Fourier restriction for hypersurfaces in three dimensions and Newton polyhedra

Bibliographic Information

Fourier restriction for hypersurfaces in three dimensions and Newton polyhedra

Isroil A. Ikromov, Detlef Müller

(Annals of mathematics studies, no. 194)

Princeton University Press, 2016

  • : hardcover
  • : pbk

Available at  / 37 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-255) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is the first book to present a complete characterization of Stein-Tomas type Fourier restriction estimates for large classes of smooth hypersurfaces in three dimensions, including all real-analytic hypersurfaces. The range of Lebesgue spaces for which these estimates are valid is described in terms of Newton polyhedra associated to the given surface. Isroil Ikromov and Detlef Muller begin with Elias M. Stein's concept of Fourier restriction and some relations between the decay of the Fourier transform of the surface measure and Stein-Tomas type restriction estimates. Varchenko's ideas relating Fourier decay to associated Newton polyhedra are briefly explained, particularly the concept of adapted coordinates and the notion of height. It turns out that these classical tools essentially suffice already to treat the case where there exist linear adapted coordinates, and thus Ikromov and Muller concentrate on the remaining case. Here the notion of r-height is introduced, which proves to be the right new concept. They then describe decomposition techniques and related stopping time algorithms that allow to partition the given surface into various pieces, which can eventually be handled by means of oscillatory integral estimates. Different interpolation techniques are presented and used, from complex to more recent real methods by Bak and Seeger. Fourier restriction plays an important role in several fields, in particular in real and harmonic analysis, number theory, and PDEs. This book will interest graduate students and researchers working in such fields.

Table of Contents

*Frontmatter, pg. i*Contents, pg. vii*Chapter 1. Introduction, pg. 1*Chapter 2. Auxiliary Results, pg. 29*Chapter 3. Reduction to Restriction Estimates near the Principal Root Jet, pg. 50*Chapter 4. Restriction for Surfaces with Linear Height below 2, pg. 57*Chapter 5. Improved Estimates by Means of Airy-Type Analysis, pg. 75*Chapter 6. The Case When hlin(PHI) => 2: Preparatory Results, pg. 105*Chapter 7. How to Go beyond the Case hlin(PHI) => 5, pg. 131*Chapter 8. The Remaining Cases Where m = 2 and B = 3 or B = 4, pg. 181*Chapter 9. Proofs of Propositions 1.7 and 1.17, pg. 244*Bibliography, pg. 251*Index, pg. 257

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top