Remark on $C_0$-semigroups with scaling invariance

Author(s):  
Yasunori Maekawa
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor Hernández-Santamaría ◽  
Alberto Saldaña

Abstract We study existence and convergence properties of least-energy symmetric solutions (l.e.s.s.) to the pure critical exponent problem ( - Δ ) s ⁢ u s = | u s | 2 s ⋆ - 2 ⁢ u s , u s ∈ D 0 s ⁢ ( Ω ) ,  2 s ⋆ := 2 ⁢ N N - 2 ⁢ s , (-\Delta)^{s}u_{s}=\lvert u_{s}\rvert^{2_{s}^{\star}-2}u_{s},\quad u_{s}\in D^% {s}_{0}(\Omega),\,2^{\star}_{s}:=\frac{2N}{N-2s}, where s is any positive number, Ω is either ℝ N {\mathbb{R}^{N}} or a smooth symmetric bounded domain, and D 0 s ⁢ ( Ω ) {D^{s}_{0}(\Omega)} is the homogeneous Sobolev space. Depending on the kind of symmetry considered, solutions can be sign-changing. We show that, up to a subsequence, a l.e.s.s. u s {u_{s}} converges to a l.e.s.s. u t {u_{t}} as s goes to any t > 0 {t>0} . In bounded domains, this convergence can be characterized in terms of an homogeneous fractional norm of order t - ε {t-\varepsilon} . A similar characterization is no longer possible in unbounded domains due to scaling invariance and an incompatibility with the functional spaces; to circumvent these difficulties, we use a suitable rescaling and characterize the convergence via cut-off functions. If t is an integer, then these results describe in a precise way the nonlocal-to-local transition. Finally, we also include a nonexistence result of nontrivial nonnegative solutions in a ball for any s > 1 {s>1} .


2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (09) ◽  
pp. 1250207 ◽  
Author(s):  
DIEGO F. M. OLIVEIRA ◽  
MARKO ROBNIK

We study some dynamical properties of a classical time-dependent elliptical billiard. We consider periodically moving boundary and collisions between the particle and the boundary are assumed to be elastic. Our results confirm that although the static elliptical billiard is an integrable system, after introducing time-dependent perturbation on the boundary the unlimited energy growth is observed. The behavior of the average velocity is described using scaling arguments.


2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliano A. de Oliveira ◽  
Carl P. Dettmann ◽  
Diogo R. da Costa ◽  
Edson D. Leonel

GEOMATICA ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 385-394
Author(s):  
Zhanlong Chen ◽  
Yongyang Xu ◽  
Liang Wu

With the rotation, translation and scaling invariance, etc. it is difficult to measure the similarity between GIS planar elements. To describe the graphics precisely, according to the number of shortest paths where vertices occur, we define the “vertex betweenness;” this measures the importance of each vertex in a graph. The higher the vertex betweenness, the more important vertex becomes. We propose a contour fea ture points extraction method, where Fourier descriptors are used. We normalize the first n order factors of Fourier descriptors, on the basis of similarity between polygons, which is obtained by comparing the cosine values for every two vectors. The experiment is operated on two different data scales, 1:50 000 and 1:250 000. Combined with analysis of impact factors during similarity measurement, the experiment results show that the contour feature points extraction method can effectively measure the geometrical similarity between GIS planar elements.


2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (06) ◽  
pp. 1250029 ◽  
Author(s):  
NOEL TAY NUO WI ◽  
CHU KIONG LOO ◽  
LETCHUMANAN CHOCKALINGAM

A small change in image will cause a dramatic change in signals. Visual system is required to be able to ignore these changes, yet specific enough to perform recognition. This work intends to provide biological-backed insights into 2D translation and scaling invariance and 3D pose-invariance without imposing strain on memory and with biological justification. The model can be divided into lower and higher visual stages. Lower visual stage models the visual pathway from retina to the striate cortex (V1), whereas the modeling of higher visual stage is mainly based on current psychophysical evidences.


1980 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guy Pelletier

In part 1 of this work, we have found a ‘critical curve’ which separates the unstable self-modulation regime from the stable one for a Gibbs ensemble of interacting modes. On this critical curve, the correlation length diverges and scaling invariance occurs; in particular, the Langmuir correlation spectrum is proportional to k-2. Simple laws have been derived for the neighbourhood of the critical curve. However these derivations are based on equilibrium statistical mechanics and the results are obtained with a Hartree approximation which has not been checked. So, in this second part, we elaborate a direct statistical theory of Zakharov's equations completed by excitation sources and dissipations. In spite of infra-red divergences and a large fluctuation level, large-scale properties are derived in the neighbourhood of the critical curve, by the renormalization group method. The laws obtained in part 1 are slightly modified; however, the same spectrum is obtained.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document