- Schwartz kernel theorem
In
mathematics , the Schwartz kernel theorem is a foundational result in the theory ofgeneralized function s, published byLaurent Schwartz in 1952. It states, in broad terms, that the generalized functions introduced by Schwartz himself (Schwartz distribution s) have a two-variable theory that includes all reasonablebilinear form s on the space "D" oftest functions . The space "D" itself consists ofsmooth function s ofcompact support .The traditional
kernel function s "K"("x","y") of two variables of the theory ofintegral operator s having been expanded in scope to include their generalized function analogues, which are allowed to be more singular in a serious way, a large class of operators from "D" to itsdual space "D′" of distributions can be constructed. The point of the theorem is to assert that the extended class of operators can be characterised abstractly, as containing all operators subject to a minimum continuity condition. A bilinear form on "D" arises by pairing the image distribution with a test function.A simple example is that the
identity operator "I" corresponds to δ("x" − "y"), in terms of theDirac delta function δ. While this is at most an observation, it shows how the distribution theory adds to the scope. Integral operators are not so 'singular'; another way to put it is that for "K" a continuous kernel, onlycompact operator s are created on a space such as the continuous functions on [0,1] . The operator "I" is far from compact, and its kernel is intuitively speaking approximated by functions on [0,1] × [0,1] with a spike along the diagonal "x" = "y" and vanishing elsewhere.This result implies that the formation of distributions has a major property of 'closure' within the traditional domain of
functional analysis . It was interpreted (comment ofJean Dieudonné ) as a strong verification of the suitability of the Schwartz theory of distributions to mathematical analysis more widely seen. In his "Éléments d'analyse" volume 7, p.3 he notes that the theorem includesdifferential operator s on the same footing as integral operators, and concludes that it is perhaps the most important modern result of functional analysis. He goes on immediately to qualify that statement, saying that the setting is too 'vast' for differential operators, because of the property of monotonicity with respect to thesupport of a function , evident for differentiation. Even monotonicity with respect tosingular support is not characteristic of the general case; its consideration leads in the direction of the contemporary theory ofpseudo-differential operator s.Dieudonné proves a version of the Schwartz result valid for
smooth manifold s, and additional supporting results, in sections 23.9 to 23.12 of that book.External links
*springer|id=N/n067820|title=Nuclear bilinear form|author=G.L. Litvinov
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