Random Sampling of Entire Functions of Exponential Type in Several Variables
Abstract
We consider the problem of random sampling for band-limited functions. When can a band-limited function be recovered from randomly chosen samples ? We estimate the probability that a sampling inequality of the form A\|f\|_2^2 \leq \sum_{j\in \mathbb{N}} |f(x_j)|^2 \leq B \|f\|_2^2 hold uniformly all functions with supp or some subset of \bdl functions. In contrast to discrete models, the space of band-limited functions is infinite-dimensional and its functions "live" on the unbounded set . This fact raises new problems and leads to both negative and positive results. (a) With probability one, the sampling inequality fails for any reasonable definition of a random set on , e.g., for spatial Poisson processes or uniform distribution over disjoint cubes. (b) With overwhelming probability, the sampling inequality holds for certain compact subsets of the space of band-limited functions and for sufficiently large sampling size.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0706.3818,
title = {Random Sampling of Entire Functions of Exponential Type in Several Variables},
author = {Karlheinz Gröchenig and Richard F. Bass},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0706.3818},
year = {2011}
}