Meyers–Serrin Theorem
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In
functional analysis Functional analysis is a branch of mathematical analysis, the core of which is formed by the study of vector spaces endowed with some kind of limit-related structure (e.g. Inner product space#Definition, inner product, Norm (mathematics)#Defini ...
the Meyers–Serrin theorem, named after
James Serrin James Burton Serrin (1 November 1926, Chicago, Illinois – 23 August 2012, Minneapolis, Minnesota) was an American mathematician, and a professor at University of Minnesota. Life He received his doctorate from Indiana University in 1951 under t ...
and Norman George Meyers, states that
smooth functions In mathematical analysis, the smoothness of a function is a property measured by the number of continuous derivatives it has over some domain, called ''differentiability class''. At the very minimum, a function could be considered smooth if ...
are dense in the
Sobolev space In mathematics, a Sobolev space is a vector space of functions equipped with a norm that is a combination of ''Lp''-norms of the function together with its derivatives up to a given order. The derivatives are understood in a suitable weak sense t ...
W^(\Omega) for arbitrary domains \Omega \subseteq \R^n.


Historical relevance

Originally there were two spaces: W^(\Omega) defined as the set of all functions which have weak derivatives of order up to k all of which are in L^p and H^(\Omega) defined as the closure of the smooth functions with respect to the corresponding Sobolev norm (obtained by summing over the L^p norms of the functions and all derivatives). The theorem establishes the equivalence W^(\Omega)=H^(\Omega) of both definitions. It is quite surprising that, in contradistinction to many other density theorems, this result does not require any smoothness of the domain \Omega. According to the standard reference on Sobolev spaces by Adams and Fournier (p 60): "This result, published in 1964 by Meyers and Serrin ended much confusion about the relationship of these spaces that existed in the literature before that time. It is surprising that this elementary result remained undiscovered for so long."


References

*. *. Sobolev spaces Theorems in functional analysis {{Mathanalysis-stub