Besov space explained
In mathematics, the Besov space (named after Oleg Vladimirovich Besov)
is a
complete quasinormed space which is a
Banach space when . These spaces, as well as the similarly defined
Triebel–Lizorkin spaces, serve to generalize more elementary
function spaces such as
Sobolev spaces and are effective at measuring regularity properties of functions.
Definition
Several equivalent definitions exist. One of them is given below.
Let
and define the modulus of continuity by
=\sup|h|\left\|
f\right\|p
Let be a non-negative integer and define: with . The Besov space
contains all functions such that
f\inWn,(R),
\right|q
<infty.
Norm
The Besov space
is equipped with the norm
\left\|f\right
=\left(
+
\right|q
The Besov spaces
coincide with the more classical
Sobolev spaces
.
If
and
is not an integer, then
, where
denotes the Sobolev–Slobodeckij space.
References
- Book: 10.1007/978-3-0346-0419-2. Theory of Function Spaces II . 1992 . Triebel . Hans . 978-3-0346-0418-5 .
- Besov . O. V. . On some families of functional spaces. Imbedding and extension theorems. . Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR . 1959 . 126 . 1163–1165 . ru. 107165.
- DeVore, R. and Lorentz, G. "Constructive Approximation", 1993.
- DeVore, R., Kyriazis, G. and Wang, P. "Multiscale characterizations of Besov spaces on bounded domains", Journal of Approximation Theory 93, 273-292 (1998).
- Leoni, Giovanni (2017). A First Course in Sobolev Spaces: Second Edition. Graduate Studies in Mathematics. 181. American Mathematical Society. pp. 734.