Analysis Problem of the Day 52

Today’s problem appeared as Problem 6 on the UCLA Fall 2021 Analysis Qual:

Problem 11. Let K be a continuous function on \mathbb{R}^2 periodic in both coordinates, i.e. K(x+1,y)=K(x,y) and K(x,y+1)=K(x,y). For any F \in L^1([0,1] \times [0,1]), show that

    \[\int_{[0,1]^2} K(x,y+nx) F(x,y)d\mu(x,y) \to \int_0^1 \left(\int_0^1 K(x,s)ds\right)\left(\int_0^1 F(x,y)dy\right)dx\]

as n \to \infty, where \mu is the two-dimensional Lebesgue measure.


Solution: As with all such kinds of complicated and scary looking expressions, we try to approximate F by the simplest functions we know – in our case, products of characteristic functions of the form \chi_{(a,b)}(x)\chi_{(c,d)}(y). Note that the presence of the n will make K oscillate faster and faster in the second coordinate. This reminds us of weak convergence – namely, the result that

    \[\int_a^b g(ny) f(y) dy \to \left(\frac{1}{b-a}\int_a^b g(s) ds\right) \int_a^b f(y)dy\]

whenever the integrals make sense. Motivated by this, we perform the change of variables ny'=y+nx and use Fubini and periodicity of K to rewrite the integral so that the inner integral with respect to y becomes

    \[n \int_{x}^{x+\frac{1}{n}} K(x,ny') \chi_{(\frac{c}{n}+x,\frac{d}{n}+x)}(y') dy'= \int_{x}^{x+1} K(x,ny') \sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\chi_{(\frac{c+i}{n}+x,\frac{d+i}{n}+x)}(y') dy'.\]

For fixed x, the integral with respect to y converges pointwise (by the above result) to

    \[\int_x^{x+1} K(x,y') dy' \int_{x}^{x+1} \sum_{i=0}^{n-1} \chi_{(\frac{c+i}{n}+x,\frac{d+i}{n}+x)}(y') dy' = \int_0^1 K(x,s)ds (d-c)\]

by the periodicity of K in the y variable. Moreover, all these functions are uniformly bounded in x, so by dominated/bounded convergence theorem one has that the integral with respect to x converges to

    \[\int_0^1 \int_0^1 K(x,s)ds (d-c) \chi_{(a,b)}(x)dx = \int_0^1 \int_0^1 K(x,s)ds \int_0^1 \chi_{(a,b)}(x) \chi_{(c,d)}(y)dy dx.\]

Since the span of such functions is dense in the span of characteristic functions of rectangles, and the span of the latter is dense in L^1, it follows that this convergence extends to arbitrary F \in L^1([0,1] \times [0,1]).

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