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This compendium focuses on self-contained presentations of various
developments in mathematical analysis, cryptography and information
science.The volume features both original research and survey
papers contributed by experts from the international community. The
book has a strong interdisciplinary flavor and features the most
recent developments in the topics treated.This useful reference
text benefits professionals, researchers, academics and graduate
students.
This edited volume presents state-of-the-art developments in
various areas in which Harmonic Analysis is applied. Contributions
cover a variety of different topics and problems treated such as
structure and optimization in computational harmonic analysis,
sampling and approximation in shift invariant subspaces of L2( ),
optimal rank one matrix decomposition, the Riemann Hypothesis,
large sets avoiding rough patterns, Hardy Littlewood series,
Navier-Stokes equations, sleep dynamics exploration and automatic
annotation by combining modern harmonic analysis tools, harmonic
functions in slabs and half-spaces, Andoni -Krauthgamer
-Razenshteyn characterization of sketchable norms fails for
sketchable metrics, random matrix theory, multiplicative completion
of redundant systems in Hilbert and Banach function spaces. Efforts
have been made to ensure that the content of the book constitutes a
valuable resource for graduate students as well as senior
researchers working on Harmonic Analysis and its various
interconnections with related areas.
Advances in discrete mathematics are presented in this book with
applications in theoretical mathematics and interdisciplinary
research. Each chapter presents new methods and techniques by
leading experts. Unifying interdisciplinary applications, problems,
and approaches of discrete mathematics, this book connects topics
in graph theory, combinatorics, number theory, cryptography,
dynamical systems, finance, optimization, and game theory. Graduate
students and researchers in optimization, mathematics, computer
science, economics, and physics will find the wide range of
interdisciplinary topics, methods, and applications covered in this
book engaging and useful.
Exploring the Riemann Zeta Function: 190 years from Riemann's Birth
presents a collection of chapters contributed by eminent experts
devoted to the Riemann Zeta Function, its generalizations, and
their various applications to several scientific disciplines,
including Analytic Number Theory, Harmonic Analysis, Complex
Analysis, Probability Theory, and related subjects. The book
focuses on both old and new results towards the solution of
long-standing problems as well as it features some key historical
remarks. The purpose of this volume is to present in a unified way
broad and deep areas of research in a self-contained manner. It
will be particularly useful for graduate courses and seminars as
well as it will make an excellent reference tool for graduate
students and researchers in Mathematics, Mathematical Physics,
Engineering and Cryptography.
The book provides a self-contained introduction to classical
Number Theory. All the proofs of the individual theorems and the
solutions of the exercises are being presented step by step. Some
historical remarks are also presented. The book will be directed to
advanced undergraduate, beginning graduate students as well as to
students who prepare for mathematical competitions (ex.
Mathematical Olympiads and Putnam Mathematical competition).
The goal in putting together this unique compilation was to present
the current status of the solutions to some of the most essential
open problems in pure and applied mathematics. Emphasis is also
given to problems in interdisciplinary research for which
mathematics plays a key role. This volume comprises highly selected
contributions by some of the most eminent mathematicians in the
international mathematical community on longstanding problems in
very active domains of mathematical research. A joint preface by
the two volume editors is followed by a personal farewell to John
F. Nash, Jr. written by Michael Th. Rassias. An introduction by
Mikhail Gromov highlights some of Nash's legendary mathematical
achievements. The treatment in this book includes open problems in
the following fields: algebraic geometry, number theory, analysis,
discrete mathematics, PDEs, differential geometry, topology,
K-theory, game theory, fluid mechanics, dynamical systems and
ergodic theory, cryptography, theoretical computer science, and
more. Extensive discussions surrounding the progress made for each
problem are designed to reach a wide community of readers, from
graduate students and established research mathematicians to
physicists, computer scientists, economists, and research
scientists who are looking to develop essential and modern new
methods and theories to solve a variety of open problems.
This book, in honor of Hari M. Srivastava, discusses essential
developments in mathematical research in a variety of problems. It
contains thirty-five articles, written by eminent scientists from
the international mathematical community, including both research
and survey works. Subjects covered include analytic number theory,
combinatorics, special sequences of numbers and polynomials,
analytic inequalities and applications, approximation of functions
and quadratures, orthogonality and special and complex functions.
The mathematical results and open problems discussed in this book
are presented in a simple and self-contained manner. The book
contains an overview of old and new results, methods, and theories
toward the solution of longstanding problems in a wide scientific
field, as well as new results in rapidly progressing areas of
research. The book will be useful for researchers and graduate
students in the fields of mathematics, physics and other
computational and applied sciences.
Hilbert-type inequalities, including Hilbert's inequalities proved
in 1908, Hardy-Hilbert-type inequalities proved in 1934, and
Yang-Hilbert-type inequalities first proved around 1998, play an
important role in analysis and its applications. These inequalities
are mainly divided in three classes: integral, discrete and
half-discrete. During the last twenty years, there have been many
research advances on Hilbert-type inequalities, and especially on
Yang-Hilbert-type inequalities.In the present monograph, applying
weight functions, the idea of parametrization as well as techniques
of real analysis and functional analysis, we prove some new
Hilbert-type integral inequalities as well as their reverses with
parameters. These inequalities constitute extensions of the
well-known Hardy-Hilbert integral inequality. The equivalent forms
and some equivalent statements of the best possible constant
factors associated with several parameters are considered.
Furthermore, we also obtain the operator expressions with the norm
and some particular inequalities involving the Riemann-zeta
function and the Hurwitz-zeta function. In the form of
applications, by means of the beta function and the gamma function,
we use the extended Hardy-Hilbert integral inequalities to consider
several Hilbert-type integral inequalities involving derivative
functions and upper limit functions. In the last chapter, we
consider the case of Hardy-type integral inequalities. The lemmas
and theorems within provide an extensive account of these kinds of
integral inequalities and operators.Efforts have been made for this
monograph hopefully to be useful, especially to graduate students
of mathematics, physics and engineering, as well as researchers in
these domains.
This volume contains a collection of research and survey papers
written by some of the most eminent mathematicians in the
international community and is dedicated to Helmut Maier, whose own
research has been groundbreaking and deeply influential to the
field. Specific emphasis is given to topics regarding exponential
and trigonometric sums and their behavior in short intervals,
anatomy of integers and cyclotomic polynomials, small gaps in
sequences of sifted prime numbers, oscillation theorems for primes
in arithmetic progressions, inequalities related to the
distribution of primes in short intervals, the Moebius function,
Euler's totient function, the Riemann zeta function and the Riemann
Hypothesis. Graduate students, research mathematicians, as well as
computer scientists and engineers who are interested in pure and
interdisciplinary research, will find this volume a useful
resource. Contributors to this volume: Bill Allombert, Levent
Alpoge, Nadine Amersi, Yuri Bilu, Regis de la Breteche, Christian
Elsholtz, John B. Friedlander, Kevin Ford, Daniel A. Goldston,
Steven M. Gonek, Andrew Granville, Adam J. Harper, Glyn Harman, D.
R. Heath-Brown, Aleksandar Ivic, Geoffrey Iyer, Jerzy Kaczorowski,
Daniel M. Kane, Sergei Konyagin, Dimitris Koukoulopoulos, Michel L.
Lapidus, Oleg Lazarev, Andrew H. Ledoan, Robert J. Lemke Oliver,
Florian Luca, James Maynard, Steven J. Miller, Hugh L. Montgomery,
Melvyn B. Nathanson, Ashkan Nikeghbali, Alberto Perelli, Amalia
Pizarro-Madariaga, Janos Pintz, Paul Pollack, Carl Pomerance,
Michael Th. Rassias, Maksym Radziwill, Joel Rivat, Andras Sarkoezy,
Jeffrey Shallit, Terence Tao, Gerald Tenenbaum, Laszlo Toth, Tamar
Ziegler, Liyang Zhang.
The volume presents extensive research devoted to a broad spectrum
of mathematical analysis and probability theory. Subjects discussed
in this Work are those treated in the so-called Strasbourg-Zurich
Meetings. These meetings occur twice yearly in each of the cities,
Strasbourg and Zurich, venues of vibrant mathematical communication
and worldwide gatherings. The topical scope of the book includes
the study of monochromatic random waves defined for general
Riemannian manifolds, notions of entropy related to a compact
manifold of negative curvature, interacting electrons in a random
background, lp-cohomology (in degree one) of a graph and its
connections with other topics, limit operators for circular
ensembles, polyharmonic functions for finite graphs and Markov
chains, the ETH-Approach to Quantum Mechanics, 2-dimensional
quantum Yang-Mills theory, Gibbs measures of nonlinear Schroedinger
equations, interfaces in spectral asymptotics and nodal sets.
Contributions in this Work are composed by experts from the
international community, who have presented the state-of-the-art
research in the corresponding problems treated. This volume is
expected to be a valuable resource to both graduate students and
research mathematicians working in analysis, probability as well as
their interconnections and applications.
This volume presents in a unified manner both classic as well as
modern research results devoted to trigonometric sums. Such sums
play an integral role in the formulation and understanding of a
broad spectrum of problems which range over surprisingly many and
different research areas. Fundamental and new developments are
presented to discern solutions to problems across several
scientific disciplines. Graduate students and researchers will find
within this book numerous examples and a plethora of results
related to trigonometric sums through pure and applied research
along with open problems and new directions for future research.
Analysis at Large is dedicated to Jean Bourgain whose research has
deeply influenced the mathematics discipline, particularly in
analysis and its interconnections with other fields. In this
volume, the contributions made by renowned experts present both
research and surveys on a wide spectrum of subjects, each of which
pay tribute to a true mathematical pioneer. Examples of topics
discussed in this book include Bourgain's discretized sum-product
theorem, his work in nonlinear dispersive equations, the slicing
problem by Bourgain, harmonious sets, the joint spectral radius,
equidistribution of affine random walks, Cartan covers and doubling
Bernstein type inequalities, a weighted Prekopa-Leindler inequality
and sumsets with quasicubes, the fractal uncertainty principle for
the Walsh-Fourier transform, the continuous formulation of shallow
neural networks as Wasserstein-type gradient flows, logarithmic
quantum dynamical bounds for arithmetically defined ergodic
Schroedinger operators, polynomial equations in subgroups, trace
sets of restricted continued fraction semigroups, exponential sums,
twisted multiplicativity and moments, the ternary Goldbach problem,
as well as the multiplicative group generated by two primes in
Z/QZ. It is hoped that this volume will inspire further research in
the areas of analysis treated in this book and also provide
direction and guidance for upcoming developments in this essential
subject of mathematics.
This volume presents extensive research devoted to a broad spectrum
of mathematics with emphasis on interdisciplinary aspects of
Optimization and Probability. Chapters also emphasize applications
to Data Science, a timely field with a high impact in our modern
society. The discussion presents modern, state-of-the-art, research
results and advances in areas including non-convex optimization,
decentralized distributed convex optimization, topics on
surrogate-based reduced dimension global optimization in process
systems engineering, the projection of a point onto a convex set,
optimal sampling for learning sparse approximations in high
dimensions, the split feasibility problem, higher order embeddings,
codifferentials and quasidifferentials of the expectation of
nonsmooth random integrands, adjoint circuit chains associated with
a random walk, analysis of the trade-off between sample size and
precision in truncated ordinary least squares, spatial deep
learning, efficient location-based tracking for IoT devices using
compressive sensing and machine learning techniques, and nonsmooth
mathematical programs with vanishing constraints in Banach spaces.
The book is a valuable source for graduate students as well as
researchers working on Optimization, Probability and their various
interconnections with a variety of other areas. Chapter 12 is
available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License via link.springer.com.
This volume presents research and expository papers highlighting
the vibrant and fascinating study of irregularities in the
distribution of primes. Written by an international group of
experts, contributions present a self-contained yet unified
exploration of a rapidly progressing area. Emphasis is given to the
research inspired by Maier's matrix method, which established a
newfound understanding of the distribution of primes. Additionally,
the book provides an historical overview of a large body of
research in analytic number theory and approximation theory. The
papers published within are intended as reference tools for
graduate students and researchers in mathematics.
This volume presents extensive research devoted to a broad spectrum
of mathematics with emphasis on interdisciplinary aspects of
Optimization and Probability. Chapters also emphasize applications
to Data Science, a timely field with a high impact in our modern
society. The discussion presents modern, state-of-the-art, research
results and advances in areas including non-convex optimization,
decentralized distributed convex optimization, topics on
surrogate-based reduced dimension global optimization in process
systems engineering, the projection of a point onto a convex set,
optimal sampling for learning sparse approximations in high
dimensions, the split feasibility problem, higher order embeddings,
codifferentials and quasidifferentials of the expectation of
nonsmooth random integrands, adjoint circuit chains associated with
a random walk, analysis of the trade-off between sample size and
precision in truncated ordinary least squares, spatial deep
learning, efficient location-based tracking for IoT devices using
compressive sensing and machine learning techniques, and nonsmooth
mathematical programs with vanishing constraints in Banach spaces.
The book is a valuable source for graduate students as well as
researchers working on Optimization, Probability and their various
interconnections with a variety of other areas. Chapter 12 is
available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License via link.springer.com.
This edited volume presents state-of-the-art developments in
various areas in which Harmonic Analysis is applied. Contributions
cover a variety of different topics and problems treated such as
structure and optimization in computational harmonic analysis,
sampling and approximation in shift invariant subspaces of L2( ),
optimal rank one matrix decomposition, the Riemann Hypothesis,
large sets avoiding rough patterns, Hardy Littlewood series,
Navier-Stokes equations, sleep dynamics exploration and automatic
annotation by combining modern harmonic analysis tools, harmonic
functions in slabs and half-spaces, Andoni -Krauthgamer
-Razenshteyn characterization of sketchable norms fails for
sketchable metrics, random matrix theory, multiplicative completion
of redundant systems in Hilbert and Banach function spaces. Efforts
have been made to ensure that the content of the book constitutes a
valuable resource for graduate students as well as senior
researchers working on Harmonic Analysis and its various
interconnections with related areas.
This volume presents research and expository papers highlighting
the vibrant and fascinating study of irregularities in the
distribution of primes. Written by an international group of
experts, contributions present a self-contained yet unified
exploration of a rapidly progressing area. Emphasis is given to the
research inspired by Maier's matrix method, which established a
newfound understanding of the distribution of primes. Additionally,
the book provides an historical overview of a large body of
research in analytic number theory and approximation theory. The
papers published within are intended as reference tools for
graduate students and researchers in mathematics.
This volume contains a collection of research and survey papers
written by some of the most eminent mathematicians in the
international community and is dedicated to Helmut Maier, whose own
research has been groundbreaking and deeply influential to the
field. Specific emphasis is given to topics regarding exponential
and trigonometric sums and their behavior in short intervals,
anatomy of integers and cyclotomic polynomials, small gaps in
sequences of sifted prime numbers, oscillation theorems for primes
in arithmetic progressions, inequalities related to the
distribution of primes in short intervals, the Moebius function,
Euler's totient function, the Riemann zeta function and the Riemann
Hypothesis. Graduate students, research mathematicians, as well as
computer scientists and engineers who are interested in pure and
interdisciplinary research, will find this volume a useful
resource. Contributors to this volume: Bill Allombert, Levent
Alpoge, Nadine Amersi, Yuri Bilu, Regis de la Breteche, Christian
Elsholtz, John B. Friedlander, Kevin Ford, Daniel A. Goldston,
Steven M. Gonek, Andrew Granville, Adam J. Harper, Glyn Harman, D.
R. Heath-Brown, Aleksandar Ivic, Geoffrey Iyer, Jerzy Kaczorowski,
Daniel M. Kane, Sergei Konyagin, Dimitris Koukoulopoulos, Michel L.
Lapidus, Oleg Lazarev, Andrew H. Ledoan, Robert J. Lemke Oliver,
Florian Luca, James Maynard, Steven J. Miller, Hugh L. Montgomery,
Melvyn B. Nathanson, Ashkan Nikeghbali, Alberto Perelli, Amalia
Pizarro-Madariaga, Janos Pintz, Paul Pollack, Carl Pomerance,
Michael Th. Rassias, Maksym Radziwill, Joel Rivat, Andras Sarkoezy,
Jeffrey Shallit, Terence Tao, Gerald Tenenbaum, Laszlo Toth, Tamar
Ziegler, Liyang Zhang.
This book, in honor of Hari M. Srivastava, discusses essential
developments in mathematical research in a variety of problems. It
contains thirty-five articles, written by eminent scientists from
the international mathematical community, including both research
and survey works. Subjects covered include analytic number theory,
combinatorics, special sequences of numbers and polynomials,
analytic inequalities and applications, approximation of functions
and quadratures, orthogonality and special and complex functions.
The mathematical results and open problems discussed in this book
are presented in a simple and self-contained manner. The book
contains an overview of old and new results, methods, and theories
toward the solution of longstanding problems in a wide scientific
field, as well as new results in rapidly progressing areas of
research. The book will be useful for researchers and graduate
students in the fields of mathematics, physics and other
computational and applied sciences.
The book provides a self-contained introduction to classical Number
Theory. All the proofs of the individual theorems and the solutions
of the exercises are being presented step by step. Some historical
remarks are also presented. The book will be directed to advanced
undergraduate, beginning graduate students as well as to students
who prepare for mathematical competitions (ex. Mathematical
Olympiads and Putnam Mathematical competition).
This brief studies recent work conducted on certain exponential
type operators and other integral type operators. It consists of
three chapters: the first on exponential type operators, the second
a study of some modifications of linear positive operators, and the
third on difference estimates between two operators. It will be of
interest to students both graduate and undergraduate studying
linear positive operators and the area of approximation theory.
This volume presents in a unified manner both classic as well as
modern research results devoted to trigonometric sums. Such sums
play an integral role in the formulation and understanding of a
broad spectrum of problems which range over surprisingly many and
different research areas. Fundamental and new developments are
presented to discern solutions to problems across several
scientific disciplines. Graduate students and researchers will find
within this book numerous examples and a plethora of results
related to trigonometric sums through pure and applied research
along with open problems and new directions for future research.
The goal in putting together this unique compilation was to present
the current status of the solutions to some of the most essential
open problems in pure and applied mathematics. Emphasis is also
given to problems in interdisciplinary research for which
mathematics plays a key role. This volume comprises highly selected
contributions by some of the most eminent mathematicians in the
international mathematical community on longstanding problems in
very active domains of mathematical research. A joint preface by
the two volume editors is followed by a personal farewell to John
F. Nash, Jr. written by Michael Th. Rassias. An introduction by
Mikhail Gromov highlights some of Nash's legendary mathematical
achievements. The treatment in this book includes open problems in
the following fields: algebraic geometry, number theory, analysis,
discrete mathematics, PDEs, differential geometry, topology,
K-theory, game theory, fluid mechanics, dynamical systems and
ergodic theory, cryptography, theoretical computer science, and
more. Extensive discussions surrounding the progress made for each
problem are designed to reach a wide community of readers, from
graduate students and established research mathematicians to
physicists, computer scientists, economists, and research
scientists who are looking to develop essential and modern new
methods and theories to solve a variety of open problems.
In this monograph, we study recent results on some categories of
trigonometric/exponential sums along with various of their
applications in Mathematical Analysis and Analytic Number Theory.
Through the two chapters of this monograph, we wish to highlight
the applicability and breadth of techniques of
trigonometric/exponential sums in various problems focusing on the
interplay of Mathematical Analysis and Analytic Number Theory. We
wish to stress the point that the goal is not only to prove the
desired results, but also to present a plethora of intermediate
Propositions and Corollaries investigating the behaviour of such
sums, which can also be applied in completely different problems
and settings than the ones treated within this monograph.In the
present work we mainly focus on the applications of
trigonometric/exponential sums in the study of Ramanujan sums -
which constitute a very classical domain of research in Number
Theory - as well as the study of certain cotangent sums with a wide
range of applications, especially in the study of Dedekind sums and
a facet of the research conducted on the Riemann Hypothesis. For
example, in our study of the cotangent sums treated within the
second chapter, the methods and techniques employed reveal
unexpected connections with independent and very interesting
problems investigated in the past by R de la Breteche and G
Tenenbaum on trigonometric series, as well as by S Marmi, P Moussa
and J-C Yoccoz on Dynamical Systems.Overall, a reader who has
mastered fundamentals of Mathematical Analysis, as well as having a
working knowledge of Classical and Analytic Number Theory, will be
able to gradually follow all the parts of the monograph. Therefore,
the present monograph will be of interest to advanced undergraduate
and graduate students as well as researchers who wish to be
informed on the latest developments on the topics treated.
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