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Unexpected norms on BMO and the Dirichlet problem - Egert, Moritz (Author of the conference) | CIRM H

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One of the many meaningful equivalent norms on BMO uses a Carleson-measure condition on the gradient of the Poisson extension. This is closely related to the Dirichlet problem for the Laplacian in the upper half-space with boundary data in BMO. The Poisson semigroup provides the unique solution in appropriate classes, and it is bounded on BMO, that is, it propagates the space boundary space in the transversal direction. If the tangential Laplacian is replaced by a general elliptic operator in divergence form, boundedness of the Poisson semigroup on BMO can fail in any dimension n ≥ 3. Somewhat unexpectedly, its gradient persists to give rise to a Carleson measure with norm equivalent to the BMO-norm at the boundary in dimensions n = 3, 4 and hence a unique solution to the corresponding Dirichlet problem. In my talk, I will try to explain the broader context behind this phenomenon and why we still do not know if the result is sharp.
Based on joint work with (of course) Pascal. It is Chapter 18 of our book but you will not have to read the seventeen preceding chapters to follow.[-]
One of the many meaningful equivalent norms on BMO uses a Carleson-measure condition on the gradient of the Poisson extension. This is closely related to the Dirichlet problem for the Laplacian in the upper half-space with boundary data in BMO. The Poisson semigroup provides the unique solution in appropriate classes, and it is bounded on BMO, that is, it propagates the space boundary space in the transversal direction. If the tangential ...[+]

35J25 ; 42B35 ; 47A60 ; 42B30 ; 42B37 ; 35J57 ; 35J67 ; 47D06 ; 35J46 ; 42B25 ; 46E35

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We describe the idempotent Fourier multipliers that act contractively on $H^{p}$ spaces of the $d$-dimensional torus $\mathbb{T}^{d}$ for $d \geq 1$ and $1 \leq p \leq \infty$. When $p$ is not an even integer, such multipliers are just restrictions of contractive idempotent multipliers on $L^{p}$ spaces, which in turn can be described by suitably combining results of Rudin and Andô. When $p=2(n+1)$, with $n$ a positive integer, contractivity depends in an interesting geometric way on $n, d$, and the dimension of the set of frequencies associated with the multiplier. Our results allow us to construct a linear operator that is densely defined on $H^{p}\left(\mathbb{T}^{\infty}\right)$ for every $1 \leq p \leq \infty$ and that extends to a bounded operator if and only if $p=2,4, \ldots, 2(n+1)$. The talk is based on joint work with Ole Fredrik Brevig and Joaquim Ortega-Cerdà.[-]
We describe the idempotent Fourier multipliers that act contractively on $H^{p}$ spaces of the $d$-dimensional torus $\mathbb{T}^{d}$ for $d \geq 1$ and $1 \leq p \leq \infty$. When $p$ is not an even integer, such multipliers are just restrictions of contractive idempotent multipliers on $L^{p}$ spaces, which in turn can be described by suitably combining results of Rudin and Andô. When $p=2(n+1)$, with $n$ a positive integer, contractivity ...[+]

42B30 ; 30H10 ; 42A45 ; 42B15

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Nigel Kalton played a prominent role in the development of a holomorphic functional calculus for unbounded sectorial operators. He showed, in particular, that such a calculus is highly unstable under perturbation: given an operator $D$ with a bounded functional calculus, fairly stringent conditions have to be imposed on a perturbation $B$ for $DB$ to also have a bounded functional calculus. Nigel, however, often mentioned that, while these results give a fairly complete picture of what is true at a pure operator theoretic level, more should be true for special classes of differential operators. In this talk, I will briefly review Nigel's general results before focusing on differential operators with perturbed coefficients acting on $L_p(\mathbb{R}^{n})$. I will present, in particular, recent joint work with $D$. Frey and A. McIntosh that demonstrates how stable the functional calculus is in this case. The emphasis will be on trying, as suggested by Nigel, to understand what makes differential operators so special from an operator theoretic point of view.[-]
Nigel Kalton played a prominent role in the development of a holomorphic functional calculus for unbounded sectorial operators. He showed, in particular, that such a calculus is highly unstable under perturbation: given an operator $D$ with a bounded functional calculus, fairly stringent conditions have to be imposed on a perturbation $B$ for $DB$ to also have a bounded functional calculus. Nigel, however, often mentioned that, while these ...[+]

47F05 ; 47A60 ; 42B30 ; 42B37

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