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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a function is said to vanish at infinity if its values approach 0 as the input grows without bounds. There are two different ways to define this with one definition applying to functions defined on normed vector spaces and the other applying to functions defined on locally compact spaces. Aside from this difference, both of these notions correspond to the intuitive notion of adding a point at infinity, and requiring the values of the function to get arbitrarily close to zero as one approaches it. This definition can be formalized in many cases by adding an (actual) point at infinity.


Definitions

A function on a normed vector space is said to if the function approaches 0 as the input grows without bounds (that is, f(x) \to 0 as \, x\, \to \infty). Or, :\lim_ f(x) = \lim_ f(x) = 0 in the specific case of functions on the real line. For example, the function :f(x) = \frac defined on the real line vanishes at infinity. Alternatively, a function f on a locally compact space \Omega , if given any positive number \varepsilon > 0, there exists a compact subset K \subseteq \Omega such that :, f(x), < \varepsilon whenever the point x lies outside of K. In other words, for each positive number \varepsilon > 0, the set \left\ has compact closure. For a given locally compact space \Omega the set of such functions :f : \Omega \to \mathbb valued in \mathbb, which is either \R or \C, forms a \mathbb-
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
with respect to pointwise scalar multiplication and
addition Addition (usually signified by the Plus and minus signs#Plus sign, plus symbol, +) is one of the four basic Operation (mathematics), operations of arithmetic, the other three being subtraction, multiplication, and Division (mathematics), divis ...
, which is often denoted C_0(\Omega). As an example, the function :h(x, y) = \frac where x and y are reals greater or equal 1 and correspond to the point (x, y) on \R_^2 vanishes at infinity. A normed space is locally compact if and only if it is finite-dimensional so in this particular case, there are two different definitions of a function "vanishing at infinity". The two definitions could be inconsistent with each other: if f(x) = \, x\, ^ in an infinite dimensional Banach space, then f vanishes at infinity by the \, f(x)\, \to 0 definition, but not by the compact set definition.


Rapidly decreasing

Refining the concept, one can look more closely to the of functions at infinity. One of the basic intuitions of
mathematical analysis Analysis is the branch of mathematics dealing with continuous functions, limit (mathematics), limits, and related theories, such as Derivative, differentiation, Integral, integration, measure (mathematics), measure, infinite sequences, series ( ...
is that the Fourier transform interchanges smoothness conditions with rate conditions on vanishing at infinity. Using big ''O'' notation, the test functions of tempered distribution theory are smooth functions that are :O\left(, x, ^\right) for all N, as , x, \to \infty, and such that all their
partial derivative In mathematics, a partial derivative of a function of several variables is its derivative with respect to one of those variables, with the others held constant (as opposed to the total derivative, in which all variables are allowed to vary). P ...
s satisfy the same condition too. This condition is set up so as to be self-dual under Fourier transform, so that the corresponding distribution theory of will have the same property.


See also

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Citations


References

* {{cite book, author= Hewitt, E and Stromberg, K, year=1963, title=Real and abstract analysis, publisher=Springer-Verlag Mathematical analysis