Inhomogeneous Sobolev Space
Inhomogeneous Sobolev Space — Verification - Androma

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For a [Schwartz function](/page/Schwartz%20Space) $\phi \in \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n)$, the [Fourier transform](/page/Fourier%20Transform) converts derivatives into polynomial weights: by Plancherel's theorem, $\|\partial^\alpha \phi\|_{L^2} = \|\xi^\alpha \hat{\phi}\|_{L^2}$ (up to factors of $2\pi$). This means that controlling the first $k$ derivatives of $\phi$ in $L^2$ is equivalent to controlling the weighted Fourier integral
\begin{align*}
\sum_{|\alpha| \le k} \|\partial^\alpha \phi\|_{L^2}^2 &= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} \sum_{|\alpha| \le k} |\xi^\alpha|^2 \, |\hat{\phi}(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi).
\end{align*}
The sum $\sum_{|\alpha| \le k} |\xi^\alpha|^2$ is comparable to $(1+|\xi|^2)^k$: both are polynomials of de
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ree $k$ in $|
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xi|^2$ that ag
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ree near $\xi = 0$. The Fourier variable $\xi$ is the **frequency**: large $|\xi|$ corresponds to rapid spatial oscillation, small $|\xi|$ to slow variation. The weight $(1+|\xi|^2)^k$ penalises high-frequency components, enforcing smoothness, while the constant 
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^2$ membership as a baseline. In this language, **having $k$ derivatives in $L^2$ is the same as the Fourier transform being square-integrable against the
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 weight $(1+|
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\xi|^2)^k$.**

This characterisation has two advantages. First, it extends to non-integer $s$: replacing $k$ by any real $s \in \mathbb{R}$ gives a meaning
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ful notion of "
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e rougher tha
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n $L^2$ — for instance, the Dirac delta belongs to $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ precisely when $s < -n/2$.

The resulting spaces $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$, called **inhomogeneous Sobolev spaces**, form the natural regularity scale f
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r elliptic PDE theory. The word
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"inhomogeneous" refers to the weight $(1+|\xi|^2)^s$ rather than $|\xi|^{2s}$: the former controls all frequencies (including $\xi = 0$), while th
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 in the [homogeneous Sobolev spaces](/page/Homogeneous%20Sobolev%20Spaces) — ignores low f
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requencies an
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d cannot enforce $L^2$ membership.

## Definition

The definition requires care because the elements of $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ are [tempered distributions](/page/Tempered%20Distributions), not functions. For a general $u \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$, the Fourier transform $\hat{u}$ is another tempered distribution (a continuous linear functional on $\mathcal{S}$, not a pointwise-defined function), and the expression "$|\hat{u}(\xi)|^2$" has no meaning. The correct formulation uses the distributional machinery developed on the [Tempered Distributions](/page/Tempered%20Distributions) page.

[definition: Inhomogeneous Sobolev Space]
Let $s \in \mathbb{R}$ and $n \ge 1$. The **inhomogeneous Sobolev space** of order $s$ is
\begin{align*}
H^s(\mathbb{
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'(\mathbb{R}^n) \;\middle|\; (1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u} = T_g \text{ for some } g \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)\right\},
\end{align*}
where $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ denotes the product of the slowly increasing function $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2} \in \mathcal{O}_M(\mathbb{R}^n)$ with the tempered distribution $\hat{u} \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$, and $T_g \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$ denotes the [regular distribution](/page/Regular%20Distribution) associated to $g$ via
\begin{align*}
T_g(\phi) &:= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} g(\xi)\,\phi(\xi) \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi), \quad \phi \in \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n).
\end{align*}
(This is well-defined because $g \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n) \subset L^1_{\mathrm{loc}}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ — the inclusion follows fro
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 Cauchy–Schwar
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 on compact se
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ution.) The **norm** on $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is $\|u\|_{H^s} := \|g\|_{L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)}$,
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 where $g$ is t
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duct $(1+|\xi
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|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ is a well-defined tempered distribution for any $u \in \mathcal{S}'$; that the $L^2$ function $g$ is unique (so that the norm does not depend on the choice of representative); and that the resulting normed space is comple
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te. All three a
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re established by the following theorem, whose proof shows that $H^s$ is isometrically isomorphic to $L^2$ via the map $u \mapsto g$.

[citetheor
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e isometric isomorphism $\Phi_s: H^s(\mathbb{R}^n) \to L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$ defined by $\Phi_s(u) = g$ (the $L^2$ representative o
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f $(1+|\xi|^2)^
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{s/2}\hat{u}$) has a transparent interpretation: it "flattens" the regularit
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eweighting in frequency space, reducing every element of $H^
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s$ to a plain 
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L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$
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represent $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ and $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{v}$.

## The Integral Formula

Once membership in $H^s$ is established — that is, once the distributional condition $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u} = T_g$ has been verified for some $g \in L^2$ — the Fourier transform $\hat{u}$ 
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is itself a [re
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gular distribution](/page/Regular%20Distribution). To see this, multiply both sides of $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u} = T_g$ by $(1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2} \in \m
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mathbb{R}^n)$:
\begin{align*}
\hat{u} &= (1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2} \cdot T_g.
\end{align*}
The right-hand side 
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s the distribution that a
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ts on $\phi \in \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ by $\phi \mapsto T_g((1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2}\phi) = \int g(\xi)(1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2}\phi(\xi) \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi)$. Setting $h(\xi) := g(\xi)(1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2}$, this is exactly $T_
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h(\phi) = \int 
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{\mathrm{loc}
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}$ and $(1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2}$ is continuous (hence locally bound
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ed), the produc
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ribution and 
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$\hat{u} = T_h$.

With $\hat{u}$ now identified as the regular distribution $T_h$, the function $h$ is 
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a genuine measu
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rable function and $|h(\xi)|$ is defined $\mathcal{L}^n$-a.e. Since $g(\xi) = (1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}h(\xi)$ a.e., the norm computatio
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n becomes a f
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unction identity:
\begin{align*}
\|u\|_{H^s}^2 &= \|g\|_{L^2}^2 = \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} |g(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi) = \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} (1+|\xi|^2)^{s} \, |h(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi),
\end{align*}
where $h$ is the $L^1_{\mathrm{loc}}$ representative of $\hat{u}$ and every expression refers to pointwise values of genuine functions. The integral is finite becaus
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 it equals $\|g\|_{L^2}^2 < \infty$.

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distributional defini
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ion and the regularity of $\hat{u}$ established above, not the definition itself
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. Writing it fo
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r a general $u \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$ without first es
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tablishing me
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mbership in $H^s$ is a notational error: the symbol $|\hat{u}(\xi)|^2$ is undefined for a distribution that is not represented by a function.

## Special Cases

For $s = 0$, the weight is trivial: $(1+|\xi|^2)^0 = 1$, so the membership condition becomes $\hat{u} = T_g$ for some $g \in L^2$. This says that $u$ is a tempered distribution wh
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nsform is a [regular distribution](/page/Regular%20Distribution) represented by a
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n $L^2$ funct
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on. By the [Plancherel theorem](/the
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rems/247), the distributional Fourier transform $\widehat{T_f} = T_{\hat{f}}$ for any $f \in L^2$ (this compatibility is established in Problem 2 on the
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 [Regular Distr
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ibution](/page/Regular%20Distribution) page), and the map $f \mapsto \hat{f}$ is an isometric bijection on $L^2$. It follows that $\hat{u} = T_g$ with $g \in L^2$ if and only if $u = T_f$ for $f := \mathcal{F}^{-1}(g) \in L^2$. Th
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bb{R}^n) = \{T_f : f \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)\}$, and the map $f \mapsto T_f$ is an isometric isomorphism from $L^2(\m
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athbb{R}^n)$ on
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to $H^0(\mathbb{R}^n)$. The two spaces are not literally equal — $L^2$ consists of equivalenc
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e classes of 
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measurable functions while $H^0 \subset \mathcal{S}'$ consists of continuous 
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onically identified via this isomorphism.

For positive integer $s = k$, the norm equivalence $(1+|\xi|^2)^k \sim \sum_{|\alpha| \le k}|\xi^{2\alpha}|$ (both
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 sides are poly
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nomials of degree $k$ agreeing at leading order with two-sided bounds depending on $n, k$) gives
\begin{align*}
\|u\|_{H^k}^2 &\sim \sum_{|\alpha| \le k}\|\par
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tial^\alpha u
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\|_{L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)}^2 = \|u\|_{W^{k,2}(\math
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bb{R}^n)}^2.
\
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end{align*}
So $H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$ coincides with the classical [Sobolev space](/page/Sobolev%20Space) $W^{k,2}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ of functions having all distribution
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rivatives up to order $k$ in $L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$, with equivalent norms.

For negative integer $s = -k$, the space $H^{-k}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is the dual of $H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$ and consists of those tempered di
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stributions
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expressible as finite sums of di
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tributional derivatives of $L^2$ functions up to order $k$.

## Relation to Homogeneous Spaces

The inhomogeneous and [homogeneous Sobolev spaces](/page/Homogeneous%20Sobolev%20Spaces) are
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ontinuous embedding reflecting the pointwise bound $|\xi|^{2s} \le (1+|\xi|^2)^s$ for $s \ge 0$.

[quotetheorem:467]

The converse fails: $\dot{H}^s(\mathbb{R
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}^n)$ contain
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s elements with no $L^2$ control (constant functions belong to $\dot{H}^0(\mathbb{R}^n)/\mathcal{P}$ but not to $H^0(\mathbb{R}^n) \cong L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$, since constants are not square-integrable on $\mathbb{R}^n$). The inhomogeneous space is the right setting whenever both the function and its derivatives must be controlled simultaneously — in particular, for elliptic equat
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ons on all of $\mathbb{R}^n$ and fo
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 Cauchy problems where the initial data is required to have finite energy.

## The Sobolev Embedding Threshold

The most structurally significant property of the $H^s$ scale is that membership in $H^s$ for $s > n/2$ forces every element to have a continuous representative. The threshold $n/2$ is sharp: for $s \le n/2$ there exist elements of $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ that are discontinuous or even unbounded.

[quotetheorem:226]

[
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of an Indicator Function]
The indicator function $f = \mathbb{1}_{[-1,1]}$ in dimension $n = 1$ illustrates the sharpnes
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s of the thresh
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old. This function is in $L^2(\mathbb{R})$ but is discontinuous at $\pm 1$. Its Fourier transform is $\hat{f}(\xi) = \sin(2\pi\xi)/(\pi\xi)$, which deca
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ys like $|\xi|^{-1}$ for large $|\xi|$. The finiteness of the $H^s$ norm reduces to the tail in
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tegral:
\beg
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 $f \notin H^{1/2}(\mathbb{R})$, confirming that the embedding threshold $s = n/2$ is sharp.
[/example]

When $s$ exceeds $n/2$ by an integer $k \ge 0$, the embedding sharpens: elements of $H^{s}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ for $s > n/2 + k$ admit representatives that are $k$ times con
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inuously differentiable. This follows by applyin
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g the [Sobolev embedding](/theorems/226) to the distributional derivatives $\partial^\alpha u$ for $|\alpha| = k$, each of which belongs to $H^{s-k}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ with $s - k > n/2$.
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## Elliptic R
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egularity

The defining feature of inhomogeneous Sobolev spaces in PDE theory is that elliptic 
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ft regularity along the $H^s$ scale: an elliptic operat
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or of order $m$
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 maps $H^{s+m} \to H^s$, and invertible elliptic operators shift in the reverse direction. This is completely explicit for the Helmholtz operator.

[quotetheorem:227]

[exampl
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e: Regularity
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 Gain for the Helmholtz Equation]
Suppose $f \in H^{-1}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ — a first-order distribution, possibly not in $L^2$ — and let $u = (1-\Delta)^{-1}f \in H^1(\mathbb{R}^n)$. The equation $
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= f$ in Fourier space reads $(1+|\xi|^2)\h
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t{u}(\xi) = \hat{f}(\xi)$, and the gain of two derivatives is transparent: the factor $(1+|\xi|^2)^{-1}$ suppresses high-frequency contributions enough to promote $H^{-1}$ data to an $H^1$ solution.

For a concrete decomposition, take $n = 3$ and $f = \Delta g$ for some $g \in H^1(\mathbb{R}^3)$. Then $\hat{f}(\xi) = -|\xi|^2\hat{g}(\xi)$, and the solution decomposes as
\begin{align*}
\hat{u}(\xi) &= \frac{-|\xi|^2\hat{g}(\xi)}{1+|\xi|^2} 
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 -\hat{g}(\xi) + \frac{\hat{g}(\xi)}{1+|\xi|^2},
\end{align*}
giving $u = -g + (1-\Delta)^{-1}g$. The first term is in $H^1$ and the second in $H^3$ (by the [Helmh
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ltz isomorphism](/
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heorems/227) applied to $g \in H^1$), yielding $\|u\|_{H^1} \le 2\|g\|_{H^1}$.
[/example]

## The Algebra Property and Nonlinear PDEs

For nonlinear PDEs a str
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n arises: is $H^s$ closed under pointwise multip
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lication? The
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 answer depends on whether $s$ exceeds the embedding threshold $n/2$.

[quotetheorem:468]

[example: Local Well-Posedness for a Nonlinear Wave Equation]
The algebra prope
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rty is the key 
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ion on $\math
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b{R}^{1+n}$:
\begin{align*}
\partial_{tt}u - \Delta 
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u &= u^3, \\
u(0,\cdot) &= u_0, \quad \partial_t u(0,\cdot) = u_1,
\end{align*}
with initial data $(u_0, u_1) \in H^s(\mathbb{R}^n) \times H^{s-1}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ for $s > n/2$. 
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The solution is
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 constructed as a fixed point of $\Phi: u \mapsto w$, where $w$ solves the linear wave eq
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uation with f
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orcing $u^3$. The energy estimate gives
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\|w(t)\|_{H^s} + \|\partial_t w(t)\|_{H^{s-1}} &\less
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sim \|u_0\|_{
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H^s} + \|u_1\|_{H^{s-1}} + \int_0^t\|u(\tau)^3\|_{H^{s-1}}\,d\
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tau.
\end{alig
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n*}
The [algebra property](
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/theorems/468
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) controls the nonlinearity: $\|u^3\|_{H^s} \le C_{n,s}^2\|u\|_{H^s}^3$. For $T$ small enough depending on $\|u_0\|_{H^s} + \|u_1\|_{H^{s-1}}$, the map $\Phi$ is a contraction on a su
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 yielding a unique local solution.

The threshold $s > n/2$ is essential. For $s \le n/2$ the algebra property fails and the fixed-point argument breaks down; a more
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 delicate analy
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sis using Strichartz estimates or Bourgain's $X^{s,b}$ spaces is required.
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ple]

## Re
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ferences

1. H. Brezis, *Functional Analysis, Sobolev Spaces and Partial Differential Equations* (2010).
2. L. C. Evans, *Partial Differential Equations* (1998).
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3. M. E. Taylor, *Partial Differential Equ
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tions III: Nonlinear Equations* (1997).
4. T. Tao, *Nonlinear Dispersive Equations: Local and Global Analysis* (2006).
5. E. M. Stein, *Singular Integrals and Differentiability Properties of Functions* (1970).
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The classical Sobolev space $W^{k,2}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ consists of $L^2$ functions whose distributional derivatives up to order $k$ are also in $L^2$. This definition is limited to integer orders: the notion of "$s$ derivatives" for a non-integer $s$ — say, "$1/2$ of a derivative" — has no direct meaning in the distributional framework. Yet non-integer regularity arises naturally throughout PDE theory: elliptic boundary value problems produce solutions with fractional Sobolev regularity, trace operators map $H^1(\Omega)$ to $H^{1/2}(\partial\Omega)$, and interpolation between integer-order spaces lands at fractional orders. We need a definition that extends the Sobolev scale to all real $s \in \mathbb{R}$.

[motivation]

Motivation

The Fourier Characterisation of Integer Regularity

The key insight is that the Fourier transform converts the derivative count into a polynomial weight. For a Schwartz function $\phi \in \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n)$, Plancherel's theorem gives
\begin{align*} \|\partial^\alpha \phi\|_{L^2}^2 &= \|\xi^\alpha \hat{\phi}\|_{L^2}^2 = \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} |\xi^\alpha|^2 \, |\hat{\phi}(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi), \end{align*}
so controlling derivatives in $L^2$ is the same as controlling polynomial moments of the Fourier transform. Summing over all multi-indices $|\alpha| \le k$:
\begin{align*} \sum_{|\alpha| \le k} \|\partial^\alpha \phi\|_{L^2}^2 &= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} \sum_{|\alpha| \le k} |\xi^\alpha|^2 \, |\hat{\phi}(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi) \sim \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} (1+|\xi|^2)^k \, |\hat{\phi}(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi), \end{align*}
where $\sim$ denotes two-sided bounds with constants depending only on $n$ and $k$. **Having $k$ derivatives in $L^2$ is equivalent to the Fourier transform being square-integrable against the

weight $(1+|

\xi|^2)^k$.** ### From Integers to All Reals The weight $(1+|\xi|^2)^k$ makes sense for any real exponent, not just integers. Replacing $k$ by $s \in \mathbb{R}$ gives a meaningful condition MATHENVyh0f9vP0END that interpolates continuously between integer regularities. The frequency variable $\xi$ encodes spatial oscillation: large $|\xi|$ corresponds to rapid oscillation (high frequency), small $|\xi|$ to slow variation (low frequency). For $s > 0$, the weight penalises high-frequency components, enforcing smoothness. For $s < 0$, the weight *amplifies* high frequencies, allowing objects rougher than $L^2$ — such as the Dirac delta, which belongs to $H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ precisely when $s < -n/2$ (Problem 2). The "$+1$" in $(1+|\xi|^2)$ ensures that low-frequency components are also controlled, giving $L^2$ membership as a baseline — this is what distinguishes the inhomogeneous spaces from their [homogeneous counterparts](/page/Homogeneous%20Sobolev%20Space). ### The Distributional Subtlety For a Schwartz function $\phi$, the integral above involves $|\hat{\phi}(\xi)|^2$ — the pointwise square of a genuine function. But for a [tempered distribution](/page/Tempered%20Distributions) $u \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$, the Fourier transform $\hat{u}$ is another tempered distribution, not a function, and "$|\hat{u}(\xi)|^2$" has no meaning. The correct definition uses the distributional product $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ — the product of the slowly increasing function $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2} \in \mathcal{O}M(\mathbb{R}^n)$ with the tempered distribution $\hat{u}$, as defined on the [Tempered Distributions](/page/Tempered%20Distributions) page — and asks whether this tempered distribution is represented by an $L^2$ function. [/motivation] ## Definition [definition: Inhomogeneous Sobolev Space] Let $s \in \mathbb{R}$ and $n \ge 1$. The **inhomogeneous Sobolev space** of order $s$ is MATHENVyh0f9vP1END where $T_g: \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n) \to \mathbb{C}$ is the [regular distribution](/page/Regular%20Distribution) associated to $g$, defined by MATHENVyh0f9vP2END and $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ denotes the product of the slowly increasing function $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2} \in \mathcal{O}_M(\mathbb{R}^n)$ with the tempered distribution $\hat{u} \in \mathcal{S}'(\mathbb{R}^n)$, acting on [test functions](/page/Test%20Function) by MATHENVyh0f9vP3END The **norm** is $|u|{H^s} := |g|{L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)}$. [/definition] Three things must be verified: that the product $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ is well-defined for any $u \in \mathcal{S}'$, that the $L^2$ representative $g$ is unique ($\mathcal{L}^n$-a.e.), and that the resulting normed space is complete. The following theorem establishes all three by constructing an isometric isomorphism $\Phi_s: H^s \to L^2$ via $\Phi_s(u) = g$. [quotetheorem:466] The map $\Phi_s$ "flattens" regularity by reweighting in frequency space, reducing every element of $H^s$ to a plain $L^2$ function. Since $\Phi_s$ is an isometric bijection onto $L^2$, the space $H^s$ inherits all the structure of $L^2$: it is a [separable](/page/Separable) [Hilbert space](/page/Hilbert%20Space) with inner product MATHENVyh0f9vP4END where $g_u, g_v \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$ represent $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u}$ and $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{v}$. ### The Integral Formula Once membership $u \in H^s$ is established, the Fourier transform $\hat{u}$ turns out to be more than just a tempered distribution — it is represented by a locally integrable function, and the $H^s$ norm can be written as a genuine integral involving this function. The following result makes this precise. [quotetheorem:929] The representative $(\hat{u}){\mathrm{rep}}$ is related to the $L^2$ function $g = \Phi_s(u)$ from [Theorem 466](/theorems/466) by $(\hat{u}){\mathrm{rep}}(\xi) = g(\xi)(1 + |\xi|^2)^{-s/2}$, $\mathcal{L}^n$-a.e. The proof proceeds by dividing the membership condition $(1 + |\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{u} = T_g$ by the smooth, positive weight $(1 + |\xi|^2)^{s/2} \in \mathcal{O}_M(\mathbb{R}^n)$, which preserves regularity of the distribution. The full proof is available on the [theorem page](/theorems/929). The integral formula is the version appearing in most textbooks as $\int (1+|\xi|^2)^s|\hat{u}(\xi)|^2,d\mathcal{L}^n$, with "$\hat{u}(\xi)$" silently denoting $(\hat{u}){\mathrm{rep}}(\xi)$. [remark: The Integral Formula for $L^2$ Functions] When $f \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$, the [recovery theorem](/theorems/928) gives $\iota(f) = T_f \in H^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ whenever $(1 + |\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{f} \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$. By the [Plancherel theorem](/theorems/247), $\widehat{T_f} = T_{\hat{f}}$ where $\hat{f} \in L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is the $L^2$ Fourier transform of $f$. The representative is then $(\widehat{T_f}){\mathrm{rep}} = \hat{f}$, and the integral formula becomes MATHENVyh0f9vP5END where $\hat{f}$ is a genuine $L^2$ function — no distributional products or $T$-representatives are involved. This is the formula used throughout PDE theory whenever the function in question is known to be in $L^2$. [/remark] ## Recovery of Classical Sobolev Spaces The Fourier-based definition of $H^s$ must agree with the classical [Sobolev space](/page/Sobolev%20Space) $W^{k,2}$ at integer orders. However, the objects are of different types: elements of $W^{k,2}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ are (equivalence classes of) functions, while elements of $H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$ are tempered distributions. The correct statement is not that the spaces are "equal," but that the canonical embedding $f \mapsto T_f$ — sending a function to its regular distribution — is an isomorphism with equivalent norms. [quotetheorem:928] The distinction between "equivalent" and "equal" norms is genuine: the $H^k$ norm uses the weight $(1 + |\xi|^2)^k$, which is a single monomial in $|\xi|^2$, while the $W^{k,2}$ norm uses the sum $\sum{|\alpha| \le k} |\xi^\alpha|^2$, a sum of many monomials. These are comparable (both are degree-$k$ polynomials in $|\xi|$ that agree at leading order) but not identical — the equivalence constants depend on the number of multi-indices, which grows with $n$ and $k$. The special case $k = 0$ is the exception: both weights equal $1$, so the isomorphism $L^2 \cong H^0$ is isometric. In practice, when $f \in W^{k,2}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ and the context involves $H^k$, one must apply the embedding $\iota$ explicitly: the correct statement is $\iota(f) = T_f \in H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$, not "$f \in H^k$." The norm comparison then reads $|\iota(f)|{H^k} \sim |f|{W^{k,2}}$, with the map $\iota$ mediating between the two spaces. [example: $H^1$ Norm Of A Gaussian] Let $n = 1$ and $u(x) = e^{-x^2/2}$, a Gaussian. Its Fourier transform is $\hat{u}(\xi) = \sqrt{2\pi},e^{-2\pi^2\xi^2}$ (up to convention). The $H^1$ norm is MATHENVyh0f9vP6END The integral splits into two Gaussian moments: MATHENVyh0f9vP7END Therefore $|u|{H^1}^2 = 2\pi\bigl(\frac{1}{2\pi} + \frac{1}{16\pi^3}\bigr) = 1 + \frac{1}{8\pi^2}$, which matches the classical computation $|u|{L^2}^2 + |u'|{L^2}^2$ (since $u'(x) = -xe^{-x^2/2}$). [/example] ### Negative Orders and Duality For negative integer $s = -k$, the space $H^{-k}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ consists of tempered distributions expressible as finite sums of distributional derivatives of $L^2$ functions up to order $k$: MATHENVyh0f9vP8END The space $H^{-k}$ is the dual of $H^k$ under the $L^2$ pairing: every [continuous](/page/Continuity) linear functional on $H^k(\mathbb{R}^n)$ is represented by a unique element of $H^{-k}(\mathbb{R}^n)$, and the operator norm equals the $H^{-k}$ norm. The isometry $\Phi_s$ makes this transparent: the dual of $H^k$ is $(H^k)^* \cong L^2 \cong H^{-k}$ via the chain $\Phi_k^* \circ \Phi{-k}^{-1}$. ## The Sobolev Embedding Threshold The most structurally significant property of the $H^s$ scale is that membership in $H^s$ for $s > n/2$ forces every element to have a continuous representative. The mechanism is that $s > n/2$ makes the Fourier transform absolutely integrable, allowing Fourier inversion to produce a pointwise-defined continuous function. This threshold is *sharp*: for $s \le n/2$, there exist elements of $H^s$ that are discontinuous or unbounded.

[quotetheorem:226]

The proof hinges on a single application of

Cauchy–Schwar

z: inserting the weight $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}$ and its reciprocal,
\begin{align*} \|\hat{u}_{\mathrm{rep}}\|_{L^1} &= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} (1+|\xi|^2)^{-s/2} \cdot (1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}|\hat{u}_{\mathrm{rep}}(\xi)|\,d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi) \\ &\le \left(\int_{\mathbb{R}^n} (1+|\xi|^2)^{-s}\,d\mathcal{L}^n(\xi)\right)^{1/2} \|u\|_{H^s}, \end{align*}
and the weight integral converges if and only if $s > n/2$ (the integrand decays like $|\xi|^{-2s}$ and $\int_1^\infty r^{n-1-2s}\,dr < \infty$ iff $2s > n$). Once $\hat{u}_{\mathrm{rep}} \in L^1$, Fourier inversion gives a bounded continuous representative.

When $s > n/2 + k$ for an integer $k \ge 0$, the embedding sharpens: elements of $H^s$ have $k$ continuous derivatives. This follows by applying the Sobolev embedding to $\partial^\alpha u \in H^{s-k}$ for $|{\alpha}| \le k$, each of which has $s - k > n/2$.

[example: Sharpness Of The Embedding Threshold]
The indicator function $f = \mathbb{1}_{[-1,1]}$ in dimension $n = 1$ is discontinuous at $\pm 1$. Its Fourier transform decays like $|\hat{f}(\xi)| \sim |\xi|^{-1}$ for large $|\xi|$:
\begin{align*} \hat{f}(\xi) &= \int_{-1}^1 e^{-2\pi i \xi x}\,d\mathcal{L}^1(x) = \frac{\sin(2\pi\xi)}{\pi\xi}. \end{align*}
The $H^s$ norm finiteness reduces to the tail integral
\begin{align*} \int_1^\infty (1+\xi^2)^s |\hat{f}(\xi)|^2\,d\mathcal{L}^1(\xi) &\sim \int_1^\infty \xi^{2s} \cdot \xi^{-2}\,d\mathcal{L}^1(\xi) = \int_1^\infty \xi^{2s-2}\,d\mathcal{L}^1(\xi), \end{align*}
which converges if and only if $2s - 2 < -1$, i.e., $s < 1/2 = n/2$. So $f \in H^s(\mathbb{R})$ for every $s < 1/2$ but $f \notin H^{1/2}(\mathbb{R})$: the embedding threshold is exactly $n/2$.
[/example]

Elliptic Regularity on the $H^s$ Scale

The defining feature of inhomogeneous Sobolev spaces in PDE theory is that elliptic operators shift regularity along the $H^s$ scale. An elliptic operator of order $m$ maps $H^{s+m} \to H^s$, and invertible elliptic operators shift in the reverse direction. This is the mechanism by which elliptic PDEs gain regularity: if the data $f$ belongs to $H^s$, the solution $u$ belongs to $H^{s+m}$ — the operator "promotes" the regularity by its order.

The simplest and most important instance is the Helmholtz operator $(1-\Delta)$, whose Fourier symbol is $(1+|\xi|^2)$ — exactly the weight defining the $H^s$ norm.

[quotetheorem:227]

The Helmholtz isomorphism is completely transparent on the Fourier side: the equation $(1-\Delta)u = f$ becomes $(1+|\xi|^2)\hat{u} = \hat{f}$, so
\begin{align*} \hat{u}(\xi) &= \frac{\hat{f}(\xi)}{1+|\xi|^2}. \end{align*}
The factor $(1+|\xi|^2)^{-1}$ suppresses high-frequency components by exactly two orders, promoting $H^s$ data to an $H^{s+2}$ solution. The isometry is equally transparent:
\begin{align*} \|u\|_{H^{s+2}} &= \|(1+|\xi|^2)^{(s+2)/2}\hat{u}\|_{L^2} = \|(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}\hat{f}\|_{L^2} = \|f\|_{H^s}. \end{align*}

[example: Regularity Gain For The Helmholtz Equation]
Let $n = 3$ and $f = \Delta g$ for some $g \in H^1(\mathbb{R}^3)$, so $f \in H^{-1}(\mathbb{R}^3)$. The solution $u = (1-\Delta)^{-1}f \in H^1(\mathbb{R}^3)$ has Fourier transform
\begin{align*} \hat{u}(\xi) &= \frac{\hat{f}(\xi)}{1+|\xi|^2} = \frac{-|\xi|^2\hat{g}(\xi)}{1+|\xi|^2}. \end{align*}
Using the partial fraction decomposition
\begin{align*} \frac{|\xi|^2}{1+|\xi|^2} &= 1 - \frac{1}{1+|\xi|^2}, \end{align*}
we get $\hat{u} = -\hat{g} + (1+|\xi|^2)^{-1}\hat{g}$, giving
\begin{align*} u &= -g + (1-\Delta)^{-1}g. \end{align*}
The first term is in $H^1$ and the second in $H^3$ (by the Helmholtz isomorphism applied to $g \in H^1$), confirming $u \in H^1$ with $\|u\|_{H^1} \le 2\|g\|_{H^1}$.
[/example]

More generally, the Bessel potential operator $(1-\Delta)^{s/2}$, defined on the Fourier side as multiplication by $(1+|\xi|^2)^{s/2}$, gives an isometric isomorphism
\begin{align*} (1-\Delta)^{s/2}: H^t(\mathbb{R}^n) &\xrightarrow{\;\sim\;} H^{t-s}(\mathbb{R}^n) \end{align*}
for every $t, s \in \mathbb{R}$. This gives the $H^s$ scale the structure of a "ruler" for regularity: applying $(1-\Delta)^{s/2}$ shifts the index by exactly $s$.

The Algebra Property and Nonlinear PDEs

For nonlinear PDEs, the fundamental structural question is whether $H^s$ is closed under pointwise multiplication. If $u, v \in H^s$, is the product $uv$ again in $H^s$? The answer depends on whether $s$ exceeds the embedding threshold.

[quotetheorem:468]

The threshold $s > n/2$ is the same as for the Sobolev embedding, and this is no coincidence: the proof for integer $s = k$ uses the Leibniz rule $\partial^\alpha(fg) = \sum_{\beta \le \alpha}\binom{\alpha}{\beta}(\partial^\beta f)(\partial^{\alpha-\beta}g)$ and bounds each term by placing the lower-order factor in $L^\infty$ (via the embedding) and the higher-order factor in $L^2$. The threshold is sharp: for $s \le n/2$, one can construct $f, g \in H^s$ with $fg \notin H^s$ (using functions with logarithmic singularities).

[example: The Algebra Property In Action]
For $n = 3$ and $s = 2 > 3/2 = n/2$, the algebra property gives $\|fg\|_{H^2} \le C\|f\|_{H^2}\|g\|_{H^2}$ for all $f, g \in H^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$. As a concrete check, take $f = g = e^{-|x|^2}$. Then $fg = e^{-2|x|^2}$ is another Gaussian, and
\begin{align*} \|fg\|_{H^2}^2 &= \int_{\mathbb{R}^3} (1+|\xi|^2)^2 \, |\widehat{e^{-2|\cdot|^2}}(\xi)|^2 \, d\mathcal{L}^3(\xi). \end{align*}
Since $\widehat{e^{-a|x|^2}}(\xi) = (\pi/a)^{3/2}e^{-\pi^2|\xi|^2/a}$, this is a finite Gaussian integral, confirming $fg \in H^2$.
[/example]

[example: Local Well-Posedness For A Nonlinear Wave Equation]
The algebra property is the key input for local well-posedness of nonlinear PDEs. Consider the semilinear wave equation on $\mathbb{R}^{1+n}$:
\begin{align*} \partial_{tt}u - \Delta u &= u^3, \\ u(0,\cdot) &= u_0, \quad \partial_t u(0,\cdot) = u_1, \end{align*}
with $(u_0, u_1) \in H^s(\mathbb{R}^n) \times H^{s-1}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ for $s > n/2$. The solution is a fixed point of $\Phi: u \mapsto w$, where $w$ solves the linear wave equation with forcing $u^3$. The energy estimate gives
\begin{align*} \|w(t)\|_{H^s} + \|\partial_t w(t)\|_{H^{s-1}} &\lesssim \|u_0\|_{H^s} + \|u_1\|_{H^{s-1}} + \int_0^t\|u(\tau)^3\|_{H^{s-1}}\,d\tau. \end{align*}
The algebra property controls the nonlinearity:
\begin{align*} \|u^3\|_{H^s} &\le C_{n,s}^2\|u\|_{H^s}^3. \end{align*}
For $T$ small enough depending on $\|u_0\|_{H^s} + \|u_1\|_{H^{s-1}}$, the map $\Phi$ is a contraction on a ball in $C([0,T]; H^s) \times C([0,T]; H^{s-1})$, yielding a unique local solution. The threshold $s > n/2$ is essential — for $s \le n/2$ the algebra property fails and the fixed-point argument breaks down.
[/example]

Relation to Homogeneous Spaces

The homogeneous Sobolev space $\dot{H}^s(\mathbb{R}^n)$ uses the weight $|\xi|^{2s}$ instead o

f $(1+|\xi|^2)^

s$. Since $(1+|\xi|^2)^s$ dominates $|\xi|^{2s}$ at all frequencies (the "$+1$" provides low-frequency control), the inhomogeneous norm dominates the homogeneous one. The question is whether this comparison gives a continuous embedding. [quotetheorem:467] The embedding is strict: $\dot{H}^s(\mathbb{R

}^n)$ contain

s elements with no $L^2$ control. For instance, constant functions have $|\xi|^s\hat{c} = c \cdot |\xi|^s\delta_0$, which vanishes for $s > 0$ in the sense that $\|c\|_{\dot{H}^s} = 0$ — so constants belong to $\dot{H}^s/\mathcal{P}$. But
\begin{align*} \|c\|_{H^0}^2 &= \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} |c|^2\,d\mathcal{L}^n = \infty \quad \text{for } c \ne 0, \end{align*}
so constants are not in $H^0 \cong L^2$. The inhomogeneous space is the right setting whenever both the function and its derivatives must be controlled simultaneously — for elliptic equations on $\mathbb{R}^n$ and Cauchy problems requiring finite-energy initial data.

References

  1. H. Brezis, Functional Analysis, Sobolev Spaces and Partial Differential Equations (2010).
  2. L. C. Evans, Partial Differential Equations (1998).
  1. M. E. Taylor, *Partial Differential Equ

ations III: Nonlinear Equations* (1997).
4. T. Tao, Nonlinear Dispersive Equations: Local and Global Analysis (2006).
5. E. M. Stein, Singular Integrals and Differentiability Properties of Functions (1970).

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