Studying introductory harmonic analysis, I hit upon the following question:
Let $f\in L^1(\mathbb{R})$. Define $E_f=\overline{\text{span}}\{f_y\}_{y\in\mathbb{R}}$.
- Assume $k \in L^1(\mathbb{R})$ is compactly supported. show $k*f \in E_f$.
- Show the condition on $k$ is not necessary.
- Show $\{f_y\}_{y\in \mathbb{R}}$ is complete in $L^1(\mathbb{R})$ iff $\widehat{f}(x) \ne 0 $ for all $x\in \mathbb{R}$.
1 easily implies 2, as for any $k\in L^1(\mathbb{R})$ the sequence $k_N = k\cdot {1}_{[-N,N]}$ converges to $k$, and $f*k_N \in E_f$.
I cannot work out $1$. Have tried using simple functions for both $f$ and $k$, have tried to show it for $k= 1_K$ but no luck. I noticed the image of $E_f$ under $\widehat{(\cdot)}$ operator is $\overline{\text{span}}\{e^{iy(\cdot)}\widehat{f}(\cdot)\}_{y\in\mathbb{R}}$, and $\widehat{k*f}=\widehat{k}\cdot\hat{f}$. So, in a way, it is ``enough'' to show $\widehat{k}$ can be approximated by such exponents. The problem is, I do not understand how such approximation coudl help. Inverting the transform is not possible.
As for 3, I cannot work both directions. If we assume $\widehat{f} \ne 0 $, the obvious approach would be to solve the following: for any $g\in L^1$, find $k\in L^1$ s.t: $$g = f*k$$ this happens iff $\widehat{k} = \widehat{g}/ \hat{f}$ but can such $k$ be guaranteed?