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Many results, both from semi group theory itself and from the
applied sciences, are phrased in discipline-specific languages and
hence are hardly known to a broader community. This volume contains
a selection of lectures presented at a conference that was
organised as a forum for all mathematicians using semi group theory
to learn what is happening outside their own field of research. The
collection will help to establish a number of new links between
various sub-disciplines of semigroup theory, stochastic processes,
differential equations and the applied fields. The theory of
semigroups of operators is a well-developed branch of functional
analysis. Its foundations were laid at the beginning of the 20th
century, while the fundamental generation theorem of Hille and
Yosida dates back to the forties. The theory was, from the very
beginning, designed as a universal language for partial
differential equations and stochastic processes, but at the same
time it started to live as an independent branch of operator
theory. Nowadays, it still has the same distinctive flavour: it
develops rapidly by posing new 'internal' questions and in
answering them, discovering new methods that can be used in
applications. On the other hand, it is influenced by questions from
PDEs and stochastic processes as well as from applied sciences such
as mathematical biology and optimal control, and thus it
continually gathers a new momentum. Researchers and postgraduate
students working in operator theory, partial differential
equations, probability and stochastic processes, analytical methods
in biology and other natural sciences, optimization and optimal
control will find this volume useful.
This book presents a detailed and contemporary account of the
classical theory of convergence of semigroups and its more recent
development treating the case where the limit semigroup, in
contrast to the approximating semigroups, acts merely on a subspace
of the original Banach space (this is the case, for example, with
singular perturbations). The author demonstrates the far-reaching
applications of this theory using real examples from various
branches of pure and applied mathematics, with a particular
emphasis on mathematical biology. The book may serve as a useful
reference, containing a significant number of new results ranging
from the analysis of fish populations to signaling pathways in
living cells. It comprises many short chapters, which allows
readers to pick and choose those topics most relevant to them, and
it contains 160 end-of-chapter exercises so that readers can test
their understanding of the material as they go along.
This text is designed both for students of probability and
stochastic processes, and for students of functional analysis. For
the reader not familiar with functional analysis a detailed
introduction to necessary notions and facts is provided. However,
this is not a straight textbook in functional analysis; rather, it
presents some chosen parts of functional analysis that can help
understand ideas from probability and stochastic processes. The
subjects range from basic Hilbert and Banach spaces, through weak
topologies and Banach algebras, to the theory of semigroups of
bounded linear operators. Numerous standard and non-standard
examples and exercises make the book suitable as a course textbook
or for self-study.
This book features selected and peer-reviewed lectures presented at
the 3rd Semigroups of Operators: Theory and Applications
Conference, held in Kazimierz Dolny, Poland, in October 2018 to
mark the 85th birthday of Jan Kisynski. Held every five years, the
conference offers a forum for mathematicians using semigroup theory
to discover what is happening outside their particular field of
research and helps establish new links between various
sub-disciplines of semigroup theory, stochastic processes,
differential equations and the applied fields. The book is intended
for researchers, postgraduate and senior students working in
operator theory, partial differential equations, probability and
stochastic processes, analytical methods in biology and other
natural sciences, optimisation and optimal control. The theory of
semigroups of operators is a well-developed branch of functional
analysis. Its foundations were laid at the beginning of the 20th
century, while Hille and Yosida's fundamental generation theorem
dates back to the forties. The theory was originally designed as a
universal language for partial differential equations and
stochastic processes but, at the same time, it started to become an
independent branch of operator theory. Today, it still has the same
distinctive character: it develops rapidly by posing new 'internal'
questions and, in answering them, discovering new methods that can
be used in applications. On the other hand, it is being influenced
by questions from PDE's and stochastic processes as well as from
applied sciences such as mathematical biology and optimal control
and, as a result, it continually gathers new momentum. However,
many results, both from semigroup theory itself and the applied
sciences, are phrased in discipline-specific languages and are
hardly known to the broader community.
Many results, both from semi group theory itself and from the
applied sciences, are phrased in discipline-specific languages and
hence are hardly known to a broader community. This volume contains
a selection of lectures presented at a conference that was
organised as a forum for all mathematicians using semi group theory
to learn what is happening outside their own field of research. The
collection will help to establish a number of new links between
various sub-disciplines of semigroup theory, stochastic processes,
differential equations and the applied fields. The theory of
semigroups of operators is a well-developed branch of functional
analysis. Its foundations were laid at the beginning of the 20th
century, while the fundamental generation theorem of Hille and
Yosida dates back to the forties. The theory was, from the very
beginning, designed as a universal language for partial
differential equations and stochastic processes, but at the same
time it started to live as an independent branch of operator
theory. Nowadays, it still has the same distinctive flavour: it
develops rapidly by posing new 'internal' questions and in
answering them, discovering new methods that can be used in
applications. On the other hand, it is influenced by questions from
PDEs and stochastic processes as well as from applied sciences such
as mathematical biology and optimal control, and thus it
continually gathers a new momentum. Researchers and postgraduate
students working in operator theory, partial differential
equations, probability and stochastic processes, analytical methods
in biology and other natural sciences, optimization and optimal
control will find this volume useful.
Elementary treatments of Markov chains, especially those devoted to
discrete-time and finite state-space theory, leave the impression
that everything is smooth and easy to understand. This exposition
of the works of Kolmogorov, Feller, Chung, Kato, and other
mathematical luminaries, which focuses on time-continuous chains
but is not so far from being elementary itself, reminds us again
that the impression is false: an infinite, but denumerable,
state-space is where the fun begins. If you have not heard of
Blackwell's example (in which all states are instantaneous), do not
understand what the minimal process is, or do not know what happens
after explosion, dive right in. But beware lest you are enchanted:
'There are more spells than your commonplace magicians ever dreamed
of.'
This authored monograph presents a mathematical description of the
time evolution of neutral genomic regions in terms of the
differential Lyapunov equation. The qualitative behavior of its
solutions, with respect to different mutation models and
demographic patterns, can be characterized using operator semi
group theory. Mutation and drift are two of the main genetic
forces, which act on genes of individuals in populations. Their
effects are influenced by population dynamics. This book covers the
application to two mutation models: single step mutation for
microsatellite loci and single-base substitutions. The effects of
demographic change to the asymptotic of the distribution are also
covered. The target audience primarily covers researchers and
experts in the field but the book may also be beneficial for
graduate students.
This text is designed both for students of probability and
stochastic processes, and for students of functional analysis. For
the reader not familiar with functional analysis a detailed
introduction to necessary notions and facts is provided. However,
this is not a straight textbook in functional analysis; rather, it
presents some chosen parts of functional analysis that can help
understand ideas from probability and stochastic processes. The
subjects range from basic Hilbert and Banach spaces, through weak
topologies and Banach algebras, to the theory of semigroups of
bounded linear operators. Numerous standard and non-standard
examples and exercises make the book suitable as a course textbook
or for self-study.
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