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Approximation of the function $f(z)=z^2/|z|$ by $C^1$ immersions

Let $D$ denote the unit disk in $\mathbb C=\mathbb R^2$. We consider the function $f:D\rightarrow\mathbb C $ defined by $$f(z):=\frac{z^2}{|z|}.$$ Then as proved in Global invertibility (p324 Remark 4)...
Tian LAN's user avatar
  • 435
11 votes
2 answers
587 views

Extracting a subsequence common to infinitely many sets from an uncountable collection with uniform positive upper density

Let $\{a_n\},\{b_n\}$ be strictly increasing sequence of positive integers satisfying $a_1<b_1<a_2<b_2<a_3<b_3<\ldots$ and $(b_n-a_n) \to \infty$. Define $I_n:= [a_n,b_n]$, meaning ...
confused's user avatar
  • 271
7 votes
1 answer
290 views

Equivalence of omniscience principles for natural numbers and analytic omniscience principles for Cauchy real numbers

In constructive mathematics, a proposition $P$ is decidable if $P \vee \neg P$, and a proposition is stable if $\neg \neg P \implies P$. We have the following principles of omniscience for the natural ...
Madeleine Birchfield's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
845 views

Convergence of sequences formed by orthocenters, incenters, and centroids in repeated triangle constructions

I asked this question on MSE here. Given a scalene triangle $A_1B_1C_1$ , construct a triangle $A_{n+1}B_{n+1}C_{n+1}$ from the triangle $A_nB_nC_n$ where $A_{n+1}$ is the orthocenter of $A_nB_nC_n$, ...
pie's user avatar
  • 541
1 vote
2 answers
231 views

A real root of a cubic equation for a stationary point

Let us consider the quartic polynomial in $x$ \begin{equation} F(x) = (2 a p +2)x^4+ (6a(1-a)p^2+(6-12a)p-6)x^3 + p(2(a-2)(a-1)a p^2 + 3(5a^2-9a+2)p +12a-18)x^2 - p^2 ((a-2)(4a^2 ...
Vladimir's user avatar
  • 371
10 votes
1 answer
668 views

On Pareto functions

The Pareto principle says that the top 20% of wealthy people people hold over 80% of the wealth. Suppose we had a non-negative function on $\mathbb R^n$ that satisfied this principle on every open ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
2 votes
2 answers
158 views

Does there exist a continuous field of directions in $\mathbb R^3$ tangent to every sphere?

Does there exist a nonconstant continuous map $v: \mathbb R^3 \to \mathbb S^2$ such that every sphere $S \subset \mathbb R^3$ is tangent to $v(x)$ at some $x \in S$? Bonus: I also suspect that for ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
5 votes
2 answers
248 views

Hausdorff dimension of the zero set of $\nabla f$

Let $f: \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R$ be a Lipschitz function with $\nabla f$ nonzero almost everywhere with respect to Lebesgue measure. What is the supremal Hausdorff dimension of the set on which $f$ ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
0 votes
0 answers
101 views

A special Hamel basis and a special additive function

On mathstackexchange I recently asked whether for an irrational number $a$ a special Hamel basis of type $\bigcup_{i\in I}\{x_i,y_i,ay_i\}$ exists, where $x_i, y_i$ and $ay_i$ are $\mathbb Q$-...
ray's user avatar
  • 687
6 votes
0 answers
156 views

Generalized Rademacher theorem for fractional derivatives

It is known that if $f$ is $\alpha$ Holder and $\gamma<\alpha$ then $f$ is $\gamma$ fractional differentiable. See Theorem 14 in the paper by G. H. Hardy and J. E. Littlewood, "Some properties ...
user479223's user avatar
  • 1,914
2 votes
1 answer
118 views

Proving that a polynomial $f(x,y)$ that is unbounded in every direction is bounded below by $1$ outside of a disc of finite radius

This is a follow up from this question. I have a polynomial function $f(x,y)$ that is unbounded in every direction. In other words, if we choose a direction $(a,b)\in S^1$ and keep moving along the ...
Ryan Hendricks's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
254 views

On the Lipschitz constant outside the stretch set

Let $f: \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R^m$ be a Lipschitz map. We define the local Lipschitz constant $Lf$ of $f$ at $x \in \mathbb R^n$ by $$Lf(x) := \lim_{r \to 0_+} \text{Lip}(f, B_r (x)),$$ where $\text{...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
0 votes
0 answers
42 views

Is this function $\mathcal{C}^1$ in the global sense?

Denote by $\mathbb{U}$ the complex unit disk. Let $\mathcal{O}$ an nonempty open subset of $\mathbb{R}^n$ $(n\geq 1)$, and $f\in\mathcal{C}^1(\mathcal{O}\times\mathbb{R},\mathbb{U})$ such that for all ...
G. Panel's user avatar
  • 449
2 votes
1 answer
246 views

Ramsey type property of the Lipschitz constant

The following problem was proposed by Pietro Majer as an extension of an earlier question of mine on Lipschitz functions. For $f$ a Lipschitz function on $\mathbb R^n$, we denote by $$\text{Lip}(f, U) ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
6 votes
2 answers
380 views

Proving convergence of solution of a fixed point equation

I encountered a nasty sequence $(x_n)_{n=1}^\infty $ defined as the smallest positive fixed point of the fixed point equation $ x_n = f_n(x_n) $, where $f_n$ is given by $$ f_n(x) = \sum_{k=0}^{\...
user24334's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
65 views

Generalized Fourier transforms associated to Schroedinger operators

Let $n\geq 1$. Let $q\in C^{\infty}_0(\mathbb R^n)$ be compactly supported and consider the operator $P= -\Delta+q(x)$ on $\mathbb R^n$. We will assume that $q$ is sufficiently small so that the ...
Ali's user avatar
  • 4,115
3 votes
0 answers
167 views

Bounding the $L^{p*}$ norm from below for functions satisfying a $p$-capacity estimate

If $1 \le p < n$, the $p$-capacity of a compact set $A \subset \mathbb{R}^n$ with respect to an open set $U$ containing it is defined as $$\text{Cap}_p(A, U) := \inf \left\{\int_U |\nabla u|^p \, ...
Cauchy's Sequence's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
84 views

Question on approximation of norms

Suppose that $E\in Int[L_{p},L_{q}]$ for some $1<p<q<\infty$ and $E$ is $w$-concave with $1<w<\infty$. It is well-known that for each $r\geq w$, we have $E=L_{r}\odot F_{r}$ for some ...
Sijie Luo's user avatar
23 votes
5 answers
2k views

PDEs and algebraic varieties

Let $P$ be an order $d$ differential operator with constant coefficients and consider a PDE of the form $Pf = \delta$. Taking the Fourier transform of $P$ we get a degree $d$ polynomial whose zero ...
Puzzled's user avatar
  • 8,998
9 votes
2 answers
424 views

Is there a path-connected, "anti-convex" subset of $\mathbb R^2$ containing $(\mathbb R\smallsetminus \mathbb Q)^2$?

This question was firstly asked in mathematics stack exchange. Getting no answer, I copied it to here. For a vector space $V$ over $\mathbb R$, I say a subset $S$ of $V$ is "anti-convex" if $...
yummy's user avatar
  • 193
0 votes
0 answers
237 views

Pair of real functions satisfying some conditions

Consider two functions $\psi$ and $\varphi$ defined on the interval $(0,c)$ where $c\in(0,+\infty)$ and they exhibit the following characteristics: $\psi$ and $\varphi$ are continuous, positive, and ...
B-S's user avatar
  • 39
0 votes
1 answer
255 views

Carleson's theorem: proof of a lemma

I am reading the paper of Michael Lacey called "Carleson's theorem: proof, complements, variations" 1, on Carleson's theorem in Fourier analysis. At the bottom of page 20 at the beginning of ...
Alexander's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
204 views

A question on Borel measurability

Let $(X, \mathcal{B}_{X}, \mu)$ be a measure space. Here, $\mu$ is an infinite Borel measure and $\mu$ is not $\sigma$-finite. Let $\pi$ be surjective Borel measurable map form $(X, \mathcal{B}_{X}, \...
bobscott's user avatar
10 votes
5 answers
2k views

Extracting a common convergent indexing from an uncountable family of sequences

Let $\mathcal{A}$ be some uncountable index set and $X$ be some separable reflexive Banach space. For each $\alpha \in \mathcal{A}$, let \begin{equation} \{ x_n^{\alpha} \}_{n=1}^\infty \end{equation} ...
Isaac's user avatar
  • 3,477
2 votes
1 answer
206 views

Deriving an inequality for the integral of maximum indicator functions under measure-preserving transformations

Let's denote the measure space by $(X, \mathcal{B}, \mu)$ and the measure-preserving transformation by $T: X \to X$. Let $A \in \mathcal{B}$ be a measurable set with $0 < \mu(A) < \infty$. Let $...
abcdmath's user avatar
  • 105
5 votes
1 answer
229 views

Intersection between Lipschitz domains

Let $\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^N$ be an open, bounded and connected Lipschitz domain. Is it true that we can find some $R>0$ such that any $N$-dimensional open ball $B(x,r)$ with $r\leq R$ that ...
Bogdan's user avatar
  • 1,759
20 votes
7 answers
5k views

Why do infinite-dimensional vector spaces usually have additional structure?

On Mathematics Stack Exchange, I asked the following question: Why are infinite-dimensional vector spaces usually equipped with additional structure? Although it received one good answer, I feel that ...
Joe Lamond's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
118 views

A matrix-valued analogue of a classical inequality

Let $p \geq 4$ be an even integer. In the study of variational problems in $W^{1, p}$, it is handy to know that for $a, b \in \mathbb R^d$, $$|a - b|^p \leq 2^{p - 1} (|a|^{p - 2} + |b|^{p - 2}) |a - ...
Aidan Backus's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
167 views

Bounding elementary symmetric polynomials away from zero

Let $2 \leq m \leq n$ be integers and let $\mathbf{x} \in \mathbb{R}^n$ (importantly, I am not assuming that the entries of $\mathbf{x}$ are non-negative). The elementary symmetric polynomials are ...
Nathaniel Johnston's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
263 views

Hölder continuity in time of heat semigroup

$ \newcommand{\bR}{\mathbb{R}} \newcommand{\diff}{\mathop{}\!\mathrm{d}} $ We fix $\alpha \in (0, 1)$ and $c>0$. Let $\ell : \bR^d \to \bR_+$ be a probability density function such that $$ \|\ell\|...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
19 votes
2 answers
951 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
2 votes
0 answers
94 views

A surprisingly simple and difficult problem on sums of upper bounds

Let $T$ be a large integer, and $C$ be a positive real constant. Consider a sequence $\{p_t\}_{T\geq t\geq 1}$ of real numbers in $[0,1]$. The sequence $\{b_t\}_{T\geq t\geq 1}$ can be defined as ...
Alex Appel's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
836 views

Representing $\Gamma(a-x)$ in terms of $\Gamma(kx)$ and $\Gamma(a)$ and elementary functions

I asked this question on MSE here. I wonder if it is possible to represent $\Gamma(a-x)$ in terms of powers of $\Gamma(a)$, powers of $\Gamma(kx)$, and elementary functions. I am not looking for any ...
pie's user avatar
  • 541
5 votes
0 answers
105 views

Convolution of a bounded function and measures

Given a function $f\in L^\infty(\mathbb{R}^n)$ and a family of Radon measure $\mu_\alpha$, under what condition do we have $f*\mu_\alpha$ equi-continuous? One condition I know is if $\mu_\alpha$ has a ...
Sean's user avatar
  • 375
7 votes
2 answers
325 views

For this continuous non differentiable function $f$ How to determine $\sup\{a\}$ s.t $\lim\limits_{h\to0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h^\alpha}=0$ for all $x$?

I asked this question on MSE here. Define $g(x)= |x|$ for $|x|\in [-1,1]$ , $g(x+2)=g(x)$ $$f(x)= \sum_{n \ge 1} \frac{3^n g\left(4^n x\right) }{4^n}$$ This function is a famous example of a ...
pie's user avatar
  • 541
7 votes
1 answer
271 views

Can a differentiable function be nowhere locally $\alpha$-Hölder for all $\alpha > 0$?

Does there exist a real valued function on $[0, 1]$ that is differentiable everywhere, but for every $\alpha > 0$ is nowhere locally $\alpha$-Hölder continuous? That is, it is not $\alpha$-Hölder ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
2 votes
1 answer
211 views

Hölder continuity in time of heat semigroup for regular initial distribution

$ \newcommand{\bR}{\mathbb{R}} \newcommand{\diff}{\mathop{}\!\mathrm{d}} $ Let $(p_t)_{t>0}$ be the standard Gaussian heat kernel on $\bR^d$, i.e., $$ p_t (x) := \frac{1}{(4 \pi t)^{\frac{d}{2}}} \...
Akira's user avatar
  • 825
4 votes
1 answer
446 views

Is the uniform limit of "almost eikonal" maps eikonal?

Let $f_n: \mathbb R^d \to \mathbb R$ be continuously differentiable functions with $f_n \to f$ uniformly for some $f$. Suppose that $|\nabla f_n| \to 1$ uniformly. Is it true that $f$ is $C^1$ with $\...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
2 votes
0 answers
57 views

Mappings that preserve local or global minimum

In the most general form, I'm interested in any non-trivial results of the following question. Consider metric space $X$ and $Y$, denote all real valued functions on $X$ and $Y$ as $\mathbb{R}^{X}$ ...
patchouli's user avatar
  • 275
4 votes
1 answer
259 views

Hausdorff dimension of the zero set of the gradient of an eikonal function

Let $f: \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R$ be a Lipschitz function with $|\nabla f| = 1$ almost everywhere with respect to Lebesgue measure. What is the supremal Hausdorff dimension of the set on which $f$ is ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
3 votes
1 answer
248 views

Can any function in $C^\alpha$ be approximated in $C^{\alpha^-}$ by singular functions?

For every positive $\alpha < 1$, we consider the space $C^{\alpha}$ of Holder continuous functions of order $\alpha$ on $[0, 1]$, equipped with the norm $$\|f\|_{C^\alpha} := \sup|f| + \sup_{x, y \...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
7 votes
2 answers
178 views

Separating domains in $\mathbb{R}^{2n}$ by a real algebraic variety

Suppose $\Omega_1$ and $\Omega_2$ are two disjoint unbounded domains in $\mathbb{R}^{2n}$, $n \in \mathbb{N}$. Can there be conditions on $\Omega_1$ and $\Omega_2$ so that these two domains can be ...
Soumya Ganguly's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
349 views

Equilateral triangle in a Brownian path

I am curious about the following simple problem but I couldn't do any progress on it. I would like to know whether it is possible to prove (with probabilistic proof) that a brownian trajectory ...
NancyBoy's user avatar
  • 393
8 votes
0 answers
414 views

For $f$ Lipschitz with $|\nabla f| = 1$ a.e., what is the supremal Hausdorff dimension of the set on which $\varepsilon< |\nabla f| < 1-\varepsilon$?

Let $f$ be a Lipschitz function with $|\nabla f| = 1$ almost everywhere. Let $\varepsilon \geq 0$. What is the supremal Hausdorff dimension of the set on which $f$ is differentiable with $\varepsilon &...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
5 votes
2 answers
298 views

Is the $W^{1, \infty}$ limit of differentiable a.e. functions also differentiable a.e.?

Let $f_n$ be a sequence of continuous, differentiable a.e. functions on $[0, 1]$ with $f_n \to f$ uniformly for some continuous $f$. $f'_n - g \to 0$ in $L^\infty$ for some measurable $g$, where we ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321
3 votes
2 answers
436 views

Closed form for $ \int_{0}^{1} \dotsi \int_{0}^{1} \frac{x_1^q + \dotsb + x_n^q}{x_1^p + \dotsb + x_n^p} \, \mathrm{d}x_1 \dotsm \mathrm{d}x_n $

I asked this question on MSE, but received no answer. Recently, reading this problem, I found out that $$ \lim_{n\to \infty} \int_{0}^{1} \dotsi \int_{0}^{1} \frac{x_1^q + \dotsb + x_n^q}{x_1^p + \...
user967210's user avatar
12 votes
2 answers
1k views

Asymptotics of a strange oscillatory function

Consider the function $f:\mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}$ defined by $f(x)=\sum_{n\geq 1}\sin(x/n^2)$. It is easy to see that $f(x) = O(\sqrt{x})$ for large real $x$. Is it true that $f(x)>0$ for $x>0$...
Satan's Minion's user avatar
25 votes
2 answers
2k views

Writing a function on $\mathbb{R}$ as a sum of two injections

Let $f: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ be a function. It is well-known that, using transfinite recursion with a well-ordering of $\mathbb{R}$, one can construct two injective functions $g,h: \...
Burak's user avatar
  • 4,265
1 vote
1 answer
76 views

Proving that a function $f(x,y)$, that is unbounded in every direction, is uniformly bounded below by $1$ outside some disc of large enough radius

I have a smooth function $f(x,y)$ that is unbounded in every direction. In other words, if we choose a direction $(a,b)\in S^1$ and keep moving along the curve $(ta,tb)$, then $$\lim_{t\to\infty}f(ta,...
Ryan Hendricks's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
309 views

Well distributed sets

Note: All integrals are taken with respect to Lebesgue measure. The symbol $\def\avint{\mathop{\rlap{\raise.15em{\scriptstyle -}}\kern-.2em\int}\nolimits} \avint$ denotes the average integral. We say ...
Nate River's user avatar
  • 6,321

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