Linear mathematical operator which translates a function
This article is about shift operators in mathematics. For operators in computer programming languages, see Bit shift. For the shift operator of group schemes, see Verschiebung operator.
The shift operator T t (where ) takes a function f on to its translation ft,
A practical operational calculus representation of the linear operator T t in terms of the plain derivative was introduced by Lagrange,
which may be interpreted operationally through its formal Taylor expansion in t; and whose action on the monomial xn is evident by the binomial theorem, and hence on all series inx, and so all functions f(x) as above.[3] This, then, is a formal encoding of the Taylor expansion in Heaviside's calculus.
The initial condition of the flow and the group property completely determine the entire Lie flow, providing a solution to the translation functional equation[6]
The left shift operator acts on one-sided infinite sequence of numbers by
and on two-sided infinite sequences by
The right shift operator acts on one-sided infinite sequence of numbers by
and on two-sided infinite sequences by
The right and left shift operators acting on two-sided infinite sequences are called bilateral shifts.
Abelian groups
In general, as illustrated above, if F is a function on an abelian groupG, and h is an element of G, the shift operator T g maps F to[6][7]
Properties of the shift operator
The shift operator acting on real- or complex-valued functions or sequences is a linear operator which preserves most of the standard norms which appear in functional analysis. Therefore, it is usually a continuous operator with norm one.
Action on Hilbert spaces
The shift operator acting on two-sided sequences is a unitary operator on The shift operator acting on functions of a real variable is a unitary operator on
In both cases, the (left) shift operator satisfies the following commutation relation with the Fourier transform:
where M t is the multiplication operator by exp(itx). Therefore, the spectrum of T t is the unit circle.
The one-sided shift S acting on is a proper isometry with range equal to all vectors which vanish in the first coordinate. The operator S is a compression of T−1, in the sense that
where y is the vector in with yi = xi for i ≥ 0 and yi = 0 for i < 0. This observation is at the heart of the construction of many unitary dilations of isometries.
Jean Delsarte introduced the notion of generalized shift operator (also called generalized displacement operator); it was further developed by Boris Levitan.[2][8][9]
A family of operators acting on a space Φ of functions from a set X to is called a family of generalized shift operators if the following properties hold:
^Jordan, Charles, (1939/1965). Calculus of Finite Differences, (AMS Chelsea Publishing), ISBN978-0828400336 .
^M Hamermesh (1989), Group Theory and Its Application to Physical Problems
(Dover Books on Physics), Hamermesh ISBM 978-0486661810, Ch 8-6, pp 294-5,
online.
^p 75 of Georg Scheffers (1891): Sophus Lie, Vorlesungen Ueber Differentialgleichungen Mit Bekannten Infinitesimalen Transformationen, Teubner, Leipzig, 1891. ISBN978-3743343078online
^ abAczel, J (2006), Lectures on Functional Equations and Their Applications (Dover Books on Mathematics, 2006), Ch. 6, ISBN978-0486445236 .
^"A one-parameter continuous group is equivalent to a group of translations". M Hamermesh, ibid.