Almost-Orthogonality in Lp Spaces: A Case Study with Grok
Ziang Chen, Jaume de Dios Pont, Paata Ivanisvili, Jose Madrid, Haozhu Wang
TLDR
This paper disproves a sharpened triangle inequality for Lp spaces when p>2, establishes conditions for its validity, and derives a new sharp three-function bound.
Key contributions
- Constructs a counterexample showing Carbery's sharpened triangle inequality fails for p > 2.
- Proves that if such an inequality holds, the exponent 'c' must satisfy c ≤ p'.
- Establishes the inequality at the critical exponent c=p' for all integer p ≥ 2.
- Derives a sharp three-function bound for p ≥ 3 with an optimal exponent c(p), improving prior results.
Why it matters
This work significantly refines our understanding of almost-orthogonality in Lp spaces, correcting a proposed inequality and providing new, sharper bounds. The paper also highlights the emerging role of large language models like Grok in mathematical exploration.
Original Abstract
Carbery proposed the following sharpened form of triangle inequality for many functions: for any $p\ge 2$ and any finite sequence $(f_j)_j\subset L^p$ we have \[ \Big\|\sum_j f_j\Big\|_p \ \le\ \left(\sup_{j} \sum_{k} α_{jk}^{\,c}\right)^{1/p'} \Big(\sum_j \|f_j\|_p^p\Big)^{1/p}, \] where $c=2$, $1/p+1/p'=1$, and $α_{jk}=\sqrt{\frac{\|f_{j}f_{k}\|_{p/2}}{\|f_{j}\|_{p}\|f_{k}\|_{p}}}$. In the first part of this paper we construct a counterexample showing that this inequality fails for every $p>2$. We then prove that if an estimate of the above form holds, the exponent must satisfy $c\le p'$. Finally, at the critical exponent $c=p'$, we establish the inequality for all integer values $p\ge 2$. In the second part of the paper we obtain a sharp three-function bound \[ \Big\|\sum_{j=1}^{3} f_j\Big\|_p \ \le\ \left(1+2Γ^{c(p)}\right)^{1/p'} \Big(\sum_{j=1}^{3} \|f_j\|_p^p\Big)^{1/p}, \] where $p \geq 3$, $c(p) = \frac{2\ln(2)}{(p-2)\ln(3)+2\ln(2)}$ and $Γ=Γ(f_1,f_2,f_3)\in[0,1]$ quantifies the degree of orthogonality among $f_1,f_2,f_3$. The exponent $c(p)$ is optimal, and improves upon the power $r(p) = \frac{6}{5p-4}$ obtained previously by Carlen, Frank, and Lieb. Some intermediate lemmas and inequalities appearing in this work were explored with the assistance of the large language model Grok.
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