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Hi,
I have a function on [0,\infty) which is represented as:
\sum_{ \stackrel{ \Re( \alpha )\in\mathbb{Q}^+ }{ \Im( \alpha )\in\mathbb{Q} } }{\beta_\alpha e^{-\alpha t}}
It seems like this must be a basis for the square integrable functions on [0,\infty) with exponential tails. Am I right though in thinking that if the \alphas are constrained to be real, then it is no longer a basis? What class of functions are spanned then? It also seems like there are many redundant terms in the sum. On the complex side I expect you could restrict \Im(\alpha)=q where q\in\mathbb{N} \cup 1/\mathbb{N}. Is a similar restriction possible on the real side?
Any comments would be much appreciated, as would directions to any papers on the properties of bases like this.
Thanks in advance,
Tom
I have a function on [0,\infty) which is represented as:
\sum_{ \stackrel{ \Re( \alpha )\in\mathbb{Q}^+ }{ \Im( \alpha )\in\mathbb{Q} } }{\beta_\alpha e^{-\alpha t}}
It seems like this must be a basis for the square integrable functions on [0,\infty) with exponential tails. Am I right though in thinking that if the \alphas are constrained to be real, then it is no longer a basis? What class of functions are spanned then? It also seems like there are many redundant terms in the sum. On the complex side I expect you could restrict \Im(\alpha)=q where q\in\mathbb{N} \cup 1/\mathbb{N}. Is a similar restriction possible on the real side?
Any comments would be much appreciated, as would directions to any papers on the properties of bases like this.
Thanks in advance,
Tom