Diffraction of Singularities for the Wave Equation on Manifolds with Corners

Diffraction of Singularities for the Wave Equation on Manifolds with Corners
Author: Richard B. Melrose
Publisher:
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2013
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN:

The authors consider the fundamental solution to the wave equation on a manifold with corners of arbitrary codimension. If the initial pole of the solution is appropriately situated, the authors show that the singularities which are diffracted by the corners (i.e., loosely speaking, are not propagated along limits of transversely reflected rays) are smoother than the main singularities of the solution. More generally, the authors show that subject to a hypothesis of nonfocusing, diffracted wavefronts of any solution to the wave equation are smoother than the incident singularities. These results extend the authors' previous work on edge manifolds to a situation where the fibers of the boundary fibration, obtained here by blowup of the corner in question, are themselves manifolds with corners.

Evolution Equations

Evolution Equations
Author: David Ellwood
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 587
Release: 2013-06-26
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821868616

This volume is a collection of notes from lectures given at the 2008 Clay Mathematics Institute Summer School, held in Zürich, Switzerland. The lectures were designed for graduate students and mathematicians within five years of the Ph.D., and the main focus of the program was on recent progress in the theory of evolution equations. Such equations lie at the heart of many areas of mathematical physics and arise not only in situations with a manifest time evolution (such as linear and nonlinear wave and Schrödinger equations) but also in the high energy or semi-classical limits of elliptic problems. The three main courses focused primarily on microlocal analysis and spectral and scattering theory, the theory of the nonlinear Schrödinger and wave equations, and evolution problems in general relativity. These major topics were supplemented by several mini-courses reporting on the derivation of effective evolution equations from microscopic quantum dynamics; on wave maps with and without symmetries; on quantum N-body scattering, diffraction of waves, and symmetric spaces; and on nonlinear Schrödinger equations at critical regularity. Although highly detailed treatments of some of these topics are now available in the published literature, in this collection the reader can learn the fundamental ideas and tools with a minimum of technical machinery. Moreover, the treatment in this volume emphasizes common themes and techniques in the field, including exact and approximate conservation laws, energy methods, and positive commutator arguments. Titles in this series are co-published with the Clay Mathematics Institute (Cambridge, MA).

Inverse Problems and Applications

Inverse Problems and Applications
Author: Gunther Uhlmann
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 593
Release: 2013
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 1107032016

Inverse problems lie at the heart of contemporary scientific inquiry and technological development. Applications include a variety of medical and other imaging techniques, which are used for early detection of cancer and pulmonary edema, location of oil and mineral deposits in the Earth's interior, creation of astrophysical images from telescope data, finding cracks and interfaces within materials, shape optimization, model identification in growth processes, and modeling in the life sciences among others. The expository survey essays in this book describe recent developments in inverse problems and imaging, including hybrid or couple-physics methods arising in medical imaging, Calderon's problem and electrical impedance tomography, inverse problems arising in global seismology and oil exploration, inverse spectral problems, and the study of asymptotically hyperbolic spaces. It is suitable for graduate students and researchers interested in inverse problems and their applications.

Partial Differential Equations II

Partial Differential Equations II
Author: Michael E. Taylor
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 706
Release: 2023-12-06
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 303133700X

This second in the series of three volumes builds upon the basic theory of linear PDE given in volume 1, and pursues more advanced topics. Analytical tools introduced here include pseudodifferential operators, the functional analysis of self-adjoint operators, and Wiener measure. The book also develops basic differential geometrical concepts, centered about curvature. Topics covered include spectral theory of elliptic differential operators, the theory of scattering of waves by obstacles, index theory for Dirac operators, and Brownian motion and diffusion. The book is targeted at graduate students in mathematics and at professional mathematicians with an interest in partial differential equations, mathematical physics, differential geometry, harmonic analysis, and complex analysis. The third edition further expands the material by incorporating new theorems and applications throughout the book, and by deepening connections and relating concepts across chapters. It includes new sections on rigid body motion, on probabilistic results related to random walks, on aspects of operator theory related to quantum mechanics, on overdetermined systems, and on the Euler equation for incompressible fluids. The appendices have also been updated with additional results, ranging from weak convergence of measures to the curvature of Kahler manifolds. Michael E. Taylor is a Professor of Mathematics at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. Review of first edition: “These volumes will be read by several generations of readers eager to learn the modern theory of partial differential equations of mathematical physics and the analysis in which this theory is rooted.” (Peter Lax, SIAM review, June 1998)

A New Approach to Kazhdan-Lusztig Theory of Type B Via Quantum Symmetric Pairs

A New Approach to Kazhdan-Lusztig Theory of Type B Via Quantum Symmetric Pairs
Author: Huanchen Bao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2018
Genre: Hecke algebras
ISBN:

We show that Hecke algebra of type B and a coideal subalgebra of the type A quantum group satsify a double centralizer property, generalizing the Schur-Jimbo duality in type A. The quantum group of type A and its coideal subalgebra form a quantum symmetric pair. A new theory of canonical bases arising from quantum symmetric pairs is initiated. It is then applied to formulate and establish for the first time a Kazhdan-Lusztig theory for the BGG category [O] of the orthosymplectic Lie superalgebras osp(2m + 1[vertical bar]2n). In particular, our approach provides a new formulation of the Kazhdan-Lusztig theory for Lie algebras of type B/C.

Recent Advances in Differential Equations and Mathematical Physics

Recent Advances in Differential Equations and Mathematical Physics
Author: Nikolai Chernov
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2006
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821838407

Surveys topics in differential equations that are associated with mathematical physics. This book includes such topics as asymptotic formulas for the ground-state energy of fermionic gas, $J$-self adjoint Dirac operators, and spectral theory of Schrodinger operators. It is suitable for mathematicians and physicists.

A Torsion Jacquet-Langlands Correspondence

A Torsion Jacquet-Langlands Correspondence
Author: Frank Calegari
Publisher:
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2019
Genre: Algebra, Homological
ISBN:

"We prove a numerical form of a Jacquet-Langlands correspondence for torsion classes on arithmetic hyperbolic 3-manifolds." -- Prové de l'editor.

National Research Symposium on Geometric Analysis and Applications (ANU, June 26-30, 2000)

National Research Symposium on Geometric Analysis and Applications (ANU, June 26-30, 2000)
Author: Alexander Isaev
Publisher:
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2001
Genre: Geometric analysis
ISBN:

This volume contains the proceeding of the National Research Symposium on Geometric Analysis and Applications held at the Centre for Mathematics and its Applications, Australian National University, Canberra, from June 26-30, 2000. The Symposium celebrated the many significant contributions of Professor Derek W.