Optimal error estimates for analytic continuation in the upper half-plane (1812.05715v3)
Abstract: Analytic functions in the Hardy class $H2$ over the upper half-plane $\mathbb{H}+$ are uniquely determined by their values on any curve $\Gamma$ lying in the interior or on the boundary of $\mathbb{H}+$. The goal of this paper is to provide a quantitative version of this statement. Given that $f$ from a unit ball in $H2$ is small on $\Gamma$ (say, its $L2$ norm is of order $\epsilon$), how does this affect the magnitude of $f$ at a point $z$ away from the curve? When $\Gamma \subset \partial \mathbb{H}+$, we give a sharp upper bound on $|f(z)|$ of the form $\epsilon\gamma$, with an explicit exponent $\gamma=\gamma(z) \in (0,1)$ and describe the maximizer function attaining the upper bound. When $\Gamma \subset \mathbb{H}+$ we give an implicit sharp upper bound in terms of a solution of an integral equation on $\Gamma$. We conjecture and give evidence that this bound also behaves like $\epsilon\gamma$ for some $\gamma=\gamma(z) \in (0,1)$. These results can also be transplanted to other domains conformally equivalent to the upper half-plane.