Weak 𝐻¹, the real and complex case

Author(s):  
Valentin Andreev ◽  
Joseph Cima
Keyword(s):  
1999 ◽  
Vol 1999 (511) ◽  
pp. 1-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hermann König ◽  
Carsten Schütt ◽  
Nicole Tomczak-Jaegermann

Abstract The projection constants of the lpn-spaces for 1 ≦ p ≦ 2 satisfy with in the real case and in the complex case. Further, there is c < 1 such that the projection constant of any n-dimensional space Xn with 1-symmetric basis can be estimated by . The proofs of the results are based on averaging techniques over permutations and a variant of Khintchine's inequality which states that


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-62
Author(s):  
Ammar Mesloub

This paper shows the different ways of using generalized Givens rotations in complex joint eigenvaluedecomposition (JEVD) problem. It presents the different schemes of generalized Givens rotation, justifies the introducedapproximations and focuses on the process of extending an algorithm developed for real JEVD to the complex JEVD.Several Joint Diagonalization problem use generalized Givens rotations to achieve the solution, many algorithmsdeveloped in the real case exist in the literature and are not generalized to the complex case. Hence, we show herein asimple and not trivial way to get the complex case from the real one. Simulation results are provided to highlight theeffectiveness and behaviour of the proposed techniques for different scenarios.


2020 ◽  
Vol 378 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 1021-1059
Author(s):  
Fabian Hebestreit ◽  
Steffen Sagave

Abstract Using the framework for multiplicative parametrized homotopy theory introduced in joint work with C. Schlichtkrull, we produce a multiplicative comparison between the homotopical and operator algebraic constructions of twisted K-theory, both in the real and complex case. We also improve several comparison results about twisted K-theory of $$C^*$$ C ∗ -algebras to include multiplicative structures. Our results can also be interpreted in the $$\infty $$ ∞ -categorical setup for parametrized spectra.


Author(s):  
Thomas Ernst

The purpose of this article is to generalize the ring of \(q\)-Appell polynomials to the complex case. The formulas for \(q\)-Appell polynomials thus appear again, with similar names, in a purely symmetric way. Since these complex \(q\)-Appell polynomials are also \(q\)-complex analytic functions, we are able to give a first example of the \(q\)-Cauchy-Riemann equations. Similarly, in the spirit of Kim and Ryoo, we can define \(q\)-complex Bernoulli and Euler polynomials. Previously, in order to obtain the \(q\)-Appell polynomial, we would make a \(q\)-addition of the corresponding \(q\)-Appell number with \(x\). This is now replaced by a \(q\)-addition of the corresponding \(q\)-Appell number with two infinite function sequences \(C_{\nu,q}(x,y)\) and \(S_{\nu,q}(x,y)\) for the real and imaginary part of a new so-called \(q\)-complex number appearing in the generating function. Finally, we can prove \(q\)-analogues of the Cauchy-Riemann equations.


2004 ◽  
Vol 2004 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beata Randrianantoanina

We characterize norm-one complemented subspaces of Orlicz sequence spacesℓMequipped with either Luxemburg or Orlicz norm, provided that the Orlicz functionMis sufficiently smooth and sufficiently different from the square function. We measure smoothness ofMusingAC1andAC2classes introduced by Maleev and Troyanski in 1991, and the condition forMto be different from a square function is essentially a requirement that the second derivativeM″ofMcannot have a finite nonzero limit at zero. This paper treats the real case; the complex case follows from previously known results.


1967 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 369-388
Author(s):  
R. H. F. Denniston

Let Q1,…, Q5 be five fixed points (no four coplanar) of the real projective space S3: let s be a variable quadric surface through these points. The set of all such quadrics can be represented by the points of a real S4, in which there is a quartic primal that represents cones. The geometry of this threefold is well known in the complex case, but has hardly been considered at all in the real case: and one object of the present paper is to describe the real threefold and determine its homology groups.


1988 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. C. Crabb ◽  
S. A. Mitchell

In [6] and [9] the second author and Bill Richter showed that the natural ‘degree’ filtration on the homology of ΩSU(n) has a geometric realization, and that this filtration stably splits (as conjectured by M. Hopkins and M. Mahowald). The purpose of the present paper is to prove the real and quaternionic analogues of these results. To explain what this means, consider the following two ways of viewing the filtration and splitting for ΩSU(n). Whenn= ∞, ΩSU=BU. The filtration isBU(1)⊆BU(2)⊆… and the splittingBU≅ V1≤<∞is a theorem of Snaith[14]. The result for ΩSU(n) may then be viewed as a ‘restriction’ of the result forBU. On the other hand there is a well-known inclusion ℂPn−1. This extends to a map ΩΣℂPn−1→ΩSU(n), and the filtration (or splitting) may be viewed, at least algebraically, as a ‘quotient’ of the James filtration (or splitting) of ΩΣℂPn−1. It is now clear what is meant by the ‘real and quaternionic analogues’. In the quaternionic case, we replaceBUbyBSp=Ω(SU/SP), ΩSU(n) by Ω(SU(2n)/SP(n))and ℂPn−1by ℍPn−1. The integral homology of Ω(SU(2n)/SP(n)) is the symmetric algebra on the homology of ℍPn−1, and may be filtered by the various symmetric powers. We show that this filtration can be realized geometrically, and that the spaces of the filtration are certain (singular) real algebraic varieties (exactly as in the complex case). The strata of the filtration are vector bundles over filtrations of Ω(SU(2n−2)/SP(n−1)), and the filtration stably splits. See Theorems (1·7) and (2·1) for the precise statement. In the real case we replaceBUby Ω(SU/SO), Ω(SU(n)/SO(n)) and ℂPn−1by ℝPn−1. Here integral homology must be replaced by mod 2 homology, and splitting is only obtained after localization at 2. (Snaith's splitting ofBOin [14] can be refined [2, 8] so as to be exactly analogous to the splitting ofBU:BO≅V1≤<∞MO(k).)


2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-99
Author(s):  
Megan Dodd Little

Delivery has often been treated as an afterthought of the “real work” of writing. This article demonstrates how writers in some contexts must think very carefully about delivery from the very beginning of their process. Tracking collaborative writers’ talk, this article demonstrates how a group of writers works to anticipate delivery by repeatedly constructing delivery narratives—that is, stories about the future handoff of their document to audiences. In a complex case of LGBT policy advocacy, the writers weave together multiple delivery narratives in order to achieve consensus, revealing the influence of discursive voices, perspectives, personal and institutional histories, and disciplinary training on the group’s rhetorical strategies. This article also considers how an experienced administrative lawyer constructs delivery narratives, revealing an expert’s strategy to try to get a legitimate hearing for a novel legal interpretation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document