Riesz–Fischer theorem

In mathematics, the Riesz–Fischer theorem in real analysis is any of a number of closely related results concerning the properties of the space L2 of square integrable functions. The theorem was proven independently in 1907 by Frigyes Riesz and Ernst Sigismund Fischer.

For many authors, the Riesz–Fischer theorem refers to the fact that the Lp spaces from Lebesgue integration theory are complete.

Modern forms of the theorem

The most common form of the theorem states that a measurable function on [π, π] is square integrable if and only if the corresponding Fourier series converges in the space L2. This means that if the Nth partial sum of the Fourier series corresponding to a square-integrable function f is given by

where Fn, the nth Fourier coefficient, is given by

then

where is the L2-norm.

Conversely, if is a two-sided sequence of complex numbers (that is, its indices range from negative infinity to positive infinity) such that

then there exists a function f such that f is square-integrable and the values are the Fourier coefficients of f.

This form of the Riesz–Fischer theorem is a stronger form of Bessel's inequality, and can be used to prove Parseval's identity for Fourier series.

Other results are often called the Riesz–Fischer theorem (Dunford & Schwartz 1958, §IV.16). Among them is the theorem that, if A is an orthonormal set in a Hilbert space H, and x  H, then

for all but countably many y  A, and

Furthermore, if A is an orthonormal basis for H and x an arbitrary vector, the series

converges commutatively (or unconditionally) to x. This is equivalent to saying that for every ε > 0, there exists a finite set B0 in A such that

for every finite set B containing B0. Moreover, the following conditions on the set A are equivalent:

Another result, which also sometimes bears the name of Riesz and Fischer, is the theorem that L2 (or more generally Lp, 0 < p  ∞) is complete.

Example

The Riesz–Fischer theorem also applies in a more general setting. Let R be an inner product space consisting of functions (for example, measurable functions on the line, analytic functions in the unit disc; in old literature, sometimes called Euclidean Space), and let be an orthonormal system in R (e.g. Fourier basis, Hermite or Laguerre polynomials, etc. – see orthogonal polynomials), not necessarily complete (in an inner product space, an orthonormal set is complete if no nonzero vector is orthogonal to every vector in the set). The theorem asserts that if the normed space R is complete (thus R is a Hilbert space), then any sequence {} that has finite ℓ2 norm defines a function f in the space R.

The function f is defined by , limit in R-norm.

Combined with the Bessel's inequality, we know the converse as well: if f is a function in R, then the Fourier coefficients have finite ℓ2 norm.

History: the Note of Riesz and the Note of Fischer (1907)

In his Note, Riesz (1907, p. 616) states the following result (translated here to modern language at one point: the notation L2([a, b]) was not used in 1907).

Let {φn } be an orthonormal system in L2([a, b]) and {an } a sequence of reals. The convergence of the series is a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of a function f such that
for every n.

Today, this result of Riesz is a special case of basic facts about series of orthogonal vectors in Hilbert spaces.

Riesz's Note appeared in March. In May, Fischer (1907, p. 1023) states explicitly in a theorem (almost with modern words) that a Cauchy sequence in L2([a, b]) converges in L2-norm to some function f in L2([a, b]). In this Note, Cauchy sequences are called "sequences converging in the mean" and L2([a, b]) is denoted by Ω. Also, convergence to a limit in L2norm is called "convergence in the mean towards a function". Here is the statement, translated from French:

Theorem. If a sequence of functions belonging to Ω converges in the mean, there exists in Ω a function f towards which the sequence converges in the mean.

Fischer goes on proving the preceding result of Riesz, as a consequence of the orthogonality of the system, and of the completeness of L2.

Fischer's proof of completeness is somewhat indirect. It uses the fact that the indefinite integrals of the functions gn in the given Cauchy sequence, namely

converge uniformly on [a, b] to some function G, continuous with bounded variation. The existence of the limit g  L2 for the Cauchy sequence is obtained by applying to G differentiation theorems from Lebesgue's theory.
Riesz uses a similar reasoning in his Note, but makes no explicit mention to the completeness of L2, although his result may be interpreted this way. He says that integrating term by term a trigonometric series with given square summable coefficients, he gets a series converging uniformly to a continuous function F with bounded variation. The derivative f of F, defined almost everywhere, is square summable and has for Fourier coefficients the given coefficients.

Completeness of Lp,  0 < p 

The proof that Lp is complete is based on the convergence theorems for the Lebesgue integral.

When 1  p  ∞, the Minkowski inequality implies that the space Lp is a normed space. In order to prove that Lp is complete, i.e. that Lp is a Banach space, it is enough (see e.g. Banach space#Definition) to prove that every series  un of functions in Lp(μ) such that

converges in the Lp-norm to some function f  Lp(μ). For p < ∞, the Minkowski inequality and the monotone convergence theorem imply that

is defined μalmost everywhere and f  Lp(μ). The dominated convergence theorem is then used to prove that the partial sums of the series converge to f in the Lp-norm,

The case 0 < p < 1 requires some modifications, because the p-norm is no longer subadditive. One starts with the stronger assumption that

and uses repeatedly that

The case p = ∞ reduces to a simple question about uniform convergence outside a μ-negligible set.

References

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