This article is about the integral inequality. For the algebraic inequality in 3 variables, see
Schur's inequality.
In mathematical analysis, the Schur test, named after German mathematician Issai Schur, is a bound on the
operator norm of an integral operator in terms of its Schwartz kernel (see Schwartz kernel theorem).
Here is one version.[1] Let
be two measurable spaces (such as
). Let
be an integral operator with the non-negative Schwartz kernel
,
,
:

If there exist real functions
and
and numbers
such that

for almost all
and

for almost all
, then
extends to a continuous operator
with the operator norm

Such functions
,
are called the Schur test functions.
In the original version,
is a matrix and
.[2]
Common usage and Young's inequality
[edit]
A common usage of the Schur test is to take
Then we get:

This inequality is valid no matter whether the Schwartz kernel
is non-negative or not.
A similar statement about
operator norms is known as Young's inequality for integral operators:[3]
if

where
satisfies
, for some
, then the operator
extends to a continuous operator
, with
Using the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality and inequality (1), we get:

Integrating the above relation in
, using Fubini's Theorem, and applying inequality (2), we get:

It follows that
for any
.
- ^ Paul Richard Halmos and Viakalathur Shankar Sunder, Bounded integral operators on
spaces, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (Results in Mathematics and Related Areas), vol. 96., Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1978. Theorem 5.2.
- ^ I. Schur, Bemerkungen zur Theorie der Beschränkten Bilinearformen mit unendlich vielen Veränderlichen, J. reine angew. Math. 140 (1911), 1–28.
- ^ Theorem 0.3.1 in: C. D. Sogge, Fourier integral operators in classical analysis, Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-521-43464-5