Convolution
Convolution
1 Introduction
The point of this note is to provide background for one of my favorite problems.
I offer a prize of 1000 USD for the solution of this problem. I do not think that
the problem by itself has any importance. It is just pretty.
It is well known that “convolution spreads regularity”. For example, if one
want to approximate a continuous function on R by a C ∞ function, one takes
convolution with a C ∞ function with (small) compact support. However, some
regularization is possible even when one takes convolution with a singular mea-
sure, and even when convolution is applied to L1 functions.
For simplicity we consider only convolution on the group G = {−1, 1}N
provided with its Haar measure λ.
Given a positive, finite measure µ on G we consider the operator Tµ on
L1 = L1 (T, dx) given by
Z
Tµ (f)(x) = f(x + y)dµ(y) .
2 Simple facts
It is quite a requirement that Tµ has some regularization properties on L1 .
Proposition 1. Assume that for some Orlicz function ϕ such that limu→∞ ϕ(u) =
∞, for all f in L1 we have
Suppose for contradiction that this is not the case, so that there is compact
set K with µ(K) > 0 and λ(K) = 0. Consider an open set U ⊂ G and a function
f ∈ L1 , such that x 6∈ U ⇒ f = 0, with f ≥ 0 and kfk1 = 1. Let us denote by
µK the restriction of µ to K. Then, using Fubini theorem in the first equality,
Z Z
µ(K) = TµK (f)dλ = f(x + y)dλ(x)dµK (y) .
G
1
Now, if f(x + y) 6= 0 and y ∈ K we have x ∈ U − K. Therefore we can restrict
the last integral to x ∈ U − K. That is, we have shown that
Z Z
µ(K) ≤ TµK (f)dλ(x) ≤ Tµ (f)dλ , (2)
U −K U −K
R
Meanwhile, consider a function g ≥ 0 with kgkϕ ≤ C, so that ϕ(g/C)dλ ≤
1. For each measurable set V from Jensen’s inequality we have
Z
ϕ( gdλ/Cλ(V ) ≤ 1 .
V
Since
kTµ (f)k1 = µ(G)kfk1 ,
from Markov inequality we see that
ψµ (u) ≤ µ(G) .
lim ψµ (u) = 0 .
u→∞
2
We may assume that µ is a probability. The support of µ is finite, so it
generates a finite subgroup H of G. Consider then a subgroup H 0 of G, so that
H + H 0 is a subgroup of G, which is invariant under translations by elements
of the support of µ. Thus if f is the indicator of H 0 + H it is invariant under
translations by elements of the support of µ, and thus Tµ (f) = f. Since the
measure of H + H 0 can be as small as we wish, the result should be obvious.
Here is another simple fact showing that when µ is singular the function ψµ
cannot decrease too fast.
Since we assume that µ is singular, we can find a > 0 such that we can find a
with µ(K) ≥Ra and λ(U − K) as small as we wish. We then see that for each A
∞
we have a ≤ A ψµ (u)du.
3 The problem
Given 0 ≤ a ≤ 1 we consider the “biased coin” probabilty µa on G. It is the
product measure on G that on each factor gives weight (1 + a)/2 to the point 1
(and weight (1 − a)/2 to the point -1) so that
1 + a 1−a ⊗N
µa = δ1 + δ−1 .
2 2
Here is a simple fact
Proposition 5 Given
√ 0 < a ≤ 1 there exists C(a) > 0 such that for u ≥ 2 we
have ψµa ≥ C(a)/ log u.
3
We simply look at the density of µa when we replace G by {−1, 1}n. On a
sequence with k terms equal to 1 this density g is (1 + a)k (1 − a)n−k , so that
n
λ(g ≥ (1 + a)k (1 − a)n−k ) ≥ 2−n .
k
Conjecture 6 Given a > 0 there exist C(a) > 0 such that for u ≥ 2 we have
C(a)
ψµa (u) ≤ √ .
log u
I do not know if it is true that limu→∞ ψµa (u) = 0. However the following
is proved in my paper “A conjecture on convolution operators, and operators
from L1 to a Banach lattice”, Israel J. of Math. 68, 1989, 82-88. In view of (3)
this is about as fast a decrease as can be expected.
R1
Theorem 6 The probability measure µ = 0
µexp(−t)dt satisfies (for u ≥ 10)
C log log u
ψµ (u) ≤ .
log u
Another noteworthy result is that in 2015 Ronen Eldan and James Lee have
solved the “Gaussian limiting case” of Conjecture 6 (with a slightly weaker
estimate).