QuArK21343
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I have the following problem: prove that the sequence e^{inx} tends to 0, in the sense of distributions, when n\to \infty. Here it is how I approached the problem. I have to prove this:
\lim \int e^{inx}\phi(x)\,dx=0
, where \phi is a test-function. I changed variable: nx=x' and got:
\lim \frac{1}{n}\int e^{ix'}\phi(x'/n)dx'
Now, can I exchange limit and integral? I would say yes, because of dominated convergence: the absolute value of the integrand is less than, say, c|\phi|, which is summable and the limit of the integrand exists, because \phi is continuos. So,
\phi(0)\lim \frac{1}{n}\int e^{ix'}dx'
But can I say that this last limit is zero? I mean, shouldn't the limit function be summable, again by dominated convergence? I suspect that I have a wrong understanding either of convergence in the sense of distribution or of dominated convergence. Can you clear up my doubts?
\lim \int e^{inx}\phi(x)\,dx=0
, where \phi is a test-function. I changed variable: nx=x' and got:
\lim \frac{1}{n}\int e^{ix'}\phi(x'/n)dx'
Now, can I exchange limit and integral? I would say yes, because of dominated convergence: the absolute value of the integrand is less than, say, c|\phi|, which is summable and the limit of the integrand exists, because \phi is continuos. So,
\phi(0)\lim \frac{1}{n}\int e^{ix'}dx'
But can I say that this last limit is zero? I mean, shouldn't the limit function be summable, again by dominated convergence? I suspect that I have a wrong understanding either of convergence in the sense of distribution or of dominated convergence. Can you clear up my doubts?