Characterizing the Fourier transform by its properties
Abstract
It is common knowledge that the Fourier transform enjoys the convolution property, i.e., it turns convolution in the time domain into multiplication in the frequency domain. It is probably less known that this property characterizes the Fourier transform amongst all linear and bounded operators Thus, a natural question arises: are there other features characterizing Fourier transform besides the convolution property? We answer this query in the affirmative by investigating the time differentiation property and its discrete counterpart, used to characterize discrete-time Fourier transform. Next, we move on to locally compact abelian groups, where differentiation becomes meaningless, but the Fourier transform can be characterized via time shifts. The penultimate section of the paper returns to the convolution characterization, this time in the context of compact (not necessarily abelian) groups. We demonstrate that the proof existing in the literature can be greatly simplified. Lastly, we hint at the possibility of other transforms being characterized by their properties and demonstrate that the Hankel transform may be characterized by a Bessel-type differential property.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2307.12001,
title = {Characterizing the Fourier transform by its properties},
author = {Mateusz Krukowski},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2307.12001},
year = {2023}
}