An Introduction to the Uncertainty Principle : Hardy's Theorem on Lie Groups

ISBN
9781461264682
$109.99
Author Thangavelu, Sundaram
Format Paperback
Details
  • 9.3" x 6.1" x 0.2"
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • 1 vol.
  • 2004
  • xiii, 174
  • Yes
  • 217
  • QA1-939
In 1932 Norbert Wiener gave a series of lectures on Fourier analysis at the Univer- sity of Cambridge. One result of Wiener's visit to Cambridge was his well-known text The Fourier Integral and Certain of its Applications; another was a paper by G. H. Hardy in the 1933 Journalofthe London Mathematical Society. As Hardy says in the introduction to this paper, This note originates from a remark of Prof. N. Wiener, to the effect that "a f and g = j] cannot both be very small." ... The theo- pair of transforms rems which follow give the most precise interpretation possible ofWiener's remark. Hardy's own statement of his results, lightly paraphrased, is as follows, in which f is an integrable function on the real line and f is its Fourier transform: x 2 m If f and j are both 0 (Ix1e- /2) for large x and some m, then each is a finite linear combination ofHermite functions. In particular, if f and j are x2 x 2 2 2 both O(e- / ), then f = j = Ae- /, where A is a constant; and if one x 2 2 is0(e- / ), then both are null.