Much of Fredholm theory concerns itself with the following
integral equation for
f when
g and
K are given: :g(x)=\int_a^b K(x,y) f(y)\,dy. This equation arises naturally in many problems in
physics and mathematics, as the inverse of a
differential equation. That is, one is asked to solve the differential equation :Lg(x)=f(x) where the function is given and is unknown. Here, stands for a linear
differential operator. For example, one might take to be an
elliptic operator, such as :L=\frac{d^2}{dx^2}\, in which case the equation to be solved becomes the
Poisson equation. A general method of solving such equations is by means of
Green's functions, namely, rather than a direct attack, one first finds the function K=K(x,y) such that for a given pair , :LK(x,y) = \delta(x-y), where is the
Dirac delta function. The desired solution to the above differential equation is then written as an integral in the form of a
Fredholm integral equation, :g(x)=\int K(x,y) f(y)\,dy. The function is variously known as a Green's function, or the
kernel of an integral. It is sometimes called the
nucleus of the integral, whence the term
nuclear operator arises. In the general theory, and may be points on any
manifold; the
real number line or -dimensional
Euclidean space in the simplest cases. The general theory also often requires that the functions belong to some given
function space: often, the space of
square-integrable functions is studied, and
Sobolev spaces appear often. The actual function space used is often determined by the solutions of the
eigenvalue problem of the differential operator; that is, by the solutions to :L\psi_n(x)=\omega_n \psi_n(x) where the are the eigenvalues, and the are the eigenvectors. The set of eigenvectors span a
Banach space, and, when there is a natural
inner product, then the eigenvectors span a
Hilbert space, at which point the
Riesz representation theorem is applied. Examples of such spaces are the
orthogonal polynomials that occur as the solutions to a class of second-order
ordinary differential equations. Given a Hilbert space as above, the kernel may be written in the form :K(x,y)=\sum_n \frac{\psi_n(x) \psi_n(y)} {\omega_n}. In this form, the object is often called the
Fredholm operator or the
Fredholm kernel. That this is the same kernel as before follows from the
completeness of the basis of the Hilbert space, namely, that one has :\delta(x-y)=\sum_n \psi_n(x) \psi_n(y). Since the are generally increasing, the resulting eigenvalues of the operator are thus seen to be decreasing towards zero. ==Inhomogeneous equations==