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The rigorous derivation of linear elasticity from finite elasticity by means of $\Gamma$-convergence is a well-known result, which has been extended to different models also beyond the elastic regime. However, in these results the applied forces are usually assumed to be dead loads, that is, their density in the reference configuration is independent of the actual deformation. In this paper we begin a study of the variational derivation of linear elasticity in the presence of live loads. We consider a pure traction problem for a nonlinearly elastic body subject to a pressure live load and we compute its linearization for small pressure by $\Gamma$-convergence. We allow for a weakly coercive elastic energy density and we prove strong convergence of minimizers.
An old conjecture of Erdős and McKay states that if all homogeneous sets in an $n$-vertex graph are of order $O(\!\log n)$ then the graph contains induced subgraphs of each size from $\{0,1,\ldots, \Omega \big(n^2\big)\}$. We prove a bipartite analogue of the conjecture: if all balanced homogeneous sets in an $n \times n$ bipartite graph are of order $O(\!\log n)$, then the graph contains induced subgraphs of each size from $\{0,1,\ldots, \Omega \big(n^2\big)\}$.
This paper consists of three parts: First, letting $b_1(z)$, $b_2(z)$, $p_1(z)$ and $p_2(z)$ be nonzero polynomials such that $p_1(z)$ and $p_2(z)$ have the same degree $k\geq 1$ and distinct leading coefficients $1$ and $\alpha$, respectively, we solve entire solutions of the Tumura–Clunie type differential equation $f^{n}+P(z,\,f)=b_1(z)e^{p_1(z)}+b_2(z)e^{p_2(z)}$, where $n\geq 2$ is an integer, $P(z,\,f)$ is a differential polynomial in $f$ of degree $\leq n-1$ with coefficients having polynomial growth. Second, we study the oscillation of the second-order differential equation $f''-[b_1(z)e^{p_1(z)}+b_2(z)e^{p_2(z)}]f=0$ and prove that $\alpha =[2(m+1)-1]/[2(m+1)]$ for some integer $m\geq 0$ if this equation admits a nontrivial solution such that $\lambda (f)<\infty$. This partially answers a question of Ishizaki. Finally, letting $b_2\not =0$ and $b_3$ be constants and $l$ and $s$ be relatively prime integers such that $l> s\geq 1$, we prove that $l=2$ if the equation $f''-(e^{lz}+b_2e^{sz}+b_3)f=0$ admits two linearly independent solutions $f_1$ and $f_2$ such that $\max \{\lambda (f_1),\,\lambda (f_2)\}<\infty$. In particular, we precisely characterize all solutions such that $\lambda (f)<\infty$ when $l=2$ and $l=4$.
We consider positive solutions to a class of quasilinear elliptic problems involving the Hardy potential under zero Dirichlet boundary condition. Via moving plane method, proving a weak comparison principle, we prove symmetry and monotonicity properties for the solutions defined on strictly convex symmetric domains.
We apply a method inspired by Popa's intertwining-by-bimodules technique to investigate inner conjugacy of MASAs in graph $C^*$-algebras. First, we give a new proof of non-inner conjugacy of the diagonal MASA ${\mathcal {D}}_E$ to its non-trivial image under a quasi-free automorphism, where $E$ is a finite transitive graph. Changing graphs representing the algebras, this result applies to some non quasi-free automorphisms as well. Then, we exhibit a large class of MASAs in the Cuntz algebra ${\mathcal {O}}_n$ that are not inner conjugate to the diagonal ${\mathcal {D}}_n$.
Given a graphon $W$ and a finite simple graph $H$, with vertex set $V(H)$, denote by $X_n(H, W)$ the number of copies of $H$ in a $W$-random graph on $n$ vertices. The asymptotic distribution of $X_n(H, W)$ was recently obtained by Hladký, Pelekis, and Šileikis [17] in the case where $H$ is a clique. In this paper, we extend this result to any fixed graph $H$. Towards this we introduce a notion of $H$-regularity of graphons and show that if the graphon $W$ is not $H$-regular, then $X_n(H, W)$ has Gaussian fluctuations with scaling $n^{|V(H)|-\frac{1}{2}}$. On the other hand, if $W$ is $H$-regular, then the fluctuations are of order $n^{|V(H)|-1}$ and the limiting distribution of $X_n(H, W)$ can have both Gaussian and non-Gaussian components, where the non-Gaussian component is a (possibly) infinite weighted sum of centred chi-squared random variables with the weights determined by the spectral properties of a graphon derived from $W$. Our proofs use the asymptotic theory of generalised $U$-statistics developed by Janson and Nowicki [22]. We also investigate the structure of $H$-regular graphons for which either the Gaussian or the non-Gaussian component of the limiting distribution (but not both) is degenerate. Interestingly, there are also $H$-regular graphons $W$ for which both the Gaussian or the non-Gaussian components are degenerate, that is, $X_n(H, W)$ has a degenerate limit even under the scaling $n^{|V(H)|-1}$. We give an example of this degeneracy with $H=K_{1, 3}$ (the 3-star) and also establish non-degeneracy in a few examples. This naturally leads to interesting open questions on higher order degeneracies.
We raise the ante, by explaining why the heuristic in Chapter 1 prima facie fails. The explanation requires some surgery theory, which will be important throughout the remainder of the book, and facts about lattices, from a variety of sources.
The Borel heuristic makes some preictions about group actions, but in this chapter we see that some are reasonably well founded, with some counterexamples at the prime 2, and others are false. Partly this is explained by means of the difference between equivariant and isovariant topology, and also in restricting the class of equivariantly aspherical spaces that are expected to be rigid.
The book closes with a brief survey of some of the techniques that have been used to prove the Farrell–Jones conjecture and the Baum–Connes conjecture. We lightly touch on the role of expanders as an obstruction to some of the proof techniques, and the utility of amenability, and its variant, coarse embedding in Hilbert space, as a tool for proving such conjectures.
We discuss the classical construction of locally symmetric manifolds, and also subsequent constructions, due to Davis, Gromov, Piatetski-Shapiro, and Thurston, of aspherical manifolds, to which the Borel conjecture applies.
The Novikov conjecture is put into a larger context, and we explain when the conjectures one is led to in this way tend to be deep facts about the fundamental group, and when they are theorems. We give examples from differential geometry, algebraic geometry, and transformation groups.
Although the Borel conjecture is a uniqueness question, it has implications for problems of whether certain manifolds exist. We shall discuss a conjecture of Wall, and some of its evidence. And also within transformation groups, the Nielsen problem and an analogue of Connes and Raymond. Further afield, we discuss manifolds with excessive symmetry.
The Novikov conjecture arises as a piece of the Borel conjecture, although generalized beyond the setting of aspherical manifolds. This chapted gives several methods, from spltting theorems to index theory to bounded topology, for verifying this conjecture.
Let $\mu $ be a probability measure on $\mathrm {GL}_d(\mathbb {R})$, and denote by $S_n:= g_n \cdots g_1$ the associated random matrix product, where $g_j$ are i.i.d. with law $\mu $. Under the assumptions that $\mu $ has a finite exponential moment and generates a proximal and strongly irreducible semigroup, we prove a Berry–Esseen bound with the optimal rate $O(1/\sqrt n)$ for the coefficients of $S_n$, settling a long-standing question considered since the fundamental work of Guivarc’h and Raugi. The local limit theorem for the coefficients is also obtained, complementing a recent partial result of Grama, Quint and Xiao.