
By recourse to tempered ultradistributions, we show here that the effect of a q-Fourier transform (qFT) is to map equivalence classes of functions into other classes in a one-to-one fashion. This suggests that Tsallis’ q-statistics may revolve around equivalence classes of distributions and not individual ones, as orthodox statistics does. We solve here the qFT’s non-invertibility issue, but discover a problem that remains open.
Matemática, FOS: Physical sciences, Nontrigonometric harmonic analysis involving wavelets and other special systems, Mathematical Physics (math-ph), https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1.3, Quantum computation, \(q\)-Fourier transform, QA1-939, q-Fourier transform, tempered ultradistributions, Tempered ultradistributions, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1, Mathematics, Numerical methods for discrete and fast Fourier transforms, Mathematical Physics
Matemática, FOS: Physical sciences, Nontrigonometric harmonic analysis involving wavelets and other special systems, Mathematical Physics (math-ph), https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1.3, Quantum computation, \(q\)-Fourier transform, QA1-939, q-Fourier transform, tempered ultradistributions, Tempered ultradistributions, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1, Mathematics, Numerical methods for discrete and fast Fourier transforms, Mathematical Physics
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