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Dilation of Distributions 📂Distribution Theory

Dilation of Distributions

Buildup

The distribution cannot be dilated in the same manner as functions defined in real space because its domain is a function space. However, for regular distributions, there exists a corresponding locally integrable function uLloc1u\in L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{1}, allowing it to be expressed as follows.

Tu(ϕ)=u(x)ϕ(x)dx,ϕD T_{u}(\phi) =\int u(x)\phi (x) dx,\quad \phi \in \mathcal{D}

Therefore, through some action SS on uu, we can obtain Su=uSu=u^{\prime}, and if uu^{\prime} remains a locally integrable function, then there exists a corresponding distribution TuT_{u^{\prime}}. Thus, we think of the action SS on uu as if it were an action on TuT_{u}. We aim to extend this idea to all distributions to define the dilation of distributions.

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Let’s call the dilation of c>0c>0 as DcD_{c}, and the dilation of uu as u(x)=Dcu(x)=1cu(xc)u^{\prime}(x)=D_{c}u(x)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{c}}u({\textstyle \frac{x}{c}}). Then, it still holds that uLloc1u^{\prime}\in L_{\mathrm{loc}}^{1}. Hence, there exists a corresponding regular distribution TuT_{u^{\prime}} and for the test function ϕD\phi \in \mathcal{D} it is as follows.

Tu(ϕ)=u(x)ϕ(x)dx=1cu(xc)ϕ(x)dx=u(x)cϕ(cx)dx=u(x)D1/cϕ(x)dx=Tu(D1/cϕ) \begin{align*} T_{u^{\prime}}(\phi)&=\int u^{\prime}(x)\phi (x)dx \\ &= \int \frac{1}{\sqrt{c}}u\left( \frac{x}{c} \right)\phi (x)dx \\ &=\int u(x) \sqrt{c}\phi (cx)dx \\ &= \int u(x) D_{1/c}\phi (x) dx \\ &= T_{u}(D_{1/c}\phi) \end{align*}

Definition1

The dilation of the distribution TT is defined as follows.

(DcT)(ϕ):=Tu(D1/cϕ) (D_{c}T)(\phi):= T_{u}(D_{1/c}\phi)


  1. Gerald B. Folland, Fourier Analysis and Its Applications (1992), p311 ↩︎