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9 votes
1 answer
311 views

Continuously varying norms

Let $V$ be a finite-dimensional real vector space with its Euclidean topology. Then all norms on $V$ are equivalent and consequently given two norms $\lVert-\rVert$, $\lVert-\rVert'$, the number $$ d =...
Jakob Werner's user avatar
  • 1,153
9 votes
1 answer
221 views

Function spaces satisfying $\mathcal{F}(M\times N)\simeq\mathcal{F}(M)\otimes\mathcal{F}(N)$

Let $M \mapsto\mathcal{F}(M)$ be a map associating topological vector spaces of some type (that I will call "function spaces") to geometric spaces $M$ of some type. For $M$, I'm mostly ...
Qfwfq's user avatar
  • 23.3k
9 votes
1 answer
355 views

Scottish Book Problem 172

The problem is formulated using old terminology and I want to understand what it actually says. The problem reads: "A space $E$ of type (B) has the property (a) if the weak closure of an ...
Hannes Thiel's user avatar
  • 3,497
9 votes
1 answer
831 views

Baire category theorem for uncountable unions

Any compact Hausdorff space $X$ is a Baire space: if the set $X$ is a meager set (meaning a countable union of nowhere dense subsets, also known as a set of first category), then $X$ is empty. I am ...
Dmitri Pavlov's user avatar
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 ...
leo monsaingeon's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
554 views

Fefferman's article: Pointwise convergence of Fourier series

I have some problems reading Pointwise convergence of Fourier series by Fefferman https://www.jstor.org/stable/1970917 When I proceed to Lemma 2, Chapter 6, I could not verify either of the following:...
Thomas Yang's user avatar
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 ...
Niki's user avatar
  • 335
9 votes
1 answer
459 views

Why should the map $-\Delta^{-1}$ be continuous?

I'm reading an article by Wei-Ming Ni about the existence of solutions for the elliptic problem $$\Delta u +|x|^\lambda |u|^\tau =0,$$ in the unit ball $\Omega$ in dimension $>2$. I'm looking for ...
Leo163's user avatar
  • 91
9 votes
2 answers
778 views

Rellich's theorem from compact resolvent

On a compact Riemannian manifold, we know that the Laplacian $\Delta$ has compact resolvent. In proving this, one typical way is to use Rellich's theorem about the compact embedding of $H^1(M)$ into $...
anonymous's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
693 views

What happens to continuous spectrum upon discretization?

Excuse me for a bit of an vague question, but I haven't been able to find a definite answer for this for quite some time. My question is regarding (mostly non-normal )linear operators and their ...
justin.b's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
2k views

Dual or pre-dual of BV

Was there any relevant work to determine the dual (or more likely the predual) of the space of bounded variation functions $BV(\mathbb{R}^n)$ (I recall the definition : a function in $L^1(\mathbb{R}^n)...
Paul-Benjamin's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
947 views

On the convergence of the function series $\sum_{n=0}^\infty(-1)^n\frac{f^{(n)}(x)}{n!}x^n$

Let $f$ be a smooth real function defined around origin. If we differentiate term by term the series $\hat{f}(x):=\sum_{n=0}^\infty(-1)^n\frac{f^{(n)}(x)}{n!}x^n$, we get $\frac{d}{dx}\hat{f}(x)=0$. \...
E.Akrami's user avatar
  • 107
9 votes
3 answers
1k views

Why is this operator compact?

Let $D$ be the Dirac-Operator on $\mathbb{R}^n$ or more generally the Dirac spinor bundle $\mathcal{S}\to M$ of a (semi-)Riemannian spin manifold $M$. Then we consider $D$ as an unbouded Operator on $\...
Robert Rauch's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
783 views

Topological Generalization of Whitney's Extension Theorem

From Wikipedia: In mathematics, in particular in mathematical analysis, the Whitney extension theorem is a partial converse to Taylor's theorem. Roughly speaking, the theorem asserts that if $A$ is ...
Tom LaGatta's user avatar
  • 8,512
9 votes
1 answer
1k views

Endpoint Strichartz Estimates for the Schrödinger Equation

The non-endpoint Strichartz estimates for the (linear) Schrödinger equation: $$ \|e^{i t \Delta/2} u_0 \|_{L^q_t L^r_x(\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}^d)} \lesssim \|u_0\|_{L^2_x(\mathbb{R}^d)} $$ $$ 2 \...
John H's user avatar
  • 217
9 votes
1 answer
300 views

What are the points of the algebra of polynomial functions on an arbitrary vector space?

Let $V$ be an arbitrary vector space over some field $\mathbb{K}$ (UPD: of characteristic 0), $V^*=\mathrm{Hom}(V,\mathbb{K})$ its linear dual. Let $\mathrm{Sym}_\mathbb{K}(V^*)$ be the free ...
Dima Roytenberg's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
428 views

The cardinality of projections of subsets of the Hilbert cube by inner products

I have three related questions. Question 1: Is there a subset $X$ of the Hilbert cube $[0,1]^{\Bbb N}$ of cardinality continuum, such that for each sequence $a\in [0,1]^{\Bbb N}$ with $\sum a_n$ ...
Boaz Tsaban's user avatar
  • 3,104
9 votes
1 answer
219 views

Examples of non-self-induced algebras

Let $A$ be a (possibly non-unital) algebra over $\mathbb C$. We say that $A$ is self-induced if the product map $m:A \otimes_A A \rightarrow A$ is an isomorphism. Here $A \otimes_A A$ is the ...
Matthew Daws's user avatar
  • 18.7k
9 votes
1 answer
359 views

Relaxation of notion of positive definite function

A function $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ is called positive definite (in the semigroup sense) if for all $n\geq 1$ and $x_1,\ldots,x_n\in\mathbb{R}$ pairwise different the matrix $(f(x_i+x_j))_{i,j=1}^n$...
Hans's user avatar
  • 3,031
9 votes
1 answer
977 views

Completed tensor product is exact

In the beginning of the 7th chapter of the book "Spectral theory and analytic geometry over non-Archimedean fields" by Vladimir Berkovich one can find the phrase "...tensor product functor is exact on ...
Boris Bilich's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
410 views

The discrete Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequality

Let $p>1$, $q>1$, $0<\lambda<1$ be such that $\frac{1}{p}+\frac{1}{q}+\lambda=2$. Suppose that $(a_{k})\in \ell^{p}(\mathbb{Z})$ and $(b_{k})\in \ell^{q}(\mathbb{Z})$. It is known ([1,2,3]...
user130023's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
542 views

Behavior of a Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff problem at infinity

The Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff problem is to obtain $\log(e^{X}e^{Y})$ where $X,Y$ are appropriate operators. The Dynkin series $$\log(e^{tX}e^{tY})=t(X+Y)+\frac{t^2}{2}[X,Y]+o(t^3)$$ gives an expansion ...
Semiclassical's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
548 views

What mode of convergence is this?

I'm interested in a new (to me) mode of convergence which is stronger than convergence in measure/probability. I want to know if it has a name and if it is used much in the literature. I will write ...
Jason Rute's user avatar
  • 6,287
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 $A$....
M.S.'s user avatar
  • 369
9 votes
1 answer
427 views

A version of von Neumann inequality

Assume that $X,Y,Z$ are three commuting operators acting in a Hilbert space $H$. Assume also that they satisfy following properties: 1) $\|Z\| \le 1$, i.e. $Z$ is a contraction; 2) For any complex ...
Karl Marx's user avatar
  • 315
9 votes
3 answers
4k views

Is there a reference for compact imbedding theory of Hölder space?

This question is posted and unanswered from math.stackexchange. Suppose $0 < \alpha < \beta$ and $\Omega$ is bounded. Then, the Hölder space $C^\beta(\Omega)$ is compactly imbedded to $C^\alpha(...
kenneth's user avatar
  • 1,399
9 votes
1 answer
544 views

Question on Hilbert Manifolds

I have a very basic question on Hilbert manifolds. Consider the Hilbert space $$ \mathcal{H}:= L^2(S^1) $$ with $S^1$ the unit circle. On $\mathcal{H}$ let us introduce the equivalence relation $$ ...
pil's user avatar
  • 233
9 votes
1 answer
450 views

A question on infinite dimensional Gaussian measure and affine tranformations.

Let $\gamma_\infty$ denote the product Gaussian measure on $\mathbb{R}^\mathbb{N}$. Which $a,b \geq 0$ satisfy that for every Borel set $K\subseteq \mathbb{R}^\mathbb{N}$ of positive measure, $a K + ...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
9 votes
2 answers
477 views

An extension of Gaussian Isoperimetry

The Gaussian isoperimetric inequality (Tsirelson,Sudakov, Borell) states that among all sets of given Gaussian measure in the n-dimensional Euclidean space, half-spaces have the minimal Gaussian ...
BharatRam's user avatar
  • 949
9 votes
1 answer
384 views

Comparing two $\sigma$-algebras on $B(\ell^1)$

Let us consider $B(\ell^1)$, bounded linear operators on $\ell^1$. We recall the weak operator topology, denoted by $w$, on $B(\ell^1)$ is determined as follow $$w-\lim T_i=T \Longleftrightarrow \...
ABB's user avatar
  • 4,058
9 votes
1 answer
415 views

Relationship between Harish-Chandra Schwartz space and more generic Schwartz spaces

If $G$ is a connected semisimple Lie group with finite center, Harish-Chandra defined a Schwartz space of rapidly decreasing functions on $G$ as the space of $\mathrm{C}^\infty$ functions defined by ...
Cameron Zwarich's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
570 views

Elements of $L^p$ and nice representatives of equivalence classes

Considering $L^p$ $( 1 \leq p < \infty)$ as a normed vector space, each element of $L^p$ is actually an Equivalent class. Take $[f] \in L^p $ as an Equivalent class, What is the Nicest possible ...
Red shoes's user avatar
  • 369
9 votes
1 answer
280 views

Fredholm theory on Fr\'echet spaces

Dear everybody, In my study of the classial Fredholm theory on Banach spaces, I am interested in the corresponding Fredholm theory on Fr\'echet spaces. But it seems to me that there is little ...
Qingping Zeng's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
395 views

Is there a coalgebraic characterisation of the hyperfinite II_1 factor?

Peter Freyd showed that the real interval [0, 1] is a final coalgebra for a functor on sets equipped with two points, which sends such a set to the 'wedge' of two copies of itself, identifying the ...
David Corfield's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
670 views

Reference for "Every compact quasinilpotent operator is the limit of nilpotent ones"

It was mentioned on Page 916 Problem 7 of Halmos's "Ten Problems in Hilbert space" that there is a proof for "Every compact quasinilpotent operator is the limit of nilpotent ones" ...
Rye's user avatar
  • 191
9 votes
1 answer
621 views

Uniqueness of solutions of Young differential equations

Consider the following one dimensional Young differential equation: \begin{align*} &Y_t=\int_0^t Y_s dX_s,\quad t\in[0,1];\\ &Y_0=0. \end{align*} Here the driving process $X$ is a bounded ...
Oleg's user avatar
  • 931
9 votes
1 answer
916 views

Inverse Fourier transform of an $L^2$ function as limit on balls

$B_m :=\{x \in \Bbb R^n : ||x|| \le m\}$ and $\mathscr{F}f$ denotes the $L^2$ fourier transform of an $f \in L^2(\Bbb R^n)$. I am trying to show that If $f \in L^2(\Bbb R^n)$ then $f(y)=\lim\limits_{...
Brozovic's user avatar
  • 201
9 votes
1 answer
646 views

Have the explicit Poisson-type formulas of Guinand and Meyer been observed before?

In a recent paper of Meyer Measures with locally finite support and spectrum PNAS vol. 113 no. 12:3152–3158 (behind a paywall, but see also these seminar notes) some new explicit Poisson-type formulas ...
Thomas Sauvaget's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
385 views

A Generalized Version of Maximal Correlation and Hypercontractivity of Conditional Expectation Operator

Given a pair of random variables $(X,Y)$ over a product space $\mathcal{X}\times \mathcal{Y}$, the maximal correlation coefficient is defined as $$\rho_2(X;Y):=\sup\frac{\mathbb{E}[f(X)g(Y)]}{||f||_2||...
math-Student's user avatar
  • 1,109
9 votes
1 answer
598 views

Trouble with Jordan form of the truncated Carleman-matrix for $\sin(x)$ as size $n$ goes to infinity

I'm currently trying to get familiar with the Jordan normal form for matrices; and after some example I ask for the possible Jordan-form for the Carleman matrix for the function $f(x) = \sin(x)$ when ...
Gottfried Helms's user avatar
9 votes
3 answers
654 views

measure with given push-forwards

Let $X,Y$ be locally compact spaces (in my specific case, they are locally compact groups). Suppose that we are given a measure $\mu$ on $X$ and a finite number of quotient maps $p_1,\ldots,p_n:Y\...
steven deprez's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
674 views

Small crown probabilities (and infinite dimensional margin assumption)

My question is: How do I find sharp upper bounds on $P(|q|\leq \epsilon)$ uniformly over a set of gaussian polynomes $q$ of degree two. Notations and definitions (to make the question rigorous) Let ...
9 votes
0 answers
163 views

Moore-Penrose partial isometries and hermitian elements

Let $A$ be a unital Banach algebra. An element $a \in A$ is hermitian if $\|\mathrm{exp}(ita)\|=1$ for every $t \in \mathbb{R}$. An element $a \in A$ is Moore-Penrose invertible if there exists $b \in ...
Hannes Thiel's user avatar
  • 3,497
9 votes
0 answers
240 views

What is known about when $vN(G)$ is a factor, for a locally compact group $G$?

When $G$ is a discrete group, it is an elementary result in the theory of von Neumann algebras that the group von Neumann algebra $vN(G)$ is a factor if and only if $G$ is an ICC group. What is known ...
Jared White's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
224 views

On the conditions of convergence in the generalized Riemann-Lebesgue lemma

I am reposting the following question that I asked in the MSE site here. As I mentioned there, The following generalizations of the Riemann-Lebesgue lemma are rather well known (Kahane, C. S., ...
Oliver Díaz's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
321 views

Best smoothing for the Prime Number Theorem?

There are plenty of proofs of the Prime Number Theorem with explicit error terms - it actually looks like a rather competitive field (see Remark 1.4 in https://arxiv.org/pdf/2204.02588.pdf). Several ...
H A Helfgott's user avatar
  • 20.2k
9 votes
0 answers
210 views

Why and how is a representation "continuously decomposable"?

What I am asking may apply to a much more general setting and I am interested in the underlying level of generality of these statements, mostly with canonical references. However I state the question ...
Desiderius Severus's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
1k views

Weak compactness in $\mathcal{F}(X)$

Let $(X,0)$ be a pointed metric space and let $\mathcal{F}(X)$ be the natural predual of ${\rm Lip}_0(X)$, the space of Lipschitz functions on $X$ that map $0$ to $0$; here $\mathcal{F}(X)$ is really ...
Tomasz Kania's user avatar
  • 11.3k
9 votes
0 answers
540 views

Why is spectral theory developed for $\mathbb C$

Spectral theory is a fundamental part of operator theory and the spectrum of many operators is investigated throughout the existing literature. And that is for a good reason: If $A$ is some closed ...
Yaddle's user avatar
  • 381
8 votes
2 answers
630 views

Extracting subsequences in Banach spaces, along an ultrafilter?

There are various principles in Banach space theory that allow one to pass from a given sequence of vectors $(x_n)$, to a subsequence $(x_{n_k})$ with some desired property. I'm thinking here, in ...
Iian Smythe's user avatar
  • 3,115

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