spaces
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Boundary value problems and sharp inequalities for martingale transforms
- Estimates for translation invariant operators in \(L^p\) spaces
- Some remarks on Banach spaces in which martingale difference sequences are unconditional
- Lévy processes and Fourier multipliers
- Bi-convexity and bi-martingales
- Homogeneous Fourier multipliers of Marcinkiewicz type
- On \(L_ p\) multipliers
- Martingales in Banach Spaces
- Analysis in Banach Spaces
- Martingales and sharp bounds for Fourier multipliers
- Convexity and Optimization in Banach Spaces
- Fourier multipliers for non-symmetric Lévy processes
- New thoughts on the vector-valued Mihlin–Hörmander multiplier theorem
- Continuity of Measurable Convex and Biconvex Operators
- On Fourier Multiplier Transformations of Banach-Valued Functions
- Directional derivates and almost everywhere differentiability of biconvex and concave-convex operators.
- A Sharp Inequality for Martingale Transforms and the Unconditional Basis Constant of a Monotone Basis in L p (0, 1)
- Classical Fourier Analysis
- On singular integral and martingale transforms