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In mathematics, a Colombeau algebra is an
algebra Algebra () is one of the broad areas of mathematics. Roughly speaking, algebra is the study of mathematical symbols and the rules for manipulating these symbols in formulas; it is a unifying thread of almost all of mathematics. Elementary a ...
of a certain kind containing the space of Schwartz distributions. While in classical distribution theory a general multiplication of distributions is not possible, Colombeau algebras provide a rigorous framework for this. Such a multiplication of distributions has long been believed to be impossible because of L. Schwartz' impossibility result, which basically states that there cannot be a differential algebra containing the space of distributions and preserving the product of continuous functions. However, if one only wants to preserve the product of smooth functions instead such a construction becomes possible, as demonstrated first by Colombeau. As a mathematical tool, Colombeau algebras can be said to combine a treatment of singularities, differentiation and nonlinear operations in one framework, lifting the limitations of distribution theory. These algebras have found numerous applications in the fields of partial differential equations, geophysics, microlocal analysis and general relativity so far. Colombeau algebras are named after French mathematician Jean François Colombeau.


Schwartz' impossibility result

Attempting to embed the space \mathcal'(\mathbb) of distributions on \mathbb into an associative algebra (A(\mathbb), \circ, +), the following requirements seem to be natural: # \mathcal'(\mathbb) is linearly embedded into A(\mathbb) such that the constant function 1 becomes the unity in A(\mathbb), # There is a partial derivative operator \partial on A(\mathbb) which is linear and satisfies the Leibniz rule, # the restriction of \partial to \mathcal'(\mathbb) coincides with the usual partial derivative, # the restriction of \circ to C(\mathbb) \times C(\mathbb) coincides with the pointwise product. However, L. Schwartz' result implies that these requirements cannot hold simultaneously. The same is true even if, in 4., one replaces C(\mathbb) by C^k(\mathbb), the space of k times continuously differentiable functions. While this result has often been interpreted as saying that a general multiplication of distributions is not possible, in fact it only states that one cannot unrestrictedly combine differentiation, multiplication of continuous functions and the presence of singular objects like the Dirac delta. Colombeau algebras are constructed to satisfy conditions 1.–3. and a condition like 4., but with C(\mathbb) \times C(\mathbb) replaced by C^\infty(\mathbb) \times C^\infty(\mathbb), i.e., they preserve the product of smooth (infinitely differentiable) functions only.


Basic idea

The Colombeau Algebra is defined as the quotient algebra :C^\infty_M(\mathbb^n)/C^\infty_N(\mathbb^n). Here the algebra of ''moderate functions'' C^\infty_M(\mathbb^n) on \mathbb^n is the algebra of families of smooth ''regularisations'' (''fε'') : \mathbb_+ \to C^\infty(\mathbb^n) of
smooth function In mathematical analysis, the smoothness of a function is a property measured by the number of continuous derivatives it has over some domain, called ''differentiability class''. At the very minimum, a function could be considered smooth if ...
s on \mathbb^n (where R+ = (0,∞) is the "
regularization Regularization may refer to: * Regularization (linguistics) * Regularization (mathematics) * Regularization (physics) * Regularization (solid modeling) * Regularization Law, an Israeli law intended to retroactively legalize settlements See also ...
" parameter ε), such that for all compact subsets ''K'' of \mathbb^n and all multiindices α, there is an ''N'' > 0 such that :\sup_\left, \fracf_\varepsilon(x)\ = O(\varepsilon^)\qquad(\varepsilon\to 0). The
ideal Ideal may refer to: Philosophy * Ideal (ethics), values that one actively pursues as goals * Platonic ideal, a philosophical idea of trueness of form, associated with Plato Mathematics * Ideal (ring theory), special subsets of a ring considered ...
C^\infty_N(\mathbb^n) of ''negligible functions'' is defined in the same way but with the partial derivatives instead bounded by O(''ε+N'') for all ''N'' > 0.


Embedding of distributions

The space(s) of
Schwartz distribution Distributions, also known as Schwartz distributions or generalized functions, are objects that generalize the classical notion of functions in mathematical analysis. Distributions make it possible to differentiate functions whose derivatives d ...
s can be embedded into the ''simplified'' algebra by (component-wise)
convolution In mathematics (in particular, functional analysis), convolution is a mathematical operation on two functions ( and ) that produces a third function (f*g) that expresses how the shape of one is modified by the other. The term ''convolution'' ...
with any element of the algebra having as representative a '' δ-net'', i.e. a family of smooth functions \varphi_\varepsilon such that \varphi_\varepsilon\to\delta in '' D' '' as ''ε'' → 0. This embedding is non-canonical, because it depends on the choice of the δ-net. However, there are versions of Colombeau algebras (so called ''full'' algebras) which allow for canonical embeddings of distributions. A well known ''full'' version is obtained by adding the mollifiers as second indexing set.


See also

*
Generalized function In mathematics, generalized functions are objects extending the notion of functions. There is more than one recognized theory, for example the theory of distributions. Generalized functions are especially useful in making discontinuous functio ...


Notes


References

* Colombeau, J. F., ''New Generalized Functions and Multiplication of the Distributions''. North Holland, Amsterdam, 1984. * Colombeau, J. F., ''Elementary introduction to new generalized functions''. North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1985. * Nedeljkov, M., Pilipović, S., Scarpalezos, D., ''Linear Theory of Colombeau's Generalized Functions'', Addison Wesley, Longman, 1998. * Grosser, M., Kunzinger, M., Oberguggenberger, M., Steinbauer, R.; ''Geometric Theory of Generalized Functions with Applications to General Relativity'', Springer Series Mathematics and Its Applications, Vol. 537, 2002; {{isbn, 978-1-4020-0145-1. Smooth functions Functional analysis Algebras Schwartz distributions