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Peetre's inequality

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In mathematics, Peetre's inequality, named after Jaak Peetre, says that for any real number t {\displaystyle t} and any vectors x {\displaystyle x} and y {\displaystyle y} in R n , {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n},} the following inequality holds: ( 1 + | x | 2 1 + | y | 2 ) t     2 | t | ( 1 + | x y | 2 ) | t | . {\displaystyle \left({\frac {1+|x|^{2}}{1+|y|^{2}}}\right)^{t}~\leq ~2^{|t|}(1+|x-y|^{2})^{|t|}.}

The inequality was proved by J. Peetre in 1959 and has founds applications in functional analysis and Sobolev spaces.

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