The Fourier transform and an inversion formula for Laplace transforms

2011 ◽  
Vol 90 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 775-779 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. Pavlov
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tariq O. Salim ◽  
Atta A. K. Abu Hany ◽  
Mohammed S. El-Khatib

The aim of this article is to introduce a new definition for the Fourier transform. This new definition will be considered as one of the generalizations of the usual (classical) Fourier transform. We employ the new Katugampola derivative to obtain some properties of the Katugampola Fourier transform and find the relation between the Katugampola Fourier transform and the usual Fourier transform. The inversion formula and the convolution theorem for the Katugampola Fourier transform are considered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Sleight ◽  
Massimo Taronna

Abstract We describe in more detail the general relation uncovered in our previous work between boundary correlators in de Sitter (dS) and in Euclidean anti-de Sitter (EAdS) space, at any order in perturbation theory. Assuming the Bunch-Davies vacuum at early times, any given diagram contributing to a boundary correlator in dS can be expressed as a linear combination of Witten diagrams for the corresponding process in EAdS, where the relative coefficients are fixed by consistent on-shell factorisation in dS. These coefficients are given by certain sinusoidal factors which account for the change in coefficient of the contact sub-diagrams from EAdS to dS, which we argue encode (perturbative) unitary time evolution in dS. dS boundary correlators with Bunch-Davies initial conditions thus perturbatively have the same singularity structure as their Euclidean AdS counterparts and the identities between them allow to directly import the wealth of techniques, results and understanding from AdS to dS. This includes the Conformal Partial Wave expansion and, by going from single-valued Witten diagrams in EAdS to Lorentzian AdS, the Froissart-Gribov inversion formula. We give a few (among the many possible) applications both at tree and loop level. Such identities between boundary correlators in dS and EAdS are made manifest by the Mellin-Barnes representation of boundary correlators, which we point out is a useful tool in its own right as the analogue of the Fourier transform for the dilatation group. The Mellin-Barnes representation in particular makes manifest factorisation and dispersion formulas for bulk-to-bulk propagators in (EA)dS, which imply Cutkosky cutting rules and dispersion formulas for boundary correlators in (EA)dS. Our results are completely general and in particular apply to any interaction of (integer) spinning fields.


A formula is developed that gives the asymptotic expansion of the Fourier transform of a function whose behaviour near the origin is given by a general asymptotic series. The result is an extension of a theorem due to Olver, who obtained a kind of analogue for Fourier transforms of Watson’s lemma for Laplace transforms. The method adopted utilizes a result due to Erdelyi on Laplace transforms and depends for its success on a novel technique of evading the appearance of divergent integrals in such problems.


Filomat ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 2327-2334
Author(s):  
B.J. González ◽  
E.R. Negrín

Gaussian functions are useful in order to establish inversion formulae for the classical Fourier transform. In this paper we show that they also are helpful in order to obtain a Fourier inversion formula for the distributional case.


Author(s):  
AHRAM S. FEIGENBAUM ◽  
PETER J. GRABNER ◽  
DOUGLAS P. HARDIN

Abstract Eigenfunctions of the Fourier transform with prescribed zeros played a major role in the proof that the E8 and the Leech lattice give the best sphere packings in respective dimensions 8 and 24 by Cohn, Kumar, Miller, Radchenko and Viazovska. The functions used for a linear programming argument were constructed as Laplace transforms of certain modular and quasimodular forms. Similar constructions were used by Cohn and Gonçalves to find a function satisfying an optimal uncertainty principle in dimension 12. This paper gives a unified view on these constructions and develops the machinery to find the underlying forms in all dimensions divisible by 4. Furthermore, the positivity of the Fourier coefficients of the quasimodular forms occurring in this context is discussed.


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