The Schwartz space or space of rapidly decreasing functions on is the function space where is the function space of smooth functions from into , and Here, denotes the supremum, and we used multi-index notation, i.e. and .
To put common language to this definition, one could consider a rapidly decreasing function as essentially a function such that , , , ... all exist everywhere on and go to zero as faster than any reciprocal power of . In particular, is a subspace of .
Examples of functions in the Schwartz space
If is a multi-index, and a is a positive real number, then .
Any smooth function with compact support is in . This is clear since any derivative of is continuous and supported in the support of , so has a maximum in by the extreme value theorem.
Because the Schwartz space is a vector space, any polynomial can be multiplied by a factor for a real constant, to give an element of the Schwartz space. In particular, there is an embedding of polynomials into a Schwartz space.
Properties
Analytic properties
From Leibniz's rule, it follows that is also closed under pointwise multiplication: implies . In particular, this implies that is an -algebra. More generally, if and is a bounded smooth function with bounded derivatives of all orders, then .
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This article incorporates material from Space of rapidly decreasing functions on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.