Singular integrals on C1,α regular curves in Carnot groups

Author(s):  
Vasileios Chousionis ◽  
Sean Li ◽  
Scott Zimmerman
Author(s):  
Brian Street

This chapter turns to a general theory which generalizes and unifies all of the examples in the preceding chapters. A main issue is that the first definition from the trichotomy does not generalize to the multi-parameter situation. To deal with this, strengthened cancellation conditions are introduced. This is done in two different ways, resulting in four total definitions for singular integral operators (the first two use the strengthened cancellation conditions, while the later two are generalizations of the later two parts of the trichotomy). Thus, we obtain four classes of singular integral operators, denoted by A1, A2, A3, and A4. The main theorem of the chapter is A1 = A2 = A3 = A4; i.e., all four of these definitions are equivalent. This leads to many nice properties of these singular integral operators.


Author(s):  
Brian Street

This chapter discusses a case for single-parameter singular integral operators, where ρ‎ is the usual distance on ℝn. There, we obtain the most classical theory of singular integrals, which is useful for studying elliptic partial differential operators. The chapter defines singular integral operators in three equivalent ways. This trichotomy can be seen three times, in increasing generality: Theorems 1.1.23, 1.1.26, and 1.2.10. This trichotomy is developed even when the operators are not translation invariant (many authors discuss such ideas only for translation invariant, or nearly translation invariant operators). It also presents these ideas in a slightly different way than is usual, which helps to motivate later results and definitions.


Author(s):  
Brian Street

This book develops a new theory of multi-parameter singular integrals associated with Carnot–Carathéodory balls. The book first details the classical theory of Calderón–Zygmund singular integrals and applications to linear partial differential equations. It then outlines the theory of multi-parameter Carnot–Carathéodory geometry, where the main tool is a quantitative version of the classical theorem of Frobenius. The book then gives several examples of multi-parameter singular integrals arising naturally in various problems. The final chapter of the book develops a general theory of singular integrals that generalizes and unifies these examples. This is one of the first general theories of multi-parameter singular integrals that goes beyond the product theory of singular integrals and their analogs. This book will interest graduate students and researchers working in singular integrals and related fields.


2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-259
Author(s):  
Lech Maligranda ◽  
Katsuo Matsuoka

Author(s):  
Batool Hatem Akar Alkfari ◽  
Roaa Aziz Fadhil ◽  
Dunia Muhammed Kreem Alftllawy

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-95
Author(s):  
Xiao Zhang ◽  
Feng Liu ◽  
Huiyun Zhang

Abstract This paper is devoted to investigating the boundedness, continuity and compactness for variation operators of singular integrals and their commutators on Morrey spaces and Besov spaces. More precisely, we establish the boundedness for the variation operators of singular integrals with rough kernels Ω ∈ Lq (S n−1) (q > 1) and their commutators on Morrey spaces as well as the compactness for the above commutators on Lebesgue spaces and Morrey spaces. In addition, we present a criterion on the boundedness and continuity for a class of variation operators of singular integrals and their commutators on Besov spaces. As applications, we obtain the boundedness and continuity for the variation operators of Hilbert transform, Hermit Riesz transform, Riesz transforms and rough singular integrals as well as their commutators on Besov spaces.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Liu

Abstract In this note we study the rough singular integral $$ T_{\varOmega }f(x)=\mathrm{p.v.} \int _{\mathbb{R}^{n}}f(x-y)\frac{\varOmega (y/ \vert y \vert )}{ \vert y \vert ^{n}}\,dy, $$ T Ω f ( x ) = p . v . ∫ R n f ( x − y ) Ω ( y / | y | ) | y | n d y , where $n\geq 2$ n ≥ 2 and Ω is a function in $L\log L(\mathrm{S} ^{n-1})$ L log L ( S n − 1 ) with vanishing integral. We prove that $T_{\varOmega }$ T Ω is bounded on the mixed radial-angular spaces $L_{|x|}^{p}L_{\theta }^{\tilde{p}}( \mathbb{R}^{n})$ L | x | p L θ p ˜ ( R n ) , on the vector-valued mixed radial-angular spaces $L_{|x|}^{p}L_{\theta }^{\tilde{p}}(\mathbb{R}^{n},\ell ^{\tilde{p}})$ L | x | p L θ p ˜ ( R n , ℓ p ˜ ) and on the vector-valued function spaces $L^{p}(\mathbb{R}^{n}, \ell ^{\tilde{p}})$ L p ( R n , ℓ p ˜ ) if $1<\tilde{p}\leq p<\tilde{p}n/(n-1)$ 1 < p ˜ ≤ p < p ˜ n / ( n − 1 ) or $\tilde{p}n/(\tilde{p}+n-1)< p\leq \tilde{p}<\infty $ p ˜ n / ( p ˜ + n − 1 ) < p ≤ p ˜ < ∞ . The same conclusions hold for the well-known Riesz transforms and directional Hilbert transforms. It should be pointed out that our proof is based on the Calderón–Zygmund’s rotation method.


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