Math 642-600 Current Assignment — Spring 2016
Assignment 9 - Not to be handed in.
- Read sections 7.2.3, 10.1-10.3.
- Suggested problems
- Prove the following theorems:
-
If $f,g \in L^1(\mathbb R) \cap L^2(\mathbb R)$, then $f\ast g\in
L^1(\mathbb R) \cap L^\infty(\mathbb R)$.
- If $f\in L^1(\mathbb R)$, then its Fourier transform $\hat f$ is in
$C_0(\mathbb R)$.
- Consider the one dimensional heat equation, $u_t = u_{xx}$, with
$u(x,0) = f(x)$, where $-\infty < x < \infty$ and $0 < t <
\infty$. You are given that ${\mathcal F}[e^{-x^2}]
=\sqrt{2\pi}e^{-\xi^2/4}$. By taking the Fourier transform in $x$,
show that the solution $u(x,t)$ is given by
\[
u(x,t) = \int_{\mathbb R}K(x-y,t)f(y)dy,\ K(\xi,t) =
(4\pi t)^{-1/2} e^{-\xi^2/4t}.
\]
(The function $K(\xi,t)$ is the one-dimensional heat kernel.)
- Let T be a tempered distribution. Find the Fourier transforms for
T′, xT(x), T(x−a), and eibxT(x).
- Let $f$ be in Schwartz space, $\mathcal S$, and let $g$ be $C^\infty$
and satisfy $|g^{(m)}(x)| \le c_m(1+t^2)^{n_m}$
for all nonnegative integers m. Here $c_m$ and $n_m$
depend on $g$ and $m$. Show that $fg$ is in Schwartz space. Use this
result to explain how to
define the product $g(x)T(x)$, where $T$ is a tempered distribution.
- Section 10.3: 1, 3, 14.
Updated 5/3/2016 (fjn)