Generalized Fourier Series

In mathematical analysis, there are many potentially useful generalizations of Fourier series. For a set of square-integrable, pairwise-orthogonal (with respect to some weight function w(x)) functions
\Phi = \{\varphi_n:a,b\rightarrow F\}_{n=0}^\infty,
the generalized Fourier series of a square-integrable function f:b → F is
f(x) \sim \sum_{n=0}^\infty c_n\varphi_n(x),
where the coefficients are given by
c_n = {\langle f, \varphi_n \rangle_w\over ||\varphi_n||_w^2}
where the inner product is the conventional one for functions. Where F = C, this is
\langle f, g\rangle_w = \int_a^b f(x)\overline{g}(x)w(x)\,dx
where \overline{g}(x) represents the complex conjugate of g(x)\,\!. If F = R, the complex conjugate is real, so
\langle f, g\rangle_w = \int_a^b f(x)g(x)w(x)\,dx
The relation \sim becomes equality if Φ is a complete set, i.e., an orthonormal basis of the space of all square-integrable functions on b, as opposed to a smaller orthonormal set, provided the convergence of the series is understood to be convergence in mean square and not necessarily pointwise convergence, nor convergence almost everywhere.

Example (Fourier-Legendre series)

The Legendre polynomials are solutions to the Sturm-Liouville problem
\left((1-x^2)P_n'(x)\right)'+n(n+1)P_n(x)=0
and because of the theory, these polynomials are eigenfunctions of the problem and are solutions are orthogonal with respect to the inner product above with unit weight. So we can form a generalized Fourier series (known as a Fourier-Legendre series) involving the Legendre polynomials, and
f(x) \sim \sum_{n=0}^\infty c_n\varphi_n(x),
c_n = {\langle f, P_n \rangle_w\over ||P_n||_w^2}
As an example, let us calculate the Fourier-Legendre series for f(x)=cos x over −1,1. Now,
c_0 = \sin{1} = {\int_{-1}^1 \cos{x} \over \int_{-1}^1 (1)^2}
c_1 = 0 = {\int_{-1}^1 x \cos{x} \over \int_{-1}^1 x^2} = {0 \over 2/3 }
c_2 = {5 \over 6} (6 \cos{1} - 4\sin{1}) = {\int_{-1}^1 {3x^2 - 1 \over 2} \cos{x} \over \int_{-1}^1 {9x^4-6x^2+1 \over 4}} = {6 \cos{1} - 4\sin{1} \over 2/5 }
and a series involving these terms
c_2P_2(x)+c_1P_1(x)+c_0P_0(x)= {5 \over 6} (6 \cos{1} - 4\sin{1})\left({3x^2 - 1 \over 2}\right) + \sin{1}(1)
= ({45 \over 2} \cos{1} - 15 \sin{1})x^2+6 \sin{1} - {15 \over 2}\cos{1}
which differs from cos x by approximately 0.003, about 0. It may be advantageous to use such Fourier-Legendre series since the eigenfunctions are all polynomials and hence the integrals and thus the coefficients are easier to calculate.

Coefficient theorems

Some theorems on the coefficients cn include:

Bessel's inequality

\sum_{n=0}^\infty |c_n|^2\leq\int_a^b|f(x)|^2\,dx.

Parseval's theorem

If Φ is a complete set,
\sum_{n=0}^\infty |c_n|^2 = \int_a^b|f(x)|^2\, dx.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
klein
feeding
national union for total independence of angola
jane barbe
jean leray
protoplanetary disc
saint christopher
christopher
davenport
luke thompson
thomas reilly
baiji, iraq
cinema of luxembourg
sheaf
child prodigy
blackbear bosin
job rotation
chomutov
flag of the people's republic of china
sanremo
fire walk with me
paris 1919: six months that changed the world
weight function
battle of guandu
mainline airways
mandatory labelling
cabin fever (tv show)
seven pillars of wisdom
james maxwell (actor)
baiji
gaussian function
chinese river dolphin
lopburi province
trigonometric integral
nitromethane
convex function
harry allen
robert leslie stewart
publicity
digital subscriber line access multiplexer
protoplanet
astrosnik
arx
john alan west