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59 votes
9 answers
10k views

Motivation for and history of pseudo-differential operators

Suppose you start from partial differential equations and functional analysis (on $\mathbb R^n$ and on real manifolds). Which prominent example problems lead you to work with pseudo-differential ...
shuhalo's user avatar
  • 5,327
2 votes
2 answers
825 views

Existence of extreme points

Let $(X,d)$ be a complete metric linear space whose balls are convex. Let $Y\subseteq X$ be a bounded, closed and convex subset that verifies the following property: for all $y_0\in Y$, the distance ...
Valerio Capraro's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
753 views

center of the algebra of bounded operators [closed]

Suppose that $X$ is a Banach space. How to prove that the center of the algebra $B(X)$ (the algebra of bounded operators on $X$) consists only of operators of the form $aI$, where $a$ is scalar and $I$...
ivo's user avatar
  • 33
12 votes
1 answer
329 views

Ideals in smooth subalgebras of C*-algebras

Let $B$ be a $C^{*}$-algebra and $\mathcal{B}$ a dense *-subalgebra stable under holomorphic functional calculus and $C^{1}$-functional calculus for selfadjoint elements. Also, $\mathcal{B}$ is a ...
alterationx10's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
410 views

Is the unitary group of $l^2(A)$ with the strict topology contractible?

Let $A$ be a $C^*$-algebra with countable approximate unit. Let $\mathbb{K}$ denote the compact operators on a separable Hilbert space. Mingo and later Cuntz and Higson have shown that the unitary ...
Ulrich Pennig's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
156 views

Holomorphic stability of inverse limit of pre-$C^*$-algebras

Let A be a C*-algebra and let At be a set of dense *-subalgebras of A, stable under holomorphic functional calculus on A, which are also Banach algebras complete with respect to the norms ||$\cdot$||t....
Kolya Ivankov's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
538 views

General theory for p-normed spaces

Hello, in functional analysis and operator theory, you encounter several (at first glance, at least) similar constructions of normed spaces that can be indexed with some $ p \in [1,\infty]$, and ...
shuhalo's user avatar
  • 5,327
0 votes
1 answer
643 views

Is this (interpolation) inequality right?

Suppose that $\Omega$ is a bounded domain in $\mathbb{R}^3$, $F$ is bounded in $L^\infty (\Omega \times (0,T))\cap (\cap_{k=1}^\infty L^{5/3}(0,T;C^k(\bar{\Omega})))$. Question: Can we say that $F$ ...
jack's user avatar
  • 61
4 votes
1 answer
688 views

Subgroups of U(M_n)

can any subgroup of the unitary group of full matrix alg $M_d(\mathbb{C})$ be approximated on finite sets by a finite subgroup? i.e. is the following True or false? Let $n, d$ be positive integers ...
Paulo's user avatar
  • 155
3 votes
0 answers
251 views

What is the origin of the metrization problem for compact convex sets?

The following is an ``old question in analysis:'' Is it true that every perfectly normal compact convex subset of a locally convex topological vector space is metrizable? Here perfectly normal means ...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
6 votes
0 answers
295 views

Is there an idempotent measure on the free LD system?

This is a follow up question to MO question "Idempotent measures on the free binary system?". Let $(A,*)$ be the free binary operation on one generator which satisfies the left self distributive law: ...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
13 votes
1 answer
736 views

Idempotent measures on the free binary system?

Let $(S,*)$ be the free (non associative) binary system on one generator (so $S$ is just the set of terms in $*$ and $1$). There is an extension of $*$ to the space $P(S)$ of finitely additive ...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
3 votes
0 answers
356 views

Stability of convex sets w.r.t. integration over [0,1]

In the preprint on pages 19−20, first using Hahn−Banach, one proves Lemma 38. For any closed convex set $U$ in a real Hausdorff locally convex space $E$ and for any Riemann integrable $\gamma:[0,1]\...
TaQ's user avatar
  • 3,584
11 votes
4 answers
1k views

Example of noncomplete quotient of complete lcs mod closed subspace

The following statement is well-known: for a Fréchet space $V$ and a closed subspace $W \subseteq V$ the quotient $V / W$ is again complete and hence a Fréchet space. For the particular case of a ...
Stefan Waldmann's user avatar
48 votes
6 answers
7k views

Is there an "elegant" non-recursive formula for these coefficients? Also, how can one get proofs of these patterns?

Not sure if this is a "good" question for this forum or if it'll get panned, but here goes anyway... Consider this problem. I've been trying to find a formula to expand the "regular iteration" of "...
9 votes
1 answer
2k views

Rate of convergence of smooth mollifiers

How does one figure out/prove the rate of convergence (in some norm) of mollifiers given a function bounded in some other norm (say Sobolev space, Besov space)? Also, is there a dimensional analysis ...
Phil Isett's user avatar
  • 2,243
1 vote
1 answer
227 views

Are these ideals in rings of operators on Hilbert space unique?

Suppose that, for every Hilbert space $H$, we have a subset $I(H) \subseteq B(H)$ of bounded linear operators on $H$, and that together all $I(H)$ form a two-sided ideal, in the sense that whenever $h ...
Chris Heunen's user avatar
  • 3,937
6 votes
1 answer
1k views

Must a surjective isometry on a dual space have a pre-adjoint?

Background: Let $X$ be a Banach space. We know a linear map $h$ is a surjective isometry of $X$ if and only if its adjoint $h^*$ is a surjective isometry of $X^*$. In general, a linear map $g:X^* \...
user13391's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
181 views

Reference request - spectral radius formula for linear transformations in char p

I am finishing up a paper and I would like to be able to quote a theorem that does what is said in the title. To be specific let me introduce some notations: ${\bf F}$ is a local field of ...
Valerio Talamanca's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
580 views

An analogue of Hilbert-Schmidt theorem for multilinear forms

Let $H$ be a (the) real separable Hilbert space. The Hilbert--Schmidt theorem says that a compact self-adjoint operator $A$ has an eigenfunction expansion. Instead of operator, we can think of a ...
zhoraster's user avatar
  • 1,533
1 vote
0 answers
477 views

A norm ratio inequality

Let $y,z\in(0,1)^n$ satisfy $||y||_1 = ||z||_1=1$. Then $$ \frac{||z||_3}{||z||_2} \le K_n ||z/y||_\infty \frac{||y||_3}{||y||_2} $$ where $z/y\in\mathbb R^n$ is the coordinate-wise quotient of $z$ ...
Aryeh Kontorovich's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
329 views

Looking for substitutes for co-free modules in a topological setting

I should say that I'm not a category theorist or an abstract algebraist, so maybe this will be very pedestrian. I have the following, somewhat vague question: I have categories C and D, a ...
Matthew Daws's user avatar
  • 18.7k
13 votes
1 answer
404 views

Self map of unitary group

Let $H$ be a Hilbert space and let $u_1 \in U(H)$ be a unitary operator on $H$. Consider the self-map $w: U(H) \to U(H)$ which is given by $$w(v) := v^2 u_1 v^{-1}.$$ Since $U(H)$ is connected, there ...
Andreas Thom's user avatar
  • 25.5k
21 votes
3 answers
3k views

Can you tell whether a space is Banach from the unit ball?

Let $V$ be a real vector space. It is well known that a subset $B\subset V$ is the unit ball for some norm on $V$ if and only if $B$ satisfies the following conditions: $B$ is convex, i.e. if $v,w\...
Jim Belk's user avatar
  • 8,493
8 votes
1 answer
2k views

Recent progress on Bochner-Riesz conjecture

Consider the family of operators $T_\delta$, $\delta \geq 0$, defined on $\mathbb{R}^n$ by $ \widehat{T_\delta f}(\xi) = (1-|\xi|^2)_+^\delta \widehat{f}(\xi). $ ($(1-|\xi|^2)_+^\delta$ are known as ...
Vince's user avatar
  • 505
7 votes
1 answer
823 views

On a decomposition of L^1(G)

[EDITED by Y. Choi - I have attempted to paraphrase the original question into something a bit terser and more precise; if this is not what the original poster intended, they should make corrections ...
Acky's user avatar
  • 643
8 votes
1 answer
453 views

Singularity structure of integrals of rational functions

Suppose I have a convergent integral of the form $\int_0^1dx_1\dots\int_0^1 dx_n \frac{P(x_i)}{Q(x_i)}$, where $P$ and $Q$ are polynomial functions of $n$ nonnegative real variables $x_i$. Let the ...
David S-D's user avatar
  • 373
2 votes
1 answer
194 views

Is there any result discribing the value of the correlation of a measurable function of `$X$` and itself: `$corr(f(X),X)$` ?

Let $X$ be a random variable, and $f$ a measurable function. Is there any particular relationship between the expression of $f$ and $corr(f(X),X)$? BACKGROUND The background of asking the value of $...
J.Xie's user avatar
  • 23
6 votes
1 answer
2k views

Finite element method inverse estimate

$\DeclareMathOperator\diam{diam}$Looking for a proof in the literature of the following lemma: Let $K\subset\mathbb{R}^d$ be a bounded domain. Let $P_X$ be a finite dimensional subspace of $\mathcal{...
alext87's user avatar
  • 3,217
1 vote
1 answer
275 views

Shift operator that generates separable orbit

Suppose, that $f$ is bounded measurable function, $T_h(f)(x) = f(x+h)$ is the shift operator. How to prove, that if the whole orbit $T_h(f):\, h\in\mathbb{R}$ has a dense, countable subset $T_{n_k}(f)$...
Maciej Skorski's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
735 views

Parametrisations for null temperature functions: nonuniqueness of solutions to the heat equation

Disclaimer. I expect this is a highly open problem, but maybe I'm wrong and someone has come up with some answers besides those given here. In any case, all information appreciated, thanks! Definition....
Zen Harper's user avatar
  • 1,990
1 vote
0 answers
400 views

Uniqueness of differential adjoint operator

I wonder if someone can help me on what is, probably, a simple question but is baffling me at the moment! In standard texts on functional analysis, something like the following is written Let $L\...
Phil's user avatar
  • 11
0 votes
1 answer
474 views

Hilbert space having all norms (and seminorms) continous.

Suppose I have a Hilbert space $H$ such that every seminorm on $H$ is continuous with respect to the inner-product induced norm. Is $H$ necessarily finite-dimensional? If not, is there an easy ...
RadonNikodym's user avatar
19 votes
1 answer
3k views

Infinite convex combinations in a Banach space

Let's say that a subset $C$ of a Banach space $X$ is $\sigma$-convex if the following property holds: For any sequence $(x_k)_{k\ge0}$ in $C$, and for any sequence of non-negative real numbers $(\...
Pietro Majer's user avatar
  • 60.5k
5 votes
2 answers
958 views

L1 distance from a trigonometric susbspace

How to check, whether the $L^{1}$ distance between a finite exponential sum $S_{F}(x)=\sum\limits_{n\in F} \exp(inx)$ and the $L^{1}$-closure of subspace $\mathrm{span}\left(\exp(inx): n\in \mathbb{Z}\...
Maciej Skorski's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
915 views

Can you interpret this divergent integral?

In this ArXiv paper by Wilk and Wlodarczyk (published in Physical Review Letters), equation 16 has essentially the following definition of a function: $$\text{f(x)=}\frac{c}{2Dx^2}\exp[\int^x_0 \frac{\...
SMH's user avatar
  • 33
1 vote
1 answer
367 views

An integral which is related to Biharmonic extension

In my research, I need to evaluate an integral: $$\int_{R^{3}}\frac{y^{3}}{(|x-\xi|^{2}+y^{2})^{3}}\log(|\xi^{2}|+\frac{1}{4})d\xi$$ where $x\in R^{3}$, $y\geq0$. Moreover, I want to see whether it ...
wrwrnm's user avatar
  • 11
1 vote
0 answers
174 views

Eigenvalues of a Parametrized Family of Linear Functions

Suppose that we have a family of linear functions $L(\alpha) : \mathbb{R}^n \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^n$, where $\alpha$ is a positive real number. For each $\alpha$, it is given that $L(\alpha)$ is a ...
Eric Haengel's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
1k views

dependence of eigenvalues on parameters

Let $f$ be a positive real-analytic function on the closed unit disk. Consider the eigenvalue problem $\Delta \phi = \lambda f \phi$, with $\phi = 0$ on the boundary. There exists a sequence of ...
Michael Beeson's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
254 views

Extending linear operators to multi-linear ones

Suppose we are given a linear operator $L$ on a Banach space $X$. Is there any way to extend $L$ to a multi-linear operator $\mathcal{L}$ in such a way that $$\mathcal{L}(x_1, x_2^*, \ldots, x_n^*) = ...
user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
515 views

continuity of extension of maps along curves

Let $a\le b$ and $k\ge 0$ be given and fixed. Let furthermore $x$ and $y$ denote two different elements of a Hilbert space $H$. Suppose $u:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow H$ is a $C^k$-embedding connecting $x$ ...
Orbicular's user avatar
  • 2,935
12 votes
1 answer
1k views

Uniform boundedness of an $L^2[0,1]$-ONB in $C[0,1]$

Assume that we have an orthonormal basis of smooth functions in $L^2[0,1]$. Are there useful practical criteria to determine whether the sup-norm of the basis functions has a uniform bound? I am sure ...
András Bátkai's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
237 views

Variation of a function

There are probably some of you guys who already know some of the terms that I am going to use so in order to be not so boring I will put the definition to the end. Let $f$ be a piecewise expanding ...
sacowea's user avatar
  • 11
9 votes
3 answers
3k views

Is the "closedness of the image of operator" needed in the defintion of Fredholm operators?

in the Higson and Roe's book "analytic K-homology" just after the definition of the Fredholm operator there is a remark (2.1.3 you can see at it onlin at Google books (click here)) which claims that ...
madmath's user avatar
  • 91
6 votes
1 answer
355 views

Why is the dimension of Gaussian variables is bounded by the dimension of the space?

I'm looking at a probabilistic proof of a local version of Dvoretzky's theorem in Pisier's manuscript "Probabilistic Methods in the Geometry of Banach Spaces." For each $\epsilon >0$ there is a ...
AatG's user avatar
  • 922
2 votes
1 answer
205 views

Do unitary bijections act invariantly on irreducible representations?

Let $\mathcal{A}$ be a $C^*$ algebra. Let $(\pi, \mathcal{H})$ be a faithful, irreducible, unitary, Hilbert space representation of $\mathcal{A}$; i.e., $\pi:\mathcal{A}\rightarrow\mathcal{B}(\mathcal{...
soulphysics's user avatar
21 votes
8 answers
11k views

Nice applications of the spectral theorem?

Most books and courses on linear algebra or functional analysis present at least one version of the spectral theorem (either in finite or infinite dimension) and emphasize its importance to many ...
Mark's user avatar
  • 4,874
18 votes
1 answer
2k views

Borel Lemma for vector-valued functions

The classical Borel Lemma states that for an arbitrary sequence $(v_n)_{n \in \mathbb{N}_0}$ of complex numbers there is a smooth function $f\colon \mathbb{R} \longrightarrow \mathbb{C}$ with Taylor ...
Stefan Waldmann's user avatar
3 votes
6 answers
1k views

Reference for complex analysis jargon

I am not a (complex) analyst but it seems that some of the questions I am working on are related to the following concepts: logarithmic capacity transfinite diameter Green's function of a compact ...
Hadi's user avatar
  • 741
3 votes
1 answer
801 views

Restriction of a linear functional equation to surface of a sphere

Let $f_i : R \rightarrow R$ and $g_j: R \rightarrow R$ be unknown functions, for $i = 1, \cdots, N$ and $j = 1, \cdots, K$. Let $A$ be a $K \times N$ matrix whose columns are unit-length vectors ${\...
user11443's user avatar

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