1. Introduction
In one dimension, there is only one way to truncate the partial sums of a Fourier series
namely
Then the Fourier series converges if and only if $S_N(x)$ converges as $N\to\infty$.
When moving to higher dimensions, we have
and an ambiguity arises.
Since the eigenvalue for $\mathrm{e}^{2 \pi \mathrm{i}(mx+ny)}$ is proportional to $m^2+n^2$, the ‘natural choice’ of truncation for the partial sums is
that is, we cut off the sum once we have picked out all eigenfunctions with eigenvalues $\left\vert\lambda_{m,n}\right\vert\lesssim N^2$. (Geometrically, this procedure corresponds to using a ‘circular cutoff’ in the frequency space by choosing frequencies (m, n) in the ball of radius N.) A celebrated result of Fefferman [Reference Fefferman5] implies, with the help of standard transference results [Reference Grafakos7, Chap. 4], that such ‘eigenvalue truncations’ of Fourier expansions fail, in general, to converge to f in the $L^p(\mathbb{T}^2)$ norm when p ≠ 2.
We may, instead, truncate according to the labelling of the indices (or frequencies) $(m,n)\in\mathbb{Z}^2$:
Happily, these ‘truncations by label’ always converge back to f in all $L^p(\mathbb{T}^2)$ spaces (provided that $1 \lt p \lt \infty$). [See Reference Grafakos7, for a proof of this classical result.] Recently, Fefferman et al. [Reference Fefferman, Hajduk and Robinson6] have noted that the general problem of finding ‘well-behaved’ truncations of eigenfunction expansions in L p-based spaces is still open for more general bounded Euclidean domains.
A natural starting point is to consider the next ‘simplest’ domains, such as discs or triangles. The eigenfunctions of the disc are products of trigonometric and Bessel functions and so share a similar product structure to the classical Fourier series on $\mathbb{T}^2$. Specifically, the eigenfunctions are of the form
giving rise to the multidimensional Bessel–Fourier series
(Here, $J_{\left\vert n\right\vert}$ denotes a Bessel function of the first kind and $j_m^{\left\vert n\right\vert}$ its non-negative zeros.) The best result we were able to find in the literature is due to Balodis and Córdoba [Reference Balodis and Córdoba3], who proved norm convergence in the mixed norm space $L^p_{\mathrm{rad}}( L^2_{\mathrm{ang}} )$ defined by the condition
where $f_k(r)$ is the kth Fourier coefficient of the angular function $f(r,\cdot)$ for fixed r:
By truncating the series (1.1) in the ranges $\left\vert n\right\vert\leqslant N$, $m\leqslant M$, they were able to show that there is a constant A > 0 such that the Bessel–Fourier series of $f \in L^p_{\mathrm{rad}}( L^2_{\mathrm{ang}} )$ converges to f in the $\left\lVert\cdot\right\rVert_{p,2}$ norm provided that $M\geqslant AN+1$ and $4/3 \lt p \lt 4$. Furthermore, the endpoints for the range of p are sharp. [See Reference Balodis and Córdoba3, Theorem 2, of which our discussion is a special case when d = 2.]
By modifying their proof, we were able to improve the result to L p convergence with respect to the usual measure $r \,\mathrm d{r} \,\mathrm d{\theta} $ on the disc, provided that $2\leqslant p \lt 4$ and
As far as we know, the problem of L p convergence for functions $f\in L^p(r \,\mathrm d{r} \,\mathrm d{\theta} )$ in the range $4/3 \lt p \lt 4$ is still open; see [Reference Acosta Babb1].
We therefore turn our attention to triangular domains, which turn out to be much more amenable to analysis. Following early work of Lamé [Reference Lamé12], other authors such as Práger [Reference Práger14] and McCartin [Reference McCartin13] have derived explicit trigonometric expressions for Dirichlet eigenfunctions on the equilateral triangle. Neither of these authors, however, considers questions of convergence for the associated eigenfunction series, and subsequent work [Reference Adcock2, Reference Huybrechs, Iserles and Nørsett10, Reference Sun and Li16] restricts attention to numerical methods or convergence in L 2-based spaces such as H k. [See Reference Grebenkov and Nguyen9, for a comprehensive survey of the literature on the Laplacian and its eigenfunctions.] To our knowledge, there is no treatment of the L p convergence of series of eigenfunctions on the triangle for p ≠ 2.
In this paper, we establish L p convergence for trigonometric series of eigenfunctions for the Dirichlet Laplacian on three types of triangular domains: (i) the 45-90-45 triangle, (ii) the equilateral triangle and (iii) the hemiequilateral triangle (i.e. half an equilateral triangle cut along its height).
Eigenfunctions for the latter types, (ii) and (iii), were obtained in the abovementioned [Reference Práger14] and [Reference McCartin13]. Using their insights, we prove that, on each of these domains, any L p function can be written as a norm-convergent series of eigenfunctions. We also give a complete treatment of these issues for the simpler case (i). As far as we know, the result for type-(i) triangles is new.
In $\S$ 2, we derive the eigenfunctions for the type-(i) triangles, prove their completeness and establish L p convergence of the associated series. This serves as a useful prototype for the arguments we will develop in the following sections.
The result for equilateral domains is obtained by a decomposition of a function into a symmetric and antisymmetric part with respect to the line x = 0. This reduces the problem to type-(iii) domains, which, once solved, easily yields the equilateral case.
Thus, in $\S$ 3 and $\S$ 5 we separately derive the antisymmetric and symmetric modes, following the ingenious approach of Práger [Reference Práger14] (see Figure 2). The hemiequilateral triangle T 1 is tiled into the rectangle ${R=[0,\sqrt{3}]\times[0,1]}$, where we exploit the classical L p convergence of ‘double-sine’ and ‘cosine-sine’ series on R to derive convergence on T 1. This is our main contribution, which is worked out in $\S$ 4 and $\S$ 6. These results are combined in $\S$ 7 to obtain L p convergence on the equilateral triangle.
In $\S$ 8, we conclude with some remarks about the limitations of this argument: owing to a theorem of Lamé, the three domains (i)–(iii) listed above are the ‘only’ ones amenable to this procedure.
2. The 45-90-45 triangle
Taking our cue from Práger’s analysis of the equilateral case, we reflect the 45-90-45 triangle along the hypotenuse to obtain a square (Figure 1).
Placing the triangle, T, at the vertices $(1,0)$, $(0,1)$ and $(0,0)$, the reflections have the simple form
Given a function $f:T\to\mathbb{R}$, we define the prolongation of f
where Tʹ denotes the reflected triangle, so that $[0,1]^2=T\cup T^\prime$.
We now expand $\mathcal{P}f$ as a double-sine series on $[0,1]^2$:
where we defined the functions
for all points $(\xi,\eta)\in T$.
Lemma 1. We record the following facts about the functions $u_{m,n}$ (indexed by $m,n\in\mathbb{N}$).
(1) For all $m\neq n$:
\begin{equation*} u_{m,n} = \sin(\pi m \xi)\sin(\pi n\eta)-(-1)^{m+n}\sin(\pi n\xi)\sin(\pi m\eta)\end{equation*}and clearly $u_{m,n}\equiv 0$ when n = m.(2) Symmetry of the indices:
\begin{equation*} u_{n,m} = -(-1)^{m+n}u_{m,n} \quad\text{for all}\ m\neq n; \end{equation*}therefore, it suffices to consider the set with $0 \lt m \lt n$.(3) Letting $(x,y)$ range over $[0,1]^2$,
\begin{equation*} \mathcal{P}\left[u_{m,n}|_T\right](x,y) = u_{m,n}(x,y) \quad\text{for all}\ m\neq n. \end{equation*}In other words, restricting $u_{m,n}$ from $[0,1]^2$ to $T$and prolonging by $\mathcal{P}$ yields $u_{m,n}$ once more, as a function on $[0,1]^2$.
(4) The set $\{u_{m,n}:0 \lt m \lt n\}$ is a complete, orthogonal set in $L^2(T)$ and
\begin{equation*} \left\lVert u_{m,n}\right\rVert_{L^{2}({T})} = \frac{1}{2}. \end{equation*}
Proof. Statements (i)–(iii) are easily verified. For the completeness claim in (iv), suppose that $f\in L^2(T)$ is such that
It follows from (i), (iii), and Equation (2.1) that the Fourier coefficients of $\mathcal{P}f$ on $[0,1]^2$ vanish, so $\mathcal{P}f=0$ in $L^2([0,1]^2)$, and therefore $f=\mathcal{P}f|_{T}=0$. This proves the completeness of the set.
From (iii) and Equation (2.1), it is clear that
Ordering the indices as $0 \lt m \lt n$ and $0 \lt k \lt l$, it follows from the formula in (i) that the functions $u_{m,n}$ and $u_{k,l}$ are pairwise orthogonal; setting m = k and n = l easily yields the norm of $u_{m,n}$.
Corollary 1. The function $u_{m,n}$ with $0 \lt m \lt n$ is an eigenfunction of (minus) the Dirichlet Laplacian on T with eigenvalue $\pi^2(m^2+n^2)$.
Proof. It is immediate from (i) and (iii) in Lemma 1 that
pointwise for all $(x,y)\in [0,1]^2$ and $u_{m,n}\equiv 0$ on the boundary of the square. Thus, restricting to $T\subset [0,1]^2$ yields eigenfunctions of the Laplacian on T that clearly vanish along the edges parallel to the axes. It remains to show that $u_{m,n}$ also vanishes on the hypotenuse $y=1-x$, but this is immediately verified on substitution into the formula from (i) above.
We thus have a complete orthogonal set of eigenfunctions for the Dirichlet Laplacian on T. We can define the Fourier coefficients as usual:
the last equality holds by Equation (2.1).
The partial sum operators, truncated by indices, for the Fourier series on T and $[0,1]^2$ are
respectively.
The next proposition tells us that the prolongation operation commutes with the Fourier partial sums, allowing us to ‘push forward’ the L p convergence results from the square to the triangle.
Proposition 1. Let $f\in L^p(T)$. Then
Proof. Break up the lattice $[1,N]^2\cap \mathbb{N}^2$ into the following regions:
(Recall that, by (i) in Lemma 1, the diagonal m = n yields no eigenfunctions.) Hence,
where in the last line we make use of the linearity of $\mathcal{P}$ and the identity $f^{\triangle}(m,n)=\widehat{\mathcal{P}f}(m,n)$ for all (m, n) in I.
We now have everything we need to prove our result.
Theorem 1. Let $f\in L^p(T)$ with $1 \lt p \lt \infty$. Then, $S_N^Tf\to f$ in $L^p(T)$.
Proof. Note that, for $f\in L^p$, we have
Thus, by successively applying this equality and Proposition 1, we have
by the L p convergence of Fourier double-sine series on $[0,1]^2$.
3. Antisymmetric eigenfunctions on the equilateral triangle
To tackle convergence on the equilateral triangle T, we divide it along its midline x = 0 into two congruent hemiequilateral triangles and call the right-hand one T 1 (Figure 2). Any function $f:T\to \mathbb{R}$ may be decomposed into a symmetric and antisymmetric part with respect to x, i.e. $f=f_a+f_s$, where
for all $(x,y)\in T$. Clearly, each of fa and fs is determined by its values on $T_1\subset T$.
Let us begin with the L p convergence of the Fourier series of fa on the triangle T 1. Denote by $(\xi,\eta)$ the coordinates of a point in T 1. Then, for each coordinate pair (x, y) in the rectangle $R=[0,\sqrt{3}]\times[0,1]$, we write [following Reference Práger14, p. 312]
Note that the i subscript serves just as a reminder that the point $(x_i,y_i)$ lies in the region Ti of the Cartesian plane.
The antisymmetric prolongation of $u\colon T_1\to\mathbb{R}$ to the rectangle R is defined by
More succinctly (albeit less precisely), we express this relation as
where ci are the appropriate ‘±’ signs.
From Figure 2 it is clear that the prolongation $\mathcal{P}_au$ vanishes along the sides of the rectangle R. We therefore express $\mathcal{P}_af_a$ as a double-sine series on R:
The Fourier coefficients of $\mathcal{P}_af_a$ are
where we defined the antisymmetric eigenfunctions as
(Recall that each pair $(x_i,y_i)\in R$ is a function of $(\xi,\eta)\in T_1$.)
By explicit computation using the parametrizations of the Ti, Práger obtained the following.
Lemma 2. For integers $0 \lt m \lt n$ with the same parity (i.e. both odd or both even),
Furthermore, $u_{m,n}\equiv 0$ whenever n and m have different parity, or n = m or $m=3n$. Finally, with ${0 \lt m \lt n}$ as above, define the pairs
Then,
The next technical result is all that stands between us and the L p convergence of a $u_{m,n}$-expansion of fa on T 1.
Lemma 3. The functions $\{u_{m,n}: 0 \lt m \lt n \text{ and } m \equiv n \mod 2\}$ are pairwise orthogonal. Furthermore,
from which it follows that
Corollary 2. The functions $u_{m,n}$ are eigenfunctions of (minus) the Dirichlet Laplacian on T 1, with eigenvalue $\pi^2\left(\tfrac{m^2}{3}+n^2\right)$.
Proof. Since each $\mathcal{P}_a u_{m,n}$ is a finite combination of eigenfunctions on R, we have
by direct calculation. This equation holds pointwise owing to the smoothness of the functions; therefore, it holds when restricted to T 1. But $\mathcal{P}_au_{m,n}\equiv u_{m,n}$ on T 1, whence
These functions clearly vanish on the boundary of the triangle by construction.
So far, our discussion is a recap of the results in [Reference Práger14], although we have added a more explicit proof of Corollary 2 than can be found there. We will now use these results to obtain L p convergence of the eigenfunction expansions.
4. L p convergence of the Fourier series of fa
Equation (3.6) tells us that the ‘Fourier coefficients’ of fa (with respect to $u_{m,n}$) are
and it follows from Equation (3.2) that
To help keep track of our indices, we will introduce the sets
Denote the Nth ‘component-wise’ partial sums on the triangle T 1 and rectangle R, respectively, by
The next theorem is a key ingredient in the proof of our main result.
Theorem 2. Let $f\in L^p(T)$ with $1 \lt p \lt \infty$ and denote its antisymmetric part by fa. Then $f_a\in L^p(T_1)$ and $S^{T_1}_Nf_a\to f_a$ in $L^p(T_1)$.
Proof. Since $f\in L^p(T)$ and fa is a linear combination of f and its reflections, clearly $f_a\in L^p(T)$ and, by symmetry (and abuse of notation), ${f_a = f_a|_{T_1}\in L^p(T_1)}$.
Next, we break up the set of indices with $0 \lt m,n\leqslant N$ into three sets:
noting that the coefficients when m = n and $m=3n$ vanish. From Lemma 2, we may label these groups as (m, n), $(m^\prime,n^\prime)$ and $(m^{\prime\prime},n^{\prime\prime})$, respectively. Note that such labelling divides $[1,N]\times[1,N]\cap\mathbb{Z}^2$ into three disjoint regions, which we label as $I=\mathcal{U}_N$, II and III (Figure 3).
It follows from Equation (3.4) that
Hence,
The last line follows from Equations (3.5) and (4.1). Since $\mathcal{P}_a$ is a linear operator, we have therefore proved that
Furthermore, since each transformation $T_1\to T_i$ is an isometry, we have
Combining the last two displayed equations with the L p convergence of double-sine series on R, we obtain
as $N\to\infty$.
5. Symmetric eigenfunctions on the equilateral triangle
It is now time to deal with the symmetric part: fs. To do so, we introduce a symmetric prolongation of u to R:
This notation uses the same ‘shorthand’ as in Equation (3.1) but uses a different combination of reflections and anti-reflections (Figure 4).
From Figure 4, it is clear that the prolongation $\mathcal{P}_su$ only vanishes on the horizontal sides y = 0 and y = 1 of the rectangle, since for an x-symmetric function, we cannot assume that $u(x,0)\equiv 0$. We therefore express $\mathcal{P}_sf_s$ as a cosine-sine series on R:
When $m,n \gt 0$, the Fourier coefficients of $\widehat{\mathcal{P}_sf_s}$ are given by
when m = 0 and n > 0, they are
Here we have defined the symmetric eigenfunctions as
(Recall that each pair $(x_i,y_i)\in R$ is a function of $(\xi,\eta)\in T_1$.)
By explicit computation, Práger obtained the following.
Lemma 4. For integers $0\leqslant m \lt n$ with the same parity,
Furthermore, $v_{m,n}\equiv 0$ whenever n and m have different parity. Finally, with $0 \lt m \lt n$ as mentioned earlier, define the pairs
Then,
and, for all n > 0,
Remark 1. Note that we no longer exclude the cases m = 0 and $m=3n$ since the corresponding $v_{m,n}$ do not vanish and must therefore be carefully accounted for when we compute the partial sums. Note also that m and n must have the same parity, so that n is even when m = 0, and, consequently, the right-hand side of Equation (5.6) is well-defined. We can thus regard $(m^\prime,n^\prime) = (3n/2,n/2)$ when m = 0.
It is also clear that $v_{m,n}$ are the symmetric eigenfunctions of the Dirichlet Laplacian on T, restricted to T 1; the proof is identical to that of Corollary 2 [See Reference McCartin13, for a fuller treatment.]
Lemma 5. The eigenfunctions $\{v_{m,n} : 0 \leqslant m \lt n,\ n \gt 0,\ m \equiv n \mod 2\}$ are pairwise orthogonal. Furthermore,
from which it follows that
Once again, these results are contained in [Reference Práger14]. They are crucial to our proof of L p convergence in the next section.
6. L p convergence of the Fourier series of fs
Writing
it immediately follows from Equations (5.2), (5.8) and (5.3), (5.9) that
The next theorem is the other key ingredient of our main result.
Theorem 3 Let $f\in L^p(T)$ with $1 \lt p \lt \infty$ and denote its symmetric part by fs. Then $f_s\in L^p(T_1)$ and $S^{T_1}_Nf_s\to f_s$ in $L^p(T_1)$.
Proof. The proof is essentially the same as that of Theorem 2, the only modifications arising from the ‘degenerate’ indices $(0,n)$ and $(3n,n)$.
As before, we break up the set of indices with $0\leqslant m\leqslant N$, $0 \lt n\leqslant N$ into three sets:
sparing the cases m = 0 and $m=3n$. From Lemma 4, we may label these groups as (m, n), $(m^\prime,n^\prime)$ and $(m^{\prime\prime},n^{\prime\prime})$, respectively, dividing the lattice ${[0,N]\times[1,N]\cap\mathbb{Z}^2}$ into three disjoint regions; see once again Figure 3.
It follows from Equation (5.5) that, for all positive indices,
and from Equation (5.6) that
Recall that we identify $(0^\prime,n^\prime)=(3n/2,n/2)$ and that this is precisely the case $m^\prime=3n^\prime$; see Remark 1.
We begin by grouping the partial sums on R as follows:
The calculations for the term (6.3) proceed in the same way as for the antisymmetric part $S_N^R\mathcal{P}_af_a$, using Equation (5.4) instead of Equation (3.3) after grouping the various cosine-sine terms. We will therefore only consider the bracketed term (6.5) in detail.
The sums in Equation (6.5) are taken over even $n\leqslant N$ and pairs ${(0^\prime,n^\prime)=(3n/2,n/2)}$ corresponding to $m=3n$. Using Equation (6.2), we have
The bold factor of 2 in the second line arises from the fact that the normalization constant for $\widehat{\mathcal{P}_sf_s}(m,n)$, m ≠ 0, is twice that of $\widehat{\mathcal{P}_sf_s}(0,n)$; see Equations (5.2) and (5.3). The last line follows from Equations (5.7) and (6.1). Once again, we have
and we can conclude that $S_N^{T_1}f_s\to f_s$ in $L^p(T_1)$.
7. Main results for the equilateral triangle
We now wrap up with the main results as they apply to the original equilateral triangle, T.
Theorem 4. [Reference Práger14]
The functions
form a complete, orthogonal system on T, consisting of eigenfunctions of the Dirichlet Laplacian. Furthermore, each eigenfunction, $u_{m,n}$ or $v_{m,n}$, corresponds to the eigenvalue $\pi^2\left(\tfrac{m^2}{3}+n^2\right)$.
As for the L p theory, we can combine our Theorems 2 and 3 to obtain the full result on $L^p(T)$. As before, we use the following notation to keep track of our indices in the asymmetric and symmetric parts of the sums:
Theorem 5. Let $f\in L^p(T)$ with $1 \lt p \lt \infty$. With the notation of the previous sections, let
Then, $S_N^Tf\to f$ in $L^p(T)$.
Proof. For any function f on T, write its decomposition into a symmetric and antisymmetric part with respect to the y-axis:
Then clearly
whence
Hence, since
it follows that
8. Concluding remarks
Our argument made use of Práger’s cunning triangle-to-rectangle transformation in order to reduce the convergence problem on the triangle to the well-known convergence on the rectangle. In a similar but more direct way, we were able to obtain these results for the 45-90-45 triangle.
There are, however, limitations to this approach, as a consequence of the following theorem due to Lamé [Reference Lamé12] and reported as Theorem 3.1 in [Reference McCartin13].
Theorem 6 (Lamé’s Fundamental Theorem)
Suppose that $f(x,y)$ can be represented by the trigonometric series
with $\lambda_i^2+\mu_i^2=k^2$. Then f is antisymmetric about any line about which it vanishes.
The implication for our argument is that, assuming Dirichlet boundary conditions on the hypothenuse of T 1, we will generate a nodal (i.e. vanishing) line along the diagonal of the rectangle (see, e.g., Figure 2). Lamé’s Theorem then requires the eigenfunctions to have a line of anti-symmetry along the diagonal. The only possibilities are symmetry along the diagonal line itself, as in the square (see Figure 5(a)) or an arrangement of smaller triangles inside the rectangle as in Práger’s construction with three hemiequilateral triangles. In this case, the upper right-angle of the rectangle is cut into three angles of $\pi/6$. Attempts to replace this decomposition by n > 3 triangles with angles $\pi/2n$ will not tile a rectangle (see Figure 5(b)).
These limitations are related to the Method of Images used to construct Green’s functions for differential equations in Euclidean domains. The classification of admissible domains for the Method of Images goes back to [Reference Keller11], wherein our three ‘special triangles’, viz. equilateral, hemiequilateral and 45-90-45, are identified as the only triangular domains for which the method is applicable.
Acknowledgement
The author owes a special thanks to his doctoral advisor, Prof James C. Robinson, for many insightful discussions and his helpful criticism of early drafts. The author also wishes to thank an anonymous reviewer for pointing out the connection to the Method of Images.
Funding Statement
The author thanks the EPSRC studentship 2443915 under the project EP/V520226/1 for their support for conducting this work.
Competing interests
The author declares no conflict of interest.
Appendix 1. Appendix: Non-convergence for circular cutoffs
Let us return to the Fourier series on the 45-90-45 triangle T from $\S$ 2. There we ordered the eigenfunctions $u_{m,n}$ by the condition $0 \lt m \lt n$ and summed in the range $n\leqslant N$. As we remarked in the introduction, a more natural choice would be to sum over all $u_{m,n}$ with eigenvalue $\lambda_{m,n}\leqslant N$. Since $\lambda_{m,n} = \pi(m^2+n^2)$, this is essentially equivalent to summing within the quarter of the disk $m^2+n^2\leqslant N^2$ of radius N in the first quadrant. Proposition 1 immediately extends to show that these partial sums are related to the circular cut-offs of the traditional Fourier series on the square $[0,1]^2$, which, as follows from Fefferman’s classical result on the ball multiplier, do not in general converge in L p.
Given a counterexample f on the square, we would need to find a function g on the triangle such that $\mathcal{P}g = f$ on $[0,1]^2$. It is therefore clear that only a counterexample that is antisymmetric along the diagonal will serve this purpose. However, Fefferman’s result is non-constructive, and we still lack an explicit example of a function on the torus whose circular partial sums do not converge in L p. Thus, we cannot assume a priori that such counterexamples are available on the triangle.
Nevertheless, we can carefully replicate Fefferman’s argument, coupled with a transference result, to draw the conclusion that circular cut-offs of Fourier series on T will in general not converge in L p. (The material in this section follows the presentation in [Reference Stein and Murphy15]; there is a more detailed account in [Reference Grafakos8]. For a discussion of transference, see [Reference Davis and Chang4, Reference Grafakos7].)
The proof requires three ingredients: (1) a transference theorem, (2) Meyer’s Lemma and (3) a Besikovitch set.
The transference theorem exploits the intuition that a Fourier transform is the limit of a Fourier series with an increasingly large period. It is then argued that, since L p convergence of Fourier series is equivalent to the uniform boundedness of the partial sum operators, this uniform bound is equivalent to the boundedness of a Fourier multiplier. For the spherical partial sums, this means the boundedness of the operator
The ‘increasing period’ of the Fourier series can be seen as rescaling the square so that it ‘converges’ to the entire space $\mathbb{R}^2$. But we need to keep the antisymmetry constraint along the diagonal. Thus, we will be concerned with the space $L_{-}^p(\mathbb{R}^2)$: the L p closure of the smooth functions f of compact support that are antisymmetric about the line $y=-x$.
Theorem 7. (Antisymmetric Transference) Suppose the circular cut-off operators $S^T_N$ are uniformly bounded in $N\geqslant 1$ from $L^p(T)$ to $L^p(T)$. Then, there is a constant $C_p \gt 0$ such that
This inequality is used to prove a vector-valued inequality known as Meyer’s Lemma. The key idea here is that, on small enough scales, the disk at $u\in S^1$ ‘looks like’ the half plane $\{\xi : \xi\cdot u \gt 0\}$. Thus, denoting by S u the multiplier operator of this half plane
we have our second ingredient.
Theorem 8 (Meyer’s Lemma for $L^p_{-}$)
Assume Equation (A.1) holds. Then, for all $u_1,\ldots,u_k\in S^1$ and all $f_1,\ldots,f_k\in L^p_{-}$,
The proof is identical to that of the original Meyer’s Lemma, since it only involves rescaling the ball in Fourier space and multiplying each fj by a complex scalar, neither of which operations alter the antisymmetry of the fj.
The crucial next step is finding a set of functions that violate the bound (A.2). This is where the third ingredient, the Besikovitch set, comes in: a collection of congruent rectangles Rj that overlap to form a small total area, but whose translates $\widetilde{R}_j$ along the longest side remain disjoint. (We use ‘$\sqcup$’ to denote disjoint unions.)
Theorem 9 (Besikovitch Set)
For any ɛ, there is a finite collection of congruent rectangles Rj such that $\left\vert\bigcup_j R_j\right\vert \lt \varepsilon$ but $\left\vert\bigsqcup_j \widetilde{R}_j\right\vert=1$.
A simple pointwise calculation shows that there is an absolute constant c > 0 such that
where $u_j\in S^1$ is the unit direction of the longest side of Rj, and thus the collection of ‘rectangles’ (more precisely: their indicator functions) violates Equation (A.2), as required.
The construction of the Besikovitch set proceeds by dissecting a triangle and shifting the resulting triangles parallel to their base so as to create overlap. Thus, all the mass lies on one side of the diagonal and we can duplicate the whole thing to create a disjoint reflection with respect to this line (see Figure A1, where we rotated the picture). This new figure has double the area but introduces no additional overlap. Hence, if we denote the reflection of Rj by R ‒j, we may take
and similarly conclude that Equation (A.2), and therefore Equation (A.1), fails.
The situation for the hemi- and equilateral triangles is much more complicated, since we cannot immediately scale the rectangles in Figures 2 and 4 to $\mathbb{R}^2$. The inner rhomboid $T_2\cup T_3\cup T_4\cup T_5$ can be scaled, while preserving the two diagonals as symmetry lines, but the ‘fringe’ triangles T 1 and T 6 would be, so to speak, ‘lost at infinity’.