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Boundary value problems in cuspidal wedgesRabinovich, Vladimir, Schulze, Bert-Wolfgang, Tarkhanov, Nikolai January 1998 (has links)
The paper is devoted to pseudodifferential boundary value problems in domains with cuspidal wedges. Concerning the geometry we even admit a more general behaviour, namely oscillating cuspidal wedges. We show a criterion for the Fredholm property of a boundary value problem and derive estimates of solutions close to edges.
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Symbolic calculus for boundary value problems on manifolds with edgesKapanadze, David, Schulze, Bert-Wolfgang January 2001 (has links)
Boundary value problems for (pseudo-) differential operators on a manifold with edges can be characterised by a hierarchy of symbols. The symbol structure is responsible or ellipicity and for the nature of parametrices within an algebra of "edge-degenerate" pseudo-differential operators. The edge symbol component of that hierarchy takes values in boundary value problems on an infinite model cone, with edge variables and covariables as parameters. Edge symbols play a crucial role in this theory, in particular, the contribution with holomorphic operatot-valued Mellin symbols. We establish a calculus in s framework of "twisted homogenity" that refers to strongly continuous groups of isomorphisms on weighted cone Sobolev spaces. We then derive an equivalent representation with a particularly transparent composition behaviour.
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Macromodelling of MicrosystemsWestby, Eskild R. January 2004 (has links)
The aim of this work has been to develop new knowledge about macromodelling of microsystems. Doing that, we have followed two different approaches for generating macromodels, namely model order reduction and lumped modelling. The latter is a rather mature method that has been widely recognized and used for a relatively long period of time. Model order reduction, on the other hand, is a relatively new area still in rapid development. Due to this, the parts considering reduced order modelling is strongly biased towards methodology and concepts, whereas parts on lumped modelling are biased towards systems and devices. In the first part of this thesis, we focus on model order reduction. We introduce some approaches for reducing model order for linear systems, and we give an example related to squeeze-film damping. We then move on to investigate model order reduction of nonlinear systems, where we present and use the concept of invariant manifolds. While the concept of invariant manifolds is general, we utilize it for reducing models. An obvious advantage of using invariant manifold theory is that it offers a conceptually clear understanding of effects and behaviour of nonlinear system. We exemplify and investigate the accuracy of one method for identifying invariant manifolds. The example is based on an industrialized dual-axis accelerometer. A new geometrical interpretation of external forcing, relating to invariant manifolds, is presented. We show how this can be utilized to deal with external forcing in a manner consistent with the invariance property of the manifold. The interpretation also aids in reducing errors for reduce models. We extend the asymptotic approach in a manner that makes it possible to create design-parameter sensitive models. We investigate an industrialized dual-axis accelerometer by means of the method and demonstrate capabilities of the method. We also discuss how manifolds for nonlinear dissipative systems can be found. Focusing on lumped modelling, we analyse a microresonator. We also discuss the two analogies that can be used to build electrical equivalents of mechanical systems. It is shown how the f → V analogy, linking velocity to voltage, is the natural choice. General properties of lumped modelling are investigated using models with varying degrees of freedom. Finally, we analyse an electromagnetic system, intended for levitating objects, and we demonstrate the scaling effects of the system. Furthermore, we prove the intrinsic stability of the system, although the floating disc will be slightly tilted. This is the first analysis done assessing the stability criterions of such a systems. The knowledge arising from the analysis gives strong indications on how such a system can be utilized, designed, and improved.
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Entropy and SpeechNilsson, Mattias January 2006 (has links)
In this thesis, we study the representation of speech signals and the estimation of information-theoretical measures from observations containing features of the speech signal. The main body of the thesis consists of four research papers. Paper A presents a compact representation of the speech signal that facilitates perfect reconstruction. The representation is constituted of models, model parameters, and signal coefficients. A difference compared to existing speech representations is that we seek a compact representation by adapting the models to maximally concentrate the energy of the signal coefficients according to a selected energy concentration criterion. The individual parts of the representation are closely related to speech signal properties such as spectral envelope, pitch, and voiced/unvoiced signal coefficients, bene cial for both speech coding and modi cation. From the information-theoretical measure of entropy, performance limits in coding and classi cation can be derived. Papers B and C discuss the estimation of di erential entropy. Paper B describes a method for estimation of the di erential entropies in the case when the set of vector observations (from the representation) lie on a lower-dimensional surface (manifold) in the embedding space. In contrast to the method presented in Paper B, Paper C introduces a method where the manifold structures are destroyed by constraining the resolution of the observation space. This facilitates the estimation of bounds on classi cation error rates even when the manifolds are of varying dimensionality within the embedding space. Finally, Paper D investigates the amount of shared information between spectral features of narrow-band (0.3-3.4 kHz) and high-band (3.4-8 kHz) speech. The results in Paper D indicate that the information shared between the high-band and the narrow-band is insufficient for high-quality wideband speech coding (0.3-8 kHz) without transmission of extra information describing the high-band. / QC 20100914
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Legendrian and transverse knots and their invariantsTosun, Bulent 14 August 2012 (has links)
In this thesis, we study Legendrian and transverse isotopy problem for cabled knot types. We give two structural theorems to describe when the (r,s)- cable of a Legendrian simple knot type K is also Legendrian simple. We then study the same problem for cables of the positive trefoil knot. We give a complete classification of Legendrian and transverse cables of the positive trefoil. Our results exhibit many new phenomena in the structural understanding of Legendrian and transverse knots. we then extend these results to the other positive torus knots. The key ingredient in these results is to find necessary and sufficient conditions on maximally thickened contact neighborhoods of the positive torus knots in three sphere.
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Reeb Spaces and the Robustness of PreimagesPatel, Amit January 2010 (has links)
<p>We study how the preimages of a mapping f : X &rarr Y between manifolds vary under perturbations. First, we consider the preimage of a single point and track the history of its connected component as this point varies in Y. This information is compactly represented in a structure that is the generalization of the Reeb graph we call the Reeb space. We study its local and global properties and provide an algorithm for its construction. Using homology, we then consider higher dimensional connectivity of the preimage. We develop a theory quantifying the stability of each homology class under perturbations of the mapping f . This number called robustness is given to each homology class in the preimage. The robustness of a class is the magnitude of the perturbation necessary to remove it from the preimage. The generality of this theory allows for many applications. We apply this theory to quantify the stability of contours, fixed points, periodic orbits, and more.</p> / Dissertation
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Exotic Smooth Structures On Non-simply Connected 4-manifoldsTopkara, Mustafa 01 March 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, we study exotic smooth structures on 4-manifolds with finite fundamental groups. For an arbitrary finite group G, we construct an infinite family of smooth 4-manifolds with fundamental group G, which are all homeomorphic but mutually non-diffeomorphic, using the small symplectic manifold with arbitrary fundamental group constructed by S. Baldridge and P. Kirk, together with the methods of A. Akhmedov, R.& / #221 / . Baykur and D. Park for constructing infinite families of exotic simply connected 4-manifolds. In the final chapter, pairs of small exotic 4-manifolds with a cyclic fundamental group of any odd order are constructed.
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On The Tight Contact Structures On Seifert Fibred 3Medetogullari, Elif 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, we study the classification problem of Stein fillable tight contact structures on
any Seifert fibered 3&minus / manifold M over S 2 with 4 singular fibers. In the case e0(M) · / &minus / 4
we have a complete classification. In the case e0(M) ¸ / 0 we have obtained upper and lower
bounds for the number of Stein fillable contact structures on M.
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Spectral mapping theorems and invariant manifolds for infinite-dimensional Hamiltonian systems /Stanislavova, Milena January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 71-78). Also available on the Internet.
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Manifolds with indefinite metrics whose skew-symmetric curvature operator has constant eigenvalues /Zhang, Tan, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2000. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 123-128). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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