Abstract

This paper is about two important trends of scattering theory in general relativity: time-dependent spectral analytic scattering and conformal scattering. The former was initiated by Jonathan Dimock and Bernard Kay in the mid-1980s and is based on spectral and functional analysis. The latter was proposed by Roger Penrose in 1965 and then constructed for the first time by Gerard Friedlander in 1980 by putting together Penrose's conformal method and another analytic approach to scattering: the Lax-Phillips theory due to Peter Lax and Ralph Phillips. We shall review the history of the two approaches and explain their general principles. We shall also explore an important question: 'can the tools of one approach be used to obtain a complete construction in the other?' This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'At the interface of asymptotics, conformal methods and analysis in general relativity'.

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