- Fredholm theory
In
mathematics , Fredholm theory is a theory ofintegral equation s. In the narrowest sense, Fredholm theory concerns itself with the solution of theFredholm integral equation . In a broader sense, the abstract structure of Fredholm's theory is given in terms of thespectral theory ofFredholm operator s andFredholm kernel s onHilbert space . The theory is named in honour ofErik Ivar Fredholm .Overview
The following sections provide a casual sketch of the place of Fredholm theory in the broader context of
operator theory andfunctional analysis . The outline presented here is broad, whereas the difficulty of formalizing this sketch is, of course, in the details.Homogeneous equations
Much of Fredholm theory concerns itself with finding solutions for the
integral equation :
This equation arises naturally in many problems in
physics and mathematics, as the inverse of adifferential equation . That is, one is asked to solve the differential equation:
where the function "f" is given and "g" is unknown. Here, "L" stands for a linear
differential operator . For example, one might take "L" to be anelliptic operator , such as:
in which case the equation to be solved become the
Poisson equation . A general method of solving such equations is by means ofGreen's function s, namely, rather than a direct attack, one instead attempts to solve the equation:
where is the
Dirac delta function . The desired solution to the differential equation is then written as:
This integral is written in the form of a
Fredholm integral equation . The function is variously known as a Green's function, or the kernel of an integral. It is sometimes called the nucleus of the integral, whence the termnuclear operator arises.In the general theory, "x" and "y" may be points on any
manifold ; thereal number line or "m"-dimensionalEuclidean space in the simplest cases. The general theory also often requires that the functions belong to some givenfunction space : often, the space ofsquare-integrable function s is studied, andSobolev space s appear often.The actual function space used is often determined by the solutions of the
eigenvalue problem of the differential operator; that is, by the solutions to:
where the are the eigenvalues, and the are the eigenvectors. The set of eigenvectors form a
Banach space , and, when there is a naturalinner product , then the eigenvectors form aHilbert space , at which point theRiesz representation theorem is applied. Examples of such spaces are theorthogonal polynomial s, which occur as the solutions to a class of second-orderordinary differential equation s.Given a Hilbert space as above, the kernel may be written in the form
:
where is the dual to . In this form, the object is often called the
Fredholm operator or theFredholm kernel . That this is the same kernel as before follows from the completeness of the basis of the Hilbert space, namely, that one has:
Since the are generally increasing, the resulting eigenvalues of the operator are thus seen to be decreasing towards zero.
Inhomogenous equations
The inhomogenous Fredholm integral equation
:
may be written formally as
:
which has the formal solution
:
A solution of this form is referred to as the
resolvent formalism , where the resolvent is defined as the operator:
Given the collection of eigenvectors and eigenvalues of "K", the resolvent may be given a concrete form as
:
with the solution being
:
A necessary and sufficient condition for such a solution to exist is one of
Fredholm's theorem s. The resolvent is commonly expanded in powers of , in which case it is known as theLiouville-Neumann series . In this case, the integral equation is written as:
and the resolvent is written in the alternate form as
:
Fredholm determinant
The
Fredholm determinant is commonly defined as:
where
:
and
:
and so on. The corresponding
zeta function is:
The zeta function can be thought of as the determinant of the
resolvent .The zeta function plays an important role in studying
dynamical systems . Note that this is the same general type of zeta function as theRiemann zeta function ; however, in this case, the corresponding kernel is not known. The existence of such a kernel is known as theHilbert-Polya conjecture .Main results
The classical results of the theory are
Fredholm's theorem s, one of which is theFredholm alternative .One of the important results from the general theory are that the kernel is a
compact operator when the space of functions areequicontinuous .A related celebrated result is the
Atiyah-Singer index theorem , pertaining to index (dim ker - dim coker) of elliptic operators oncompact manifold s.History
Fredholm's 1903 paper in "Acta Mathematica" is considered to be one of the major landmarks in the establishment of
operator theory .David Hilbert developed the abstraction ofHilbert space in association with research on integral equations prompted by Fredholm's (amongst other things).References
* E.I. Fredholm, "Sur une classe d'equations fonctionnelles", "Acta Mathematica" , 27 (1903) pp. 365–390.
* D.E. Edmunds and W.D. Evans (1987), "Spectral theory and differential operators," Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-853542-2.
*
* Bruce K. Driver, " [http://math.ucsd.edu/~driver/231-02-03/Lecture_Notes/compact.pdf Compact and Fredholm Operators and the Spectral Theorem] ", "Analysis Tools with Applications", Chapter 35, pp. 579-600.
* Robert C. McOwen, " [http://projecteuclid.org/Dienst/UI/1.0/Summarize/euclid.pjm/1102780323 Fredholm theory of partial differential equations on complete Riemannian manifolds] ", "Pacific J. Math." 87, no. 1 (1980), 169–185.
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