333 research outputs found
Time irregularity of generalized Ornstein--Uhlenbeck processes
The paper is concerned with the properties of solutions to linear evolution
equation perturbed by cylindrical L\'evy processes. It turns out that
solutions, under rather weak requirements, do not have c\`adl\`ag modification.
Some natural open questions are also stated
Gold(I)-Catalyzed Reactivity of Furan-ynes with N-Oxides: Synthesis of Substituted Dihydropyridinones and Pyranones
[Image: see text] The reactivity of “furan-ynes” in combination with pyridine and quinoline N-oxides in the presence of a Au(I) catalyst, has been studied, enabling the synthesis of three different heterocyclic scaffolds. Selective access to two out of the three possible products, a dihydropyridinone and a furan enone, has been achieved through the fine-tuning of the reaction conditions. The reactions proceed smoothly at room temperature and open-air, and were further extended to a broad substrate scope, thus affording functionalized dihydropyridinones and pyranones
Controllability and Qualitative properties of the solutions to SPDEs driven by boundary L\'evy noise
Let be the solution to the following stochastic evolution equation (1)
du(t,x)& = &A u(t,x) dt + B \sigma(u(t,x)) dL(t),\quad t>0; u(0,x) = x taking
values in an Hilbert space \HH, where is a \RR valued L\'evy process,
an infinitesimal generator of a strongly continuous semigroup,
\sigma:H\to \RR bounded from below and Lipschitz continuous, and B:\RR\to H
a possible unbounded operator. A typical example of such an equation is a
stochastic Partial differential equation with boundary L\'evy noise. Let
\CP=(\CP_t)_{t\ge 0} %{\CP_t:0\le t<\infty}T>0BAx\in H\CP_T^\star \delta_xH\HHLAB$ the solution of Equation [1] is
asymptotically strong Feller, respective, has a unique invariant measure. We
apply these results to the damped wave equation driven by L\'evy boundary
noise
Selective Synthesis of a Salt and a Cocrystal of the Ethionamide-Salicylic Acid System
Herein is presented a rare example of salt/cocrystal polymorphism involving the adduct between ethionamide (ETH) and salicylic acid (SAL). Both the salt and cocrystal forms have the same stoichiometry and composition and are both stable at room temperature. The synthetic procedure was successfully optimized in order to selectively obtain both polymorphs. The two adducts' structures were thoroughly investigated by means of single-crystal X-ray diffraction, solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. From the solid-state NMR point of view, the combination of mono- and multinuclear experiments (1H MAS, 13C and 15N CPMAS, 1H-{14N} D-HMQC, 1H-14N PM-S-RESPDOR) provided undoubted spectroscopic evidence about the different positions of the hydrogen atom along the main N\ub7\ub7\ub7H\ub7\ub7\ub7O interaction. In particular, the 1H-14N PM-S-RESPDOR allowed N-H distance measurements through the 1H detected signal at a very high spinning speed (70 kHz), which remarkably agree with those derived by DFT optimized X-ray diffraction, even on a natural abundance real system. The thermodynamic relationship between the salt and the cocrystal was inquired from the experimental and computational points of view, enabling the characterization of the two polymorphs as enantiotropically related. The performances of the two forms in terms of dissolution rate are comparable to each other but significantly higher with respect to the pure ETH
Linear Operator Inequality and Null Controllability with Vanishing Energy for unbounded control systems
We consider linear systems on a separable Hilbert space , which are null
controllable at some time under the action of a point or boundary
control. Parabolic and hyperbolic control systems usually studied in
applications are special cases. To every initial state we
associate the minimal "energy" needed to transfer to in a time ("energy" of a control being the square of its norm). We
give both necessary and sufficient conditions under which the minimal energy
converges to for . This extends to boundary control
systems the concept of null controllability with vanishing energy introduced by
Priola and Zabczyk (Siam J. Control Optim. 42 (2003)) for distributed systems.
The proofs in Priola-Zabczyk paper depend on properties of the associated
Riccati equation, which are not available in the present, general setting. Here
we base our results on new properties of the quadratic regulator problem with
stability and the Linear Operator Inequality.Comment: In this version we have also added a section on examples and
applications of our main results. This version is similar to the one which
will be published on "SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization" (SIAM
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