Abstract Generated abstract
This paper studies extremal norm problems for linear polynomial operators on translation-invariant function spaces, especially operators agreeing with convolution-type polynomial transforms on trigonometric polynomials. It establishes exact values of the minimal operator norms in L2, including the case associated with derivatives of the Dirichlet kernel, and gives a formula for the ratio of constrained and unconstrained extremal norms in the spaces of continuous functions and L1 under positivity assumptions on the kernel. The paper also derives lower bounds for linear operators in L1 with prescribed eigenfunctions or fixed trigonometric polynomials, leading to a strengthened form of the Lozinskii-Kharshiladze divergence theorem for sequences of polynomial-valued operators.
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D. L. BERMAN
ON SOME EXTREMAL PROBLEMS IN THE THEORY OF POLYNOMIAL OPERATORS
(Presented by Academician S. N. Bernstein, November 10, 1964)
1°. Let us introduce notation. \(\Pi_n\) is the set of all trigonometric polynomials of order \(\leq n\); \(L_1\) is the set of all summable \(2\pi\)-periodic functions; \(E\) is a linear normed function space possessing the following properties: 1) the elements of \(E\) are functions from \(L_1\); 2) if \(f \in E\), then the shifted function \(f_t(x)=f(x+t)\), for any \(-\infty<t<\infty\), also belongs to \(E\), and \(\|f_t\|=\|f\|\); 3) \(E\) contains the set of all trigonometric polynomials. The most important special cases of the space \(E\) are: the space \(C\) of all continuous \(2\pi\)-periodic functions, and the space \(L_r\) of all \(2\pi\)-periodic functions summable to the \(r\)-th power. Put
\[ \sigma_n(f,x)=\int_0^{2\pi} f(x+t)\Phi(t)\,dt, \]
where
\[ \Phi(t)=\frac{r_0}{2}+\sum_{k=1}^{n} r_k \sin(kt+\alpha_k). \tag{1} \]
Denote by \(\Omega_n^\Phi(E)\) the set of all linear operations \(U_n\) from \(E\) into \(E\) possessing the property that \(U_n(t_n)=\sigma_n(t_n)\) if \(t_n\in\Pi_n\). The set \(\Omega_{n,n}^\Phi(E)\) consists of all linear operations \(U_{n,n}\) from \(E\) into \(E\) for which the conditions are fulfilled: 1) for every \(f\in E\), \(U_{n,n}(f)\in\Pi_n\); 2) if \(t_n\in\Pi_n\), then \(U_{n,n}(t_n)=\sigma_n(t_n)\). It is obvious that \(\Omega_{n,n}^\Phi(E)\subset\Omega_n^\Phi(E)\). There exist operations belonging to \(\Omega_n^\Phi(E)\) but not belonging to \(\Omega_{n,n}^\Phi(E)\). Introduce the numbers
\[ \rho_n(E)=\rho_n^\Phi(E)= \inf_{U_n\in\Omega_n^\Phi(E)} \|U_n\|; \qquad \rho_{n,n}(E)=\rho_{n,n}^\Phi(E)= \inf_{U_{n,n}\in\Omega_{n,n}^\Phi(E)} \|U_{n,n}\|. \]
It is clear that
\[ \rho_{n,n}(E)\geq \rho_n(E). \tag{2} \]
The ratio \(\rho_{n,n}(E):\rho_n(E)\) depends essentially on the space \(E\) (2). In \(L_2\) the following theorem holds.
Theorem 1. The equalities
\[ \rho_{n,n}^\Phi(L_2)=\rho_n^\Phi(L_2)=\pi \max_{j=0,1,\ldots,n} r_j \tag{3} \]
hold.
Let us outline the proof. It is easy to see that
\[ \left\|U_n\left(\frac{\cos kx}{\|\cos kx\|_E}\right)\right\|=\pi r_k,\qquad k=0,1,2,\ldots,n, \]
where \(\|\cos kx\|_E\) is the norm of \(\cos kx\) in the metric of \(E\). Therefore
\[ \rho_n(E)\geq \pi r_{j_0},\qquad r_{j_0}=\max_{j=0,1,2,\ldots,n} r_j . \tag{4} \]
With the aid of Parseval’s equality it is easy to obtain that
\[ \|\sigma_n\|_{L_2}\leq \pi r_{j_0}. \]
Consequently, since \(\sigma_n\in \Omega^\Phi_{n,n}(E)\), we have
\[ \rho_{n,n}(E)\leq \pi r_{j_0}. \tag{5} \]
From (2) and (4), (5), (3) follows.
Of particular interest is the case when
\[ \Phi(t)=\frac{1}{\pi}D_n^{(k)}(t), \tag{6} \]
where \(D_n(t)\) is the Dirichlet kernel and \(D_n^k(t)\) is the derivative of order \(k\). In this case \(r_{j_0}=n^k/\pi\), and therefore equality (3) takes the form
\[ \rho_{n,n}(L_2)=\rho_n(L_2)=n^k . \tag{7} \]
The validity of equality (7) was pointed out to the author by A. N. Kolmogorov.
\(2^\circ\). In the case \(E=\widetilde C\) or \(E_1=\widetilde L_1\), the study of the ratio \(\rho_{n,n}(E):\rho_n(E)\) is considerably more difficult. In [1] it was established that if \(\Phi(t)\) is defined according to (6), then
\[ \lim_{n\to\infty}\left(\frac{\rho_{n,n}(\widetilde C)}{\rho_n(\widetilde C)}:\frac{4}{\pi^2}\ln n\right)=1. \tag{8} \]
(8) also remains valid when \(\widetilde C\) is replaced by \(\widetilde L_1\). The question arises of studying \(\rho_{n,n}(E):\rho_n(E)\) in the case of an arbitrary kernel \(\Phi(t)\) of the form (1).
Theorem 2. Let \(E=\widetilde C\) or \(E=\widetilde L_1\). Suppose that the kernel \(\Phi(t)\) satisfies the conditions \(r_0=0\) and
\[ \Phi_1(t)=r_n+2\sum_{k=1}^{n-1} r_n\cos\bigl[(n-k)t+\alpha_n-\alpha_k\bigr]\geq 0,\qquad -\infty<t<\infty . \tag{9} \]
Then the equality holds
\[ \rho^\Phi_{n,n}(E)/\rho^\Phi_n(E)=\int_0^{2\pi}|\Phi(t)|\,dt\ /\ \pi r_n . \]
In the course of the proof the following lemma plays an important role:
Lemma. Suppose that the kernel \(\Phi(t)\) satisfies the conditions of Theorem 2. Then, for an arbitrary space of type \(E\), the equality holds
\[ \rho^\Phi_n(E)=\pi r_n . \tag{10} \]
We outline the proof. Put
\[ \overline U(f,x)=\overline U(f,g,x)=\int_0^{2\pi} f(x+t)g(nt+\alpha_n)\Phi_1(t)\,dt, \tag{11} \]
where \(\Phi_1(t)\) is defined according to (9), and \(g(t)\) is an arbitrary \(2\pi\)-periodic continuous function whose Fourier expansion begins with \(\sin t\). It is not difficult to verify that \(\overline U\in\Omega_n^\Phi(E)\). In view of (11) we have
\[ \|\overline U(f)\|\leq \|f\|\int_0^{2\pi}|g(nt+\alpha_n)|\,|\Phi_1(t)|\,dt . \tag{12} \]
The legitimacy of passing to the norm under the integral sign in the case \(E=C\) or \(E=\widetilde L_1\) is obvious. In the general case it is easy to justify. Following the arguments of F. Riesz \((^2)\), put
\[ g(t)=\sin t-r^2\sin 3t+r^4\sin 5t-\cdots =\frac{(1-r^2)\sin t}{1+2r^2\cos 2t+r^4},\quad 0<r<1. \]
Since
\[ \int_0^{2\pi}|g(t)|\,dt=\frac{4}{r}\operatorname{arc\,tg} r \]
and \(\Phi_1(t)\geq 0\), it follows from (12) that
\(\|\overline U\|\leq 4r_n r^{-1}\operatorname{arc\,tg} r\). Therefore
\[ \rho_n^\Phi(E)\leq 4r_n\operatorname{arc\,tg} r/r. \]
Letting \(r\to 1\), we obtain
\[ \rho_n^\Phi(E)\leq \pi r_n. \tag{13} \]
On the other hand, by virtue of (4) one always has
\(\rho_n^\Phi(E)\geq \pi r_n\). From this and (13), (10) follows.
Remark. Equality (8) is a special case of Theorem 2.
\(3^\circ\). Let \(L=L_{[a,b]}\) be the set of all summable on the segment \([a,b]\) functions \(f(x)\) with \(\|f\|=\int_a^b |f|\,dx\). Consider some subspace \(\Sigma\) of the space \(L\) and a linear operator \(U\) from \(L\) into \(\Sigma\). Put that \(\{\chi_i\}_{i=1}^p\) are eigenfunctions of the operator \(U\), \(U(\chi_k)=\mu_k\chi_k\), \(k=1,2,\ldots,p\). We shall assume that \(|\chi_k(x)|\leq \Delta\), \(k=1,2,\ldots,p\), where \(\Delta\) does not depend on \(x\) or \(k\).
Theorem 3. If (in \(L\)) there exist a sequence of functionals \(\{\psi_k\}_{k=1}^p\) and a sequence of positive numbers \(\{a_k\}_{k=1}^p\) such that for any \(f\in\Sigma\) the inequality
\[ \sum_{k=1}^p a_k|\psi_k(f)|\leq C\int_a^b |f|\,dx, \]
where \(C\) is a constant, holds, then
\[ \|U\|\geq \sum_{k=1}^p a_k\mu_k\psi_k(\chi_k^2)\,/\,C\Delta(b-a). \]
A special case of this theorem is
Theorem 4. Let \(U_n\) be a linear operator from \(\widetilde L_1\) into \(\Pi_n\), and let the polynomials \(\{t_k^{(n)}\}_{k=1}^m\), \(m\leq n\), be its fixed points, where \(t_k^{(n)}\) is a polynomial of degree \(k\). Then, if the polynomials \(\{t_k^{(n)}\}_{k=1}^n\) are uniformly bounded in the aggregate, then
\[ \|U_n\|\geq C_1\ln\frac{n}{n-m+1}. \]
From this estimate the theorem follows:
Theorem 5. Let \(\overline{\lim}_{n\to\infty}\frac{m_n}{n}=1\), and let \(\{U_n\}_{n=1}^\infty\) be a sequence of linear operators from \(\widetilde L_1\) into \(\widetilde L_1\), where \(U_n\), \(n=1,2,\ldots\), has the properties: a) for any \(f\in\widetilde L_1\), \(U_n(f)\in\Pi_n\); b) there exists a sequence of polynomials \(\{t_k^{(n)}\}_{k=1}^{m_n}\), \(m_n\leq n\), \(n=1,2,\ldots\) \((t_k^{(n)}\) is a polynomial of degree \(k)\), uniformly bounded in the aggregate, such that \(U_n(t_k^{(n)})=t_k^{(n)}\), \(k=1,2,\ldots,m_n\), \(n=1,2\).
Then for some \(f \in \widetilde{L}_{1}\) the equality
\[ \overline{\lim_{n\to\infty}} \,\|U_n(f)-f\|_{\widetilde{L}_{1}}=\infty . \]
This theorem is a strengthening of the Lozinskii–Kharshiladze theorem \((^3)\), since in the latter it is required that any polynomial \(t_n\in \Pi_n\) be a fixed point of the operator \(U_n\). The conditions of Theorem 5 are satisfied, for example, by the polynomials
\[ t_k^{(n)}(x)=\sin\bigl(kx+a_k^{(n)}\bigr), \]
\[ k=1,2,\ldots,m_n;\qquad n=1,2,\ldots\quad (m_n\le n). \]
Leningrad Institute of Soviet Trade
named after F. Engels
Received
2 X 1964
REFERENCES
\(^1\) D. L. Berman, DAN, 138, No. 4 (1961). \(^2\) F. Riesz, C. R., 158 (1914). \(^3\) I. P. Natanson, Constructive Function Theory, 1949.