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4 votes
2 answers
276 views

A function that maps every perfect set to $\mathbb{R}$

It's known that some real functions map every nonempty open subset onto $\mathbb{R}$. Is there any function from $\mathbb{R}$ to $\mathbb{R}$ that maps every nonempty perfect set onto $\mathbb{R}$?
aleph2's user avatar
  • 637
0 votes
1 answer
127 views

Continuous extensions of tangent vector fields

Let $\Omega$ be an open subset of $S^2$ with $\bar{\Omega}\neq S^2$. Suppose a continuous tangent vector field $G$ is given on $\partial \Omega$ with $|G(y)|=1$ for all $y\in \partial \Omega$. Does ...
MathLearner's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

Continuous modification of tangent vector fields

Let $\Omega$ be an open subset of $S^2$, and assume that there exists a continuous tangent vector field $F(x)$ defined on $\bar{\Omega}\neq S^2$ with $|F(x)|=1$ for all $x\in \bar{\Omega}$. Suppose a ...
MathLearner's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
249 views

Is Toeplitz operator on the Bergman space bounded iff its symbol is bounded?

It is fairly well known that if $T_\varphi$ is a Toeplitz operator on the Hardy-Hilbert space, then $\lVert T_\varphi \rVert = \lVert \varphi \rVert _{\infty}$. Now, if $\varphi \in L^\infty (\mathbb ...
ash's user avatar
  • 151
19 votes
2 answers
950 views

Etymology of “real numbers"

I would like to know why the real numbers are called “the real numbers.” I would also like to know the meaning of “real” in the phrase “real number.” Further questions and clarifications: I’d like to ...
Paul Talma's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
96 views

Function whose derivatives eventually vanish almost everywhere

As a takeaway of this post we have the following result. P. Let $f:[0,1]\to\mathbb{R}$ be infinitely differentiable such that for all $x\in[0,1]$ the sequence $\{f^{(n)}(x)\}$ is eventually $0$. Then ...
aleph2's user avatar
  • 637
0 votes
0 answers
33 views

Reference request: injectivity of CWT, density of dilations and translations in $L^p$

Recently, I encountered the notion of Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT), and I find it very intriguing (for a reference, see the wiki). I believe it offers a different and more general perspective on ...
Zhang Yuhan's user avatar
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
6 votes
2 answers
449 views

Asymptotic behavior of the "Cauchy square" series

$\renewcommand{\ge}{\geqslant}\renewcommand{\le}{\leqslant}$ $\newcommand{\pa}[1]{\left( #1 \right)}$ Let us take $\alpha > 0$, $x_1 := \alpha$ and for any $n \ge \mathbb{N}$, \begin{align*} \boxed{...
Raphaël's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
138 views

Is $L^2([a,b]; L^2(S^2))$ the same as $L^2([a,b] \times S^2)$?

The space $L^2([a,b];L^2(S^2))$ is a Banach space with respect to the norm $$\left\Vert f \right\Vert_1^2 = \int_{a}^b \left\Vert f(r) \right\Vert_{L^2(S^2)}^2 dr$$ The space $L^2([a,b]\times S^2)$ ...
Laithy's user avatar
  • 969
0 votes
0 answers
136 views

Antiderivatives via Taylor series and the FT of Calculus

If $f$ is a real function on an interval $[a,b]$ such that $f$ is computationally tractable on $[a,b]$: you can calculate $f(x)$ to $n$ bits of precision using an algorithm which is polynomial in $n$ ...
Joe Shipman's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
92 views

Multilinear non-commutative Khintchine inequality

Let $g_1,\ldots,g_k$ be independent standard Gaussians and for each index $(i_1,\ldots,i_k)\in [n]^k$ let $A_{i_1,\ldots,i_k}$ be a $d\times d$ symmetric matrix. Question: Is there a known bound for ...
user293794's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
262 views

Spectrum of ring in algebraic geometry vs spectrum of Banach algebra

For a commutative unital Banach algebra $A,$ and $x\in A,$ we have $\lambda \in \sigma_A(x)$ if and only if $\phi(x) = \lambda$ for some algebra homomorphism $\phi:A \to \mathbb C.$ The set of all ...
Ma Joad's user avatar
  • 1,755
1 vote
1 answer
112 views

A bilinear estimate with a simple one-dimensional oscillatory integral kernel

Let $f\in L^{p}(\mathbb{R})$, $1\leq p\leq 2$. I am trying to show that $$\int_{\mathbb{R}}\int_{\mathbb{R}} \,K(y,z)\, \frac{f(y)f(z)}{y^{\frac{1}{2\,p^{\prime}}}\,z^{\frac{1}{2\,p^{\prime}}}}\,dy\,...
Medo's user avatar
  • 852
0 votes
0 answers
149 views

Notation $\le_{a,b,n,\ldots}$ in Analysis

In modern Analysis, especially Functional Analysis, one proves, or one uses inequalities of the form $$F(X)\le_{a,\ldots,n}G(X).$$ The meaning of the subscripts in the inequality sign means that there ...
Denis Serre's user avatar
  • 52.3k
2 votes
0 answers
28 views

Monotonicity of the rank of finitely generated closed sublattices

Let $E$ be a Banach lattice. We consider finitely generated elements in the class of all closed sublattices of $E$. Let $F$ be a closed sublattice $E$. Then a subset $G \subseteq F$ is called ...
Julian Hölz's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
78 views

What is known about $\operatorname{gap}(A) = \|A\| - r(A)$ for bounded operators on Hilbert spaces?

The gap of a bounded linear operator on a Hilbert space is defined as $$\operatorname{gap}(A) := \|A\| - r(A),$$ where $r(A)$ denotes the spectral radius of $A$. A natural question to ask is - for ...
stoic-santiago's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
206 views

Explicit basis of symmetric harmonic polynomials

An orthonormal basis for the space of harmonic polynomials in $n$ variables is provided by the spherical harmonics on the $n-1$ sphere, see e.g. wiki. From there, constructing an orthonormal basis for ...
Cacuete's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
0 answers
73 views

Criteria giving sufficient conditions for a Borel measure to have compact support

I am interested in criteria that guarantee that a Borel probability measure has compact support. I outline two below and I am hoping to gather more as answers (if they exist). The first sufficient ...
Dispersion's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
55 views

Johnson-Lindenstrauss type result for matrix factorization

The type of result I want is: given matrix $A\in \mathbb{R}^{m\times n}$ and error tolerance $\epsilon$, what is a lower bound on $k$ such that $\|A - UV\|_{??}\le \epsilon$, where $U \in\mathbb{R}^{m\...
optimal_transport_fan's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
60 views

Basis vectors using anti-commuting operators?

Let $V$ be a finite-dimensional inner product space. Suppose $A_{1},...,A_{N}$ are anti-commuting operators, meaning that these are linear operators on $V$ that satisfy: $$A_{i}A_{j}+A_{j}A_{i} = A_{i}...
MathMath's user avatar
  • 1,305
0 votes
0 answers
43 views

When does the Hermite series converge pointwise and when is it uniformly bounded?

Let $\gamma$ denote the standard Gaussian measure on the real line, and consider $f \in L^2(\gamma)$. Since the Hermite polynomials $\{H_n\}_{n \geq 0}$ are a complete orthonormal system, we may ...
Drew Brady's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
369 views

Bounding supremum norm in terms of gradient L2-norm using a Poincare-like inequality

Suppose $f$ is a Lipschitz continuous real-valued function over a bounded domain $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^d$ with smooth boundary, and let $\overline{f} := \frac{1}{|\Omega|}\int_\Omega f(x) dx$. Is ...
Greg O.'s user avatar
  • 148
-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
6 votes
1 answer
291 views

Analytic maps on Banach spaces: analyticity upgrade

Consider the following problem. Let $E,F,G$ be real or complex Banach spaces, such that $F\subset G$ with continuous embedding. Let $U\subset E$ an open set and $$ f:U\to G $$ an analytic map, such ...
Lorenzo Pompili's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
128 views

Sum of upper semi continuous and lower semi continuous functions

Let $X$ be a compact metric space. Assume that $f: X \to \mathbb{R}$ is upper-semi continuous and $g:X \to \mathbb{R}$ is lower semi-continuous. Assume that $\sup \{ f(x)+g(x) : x \in X \}$ is finite. ...
Adam's user avatar
  • 1,043
3 votes
0 answers
281 views

Interchange limit and supremum of functionals over a bounded convex set

Let $(H, \langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle)$ be a separable real Hilbert space and $B\subset H$ be (nonempty) convex and bounded, and suppose that $(\alpha_k)\subset H$ is a sequence for which the limit $\...
fsp-b's user avatar
  • 463
2 votes
1 answer
321 views

A strange functional inequality

Let $f,g \in C([-2,2],\mathbb R_+^*)$ even and concave real functions. Is it true that $$ \int_0^1 f\big(\cos(x^{-1})+\sin(x^{-1})\big) \cdot g\big(\cos(x^{-1})-\sin(x^{-1})\big) \mathrm{d}x\\ \leq f(...
Dattier's user avatar
  • 4,074
0 votes
0 answers
97 views

Generator of an analytic semigroup

Perhaps I have a naive question. My question is as follows: When we consider a Cauchy proposition of the following form: $$ \begin{cases} x'(t)= -Ax(t)+ F(t,x(t)) &\text{for}\ t> 0 \\ x(0)=...
Mathlover's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
44 views

Are there probability densities $\rho, f_n$ such that $\lim_n \frac{[\rho * f_n]_\alpha}{\|\rho * f_n\|_\infty} = \infty$?

We fix $\alpha \in (0, 1)$. Let $[f]_\alpha$ be the best $\alpha$-Hölder constant of $f: \mathbb R^d \to \mathbb R^k \otimes \mathbb R^m$, i.e., $[f]_\alpha := \sup_{x \neq y} \frac{|f(x) - f(y)|}{|x-...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
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
1 vote
2 answers
90 views

Is the difference between $\alpha$-Hölder constants of $f*\rho$ and $g*\rho$ controlled by $\|f-g\|_\infty$?

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
7 votes
0 answers
294 views

Applications of Banach space homology

There is a well-developed theory of Banach space homology. What are some of its useful applications to Banach space theory and which important questions can one answer using it? In other words, how ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
0 votes
0 answers
53 views

A problem about how to understand the existence of derivative of level set in Mountain-pass theorem

I'm confused about the Mountain pass theorem in Lemma4 of here. Background : $$ \begin{gathered} I_\lambda(u)=\frac{1}{2} \int_M\left|\Delta_g^{\frac{m}{2}} u\right|^2 d \mu_g-\frac{\lambda}{2 m} \log ...
Elio Li's user avatar
  • 809
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
2 votes
1 answer
146 views

Understanding the integral $\int_0^1\det(v(t),v'(t))dt$ where $v(t)$ is path in the plane

Let $v(t) : [0,1]\rightarrow\mathbb{C}^2$ be a smooth path, and let $v' := dv/dt$. I'd like to understand what the integral: $$I(v) := \int_0^1 \det(v(t),v'(t))dt$$ tells us about $v$, where $\det(v(t)...
stupid_question_bot's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
112 views

Characterization for the multipliers of Schwartz space

Is the following true? A function $m:\mathbb R^n\to\mathbb C$ is a Schwartz multiplier (i.e. $[f\mapsto mf]:S(\mathbb R^n)\to S(\mathbb R^n)$ is bounded linear) iff the following: For every $\alpha$ ...
Liding Yao's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
64 views

When is a symmetric block Toeplitz matrix invertible?

Let $$ Q = \begin{bmatrix} Q_0 & Q_1 & Q_2 & \cdots\\ Q_{-1} & Q_{0} & Q_1 & \cdots\\ Q_{-2} & Q_{-1} & Q_0 & \cdots\\ \vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \ddots ...
Benjamin Tennyson's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
85 views

Maximizing the integral of a transformation that depends on a neighborhood of values of the original function

I'm not an expert in analysis whatsoever, so I might be posing a well-established question, or even an unanswerable one. Also, any suggestion on changes that might make the problem better are welcome. ...
Juan Meleiro's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
286 views

Check an equation on the Heisenberg group $H_1$

The Heisenberg group $H_1$ is the set $\mathbb C\times \mathbb R$ endowed with the group law $$ (z,t)\cdot(w,s) =\left (z+w, \,t+s+\tfrac{1}{2}\Im m(z \bar{w})\right); \quad \forall z,w \in \mathbb C\,...
Z. Alfata's user avatar
  • 650
4 votes
2 answers
360 views

Functions with asymmetrically decreasing Fourier transform?

$\def\ii{{\rm i}}\def\bbR{\mathbb R}\def\bbC{\mathbb C}\def\bbNo{\mathbb N_0}\def\Fou{\mathscr F}$Specifically, I would like to have a compactly supported continuous function $f=u+\ii\,v:\bbR\to\bbC$ ...
TaQ's user avatar
  • 3,584
0 votes
1 answer
50 views

Norm of a $2$-tuple of operators

Let $E$ be a complex Hilbert space and $K_1,K_2$ are bounded linear operators on $E$. Let $\omega(K_1)$ and $\omega(K_2)$ be the numerical radius of $K_1$ and $K_2$ respectively. That is \begin{align*}...
Student's user avatar
  • 1,154
0 votes
1 answer
143 views

Is the space $C_0^{k}(\Omega)$ a Montel space?

I asked this question in the MathStackExchange, but I think I'm not get any answer. I'm trying to find a reference for the following result: Theorem: Let $\Omega$ be a open subset of $\mathbb{R}^{d}$ ...
Math's user avatar
  • 509
4 votes
1 answer
492 views

Does $f(t) \le \int_0^t (t-s)^{-\frac{1}{2}} [f(s) + |f(s)|^{\beta}] \, \mathrm d s$ imply $f=0$?

Let $\beta \in (0, 1)$. We assume $f : [0, 1] \to [0, \infty)$ is a measurable and bounded function such that $$ f(t) \le \int_0^t (t-s)^{-\frac{1}{2}} [f(s) + |f(s)|^{\beta}] \, \mathrm d s, \quad \...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
2 votes
1 answer
154 views

Grönwall-type inequality for $f(t) \le \alpha + \int_0^t (t-s)^{-\frac{1}{2}} [f(s) + |f(s)|^{\beta}] \, \mathrm d s$

Let $\alpha \in (0, \infty)$ and $\beta \in (0, 1]$. We assume $f : [0, 1] \to [0, \infty)$ is a measurable and bounded function such that $$ f(t) \le \alpha + \int_0^t (t-s)^{-\frac{1}{2}} [f(s) + |f(...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
0 votes
0 answers
235 views

Analogue of $\ell^2(X)$ over an arbitrary Banach ring

Let $X$ be a set. Over the Banach fields $F=\mathbb{R}$ or $F=\mathbb{C}$ we can define the Banach space$$\ell^2(X)=\{\xi\colon X\to F\mid \sum_{x\in X}|\xi(x)|^2<\infty\}$$which satisfies a list ...
Luiz Felipe Garcia's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
183 views

Example of a conditionally convergent series $\sum_{n=1}^\infty b_n$ such that $n^2(b_n-b_{n+1})$ is bounded

Let $(b_n)_{n \in \mathbb{N}}$ be a real sequence such that $(nb_n)$ is bounded. I know that if the series $\sum_{n=1}^\infty b_n$ is conditionally convergent, then $(n^2b_n)_n$ is not bounded. But, ...
Kanydo Mat's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
117 views

How to understand the unique continuation result

Let $E$ be the closure of $C_c^{\infty}\left(\mathbb{R}^N\right)$ ($N \geqq 3)$ under the norm $$ \|u\|_E=\left(\int_{\mathbb{R}^N}|\nabla u|^2\right)^{1 / 2}. $$ Suppose $K(x) \in C^1\left(\mathbf{R}^...
Davidi Cone's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
145 views

Does the union of fractional Sobolev spaces fills $L^p$?

Let $\Omega\subset \Bbb R^d$ be any open set. Recall that for $s\in (0,1)$, the fractional Sobolev space $W^{s,p}(\Omega)$ is the collection of function in $L^p(\Omega$ such that \begin{align*} \iint_{...
Guy Fsone's user avatar
  • 1,101
4 votes
2 answers
257 views

Simple proof that exactness implies strong mixing

Let $f$ be a continuous map defined on a compact metric space $X$. Suppose that $f$ preserves the Borel probability measure $\mu$ and that, for every positive-measure set $A\subseteq X$, we have $$\...
Uagi's user avatar
  • 63

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