- Vanish at infinity
In
mathematics , a function on anormed vector space is said to vanish at infinity if as For example, the function:
defined on the
real line vanishes at infinity.There is a generalization of this to a
locally compact setting. A function on a locally compact space (which may not have a norm) vanishes at infinity if, given anypositive number , there is acompact subset such that whenever the point lies outside of .Both of these notions correspond to the intuitive notion of adding a point "at infinity" and requiring the values of the function to get arbitrarily close to zero as we approach it. This "definition" can be formalized in many cases by adding a point at infinity.
Refining the concept, one can look more closely at the "rate of vanishing" of functions at infinity. One of the basic intuitions of
mathematical analysis is that theFourier transform interchanges smoothness conditions with rate conditions on vanishing at infinity. The rapidly decreasing test functions oftempered distribution theory aresmooth function s that are:o(|"x"|−"N")
for all "N", as |"x"| → ∞, and such that all their
partial derivative s satisfy that condition, too. This condition is set up so as to be self-dual under Fourier transform, so that the correspondingdistribution theory of "tempered distributions" will have the same good property.References
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.