English

The periodic decomposition problem

Classical Analysis and ODEs 2013-12-16 v1 Functional Analysis

Abstract

If a function f:RRf:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R} can be represented as the sum of nn periodic functions as f=f1++fnf=f_1+\dots+f_n with f(x+αj)=f(x)f(x+\alpha_j)=f(x) (j=1,,nj=1,\dots,n), then it also satisfies a corresponding nn-order difference equation Δα1Δαnf=0\Delta_{\alpha_1}\dots\Delta_{\alpha_n} f=0. The periodic decomposition problem asks for the converse implication, which may hold or fail depending on the context (on the system of periods, on the function class in which the problem is considered, etc.). The problem has natural extensions and ramifications in various directions, and is related to several other problems in real analysis, Fourier and functional analysis. We give a survey about the available methods and results, and present a number of intriguing open problems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1312.3798,
  title  = {The periodic decomposition problem},
  author = {Bálint Farkas and Szilárd Révész},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1312.3798},
  year   = {2013}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T02:27:01.012Z