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The Funk transform as a Penrose transform

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1999

TOBY N. BAILEY
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh; e-mail: tnb@maths.ed.ac.uk
MICHAEL G. EASTWOOD
Affiliation:
Department of Pure Mathematics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia; e-mail: meastwoo@maths.adelaide.edu.au
A. ROD GOVER
Affiliation:
School of Mathematics, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; e-mail: r.gover@fsc.qut.edu.au
LIONEL J. MASON
Affiliation:
St Peter's College, Oxford; e-mail: lmason@maths.ox.ac.uk

Abstract

The Funk transform is the integral transform from the space of smooth even functions on the unit sphere S2⊂ℝ3 to itself defined by integration over great circles. One can regard this transform as a limit in a certain sense of the Penrose transform from [Copf ]ℙ2 to [Copf ]ℙ*ast;2. We exploit this viewpoint by developing a new proof of the bijectivity of the Funk transform which proceeds by considering the cohomology of a certain involutive (or formally integrable) structure on an intermediate space. This is the simplest example of what we hope will prove to be a general method of obtaining results in real integral geometry by means of complex holomorphic methods derived from the Penrose transform.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge Philosophical Society 1999

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Footnotes

This research was supported by the Australian Research Council and the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences. The last named author was supported by NATO collaborative research grant 950300.