All Questions
737 questions
3
votes
1
answer
557
views
Is there real or complex analytic function whose positive real zeros are the primes?
Related to this question
Q1 Is there real or complex analytic function $f(x)$ such
that its positive real zeros are the primes and it is
given in closed form of compositions of already named ...
3
votes
1
answer
219
views
Looking for non-polynomial functions: with the growth condition: $\phi\big(\theta \frac{s}{t}\big) \leq \frac{\phi(s)}{\phi(t)}$
I am for example(s) of an invertible Convex or concave function $\phi: [0,\infty)\to [0, \infty)$ such that $\phi(0)=0$ and there exists $\theta>0$ and for all $s\leq t$ we have
\begin{align}\label{...
3
votes
1
answer
186
views
packing with special sets in high dimensional Euclidean space
Let $\lambda$ be Lebesgue measure on $[0,1]$. For $\mathbf{x}=(x_1,x_2,..,x_k)\in[0,1]^k$, define $$A(\mathbf{x}):=\{(y_1,\dots,y_k)\in [0,1]^k: \text{there exist intervals }I_1,\dots,I_k \text{ in }[...
3
votes
1
answer
250
views
Characterization of a subset of [0,1] $II$
My question follows the previous one
Characterization of a subset of $[0,1]$
But I don't know whether it is correct to ask again with a new title.
Thanks a lot for pointing the mistake and I ...
3
votes
2
answers
472
views
Regularity of lipschitz and derivable function
Let be lipschitz $f$ on $[0,1]$ and everywhere derivable. Is it true that $f\in C^1([0,1])$ ?
3
votes
1
answer
115
views
Given a local metric which is $C^1$-close to another, can we extend it globally while preserving the approximation?
Let $M$ be a smooth closed manifold, and let $g_0$ be a Riemannian metric on $M$.
Let $U$ be a neighbourhood of $p \in M$, and suppose that we are given a metric $g$ on $U$, which satisfies $\| g-...
3
votes
1
answer
155
views
Smoothening a probability measure
Given a probability measure $\mu$ supported on a finite set $S\subset{\mathbb R}^2$, define
$$ f(z):=\max\left\{\frac{\mu(x)+\mu(y)}2\colon \frac{x+y}2=z,\ x,y\in S \right\},
\ z\in{\mathbb ...
3
votes
1
answer
274
views
Function square-integrable
Let $f$ be an arbitrary function in $L^2(0,\infty)$ and consider the function
$$(g_f)(y) = \frac{1}{y-x_0} \int_{0}^{\infty} f(x) \left(\frac{xy}{(x^2+y^2+1)}\right)^2 \ dx$$
where $x_0$ is an ...
3
votes
0
answers
166
views
Monotone version of one-dimensional Whitney extension theorem
Is there a version of the Whitney extension theorem that would extend a monotone $C^\infty$ function on a compact subset of $\mathbb R$ (satisfying the usual Whitney's compatibility conditions) to a ...
3
votes
0
answers
234
views
Hurwitz–Radon problem for $ \mathbb{Q} ^{n} $
What is the maximal number of orthogonal operators $ A _{1} , \dotsc, A _ {m} $ in $ \mathbb{Q}^{ n } $ satisfying the relations $ A_{i}^{2} = - I $ and $ A_{i}A_{j} + A_{j}A_{i} = 0 $ for $ i \neq ...
3
votes
2
answers
487
views
Integrating over the Intersection of Convex Regions
Is there a way to integrate over the intersection of a finite collection of convex regions, using only the definition of the regions (i.e. without actually calculating the intersections)?
The ...
3
votes
1
answer
496
views
Prove that these two definitions of "natural" integration constant coincide when both converge
These are two possible definitions of antiderivative (integral) incorporating a supposedly natural choice of an integration constant (see this question for further details).
The first one is based on ...
3
votes
1
answer
125
views
Relation between the local maxima and the local minima for approximating the generalized Laguerre polynomial
I have already asked my question in the link below:
Minima approximation for Laguerre polynomials
I have suggested to anyone to give me the approximations of the minima for the Laguerre polynomial, ...
3
votes
0
answers
290
views
Does there exist a supersmooth non-polynomial function?
Let's call a $C^{\infty}$-function $f:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ Lebesgue supersmooth if whenever $a_{n}\in\mathbb{R}$ for all $n$, then $\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}a_{n}f^{(n)}(x)\rightarrow 0$ ...
3
votes
1
answer
623
views
Forwards Feynman–Kac formula
This might be a simple question, but I'm having trouble with it.
Consider the Cauchy problem with final condition.
\begin{equation}
\begin{cases}
\frac{\partial u}{\partial t}(t,x) + \mathcal{L}u(t,x) ...
3
votes
0
answers
689
views
"Nicely" strong measure zero sets
This question is essentially an expanded version of the unanswered half of Two strengthenings of "strong measure zero".
A set $X$ of reals is strong measure zero if, for any $f: \omega\...
3
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Reference request: interpolation of Hölder spaces
On the Wikipedia page on interpolation space, it is written that the space $C^\theta([0, 1])$ is the (real) interpolation of $C^0([0, 1])$ and $C^1([0, 1])$, where $C^\theta([0, 1])$ denotes the space ...
3
votes
0
answers
1k
views
On new (purely analytic) perspective towards theory of prime numbers
[I'm going to ask this question very carefully as a question similar to this received a critical response on this platform.
I myself am very skeptical about this but I want to know, from the experts' ...
3
votes
3
answers
427
views
Quantitative analytic continuation estimate for a function small on a set of positive measure
The following conjecture about analytic functions arose as a way to show the asymptotic growth for certain PDE solutions. As I am unfamiliar with any results of this type, I thought I'd ask here.
In ...
3
votes
1
answer
201
views
"Approximating" linear recursion with homogenous polynomial coefficients by linear recursion with constant coefficients
In a lecture I once attended, I remember the speaker using a result of the following nature:
$``$Let $\{A_n\}_{n=1}^\infty \subset \mathbb R$ be a sequence satisfying a recursion of the form
$$P(n) ...
3
votes
2
answers
447
views
Algebraic curve intersecting square-grid
Let us subdivide the unit square into square-grid cells with sidelength $w$. This will give us roughly $w^{-2}$ cells.
Formally
$$ g_{ij} = \{(wi, wj) + (x,y) : 0\leq x,y\leq w \},$$
for $i,j = 0,\...
3
votes
0
answers
238
views
Move one element of finite set out from A in plane
Suppose we are given two sets, $S$ and $A$ in the plane, such that $S$ is finite, with a special point, $s_0$, while neither $A$ nor its complement is a null-set, i.e., the outer Lebesgue measure of $...
3
votes
3
answers
128
views
Detecting slow growth in a finite number of queries
The following question was asked at Can you solve this problem using a finite number of queries?
:
Let $g:[0,1]\to[0,1]$ be a continuous monotonically-increasing function. You can access $g$ using ...
3
votes
1
answer
1k
views
A calculus question related to the nonnegative definite functions
I am looking for some sufficient conditions for an even, continuous, nonnegative, non increasing function $f(x)$ on $R$ such that
$$
\int_0^\infty \cos(xz) f(z) d z \ge 0 \qquad\text{for all $x\ge 0$...
3
votes
0
answers
232
views
When polynomial f(t+1/t) can be factored as g(t)·g(1/t)?
In venue of my old question When polynomial f(x^2) can be factored as g(x)·g(-x)? and this recent answer to a different question, I wonder:
How to characterize polynomials $f(x)$ with rational ...
3
votes
1
answer
296
views
Does this condition characterise intervals, among subsets of the real line?
For a real number, $c\in \left]0,1\right[$, consider the following property $\mathbf(\mathbf P_c\mathbf)$ of subsets $A$ of $\mathbb R$:
$\mathbf(\mathbf P_c\mathbf)$ For every bounded set $B\subset \...
3
votes
1
answer
411
views
Continuation of a smooth function, whose every derivative is strictly monotonic
Let $f$ be a function defined on $(-\infty, a]$ such that every derivative of $f$ is strictly monotonic. Does it guarantee uniqueness of a smooth continuation $g$ of $f$ to the whole real line, where ...
3
votes
1
answer
299
views
Lipschitz functions that saturate the Lipschitz inequality on the average (part 1)
Consider a 1-Lipschitz function $f: \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R$ satisfying the inequality
\begin{align*}
|f(x) - f(y)| \le \|x-y\|_2, \;\forall x,y \in \mathbb R^n.
\end{align*}
For $n \ge 2$, can we ...
3
votes
1
answer
496
views
"Square root" of multiplication operator on Sobolev space
Let $f:\mathbb{R}^n\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ be a non-negative, smooth, uniformly bounded function with uniformly bounded first derivative. Then $f$ defines a bounded operator on $L^2(\mathbb{R}^n)$ as ...
3
votes
1
answer
193
views
Differentiability along hyperplanes
Definition. Let us say that a function $f\colon \mathbb R^d\to \mathbb R$ is differentiable along hyperplanes in the point $0\in \mathbb R^d$, if $f\circ \varphi\colon \mathbb R^{d-1}\to \mathbb R$ is ...
3
votes
0
answers
144
views
Noncrossing partitions in Hopf algebras/monoids via compositional inversion
Partition polynomials constructed from the face structures of the associahedra (OEIS A133437) and permutahedra (A133314) comprise the antipodes/compositional inverses in a Faa-di-Bruno-type Hopf ...
3
votes
0
answers
306
views
Metric analogues of bounded variation
A function $f:[a,b]\to\mathbb{R}$ is said to be of bounded variation if
$$ \sup_I \sum_{i=1}^n |f(x_i)-f(x_{i-1})| \le V $$
for some finite $V>0$, where the supremum is over all finite partitions
$...
3
votes
1
answer
442
views
Error of midpoint method for functions that are not twice-differentiable
All of the bounds I've seen for the error of the midpoint method of integration are expressed in terms of the second derivative of the function. What bounds are available when the function is not ...
3
votes
2
answers
203
views
Recovering a set from its projections in varying coordinate systems - a projection hull?
Let me describe the simplest non-trivial case of what I have in mind. Let $V$ be a 2-dimensional $\mathbb{R}$-vector space and fix an isomorphism $V \cong \mathbb{R}^2$, where $\mathbb{R}^2$ is ...
3
votes
1
answer
139
views
Lower bound for coercive polynomials
For a polynomial $f \in \mathbb{R}[x_1, \cdots, x_n]$, we say that $f$ is coercive (see my earlier question: Real polynomials that go to infinity in all directions: how fast do they grow?) if
$$\...
3
votes
1
answer
231
views
Under which conditions the domain of the surjective function $f:[a,b]\times[c,d]\to[0,1]^{2}$ can be split s.t. the restrictions are bijective?
This is a follow-up question to this.
Since it is not always possible to construct such partition, I would like to know if there are additional restrictions which we could impose so that the wanted ...
3
votes
0
answers
154
views
Inequality involving convolution roots
I am struggling with the following problem. Let $f$ be a real smooth function. Let assume that $f$ is:
increasing
strictly convex on $(-\infty,0)$
strictly concave on $(0,+\infty)$
Let $\sigma>0$ ...
3
votes
1
answer
322
views
Special version of Tonelli’s theorem
I am trying to prove this theorem. I have not found anything similar to it on the internet.
Special version of Tonelli’s theorem
Assume that the functions $f(x,u): [a,b] \times \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{...
3
votes
1
answer
255
views
Is this constraint convex?
I have an optimization problem where the following constraint causes DCP Rule Error.
$$e^{x_n} \leq B \log _2\left(1+\frac{e^{\rho_n} g_n^2}{\sum_{i=1}^{n-1} e^{\...
3
votes
1
answer
173
views
Weak Lebesgue spaces and an estimate for BV functions
Let $u \in BV(\Omega \subset \mathbb R^N, \mathbb{R}^N)$. Is it true that there exists a function $f$ in the weak $L^1$ space such that
$$|u(y)-u(x)| \le |x-y|\big|f(y) - f(x)\big|$$
holds for a.e. $...
3
votes
1
answer
248
views
"Lagrange inversion" around an extremum
Cross-posted from Math Stackexchange.
In an older question to which I provided an answer it was asked how to compute a particular limit involving the roots of a transcedental function around its ...
3
votes
2
answers
293
views
On convergence of convex-concave functions
Let $(f_n)$ be a sequence of twice differentiable functions on $\mathbb R$ such that for each $n$ there exists some $x_n\in\mathbb{R}$ such that:
$f_n$ is strictly convex on $(-\infty,x_n)$,
$f_n$ is ...
2
votes
1
answer
193
views
A question on the partial sum of infinite doubly stochastic matrix
Let $A=(a_{ij})$ be an infinite doubly stochastic matrix. Is the following statement true ?
$$
\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=1}^n\sum_{j=1}^na_{ij} >0
$$
Any reference or comment on this is ...
2
votes
2
answers
667
views
Power series of ratio of Gamma functions
Let $a>1$ and define $G_a(x)=\sum\limits_{n=0}^{+\infty} \frac{\Gamma(\frac{2n+1}{a})}{\Gamma(2n+1)\Gamma(\frac{1}{a})}x^n$ where $\Gamma$ is the Gamma function. This series is convergent on $\...
2
votes
1
answer
101
views
Convergence of energy of Sobolev functions near the boundary
Let $B_0(1)$ be the unit ball in $\mathbb R^n$, $n\geq2$. $h\in W_0^{1,2}(B_0(1))$. For $r\in (0,1)$, define a function $f_r(x):[0,1]\rightarrow \mathbb R$ by
\begin{equation}
f_r(x):=
\begin{cases}
...
2
votes
1
answer
144
views
Do we have independence if we let the indices of the events increase?
Let $(\Omega, \mathscr F, \mathbb P)$ be a probability space.
Consider events indexed by $m, n \in \mathbb N$:
$ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ A_{1,n}, A_{2,n}, A_{3,n} ...$ are n-wise independent.
$A_{m,1}...
2
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Doubling metrics, doubling measures, Lebesgue density
As stated in this question,
Lebesgue differentiation theorem holds on locally doubling space?
and proved here,
http://www.math.uiuc.edu/~tyson/595f15lecture2.pdf
the Lebesgue differentiation theorem (...
2
votes
1
answer
61
views
$K *g_n$ converges in the topology of smooth functions, $K$ approximates $\delta(x)$ and $g_n$ is a.e convergent to $g$, then regularity of $g$?
This question is continuation from If $K *g_n$ converges in the Fréchet topology of smooth functions and $K$ approximates $\delta(x)$, is $g_n$ itself convergent? - revised.
As before, let us ...
2
votes
1
answer
168
views
Validity of formula $u(x)=\frac{1}{4\pi}\int_G \nabla_y \frac{1}{\lvert x-y \rvert} \times \omega(y) \, d^3y +A(x)$ for periodic boundary case
I think it is better to provide context in which the previous question Any formula or estimates the Green function for the Laplacian in $3D$ periodic box? has been raised.
The motivation is the ...
2
votes
1
answer
249
views
linear recurrence inequality
Given two real analytic functions, $g(x)$ and $f(x)$, on an open interval $I\subset \mathbb{R}$, it is obvious that $g(x) \leq f(x)$ does not imply $g_n \leq f_n$ (here $g_n = [x^n] g(x)$ denotes the $...