802 research outputs found
Continued fraction solution of Krein's inverse problem
The spectral data of a vibrating string are encoded in its so-called
characteristic function. We consider the problem of recovering the distribution
of mass along the string from its characteristic function. It is well-known
that Stieltjes' continued fraction provides a solution of this inverse problem
in the particular case where the distribution of mass is purely discrete. We
show how to adapt Stieltjes' method to solve the inverse problem for a related
class of strings. An application to the excursion theory of diffusion processes
is presented.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
On a New Class of Structured Reproducing Kernel Spaces, Journal of Functional Analysis
A class of reproducing kernel spaces with reproducing kernels of the form KĻ(Ī») = {J ā Ī(Ī»)JĪ(Ļ)*}/ĻĻ(Ī») with pĻ(Ī») = a(Ī»)a(Ļ)* is characterized in terms of invariance under a pair of generalized shift operators and a structural identity. This incorporates a characterization of de Branges for the line case and a later analogue due to Ball for the circle case, as well as many other possibilities, by specializing the choice of Ļ. These results also permit the extension of some earlier characterizations by the authors of finite dimensional spaces with reproducing kernels of the form given above to the infinite dimensional case. The non-Hermitian case is also considered
Violation of the entropic area law for Fermions
We investigate the scaling of the entanglement entropy in an infinite
translational invariant Fermionic system of any spatial dimension. The states
under consideration are ground states and excitations of tight-binding
Hamiltonians with arbitrary interactions. We show that the entropy of a finite
region typically scales with the area of the surface times a logarithmic
correction. Thus, in contrast to analogous Bosonic systems, the entropic area
law is violated for Fermions. The relation between the entanglement entropy and
the structure of the Fermi surface is discussed, and it is proven, that the
presented scaling law holds whenever the Fermi surface is finite. This is in
particular true for all ground states of Hamiltonians with finite range
interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Reconstruction of multiplicative space- and time-dependent sources
This paper presents a numerical regularization approach to the simultaneous determination of multiplicative space- and time-dependent source functions in a nonlinear inverse heat conduction problem with homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions together with specified interior and final time temperature measurements. Under these conditions a unique solution is known to exist. However, the inverse prob- lem is still ill-posed since small errors in the input interior temperature data cause large errors in the output heat source solution. For the numerical discretisation, the boundary element method combined with a regularized nonlinear optimization are utilized. Results obtained from several numerical tests are provided in order to illustrate the efficiency of the adopted computational methodology
Integrating Functional Synthesis
Design couples synthesis and analysis in iterative cycles, alternatively generating solutions, and evaluating their validity. The accuracy and depth of evaluation has increased markedly because of the availability of powerful simulation tools and the development of domain-specific knowledge bases. Efforts to extend the state of the art in evaluation have unfortunately been carried out in stovepipe fashion, depending on domain-specific views both of function and of what constitutes āgoodā design. Although synthesis as practiced by humans is an intentional process that centers on the notion of function, computational synthesis often eschews such intention for sheer permutation. Rather than combining synthesis and analysis to form an integrated design environment, current methods focus on comprehensive search for solutions within highly circumscribed subdomains of design. This paper presents an overview of the progress made in representing design function across abstraction levels proven useful to human designers. Through an example application in the domain of mechatronics, these representations are integrated across domains and throughout the design process
Maximal violation of Bell inequalities by position measurements
We show that it is possible to find maximal violations of the CHSH-Bell
inequality using only position measurements on a pair of entangled
non-relativistic free particles. The device settings required in the CHSH
inequality are done by choosing one of two times at which position is measured.
For different assignments of the "+" outcome to positions, namely to an
interval, to a half line, or to a periodic set, we determine violations of the
inequalities, and states where they are attained. These results have
consequences for the hidden variable theories of Bohm and Nelson, in which the
two-time correlations between distant particle trajectories have a joint
distribution, and hence cannot violate any Bell inequality.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Bitangential interpolation in generalized Schur classes
Bitangential interpolation problems in the class of matrix valued functions
in the generalized Schur class are considered in both the open unit disc and
the open right half plane, including problems in which the solutions is not
assumed to be holomorphic at the interpolation points. Linear fractional
representations of the set of solutions to these problems are presented for
invertible and singular Hermitian Pick matrices. These representations make use
of a description of the ranges of linear fractional transformations with
suitably chosen domains that was developed in a previous paper.Comment: Second version, corrected typos, changed subsection 5.6, 47 page
Multi-operator colligations and multivariate characteristic functions
In the spectral theory of non-self-adjoint operators there is a well-known
operation of product of operator colligations. Many similar operations appear
in the theory of infinite-dimensional groups as multiplications of double
cosets. We construct characteristic functions for such double cosets and get
semigroups of matrix-valued functions in matrix balls.Comment: 15p
Small-Energy Analysis for the Selfadjoint Matrix Schroedinger Operator on the Half Line
The matrix Schroedinger equation with a selfadjoint matrix potential is
considered on the half line with the most general selfadjoint boundary
condition at the origin. When the matrix potential is integrable and has a
first moment, it is shown that the corresponding scattering matrix is
continuous at zero energy. An explicit formula is provided for the scattering
matrix at zero energy. The small-energy asymptotics are established also for
the corresponding Jost matrix, its inverse, and various other quantities
relevant to the corresponding direct and inverse scattering problems.Comment: This published version has been edited to improve the presentation of
the result
Processing and Transmission of Information
Contains reports on three research projects.Lincoln Laboratory, Purchase Order DDL B-00368U. S. ArmyU. S. NavyU. S. Air Force under Air Force Contract AF19(604)-7400National Institutes of Health (Grant MH-04737-03)National Science Foundation (Grant G-16526
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