I am trying to understand how sharp Young's inequality for convolution is. The inequality says $||f \ast g||_r \leq ||f||_p ||g||_q$ where as $1/p+1/q = 1+1/r$.
Actually, there are a couple of papers (for example: Sharpness in Young's inequality for convolution) talking about the case of $p, q>1$, and the answer is that we can find a constant $C<1$ such that $||f \ast g||_r \leq C||f||_p ||g||_q$
However, I believe that when $f\in L^1$ and nonnegative, we will have a sharp $||f \ast g||_p \leq ||f||_1 ||g||_p$. Does anyone know a proof of this?
To be more precise, can we construct a sequence $\{g_n\}$ of $L^p$ functions, such that $||f\ast g_n||_p/||g_n||_p\rightarrow ||f||_1$ as $n\rightarrow \infty$?