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2 votes
1 answer
547 views

Shift-invariant spaces

We can define a shift-invariant space as $$V_{\varphi}(\mathbb{Z}):=\left\{\sum_{k\in\mathbb{Z}}c_k\varphi({\cdot}-k):(c_k)\in \ell_2\right\},$$ where convergence of the series is taken to be in $L^2(\...
AKG's user avatar
  • 49
1 vote
1 answer
322 views

A particular commutator of the discrete Fourier matrix

For $N$ be a fixed natural number, define $w=e^{\frac{2\pi i}{N}}$ and $z=e^{\frac{\pi i}{N}}$, so that $z^2=w$. Let $D$ be the diagonal matrix $D=\operatorname{diag}(1,z,z^2,\ldots,z^{N-1})$ and $F$ ...
ABB's user avatar
  • 4,058
1 vote
1 answer
142 views

Operator norm of some type of discrete Fourier matrix

Let $N$ be a natural number and let $w$ be a complex number. We define the $N\times N$ matrix $C_w=(a_{k,l})_{k,l=1}^N$ as follows, $$ a_{k,l}=\begin{cases}1 & l=k+1\\ w &...
ABB's user avatar
  • 4,058
1 vote
0 answers
127 views

What is the analogue of expansive matrix for automorphisms?

We say an invertible $n \times n$ matrix with entries in $\Bbb R^n$ is expansive if the absolute values of all of its eigenvalues exceed $1$. An easy calculation also shows that if we consider a ball ...
Melody's user avatar
  • 41