Summary
The present book is in substance an elaboration of a course of fifteen lectures on the Fourier Integral and its Applications, given at the University of Cambridge during the Lent Term of 1932. When I arrived in Cambridge during the Michaelmas Term of 1931, on leave of absence from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, I had vague plans of writing up certain topics in the theory of harmonic analysis into a book on the subject. My original idea was of a rather comprehensive treatise, proceeding from the elements of Lebesgue integration through the L2 theory of the Fourier series to the Plancherel theorem, the Fourier Integral, the periodogram, and lastly, to theorems of Tauberian type. My impulse to write a book of this type arose from a dissatisfaction with the preponderant rôle of convergence theory in existing textbooks on the subject, and from the need for a treatment more in line with the extensive periodical literature.
As far as my desire to write a book sprang from the need for a textbook to use in my course at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it has largely been dissipated by the recent appearance of a book on the Theory of Functions by Professor Titchmarsh. Several chapters of his book are devoted to the treatment of Fourier series from the modern point of view. Unfortunately—from my standpoint—he does not allot a great deal of space to the Fourier Integral and related matters.
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- The Fourier Integral and Certain of its Applications , pp. xv - xviiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988