Family of functions
In mathematics, a summability kernel is a family or sequence of periodic integrable functions satisfying a certain set of properties, listed below. Certain kernels, such as the Fejér kernel, are particularly useful in Fourier analysis. Summability kernels are related to approximation of the identity; definitions of an approximation of identity vary,[1] but sometimes the definition of an approximation of the identity is taken to be the same as for a summability kernel.
Definition
Let
. A summability kernel is a sequence
in
that satisfies

(uniformly bounded)
as
, for every
.
Note that if
for all
, i.e.
is a positive summability kernel, then the second requirement follows automatically from the first.
With the more usual convention
, the first equation becomes
, and the upper limit of integration on the third equation should be extended to
, so that the condition 3 above should be
as
, for every
.
This expresses the fact that the mass concentrates around the origin as
increases.
One can also consider
rather than
; then (1) and (2) are integrated over
, and (3) over
.
Examples
Convolutions
Let
be a summability kernel, and
denote the convolution operation.
- If
(continuous functions on
), then
in
, i.e. uniformly, as
. In the case of the Fejer kernel this is known as Fejér's theorem.
- If
, then
in
, as
.
- If
is radially decreasing symmetric and
, then
pointwise a.e., as
. This uses the Hardy–Littlewood maximal function. If
is not radially decreasing symmetric, but the decreasing symmetrization
satisfies
, then a.e. convergence still holds, using a similar argument.
References
- ^ Pereyra, María; Ward, Lesley (2012). Harmonic Analysis: From Fourier to Wavelets. American Mathematical Society. p. 90.