Videos

Rodolfo Torres - Almost Orthogonality in Fourier: Singular integrals, Function Spaces, Leibniz Rules

Presenter
March 8, 2025
Abstract
Recorded 08 March 2025. Rodolfo Torres of the University of California, Riverside, presents "Almost Orthogonality in Fourier Analysis: From Singular integrals, to Function Spaces, to Leibniz Rules for Fractional Derivatives" at IPAM's LatMath 2025 Workshop. Abstract: Fourier analysis has been an extraordinarily powerful mathematical tool since its development 200 years ago, and currently has a wide range of applications in diverse scientific fields including digital image processing, forensics, option pricing, cryptography, optics, oceanography, and protein structure analysis. Like a prism that decomposes a beam of light into a rainbow of colors, Fourier analysis transforms signals into a mathematical spectrum of basic wave components of different amplitudes and frequencies, from which many hidden properties in the data can be deciphered. At the abstract mathematical level signals are represented by functions and their filtering and other operations on them by operators. From a functional analytical point of view, these objects are studied by decomposing them into elementary building blocks, some of which have wavelike behavior too. Decomposition techniques such as atomic, molecular, wavelet and wave-packet expansions provide a multi-scale refinement of Fourier analysis and exploit a rather simple concept: “waves with very different frequencies are almost invisible to each other”. Many of these useful techniques have been developed around the study of some particular operators called singular integral operators. By breaking an operator or splitting the functions on which it acts into non-interacting almost orthogonal pieces, these tools capture subtle cancelations and quantify properties of an operator in terms of norm estimates in function spaces. This type of analysis has been used to study linear operators with tremendous success in the mathematical areas of harmonic analysis, complex analysis, and partial differential equations. More recently, similar decomposition techniques have been pushed to the analysis of new multilinear operators that arise in the study of (para) product-like operations, commutators, null-forms and other nonlinear functional expressions. In this talk we will present some of our contributions in the study of multilinear singular integrals and function spaces, and their applications to the development of the equivalent of the calculus Leibniz rule to the concept of fractional derivatives. Learn more online at: https://www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/special-events-and-conferences/latmath-2025/?tab=overview