13,175 research outputs found
Distributional versions of Littlewood's Tauberian theorem
We provide several general versions of Littlewood's Tauberian theorem. These
versions are applicable to Laplace transforms of Schwartz distributions. We
apply these Tauberian results to deduce a number of Tauberian theorems for
power series where Ces\`{a}ro summability follows from Abel summability. We
also use our general results to give a new simple proof of the classical
Littlewood one-sided Tauberian theorem for power series.Comment: 15 page
Fuzzy Self-Learning Controllers for Elasticity Management in Dynamic Cloud Architectures
Cloud controllers support the operation and quality management of dynamic cloud architectures by automatically scaling the compute resources to meet performance guarantees and minimize resource costs. Existing cloud controllers often resort to scaling strategies that are codified as a set of architecture adaptation rules. However, for a cloud provider, deployed application architectures are black-boxes, making it difficult at design time to define optimal or pre-emptive adaptation rules. Thus, the burden of taking adaptation decisions often is delegated to the cloud application. We propose the dynamic learning of adaptation rules for deployed application architectures in the cloud. We introduce FQL4KE, a self-learning fuzzy controller that learns and modifies fuzzy rules at runtime. The benefit is that we do not have to rely solely on precise design-time knowledge, which may be difficult to acquire. FQL4KE empowers users to configure cloud controllers by simply adjusting weights representing priorities for architecture quality instead of defining complex rules. FQL4KE has been experimentally validated using the cloud application framework ElasticBench in Azure and OpenStack. The experimental results demonstrate that FQL4KE outperforms both a fuzzy controller without learning and the native Azure auto-scalin
The k-metric dimension of a graph
As a generalization of the concept of a metric basis, this article introduces
the notion of -metric basis in graphs. Given a connected graph , a
set is said to be a -metric generator for if the elements
of any pair of different vertices of are distinguished by at least
elements of , i.e., for any two different vertices , there exist
at least vertices such that for every . A metric generator of minimum
cardinality is called a -metric basis and its cardinality the -metric
dimension of . A connected graph is -metric dimensional if is the
largest integer such that there exists a -metric basis for . We give a
necessary and sufficient condition for a graph to be -metric dimensional and
we obtain several results on the -metric dimension
On the order of summability of the Fourier inversion formula
In this article we show that the order of the point value, in the sense of Łojasiewicz, of a tempered distribution and the order of summability of the pointwise Fourier inversion formula are closely related. Assuming that the order of the point values and certain order of growth at infinity are given for a tempered distribution, we estimate the order of summability of the Fourier inversion formula. For Fourier series, and in other cases, it is shown that if the distribution has a distributional point value of order k, then its Fourier series is e.v. Cesàro summable to the distributional point value of order k+1. Conversely, we also show that if the pointwise Fourier inversion formula is e.v. Cesàro summable of order k, then the distribution is the (k+1)-th derivative of a locally integrable function, and the distribution has a distributional point value of order k+2. We also establish connections between orders of summability and local behavior for other Fourier inversion problems
Response of a Fermi gas to time-dependent perturbations: Riemann-Hilbert approach at non-zero temperatures
We provide an exact finite temperature extension to the recently developed
Riemann-Hilbert approach for the calculation of response functions in
nonadiabatically perturbed (multi-channel) Fermi gases. We give a precise
definition of the finite temperature Riemann-Hilbert problem and show that it
is equivalent to a zero temperature problem. Using this equivalence, we discuss
the solution of the nonequilibrium Fermi-edge singularity problem at finite
temperatures.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures; 2 appendices added, a few modifications in the
text, typos corrected; published in Phys. Rev.
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