Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Tokyo :Springer Japan :
    UID:
    almahu_9947363397302882
    Format: XIII, 305 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9784431679059
    Series Statement: Springer Monographs in Mathematics,
    Content: "Still waters run deep." This proverb expresses exactly how a mathematician Akihito Uchiyama and his works were. He was not celebrated except in the field of harmonic analysis, and indeed he never wanted that. He suddenly passed away in summer of 1997 at the age of 48. However, nowadays his contributions to the fields of harmonic analysis and real analysis are permeating through various fields of analysis deep and wide. One could write several papers explaining his contributions and how they have been absorbed into these fields, developed, and used in further breakthroughs. Peter W. Jones (Professor of Yale University) says in his special contribution to this book that Uchiyama's decomposition of BMO functions is considered to be the Mount Everest of Hardy space theory. This book is based on the draft, which the author Akihito Uchiyama had completed by 1990. It deals with the theory of real Hardy spaces on the n-dimensional Euclidean space. Here the author explains scrupulously some of important results on Hardy spaces by real-variable methods, in particular, the atomic decomposition of elements in Hardy spaces and his constructive proof of the Fefferman-Stein decomposition of BMO functions into the sum of a bounded?function and Riesz transforms of bounded functions.
    Note: 0. Introduction -- 1. Lipschitz spaces and BMO -- 2. Atomic Hp spaces -- 3. Operators on Hp -- 4. Atomic decomposition from grand maximal functions -- 5. Atomic decomposition from S functions -- 6. Hardy-Littlewood-Fefferman-Stein type inequalities, 1 -- 7. Hardy-Littlewood-Fefferman-Stein type inequalities, 2 -- 8*Hardy-Littlewood-Fefferman-Stein type inequalities, 3 -- 9. Grand maximal functions from radial maximal functions -- 10* S-functions from g-functions -- 11. Good ? inequalities for nontangential maximal functions and S-functions of harmonic functions -- 14. Subharmonicity, 1 -- 15. Subharmonicity, 2 -- 16. Preliminaries for characterizations of Hp in terms of Fourier multipliers -- 17. Characterization of Hp in terms of Riesz transforms -- 18. Other results on the characterization of Hp in terms of Fourier multipliers -- 19. Fefferman’s original proof of -- 20. Varopoulos’s proof of the above inequality -- 21. The Fefferman-Stein decomposition of BMO -- 22. A constructive proof of the Fefferman-Stein decomposition of BMO -- 23. Vector-valued unimodular BMO functions -- 24. Extension of the Fefferman-Stein decomposition of BMO, 1 -- 25. Characterization of H1 in terms of Fourier multipliers -- 26. Extension of the Fefferman-Stein decomposition of BMO, 2 -- 27. Characterization of Hp in terms of Fourier multipliers -- 28. The one-dimensional case -- References.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9784431679998
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages