All Questions
981 questions
11
votes
2
answers
712
views
Poincaré lemma for distributions
Let us consider a current on $\mathbb R^n$, that is a differential form whose coefficients are distributions. For simplicity, let us check the case of a $1$-form
$$
u=\sum_{1\le j\le n} u_j dx_j,\quad ...
11
votes
3
answers
1k
views
Continuous automorphism groups of normed vector spaces?
Consider the metric space on, say, ℝ2 induced by the various $L^p$ norms, and the group of isometries from that space into itself that preserve the origin. When $p=2$ I get the continuous group ...
11
votes
1
answer
309
views
Which closed subsets $Y$ of a compact space $X$ admit a linear extensor $C(Y)\to C(X)$?
In the following $X$ is a Hausdorff compact topological space. Let $Y$ be a closed subset of $X$.
The restriction operator $R_Y:C(X)\to C(Y)$ is surjective (Tietze), so it admits a continuous right ...
11
votes
2
answers
545
views
Is $\mathcal{B}^{\mathbb{Z}}(l^\infty(\mathbb{Z}))$ a commutative algebra?
Consider $l^\infty(\mathbb{Z})$ the Banach space of bounded complex valued functions on the abelian group $\mathbb{Z}$ with the supremum norm. It has a natural action by $\mathbb{Z}$ given by $(zf)(g):...
11
votes
1
answer
451
views
Comparison of the absolute value of an operator with its positive parts
It is well known that the absolute value on operators does not satisfy the triangle inequality.
My question is whether for all positive operators $P,Q \in B(\mathcal H)$ is there a universal ...
11
votes
1
answer
668
views
Is every continuous endomorphism of the Schwartz space a pseudo-differential operator?
Let $\mathcal{S}:= \mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ be the Schwartz space of smooth functions with rapid decay. The question is pretty simply stated in the title. Pseudo-differential act continuously on the ...
11
votes
5
answers
5k
views
A criterion for the sum of two closed sets to be closed ?
Let $V$ and $I$ be two closed subsets of a Banach space $A$.
The set $V$ is a convex cone, and $I$ is a linear subspace of $A$. I also know that $V\cap I=\{0\}$.
I would like to know whether $I+V$ ...
11
votes
1
answer
676
views
Entropy arguments used by Jean Bourgain
My question comes from understanding a probabilistic inequality in Bourgain's paper on Erdős simiarilty problem: Construction of sets of positive measure not containing an affine image of a given ...
11
votes
1
answer
336
views
Notions in the literature capturing the "symmetric" or "homogeneous" flavour of $L_p$?
This post/question is admittedly vague, but I hope that with some feedback in comments it could be made more precise.
For $E$ a Banach space, $K(E)$ and $B(E)$ will denote the Banach algebras of ...
11
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Do direct limits (filtered colimits) commute with pullbacks, in C*-algebras?
I asked this question already on math.stackexchange, but maybe it is also useful to ask this here, since it was not answered there.
Suppose we have three directed sequences of $C^*$-algebras, say $(...
11
votes
1
answer
2k
views
Bounded operator on a normed space with empty spectrum
A bounded operator acting on a complex Banach space has non-empty spectrum, and the proof of this fact uses the completeness of the space.
Is there any example of bounded operator acting on a ...
11
votes
1
answer
964
views
Quotients of l^infty
Let $M$ be a closed subspace of $l^\infty$. Suppose that the quotient $l^{\infty}/M$ is isomorphic to $l^\infty$. Is it true that $M$ is complemented in $l^\infty$?
10
votes
0
answers
226
views
Extremal bases in finite-dimensional Banach spaces
Definition. A basis $e_1,\dots,e_n$ for a Banach space $X$ is called extremal if there exists a point $s$ in the unit sphere $S_X=\{x\in X:\|x\|=1\}$ such that for every $i\in\{1,\dots,n\}$ the ...
10
votes
4
answers
1k
views
References: Infinite dimensional Lie algebras
What I really want are properties (if it is abelian, nilpotent, solvable, simple, or semisimple; Cartan subalgebras...) of the Lie algebra of smooth functions on a symplectic manifold $(M,\omega)$; ...
10
votes
1
answer
900
views
Approximation of a compactly supported function by Gaussians
Let $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ be a smooth function whose support is a closed interval, e.g. $\text{supp}(f)=[a,b]$. Then $f$ can be approximated (e.g. in $L^2$) by a linear combination of Gaussian ...
10
votes
1
answer
1k
views
When are certain group C*-algebras exact?
This is somewhere between a "reference request" and "ask an expert", but I hope it is not too trivial or off-topic.
Anyway. There has been a lot of attention given to showing that for certain ...
10
votes
1
answer
2k
views
Quantum functional analysis
Can one explain some philosophy behind "quantum functional analysis" (or "quantized functional analysis") which was initiated and developed by such researchers as: Ruan Z.-J., Pisier J., Effros E.G., ...
10
votes
2
answers
1k
views
On equibounded sequences in $L^\infty$
Let $f_n: [0, 1] \to \mathbb R$ be a sequence of positive functions in $L^\infty$ (hence a fortiori in $L^1$) that are equibounded in $L^\infty$ norm - that is $\sup_{n \in \mathbb N} \|f_n\|_{L_\...
10
votes
2
answers
666
views
Reference request: Extensions of Wiener's Tauberian Theorem
Wiener's Tauberian Theorem says that linear combinations of translations of a function $f$ are dense in $L^1(\mathbb{R})$ if and only if the zero set of the Fourier transform of $f$ is empty. This is ...
10
votes
0
answers
422
views
Upper bound Hölder norm of the solution to the non-linear PDE $\partial_t u (t, x) = \Delta_x \{ |\sigma (u (t, x))|^2 u(t, x) \}$
We fix $T>0$ and let $\mathbb T := [0, T]$. Let $\sigma : \mathbb R \to \mathbb R$ belong to the Hölder space $C^{1, \alpha}_b (\mathbb R)$ for some $\alpha \in (0, 1)$. Let $u : \mathbb T \times \...
10
votes
3
answers
2k
views
Pathological product space norm
Let $X$ and $Y$ be two normed vector spaces and $n(\cdot, \cdot)$ be any norm on $\mathbb{R}^2$. Is it always possible to define a norm on the product vector space $X \times Y$ as $||(x, y)||_{X \...
10
votes
2
answers
739
views
Unconditionally convergent series in some functional spaces
Linked with this question and discussion
(Bilinear product of two summable families), I am very
interested in counterexamples/results about the following questions (cf the end).
First, I recall that a
...
10
votes
1
answer
598
views
What happens if we rotate the kernel of an integral operator?
Given an integral operator $K$ on $L^2(\mathbb R)$ with kernel $k(x, y)$, consider the integral operator $L$ on $L^2(\mathbb R)$, whose kernel has the form $k(\alpha x+\beta y, \gamma x+\delta y)$, ...
10
votes
1
answer
594
views
Are the polynomials in $\{1/t\}$ dense in $L^2(0,1)$?
Added. My question in the title was solved (in the negative) by Nik Weaver (in the answer below) and Mateusz Kwaśnicki (in the comments). In both solutions, the reason is that the $L^2$ density fails ...
10
votes
1
answer
2k
views
Counting norms on an infinite dimensional vector space
It is known that whenever E is a finite dimensional real vector space, there is only one norm on E up to equivalence (actually one non discrete vector space topology).
Is it known what happens when E ...
10
votes
2
answers
281
views
Weak* continuity of positive parts
I'm a little embarrassed to be asking this, but surely there is a simple argument that I didn't see?
Let $(f_\lambda)$ be a net in $l^\infty$ which converges weak* to $f \in l^\infty$. We do not ...
10
votes
0
answers
207
views
Projective tensor squares of uniform algebras
In discussion with a colleague recently (Jan 2017),
$\newcommand{\AD}{A({\bf D})}\newcommand{\CT}{C({\bf T})}$
I was reminded that if $A(D)$ denotes the disc algebra and $\iota: \AD\to \CT$ is the ...
10
votes
2
answers
2k
views
Why does Riesz's Representation Theorem apply in quantum mechanics?
$\DeclareMathOperator\tr{tr}$One begins with a quantum mechanical system, i.e. a unital $C^*$-algebra $A$.
It is common to begin the discussion with embedding $A$ into the algebra of bounded operators ...
10
votes
2
answers
606
views
A characterization of metric spaces admitting a bi-Lipschitz embedding into a Hilbert space?
Theorem (??) derived in this MO-post from Schoenberg's theorem yeilds a "bipartite" characterization of metric spaces that admit an isometric embedding into a Hilbert space. This Theorem (??)...
10
votes
0
answers
656
views
“Taylor series” is to “Volterra series” as “Laurent series” is to _________?
Preamble
My question is similar to an earlier MathOverflow question:
“Taylor series” is to “Volterra series” as “Padé approximant” is to _________? which I just answered (hopefully my first ever ...
10
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Separating vectors for C$^*$-algebras
(I asked this on math.stackexchange, without response).
Let $A$ be a C$^*$-algebra, concretely acting on a Hilbert space $H$. Suppose that $\xi_0\in H$ is cyclic and separating for $A$ (that is, the ...
10
votes
5
answers
5k
views
Applications of functional analysis beyond analysis(towards algebra, geometry, number theory...) [closed]
So far, We have seen the applications of functional analysis in PDE, probability and many areas in applied mathematics. On the other hand, methods of algebraic topology are introduced to functional ...
10
votes
1
answer
658
views
Are functions of moderate growth a bornological space?
I was thinking a bit about distribution theory the last weeks and stumbled across the following question:
There are two natural locally convex topologies on the space of smooth functions of moderate ...
10
votes
1
answer
593
views
Density of smooth function in Hilbert spaces
I am looking for a simple reference to the following fact:
If $f:\Omega\to\mathbb{R}$ is continuous, where $\Omega\subset H$ is an open subset of a separable Hilbert space $H$, then for any $\...
10
votes
1
answer
533
views
Who first identified the universal $C^*$-algebra generated by an idempotent of norm at most $C$?
So much is known about hermitian and non-hermitian idempotents in a $C^*$-algebra, that someone must have written down the following.
Theorem The universal $C^*$-algebra generated by one element $x$...
10
votes
0
answers
397
views
Is $\mathcal{B}(\mathcal{H})$ a groupoid $C^*$-algebra?
Let $\mathcal{H}$ be a complex Hilbert space, and $\mathcal{B}(\mathcal{H})$ be the $C^{\ast}$-algebra of bounded operators on $\mathcal{H}$. Is there an étale groupoid $\mathcal{G}$ such that its $C^{...
9
votes
2
answers
553
views
Asymptotic behavior of Sturm-Liouville eigenvalues
I have two questions.
Consider the operator $Av = -v'' + a(x)v$ on $I = (0, L)$, with zero Dirichlet condition and $a \in C([0, L])$.
Let $(\lambda_n)$ denote the sequence of eigenvalues of $A$....
9
votes
3
answers
1k
views
Does there exist a notion of discrete riemannian metric on graph?
I would like to know if there is any notion of a discrete Riemannian metric on graphs. C. Mercat has worked on discrete Riemann Surfaces, but that's not exactly what I am working on.
To be more ...
9
votes
2
answers
1k
views
Borsuk pairs of Banach spaces
Given $X$, $Y$ two real Banach spaces, let's say that $(X,\ Y)$
is a Borsuk pair if for any continuous mapping $T$ : {$x$ $\in$
$X$ ; $||x||\leq1$} $\rightarrow$ $Y$ s.t. $T$ is odd on {$x$
$\in$ $X$ ;...
9
votes
0
answers
268
views
Existence/characterization/properties of $C^*$-algebras which "are" quantization of compact symplectic manifolds?
Understanding of "quantization" achieved much progress recent years, especially after Kontsevich breakthrough on deformation quantization, where he proved one-to-one correspondence between Poisson ...
9
votes
5
answers
870
views
Abelianization of GL(H)
This is related to Theo's question about the abelianizations of finite dimensionsal Lie groups.
I am interested in a specific (infinite-dimensional) case of the above question. Let H be an infinite-...
9
votes
1
answer
596
views
Why is the Berkovich spectrum of a C*-Algebra the same as the Gelfand spectrum?
Let $A = \mathcal{C}(X)$ be a commutative (unital) C*-Algebra. Let $Spec(A)$ denote its Gelfand spectrum
$$ Spec(A) = \{A \rightarrow \mathbb{C} : \text{non-zero *-homomorphism} \} \simeq X. $$
Now ...
9
votes
2
answers
848
views
$\zeta$-function regularized determinants
In (mathematical) physics in order to compute path integrals one often makes an infinite dimensional change of variables and uses infinite Jacobian as a purely formal expression. This step is done in ...
9
votes
1
answer
429
views
Is $\mathcal{S}(\mathbb{R}^n)$ a tame Fréchet space?
Hamilton's paper "The Inverse Function theorem of Nash and Moser" (1982, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc, vol. 7, n. 1, page $137$) proves that $C^{\infty}(M)$ is a tame Fréchet space when $M$ is a compact ...
9
votes
1
answer
652
views
Scaling in Mehta's integral
The following expression is known as Mehta's integral and deeply connected to random matrix theory:
$$\frac{1}{(2\pi)^{n/2}}\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \cdots \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \prod_{i=1}^n e^{-...
9
votes
2
answers
758
views
Number of critical points of smooth functions on $S^1$
Let $u$ be a smooth function on the unit circle $S^1$ such that $\int_{S^1}ux_j=0$, for $j=1,2$. Is the number of critical points of $u$ strictly bigger than 2?
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.
9
votes
1
answer
1k
views
A question concerning separate and joint continuity of bilinear maps
Suppose that $V$ is a locally convex topological vector space and $f:V^2 \to V$ is a bilinear map. Suppose that $C \subseteq V$ is compact and convex, $f$ maps $C^2$ into $C$ and
$f \restriction C^2$ ...
9
votes
2
answers
775
views
Heat flow, decay of the Fisher information, and $\lambda$-displacement convexity
In the whole post I will work in the flat torus $\mathbb T^d=\mathbb R^d/\mathbb Z^d$ and $\rho$ will stand for any probability measure $\mathcal P(\mathbb T^d)$. This question is strongly related to ...
9
votes
1
answer
499
views
Subspaces of $L^2(0,1)$ dense on every truncation $L^2(c,1)$
It may be better to move this to a separate question.
Let me call a linear subspace $V \subset L^2(0,1)$ to be tame if, for every linear subspace $W \subset V$, either $W$ is dense in $L^2(0,1)$, or ...