The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

The search session has expired. Please query the service again.

Currently displaying 1 – 11 of 11

Showing per page

Order by Relevance | Title | Year of publication

A remark on extrapolation of rearrangement operators on dyadic H s , 0 < s ≤ 1

Stefan GeissPaul F. X. MüllerVeronika Pillwein — 2005

Studia Mathematica

For an injective map τ acting on the dyadic subintervals of the unit interval [0,1) we define the rearrangement operator T s , 0 < s < 2, to be the linear extension of the map ( h I ) / ( | I | 1 / s ) ( h τ ( I ) ) ( | τ ( I ) | 1 / s ) , where h I denotes the L -normalized Haar function supported on the dyadic interval I. We prove the following extrapolation result: If there exists at least one 0 < s₀ < 2 such that T s is bounded on H s , then for all 0 < s < 2 the operator T s is bounded on H s .

Page 1

Download Results (CSV)