The Mellin transform #
We define the Mellin transform of a locally integrable function on Ioi 0, and show it is
differentiable in a suitable vertical strip.
Main statements #
mellin: the Mellin transform∫ (t : ℝ) in Ioi 0, t ^ (s - 1) • f t, wheresis a complex number.HasMellin: shorthand asserting that the Mellin transform exists and has a given value (analogous toHasSum).mellin_differentiableAt_of_isBigO_rpow: iffisO(x ^ (-a))at infinity, andO(x ^ (-b))at 0, thenmellin fis holomorphic on the domainb < re s < a.
Predicate on f and s asserting that the Mellin integral is well-defined.
Equations
- MellinConvergent f s = MeasureTheory.IntegrableOn (fun (t : ℝ) => ↑t ^ (s - 1) • f t) (Set.Ioi 0) MeasureTheory.volume
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A function f is VerticalIntegrable at σ if y ↦ f(σ + yi) is integrable.
Equations
- Complex.VerticalIntegrable f σ μ = MeasureTheory.Integrable (fun (y : ℝ) => f (↑σ + ↑y * Complex.I)) μ
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The Mellin inverse transform of a function f, defined as 1 / (2π) times
the integral of y ↦ x ^ -(σ + yi) • f (σ + yi).
Equations
Instances For
Predicate standing for "the Mellin transform of f is defined at s and equal to m". This
shortens some arguments.
Instances For
Convergence of Mellin transform integrals #
Auxiliary lemma to reduce convergence statements from vector-valued functions to real scalar-valued functions.
If f is a locally integrable real-valued function which is O(x ^ (-a)) at ∞, then for any
s < a, its Mellin transform converges on some neighbourhood of +∞.
If f is a locally integrable real-valued function which is O(x ^ (-b)) at 0, then for any
b < s, its Mellin transform converges on some right neighbourhood of 0.
If f is a locally integrable real-valued function on Ioi 0 which is O(x ^ (-a)) at ∞
and O(x ^ (-b)) at 0, then its Mellin transform integral converges for b < s < a.
If f is O(x ^ (-a)) as x → +∞, then log • f is O(x ^ (-b)) for every b < a.
If f is O(x ^ (-a)) as x → 0, then log • f is O(x ^ (-b)) for every a < b.
Suppose f is locally integrable on (0, ∞), is O(x ^ (-a)) as x → ∞, and is
O(x ^ (-b)) as x → 0. Then its Mellin transform is differentiable on the domain b < re s < a,
with derivative equal to the Mellin transform of log • f.
Suppose f is locally integrable on (0, ∞), is O(x ^ (-a)) as x → ∞, and is
O(x ^ (-b)) as x → 0. Then its Mellin transform is differentiable on the domain b < re s < a.
If f is locally integrable, decays exponentially at infinity, and is O(x ^ (-b)) at 0, then
its Mellin transform converges for b < s.re.
If f is locally integrable, decays exponentially at infinity, and is O(x ^ (-b)) at 0, then
its Mellin transform is holomorphic on b < s.re.