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Journal of the London Mathematical Society 1999 59(1):369-384; doi:10.1112/S0024610798006899
© 1999 by London Mathematical Society
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© The London Mathematical Society

Convolution Hemigroups of Bounded Variation on a Lie Projective Group

Herbert Heyer and Gyula Pap

Mathematisches Institut, Universität Tübingen Auf der Morgenstelle 10, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany
Institute of Mathematics, Lajos Kossuth University Pf.12, H-4010 Debrecen, Hungary

Received 5 August 1996. Revision received 17 February 1997.

In a previous article [11] we studied the central limit theorem for infinitesimal triangular arrays of probability measures on a Lie group. Since the work of Berg [2] and more recently of Bendikov [1] similar studies appeared to be urgent for the infinite-dimensional torus group and beyond that for the class of Lie projective groups which among others contains all compact groups. Consequently we started extending the existing theory within the enlarged framework of Lie projective groups. In the present contribution continuous convolution hemigroups (µ(s, t)) of probability measures on a Lie projective group G are investigated with respect to generation, representation and occurrence as limits of non-commutative infinitesimal triangular arrays.

The layout of our exposition is as follows. In Section 2 some facts on Lie projective groups G with Lie algebra L(G), Lie system H, projective basis (Xi)iisinI and corresponding projective weak coordinate system (xi)iisinI are collected to make the reader familiar with the setting. Section 3 contains the basic methodical result yielding the intended generalisations. It is shown in Proposition 3.3 that a hemigroup (µ(s, t)) in the set M1(G) of probability measures on G corresponds to a triplet (a, B, {eta}) in the set Pbv(R+, G) of characteristics of bounded variation if and only if for each HisinH the projection (pH(µ(s, t))) in M1(G/H) corresponds to a certain triplet (aH, BH, {eta}H) in the set Pbv(R+, G/H). Here the correspondence between hemigroups and triplets is achieved via weak backward evolution equations with respect to (Xi)iisinI and (xi)iisinI (see Definition 3.2). Applying the reduction method based on this result, the convergence of infinitesimal arrays {µnL:(n,L)isinN2} in M1(G) towards hemigroups (µ(s, t)) of continuous weak bounded variation is proved in Section 4. In fact, sufficient conditions involving the triplet (a, B, {eta}) are given in order that the sequence (µn (s, t))n≥1 of ‘scaled’ convolution products µn, kn(s)+1*...*µn, kn(t) converges weakly to (µ(s, t)). Moreover, necessary and sufficient conditions are given for the limiting hemigroup to be a diffusion hemigroup. Section 5 is devoted to the existence and uniqueness results leading to the one-to-one correspondence between the set Pbv(R+, G) and the set of hemigroups of continuous weak bounded variation on G. In Section 6 we illustrate the technique of Lie projectivity of the infinite-dimensional torus group and of the p-adic solenoidal group. Moreover, we sketch a little-known example of a hemigroup appearing in atomic physics and derive from it some thoughts towards a perturbation theory for hemigroups.


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