1,007 research outputs found
On the geometry of the -Laplacian operator
The -Laplacian operator is not uniformly elliptic for any and
degenerates even more when or . In those two cases the
Dirichlet and eigenvalue problems associated with the -Laplacian lead to
intriguing geometric questions, because their limits for or can be characterized by the geometry of . In this little survey we
recall some well-known results on eigenfunctions of the classical 2-Laplacian
and elaborate on their extensions to general .
We report also on results concerning the normalized or game-theoretic
-Laplacian and
its parabolic counterpart . These equations are homogeneous
of degree 1 and is uniformly elliptic for any .
In this respect it is more benign than the -Laplacian, but it is not of
divergence type.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Survey lecture given at the WIAS conference
"Theory and Applications of Partial Differential Equations" in Dec. 201
Overdetermined boundary value problems for the -Laplacian
We consider overdetermined boundary value problems for the -Laplacian
in a domain of and discuss what kind of implications on the
geometry of the existence of a solution may have. The classical
-Laplacian, the normalized or game-theoretic -Laplacian and the
limit of the -Laplacian as are considered and provide
different answers.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Abstraction and registration: conceptual innovations and supply effects in Prussian and British Copyright (1820-50)
It is one of the orthodoxies of modern copyright law that the enjoyment and the exercise of the rights granted âshall not be subject to any formalityâ (Berne Convention 1886, Berlin revision 1908, Art.4), such as a registration requirement. In this article, we trace the origins of this provision to a conceptual shift that took place during the early 1800s. Specific regulations of the book trade were superseded by the protection of all instantiations (such as performances, translations and adaptations) of abstract authored work. For two seminal copyright acts of the period, the Prussian Act of 1837 and the UK Act of 1842, we show there was considerable concern about the economic implications of this new justificatory paradigm, reflected in a period of experimentation with sophisticated registration requirements. We indicate market responses to these requirements and plea for a reconsideration of âformalitiesâ as redressing justificatory problems of copyright in the digital environment
Johann Gottlieb Fichte, and the Trap of Inhalt (Content) and Form: An Information Perspective on Music Copyright
In the digital environment, copyright law has become trapped in an assessment of what
has been taken, rather than what has been done with copied materials and elements. This
expands the scope of copyright into areas where it should not find infringement (such as
sampling, mash-ups and other transformative uses) while encouraging activities that are
problematic (such as hiding sources). This article argues that the trap was laid by the
German idealist philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte whose influential 1793 article Proof
of the Unlawfulness of Reprinting for the first time distinguishes Inhalt (i.e. content free
to all) and Form (i.e. the authorâs inalienable expression) as copyright categories. It is
shown that Fichteâs structure conflates norms of communication and norms of
transaction. An alternative path for copyright law in an information society is sketched
from a separation of these norms: copying should be assessed from (i) the attribution of
sources, and (ii) the degree to which original and derivative materials compete with each
other. Throughout the article, transformative practices in music set the scene
Droplet condensation and isoperimetric towers
We consider a variational problem in a planar convex domain, motivated by
statistical mechanics of crystal growth in a saturated solution. The minimizers
are constructed explicitly and are completely characterized
The problem of minimal resistance for functions and domains
Here we solve the problem posed by Comte and Lachand-Robert in [SIAM J. Math.
Anal., 34 (2002), pp. 101â120]. Take a bounded domain Ω â R2 and a piecewise smooth nonpositive
function u : ¯Ω â R vanishing on âΩ. Consider a flow of point particles falling vertically down and
reflected elastically from the graph of u. It is assumed that each particle is reflected no more than
once (no multiple reflections are allowed); then the resistance of the graph to the flow is expressed
as R(u; Ω) = 1
|Ω| Ω(1 + |âu(x)|2)â1dx. We need to find infΩ,u R(u;Ω). One can easily see that
|âu(x)| 1/2. We prove that the
infimum of R is exactly 1/2. This result is somewhat paradoxical, and the proof is inspired by, and
partly similar to, the paradoxical solution given by Besicovitch to the Kakeya problem [Amer. Math.
Monthly, 70 (1963), pp. 697â706]
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