Riesz Rearrangement Inequality
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In mathematics, the Riesz rearrangement inequality, sometimes called Riesz–Sobolev inequality, states that any three non-negative functions f : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+, g : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+ and h : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+ satisfy the inequality :\iint_ f(x) g(x-y) h(y) \, dx\,dy \le \iint_ f^*(x) g^*(x-y) h^*(y) \, dx\,dy, where f^* : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+, g^* : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+ and h^* : \mathbb^n \to \mathbb^+ are the symmetric decreasing rearrangements of the functions f, g and h respectively.


History

The inequality was first proved by
Frigyes Riesz Frigyes Riesz ( hu, Riesz Frigyes, , sometimes spelled as Frederic; 22 January 1880 – 28 February 1956) was a HungarianEberhard Zeidler: Nonlinear Functional Analysis and Its Applications: Linear monotone operators. Springer, 199/ref> mathema ...
in 1930, and independently reproved by S.L.Sobolev in 1938. Brascamp, Lieb and Luttinger have shown that can be generalized to arbitrarily (but finitely) many functions acting on arbitrarily many variables.


Applications

The Riesz rearrangement inequality can be used to prove the
Pólya–Szegő inequality In mathematical analysis, the Pólya–Szegő inequality (or Szegő inequality) states that the Sobolev energy of a function in a Sobolev space does not increase under symmetric decreasing rearrangement. The inequality is named after the mathematici ...
.


Proofs


One-dimensional case

In the one-dimensional case, the inequality is first proved when the functions f, g and h are
characteristic function In mathematics, the term "characteristic function" can refer to any of several distinct concepts: * The indicator function of a subset, that is the function ::\mathbf_A\colon X \to \, :which for a given subset ''A'' of ''X'', has value 1 at point ...
s of a finite unions of intervals. Then the inequality can be extended to characteristic functions of measurable sets, to measurable functions taking a finite number of values and finally to nonnegative measurable functions.


Higher-dimensional case

In order to pass from the one-dimensional case to the higher-dimensional case, the spherical rearrangement is approximated by Steiner symmetrization for which the one-dimensional argument applies directly by Fubini's theorem.


Equality cases

In the case where any one of the three functions is a strictly symmetric-decreasing function, equality holds only when the other two functions are equal, up to translation, to their symmetric-decreasing rearrangements.


References

{{Reflist Inequalities Rearrangement inequalities Real analysis