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Landau–Kolmogorov inequality

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In mathematics, the Landau–Kolmogorov inequality, named after Edmund Landau and Andrey Kolmogorov, is the following family of interpolation inequalities between different derivatives of a function f defined on a subset T of the real numbers:

Contents

f ( k ) L ( T ) C ( n , k , T ) f L ( T ) 1 k / n f ( n ) L ( T ) k / n  for  1 k < n .

On the real line

For k = 1, n = 2, T=R the inequality was first proved by Edmund Landau with the sharp constant C(2, 1, R) = 2. Following contributions by Jacques Hadamard and Georgiy Shilov, Andrey Kolmogorov found the sharp constants and arbitrary n, k:

C ( n , k , R ) = a n k a n 1 + k / n   ,

where an are the Favard constants.

On the half-line

Following work by Matorin and others, the extremising functions were found by Isaac Jacob Schoenberg, explicit forms for the sharp constants are however still unknown.

Generalisations

There are many generalisations, which are of the form

f ( k ) L q ( T ) K f L p ( T ) α f ( n ) L r ( T ) 1 α  for  1 k < n .

Here all three norms can be different from each other (from L1 to L, with p=q=r=∞ in the classical case) and T may be the real axis, semiaxis or a closed segment.

The Kallman–Rota inequality generalizes the Landau–Kolmogorov inequalities from the derivative operator to more general contractions on Banach spaces.

References

Landau–Kolmogorov inequality Wikipedia