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We consider the non-linear Schrödinger equation(Pμ)
\begin{equation*}\begin{array}{lc}-\Delta u + V(x) u = \mu f(u) + |u|^{2^*-2}u, &\end{array}\end{equation*}
in $\mathbb{R}^N$, $N\geq3$, where V changes sign and $f(s)/s$, s ≠ 0, is bounded, with V non-periodic in x. The existence of a solution is established employing spectral theory, a general linking theorem due to [12] and interaction between translated solutions of the problem at infinity with some qualitative properties of them.
Let $S=\{p_1, \ldots , p_r,\infty \}$ for prime integers $p_1, \ldots , p_r.$ Let X be an S-adic compact nilmanifold, equipped with the unique translation-invariant probability measure $\mu .$ We characterize the countable groups $\Gamma $ of automorphisms of X for which the Koopman representation $\kappa $ on $L^2(X,\mu )$ has a spectral gap. More specifically, let Y be the maximal quotient solenoid of X (thus, Y is a finite-dimensional, connected, compact abelian group). We show that $\kappa $ does not have a spectral gap if and only if there exists a $\Gamma $-invariant proper subsolenoid of Y on which $\Gamma $ acts as a virtually abelian group,
We use tools from free probability to study the spectra of Hermitian operators on infinite graphs. Special attention is devoted to universal covering trees of finite graphs. For operators on these graphs, we derive a new variational formula for the spectral radius and provide new proofs of results due to Sunada and Aomoto using free probability.
With the goal of extending the applicability of free probability techniques beyond universal covering trees, we introduce a new combinatorial product operation on graphs and show that, in the noncommutative probability context, it corresponds to the notion of freeness with amalgamation. We show that Cayley graphs of amalgamated free products of groups, as well as universal covering trees, can be constructed using our graph product.
The Dagum family of isotropic covariance functions has two parameters that allow for decoupling of the fractal dimension and the Hurst effect for Gaussian random fields that are stationary and isotropic over Euclidean spaces. Sufficient conditions that allow for positive definiteness in
$\mathbb{R}^d$
of the Dagum family have been proposed on the basis of the fact that the Dagum family allows for complete monotonicity under some parameter restrictions. The spectral properties of the Dagum family have been inspected to a very limited extent only, and this paper gives insight into this direction. Specifically, we study finite and asymptotic properties of the isotropic spectral density (intended as the Hankel transform) of the Dagum model. Also, we establish some closed-form expressions for the Dagum spectral density in terms of the Fox–Wright functions. Finally, we provide asymptotic properties for such a class of spectral densities.
We show that all self-adjoint extensions of semibounded Sturm–Liouville operators with limit-circle endpoint(s) can be obtained via an additive singular form-bounded self-adjoint perturbation of rank equal to the deficiency indices, say $d\in \{1,2\}$. This characterization generalizes the well-known analog for semibounded Sturm–Liouville operators with regular endpoints. Explicitly, every self-adjoint extension of the minimal operator can be written as
where $\boldsymbol {A}_0$ is a distinguished self-adjoint extension and $\Theta $ is a self-adjoint linear relation in $\mathbb {C}^d$. The perturbation is singular in the sense that it does not belong to the underlying Hilbert space but is form-bounded with respect to $\boldsymbol {A}_0$, i.e., it belongs to $\mathcal {H}_{-1}(\boldsymbol {A}_0)$, with possible “infinite coupling.” A boundary triple and compatible boundary pair for the symmetric operator are constructed to ensure that the perturbation is well defined and self-adjoint extensions are in a one-to-one correspondence with self-adjoint relations $\Theta $.
The merging of boundary triples with perturbation theory provides a more holistic view of the operator’s matrix-valued spectral measures: identifying not just the location of the spectrum, but also certain directional information.
As an example, self-adjoint extensions of the classical Jacobi differential equation (which has two limit-circle endpoints) are obtained, and their spectra are analyzed with tools both from the theory of boundary triples and perturbation theory.
We construct families of translationally invariant, nearest-neighbour Hamiltonians on a 2D square lattice of d-level quantum systems (d constant), for which determining whether the system is gapped or gapless is an undecidable problem. This is true even with the promise that each Hamiltonian is either gapped or gapless in the strongest sense: it is promised to either have continuous spectrum above the ground state in the thermodynamic limit, or its spectral gap is lower-bounded by a constant. Moreover, this constant can be taken equal to the operator norm of the local operator that generates the Hamiltonian (the local interaction strength). The result still holds true if one restricts to arbitrarily small quantum perturbations of classical Hamiltonians. The proof combines a robustness analysis of Robinson’s aperiodic tiling, together with tools from quantum information theory: the quantum phase estimation algorithm and the history state technique mapping Quantum Turing Machines to Hamiltonians.
In this paper we analyze a simple spectral method (EIG1) for the problem of matrix alignment, consisting in aligning their leading eigenvectors: given two matrices A and B, we compute two corresponding leading eigenvectors
$v_1$
and
$v'_{\!\!1}$
. The algorithm returns the permutation
$\hat{\pi}$
such that the rank of coordinate
$\hat{\pi}(i)$
in
$v_1$
and that of coordinate i in
$v'_{\!\!1}$
(up to the sign of
$v'_{\!\!1}$
) are the same.
We consider a model of weighted graphs where the adjacency matrix A belongs to the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble of size
$N \times N$
, and B is a noisy version of A where all nodes have been relabeled according to some planted permutation
$\pi$
; that is,
$B= \Pi^T (A+\sigma H) \Pi $
, where
$\Pi$
is the permutation matrix associated with
$\pi$
and H is an independent copy of A. We show the following zero–one law: with high probability, under the condition
$\sigma N^{7/6+\epsilon} \to 0$
for some
$\epsilon>0$
, EIG1 recovers all but a vanishing part of the underlying permutation
$\pi$
, whereas if
$\sigma N^{7/6-\epsilon} \to \infty$
, this method cannot recover more than o(N) correct matches.
This result gives an understanding of the simplest and fastest spectral method for matrix alignment (or complete weighted graph alignment), and involves proof methods and techniques which could be of independent interest.
We compute the deficiency spaces of operators of the form $H_A{\hat {\otimes }} I + I{\hat {\otimes }} H_B$, for symmetric $H_A$ and self-adjoint $H_B$. This enables us to construct self-adjoint extensions (if they exist) by means of von Neumann's theory. The structure of the deficiency spaces for this case was asserted already in Ibort et al. [Boundary dynamics driven entanglement, J. Phys. A: Math. Theor.47(38) (2014) 385301], but only proven under the restriction of $H_B$ having discrete, non-degenerate spectrum.
Many special functions are eigenfunctions to explicit operators, such as difference and differential operators, which is in particular true for the special functions occurring in the Askey scheme, its q-analogue and extensions. The study of the spectral properties of such operators leads to explicit information for the corresponding special functions. We discuss several instances of this application, involving orthogonal polynomials and their matrix-valued analogues.
Let X = (Xt)t≥0 be a stochastic process issued from
$x \in \mathbb{R}$
that admits a marginal stationary measure v, i.e. vPtf = vf for all t ≥ 0, where
$\textbf{P}_t\,f(x)= \mathbb{E}_x[f(\textbf{X}_t)]$
. In this paper, we introduce the (resp. biorthogonal) spectral projections correlation functions which are expressed in terms of projections.” Also, update first published online date, if available. into the eigenspaces of Pt (resp. and of its adjoint in the weighted Hilbert space L2 (v)). We obtain closed-form expressions involving eigenvalues, the condition number and/or the angle between the projections in the following different situations: when X = X with X = (Xt)t ≥ 0 being a Markov process, X is the subordination of X in the sense of Bochner, and X is a non-Markovian process which is obtained by time-changing X with an inverse of a subordinator. It turns out that these spectral projections correlation functions have different expressions with respect to these classes of processes which enables to identify substantial and deep properties about their dynamics. This interesting fact can be used to design original statistical tests to make inferences, for example, about the path properties of the process (presence of jumps), distance from symmetry (self-adjoint or non-self-adjoint) and short-to-long-range dependence. To reveal the usefulness of our results, we apply them to a class of non-self-adjoint Markov semigroups studied in Patie and Savov (to appear, Mem. Amer. Math. Soc., 179p), and then time-change by subordinators and their inverses.
By using methods of subordinacy theory, we study packing continuity properties of spectral measures of discrete one-dimensional Schrödinger operators acting on the whole line. Then we apply these methods to Sturmian operators with rotation numbers of quasibounded density to show that they have purely $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$-packing continuous spectrum. A dimensional stability result is also mentioned.
A self-adjoint first-order system with Hermitian π-periodic potential Q(z), integrable on compact sets, is considered. It is shown that all zeros of are double zeros if and only if this self-adjoint system is unitarily equivalent to one in which Q(z) is π/2-periodic. Furthermore, the zeros of are all double zeros if and only if the associated self-adjoint system is unitarily equivalent to one in which Q(z) = σ2Q(z)σ2. Here, Δ denotes the discriminant of the system and σ0, σ2 are Pauli matrices. Finally, it is shown that all instability intervals vanish if and only if Q = rσ0 + qσ2, for some real-valued π-periodic functions r and q integrable on compact sets.
We give a constructive proof of the carpenter's theorem due to Kadison. Unlike the original proof, our approach also yields the real case of this theorem.
The CMV matrices are unitary analogues of the discrete one-dimensional Schrödingeroperators. We review spectral properties of a few classes of CMV matrices and describefamilies of random and deterministic CMV matrices which exhibit a transition in thedistribution of their eigenvalues.
Spectral and dynamical properties of some one-dimensional continuous Schrödinger and Dirac operators with a class of sparse potentials (which take non-zero values only at some sparse and suitably randomly distributed positions) are studied. By adapting and extending to the continuous setting some of the techniques developed for the corresponding discrete operator cases, the Hausdorff dimension of their spectral measures and lower dynamical bounds for transport exponents are determined. Furthermore, it is found that the condition for the spectral Hausdorff dimension to be positive is the same for the existence of a singular continuous spectrum.
We construct families of irreducible representations for a class of quantum groups Uq(fm(K,H). First, we realize these quantum groups as hyperbolic algebras. Such a realization yields natural families of irreducible weight representations for Uq(fm(K,H)). Second, we study the relationship between Uq(fm(K,H)) and Uq(fm(K)). As a result, any finite-dimensional weight representation of Uq(fm(K,H)) is proved to be completely reducible. Finally, we study the Whittaker model for the center of Uq(fm(K,H)), and a classification of all irreducible Whittaker representations of Uq(fm(K,H)) is obtained.
We study the geometry of the set of closed extensions of index 0 of an elliptic differential cone operator and its model operator in connection with the spectra of the extensions, and we give a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of rays of minimal growth for such operators.
Nous présentons une étude des relations d’équivalence mesurées du point de vue spectral. En particulier nous montrons que pour une relation d’équivalence donnée, la propriété T de Kazhdan, l’ergodicité forte et la moyennabilité peuvent être caractérisées par la présence d’un trou dans le spectre de certaines marches aléatoires sur les orbites de cette relation (à coefficients dans des représentations hilbertiennes appropriées). Les démonstrations reposent de façon essentielle sur l’étude des relations d’équivalence moyennables (Connes–Feldman–Weiss), sur les caractérisations spectrales correspondantes, pour les groupes dénombrables, de la moyennabilité (théorème de Kesten) et de la propriété T de Kazhdan (Gromov, Ghys, etc.), ainsi que sur des résultats techniques sur les représentations unitaires de relations d’équivalence mesurées (en particulier au voisinage de la représentation triviale) que nous développons au cours de l’article. Enfin nous obtenons un analogue du “critère $\lambda_1>1/2$” pour les relations d’équivalence mesurées.
It is a well known theorem due to Kesten that amenability for discrete groups can be characterized in terms of the spectra of diffusion operators associated to random walks on the Cayley graph of these groups. In this paper we are interested in analogous results in the framework of discrete measured equivalence relations. Our main results concern characterizations of Kazhdan’s property T, amenability, and the non existence of amenable quotients (strong ergodicity), in terms of the spectra of diffusion operators associated to random walks and hilbertian representations of the underlying equivalence relation. Our arguments are based on the proof of Connes–Feldman–Weiss’s classification of amenable equivalence relations, the spectral characterizations, in the group case, of amenability (Kesten) and property T (Gromov, Ghys, etc.), as well as new results on the representation theory of measured equivalence relations (in particular in the neighbourhood of the trivial representation) and Kazhdan’s property T. As an application we show how Żuk’s ‘$\lambda_1>1/2$’ criterion for property T can be adapted to measured equivalence relations.