HARDY SPACE

In complex analysis, the 'Hardy spaces' are analogues of the Lp spaces of functional analysis. They are named for G. H. Hardy.
For example, for spaces of holomorphic functions on the open unit disc, the Hardy space ''H''2 consists of the functions ''f'' whose mean square value on the circle of radius ''r'' remains finite as ''r'' → 1 from below.
More generally, the Hardy space ''H''''p'' for 0 is the class of holomorphic functions on the open unit disc satisfying
:sup_{0 ight]^p ; d heta
ight)^ rac{1}{p}
The number on the left side of the above inequality is the Hardy space p-norm for f, denoted by |f|_{H^p}.
For 0, it can be shown that Hq is a subset of Hp.

Contents
Applications
Factorization
Other domains
See also
References

Applications


Such spaces have a number of applications in mathematical analysis itself, and also to control theory and scattering theory. A space ''H''2 may sit naturally inside an ''L''2 space as a 'causal' part, for example represented by infinite sequences indexed by 'N', where ''L''2 consists of bi-infinite sequences indexed by 'Z'.

Factorization


For pgeq 1, every function f in H^p can be written as the product ''f'' = ''Gh'' where ''G'' is an ''outer function'' and ''h'' is an ''inner function'', as defined below.
One says that ''h''(''z'') is an 'inner (interior) function' if and only if
|h(z)|leq 1 on the unit disc and the limit
:lim_{r
ightarrow 1^-} h(re^{i heta})
exists for almost all heta and its modulus is equal to 1.
One says that ''G''(''z'') is an 'outer (exterior) function' if it takes the form
:G(z)=expleft[iphi+ rac{1}{2pi} int_0^{2pi}
rac{e^{i heta}+z}{e^{i heta}-z} g(e^{i heta}) d heta
ight]
for some real value ,phi and some real-valued function ''g''(''z'') that is integrable on the unit circle.
The inner function can be further factored into a form involving a Blaschke product.

Other domains


It is possible to define Hardy spaces on other domains than the disc, and in many applications Hardy spaces on a
complex half-plane (usually the right half-plane or upper half-plane) are used. See, for example, the cited book of
Hoffman.

See also



H infinity

References



★ Joseph A. Cima and William T. Ross, ''The Backward Shift on the Hardy Space'', (2000) American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-2083-4

★ Peter Colwell, ''Blaschke Products - Bounded Analytic Functions'' (1985), University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. ISBN 0-472-10065-3

★ P. Duren, ''Theory of H^p-Spaces'' (1970), Academic Press, New York.

★ Kenneth Hoffman, ''Banach spaces of analytic functions'', (1988), Dover Publications, New York. ISBN 0-486-65785-X

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