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Modulation space

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Modulation spaces are a family of Banach spaces defined by the behavior of the short-time Fourier transform with respect to a test function from the Schwartz space. They were originally proposed by Hans Georg Feichtinger and are recognized to be the right kind of function spaces for time-frequency analysis. Feichtinger's algebra, while originally introduced as a new Segal algebra, is identical to a certain modulation space and has become a widely used space of test functions for time-frequency analysis.

Modulation spaces are defined as follows. For 1 p , q {\displaystyle 1\leq p,q\leq \infty } , a non-negative function m ( x , ω ) {\displaystyle m(x,\omega )} on R 2 d {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{2d}} and a test function g S ( R d ) {\displaystyle g\in {\mathcal {S}}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} , the modulation space M m p , q ( R d ) {\displaystyle M_{m}^{p,q}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is defined by

M m p , q ( R d ) = { f S ( R d )   :   ( R d ( R d | V g f ( x , ω ) | p m ( x , ω ) p d x ) q / p d ω ) 1 / q < } . {\displaystyle M_{m}^{p,q}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})=\left\{f\in {\mathcal {S}}'(\mathbb {R} ^{d})\ :\ \left(\int _{\mathbb {R} ^{d}}\left(\int _{\mathbb {R} ^{d}}|V_{g}f(x,\omega )|^{p}m(x,\omega )^{p}dx\right)^{q/p}d\omega \right)^{1/q}<\infty \right\}.}

In the above equation, V g f {\displaystyle V_{g}f} denotes the short-time Fourier transform of f {\displaystyle f} with respect to g {\displaystyle g} evaluated at ( x , ω ) {\displaystyle (x,\omega )} , namely

V g f ( x , ω ) = R d f ( t ) g ( t x ) ¯ e 2 π i t ω d t = F ξ 1 ( g ^ ( ξ ) ¯ f ^ ( ξ + ω ) ) ( x ) . {\displaystyle V_{g}f(x,\omega )=\int _{\mathbb {R} ^{d}}f(t){\overline {g(t-x)}}e^{-2\pi it\cdot \omega }dt={\mathcal {F}}_{\xi }^{-1}({\overline {{\hat {g}}(\xi )}}{\hat {f}}(\xi +\omega ))(x).}

In other words, f M m p , q ( R d ) {\displaystyle f\in M_{m}^{p,q}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is equivalent to V g f L m p , q ( R 2 d ) {\displaystyle V_{g}f\in L_{m}^{p,q}(\mathbb {R} ^{2d})} . The space M m p , q ( R d ) {\displaystyle M_{m}^{p,q}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is the same, independent of the test function g S ( R d ) {\displaystyle g\in {\mathcal {S}}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} chosen. The canonical choice is a Gaussian.

We also have a Besov-type definition of modulation spaces as follows.

M p , q s ( R d ) = { f S ( R d )   :   ( k Z d k s q ψ k ( D ) f p q ) 1 / q < } , x := | x | + 1 {\displaystyle M_{p,q}^{s}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})=\left\{f\in {\mathcal {S}}'(\mathbb {R} ^{d})\ :\ \left(\sum _{k\in \mathbb {Z} ^{d}}\langle k\rangle ^{sq}\|\psi _{k}(D)f\|_{p}^{q}\right)^{1/q}<\infty \right\},\langle x\rangle :=|x|+1} ,

where { ψ k } {\displaystyle \{\psi _{k}\}} is a suitable unity partition. If m ( x , ω ) = ω s {\displaystyle m(x,\omega )=\langle \omega \rangle ^{s}} , then M p , q s = M m p , q {\displaystyle M_{p,q}^{s}=M_{m}^{p,q}} .

Feichtinger's algebra

For p = q = 1 {\displaystyle p=q=1} and m ( x , ω ) = 1 {\displaystyle m(x,\omega )=1} , the modulation space M m 1 , 1 ( R d ) = M 1 ( R d ) {\displaystyle M_{m}^{1,1}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})=M^{1}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is known by the name Feichtinger's algebra and often denoted by S 0 {\displaystyle S_{0}} for being the minimal Segal algebra invariant under time-frequency shifts, i.e. combined translation and modulation operators. M 1 ( R d ) {\displaystyle M^{1}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is a Banach space embedded in L 1 ( R d ) C 0 ( R d ) {\displaystyle L^{1}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})\cap C_{0}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} , and is invariant under the Fourier transform. It is for these and more properties that M 1 ( R d ) {\displaystyle M^{1}(\mathbb {R} ^{d})} is a natural choice of test function space for time-frequency analysis. Fourier transform F {\displaystyle {\mathcal {F}}} is an automorphism on M 1 , 1 {\displaystyle M^{1,1}} .

References

  1. Foundations of Time-Frequency Analysis by Karlheinz Gröchenig
  2. H. Feichtinger. "On a new Segal algebra" Monatsh. Math. 92:269–289, 1981.
  3. B.X. Wang, Z.H. Huo, C.C. Hao, and Z.H. Guo. Harmonic Analysis Method for Nonlinear Evolution Equations. World Scientific, 2011.
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