Analysis Problem of the Day 38

Today’s problem appeared as Problem 6 on the UCLA Fall 2010 Analysis Qual:

Problem 6: Consider the Hilbert space H of functions f: \overline{\mathbb{D}} \to \mathbb{C} given by f(z) = \sum_{k=0}^\infty \widehat{f}(k) z^k with \|f\|^2:= \sum_{k=0}^\infty (1+|k|)^2|\widehat{f}(k)|^2<\infty.

a) Prove that the linear functional L: f \to f(1) is bounded.

b) Find the element g such that L(f)=\langle f,g \rangle.

c) Show that f \to \text{Re }L(f) achieves a unique maximum on \{\|f\| \leq 1, f(0)=0\} and find its value.


Solution: a) By Cauchy-Schwarz,

    \[|f(1)| = |\sum \widehat{f}(k)(1+|k|^2)^{\frac12}(1+|k|^2)^{-\frac12}|\leq \sqrt{\sum (1+|k|^2)|\widehat{f}(k)|^2} \sqrt{\sum (1+|k|^2)^{-1}} \leq C\|f\|,\]

with C \leq \frac{\pi}{\sqrt{6}}. Thus, L is bounded.

b) Note that \langle f,g \rangle = \sum \langle k \rangle \widehat{f}(k) \overline{\langle k \rangle \widehat{g}(k)}, where the Japanese bracket is defined by \langle k \rangle :=(1+|k|^2)^{\frac12}. Thus, by the Riesz Representation Theorem, if \langle f,g \rangle = L(f) = f(1) = \sum \widehat{f}(k), then (1+|k|^2) \widehat{g}(k)=1, i.e. g(z) = \sum_{k=0}^\infty (1+|k|^2)^{-1} z^k (a more explicit formula is likely impossible).

c) Note that by the Cauchy-Schwarz argument above, |\text{Re }f(1)| \leq |f(1)| \leq \sum_{k=1}^\infty (1+|k|^2)^{-1} when f(0) = \widehat{f}(0)=0. It follows that equality occurs if and only if \widehat{f}(k) = (1+|k|^2)^{-1}, i.e. the maximum is uniquely achieved and equals to \sum_{k=1}^\infty (1+|k|^2)^{-1}.

Remark: Interpreting these as holomorphic functions on the unit disc, the Hilbert space in question is the space of holomorphic functions on the unit disc that admit an extension f to S^1 with \|f\|_2^2+\|f'\|_2^2 < \infty, i.e. f \in H^1(S^1).

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