Paraproduct Explained
In mathematics, a paraproduct is a non-commutative bilinear operator acting on functions that in some sense is like the product of the two functions it acts on. According to Svante Janson and Jaak Peetre, in an article from 1988,[1] "the name 'paraproduct' denotes an idea rather than a unique definition; several versions exist and can be used for the same purposes." The concept emerged in J.-M. Bony’s theoryof paradifferential operators.[2]
This said, for a given operator
to be defined as a paraproduct, it is normally required to satisfy the following properties:
- It should "reconstruct the product" in the sense that for any pair of functions
in its domain,
- For any appropriate functions
and
with
, it is the case that
.
A paraproduct may also be required to satisfy some form of Hölder's inequality.
Further references
- Árpád Bényi, Diego Maldonado, and Virginia Naibo, "What is a Paraproduct?", Notices of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 57, No. 7 (Aug., 2010), pp. 858–860.
Notes and References
- Svante Janson and Jaak Peetre, "Paracommutators-Boundedness and Schatten-Von Neumann Properties", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 305, No. 2 (Feb., 1988), pp. 467–504.
- Bony . J.-M. . Calcul symbolique et propagation des singularités pour les équations aux dérivées partielles non linéaires . Ann. Sci. Éc. Norm. Supér. . 1981 . 14 . 2 . 209–246. 10.24033/asens.1404 . free .