1. Introduction
The space of functions of bounded mean oscillation ($BMO$) was introduced by John and Nirenberg in [Reference John and Nirenberg19]. Let $Q_0$ be a cube with sides parallel to the coordinate axis in $\mathbb {R}^{n}$. A function $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$ belongs to $BMO(Q_0)$ if
where the supremum is taken over all subcubes of $Q_0$. Throughout, we denote the integral average over a cube by a barred integral sign or $f_Q$. A more general $BMO$-type space was also discussed in [Reference John and Nirenberg19]. A function $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$ belongs to the John–Nirenberg space $JN_p(Q_0)$, $1< p<\infty$, if
where the supremum is taken over countable collections $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ of pairwise disjoint subcubes of $Q_0$. The space $BMO(Q_0)$ is obtained as the limit of $JN_p(Q_0)$ as $p\to \infty$. John [Reference John18] considered a way to define $BMO(Q_0)$ for any measurable function $f$ on $Q_0$ and this approach has been developed further by Strömberg [Reference Strömberg27] and Jawerth and Torchinsky [Reference Jawerth and Torchinsky17]. In this case, (1.1) is replaced with
where the supremum is taken over all subcubes of $Q_0$ and $s$ is a fixed parameter with $0< s\le 1$. Perhaps, the most common parameter value is $s=\frac 12$ and, for $0< s \leq 1$, we obtain a biased notion of $s$-median. Medians have been studied and applied in many problems; see for example [Reference Federer and Ziemer7, Reference Fujii8, Reference Gogatishvili, Koskela and Zhou10–Reference John18, Reference Karak20–Reference Lerner and Pérez22, Reference Poelhuis and Torchinsky25, Reference Strömberg27–Reference Zhou29].
This paper discusses several new results related to the definition and properties of the John–Nirenberg space with $s$-medians (definition 3.1). In particular, this extends the median approach of $BMO$ in (1.3) to John–Nirenberg spaces. We restrict our attention to the dyadic case, that is, the cubes in (1.2) are assumed to be dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$. The dyadic structure has many advantages in the theory of John–Nirenberg spaces. For some of our results, it does not matter whether we consider dyadic cubes or all subcubes of $Q_0$, but some results hold exclusively for dyadic cubes. We study a John–Nirenberg inequality for the dyadic John–Nirenberg space with $s$-medians (theorem 3.5). Our proof is based on relatively standard arguments. Related questions on metric measure spaces have been studied by Lerner and Pérez [Reference Lerner and Pérez22] and Myyryläinen [Reference Myyryläinen23]. We reconsider dyadic versions of these results in the Euclidean context. As a consequence (corollary 3.7), we show that the dyadic John–Nirenberg space with medians coincides with the dyadic John–Nirenberg space with integral averages. Thus, it does not matter which one we consider. However, assumptions in the median approach are initially weaker, since the function does not need to be integrable.
Bennett et al. [Reference Bennett, DeVore and Sharpley2] showed that the Hardy–Littlewood maximal operator is bounded on $BMO$. For a short proof, we refer to Chiarenza and Frasca [Reference Chiarenza and Frasca4]. We show that the dyadic maximal operator is bounded on the dyadic John–Nirenberg space $JN^{d}_p(Q_0)$ (theorem 4.2). To our knowledge, this result is new. The proof is based on the John–Nirenberg inequality. A similar argument, with the weak type estimate for the maximal operator, gives an $L^{1}$ result for the dyadic maximal operator (theorem 4.3). Using this result together with a theorem of Stein [Reference Stein26], we obtain a method to construct functions in $JN^{d}_p(Q_0) \setminus L^{p}(Q_0)$. This complements results by Dafni et al. [Reference Dafni, Hytönen, Korte and Yue6] in the dyadic case. Motivated by theorem 4.3, it is an open question whether there exists a Coifman–Rochberg [Reference Coifman and Rochberg5] type characterization for the dyadic John–Nirenberg space. A one-dimensional example in § 4 demonstrates that the $L^{1}$ result in its generality does not hold for the standard John–Nirenberg space. The standard $BMO$ is complete with respect to the $BMO$ seminorm; see [Reference Neri24]. We prove that the dyadic John–Nirenberg space is complete (theorem 5.1). This also holds for the standard John–Nirenberg space $JN_p(Q_0)$. The connection between the dyadic $BMO$ and the standard $BMO$ has been studied by Garnett and Jones in [Reference Garnett and Jones9]. The corresponding result is also true for the John–Nirenberg spaces.
2. Preliminaries
The Lebesgue measure of a measurable subset $A$ of $\mathbb {R}^{n}$ is denoted by $|A|$. The integral average of $f \in L^{1}(A)$ in $A$, with $0<|A|<\infty$, is denoted by
In many cases, it is preferable to consider medians instead of integral averages. Let $0< s \leq 1$. Assume that $A \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ is a measurable set with $0<|A|<\infty$ and that $f:A\rightarrow [-\infty, \infty ]$ is a measurable function. A number $a\in \mathbb {R}$ is called an $s$-median of $f$ over $A$, if
In general, the $s$-median is not unique. To obtain a uniquely defined notion, we consider the maximal $s$-median as in [Reference Poelhuis and Torchinsky25].
Definition 2.1 Let $0< s \leq 1$. Assume that $A \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ is a measurable set with $0<|A|<\infty$ and that $f:A\rightarrow [-\infty, \infty ]$ is a measurable function. The maximal $s$-median of $f$ over $A$ is defined as
The maximal $s$-median of a function is an $s$-median [Reference Poelhuis and Torchinsky25]. In the next lemma, we list the basic properties of the maximal $s$-median. We refer to [Reference Myyryläinen23] where the properties are proven in metric measure spaces. The arguments are identical for Euclidean spaces. The proofs of properties (i), (ii), (v), (vii), (viii) and (ix) can also be found in [Reference Poelhuis and Torchinsky25]. In addition, most of these properties are listed without proofs in [Reference Heikkinen, Koskela and Tuominen14, Reference Heikkinen and Tuominen15].
Lemma 2.2 Let $0< s \leq 1$. Assume that $A \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ is a measurable set with $0<|A|<\infty$ and that $f,g:A\rightarrow [-\infty, \infty ]$ is a measurable function. The maximal $s$-median has the following properties.
(i) $m_f^{s'}(A) \leq m_f^{s}(A)$ for $s \leq s'$.
(ii) $m_f^{s}(A) \leq m_g^{s}(A)$ whenever $f\leq g$ $\mu$-almost everywhere in $A$.
(iii) If $A \subset A'$ and $|A'| \leq c |A|$ with some $c \geq 1$, then $m_f^{s}(A) \leq m_f^{s/c}(A')$.
(iv) $m_{\varphi \circ f}^{s}(A) = \varphi (m_f^{s}(A))$ for an increasing continuous function $\varphi : f(A) \to [-\infty, \infty ]$.
(v) $m_f^{s}(A) + c = m_{f+c}^{s}(A)$ for $c \in \mathbb {R}$.
(vi) $m_{cf}^{s}(A) = c \, m_f^{s}(A)$ for $c > 0$.
(vii) $|m_{f}^{s}(A)| \leq m_{|f|}^{\min \{s,1-s\}}(A)$.
(viii) $m_{f+g}^{s}(A) \leq m_f^{t_1}(A) + m_g^{t_2}(A)$ whenever $t_1 + t_2 \leq s$.
(ix) For $f \in L^{p}(A)$ and $p>0$,
\[ m_{|f|}^{s}(A) \leq \left( s^{{-}1} \int\kern-10pt_A |f|^{p} \,\textrm{d}x \right)^{{1}/{p}}. \](x) If $A_i$ are pairwise disjoint for every $i \in \mathbb {N}$, then
\[ \inf_{i} m_f^{s}(A_i) \leq m_f^{s}\left(\bigcup_{i=1}^{\infty} A_i\right)\leq \sup_{i} m_f^{s}(A_i) . \]
Remark Assume that $0< s\leq \frac 12$. Then property (vii) assumes a slightly simpler form
since
for $0< s\leq \frac 12$.
A cube $Q$ is a bounded interval in $\mathbb {R}^{n}$, with sides parallel to the coordinate axes and equally long, that is, $Q=[a_1,b_1] \times \dots \times [a_n, b_n]$ with $b_1-a_1=\cdots =b_n-a_n$. The side length of $Q$ is $l(Q)=b_1-a_1$. In case we want to specify the centre of a cube, we write $Q=Q(x,r)=\{y \in \mathbb {R}^{n}: |y_i-x_i| \leq r,\,i=1,\dots,n\}$ for $x\in \mathbb {R}^{n}$ and $r>0$. We consider closed cubes, but the results hold for open and half open cubes as well.
Let $Q_0\subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube. The dyadic decomposition $\mathcal {D}(Q_0)$ of $Q_0$ is defined as $\mathcal {D}(Q_0)=\bigcup _{j=0}^{\infty }\mathcal {D}_j(Q_0)$, where each $\mathcal {D}_j(Q_0)$ consists of $2^{jn}$ cubes $Q$, with pairwise disjoint interiors and side length $l(Q)=2^{-j}l(Q_0)$, such that $Q_0=\bigcup \{Q:Q\in \mathcal {D}_j(Q_0)\}$ for every $j\in \mathbb {N}_0$. If $j\ge 1$ and $Q\in \mathcal {D}_j(Q_0)$, there exists a unique cube $Q'\in \mathcal {D}_{j-1}(Q_0)$ with $Q\subset Q'$. The cube $Q'$ is called the dyadic parent of $Q$, and $Q$ is a dyadic child of $Q'$.
We recall the Lebesgue differentiation theorem for medians. The proof can be found in [Reference Poelhuis and Torchinsky25].
Lemma 2.3 Let $f: \mathbb {R}^{n} \rightarrow [-\infty, \infty ]$ be a measurable function which is finite almost everywhere in $\mathbb {R}^{n}$ and $0< s\leq 1$. Then
for almost every $x \in \mathbb {R}^{n}$, whenever $(Q_i)_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ is a sequence of (dyadic) cubes containing $x$ such that $\lim _{i \to \infty } |Q_i| = 0$.
We discuss a Calderón–Zygmund decomposition with medians instead of integral averages. The proof is a simple modification of the corresponding argument for integral averages in [Reference John and Nirenberg19].
Lemma 2.4 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube and $0< t\leq 1$. Assume that $f:Q_0\to [-\infty,\infty ]$ is a measurable function. For every $\lambda \ge m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_0)$, there exist dyadic cubes $Q_i \in \mathcal {D}(Q_0)$, $i\in \mathbb {N}$, with pairwise disjoint interiors, such that
(i) $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_i) > \lambda$,
(ii) $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_i') \leq \lambda$ where $Q_i'$ is the dyadic parent of $Q_i$,
(iii) $|f(x)| \leq \lambda$ for almost every $x \in Q_0 \setminus \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$.
The collection $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ is called the Calderón–Zygmund cubes in $Q_0$ at level $\lambda$.
Proof. Consider the collection
For every $x\in \bigcup _{Q \in \mathcal {F}_\lambda } Q$, there exists a cube $Q\in \mathcal {F}_\lambda$ with $x\in Q$ and $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q) > \lambda$. It follows that there exists a unique maximal cube $Q_x\in \mathcal {F}_\lambda$ with $x\in Q_x$ and $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_x) > \lambda$. Maximality means that if $Q_x\subsetneq Q\in \mathcal {D}(Q_0)$, then $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q)\le \lambda$. Let $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ be the subcollection of $\mathcal {F}_\lambda$ of such maximal cubes. If $Q_x=Q_0$ for some $x\in Q_0$, then $\mathcal {F}_\lambda = \{Q_0\}$ and there are no cubes $Q\in \mathcal {D}(Q_0)$ with $Q_x\subsetneq Q$. This happens if and only if $\lambda < m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_0)$, which contradicts the assumption $\lambda \ge m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_0)$.
For two dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$, it holds that either one is contained in the other or the cubes have pairwise disjoint interiors. Thus, the collection $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ consists of cubes with pairwise disjoint interiors with $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_i) > \lambda$, $i\in \mathbb {N}$. This proves (i). By maximality, it holds that $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_i') \leq \lambda$ for every $i\in \mathbb {N}$, where $Q_i'$ is the dyadic parent of $Q_i$. This implies (ii). To prove (iii), assume that $x \in Q_0 \setminus \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$. We have $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q) \leq \lambda$ for every dyadic subcube $Q$ of $Q_0$ containing $x$. Hence, there exist a decreasing sequence of dyadic subcubes $Q_k$ such that $x \in Q_k$ for every $k \in \mathbb {N}$ and $Q_{k+1} \subsetneq Q_k$. The Lebesgue differentiation theorem for medians (lemma 2.4) implies that
for almost every point $x \in Q_0 \setminus \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$.
3. John–Nirenberg inequality with medians
This section discusses the John–Nirenberg inequality for median-type John– Nirenberg spaces.
Definition 3.1 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube, $1< p<\infty$ and $0< s \leq \frac 12$, and assume that $f:Q_0\to [-\infty,\infty ]$ is a measurable function. We say that $f$ belongs to the median-type dyadic John–Nirenberg space $JN^{d}_{p,0,s}(Q_0)$ if
where the supremum is taken over countable collections $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ of pairwise disjoint dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$.
The constants $c_i$ in the definition of $JN^{d}_{p,0,s}$ can be replaced by maximal $t$-medians with $0< s\leq t \leq \tfrac {1}{2}$. A simple proof can be found in [Reference Myyryläinen23]. For more on the median-type John–Nirenberg space, see [Reference Myyryläinen23].
Lemma 3.2 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube and assume that $f:Q_0\to [-\infty,\infty ]$ is a measurable function. It holds that
whenever $0< s\leq t \leq \frac 12$.
Definition 3.3 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube and $0< t\leq 1$, and assume that $f:Q_0\to [-\infty,\infty ]$ is a measurable function. The median-type dyadic maximal function is defined by
where the supremum is taken over all dyadic subcubes $Q\in \mathcal {D}(Q_0)$ with $x \in Q$.
The following good-$\lambda$ inequality is the main ingredient in the proof of the John–Nirenberg inequality.
Lemma 3.4 Let $0< t \leq {1}/{2^{n+1}}$, $K>1$ and $f \in JN^{d}_{p,0,s}(Q_0)$ for some $0< s \leq {t}/{2K^{p}}$, and assume that $m_{|f|}^{t}(Q_0) \leq \lambda$. Then
where $E_{\lambda }(Q_0) = \{ x \in Q_0 : \mathcal {M}^{d,t}_{Q_0}f(x) > \lambda \}$.
Proof. We apply the Calderón–Zygmund decomposition (lemma 2.5) for $f$ in $Q_0$ at levels $\lambda$ and $K\lambda$ to obtain collections of cubes $\{Q_{i,\lambda }\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ and $\{Q_{j,K\lambda }\}_{j\in \mathbb {N}}$ such that
Denote
for every $i \in \mathbb {N}$, and
Since each $Q_{j,K\lambda }$ is contained in some $Q_{i,\lambda }$, we get the partition
By lemma 2.2(ii), (v), (vii), (iii) and lemma 2.5(ii) in this order, we obtain
where $Q'_{i,\lambda }$ is the parent cube of $Q_{i,\lambda }$. Since $Q_{j,K\lambda }$ are pairwise disjoint, property (x) of lemma 2.2 implies that
By applying lemma 2.2(iii), we get
for $i \in I$. Hence, by summing over all indices $i \in I$, we obtain
where in the last inequality we used lemma 3.2 with $t \leq {1}/{2^{n+1}}$ and $0 < s \leq {t}/{2 K^{p}}$.
On the contrary, if $i \notin I$, we have
Summing over all indices $i \notin I$, it follows that
By combining the cases $i\in I$ and $i \notin I$, we conclude that
We are ready to prove the John–Nirenberg inequality for $JN^{d}_{p,0,s}$ which implies that $JN^{d}_{p,0,s}(Q)$ is contained in $L^{p,\infty }(Q)$ for all cubes $Q \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$.
Theorem 3.5 Let $0< s \leq {1}/{2^{n+3}}$ and $s \leq r \leq \frac {1}{2}$. If $f \in JN^{d}_{p,0,s}(Q_0)$, then there exists a constant $c=c(p)$ such that for every $\lambda > 0$ we have
Proof. Since $f \in JN^{d}_{p,0,s}(Q_0)$, lemma 3.2 implies that
where $t = {1}/{2^{n+1}}$ and $s\leq r \leq \frac {1}{2}$. Therefore, the condition in lemma 3.4 holds for $|f-m_f^{r}(Q_0)|$ with the choice
For $0 < \lambda \leq \lambda _0$, we have
Assume then that $\lambda > \lambda _0$. Let $K = 2^{1/p}$ and choose $N \in \mathbb {N}$ such that
We have
where the last inequality follows from lemma 2.5(iii). We claim that
for every $m=0,1,\dots,N$, where $c_0 = 2^{p+1} K^{p}(K-1)^{-p}$. We prove the claim by induction. First, observe that the claim holds for $m = 0$, since
Assume then that the claim holds for $k \in \{0,1,\dots,N-1\}$, that is,
This together with lemma 3.4 for $K^{k} \lambda _0$ implies the claim for $k+1$:
Hence, the claim holds for $k+1$.
We conclude that
with $c = c_0 K^{p} = 2^{p+1} K^{2p}(K-1)^{-p} =2^{p+3}(2^{1/p} -1)^{-p}$.
As an application of the John–Nirenberg inequality (theorem 3.5), we discuss the connection between the John–Nirenberg spaces with medians and integral averages.
Definition 3.6 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube and $1< p<\infty$. We say that $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$ belongs to the dyadic John–Nirenberg space $JN^{d}_{p}(Q_0)$ if
where the supremum is taken over countable collections $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ of pairwise disjoint dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$.
As a corollary of theorem 3.5, the median-type dyadic John–Nirenberg space coincides with the dyadic John–Nirenberg space with integral averages. In particular, it follows that all results for the dyadic John–Nirenberg spaces with integral averages also hold for the median-type dyadic John–Nirenberg spaces and vice versa. We note that theorem 3.5 also holds for the John–Nirenberg space over all subcubes instead of dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$. Thus, the corollary below also holds for the standard John–Nirenberg spaces.
Corollary 3.7 Let $1< p<\infty$ and $0< s \leq {1}/{2^{n+3}}$. It holds that
where $c$ is the constant from theorem 3.5.
Proof. Let $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ be a collection of pairwise disjoint dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$. The first inequality follows in a straightforward manner from lemma 2.2(ix). For the second inequality, we use Cavalieri's principle together with theorem 3.5 to obtain
where $c$ is the constant from theorem 3.5. This implies that
Thus, it follows that
4. The dyadic maximal function on $JN^{d}_p$
In this section, we discuss the behaviour of the Hardy–Littlewood maximal function on the John–Nirenberg space with integral averages as in definition 3.6.
Definition 4.1 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube and assume that $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$. The dyadic maximal function of $f$ is defined by
where the supremum is taken over all dyadic subcubes $Q\in \mathcal {D}(Q_0)$ with $x \in Q$.
Let $f,g\in L^{1}(Q_0)$ and $x\in Q_0$. Using the definition, it is easy to show that $M^{d}_{Q_0}f(x)\ge 0$,
and
for every $a\in \mathbb {R}$.
The Calderón–Zygmund decomposition with integral averages implies that the dyadic maximal function satisfies the weak type estimate
for every $\lambda >0$ and is a bounded operator on $L^{p}(Q_0)$ with $1< p\le \infty$. Moreover, the dyadic maximal operator is bounded on $BMO(Q_0)$; see [Reference Bennett, DeVore and Sharpley2]. We show that the dyadic maximal operator is bounded on the dyadic John–Nirenberg space.
Theorem 4.2 Let $1 < p <\infty$ and assume that $f \in JN^{d}_{p}(Q_0)$. Then there exists a constant $c = c(n,p)$ such that
Proof. Let $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ be a collection of pairwise disjoint dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$. Denote
For $x \in Q_i \setminus E_i$, the supremum in the definition of $M^{d}_{Q_0}f(x)$ is attained in a dyadic cube $Q_x \ni x$ that intersects $Q_0 \setminus Q_i$. Since both $Q_x$ and $Q_i$ are dyadic subcubes of $Q_0$ and $x \in Q_i \cap Q_x$, it follows that $Q_i \subset Q_x$. Since $Q_i \subset Q_x$ for every $x \in Q_i \setminus E_i$, the cube $Q_x$ for which the supremum in the maximal function is attained is the same cube for every $x \in Q_i \setminus E_i$. Thus, for every $i\in \mathbb {N}$, there exists a constant $M_i$ such that $M^{d}_{Q_0}f(x)=M_i$ for every $x \in Q_i \setminus E_i$. We observe that
This implies that
where in the second last inequality we also used $M_i \leq (M^{d}_{Q_0}f)_{Q_i}$, $i\in \mathbb {N}$, which follows from $M_i\leq M^{d}_{Q_0}f(x)$ for every $x \in Q_i$. From the proof of the John–Nirenberg lemma [Reference Aalto, Berkovits, Kansanen and Yue1, pp. 11–13], [Reference Berkovits, Kinnunen and Martell3, p. 7], we see that
for some constant $c = c(n,p)$. Applying this together with Cavalieri's principle, we obtain
Therefore, we can conclude that
Taking the supremum over all collections of $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$, we get
By a similar argument as in the proof of theorem 4.2, we obtain an $L^{1}$ result for the dyadic maximal function. The weak type estimate (4.1) is used instead of the John–Nirenberg inequality in the argument.
Theorem 4.3 Let $1 < p <\infty$ and assume that $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$. Then there exists a constant $c = c(p)$ such that
Proof. We use the same notation as in the proof of theorem 4.2. Analogously, we observe that
since $|f_{Q_i}| \leq M^{d}_{Q_0}f(x)$ for every $x \in Q_i$. This implies
where in the second last inequality we also used
Applying Cavalieri's principle together with the weak type estimate (4.1) for the dyadic maximal operator, we obtain
Therefore, we can conclude that
Taking the supremum over all collections of $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$, we obtain
Corollary 4.4 Let $1< p<\infty$ and assume that $f \in L^{1}(Q_0) \setminus L \log ^{+} L(Q_0)$. Then $(M^{d}_{Q_0}f)^{1/p} \in JN^{d}_{p}(Q_0) \setminus L^{p}(Q_0)$.
Proof. Since $f \in L^{1}(Q_0)$, it follows that $(M^{d}_{Q_0}f)^{1/p} \in JN^{d}_{p}(Q_0)$ by theorem 4.3. We know that a function $g$ is in $L \log ^{+} L(Q_0)$ if and only if $M^{d}_{Q_0}g$ is in $L^{1}(Q_0)$ [Reference Stein26]. Therefore, we have $M^{d}_{Q_0}f \notin L^{1}(Q_0)$, and thus $(M^{d}_{Q_0}f)^{1/p} \notin L^{p}(Q_0)$.
This provides a method to construct functions in $JN_p^{d} \setminus L^{p}$. Consider a one-dimensional example. Let $I_0 = (0,\frac 18)$ and $f:I_0\to \mathbb {R}$,
It holds that $f \in L^{1}(I_0) \setminus L \log ^{+} L(I_0)$. Since $f$ is monotone on $I_0$, its maximal function is monotone on $I_0$ as well. Hence, it cannot be in the standard John–Nirenberg space $JN_p(I_0)$, $1< p<\infty$, since $JN_p(I_0) = L^{p}(I_0)$ for monotone functions [Reference Dafni, Hytönen, Korte and Yue6]. Thus, we have $(M^{d}_{I_0}f)^{1/p} \in JN^{d}_p(I_0) \setminus JN_p(I_0)$ and $(M^{d}_{I_0}f)^{1/p}\in JN^{d}_{p}(I_0) \setminus L^{p}(I_0)$.
5. Completeness of $JN^{d}_p$
The standard $BMO$ is complete with respect to the $BMO$ seminorm; see [Reference Neri24]. We prove that the dyadic John–Nirenberg space is complete. Our proof also works for the standard John–Nirenberg space $JN_p$; see (1.2).
Theorem 5.1 Let $Q_0 \subset \mathbb {R}^{n}$ be a cube. The space $JN^{d}_p(Q_0)$ is complete with respect to the seminorm in definition 3.6.
Proof. Assume that $(f_j)_{j\in \mathbb {N}}$ is a Cauchy sequence in $JN^{d}_p(Q_0)$ and let $\varepsilon >0$. There exists $j_\varepsilon \in \mathbb {N}$ such that
Consider a collection $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$ of pairwise disjoint dyadic cubes $Q_i \subset Q_0$, $i\in \mathbb {N}$. Let
and observe that
Choose a subsequence $(f_{j_m})_{m\in \mathbb {N}}$ such that
for every $m \in \mathbb {N}$. Denote
It then holds that $\lim _{l \to \infty } h_l = h$. By using Fatou's lemma and Minkowski's inequality, we obtain
Thus, $h \in L^{1}(Q_i)$ for every $i\in \mathbb {N}$ and consequently $h(x) < \infty$ for almost every $x \in \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$. This implies that the series in
converges absolutely for almost every $x \in \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$. Hence, we have
for almost every $x \in \bigcup _{i=1}^{\infty } Q_i$. By Fatou's lemma, we obtain
whenever $j \geq j_\varepsilon$.
Consider the collection consisting only of the cube $Q_0$. Then as above, we have
and
almost everywhere in $Q_0$. Similarly, we obtain
whenever $j \geq j_\varepsilon$. We see that $g^{Q_0} \in L^{1}(Q_0)$ and $g_{j}^{Q_0} = f_{j} - (f_{j})_{Q_0} \to g^{Q_0}$ in $L^{1}(Q_0)$ as $j\to \infty$, and thus
as $m \to \infty$. Hence, for almost every $x \in Q_i$, it holds that
This together with (5.1) implies
whenever $j \geq j_\varepsilon$. Since this holds for any collection $\{Q_i\}_{i\in \mathbb {N}}$, we can take the supremum over the collections to obtain
whenever $j \geq j_\varepsilon$. This concludes that $g^{Q_0} = (g^{Q_0} - f_{j}) + f_{j} \in JN^{d}_{p}(Q_0)$ and $f_j$ converges to $g^{Q_0}$ in $JN^{d}_p(Q_0)$ as $j\to \infty$.
Financial support
The research was supported by the Academy of Finland.