Skip to main content

All Questions

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
3 votes
0 answers
90 views

Upcrossing lemma and subharmonic functions

I have been studying the upcrossing lemma for submartingales, which asserts that if $X_n$ is a non negative submartingale, and $ \lambda>0$ then if we denote by $U_n$ the number of $[0,\lambda]$-...
an_ordinary_mathematician's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
422 views

$C^1$ harmonic functions on a dense open set are globally harmonic

In a paper I am studying, at a certain point the authors introduce a function $u\in C^1(B_1,\mathbb{R})$ which is harmonic in a dense open subset $U$ of $B_1$. From this, they seem to conclude that $u$...
No-one's user avatar
  • 1,149
8 votes
3 answers
701 views

Regularity of Newtonian potential along smooth boundary

Let $\Omega$ be a bounded open set in $\mathbb{R}^n$ with $C^\infty$ boundary, $n\ge 3$. Define $$V(z)=\int_\Omega \frac{1}{|z-y|^{n-2}}dy$$ Is it true that $V(z) \in C^{\infty}(\partial \Omega)$? ...
student's user avatar
  • 1,350
4 votes
1 answer
3k views

An inequality for harmonic functions

In a paper that I am reading the author quotes the following result about harmonic functions. According to him this should be "easy to show" but I don't seem to be able to do so. Let $u:\...
No-one's user avatar
  • 1,149
4 votes
1 answer
225 views

Harmonic functions as limits of harmonic functions on graphs?

I have recently learned about Rodin and Sullivan's work that proved a conjecture of Thurston involving giving a construction for the map in the Riemann mapping theorem using circle packings and this ...
Sprotte's user avatar
  • 1,075
8 votes
2 answers
773 views

Points where harmonic functions fail to give a coordinates system

Let $\Omega$ be a bounded domain in $\mathbb R^n$ with a smooth boundary and let $g$ be a smooth Riemannian metric on $\Omega$. Let $f_1,f_2,\ldots,f_n$ be non-constant smooth functions on $\partial \...
Ali's user avatar
  • 4,135
8 votes
2 answers
622 views

Vanishing rate of a harmonic function near a boundary point

Let $u(x, y)$ be a harmonic function on the upper half-plane $\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}^+$, that is, $$\partial_x^2 u(x, y) + \partial_y^2 u(x, y) = 0$$ for $x \in \mathbb{R}, y>0$. Assume $u(x, ...
Jacob Lu's user avatar
  • 903
3 votes
0 answers
117 views

Are continuous harmonic maps between Riemannian manifolds smooth up to the boundary?

Let $M,N$ be smooth, connected, compact, oriented, two-dimensional Riemannian manifolds, with $C^k$ boundaries. Let $f:M \to N$ be a Lipschitz continuous weakly harmonic map**, and assume that $f(\...
Asaf Shachar's user avatar
  • 6,741
4 votes
1 answer
221 views

Is a specific product function orthogonal to all harmonic functions

Suppose $\Omega=[-1,1]^3$. Let $f:[-1,1]\to \mathbb R$ and $g:[-1,1]^2\to \mathbb R$ be smooth functions and suppose that given any harmonic function on $\Omega$ (i.e. $\Delta u =0$ on $\Omega$), with ...
Ali's user avatar
  • 4,135
4 votes
1 answer
92 views

Approximate a one-form on the disk with nowhere vanishing one-forms satisfying an asymptotic vanishing of some derivatives

Let $\mathbb{D}^2$ be the closed two-dimensional unit disk, and let $g:\mathbb{D}^2 \to \mathbb{R}$ be a non-constant harmonic function (smooth up to the boundary). Does there exist a sequence of ...
Asaf Shachar's user avatar
  • 6,741
1 vote
1 answer
200 views

Smooth approximation of a subharmonic function in the barrier sense

Let $f$ be a continuous function on $\mathbb R^n$ such that $\Delta f \ge 0$ at a point $p$ in the barrier sense. More precisely, for any $\epsilon>0$, there exists a smooth function $f_{\epsilon}$ ...
Totoro's user avatar
  • 2,535
6 votes
1 answer
352 views

Harmonic maps are light

Assume $f\colon \mathbb{D}\to\mathbb{R}^2$ is a harmonic map and $x\notin f(\partial\mathbb{D})$. Is it true that $f^{-1}\{x\}$ is totally disconnected? I hope that the answer is yes. But actually I ...
Anton Petrunin's user avatar
10 votes
2 answers
426 views

Density of the linear span of products of harmonic polymomials

Let $\mathcal{H}$ denote the space of all harmonic polynomials with complex coefficients in $n$ variables $x_1,\ldots, x_n$ in $\mathbb{R}^n$. I'm trying to show that the linear span of the set $\...
T. Le's user avatar
  • 577
1 vote
0 answers
192 views

The decay rate of the spectrum of the Gaussian kernel on compact manifolds

It seems that the $k^{th}$ largest eigenvalue of the intergral operator induced on $S^n$ by the Gaussian kernel, $e^{-\frac{\vert \vec{x} - \vec{y} \vert _2^2}{2\sigma^2}}$ decays as $k^{-k}$. This is ...
Student's user avatar
  • 617
1 vote
1 answer
186 views

Expectation equation, harmonic functions, do not understand why equation is true

Let $u: \mathbb{R}_+ \times \mathbb{R}^d$ be a bounded $C^2$ function whose first and second partial derivatives are uniformly bounded (or, more generally, have at most polynomial growth as $|x| \to \...
Wenliang's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
116 views

Dimension of the set of the polynomial growth harmonic function on the hyperbolic plane

We consider the hyperbolic plane and the harmonic function there. Pick any point $p$. Let $H_n, n \in\mathbb N$ be the set of the harmonic functions $f$ such that $|f(x)|\leq c(1+ d(x,p))^n$. What is ...
Nikita Kalinin's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
137 views

Find sufficient and necessary conditions on $f$ in which the level curve $f(x,y)=0$ implies only one case $x=a$ for all real $y$ [closed]

Let $f:ℝ²→ℝ$ be an arbitrary harmonic function. A level curve in two dimensions is a curve on which the value of a function $f(x,y)$ is a constant. My question is: Find sufficient and necessary ...
Safwane's user avatar
  • 1,197