- Pseudo-differential operator
In
mathematical analysis a pseudo-differential operator is an extension of the concept ofdifferential operator . Pseudo-differential operators are used extensively in the theory ofpartial differential equations andquantum field theory .Motivation
Linear Differential Operators with Constant Coefficients
Consider a linear
differential operator with constant coefficients,:
which acts on smooth functions with compact support in R"n".This operator can be written as a composition of a
Fourier transform , a simple "multiplication" by thepolynomial function (called the symbol):
and an inverse Fourier transform in the form:
NumBlk|:||EquationRef|1
Here, α = (α1, … ,α"n") is a
multi-index , "a"α are complex numbers, and:
is an iterated partial derivative, where ∂"j" means differentiation with respect to the j-th variable.
Similarly, a pseudo-differential operator "P"("x","D") on R"n" is an operator of the form
NumBlk|:||EquationRef|2
with a more general function "P" in the integrand, with certain properties to be specified.
;Derivation of formula (EquationNote|1)The Fourier transform of a smooth function "u", compactly supported in R"n", is
: and Fourier's inversion formula gives
:
By applying "P"("D") to this representation of "u" and using
:
one obtains formula (EquationNote|1).
Representation of Solutions to Partial Differential Equations
To solve the partial differential equation
:
we (formally) apply the Fourier transform on both sides and obtain the "algebraic" equation
:.
If the symbol "P"(ξ) is never zero when ξ ∈ R"n", then it is possible to divide by "P"(ξ):
:
By Fourier's inversion formula, a solution is
:.
Here it is assumed that:
# "P"("D") is a linear differential operator with "constant" coefficients,
# its symbol "P"(ξ) is never zero,
# both "u" and ƒ have a well defined Fourier transform.The last assumption can be weakened by using the theory of distributions.The first two assumptions can be weakened as follows.In the last formula, write out the Fourier transform of ƒ to obtain
:.
This is similar to formula (EquationNote|1), except that 1/"P"(ξ) is not a polynomial function, but a function of a more general kind.
ymbol Classes and Pseudo-Differential Operators
The main idea is to define operators "P"("x","D") by using formula (1) and admitting more general symbols "P"("x",ξ):
:
One assumes that the symbol "P"("x",ξ) belongs to a certain "symbol class".
For instance, if "P"("x",ξ) is an infinitely differentiable function on R"n" × R"n" with the property
:
for all "x",ξ ∈R"n", all multiindices α,β. some constants "C"α, β and some real number "m", then "P" belongs to the symbol class of
Hörmander . The corresponding operator "P"("x","D") is called a pseudo-differential operator of order m and belongs to the classProperties
Linear differential operators of order m with smooth bounded coefficients are pseudodifferentialoperators of order "m".The composition "PQ" of two pseudo-differential operators "P", "Q" is again a pseudodifferential operator and the symbol of "PQ" can be calculated by using the symbols of "P" and "Q". The adjoint and transpose of a pseudo-differential operator is a pseudodifferential operator.
If a differential operator of order "m" is (uniformly) elliptic (of order "m")and invertible, then its inverse is a pseudo-differential operator of order −"m", and its symbol can be calculated. This means that one can solve linear elliptic differential equations more or less explicitlyby using the theory of pseudo-differential operators.
Differential operators are "local" in the sense that one only needs the value of a function in a neighbourhood of a point to determine the effect of the operator. Pseudo-differential operators are "pseudo-local", which means informally that when applied to a distribution they do not create a singularity at points where the distribution was already smooth.
Just as a differential operator can be expressed in terms of "D" = −id/d"x" in the form
:
for a
polynomial "p" in "D" is called the "symbol", a pseudo-differential operator has a symbol in a more general class of functions. Often one can reduce a problem in analysis of pseudo-differential operators to a sequence of algebraic problems involving their symbols, and this is the essence ofmicrolocal analysis .ee also
*
Differential algebra for a definition of pseudo-differential operators in the context of differential algebras and differential rings.
*Micro-local operator
*Sato's fundamental theorem Further reading
Here are some of the standard reference books
* Michael E. Taylor, Pseudodifferential Operators, Princeton Univ. Press 1981. ISBN 0-691-08282-0
* M. A. Shubin, Pseudodifferential Operators and Spectral Theory, Springer-Verlag 2001. ISBN 3-540-41195-X
* Francois Treves, Introduction to Pseudo Differential and Fourier Integral Operators, (University Series in Mathematics), Plenum Publ. Co. 1981. ISBN 0-306-40404-4
* F. G. Friedlander and M. Joshi, Introduction to the Theory of Distributions, Cambridge University Press 1999. ISBN 0-521-64971-4
* cite book
first=Lars
last=Hörmander
authorlink= Lars Hörmander
title=The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators III: Pseudo-Differential Operators
year=1987
publisher=Springer
isbn=3540499377External links
* [http://arxiv.org/abs/math.AP/9906155 Lectures on Pseudo-differential Operators] by MS Joshi on arxiv.org.
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