6,069 research outputs found
Multipliers for p-Bessel sequences in Banach spaces
Multipliers have been recently introduced as operators for Bessel sequences
and frames in Hilbert spaces. These operators are defined by a fixed
multiplication pattern (the symbol) which is inserted between the analysis and
synthesis operators. In this paper, we will generalize the concept of Bessel
multipliers for p-Bessel and p-Riesz sequences in Banach spaces. It will be
shown that bounded symbols lead to bounded operators. Symbols converging to
zero induce compact operators. Furthermore, we will give sufficient conditions
for multipliers to be nuclear operators. Finally, we will show the continuous
dependency of the multipliers on their parameters.Comment: 17 page
The Four Phases of Philosophy
Introduction and translation of âThe Four Phases of Philosophyâ by Franz Brentano
Diet of oceanic loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) in the central North Pacific
Diet analysis of 52 loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta)
collected as bycatch from 1990 to 1992 in the high-seas driftnet fishery operating between lat. 29.5°N and 43°N
and between long. 150°E and 154°W demonstrated that these turtles fed predominately at the surface; few deeper water prey items were present in their stomachs. The turtles
ranged in size from 13.5 to 74.0 cm curved carapace length. Whole turtles (n =10) and excised stomachs (n= 42) were frozen and transported to a laboratory for analysis of major
faunal components. Neustonic species accounted for four of the five most common prey taxa. The most common prey items were Janthina spp. (Gastropoda); Carinaria cithara Benson
1835 (Heteropoda); a chondrophore, Velella velella (Hydrodia); Lepas spp. (Cirripedia), Planes spp. (Decapoda:
Grapsidae), and pyrosomas (Pyrosoma spp.)
Scaling gridded river networks for macroscale hydrology: Development, analysis, and control of error
A simple and robust river network scaling algorithm (NSA) is presented to rescale fineâresolution networks to any coarser resolution. The algorithm was tested over the Danube River basin and the European continent. Coarseâresolution networks, at 2.5, 5, 10, and 30 min resolutions, were derived from higherâresolution gridded networks using NSA and geomorphometric attributes, such as river order, shape index, and width function. These parameters were calculated and compared at each resolution. Simple scaling relationships were found to predict decreasing river lengths with coarserâresolution data. This relationship can be used to correct river length as a function of grid resolution. The lengthâcorrected width functions of the major river basins in Europe were compared at different resolutions to assess river network performance. The discretization error in representing basin area and river lengths at coarser resolutions were analyzed, and simple relationships were found to calculate the minimum number of grid cells needed to maintain the catchment area and length within a desired level of accuracy. This relationship among geomorphological characteristics, such as shape index and width function (derived from gridded networks at different resolutions), suggests that a minimum of 200â300 grid cells is necessary to maintain the geomorphological characteristics of the river networks with sufficient accuracy
Global system of rivers: Its role in organizing continental land mass and defining landâtoâocean linkages
The spatial organization of the Earth\u27s land mass is analyzed using a simulated topological network (STNâ30p) representing potential flow pathways across the entire nonglacierized surface of the globe at 30âmin (longitude Ă latitude) spatial resolution. We discuss a semiautomated procedure to develop this topology combining digital elevation models and manual network editing. STNâ30p was verified against several independent sources including map products and drainage basin statistics, although we found substantial inconsistency within the extant literature itself. A broad suite of diagnostics is offered that quantitatively describes individual grid cells, river segments, and complete drainage systems spanning orders 1 through 6 based on the Strahler classification scheme. Continental and globalâscale summaries of key STNâ30p attributes are given. Summaries are also presented which distinguish basins that potentially deliver discharge to an ocean (exorheic) from those that potentially empty into an internal receiving body (endorheic). A total of 59,122 individual grid cells constitutes the global nonglacierized land mass. At 30âmin spatial resolution, the cells are organized into 33,251 distinct river segments which define 6152 drainage basins. A global total of 133.1 Ă 106 km2 bear STNâSOp flow paths with a total length of 3.24 Ă 106 km. The organization of river networks has an important role in linking land mass to ocean. From a continental perspective, lowâorder river segments (orders 1â3) drain the largest fraction of land (90%) and thus constitute a primary source area for runoff and constituents. From an oceanic perspective, however, the small number (n=101) of large drainage systems (orders 4â6) predominates; draining 65% of global land area and subsuming a large fraction of the otherwise spatially remote lowâorder rivers. Along river corridors, only 10% of land mass is within 100 km of a coastline, 25% is within 250 km, and 50% is within 750 km. The global mean distance to river mouth is 1050 km with individual continental values from 460 to 1340 km. The Mediterranean/Black Sea and Arctic Ocean are the most landâdominated of all oceans with land:ocean area ratios of 4.4 and 1.2, respectively; remaining oceans show ratios from 0.55 to 0.13. We discuss limitations of the STNâ30p together with its potential role in future global change studies. STNâ30p is geographically linked to several hundred river discharge and chemistry monitoring stations to provide a framework for calibrating and validating macroscale hydrology and biogeochemical flux models
Optimal one-dimensional coverage by unreliable sensors
This paper regards the problem of optimally placing unreliable sensors in a
one-dimensional environment. We assume that sensors can fail with a certain
probability and we minimize the expected maximum distance from any point in the
environment to the closest active sensor. We provide a computational method to
find the optimal placement and we estimate the relative quality of equispaced
and random placements. We prove that the former is asymptotically equivalent to
the optimal placement when the number of sensors goes to infinity, with a cost
ratio converging to 1, while the cost of the latter remains strictly larger.Comment: 21 pages 2 figure
Discrete coherent states for higher Landau levels
We consider the quantum dynamics of a charged particle evolving under the
action of a constant homogeneous magnetic field, with emphasis on the discrete
subgroups of the Heisenberg group (in the Euclidean case) and of the SL(2, R)
group (in the Hyperbolic case). We investigate completeness properties of
discrete coherent states associated with higher order Euclidean and hyperbolic
Landau levels, partially extending classic results of Perelomov and of
Bargmann, Butera, Girardello and Klauder. In the Euclidean case, our results
follow from identifying the completeness problem with known results from the
theory of Gabor frames. The results for the hyperbolic setting follow by using
a combination of methods from coherent states, time-scale analysis and the
theory of Fuchsian groups and their associated automorphic forms.Comment: Revised for Annals of Physic
A Comparison of Predictions for SM Higgs Boson Production at the LHC
This paper describes a comparison of most of the available predictions for
the cross section and transverse momentum distribution for a 125 GeV mass Higgs
at the LHC, including those from the PYTHIA and HERWIG parton shower Monte
Carlos and from four resummation calculations.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to proceedings of the Workshop on Physics at TeV
Colliders, Les Houches 200
- âŠ