A unified approach to three themes in harmonic analysis ($1^{st}$ part) (1902.03807v2)
Abstract: In the present paper and its sequel "A unified approach to three themes in harmonic analysis ($2{nd}$ part)", we address three rich historical themes in harmonic analysis that rely fundamentally on the concept of non-zero curvature. Namely, we focus on the boundedness properties of (I) the linear Hilbert transform and maximal operator along variable curves, (II) Carleson-type operators in the presence of curvature, and (III) the bilinear Hilbert transform and maximal operator along variable curves. Our Main Theorem states that, given a general variable curve $\gamma(x,t)$ in the plane that is assumed only to be measurable in $x$ and to satisfy suitable non-zero curvature (in $t$) and non-degeneracy conditions, all of the above itemized operators defined along the curve $\gamma$ are $Lp$-bounded for $1<p<\infty$. Our result provides a new and unified treatment of these three themes. Moreover, it establishes a unitary approach for both the singular integral and the maximal operator versions within themes (I) and (III). At the heart of our approach stays a methodology encompassing three key ingredients: 1) discretization on the multiplier side that confines the phase of the multiplier to oscillate at the \emph{linear} level, 2) \emph{Gabor}-frame discretization of the input function(s) and 3) extraction of the \emph{cancelation} hidden in the non-zero curvature of $\gamma$ via $TT{*}-$orthogonality methods and time-frequency \emph{correlation}.
Sponsored by Paperpile, the PDF & BibTeX manager trusted by top AI labs.
Get 30 days freePaper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.