13,351 research outputs found
Toric symplectic ball packing
We define and solve the toric version of the symplectic ball packing problem,
in the sense of listing all 2n-dimensional symplectic-toric manifolds which
admit a perfect packing by balls embedded in a symplectic and torus equivariant
fashion.
In order to do this we first describe a problem in geometric-combinatorics
which is equivalent to the toric symplectic ball packing problem. Then we solve
this problem using arguments from Convex Geometry and Delzant theory.
Applications to symplectic blowing-up are also presented, and some further
questions are raised in the last section.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Symplectic spectral geometry of semiclassical operators
In the past decade there has been a flurry of activity at the intersection of
spectral theory and symplectic geometry. In this paper we review recent results
on semiclassical spectral theory for commuting Berezin-Toeplitz and
h-pseudodifferential operators. The paper emphasizes the interplay between
spectral theory of operators (quantum theory) and symplectic geometry of
Hamiltonians (classical theory), with an eye towards recent developments on the
geometry of finite dimensional integrable systems.Comment: To appear in Bulletin of the Belgian Mathematical Society, 11 page
Computation of the multi-chord distribution of convex and concave polygons
Analytical expressions for the distribution of the length of chords
corresponding to the affine invariant measure on the set of chords are given
for convex polygons. These analytical expressions are a computational
improvement over other expressions published in 2011. The correlation function
of convex polygons can be computed from the results obtained in this work,
because it is determined by the distribution of chords.
An analytical expression for the multi-chord distribution of the length of
chords corresponding to the affine invariant measure on the set of chords is
found for non convex polygons. In addition we give an algorithm to find this
multi-chord distribution which, for many concave polygons, is computationally
more efficient than the said analytical expression. The results also apply to
non simply connected polygons.Comment: 22 figures, 40 pages, 43 reference
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