Transport and Interface: an Uncertainty Principle for the Wasserstein distance
Abstract: Let $f: [0,1]d \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ be a continuous function with zero mean and interpret $f_{+} = \max(f, 0)$ and $f_{-} = -\min(f, 0)$ as the densities of two measures. We prove that if the cost of transport from $f_{+}$ to $f_{-}$ is small (in terms of the Wasserstein distance $W1$), then the nodal set $\left{x \in (0,1)d: f(x) = 0 \right}$ has to be large (if it is always easy to buy milk, there must be many supermarkets'). More precisely, we show that $$ W_1(f_+, f_-) \cdot \mathcal{H}^{d-1}\left\{x \in (0,1)^d: f(x) = 0 \right\} \gtrsim_{d} \left( \frac{\|f\|_{L^1}}{\|f\|_{L^{\infty}}} \right)^{4 - \frac1d} \|f\|_{L^1} \, .$$ We apply this`uncertainty principle" to the metric Sturm-Liouville theory in higher dimensions to show that a linear combination of eigenfunctions of an elliptic operator cannot have an arbitrarily small zero set.
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