Operator monotone function

From nonlocal pde
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

A function $f : [0, \infty) \to [0, \infty)$ is said to be an operator monotone function (complete Bernstein function, Nevanlinna-Pick function for the half-line) if $A \ge B \ge 0$ implies $f(A) \ge f(B) \ge 0$ for any self-adjoint matrices $A$, $B$. Many equivalent definitions can be given.[1]

Representation

A function $f$ is operator monotone if and only if \[ f(z) = a z + b + \int_{(0, \infty)} \frac{z}{z + r} \, \frac{\rho(\mathrm d r)}{r} \] for some $a, b \ge 0$ and a Radon measure $\rho$ such that $\int_{(0, \infty)} \min(r^{-1}, r^{-2}) \rho(\mathrm d r) < \infty$.

Examples

The following functions are operator monotone:

  • $z^s$ for $s \in [0, 1]$,
  • $\log(1 + z)$,
  • $\frac{z}{r + z}$ for $r > 0$.

Properties

If $f, f_1, f_2$ are operator monotone, then the following functions are also operator monotone:

  • $c_1 f_1(z) + c_2 f_2(z)$ for $c_1, c_2 > 0$,
  • $((f_1(z))^s + (f_2(z))^s)^{1/s}$ and $(f_1(z^s) + f_2(z^s))^{1/s}$ for $s \in (0, 1]$,
  • $(f_1(z))^s (f_2(z))^{1-s}$ and $f_1(z^s) f_2(z^{1-s})$ for $s \in [0, 1]$,
  • $f_1(f_2(z))$,
  • $z^{1-s} f(z^s)$ and $(f(z^s))^{1/s}$ for $s \in (0, 1]$,
  • $z / f(z)$, $z f(1/z)$ and $1 / f(1/z)$.

Relation to Bernstein functions

Operator monotone functions form a subclass of Bernstein functions. Namely, a Bernstein function $f$ is an operator monotone function if and only if the measure $\mu$ in the Bernstein representation of $f$: \[ f(z) = a z + b + \int_{(0, \infty)} (1 - e^{-t z}) \mu(\mathrm d t) \] has a completely monotone density function. In this case \[ \mu(\mathrm d t) = \left( \int_{(0, \infty)} e^{-t r} \rho(\mathrm d r) \right) \mathrm d t \] This explains the name complete Bernstein functions.

Holomorphic extension

Every operator monotone function $f$ extends to a holomorphic function on $\C \setminus (-\infty, 0]$ such that \begin{align*} \Im f(z) & \ge 0 \qquad && \text{if } \Im z \ge 0 , \\ f(z) & \ge 0 \qquad && \text{if } \Im z = 0 , \\ \Im f(z) & \le 0 \qquad && \text{if } \Im z \le 0 . \end{align*} Conversely, any function $f$ with above properties is an operator monotone function.

Functions with nonnegative imaginary part in the upper half-plane are often called Nevanlinna-Pick functions, or Pick functions.

Operator monotone functions of the Laplacian

Operator monotone functions of the Laplacian are particularly regular examples of translation invariant non-local operators in $\R^n$. More precisely, $A = f(-\Delta)$ for an operator monotone $f$ if and only if \[ -A u(x) = a \Delta u(x) + b u(x) + \int_{\R^n} (u(x + z) - u(x) - z \cdot \nabla u(x) \mathbf{1}_{|z| < 1}) k(z) \mathrm d z \] for some $a, b \ge 0$ and $k(z)$ of the form \begin{align*} k(z) &= \int_0^\infty \int_0^\infty (4 \pi t)^{-n/2} e^{-|z|^2 / (4 t)} e^{-t r} \mathrm d t \rho(\mathrm d r) \\ &= \frac{1}{(2 \pi)^{n/2}} \int_0^\infty \left(\frac{\sqrt{r}}{|z|}\right)^{n/2 - 1} K_{n/2 - 1}(\sqrt{r} |z|) \rho(\mathrm d r) . \end{align*} Here $K_\nu$ is the modified Bessel function of the second kind.

For $n = 1$, the above expression simplifies to \[ k(z) = \int_0^\infty \frac{e^{-\sqrt{r} |z|}}{2 \sqrt{r}} \, \rho(\mathrm d r) ; \] that is, $k(z)$ can be an arbitrary completely monotone function of $|z|$, which satisfies the ususal integrability condition $\int_{-\infty}^\infty \min(1, z^2) k(z) dz < \infty$. In a similar way, for $n = 3$, \[ k(z) = \frac{1}{4 \pi |z|} \int_0^\infty e^{-\sqrt{r} |z|} \rho(\mathrm d r) ; \] hence, $|z| k(z)$ can be an arbitrary completely monotone function of $|z|$, provided that $\int_{\R^3} \min(1, |z|^2) k(z) dz < \infty$.

References

  1. Schilling, R.; Song, R.; Vondraček, Z. (2010), Bernstein functions. Theory and Applications, Studies in Mathematics, 37, de Gruyter, Berlin, doi:10.1515/9783110215311, http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110215311 

This article is a stub. You can help this nonlocal wiki by expanding it.