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2 votes
1 answer
140 views

Invertibility of message passing with invertible parametrization

Consider the message passing framework defined by, $$f(\boldsymbol{x}_i)= \boldsymbol{x}_i + \sum_{j \neq i} (\boldsymbol{x}_i -\boldsymbol{x}_j) g(\|\boldsymbol{x}_i -\boldsymbol{x}_j\|^2),$$ for $i=...
PonderingPolynomial's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
57 views

Lower bound the best $\alpha$-Hölder constant of a convolution

Let $\mathcal D_1$ be the set of bounded probability density functions on $\mathbb R^d$. This means $f \in \mathcal D_1$ if and only if $f$ is non-negative measurable such that $\int_{\mathbb R^d} f (...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
3 votes
1 answer
132 views

Existence of a density

Let $W: \mathbb R^d \to \mathbb R^{d \times d}$ be a matrix-valued function with domain $\mathbb R^d$ and taking values in the set of $d \times d$ real matrices, such that $W(x)$ is positive-definite ...
Aurelien's user avatar
  • 301
3 votes
1 answer
161 views

Equivalent definition for Skorokhod metric

I have a question about the Skorokod distance on the space $\mathcal{D}([0,1],\mathbb{R})$: $$ d(X,Y):= \inf_{\lambda \in \Lambda}\left( \sup_{t\in [0,1]}|t-\lambda(t)|\vee \sup_{t\in [0,1]}|X(t)-Y(\...
user1598's user avatar
  • 177
2 votes
1 answer
289 views

Erdős–Sierpiński duality in locally compact Polish groups (e.g. $\mathbb{R}^n$)

Erdős–Sierpiński mapping for a locally compact Polish group $G$ is a bijection $f$ from $G$ to $G$ such that $A$ is a null set in $G$ with respect to the Haar measure if and only if $f(A)$ is a meager ...
Nugi's user avatar
  • 131
4 votes
2 answers
361 views

Implicit function theorem without uniqueness?

Imagine you are given $f(x,y) := y^2-\sin(x)^2$ and you want to answer the question, if there is a neighbourhood of $x=0$ such that $f(x,y(x))=0$ with $y(0)=0$. One idea that comes to mind is the ...
Daisy_Duck's user avatar
37 votes
12 answers
5k views

Examples where existence is harder than evaluation

In expressions involving an infinite process (infinite sum, infinite sequence of nested radicals), sometimes the hardest part is proving the existence of a well-defined value. Consider, for example, ...
0 votes
0 answers
29 views

$ \sup_{\theta \in [0,2\pi)}\max_{r\leq \delta}\frac{\log\left(\frac{f(r,\theta)}{f(\delta,\theta)}\right)}{\log(r)}<\infty,$ $f$ real analytic

$\textbf{Conjecture.}$ Let $B\subseteq \Bbb{R}^2$ be a closed ball centered on $(0,0)$ of radius $\delta <1$. Let $f:B\to \Bbb{R}_{\geq 0}$ be real analytic and suppose that $(0,0)$ is the only ...
Doofenshmert's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
87 views

Symmetric and anti-symmetric matrices and maximal eigenvalues

Suppose we start with a symmetric $n \times n$ matrix $A$, the elements of which are either $1$ or $0$. All the diagonal elements of this matrix are set to be $0$. So, $\lambda_{\text{max}}=\sup \...
Alapan Das's user avatar
  • 1,755
0 votes
1 answer
47 views

Everywhere existence of marginals

Let $f\in L^1(\mathbb{R}^2)$ be a (joint) probability density function which satisfies $f(x,y)>0$ for all $(x,y)\in \mathbb{R^2}$. What is a necessary and sufficient condition under which the ...
Amir Sagiv's user avatar
  • 3,574
3 votes
4 answers
353 views

What real distributions solve $f'=0$? [closed]

I mean specifically real-valued Schwartz distributions on the real line.  That is linear functionals  on $C^{\infty}_c(\mathbb{R})$ continuous in the canonical LF topology.  My question is, what are ...
Colin McLarty's user avatar
9 votes
4 answers
2k views

How may I find all continuous and bounded functions g with the following property?

Find all continuous and bounded functions $g$ with : $$\forall x \in \mathbb R, 4g(x)=g(x+1)+g(x-1)+g(x+\pi)+g(x-\pi).$$ I have posted this question here, but received no answer.
Dattier's user avatar
  • 4,074
2 votes
1 answer
117 views

When is a $p$-th order stationary point of a polynomial actually a local minimum?

Definition: For integer $p\geq 1$, we say $x\in \mathbb{R}^d$ is a $p$-th order stationary point of a function $f \colon \mathbb{R}^d \to \mathbb{R}$ if there exists a $C>0$ and an $\epsilon>0$ ...
ccriscitiello's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
224 views

A limit related to quasi-periodic function

Let us consider $V(x) = 2-\sin(x) - \sin(\sqrt{2} x)$ on $x\in \mathbb{R}$ so that $V(x)>0$ everywhere. One can see that $$ \frac{C_1}{t^2} \leq \min_{|x|\leq t} V(x)\leq \frac{C_2}{t^2} $$ ...
Sean's user avatar
  • 375
2 votes
1 answer
309 views

Reverse estimate on the Riesz potential $I_\alpha : L^{n/\alpha}\to \mathrm{BMO}$

$\newcommand\BMO{\mathrm{BMO}}$Consider the Riesz potential on $\mathbb{R}^n$ given by $$ I_\alpha f(x) = c_{n,\alpha} \int_{\mathbb{R}^n} \frac{f(y)}{\lvert x-y\rvert^{n-\alpha}} dy. $$ It is known ...
Dorian's user avatar
  • 363
1 vote
1 answer
234 views

Zeroes of elementary polynomials without involving closed-form solutions

Consider the following two polynomials, where $n$ is an integer: $$ p_n(x) = x^3-\frac1nx-\frac2n, \\ q_n(x) = x^2-\frac2n. $$ For any $n$, let $x_p=x_p(n)$ and $x_q=x_q(n)$ be the unique positive ...
chrisv's user avatar
  • 21
8 votes
1 answer
496 views

A fractional weighted Poincaré inequality

Does there exists a constant $C>0$ such that $$ \int_{-1}^1 \lvert x\rvert\lvert\partial_x u\rvert^2 \,dx \geq C\, \lVert u\rVert^2_{H^{1/2}((-1,1))},$$ for all $u\in C^{\infty}_0((-1,1))$?
Ali's user avatar
  • 4,143
0 votes
1 answer
58 views

An expansion for 2d Euler equation

Let $R>0$ be a large constant, such that for any $x \in \Omega$, $\Omega \subset B_R(x)$. Consider the following problem in $\mathbb{R}^2$: $$ -\varepsilon^2 \Delta u=1_{\{u>a\}} \text { in }\, ...
Davidi Cone's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
255 views

Is this constraint convex?

I have an optimization problem where the following constraint causes DCP Rule Error. $$e^{x_n} \leq B \log _2\left(1+\frac{e^{\rho_n} g_n^2}{\sum_{i=1}^{n-1} e^{\...
Mojtaba's user avatar
  • 31
1 vote
0 answers
79 views

How to distinguish birth and death bifurcations?

Let $f : \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ have a degenerate critical point at $x = 0 \, ($ie, $f(0) = f'(0) = f''(0) = 0)$. Perturbing $f$ locally around $0$ may cause multiple scenarios: Birth: the ...
Azur's user avatar
  • 111
2 votes
0 answers
80 views

Limit of lacunar power series at $1^-$

I've asked this question on MSE but I didn't get a convincive answer so I'm trying here. Here is the question : Let $\sigma:\mathbb{N}\longrightarrow\mathbb{N}$ be strictly increasing, and consider ...
Tuvasbien's user avatar
  • 186
0 votes
1 answer
150 views

Property of $p$-norm in the $n$-simplex

Let $\mathbb{S}^{n}$ be the canonical simplex of $\mathbb{R}^{n}$ and let $u = (1/n,\dotsc,1/n)$. Is it true that $$\lVert x - u \rVert_p \leq \lVert y - u \rVert_p$$ implies that $$\lVert x\rVert_p \...
aureliano_buendia's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
354 views

General version of Weyl's lemma

The classical Weyl's lemma say, suppose $u \in L^1_{loc}(\Omega­)$ satisfies $$\int_{\Omega}u \Delta \phi dx=0\ \ \forall \phi\in C_c^{\infty}(\Omega),$$ then $u$ is harmonic in $\Omega.$ What I want ...
W.J.'s user avatar
  • 379
25 votes
2 answers
3k views

What is the origin/history of the following very short definition of the Lebesgue integral?

Typical courses on real integration spend a lot of time defining the Lebesgue measure and then spend another lot of time defining the integral with respect to a measure. This is sometimes criticized ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
  • 32.5k
2 votes
2 answers
268 views

If $\inf\{b\in\mathbb{R}\mid\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}e^{-ax_n-by_n}<+\infty\}=1-a$ for all $a\in [0,1]$, does this equality hold for all $a\in\mathbb{R}$?

Let $\left\{x_n\right\}_{n=1}^{+\infty},\left\{y_n\right\}_{n=1}^{+\infty}\subset [0,+\infty)$ be two sequences of non-negative real numbers. Suppose there exist $\lambda\ge 1, c\ge 0$ such that $\...
YC Su's user avatar
  • 605
1 vote
1 answer
249 views

Sufficient condition such that the set of zeros of an analytic function $f:\mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}$ contains only isolated points

Consider a real- analytic function $f: \mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}$. We know that zeros of $f$, roughly speaking, live in the low dimensional manifolds. My question: Does a 'reasonable' sufficient ...
Boby's user avatar
  • 671
1 vote
2 answers
271 views

An integral inequality?

Let $v \in C^\infty(\mathbb R)$ such that $1 \ge v \ge 0$ and $\int_{\mathbb R} v \, dx = 1$. I want to show that if $$\int_{\mathbb R} v |v''|^2 \, dx < + \infty. \tag{$\star$}$$ then $$ \int_{\...
aaragon's user avatar
  • 83
0 votes
0 answers
80 views

Verifying the Cauchy behavior of a sequence

Let me consider the iteration $x_{n+1}=Tx_n$ and $T$ is a self-map from a non-empty subset $K$ of a smooth Banach space $X$ to itself, satisfying $W(Tx, Ty) \leq W(x, y)$, where $W(x, y)=\Vert x \Vert^...
PPB's user avatar
  • 85
0 votes
0 answers
279 views

Are there "gaps" between Lipschitz functions and $C^1$ functions?

I was wondering about this fact. By Rademacher theorem, it is well known that a Lipschitz function in $\mathbb{R}^d$ is $\mathcal{L}^d$-a.e. differentiable. Of course, a $C^1$ function is everywhere ...
tommy1996q's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
329 views

$L^1$ norm for a product of cosines

Let $k$ be an integer and consider the function $$ f(t)=\prod_{i=1}^{k} \cos(3^{i-1}\pi t). $$ I'm interested in finding bounds for $\int_{0}^{1}|f(t)|dt$ in terms of $k$. The first idea that comes to ...
Itachi's user avatar
  • 178
3 votes
2 answers
429 views

Functional equations based on composition

I have asked this question here (*), but there are no answer. Let $n \in \mathbb N^*$, $\{a_0,\ldots,a_n\} \subset \left] 0,+\infty\right]$. We suppose $Eq : \sum\limits_{k=0}^n a_k f^k(x)=0$ have no ...
Dattier's user avatar
  • 4,074
4 votes
1 answer
668 views

$f\in C(B_1)\cap W^{1,2}(B_1\setminus \{f=0\})$ implies $f\in W^{1,2}(B_1)$?

In a paper I am writing I need to show that a certain real-valued function $f\in C^0(B_1)$ belongs to the Sobolev space $W^{1,2}(B_1)$ ($B_1$ is the unit ball). So far I have been able to show that ...
No-one's user avatar
  • 1,149
1 vote
1 answer
113 views

An integrable estimate of the Hölder constant of the map $x \mapsto \int_{\mathbb R^d} f(y) \partial_1 \partial_1 g_t (x-y) \, \mathrm d y$

Let $(g_t)_{t>0}$ be the Gaussian heat kernel on $\mathbb R^d$, i.e., $$ g_t (x) := (4\pi t)^{-\frac{d}{2}} e^{-\frac{|x|^2}{4t}}, \quad t>0, x \in \mathbb R^d. $$ Let $f : \mathbb R^d \to \...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
2 votes
2 answers
274 views

Is a simple closed curve always a free boundary arc?

Is it possible to extract a neighborhood around any point on a simple closed curve such that the boundary of this neighborhood intersects the curve at only two points? For a simple closed curve $\...
S.Zhang's user avatar
  • 23
5 votes
1 answer
589 views

On the Riemannian integrability of the bounded derivative

Let $f:[a,b]\to\mathbb R$ be a differentiable function with $f'$ bounded. According to this post, $f'$ is not necessarily Riemann integrable on $[a,b]$, see also Volterra's function. I wonder, if $f'$...
Fergns Qian's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
530 views

Proof of the inequality $\frac{y}{x}-1-\log\left(\frac{y}{x}\right)\geq \frac{1}{2}\frac{(x-y)^2}{x}$ when $x,y \in (0,1]$

I am trying to prove the following inequality: $$\frac{y}{x}-1-\log\left(\frac{y}{x}\right)\geq \frac{1}{2}\frac{(x-y)^2}{x} \quad \forall x,y \in (0,1]$$ The statement looks simple enough that it may ...
good bandit's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
92 views

Modulus of Continuity, Heat Flow, and Derivative Estimates

Given $f : \mathbf{R}^d \to \mathbf{R}$, define $P_t f$ by \begin{align} (P_t f)(x) = \mathbf{E} \left[ f (x + \sqrt{t} G) \right], \end{align} where $G \sim \mathcal{N} (0, I_d)$ is a standard ...
πr8's user avatar
  • 801
3 votes
3 answers
340 views

Extending a $C^1$ function on $\mathbb R^n$ to a set of finite $\mathcal H^{n-2}$ measure

Note: Here $\mathcal H^k$ denotes the $k$-dimensional Hausdorff measure. Let $n \geq 2$ be an integer, and $E \subset \mathbb R^n$ be a set of finite $\mathcal H^{n-2}$ measure. Suppose $f: \mathbb R^...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,223
0 votes
0 answers
70 views

Multiplication with dilations of nonzero measurable function is injective

Denote $f_s(x):=f(sx)$ as the dilation of a function $f$. I want to know whether the following statement is true: Suppose $f$ and $g$ are measurable functions on $\mathbb{R}$, and $f$ is not almost ...
Zhang Yuhan's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
76 views

Upper bounds for the spatial differential of the inverse of a flux

It is well known that given a regular velocity field $b: \mathbb{R} \times \mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}^n$ (say, continuous in time and uniformly Lipshitz in space), the flux $X$ associated to $b$ is a ...
tommy1996q's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
194 views

What are the possible blow up limits of an $L^1$ function?

Let $f: [0, 1] \to \mathbb R$ be an $L^1$ function. Define for each $r > 0$, the blow up $f_r:[0, 1] \to \mathbb R$ by $$f_r (x) := \frac{f(rx)}{r}.$$ Suppose $f_r$ converges in $L^1$ to some ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,223
4 votes
1 answer
507 views

Degree four polynomials with no real roots

Consider a degree four polynomial $$ f = a_4x^4 + a_3x^3 + a_2x^2 + a_1x+ a_0 \in \mathbb{R}[x] $$ with real coefficients. The discriminant $\Delta_f$ of $f$ is a homogeneous polynomials of degree six ...
Puzzled's user avatar
  • 8,998
5 votes
1 answer
542 views

If $f$ is bounded, decays fast enough at infinity and $\int f=0$, does this imply that $f$ is in the Hardy space $\mathcal H^1(\mathbb R^n)$?

Let $\mathcal H^1(\mathbb R^n)$ be the real Hardy space (as in Stein's "Harmonic Analysis", Chapter 3). It is well known that $\mathcal H^1(\mathbb R^n)\subset L^1(\mathbb R^n)$ and its ...
Lorenzo Pompili's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
114 views

Lipschitz function which is surjective on subset implies that the subset is dense

Let $f: \mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}^n$ be a Lipschitz-function. Suppose $A \subseteq \mathbb{R}^n$ is an $(n-1)$-connected subset such that $f(A) = \mathbb{R}^n$. I would like to show that $A\subseteq ...
psl2Z's user avatar
  • 311
0 votes
0 answers
103 views

Who first gave a result stronger-or-equal to this one on ODEs

After some thinking I've come to the following conclusion. Consider the initial value problem $$\text{(P)}\begin{cases}x'(t)=f(t,x(t)),\quad t\geq t_0\\x(t_0)=x_0 \end{cases}$$ where $f:D\subset\...
aleph2's user avatar
  • 637
0 votes
0 answers
36 views

Sufficient condition for interpolation

If we have a couple of two compatible banach spaces (in this sense) $(X,Y)$ and a sequence of Banach spaces $\{Z\}_{\theta\in[0,1]}$ which are intermediate between $X$ and $Y$ satisfying: $Z_0=X$, $...
mejopa's user avatar
  • 101
3 votes
1 answer
296 views

Does this condition characterise intervals, among subsets of the real line?

For a real number, $c\in \left]0,1\right[$, consider the following property $\mathbf(\mathbf P_c\mathbf)$ of subsets $A$ of $\mathbb R$: $\mathbf(\mathbf P_c\mathbf)$ For every bounded set $B\subset \...
Pietro Majer's user avatar
  • 60.5k
2 votes
2 answers
152 views

Upper bound estimation for second-order variable-coefficient ODE

I'm tackling a second-order linear ordinary differential equation with variable coefficients $a(t)$ and seek advice on estimating the upper bound of $y(t)$ s.t $|y(t)|\le M$. The equation in question ...
lming2's user avatar
  • 45
5 votes
0 answers
107 views

Generalized Puiseux series for diagonal reflections of the curves $y = \frac{x}{(1-ax)(1-bx)^m}$

Reflection of the curve $y = f_m(x) = \frac{x}{(1-ax)(1-bx)^m}$ through the diagonal line $y=x$ in the $xy$-plane can be regarded as local compositional inversion of the curve $y=f_m(x)$. ($x,y,a,b$ ...
Tom Copeland's user avatar
  • 10.5k
1 vote
1 answer
150 views

Unable to understand an application of Minkowski's inequality

Consider the following exerpt from the paper "Non-linear Quantum Processes" by Segal: with the norm $\|F\|=\left(\int\|F(x)\|^p \, d x\right)^{1 / p}$, then the operator $T_1^{\prime}: F \...
matilda's user avatar
  • 90

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