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Marcinkiewicz interpolation theorem
1 reference results for: Marcinkiewicz theorem
Wikipedia
In mathematics, the Marcinkiewicz theorem, discovered by Józef Marcinkiewicz, is a result about interpolation of operators acting on Lp spaces and related spaces. Interpolation of operators should not be confused with somewhat different mathematical procedure of interpolation of functions.

Marcinkiewicz' theorem is similar in spirit to the Riesz-Thorin theorem, but can be used in certain situations where the Riesz-Thorin theorem cannot.

You might want to read Riesz-Thorin theorem first, since it covers a similar, but conceptually simpler topic. More useful background can be found in Fourier series, operator norm and Lp space.

Preliminaries

Let f be a measurable function with real or complex values, defined on a measure space (XF, ω). The distribution function of f is defined by

lambda_f(t) = omegaleft{xin Xmid |f(x)| > tright}.

Then f is called weak L^1 if there exists a constant C such that the distribution of f satisfies the following inequality for all t > 0:

lambda_f(t)leq frac{C}{t}.

The smallest constant C in the inequality above is called the weak L^1 norm and is usually denoted by ||f||1,w or ||f||1,∞. Similarly the space is usually denoted by L1,w or L1,∞.

(Note: This terminology is a bit misleading since the weak norm does not satisfy the triangle inequality as one can see by considering the sum of the functions on (0,1) given by 1/x and 1/(1-x) , which has norm 4 not 2.)

Any L^1 function belongs to L1,w and in addition one has the inequality

|f|_{1,w}leq |f|_1.

This is nothing but Markov's inequality. The converse is not true. For example, the function 1/x belongs to L1,w but not to L1.

Similarly, one may define the weak L^p space as the space of all functions f such that |f|^p belong to L1,w, and the weak L^p norm using

|f|_{p,w}=|,|f|^p |_{1,w}^{1/p}.

More directly, the Lp,w norm is defined as the best constant C in the inequality

lambda_f(t) le frac{C^p}{t^p}

for all t > 0.

Formulation

Informally, Marcinkiewicz's theorem is

Theorem: Let T be a bounded linear operator from L^p to L^{p,w} and at the same time from L^q to L^{q,w}. Then T is also a bounded operator from L^r to L^r for any r between p and q.

In other words, even if you only require weak boundedness on the extremes p and q, you still get regular boundedness inside. To make this more formal, one has to explain that T is bounded only on a dense subset and can be completed. See Riesz-Thorin theorem for these details.

Where Marcinkiewicz's theorem is weaker than the Riesz-Thorin theorem is in the estimates of the norm. The theorem gives bounds for the L^r norm of T but this bound increases to infinity as r converges to either p or q. Specifically , suppose that

|Tf|_{p,w} le N_p|f|_p,
|Tf|_{q,w} le N_q|f|_q,
so that the operator norm of T from Lp to Lp,w is at most Np, and the operator norm of T from Lq to Lq,w is at most Nq. Then the following interpolation inequality holds for all r between p and q and all f ∈ Lr:
|Tf|_rle gamma N_p^delta N_q^{1-delta}|f|_r
where
delta=frac{p(q-r)}{r(q-p)}
and
gamma=2left(frac{r(q-p)}{(r-p)(q-r)}right)^{1/r}.
The constants δ and γ can also be given for q = ∞ by passing to the limit.

A version of the theorem also holds more generally if T is only assumed to be a quasilinear operator. That is, there exists a constant C > 0 such that T satisfies

|T(f+g)(x)| le C(|Tf(x)|+|Tg(x)|)
for almost every x. The theorem holds precisely as stated, except with γ replaced by
gamma=2Cleft(frac{r(q-p)}{(r-p)(q-r)}right)^{1/r}.

An operator T (possibly quasilinear) satisfying an estimate of the form

|Tf|_{p,w}le C|f|_q
is said to be of weak type (p,q). An operator is simply of type (p,q) if T is a bounded transformation from Lp to Lq:
|Tf|_ple C|f|_q.
An alternative formulation of the interpolation theorem is as follows:

  • If T is a quasilinear operator of weak type (p0, q0) and of weak type (p1, q1) where q0 ≠ q1, then for each θ ∈ (0,1), T is of type (p,q) for p and q of the form

frac{1}{p} = frac{1-theta}{p_0}+frac{theta}{p_1},quad frac{1}{q} = frac{1-theta}{q_0} + frac{theta}{q_1}.
The latter formulation follows from the former through an application of Hölder's inequality and a duality argument.

Applications and examples

A famous application example is the Hilbert transform. Viewed as a multiplier, the Hilbert transform of a function f can be computed by first taking the Fourier transform of f, then multiplying by the sign function, and finally applying the inverse Fourier transform.

Hence Parseval's theorem easily shows that the Hilbert transform is bounded from L^2 to L^2. A much less obvious fact is that it is bounded from L^1 to L^{1,w}. Hence Marcinkiewicz's theorem shows that it is bounded from L^p to L^p for any 1 < p < 2. Duality arguments show that it is also bounded for 2 < p < ∞. In fact, the Hilbert transform is really unbounded for p equal to 1 or ∞.

Another famous example is the Hardy-Littlewood Maximal Function. While L^p to L^p bounds can be derived immediately from the L^1 to weak L^1 estimate by a clever change of variables, Marcinkiewicz interpolation is a more intuitive approach. Since the Hardy-Littlewood Maximal Function is trivially bounded from L^infty to L^infty, strong boundedness for all p>1 follows immediately from the weak (1,1) estimate and interpolation.

History

Marcinkiewicz had originally told this result to Antoni Zygmund shortly before he died in World War II. The theorem was almost forgotten by Zygmund, and was absent from his original works on the theory of singular integral operators. Later Zygmund realized that Marcinkiewicz's result could greatly simplify his work, at which time he published his former student's theorem together with a generalization of his own.

References

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