Fredrik said:
Does this mean that we can always define the product as a functional that acts on test functions on U\times U when the original two distributions are functionals that act on test functions on U?
If we are a bit more pedantic, we could say that given a space of test functions U, whose
dual space U* is the space of tempered distributions, then we construct the tensor product
space U\otimes U and consider its dual (U\otimes U)^*. We should probably say "topological dual",
since Hurkyl made the assumption about the functions being representable as (the limit of) a sequence.
However, the obvious meaning of a product of distributions (each in U^*) in different
variables as an element of U^* \otimes U^* is delicate. In finite dimensions, in turns
out that (U\otimes U)^* = (U^* \otimes U^*). For infinite dimensions, this is not
necessarily the case. (TBH, I'm a bit hazy on this: maybe that's only true for the algebraic dual,
but for the nice topological dual that Hurkyl appears to be using maybe it's true that
(U\otimes U)^* = (U^* \otimes U^*). I hope someone will clarify this better.)
And that the problem is that we can't in general define the product as a a functional
that acts on test functions on U?
Yes. A functional is a mapping U \to C, but to define a product we need an operator U \to U.
And the distributions we're talking about here are not operators.