Schrodinger estimates
Solutions to the linear Schrodinger equation and its perturbations are either estimated in mixed space-time norms or , or in spaces, defined by
Note that these spaces are not invariant under conjugation.
Linear space-time estimates in which the space norm is evaluated first are known as Strichartz estimates. They are useful for NLS without derivatives, but are much less useful for derivative non-linearities. Other linear estimates include smoothing estimates and maximal function estimates. The X^{s,b} spaces are used primarily for bilinear estimates, although more recently multilinear estimates have begun to appear. These spaces and estimates first appear in the context of the Schrodinger equation in [Bo1993], although the analogous spaces for the wave equation appeared earlier [RaRe1982], [Be1983] in the context of propogation of singularities. See also [Bo1993b], [KlMa1993].
Schrodinger Linear estimates
[More references needed here!]
On :
- If , then
- (Energy estimate)
- (Strichartz estimates) references:Sz1997 Sz1977.
- More generally, f is in whenever , and
- The endpoint is true for references:KeTa1998 KeTa1998. When it fails even in the BMO case references:Mo1998 Mo1998, although it still is true for radial functions references:Ta2000b Ta2000b, [Stv-p].In fact the estimates are true assuming for non-radial functions some additional regularity in the angular variable references:Ta2000b Ta2000b, although there is a limit as to low little regularity one can impose [MacNkrNaOz-p].
- In the radial case there are additional weighted smoothing estimates available references:Vi2001 Vi2001
- When one also has
- When one can refine the assumption on the data in rather technical ways on the Fourier side, see e.g. references:VaVe2001 VaVe2001.
- When the estimate has a maximizer [Kz-p2].This maximizer is in fact given by Gaussian beams, with a constant of [Fc-p4].Similarly when with the estimate, which is also given by Gaussian beams with a constant of
- (Kato estimates) references:Sl1987 Sl1987, references:Ve1988 Ve1988
- When one can improve this to
- (Maximal function estimates) In all dimensions one has for all
- When one also has
- When one also has The can be raised to references:TaVa2000b TaVa2000b, with the corresponding loss in the exponent dictated by scaling. Improvements are certainly possible.
- Variants of some of these estimates exist for manifolds, see [BuGdTz-p]
- Fixed time estimates for free solutions:
- (Energy estimate) If , then is also .
- (Decay estimate) If , then has an norm of
- Interpolants between these two are very useful for proving Strichartz estimates and obtaining scattering.
On T:
- embds into references:Bo1993 Bo1993 (see also references:HimMis2001 HimMis2001).
- embeds into references:Bo1993 Bo1993. One cannot remove the from the exponent, however it is conjectured in references:Bo1993 Bo1993 that one might be able to embed into
On :
- When embeds into (this is essentially in references:Bo1993 Bo1993)
- The endpoint is probably false in every dimension.
Strichartz estimates are also available on [#manifold more general manifolds], and in the [#potential presence of a potential].Inhomogeneous estimates are also available off
the line of duality; see [Fc-p2] for a discussion.
Schrodinger Bilinear Estimates
and references:BkOgPo1998 BkOgPo1998
Also, if u has frequency and v has frequency then we have (see e.g. [CoKeStTkTa-p4])
and similarly for .
- The s indices on the right cannot be lowered, but perhaps the s indices on the left can be raised in analogy with the R2 estimates. The analogues on are also known references:KnPoVe1996b KnPoVe1996b:
Schrodinger Trilinear estimates
- On R we have the following refinement to the Strichartz inequality [Gr-p2]:
Schrodinger Multilinear estimates
- In R2 we have the variant
where each factor is allowed to be conjugated if desired. See references:St1997b St1997b, references:CoDeKnSt-p CoDeKnSt-p.