A cone restriction estimate using polynomial partitioning
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2148896
DOI10.4171/JEMS/1168zbMath1491.42010arXiv1704.05485OpenAlexW3214696604MaRDI QIDQ2148896
Publication date: 24 June 2022
Published in: Journal of the European Mathematical Society (JEMS) (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1704.05485
Singular and oscillatory integrals (Calderón-Zygmund, etc.) (42B20) Fourier and Fourier-Stieltjes transforms and other transforms of Fourier type (42B10)
Related Items
Restriction estimates for hyperbolic cone in high dimensions ⋮ Mizohata–Takeuchi estimates in the plane ⋮ Real analysis, harmonic analysis and applications. Abstracts from the workshop held July 3--9, 2022 ⋮ Improved local smoothing estimate for the wave equation in higher dimensions ⋮ Improved decay of conical averages of the Fourier transform ⋮ \(L^p\)-\(L^q\) local smoothing estimates for the wave equation via \(k\)-broad Fourier restriction
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- On the Erdős distinct distances problem in the plane
- The optimal trilinear restriction estimate for a class of hypersurfaces with curvature
- Bounds on oscillatory integral operators based on multilinear estimates
- On the multilinear restriction and Kakeya conjectures
- Restriction estimates using polynomial partitioning. II
- Optimal multilinear restriction estimates for a class of hypersurfaces with curvature
- A sharp bilinear cone restriction estimate
- The Bochner-Riesz conjecture implies the restriction conjecture
- Improved Fourier restriction estimates in higher dimensions
- The proof of the \(l^2\) decoupling conjecture
- A sharp Schrödinger maximal estimate in \(\mathbb{R}^2\)
- A restriction estimate using polynomial partitioning
- On the size of Kakeya sets in finite fields
- The restriction of the Fourier transform to some curves and surfaces
- A bilinear approach to the restriction and Kakeya conjectures
- Improved decay of conical averages of the Fourier transform
- Endpoint bilinear restriction theorems for the cone, and some sharp null form estimates