scholarly journals On Holomorphic Continuation Integrable Functions of Along Finite Families of Complex Lines in n-circular Domain

Author(s):  
Otemuratov Bayram P. ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Taylor

In the last few years it has been found useful to apply known theorems in the theory of functions of several complex variables to solve problems arising in the quantum theory of fields (11). In particular, in order to derive the dispersion relations of quantum field theory from the general postulates of that theory it appears useful to apply known theorems on holomorphic continuation for functions of several complex variables ((2), (10)). The most important theorems are those which enable a determination to be made of the largest domain to which every function which is holomorphic in a domain D may be continued. This domain is called the envelope of holomorphy of D, and denoted by E(D). If D = E(D) then D is termed a domain of holomorphy. E(D) may be defined as the smallest domain of holomorphy containing D. Only in the special cases that D is a tube, semi-tube, Hartogs, or circular domain has it been possible to determine the envelope of holomorphy E(D) ((3), (7)). An iterative method for the computation of envelopes of holomorphy has recently been given by Bremmerman(4). It is also possible to use the continuity theorem (1) in a direct manner, though in most cases this is exceedingly difficult.


1986 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 524
Author(s):  
Chuan-Song ◽  
Peng-Yee
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Nicolas Nagel ◽  
Martin Schäfer ◽  
Tino Ullrich

AbstractWe provide a new upper bound for sampling numbers $$(g_n)_{n\in \mathbb {N}}$$ ( g n ) n ∈ N associated with the compact embedding of a separable reproducing kernel Hilbert space into the space of square integrable functions. There are universal constants $$C,c>0$$ C , c > 0 (which are specified in the paper) such that $$\begin{aligned} g^2_n \le \frac{C\log (n)}{n}\sum \limits _{k\ge \lfloor cn \rfloor } \sigma _k^2,\quad n\ge 2, \end{aligned}$$ g n 2 ≤ C log ( n ) n ∑ k ≥ ⌊ c n ⌋ σ k 2 , n ≥ 2 , where $$(\sigma _k)_{k\in \mathbb {N}}$$ ( σ k ) k ∈ N is the sequence of singular numbers (approximation numbers) of the Hilbert–Schmidt embedding $$\mathrm {Id}:H(K) \rightarrow L_2(D,\varrho _D)$$ Id : H ( K ) → L 2 ( D , ϱ D ) . The algorithm which realizes the bound is a least squares algorithm based on a specific set of sampling nodes. These are constructed out of a random draw in combination with a down-sampling procedure coming from the celebrated proof of Weaver’s conjecture, which was shown to be equivalent to the Kadison–Singer problem. Our result is non-constructive since we only show the existence of a linear sampling operator realizing the above bound. The general result can for instance be applied to the well-known situation of $$H^s_{\text {mix}}(\mathbb {T}^d)$$ H mix s ( T d ) in $$L_2(\mathbb {T}^d)$$ L 2 ( T d ) with $$s>1/2$$ s > 1 / 2 . We obtain the asymptotic bound $$\begin{aligned} g_n \le C_{s,d}n^{-s}\log (n)^{(d-1)s+1/2}, \end{aligned}$$ g n ≤ C s , d n - s log ( n ) ( d - 1 ) s + 1 / 2 , which improves on very recent results by shortening the gap between upper and lower bound to $$\sqrt{\log (n)}$$ log ( n ) . The result implies that for dimensions $$d>2$$ d > 2 any sparse grid sampling recovery method does not perform asymptotically optimal.


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