2,944 research outputs found
Almost-Euclidean subspaces of via tensor products: a simple approach to randomness reduction
It has been known since 1970's that the N-dimensional -space contains
nearly Euclidean subspaces whose dimension is . However, proofs of
existence of such subspaces were probabilistic, hence non-constructive, which
made the results not-quite-suitable for subsequently discovered applications to
high-dimensional nearest neighbor search, error-correcting codes over the
reals, compressive sensing and other computational problems. In this paper we
present a "low-tech" scheme which, for any , allows to exhibit nearly
Euclidean -dimensional subspaces of while using only
random bits. Our results extend and complement (particularly) recent work
by Guruswami-Lee-Wigderson. Characteristic features of our approach include (1)
simplicity (we use only tensor products) and (2) yielding "almost Euclidean"
subspaces with arbitrarily small distortions.Comment: 11 pages; title change, abstract and references added, other minor
change
Amenability of algebras of approximable operators
We give a necessary and sufficient condition for amenability of the Banach
algebra of approximable operators on a Banach space. We further investigate the
relationship between amenability of this algebra and factorization of
operators, strengthening known results and developing new techniques to
determine whether or not a given Banach space carries an amenable algebra of
approximable operators. Using these techniques, we are able to show, among
other things, the non-amenability of the algebra of approximable operators on
Tsirelson's space.Comment: 20 pages, to appear in Israel Journal of Mathematic
Stability of chemical reaction fronts in solids:Analytical and numerical approaches
Localized chemical reactions in deformable solids are considered. A chemical transformation is accompanied by the transformation strain and emerging mechanical stresses, which affect the kinetics of the chemical reaction front to the reaction arrest. A chemo-mechanical coupling via the chemical affinity tensor is used, in which the stresses affect the reaction rate. The emphasis is made on the stability of the propagating reaction front in the vicinity of the blocked state. There are two major novel contributions. First, it is shown that for a planar reaction front, the diffusion of the gaseous-type reactant does not influence the stability of the reaction front â the stability is governed only by the mechanical properties of solid reactants and stresses induced by the transformation strain and the external loading, which corresponds to the mathematically analogous phase transition problem. Second, the comparison of two computational approaches to model the reaction front propagation is performed â the standard finite-element method with a remeshing technique to resolve the moving interface is compared to the cut-finite-element-based approach, which allows the interface to cut through the elements and to move independently of the finite-element mesh. For stability problems considered in the present paper, the previously-developed implementation of the cut-element approach has been extended with the additional post-processing procedure that obtains more accurate stresses and strains, relying on the fact that the structured grid is used in the implementation. The approaches are compared using a range of chemo-mechanical problems with stable and unstable reaction fronts.</p
Nonlinear spectral calculus and super-expanders
Nonlinear spectral gaps with respect to uniformly convex normed spaces are
shown to satisfy a spectral calculus inequality that establishes their decay
along Cesaro averages. Nonlinear spectral gaps of graphs are also shown to
behave sub-multiplicatively under zigzag products. These results yield a
combinatorial construction of super-expanders, i.e., a sequence of 3-regular
graphs that does not admit a coarse embedding into any uniformly convex normed
space.Comment: Typos fixed based on referee comments. Some of the results of this
paper were announced in arXiv:0910.2041. The corresponding parts of
arXiv:0910.2041 are subsumed by the current pape
Measurement of the Luminosity in the ZEUS Experiment at HERA II
The luminosity in the ZEUS detector was measured using photons from electron
bremsstrahlung. In 2001 the HERA collider was upgraded for operation at higher
luminosity. At the same time the luminosity-measuring system of the ZEUS
experiment was modified to tackle the expected higher photon rate and
synchrotron radiation. The existing lead-scintillator calorimeter was equipped
with radiation hard scintillator tiles and shielded against synchrotron
radiation. In addition, a magnetic spectrometer was installed to measure the
luminosity independently using photons converted in the beam-pipe exit window.
The redundancy provided a reliable and robust luminosity determination with a
systematic uncertainty of 1.7%. The experimental setup, the techniques used for
luminosity determination and the estimate of the systematic uncertainty are
reported.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figure
Factorization of Operators Through Orlicz Spaces
[EN] We study factorization of operators between quasi-Banach spaces. We prove the equivalence between certain vector norm inequalities and the factorization of operators through Orlicz spaces. As a consequence, we obtain the Maurey-Rosenthal factorization of operators into L-p-spaces. We give several applications. In particular, we prove a variant of Maurey's Extension Theorem.The research of the first author was supported by the National Science Centre (NCN), Poland, Grant No. 2011/01/B/ST1/06243. The research of the second author was supported by Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spain, under project #MTM2012-36740-C02-02Mastylo, M.; SĂĄnchez PĂ©rez, EA. (2017). Factorization of Operators Through Orlicz Spaces. Bulletin of the Malaysian Mathematical Sciences Society. 40(4):1653-1675. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40840-015-0158-5S16531675404CalderĂłn, A.P.: Intermediate spaces and interpolation, the complex method. Stud. Math. 24, 113â190 (1964)Davis, W.J., Garling, D.J.H., Tomczak-Jaegermann, N.: The complex convexity of quasi-normed linear spaces. J. Funct. Anal. 55, 110â150 (1984)Defant, A.: Variants of the MaureyâRosenthal theorem for quasi Köthe function spaces. Positivity 5, 153â175 (2001)Defant, A., MastyĆo, M., Michels, C.: Orlicz norm estimates for eigenvalues of matrices. Isr. J. Math. 132, 45â59 (2002)Defant, A., SĂĄnchez PĂ©rez, E.A.: MaureyâRosenthal factorization of positive operators and convexity. J. Math. Anal. Appl. 297, 771â790 (2004)Defant, A., SĂĄnchez PĂ©rez, E.A.: Domination of operators on function spaces. Math. Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc. 146, 57â66 (2009)Diestel, J.: Sequences and Series in Banach Spaces. Springer, Berlin (1984)Diestel, J., Jarchow, H., Tonge, A.: Absolutely Summing Operators. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1995)Dilworth, S.J.: Special Banach lattices and their applications. In: Handbook of the Geometry of Banach Spaces, vol. 1. Elsevier, Amsterdam (2001)Figiel, T., Pisier, G.: SĂ©ries alĂ©toires dans les espaces uniformĂ©ment convexes ou uniformĂ©ment lisses. Comptes Rendus de lâAcadĂ©mie des Sciences, Paris, SĂ©rie A 279, 611â614 (1974)Kalton, N.J., Montgomery-Smith, S.J.: Set-functions and factorization. Arch. Math. (Basel) 61(2), 183â200 (1993)KamiĆska, A., MastyĆo, M.: Abstract duality Sawyer formula and its applications. Monatsh. Math. 151(3), 223â245 (2007)Kantorovich, L.V., Akilov, G.P.: Functional Analysis, 2nd edn. Pergamon Press, Oxford (1982)Lindenstrauss, J., Tzafriri, L.: Classical Banach Spaces II. Springer, Berlin (1979)Lozanovskii, G.Ya.: On some Banach lattices IV, Sibirsk. Mat. Z. 14, 140â155 (1973) (in Russian); English transl.: Siberian. Math. J. 14, 97â108 (1973)Lozanovskii, G.Ya.:Transformations of ideal Banach spaces by means of concave functions. In: Qualitative and Approximate Methods for the Investigation of Operator Equations, Yaroslavl, vol. 3, pp. 122â147 (1978) (Russian)MastyĆo, M., Szwedek, R.: Interpolative constructions and factorization of operators. J. Math. Anal. Appl. 401, 198â208 (2013)NikiĆĄin, E.M.: Resonance theorems and superlinear operators. Usp. Mat. Nauk 25, 129â191 (1970) (Russian)Okada, S., Ricker, W.J., SĂĄnchez PĂ©rez, E.A.: Optimal Domain and Integral Extension of Operators acting in Function Spaces. Operator Theory: Adv. Appl., vol. 180. BirkhĂ€user, Basel (2008)Pisier, G.: Factorization of linear operators and geometry of Banach spaces. CBMS Regional Conference Series in Mathematics, vol. 60. Published for the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences, Washington, DC (1986)Reisner, S.: On two theorems of Lozanovskii concerning intermediate Banach lattices, geometric aspects of functional analysis (1986/87). Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1317, pp. 67â83. Springer, Berlin (1988)Wojtaszczyk, P.: Banach Spaces for Analysts. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991
Stability of chemical reaction fronts in solids : analytical and numerical approaches
Localized chemical reactions in deformable solids are considered. A chemical transformation is accompanied by the transformation strain and emerging mechanical stresses, which affect the kinetics of the chemical reaction front to the reaction arrest. A chemo-mechanical coupling via the chemical affinity tensor is used, in which the stresses affect the reaction rate. The emphasis is made on the stability of the propagating reaction front in the vicinity of the blocked state. There are two major novel contributions. First, it is shown that for a planar reaction front, the diffusion of the gaseous-type reactant does not influence the stability of the reaction front â the stability is governed only by the mechanical properties of solid reactants and stresses induced by the transformation strain and the external loading, which corresponds to the mathematically analogous phase transition problem. Second, the comparison of two computational approaches to model the reaction front propagation is performed â the standard finite-element method with a remeshing technique to resolve the moving interface is compared to the cut-finite-element-based approach, which allows the interface to cut through the elements and to move independently of the finite-element mesh. For stability problems considered in the present paper, the previously-developed implementation of the cut-element approach has been extended with the additional post-processing procedure that obtains more accurate stresses and strains, relying on the fact that the structured grid is used in the implementation. The approaches are compared using a range of chemo-mechanical problems with stable and unstable reaction fronts
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