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Potential p-norm on tuples of positive operators

This is a follow-up to this question on p-norms of tuples of operators. Consider $\left[\begin{matrix} A \\ B \end{matrix}\right] \in B(H)^2_+$, meaning $A,B\geq 0$, and define $$ \left\|\left[\begin{...
Chris Ramsey's user avatar
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124 views

The bidual of the space of divergence-free vector fields

Consider the Banach space $L_1(\mathbb R^n, \mathbb R^n)$ of integrable vector fields $(n>1$) together with its subspace $N$ formed by those vectors fields whose divergence (computed in the ...
Tomasz Kania's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
420 views

What is the relationship between Hecke algebras and the enveloping algebra of Lie groups?

Here is the story as I see it. Let $G$ be an abelian locally compact group. Then the (spherical) Hecke algebra for $K=1$ is by definition the endomorphism algebra of $l^2(G)$ as a $G$-module, where ...
Tim Phalange's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
299 views

Possible Birkhoff spectra for irrational rotations

Let $\mathbb{T}=\mathbb{R}/\mathbb{Z}$ be the unit circle (think of it as of the interval $[0,1)$ with endpoints identified). Assume that $\alpha$ is irrational and consider the rotation by $\alpha$, ...
Dominik Kwietniak's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
248 views

Isometries on the unit sphere

Suppose that $X$ and $Y$ are two Banach spaces, $S_{X}$ and $S_{Y}$ their unit spheres, and $f$ an onto isometry between $S_X$ and $S_Y$. Does it follow that $X$ and $Y$ are isometric?
Markus's user avatar
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237 views

Understanding the odd-dimensional index

Given a Dirac operator $D$ on a closed odd-dimensional manifold $M$, I've sometimes heard it said that the Fredholm index of $D$ vanishes because it is an ungraded self-adjoint operator, so that $\dim\...
geometricK's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
373 views

What is known about "almost orthogonal vectors"?

Motivation: Suppose we have a kernel $k(a,b)$ defined over the natural numbers. Then by the Moore–Aronszajn theorem, we can embedd the natural number $a$ in some Hilbert space $\mathbb{H}$, which we ...
user avatar
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262 views

When is the exponential of a map proper?

Let $X$ be a compact Hausdorff space. Then if $f: A \to B$ is a map between discrete spaces, the induced map $f^\ast: X^B \to X^A$ is proper. Question: Are there other classes of map $f: A \to B$ ...
Tim Campion's user avatar
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7 votes
2 answers
824 views

Fourier series of smooth functions in infinitely many variables

Let $J$ be a set (usually countable). Let $t_j$, $j\in J$, be variables in ${\mathbb R}/2\pi i{\mathbb Z}.$ Put $u_j=\exp(it_j),$ $j\in J.$ Introduce the following semi-norms on the space of Fourier ...
Boris Tsygan's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
103 views

Rough classification of Peano Curves

By Peano curve I mean a continuous map from the unit interval that fills the unit square in $\mathbb R^2$. In the paper: Shchepin, E. V.; Bauman, K. E., Minimal Peano curve, Proc. Steklov Inst. Math....
Ivan Meir's user avatar
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85 views

Analogue of Friedrichs extension for Hilbert $C^*$-modules

Suppose one has a densely defined symmetric operator $T:\mathcal{M}\rightarrow\mathcal{M}$, where $\mathcal{M}$ is a Hilbert $A$-module for a $C^*$-algebra $A$. Suppose that $T$ is non-negative, so ...
geometricK's user avatar
  • 1,903
7 votes
0 answers
177 views

Does this ideal in $B(L_1)$ have a (bounded) right approximate identity?

I will take a roundabout way to defining this ideal, because (a) this route is how my collaborators and I came to it (b) this alternative definition, rather than the standard one, may suggest a ...
Yemon Choi's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
394 views

Inverse limit in the category of $C^{\ast}$-algebras or operator spaces

Does the inverse limits (projective limits) exist in the category of $C^{\ast}$-algebras or operator spaces? I tried to search but could not find a proper reference. Any reference or comments about ...
Math Lover's user avatar
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185 views

A special connected subset of the Cantor fan

Is there a dense connected subset $X$ of the Cantor fan $$(C\times [0,1])/(C\times \{1\})$$ such that for every two connected subsets $X_1,X_2\subseteq X$, the intersection $X_1\cap X_2$ is connected? ...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
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432 views

(geodesic) smoothness of f-divergence with respect to the Wasserstein metric

We consider the f-divergence, which takes the form $$ D_f(P \| Q) = \int_\Omega f\left(\frac{dP}{dQ}\right) dQ. $$ For example, when $f(t) = t \log t$, we obtain the KL-divergence. My question is ...
Minkov's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
181 views

Compact Kaehler submanifolds of projectivized Hilbert space

If we take a separable complex Hilbert space $H$, its projective space $PH$ is an infinite-dimensional Kähler manifold in a fairly obvious sense (see below). Suppose $M \subset PH$ is a finite-...
John Baez's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
172 views

Countable network vs countable Borel network

Definition. A family $\mathcal N$ of subsets of a topological space $X$ is called $\bullet$ a network if for any open set $U\subset X$ and point $x\in U$ there exists a set $N\in\mathcal N$ such that $...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
174 views

Is each Choquet topological group strong Choquet?

A topological space $X$ is called (strong) Choquet if the player II has a winning strategy in the (strong) Choquet game. It is known that a metrizable space $X$ is $\bullet$ Choquet if and only if it ...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
119 views

The automorphism group of the fibered cylinder

My collegue (Oleg Gutik) is interested in finding a proper reference to a description of the group $G$ of homeomorphisms $h:\mathbb T\times\mathbb R\to\mathbb T\times\mathbb R$ of the cylinder that ...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
7 votes
0 answers
287 views

Does geometric realization commute with passing to the compactly generated topology?

My question is in the title, but here is a more detailed formulation: Let Top be the category of all topological spaces and continuous maps, and let CGTop be the subcategory of compactly generated ...
Dan Ramras's user avatar
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0 answers
328 views

Status of two Banach space theory open problems posted by Pełczyński

In the book 'Open Problems in the Geometry and Analysis of Banach Spaces', I am interested in the following two problems. Problem $1$: Let $X$ be a separable infinite-dimensional Banach space that is ...
Idonknow's user avatar
  • 623
7 votes
0 answers
200 views

Equivalent strictly convex norms in spaces of small density

Can one construct in ZFC a Banach space of density character $\omega_1$ that does not have an equivalent strictly convex norm? Maybe one may apply some kind of a Löwenheim–Skolem-type argument to a ...
Tomasz Kania's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
243 views

Loomis-Whitney versus Gagliardo inequalities

When searching for a reference, I discovered a curious fact about the Wikipedia page concerning the Loomis-Whitney Inequality (LWI).This page, which exists only in an English version, states that the ...
Denis Serre's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
106 views

The first homotopic Baire class

Let $X$ and $Y$ be topological spaces. A map $f:X\to Y$ belongs to the first Baire class (to the first homotopic Baire class), if there exists a continuous map $H:X\times \omega\to Y$ (a continuous ...
MasleniZZa's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
305 views

Generalizing Gromov Hausdorff distance using Vietoris topology

There are two notions of convergence of a sequence of metric space. One is by the Gromov Hausdorff distance for compact metric spaces, another one is the pointed Gromov Hausdorff convergence for ...
JSCB's user avatar
  • 1,630
7 votes
0 answers
619 views

Lavrentiev Phenomenon

Does there exist a (onedimensional) integral functional of calculus of variations $$ F(y)=\int_a^b f(t,y(t),y'(t))\,dt
 $$ such that not only $$ \inf_{y\in\operatorname{Lip}([a,b])}F(y)>\inf_{y\in ...
Carlo Mantegazza's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
222 views

Can C*/W*-algebras be realized as (involutive?) monoid/co-monoid objects?

I would like to know how close one can get to realizing the category of C*-algebras as a category of monoid objects. Related (almost, but not quite, duplicate) questions are: "Recovering a monoidal ...
Tom Mainiero's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
549 views

Counter-example to the completeness of the Wasserstein metric

$\newcommand{\P}{\mathcal{P}}$ Let $(E,d)$ be a complete metric space, let $\P(E)$ be the set of all probability measures on $(E,\mathcal{B}(E))$. Let $W_d$ be the $1$-Wasserstein (Kantorovich) ...
Oleg's user avatar
  • 931
7 votes
0 answers
504 views

Intersection form of logarithmic transformations

Now I want to calculate the intersection form of a logarithmic transformation which is defined as follows. Let $X$ be an oriented, closed, simply-connected 4-manifold and $T^2\subset X$ be an ...
Hopf Fibration's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
478 views

Characterizing the sum $L^1 + L^\infty + L^{1,\infty} + L^{\infty, 1}$ of iterated Lebesgue spaces "by duality"

For the usual Lebesgue spaces $L^p (\mu)$ ($p \in [1,\infty]$) on a ($\sigma$-finite) measure space $(X,\mu)$, it is well-known that one has the characterization $$ L^p (\mu) = \left\{f : X \to \Bbb{...
PhoemueX's user avatar
  • 734
7 votes
0 answers
214 views

Is each completely minimal topological group minimal?

A topological group $G$ is called $\bullet$ minimal if it admits no strictly weaker Hausdorff group topology; $\bullet$ completely minimal if it is Raikov-complete in each weaker Hausdorff group ...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
7 votes
0 answers
1k views

Books on von Neumann algebras

I am interested in non-commutative $L^p$ spaces. I have a very basic background on von Neumann algebras. But all the papers appearing now a days really requires very deep knowledge of von Neumann ...
Mathbuff's user avatar
  • 455
7 votes
0 answers
132 views

Different definitions of fractional sobolev spaces

Let $\Omega$ be a bounded and smooth domain in $\mathbb R^d$. For any $s\in (0,1)$ we can define $H_s(\Omega)$ to be the space of functions $u\in L^2(\Omega)$ such that $$(x,y)\mapsto \frac{|u(x)-u(y)|...
Thomas's user avatar
  • 630
7 votes
0 answers
3k views

What is vague convergence and what does it accomplish?

For convenience, let's say that I have a locally compact Hausdorff space $X$ and am concerned with probability measures on its Borel $\sigma$-algebra $\mathcal{B}(X)$. Natural vector spaces to ...
Greg Zitelli's user avatar
  • 1,114
7 votes
0 answers
369 views

Baire category of tall ideals

Problem. Is it consistent with ZFC that $\mathfrak t=\omega_1$ and each $\omega_1$-generated tall $P$-ideal is of the second Baire category? (Asked 01.10.2016 by David Chodounsky at page 20 of Volume ...
Lviv Scottish Book's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
187 views

distance distributions on a hypersphere?

Fix a real number $0\leq t\leq 1$ and an integer $n>1$. Let $\mathbb{S}^{n-1}\subset\mathbb{R}^n$ denote the unit hypersphere. Define $$d_N(n;t):=\max\sum_{i<j}\Vert P_i-P_j\Vert_2^t$$ where ...
T. Amdeberhan's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
304 views

Derivation of a stochastic Navier-Stokes equation under the assumption of perturbed particle trajectories

Let $d\in\left\{2,3\right\}$ $\mathcal V_t\subseteq\mathbb R^d$ be the bounded domain occupied by an incompressible Newtonian fluid at time $t\ge 0$ $\Phi_t:\mathcal V_0\to\mathcal V_t$ such that $\...
0xbadf00d's user avatar
  • 167
7 votes
0 answers
501 views

intuitive connection between The KdV equations and the Virasoro bott group

I posted this on stack exchange but had no joy, perhaps someone here can answer : The Euler Arnold equation expresses equations (usually from mathematical physics) as geodesic equations on a Lie group....
R Mary's user avatar
  • 979
7 votes
0 answers
171 views

Are there always large discrete families of normal measures?

Let $\kappa$ be a measurable cardinal. We give the Stone space of all ultrafilters on $\kappa$ the usual topology, where each $x\subseteq\kappa$ determines a basic open $[x]=\{U;x\in U\}$. The ...
Miha Habič's user avatar
  • 2,389
7 votes
0 answers
430 views

algebraic structure of Integral Steenrod squares

It is well known that the classical Steenrod squares $Sq^a$ satisfy the Adem relations $$Sq^aSq^b= \sum_c \binom{b-c-1}{a-2c}Sq^{a+b-c}Sq^c\;.$$ In the case where $a$ is odd, one can define an ...
Daniel Grady's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
244 views

Commutation preserving operators

Let $A$ and $B$ be unital $C$*-algebras and let $T\colon A\to B$ be a bounded linear bijection that preserves commuting elements, i.e., $ab=ba$ implies $TaTb=TbTa$. Does $T^{**}$ then also preserve ...
Mark Roelands's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
340 views

Embeddings between weighted Besov spaces

Consider the Besov spaces $B_{p,q}^s(\mathbb{R}^d)$ for parameters $0<p,q\leq \infty$ and $s\in \mathbb{R}$. The weighted Besov space $B_{p,q}^s(\mathbb{R}^d;\mu)$ is defined for $\mu \in \mathbb{R}...
Goulifet's user avatar
  • 2,306
7 votes
0 answers
266 views

Remote points in $\beta X$

It is known that in general convergence by sequences is not enough to account for all points in $\beta X \setminus X$, where $\beta X$ refers to the Stone-Cech compactification of a topological space $...
noname's user avatar
  • 79
7 votes
0 answers
227 views

Uniform approximation of separately continuous functions on zero-dimensional spaces

For topological spaces $X,Y,Z$ а function $f:X\times Y\to Z$ is called separately continuous if for any $(x,y)\in X\times Y$ the restrictions of $f$ to the sets $\{x\}\times Y$ and $X\times \{y\}$ are ...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
7 votes
0 answers
168 views

Cutting a piece of cake that $n$ people value as exactly $w$

Stromquist and Woodall (1985) study the problem of Sets on which several measures agree. There are $n$ non-atomic value measures on the unit circle, and a parameter $w\in(0,1)$. The goal is to find a ...
Erel Segal-Halevi's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
183 views

Is there a quotient of $c_0$ without the approximation property?

The famous example of Enflo of a Banach space without the approximation property is actually a subspace of $c_0$. Is there a quotient of $c_0$ without the approximation property? This would follow if ...
user136256's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
571 views

Thom Class of tensor bundles

Suppose $\xi$ and $\eta$ are oriented vector bundles over a CW-complex $B$. Is it possible to express the Thom class (with ${\mathbb Z}$ coefficients) of $\xi\otimes \eta$ or even ${\rm Sym}^2(\xi)$ ...
Panagiotis Konstantis's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
141 views

Kolmogorov superposition representation of Lipschitz functions

Kolmogorov's superposition theorem states that if $f:[0,1]^n \to \mathbb{R}$ is an arbitrary continuous function, then it has the representation \begin{align} f(x) = \sum_{q=0}^{2n} \Phi_q (\sum_{p=1}...
Asterix's user avatar
  • 371
7 votes
0 answers
241 views

A "slice-map" type problem for symmetric tensors in the square of a nuclear C*-algebra

Throughout: let $\otimes$ denote the minimal (i.e. spatial) $\newcommand{\Cst}{{\rm C}^*}\Cst$-tensor product of two $\Cst$-algebras. Let $B$ be a unital, nuclear $\Cst$-algebra and let $A\subset B$ ...
Yemon Choi's user avatar
  • 25.8k
7 votes
0 answers
269 views

Approximation in the tensor square of a weakly exact von Neumann algebra

Background. I think I can prove something about a certain construction definition for Fourier algebras of discrete groups, under the assumption that the group is exact (well, really I use Yu's ...
Yemon Choi's user avatar
  • 25.8k

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