Iterates of a compact holomorphic map on a finite rank homogeneous ball

2019 ◽  
Vol 85 (12) ◽  
pp. 203-214
Author(s):  
Michael Mackey ◽  
Pauline Mellon
1982 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 17-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. van der Geer ◽  
K. Ueno

Around the beginning of this century G. Humbert ([9]) made a detailed study of the properties of compact complex surfaces which can be parametrized by singular abelian functions. A surface parametrized by singular abelian functions is the image under a holomorphic map of a singular abelian surface (i.e. an abelian surface whose endomorphism ring is larger than the ring of rational integers). Humbert showed that the periods of a singular abelian surface satisfy a quadratic relation with integral coefficients and he constructed an invariant D of such a relation with respect to the action of the integral symplectic group on the periods.


Author(s):  
Constanze Liaw ◽  
Sergei Treil ◽  
Alexander Volberg

Abstract The classical Aronszajn–Donoghue theorem states that for a rank-one perturbation of a self-adjoint operator (by a cyclic vector) the singular parts of the spectral measures of the original and perturbed operators are mutually singular. As simple direct sum type examples show, this result does not hold for finite rank perturbations. However, the set of exceptional perturbations is pretty small. Namely, for a family of rank $d$ perturbations $A_{\boldsymbol{\alpha }}:= A + {\textbf{B}} {\boldsymbol{\alpha }} {\textbf{B}}^*$, ${\textbf{B}}:{\mathbb C}^d\to{{\mathcal{H}}}$, with ${\operatorname{Ran}}{\textbf{B}}$ being cyclic for $A$, parametrized by $d\times d$ Hermitian matrices ${\boldsymbol{\alpha }}$, the singular parts of the spectral measures of $A$ and $A_{\boldsymbol{\alpha }}$ are mutually singular for all ${\boldsymbol{\alpha }}$ except for a small exceptional set $E$. It was shown earlier by the 1st two authors, see [4], that $E$ is a subset of measure zero of the space $\textbf{H}(d)$ of $d\times d$ Hermitian matrices. In this paper, we show that the set $E$ has small Hausdorff dimension, $\dim E \le \dim \textbf{H}(d)-1 = d^2-1$.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham A. Niblo ◽  
Nick Wright ◽  
Jiawen Zhang

AbstractThis paper establishes a new combinatorial framework for the study of coarse median spaces, bridging the worlds of asymptotic geometry, algebra and combinatorics. We introduce a simple and entirely algebraic notion of coarse median algebra which simultaneously generalises the concepts of bounded geometry coarse median spaces and classical discrete median algebras. We study the coarse median universe from the perspective of intervals, with a particular focus on cardinality as a proxy for distance. In particular we prove that the metric on a quasi-geodesic coarse median space of bounded geometry can be constructed up to quasi-isometry using only the coarse median operator. Finally we develop a concept of rank for coarse median algebras in terms of the geometry of intervals and show that the notion of finite rank coarse median algebra provides a natural higher dimensional analogue of Gromov’s concept of $$\delta $$ δ -hyperbolicity.


1985 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 11-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shigeyuki Kondo

A degeneration of K3 surfaces (over the complex number field) is a proper holomorphic map π: X→Δ from a three dimensional complex manifold to a disc, such that, for t ≠ 0, the fibres Xt = π-1(t) are smooth K3 surfaces (i.e. surfaces Xt with trivial canonical class KXt = 0 and dim H1(Xt, Oxt) = 0).


Author(s):  
Clément Luneau ◽  
Jean Barbier ◽  
Nicolas Macris

Abstract We consider a statistical model for finite-rank symmetric tensor factorization and prove a single-letter variational expression for its asymptotic mutual information when the tensor is of even order. The proof applies the adaptive interpolation method originally invented for rank-one factorization. Here we show how to extend the adaptive interpolation to finite-rank and even-order tensors. This requires new non-trivial ideas with respect to the current analysis in the literature. We also underline where the proof falls short when dealing with odd-order tensors.


2008 ◽  
Vol 192 ◽  
pp. 27-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaki Tsukamoto

AbstractA Brody curve is a holomorphic map from the complex plane ℂ to a Hermitian manifold with bounded derivative. In this paper we study the value distribution of Brody curves from the viewpoint of moduli theory. The moduli space of Brody curves becomes infinite dimensional in general, and we study its “mean dimension”. We introduce the notion of “mean energy” and show that this can be used to estimate the mean dimension.


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