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We study the problem of extending an order-preserving real-valued Lipschitz map defined on a subset of a partially ordered metric space without increasing its Lipschitz constant and preserving its monotonicity. We show that a certain type of relation between the metric and order of the space, which we call radiality, is necessary and sufficient for such an extension to exist. Radiality is automatically satisfied by the equality relation, so the classical McShane–Whitney extension theorem is a special case of our main characterization result. As applications, we obtain a similar generalization of McShane’s uniformly continuous extension theorem, along with some functional representation results for radial partial orders.
We denote by $\mathcal{H}_{d,g,r}$ the Hilbert scheme of smooth curves, which is the union of components whose general point corresponds to a smooth, irreducible, and non-degenerate curve of degree d and genus g in $\mathbb{P}^r.$ In this article, we study $\mathcal{H}_{15,g,5}$ for every possible genus g and determine when it is irreducible. We also study the moduli map $\mathcal{H}_{15,g,5}\rightarrow\mathcal{M}_g$ and several key properties such as gonality of a general element as well as characterizing smooth elements of each component.
The N-body problem has been investigated since Isaac Newton, however vast tracts of the problem remain open. Showcasing the vibrancy of the problem, this book describes four open questions and explores progress made over the last 20 years. After a comprehensive introduction, each chapter focuses on a different open question, highlighting how the stance taken and tools used vary greatly depending on the question. Progress on question one, 'Are the central configurations finite?', uses tools from algebraic geometry. Two, 'Are there any stable periodic orbits?', is dynamical and requires some understanding of the KAM theorem. The third, 'Is every braid realised?', requires topology and variational methods. The final question, 'Does a scattered beam have a dense image?', is quite new and formulating it precisely takes some effort. An excellent resource for students and researchers of mathematics, astronomy, and physics interested in exploring state-of-the-art techniques and perspectives on this classical problem.
Several structural results about permutation groups of finite rank definable in differentially closed fields of characteristic zero (and other similar theories) are obtained. In particular, it is shown that every finite rank definably primitive permutation group is definably isomorphic to an algebraic permutation group living in the constants. Applications include the verification, in differentially closed fields, of the finite Morley rank permutation group conjectures of Borovik-Deloro and Borovik-Cherlin. Applying the results to binding groups for internality to the constants, it is deduced that if complete types p and q are of rank m and n, respectively, and are nonorthogonal, then the $(m+3)$rd Morley power of p is not weakly orthogonal to the $(n+3)$rd Morley power of q. An application to transcendence of generic solutions of pairs of algebraic differential equations is given.
We introduce two new notions called the Daugavet constant and Δ-constant of a point, which measure quantitatively how far the point is from being Daugavet point and Δ-point and allow us to study Daugavet and Δ-points in Banach spaces from a quantitative viewpoint. We show that these notions can be viewed as a localized version of certain global estimations of Daugavet and diametral local diameter two properties such as Daugavet indices of thickness. As an intriguing example, we present the existence of a Banach space X in which all points on the unit sphere have positive Daugavet constants despite the Daugavet indices of thickness of X being zero. Moreover, using the Daugavet and Δ-constants of points in the unit sphere, we describe the existence of almost Daugavet and Δ-points, as well as the set of denting points of the unit ball. We also present exact values of the Daugavet and Δ-constant on several classical Banach spaces, as well as Lipschitz-free spaces. In particular, it is shown that there is a Lipschitz-free space with a Δ-point, which is the furthest away from being a Daugavet point. Finally, we provide some related stability results concerning the Daugavet and Δ-constant.
This paper is concerned with a singular limit of the Kobayashi–Warren–Carter system, a phase field system modelling the evolutions of structures of grains. Under a suitable scaling, the limit system is formally derived when the interface thickness parameter tends to zero. Different from many other problems, it turns out that the limit system is a system involving fractional time derivatives, although the original system is a simple gradient flow. A rigorous derivation is given when the problem is reduced to a gradient flow of a single-well Modica–Mortola functional in a one-dimensional setting.
In this article, we calculate the Birkhoff spectrum in terms of the Hausdorff dimension of level sets for Birkhoff averages of continuous potentials for a certain family of diagonally affine iterated function systems. Also, we study Besicovitch–Eggleston sets for finite generalized Lüroth series number systems with redundancy. The redundancy refers to the fact that each number $x \in [0,1]$ has uncountably many expansions in the system. We determine the Hausdorff dimension of digit frequency sets for such expansions along fibres.
In this article, we study the following Schrödinger equation
\begin{align*}\begin{cases}-\Delta u -\frac{\mu}{|x|^2} u+\lambda u =f(u), &\text{in}~ \mathbb{R}^N\backslash\{0\},\\\int_{\mathbb{R}^{N}}|u|^{2}\mathrm{d} x=a, & u\in H^1(\mathbb{R}^{N}),\end{cases}\end{align*}
where $N\geq 3$, a > 0, and $\mu \lt \frac{(N-2)^2}{4}$. Here $\frac{1}{|x|^2} $ represents the Hardy potential (or ‘inverse-square potential’), λ is a Lagrange multiplier, and the nonlinearity function f satisfies the general Sobolev critical growth condition. Our main goal is to demonstrate the existence of normalized ground state solutions for this equation when $0 \lt \mu \lt \frac{(N-2)^2}{4}$. We also analyse the behaviour of solutions as $\mu\to0^+$ and derive the existence of normalized ground state solutions for the limiting case where µ = 0. Finally, we investigate the existence of normalized solutions when µ < 0 and analyse the asymptotic behaviour of solutions as $\mu\to 0^-$.
It is known that hyperbolic linear delay difference equations are shadowable on the half-line. In this article, we prove the converse and hence the equivalence between hyperbolicity and the positive shadowing property for the following two classes of linear delay difference equations: (a) for non-autonomous equations with finite delays and uniformly bounded compact coefficient operators in Banach spaces and (b) for Volterra difference equations with infinite delay in finite dimensional spaces.
The article considers systems of interacting particles on networks with adaptively coupled dynamics. Such processes appear frequently in natural processes and applications. Relying on the notion of graph convergence, we prove that for large systems the dynamics can be approximated by the corresponding continuum limit. Well-posedness of the latter is also established.
Adversarial training is a min-max optimization problem that is designed to construct robust classifiers against adversarial perturbations of data. We study three models of adversarial training in the multiclass agnostic-classifier setting. We prove the existence of Borel measurable robust classifiers in each model and provide a unified perspective of the adversarial training problem, expanding the connections with optimal transport initiated by the authors in their previous work [21]. In addition, we develop new connections between adversarial training in the multiclass setting and total variation regularization. As a corollary of our results, we provide an alternative proof of the existence of Borel measurable solutions to the agnostic adversarial training problem in the binary classification setting.
Recently, we analysed spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) of solitons in linearly coupled dual-core waveguides with fractional diffraction and cubic nonlinearity. In a practical context, the system can serve as a model for optical waveguides with the fractional diffraction or Bose–Einstein condensate of particles with Lévy index $\alpha <2$. In an earlier study, the SSB in the fractional coupler was identified as the bifurcation of subcritical type, becoming extremely subcritical in the limit of $\alpha \rightarrow 1$. There, the moving solitons and collisions between them at low speeds were also explored. In the present paper, we present new numerical results for fast solitons demonstrating restoration of symmetry in post-collision dynamics.
We study locally constant skew-product maps over full shifts of finite symbols with arbitrary compact metric spaces as fiber spaces. We introduce a new criterion to determine the density of leaves of the strong unstable (and strong stable) foliation, that is, for its minimality. When the fiber space is a circle, we show that both strong foliations are minimal for an open and dense set of robustly transitive skew-products. We provide examples where either one foliation is minimal or neither is minimal. Our approach involves investigating the dynamics of the associated iterated function system (IFS). We establish the asymptotic stability of the phase space of the IFS when it is a strict attractor of the system. We also show that any transitive IFS consisting of circle diffeomorphisms that preserve orientation can be approximated by a robust forward and backward minimal, expanding, and ergodic (with respect to Lebesgue) IFS. Lastly, we provide examples of smooth robustly transitive IFSs where either the forward or the backward minimal fails, or both.
Let $\mathfrak{C}$ be the smallest class of countable discrete groups with the following properties: (i) $\mathfrak{C}$ contains the trivial group, (ii) $\mathfrak{C}$ is closed under isomorphisms, countable increasing unions and extensions by $\mathbb{Z}$. Note that $\mathfrak{C}$ contains all countable discrete torsion-free abelian groups and poly-$\mathbb{Z}$ groups. Also, $\mathfrak{C}$ is a subclass of the class of countable discrete torsion-free elementary amenable groups. In this article, we show that if $\Gamma\in \mathfrak{C}$, then all strongly outer actions of Γ on the Razak–Jacelon algebra $\mathcal{W}$ are cocycle conjugate to each other. This can be regarded as an analogous result of Szabó’s result for strongly self-absorbing C$^*$-algebras.
Three-dimensional short-crested water waves are known to host harmonic resonances (HRs). Their existence depends on their sporadicity versus their persistency. Previous studies, using a unique yet hybrid solution, suggested that HRs exhibit sporadic instability, with the domain of instability exhibiting a bubble-like structure which experiences a loss of stability followed by a re-stabilization. Through the calculation of their complete multiple solution structures and normal forms, we discuss the particular harmonic resonance (2,6). The (2,6) resonance was chosen, not only because it is of lower order, and thus more likely to be significant, but also because it is representative of a fully developed three-dimensional water wave field. Its appearance, growth rate and persistency are discussed. On our converged solutions, we show that, at an incidence angle for which HR (2,6) occurs, the associated superharmonic instability is no longer sporadic. It was also found that the multiple solution operates a subcritical pitchfork bifurcation, so regardless of the value of the control parameter, the wave steepness, a stable branch of the solution always exists. As a result, the analysis reveals two competing processes that either provoke and enhance HRs, or inhibit their appearance and development.
In Caspers et al. (Can. J. Math. 75[6] [2022], 1–18), transference results between multilinear Fourier and Schur multipliers on noncommutative $L_p$-spaces were shown for unimodular groups. We propose a suitable extension of the definition of multilinear Fourier multipliers for non-unimodular groups and show that the aforementioned transference results also hold in this more general setting.
In Oliveira, Schlomiuk, Travaglini, and Valls, Geometry, integrability and bifurcation diagrams of a family of quadratic differential systems as application of Darboux theory of integrability, Electron. J. Qual. Theory Differ. Equ.45(2021), 1–90, the authors investigate about the integrability of the family QSH (the whole class of non-degenerate planar quadratic systems possessing at least one invariant hyperbola). However, some very difficult cases are left open in Oliveira, Schlomiuk, Travaglini, and Valls, Geometry, integrability and bifurcation diagrams of a family of quadratic differential systems as application of Darboux theory of integrability, Electron. J. Qual. Theory Differ. Equ.45(2021), 1–90, and the main aim of this article is to study the Liouvillian integrability some of the systems that were left behind in Oliveira, Schlomiuk, Travaglini, and Valls, Geometry, integrability and bifurcation diagrams of a family of quadratic differential systems as application of Darboux theory of integrability, Electron. J. Qual. Theory Differ. Equ.45(2021), 1–90.