
The Mathematics of Superoscillations
American Mathematical Society (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 30. May 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
107 pages
978-1-4704-2324-7 (ISBN)
Description
In the past 50 years, quantum physicists have discovered, and experimentally demonstrated, a phenomenon which they termed superoscillations. Aharonov and his collaborators showed that superoscillations naturally arise when dealing with weak values, a notion that provides a fundamentally different way to regard measurements in quantum physics. From a mathematical point of view, superoscillating functions are a superposition of small Fourier components with a bounded Fourier spectrum, which result, when appropriately summed, in a shift that can be arbitrarily large, and well outside the spectrum. The purpose of this work is twofold: on one hand the authors provide a self-contained survey of the existing literature, in order to offer a systematic mathematical approach to superoscillations; on the other hand, they obtain some new and unexpected results, by showing that superoscillating sequences can be seen of as solutions to a large class of convolution equations and can therefore be treated within the theory of analytically uniform spaces. In particular, the authors will also discuss the persistence of the superoscillatory behavior when superoscillating sequences are taken as initial values of the Schrodinger equation and other equations.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Providence
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 178 mm
Weight
180 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4704-2324-7 (9781470423247)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
F. Colombo, Politecnico di Milano, Italy.
I. Sabadini, Polytechnic Institute of Milan, Italy.
D. C. Struppa, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
J. Tollaksen, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
Y. Aharonov, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
I. Sabadini, Polytechnic Institute of Milan, Italy.
D. C. Struppa, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
J. Tollaksen, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
Y. Aharonov, Chapman University, Orange, CA.
Content
Introduction
Physical motivations
Basic mathematical properties of superoscillating sequences
Function spaces of holomorphic functions with growth
Schrodinger equation and superoscillations
Superoscillating functions and convolution equations
Superoscillating functions and operators
Superoscillations in $SO(3)$
Bibliography
Index
Physical motivations
Basic mathematical properties of superoscillating sequences
Function spaces of holomorphic functions with growth
Schrodinger equation and superoscillations
Superoscillating functions and convolution equations
Superoscillating functions and operators
Superoscillations in $SO(3)$
Bibliography
Index