Classical Fourier Analysis
Abstract
The great response to the publication of my book Classical and Modern Fourier
Analysis in 2004 has been especially gratifying to me. I was delighted when Springer
offered to publish the second edition in 2008 in two volumes: Classical Fourier
Analysis, 2nd Edition, and Modern Fourier Analysis, 2nd Edition. I am now elated
to have the opportunity to write the present third edition of these books, which
Springer has also kindly offered to publish. The third edition was born from my
desire to improve the exposition in several places, fix a few inaccuracies, and add
some new material. I have been very fortunate to receive several hundred e-mail
messages that helped me improve the proofs and locate mistakes and misprints in
the previous editions.
In this edition, I maintain the same style as in the previous ones. The proofs contain
details that unavoidably make the reading more cumbersome. Although it will
behoove many readers to skim through the more technical aspects of the presentation
and concentrate on the flow of ideas, the fact that details are present will be
comforting to some. (This last sentence is based on my experience as a graduate
student.) Readers familiar with the second edition will notice that the chapter on
weights has been moved from the second volume to the first.
This first volume Classical Fourier Analysis is intended to serve as a text for
a one-semester course with prerequisites of measure theory, Lebesgue integration,
and complex variables. I am aware that this book contains significantly more material
than can be taught in a semester course; however, I hope that this additional
information will be useful to researchers. Based on my experience, the following list
of sections (or parts of them) could be taught in a semester without affecting the
logical coherence of the book: Sections 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 2.1, 2.2., 2.3, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 4.4,
4.5, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.5, 5.6, 6.1, 6.2.