Loading AI tools
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, the Riesz potential is a potential named after its discoverer, the Hungarian mathematician Marcel Riesz. In a sense, the Riesz potential defines an inverse for a power of the Laplace operator on Euclidean space. They generalize to several variables the Riemann–Liouville integrals of one variable.
If 0 < α < n, then the Riesz potential Iαf of a locally integrable function f on Rn is the function defined by
(1) |
where the constant is given by
This singular integral is well-defined provided f decays sufficiently rapidly at infinity, specifically if f ∈ Lp(Rn) with 1 ≤ p < n/α. In fact, for any 1 ≤ p (p>1 is classical, due to Sobolev, while for p=1 see (Schikorra, Spector & Van Schaftingen 2014), the rate of decay of f and that of Iαf are related in the form of an inequality (the Hardy–Littlewood–Sobolev inequality)
where is the vector-valued Riesz transform. More generally, the operators Iα are well-defined for complex α such that 0 < Re α < n.
The Riesz potential can be defined more generally in a weak sense as the convolution
where Kα is the locally integrable function:
The Riesz potential can therefore be defined whenever f is a compactly supported distribution. In this connection, the Riesz potential of a positive Borel measure μ with compact support is chiefly of interest in potential theory because Iαμ is then a (continuous) subharmonic function off the support of μ, and is lower semicontinuous on all of Rn.
Consideration of the Fourier transform reveals that the Riesz potential is a Fourier multiplier.[1] In fact, one has
and so, by the convolution theorem,
The Riesz potentials satisfy the following semigroup property on, for instance, rapidly decreasing continuous functions
provided
Furthermore, if 0 < Re α < n–2, then
One also has, for this class of functions,
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.