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Skew-gentle algebras are a generalisation of the well-known class of gentle algebras with which they share many common properties. In this work, using non-commutative Gröbner basis theory, we show that these algebras are strong Koszul and that the Koszul dual is again skew-gentle. We give a geometric model of their bounded derived categories in terms of polygonal dissections of surfaces with orbifold points, establishing a correspondence between curves in the orbifold and indecomposable objects. Moreover, we show that the orbifold dissections encode homological properties of skew-gentle algebras such as their singularity categories, their Gorenstein dimensions and derived invariants such as the determinant of their q-Cartan matrices.
We study stationary solutions to the Keller–Segel equation on curved planes. We prove the necessity of the mass being $8 \pi$ and a sharp decay bound. Notably, our results do not require the solutions to have a finite second moment, and thus are novel already in the flat case. Furthermore, we provide a correspondence between stationary solutions to the static Keller–Segel equation on curved planes and positively curved Riemannian metrics on the sphere. We use this duality to show the nonexistence of solutions in certain situations. In particular, we show the existence of metrics, arbitrarily close to the flat one on the plane, that do not support stationary solutions to the static Keller–Segel equation (with any mass). Finally, as a complementary result, we prove a curved version of the logarithmic Hardy–Littlewood–Sobolev inequality and use it to show that the Keller–Segel free energy is bounded from below exactly when the mass is $8 \pi$, even in the curved case.
We investigate the equilibrium configurations of closed planar elastic curves of fixed length, whose stiffness, also known as the bending rigidity, depends on an additional density variable. The underlying variational model relies on the minimisation of a bending energy with respect to shape and density and can be considered as a one-dimensional analogue of the Canham–Helfrich model for heterogeneous biological membranes. We present a generalised Euler–Bernoulli elastica functional featuring a density-dependent stiffness coefficient. In order to treat the inherent nonconvexity of the problem, we introduce an additional length scale in the model by means of a density gradient term. We derive the system of Euler–Lagrange equations and study the bifurcation structure of solutions with respect to the model parameters. Both analytical and numerical results are presented.
A Simons type formula for submanifolds with parallel normalized mean curvature vector field (pnmc submanifolds) in the product spaces $M^{n}(c)\times \mathbb {R}$, where $M^{n}(c)$ is a space form with constant sectional curvature $c\in \{-1,1\}$, it is shown. As an application is obtained rigidity results for submanifolds with constant second mean curvature.
In this paper, we present explicit and computable error bounds for the asymptotic expansions of the Hermite polynomials with Plancherel–Rotach scale. Three cases, depending on whether the scaled variable lies in the outer or oscillatory interval, or it is the turning point, are considered separately. We introduce the ‘branch cut’ technique to express the error terms as integrals on the contour taken as the one-sided limit of curves approaching the branch cut. This new technique enables us to derive simple error bounds in terms of elementary functions. We also provide recursive procedures for the computation of the coefficients appearing in the asymptotic expansions.
We study quantitative relationships between the triangle removal lemma and several of its variants. One such variant, which we call the triangle-free lemma, states that for each $\epsilon>0$ there exists M such that every triangle-free graph G has an $\epsilon$-approximate homomorphism to a triangle-free graph F on at most M vertices (here an $\epsilon$-approximate homomorphism is a map $V(G) \to V(F)$ where all but at most $\epsilon \left\lvert{V(G)}\right\rvert^2$ edges of G are mapped to edges of F). One consequence of our results is that the least possible M in the triangle-free lemma grows faster than exponential in any polynomial in $\epsilon^{-1}$. We also prove more general results for arbitrary graphs, as well as arithmetic analogues over finite fields, where the bounds are close to optimal.
This Chapter covers optional Calculus topics such as the Fubini Theorem, Riemann Integration, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, Integration by Parts, Mean Value Theorem, and Absolute Continuity.
This preliminary chapter contains notations, definitions, and basic concepts needed for the study of Measure Theory and Functional Analysis. Most of this chapter is for reference and may be read only as needed. Included are concepts such as Convergence, Continuity, and Compactness in Euclidean Spaces. The theory of Euclidean Measure and sets of Measure Zero are covered. An overview is included of Integration sufficient to begin the study of Functional Analysis. The chapter finishes with topics such as Functions of Bounded Variation, Inequalities, along with a discussion of the Axiom of Choice.
This chapter extends Lebesgue measure to Abstract Measure Spaces. Example such as Lebesgue-Stieltjes Measures, Probability Measures, and Signed Measures are considered. The Radon–Nikodym Theorem on Absolute Continuity is proven. The Radon–Nikodym derivative is defined and its Chain Rule is proven.
Many applications of Functional Analysis are introduced, including Least Squares Approximation Methods, the Vibrating String or Membrane (the Wave Equation), Heat Flow on a rod or plate (the Heat Equation), Gambler's Ruin and Random Walk, Sampling Theorem of Signal Processing, the Atomic Theory of Matter, Uncertainty Principle, and Wavelets. The beautiful connection between Group Theory, Fourier Series, and the Haar Integral (which for Euclidean Space, is the Lebesgue Integral) is investigated.
Inner Product Spaces and their Fourier Series are studied in this chapter, including Hilbert Spaces and Adjoint Operators. Convergence of Trigonometric and Square Wave Fourier Series of Integrable Functions are investigated. Theorems connecting Summability of Fourier Series and Summability Kernels are studied. The Radamacher, Walsh, and Haar Systems are defined and studied. The Fourier Transform is introduced.
The study of Sequence Spaces is the basic and natural setting for the study of Functional Analysis. Banach Sequence Spaces with continuous coordinates (K-spaces) are fundamental here. The concepts of Sectional Convergence (AK) and Cesaro Sectional Convergence (SigmaK), as well as more general sectional density (AD), are examined in relation to bv-invariance and q-invariance.
Linear Operators and Linear Functionals are studied. Then Operator Spaces, Topological Duals, and Second Duals of Normed Spaces are considered. Lebesgue L(p) Spaces are defined and studied. The theorems of Hahn–Banach Extension, Baire Category, Riesz Representation, Open Mapping, Closed Graph, and Banach Fixed Points are all proven.
Frechet K-spaces (FK-spaces) are introduced. They are more general than BK-spaces and are more suited to the study of Topological Sequence Spaces. All Matrix Mappings between FK-spaces are continuous. Alpha, Beta, and Sigma duality between Sequence Spaces are considered and the more general Multiplier Spaces are studied. An application to Matrix Mechanics of Quantum Theory is discussed.
Metric Spaces, Normed Spaces, and Banach Spaces are investigated. Topological concepts of Open and Closed sets, Convergence, Continuity, Compactness, Completeness, and Total Boundedness are studied. The Stone–Weierstrass Approximation Theorem is proven.