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Symplectic Analysis of Time-Frequency Spaces

Elena Cordero, Gianluca Giacchi

Abstract

We present a different symplectic point of view in the definition of weighted modulation spaces $M^{p,q}_m(\mathbb{R}^d)$ and weighted Wiener amalgam spaces $W(\mathcal{F} L^p_{m_1},L^q_{m_2})(\mathbb{R}^d)$. All of the classical time-frequency representations, such as the short-time Fourier transform (STFT), the $τ$-Wigner distributions and the ambiguity function, can be written as metaplectic Wigner distributions $μ(\mathcal{A})(f\otimes \bar{g})$, where $μ(\mathcal{A})$ is the metaplectic operator and $\mathcal{A}$ is the associated symplectic matrix. Namely, time-frequency representations can be represented as images of metaplectic operators, which become the real protagonists of time-frequency analysis. In [E. Cordero and L. Rodino (2022) "Characterization of Modulation Spaces by symplectic representations and applications to Schrödinger equations", arXiv:2204.14124], the authors suggest that any metaplectic Wigner distribution that satisfies the so-called "shift-invertibility" condition can replace the STFT in the definition of modulation spaces. In this work, we prove that shift-invertibility alone is not sufficient, but it has to be complemented by an upper-triangularity condition for this characterization to hold, whereas a lower-triangularity property comes in to play for Wiener amalgam spaces. The shift-invertibility property is necessary: Ryhaczek and and conjugate Ryhaczek distributions are not shift-invertible and they fail the characterization of the above spaces. We also exhibit examples of shift-invertible distributions without upper-tryangularity condition which do not define modulation spaces. Finally, we provide new families of time-frequency representations that characterize modulation spaces, with the purpose of replacing the time-frequency shifts with other atoms that allow to decompose signals differently, with possible new outcomes in applications.

Symplectic Analysis of Time-Frequency Spaces

Abstract

We present a different symplectic point of view in the definition of weighted modulation spaces and weighted Wiener amalgam spaces . All of the classical time-frequency representations, such as the short-time Fourier transform (STFT), the -Wigner distributions and the ambiguity function, can be written as metaplectic Wigner distributions , where is the metaplectic operator and is the associated symplectic matrix. Namely, time-frequency representations can be represented as images of metaplectic operators, which become the real protagonists of time-frequency analysis. In [E. Cordero and L. Rodino (2022) "Characterization of Modulation Spaces by symplectic representations and applications to Schrödinger equations", arXiv:2204.14124], the authors suggest that any metaplectic Wigner distribution that satisfies the so-called "shift-invertibility" condition can replace the STFT in the definition of modulation spaces. In this work, we prove that shift-invertibility alone is not sufficient, but it has to be complemented by an upper-triangularity condition for this characterization to hold, whereas a lower-triangularity property comes in to play for Wiener amalgam spaces. The shift-invertibility property is necessary: Ryhaczek and and conjugate Ryhaczek distributions are not shift-invertible and they fail the characterization of the above spaces. We also exhibit examples of shift-invertible distributions without upper-tryangularity condition which do not define modulation spaces. Finally, we provide new families of time-frequency representations that characterize modulation spaces, with the purpose of replacing the time-frequency shifts with other atoms that allow to decompose signals differently, with possible new outcomes in applications.
Paper Structure (11 sections, 15 theorems, 130 equations)

This paper contains 11 sections, 15 theorems, 130 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

Let $1\leq p,q\leq \infty$, $m$ be a $v$-moderate weight, $g$ a fixed non-zero window function in $\mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^d)$. Consider a metaplectic operator $\mu(\mathcal{A})\in Mp(2d,\mathbb{R})$ and let $\mathcal{A}$ be the unique symplectic matrix associated to $\mu(\mathcal{A})$. The following

Theorems & Definitions (37)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Proposition 2.1
  • Example 2.2
  • Definition 2.3
  • Example 2.4
  • Definition 3.1
  • Proposition 3.2
  • Corollary 3.3
  • proof
  • Corollary 3.4
  • ...and 27 more