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1.
Let be a fixed open cube in Rn. For r[1, ) and [0, ) we define where Q is a cube in Rn (with sides parallel to the coordinateaxes) and Q stands for the characteristic function of the cubeQ. A well-known result of Gehring [5] states that if (1.1) for some p(1, ) and c(0, ), then there exist q(p, ) and C=C(p,q, n, c)(0, ) such that for all cubes Q, where |Q| denotes the n-dimensional Lebesguemeasure of Q. In particular, a function fL1() satisfying (1.1)belongs to Lq(). In [9] it was shown that Gehring's result is a particular caseof a more general principle from the real method of interpolation.Roughly speaking, this principle states that if a certain reversedinequality between K-functionals holds at one point of an interpolationscale, then it holds at other nearby points of this scale. Usingan extension of Holmstedt's reiteration formulae of [4] andresults of [8] on weighted inequalities for monotone functions,we prove here two variants of this principle involving extrapolationspaces of an ordered pair of (quasi-) Banach spaces. As an applicationwe prove the following Gehring-type lemmas.  相似文献   

2.
In [6] S. Shelah showed that in the endomorphism semi-groupof an infinitely generated algebra which is free in a varietyone can interpret some set theory. It follows from his resultsthat, for an algebra F which is free of infinite rank in avariety of algebras in a language L, if > |L|, then thefirst-order theory of the endomorphism semi-group of F, Th(End(F)),syntactically interprets Th(,L2), the second-order theory ofthe cardinal . This means that for any second-order sentence of empty language there exists *, a first-order sentence ofsemi-group language, such that for any infinite cardinal >|L|, Th(,L2)*Th(End(F)) In his paper Shelah notes that it is natural to study a similarproblem for automorphism groups instead of endomorphism semi-groups;a priori the expressive power of the first-order logic for automorphismgroups is less than the one for endomorphism semi-groups. Forinstance, according to Shelah's results on permutation groups[4, 5], one cannot interpret set theory by means of first-orderlogic in the permutation group of an infinite set, the automorphismgroup of an algebra in empty language. On the other hand, onecan do this in the endomorphism semi-group of such an algebra. In [7, 8] the author found a solution for the case of the varietyof vector spaces over a fixed field. If V is a vector spaceof an infinite dimension over a division ring D, then the theoryTh(, L2) is interpretable in the first-order theory of GL(V),the automorphism group of V. When a field D is countable anddefinable up to isomorphism by a second-order sentence, thenthe theories Th(GL(V)) and Th(, L2) are mutually syntacticallyinterpretable. In the general case, the formulation is a bitmore complicated. The main result of this paper states that a similar result holdsfor the variety of all groups.  相似文献   

3.
The starting point of our investigation is the remarkable paper[2] in which Bestvina and Brady gave an example of an infinitelyrelated group of type FP2. The result about right-angled Artingroups behind their example is best interpreted by means ofthe Bieri–Strebel–Neumann–Renz -invariants. For a group G the invariants n(G) and n(G, Z) are sets of non-trivialhomomorphisms :GR. They contain full information about finitenessproperties of subgroups of G with abelian factor groups. Themain result of [2] determines for the canonical homomorphism, taking each generator of the right-angled Artin group G to1, the maximal n with n(G), respectively n(G, Z). In [6] Meier, Meinert and VanWyk completed the picture by computingthe full -invariants of right-angled Artin groups using as wellthe result of Bestvina and Brady as algebraic techniques from-theory. Here we offer a new account of their result which istotally geometric. In fact, we return to the Bestvina–Bradyconstruction and simplify their argument considerably by bringinga more general notion of links into play. At the end of thefirst section we re-prove their main result. By re-computingthe full -invariants, we show in the second section that thesimplification even adds some power to the method. The criterionwe give provides new insight on the geometric nature of the‘n-domination’ condition employed in [6].  相似文献   

4.
For any pair i,j 0 with i+j=1 let Bad(i,j) denote the set ofpairs (,ß) R2 for which max{||q||1/i||qß|1/j}>c/qfor all q N. Here c=c(,ß) is a positive constant.If i=0 the set Bad(0, 1) is identified with RxBad where Badis the set of badly approximable numbers. That is, Bad(0, 1)consists of pairs (, ß) with R and ß Bad If j=0 the roles of and ß are reversed. It isproved that the set Bad(1,0)Bad (0,1) Bad(i,j) has Hausdorffdimension 2, that is, full dimension. The method easily generalizesto give analogous statements in higher dimensions.  相似文献   

5.
In 1940 Nisnevi published the following theorem [3]. Let (G) be a family of groups indexed by some set and (F) a family of fields of the same characteristic p0. Iffor each the group G has a faithful representation of degreen over F then the free product* G has a faithful representationof degree n+1 over some field of characteristic p. In [6] Wehrfritzextended this idea. If (G) GL(n, F) is a family of subgroupsfor which there exists ZGL(n, F) such that for all the intersectionGF.1n=Z, then the free product of the groups *ZG with Z amalgamatedvia the identity map is isomorphic to a linear group of degreen over some purely transcendental extension of F. Initially, the purpose of this paper was to generalize theseresults from the linear to the skew-linear case, that is, togroups isomorphic to subgroups of GL(n, D) where the D are divisionrings. In fact, many of the results can be generalized to ringswhich, although not necessarily commutative, contain no zero-divisors.We have the following.  相似文献   

6.
Let G be a connected semisimple group over an algebraicallyclosed field K of characteristic p>0, and g=Lie (G). Fixa linear function g* and let Zg() denote the stabilizer of in g. Set Np(g)={xg|x[p]=0}. Let C(g) denote the category offinite-dimensional g-modules with p-character . In [7], Friedlanderand Parshall attached to each MOb(C(g)) a Zariski closed, conicalsubset Vg(M)Np(g) called the support variety of M. Suppose thatG is simply connected and p is not special for G, that is, p2if G has a component of type Bn, Cn or F4, and p3 if G has acomponent of type G2. It is proved in this paper that, for anynonzero MOb(C(g)), the support variety Vg(M) is contained inNp(g)Zg(). This allows one to simplify the proof of the Kac–Weisfeilerconjecture given in [18].  相似文献   

7.
Geometry of Critical Loci   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Let :(Z,z)(U,0) be the germ of a finite (that is, proper with finite fibres)complex analytic morphism from a complex analytic normal surfaceonto an open neighbourhood U of the origin 0 in the complexplane C2. Let u and v be coordinates of C2 defined on U. Weshall call the triple (, u, v) the initial data. Let stand for the discriminant locus of the germ , that is,the image by of the critical locus of . Let ()A be the branches of the discriminant locus at O whichare not the coordinate axes. For each A, we define a rational number d by where I(–, –) denotes the intersection number at0 of complex analytic curves in C2. The set of rational numbersd, for A, is a finite subset D of the set of rational numbersQ. We shall call D the set of discriminantal ratios of the initialdata (, u, v). The interesting situation is when one of thetwo coordinates (u, v) is tangent to some branch of , otherwiseD = {1}. The definition of D depends not only on the choiceof the two coordinates, but also on their ordering. In this paper we prove that the set D is a topological invariantof the initial data (, u, v) (in a sense that we shall definebelow) and we give several ways to compute it. These resultsare first steps in the understanding of the geometry of thediscriminant locus. We shall also see the relation with thegeometry of the critical locus.  相似文献   

8.
On Prime Ends and Plane Continua   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Let f be a conformal map of the unit disk D onto the domainG = C{}. We shall always use the spherical metric in . Carathéodory [3] introduced the concept of a prime endof G in order to describe the boundary behaviour of f in geometricterms; see for example [6, Chapter 9] or [12, Section 2.4].There is a bijective map of T = D onto the set of prime ends of G.  相似文献   

9.
A negative answer to the Kuro–ernikov Question 21 in [7],whether a group satisfying the normalizer condition is hypercentral,was given by Heineken and Mohamed in 1968 [6]. They constructedgroups G satisfying: (i) G is a locally finite p-group for a prime p, (ii) G/G'Cp and G' is countable elementary abelian, (iii) every proper subgroup of G is subnormal and nilpotent, (iv) Z(G)={1}, (v) the set of normal subgroups of G contained in G' is linearlyordered by set inclusion, see [3, p. 334], (vi) KG' is a proper subgroup in G for every proper subgroupK of G, see [6, Lemma 1(a)].  相似文献   

10.
Let G be a permutation group on a set , and let m and k be integerswhere 0<m<k. For a subset of , if the cardinalities ofthe sets g\, for gG, are finite and bounded, then is said tohave bounded movement, and the movement of is defined as move()=maxgG|g\|. If there is a k-element subset such that move()m, it is shown that some G-orbit has length at most (k2m)/(km).When combined with a result of P. M. Neumann, this result hasthe following consequence: if some infinite subset has boundedmovement at most m, then either is a G-invariant subset withat most m points added or removed, or nontrivially meets aG-orbit of length at most m2+m+1. Also, if move ()m for allk-element subsets and if G has no fixed points in , then either||k+m (and in this case all permutation groups on have thisproperty), or ||5m–2. These results generalise earlierresults about the separation of finite sets under group actionsby B. J. Birch, R. G. Burns, S. O. Macdonald and P. M. Neumann,and groups in which all subsets have bounded movement (by theauthor).  相似文献   

11.
Consider the countable semilattice T consisting of the recursivelyenumerable Turing degrees. Although T is known to be structurallyrich, a major source of frustration is that no specific, naturaldegrees in T have been discovered, except the bottom and topdegrees, 0 and 0'. In order to overcome this difficulty, weembed T into a larger degree structure which is better behaved.Namely, consider the countable distributive lattice w consistingof the weak degrees (also known as Muchnik degrees) of massproblems associated with non-empty 01 subsets of 2. It is knownthat w contains a bottom degree 0 and a top degree 1 and isstructurally rich. Moreover, w contains many specific, naturaldegrees other than 0 and 1. In particular, we show that in wone has 0 < d < r1 < f(r2, 1) < 1. Here, d is theweak degree of the diagonally non-recursive functions, and rnis the weak degree of the n-random reals. It is known that r1can be characterized as the maximum weak degree of a 01 subsetof 2 of positive measure. We now show thatf(r2, 1) can be characterizedas the maximum weak degree of a 01 subset of 2, the Turing upwardclosure of which is of positive measure. We exhibit a naturalembedding of T into w which is one-to-one, preserves the semilatticestructure of T, carries 0 to 0, and carries 0' to 1. IdentifyingT with its image in w, we show that all of the degrees in Texcept 0 and 1 are incomparable with the specific degrees d,r1, andf(r2, 1) in w.  相似文献   

12.
Uniqueness of the Topology on Spaces of Vector-Valued Functions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Let be a topological space without isolated points, let E bea topological linear space which is continuously embedded intoa product of countably boundedly generated topological linearspaces, and let X be a linear subspace of C(, E). If a C()is not constant on any open subset of and aX X, then it isshown that there is at most one F-space topology on X that makesthe multiplication by a continuous. Furthermore, if U is a subsetof C() which separates strongly the points of and UX X, thenit is proved that there is at most one F-space topology on Xthat makes the multiplication by a continuous for each a U. These results are applied to the study of the uniqueness ofthe F-space topology and the continuity of translation invariantoperators on the Banach space L1(G, E) for a noncompact locallycompact group G and a Banach space E. Furthermore, the problemsof the uniqueness of the F-algebra topology and the continuityof epimorphisms and derivations on F-algebras and some algebrasof vector-valued functions are considered.  相似文献   

13.
The fine topology on Rn (n2) is the coarsest topology for whichall superharmonic functions on Rn are continuous. We refer toDoob [11, 1.XI] for its basic properties and its relationshipto the notion of thinness. This paper presents several theoremsrelating the fine topology to limits of functions along parallellines. (Results of this nature for the minimal fine topologyhave been given by Doob – see [10, Theorem 3.1] or [11,1.XII.23] – and the second author [15].) In particular,we will establish improvements and generalizations of resultsof Lusin and Privalov [18], Evans [12], Rudin [20], Bagemihland Seidel [6], Schneider [21], Berman [7], and Armitage andNelson [4], and will also solve a problem posed by the latterauthors. An early version of our first result is due to Evans [12, p.234], who proved that, if u is a superharmonic function on R3,then there is a set ER2x{0}, of two-dimensional measure 0, suchthat u(x, y,·) is continuous on R whenever (x, y, 0)E.We denote a typical point of Rn by X=(X' x), where X'Rn–1and xR. Let :RnRn–1x{0} denote the projection map givenby (X', x) = (X', 0). For any function f:Rn[–, +] andpoint X we define the vertical and fine cluster sets of f atX respectively by CV(f;X)={l[–, +]: there is a sequence (tm) of numbersin R\{x} such that tmx and f(X', tm)l}| and CF(f;X)={l[–, +]: for each neighbourhood N of l in [–,+], the set f–1(N) is non-thin at X}. Sets which are open in the fine topology will be called finelyopen, and functions which are continuous with respect to thefine topology will be called finely continuous. Corollary 1(ii)below is an improvement of Evans' result.  相似文献   

14.
We consider the iterates of the heat operator on Rn+1={(X, t); X=(x1, x2, ..., xn)Rn, tR}. Let Rn+1 be a domain,and let m1 be an integer. A lower semi-continuous and locallyintegrable function u on is called a poly-supertemperatureof degree m if (–H)mu0 on (in the sense of distribution). If u and –u are both poly-supertemperatures of degreem, then u is called a poly-temperature of degree m. Since His hypoelliptic, every poly-temperature belongs to C(), andhence (–H)m u(X, t)=0 (X, t). For the case m=1, we simply call the functions the supertemperatureand the temperature. In this paper, we characterise a poly-temperature and a poly-supertemperatureon a strip D={(X, t);XRn, 0<t<T} by an integral mean on a hyperplane. To state our result precisely,we define a mean A[·, ·]. This plays an essentialrole in our argument.  相似文献   

15.
Let G be a group, and let Fn[G] be the free G-group of rankn. Then Fn[G] is just the natural non-abelian analogue of thefree ZG-module of rank n, and correspondingly the group n(G)of equivariant automorphisms of Fn[G] is a natural analogueof the general linear group GLn(ZG). The groups n(G) have beenstudied recently in [4, 8, 5]. In particular, in [5] it wasshown that if G is not finitely presentable (f.p.) then neitheris n(G), and conversely, that n(G) is f.p. if G is f.p. andn2. It is a common phenomenon that for small ranks the automorphismgroups of free objects may behave unstably (see the survey article[2]), and the main aim of the present paper is to show thatthis turns out to be the case for the groups 2(G).  相似文献   

16.
The Cauchy problem is studied for the nonlinear equations withfractional power of the negative Laplacian where (0,2), with critical = /n and sub-critical (0,/n)powers of the nonlinearity. Let u0 L1,a L C, u0(x) 0 in Rn, = . The case of not small initial data is of interest. It is proved that the Cauchy problemhas a unique global solution u C([0,); L L1,a C) and the largetime asymptotics are obtained.  相似文献   

17.
We obtain some weighted Sobolev interpolation inequalities oncertain domains that include Lipschitz domains for doublingweights satisfying a weighted Poincaré inequality. Thesegeneralize most results in Gutierrez and Wheeden's paper [20].We also give some applications on Lipschitz domains for weightsof type dist (·, G)8, where G .  相似文献   

18.
Let f be a continuous function on an open subset of R2 suchthat for every x there exists a continuous map : [–1,1] with (0) = x and f increasing on [–1, 1]. Thenfor every there exists a continuous map : [0, 1) suchthat (0) = y, f is increasing on [0; 1), and for every compactsubset K of , max{t : (t) K} < 1. This result gives an answerto a question posed by M. Ortel. Furthermore, an example showsthat this result is not valid in higher dimensions.  相似文献   

19.
An asymptotic field is a special type of Hardy field in which,modulo an oracle for constants, one can determine asymptoticbehaviour of elements. In a previous paper, it was shown inparticular that limits of real Liouvillian functions can therebybe computed. Let denote an asymptotic field and let f . Weprove here that if G is meromorphic at the limit of f (whichmay be infinite) and satisfies an algebraic differential equationover R(x), then (G o f) is an asymptotic field. Hence it ispossible (modulo an oracle for constants) to compute asymptoticforms for elements of (G o f). An example is given to show thatthe result may fail if G has an essential singularity at limf.  相似文献   

20.
Let G be a separable locally compact group and let be its dualspace with Fell's topology. It is well known that the set P(G)of continuous positive-definite functions on G can be identifiedwith the set of positive linear functionals on the group C*-algebraC*(G). We show that if is discrete in , then there exists anonzero positive-definite function associated with such that is a w*-strongly exposed point of P(G)0, where P(G)0={f P(G):f(e)1. Conversely, if some nonzero positive-definite function associatedwith is a w*-strongly exposed point of P(G)0, then is isolatedin . Consequently, G is compact if and only if, for every ,there exists a nonzero positive-definite function associatedwith that is a w*-strongly exposed point of P(G)0. If, in addition,G is unimodular and , then is isolated in if and only if somenonzero positive-definite function associated with is a w*-stronglyexposed point of P(G)0, where is the left regular representationof G and is the reduced dual space of G. We prove that if B(G)has the Radon–Nikodym property, then the set of isolatedpoints of (so square-integrable if G is unimodular) is densein . It is also proved that if G is a separable SIN-group, thenG is amenable if and only if there exists a closed point in. In particular, for a countable discrete non-amenable groupG (for example the free group F2 on two generators), there isno closed point in its reduced dual space .  相似文献   

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