Gabor Frames for Quasicrystals II: Gap Labeling, Morita Equivale

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Gabor Frames for Quasicrystals II: Gap Labeling, Morita Equivale"

Transcription

1 Gabor Frames for Quasicrystals II: Gap Labeling, Morita Equivalence, and Dual Frames University of Maryland June 11, 2015

2 Overview Twisted Gap Labeling

3 Outline Twisted Gap Labeling

4 Physical Quasicrystals In 1984, Shechtman et. al. discovered materials whose atoms did not have the structure of a lattice, but instead had the structure of a quasicrystal. How can we study the electron interactions in such a material?

5 Physical Quasicrystals In 1984, Shechtman et. al. discovered materials whose atoms did not have the structure of a lattice, but instead had the structure of a quasicrystal. How can we study the electron interactions in such a material? We consider a Schrödinger operator of the form H Λ = 1 ( ) 2 2m i ea + V acting on L 2 (R d ), where V is multiplication by a pattern equivariant function. The vector potential A models the effect of a constant, uniform magnetic field.

6 Physical Quasicrystals (cont) In general, the Schrödinger operator H Λ will have gaps in its spectrum, and we would like to know the energy levels at these gaps. The location of the gaps depends on the specific potential, but the possible values of the energy levels are constrained by the structure of Λ.

7 Physical Quasicrystals (cont) In general, the Schrödinger operator H Λ will have gaps in its spectrum, and we would like to know the energy levels at these gaps. The location of the gaps depends on the specific potential, but the possible values of the energy levels are constrained by the structure of Λ. We can consider the twisted groupoid C -algebra A θ where θ is a cocycle on R d corresponding to the choice of magnetic field. When θ = σ, the symplectic cocycle, we get the algebra A we defined yesterday. There is a trace defined on A θ, and we define the gap labeling group to be Tr (K 0 (A θ )) R. As long as the potential is modeled on Λ, the energy levels of the Schrödinger operator can only take values in the gap labeling group.

8 Gap Labeling Conjecture (Bellissard s Gap Labeling Conjecture) When the magnetic field θ = 0, the gap labeling group is generated by the frequencies of patches in Λ.

9 Gap Labeling Conjecture (Bellissard s Gap Labeling Conjecture) When the magnetic field θ = 0, the gap labeling group is generated by the frequencies of patches in Λ. There are now multiple proofs of this conjecture. All use some version of index theory.

10 Main Question Question Can we determine the gap labeling group when a magnetic field is present? Strategy: Find a systematic way to construct modules over A θ, then show that these modules generate all of K 0 (A θ ).

11 Computing K-theory K 0 (A θ ) = K 0 (A θ=0 ), and it is easy to identify elements which come from projections onto clopen sets in the transversal. Thus the patch frequencies will still be contained in the gap labeling group for A θ. The difficulty is in identifying the other elements of K 0 (A θ ) and computing their traces. (Recall that when θ = 0, all these elements end up having trace equal to 0.)

12 Twisted Gap Labeling for Marked Lattices As a first attempt, let s assume Λ is a lattice with an aperiodic coloring. Then the groupoid C -algebra of Λ can be written as a crossed product by an action of Z d on the transversal. This yields a map i from C r (Z d ) = C(T d ) into A θ=0. When we twist by a cocycle θ on R d, we get instead a map from the noncommutative torus A θ into A θ.

13 Twisted Gap Labeling for Marked Lattices As a first attempt, let s assume Λ is a lattice with an aperiodic coloring. Then the groupoid C -algebra of Λ can be written as a crossed product by an action of Z d on the transversal. This yields a map i from C r (Z d ) = C(T d ) into A θ=0. When we twist by a cocycle θ on R d, we get instead a map from the noncommutative torus A θ into A θ. Theorem The map i : A θ A θ preserves the trace and is injective on K 0. Aside from the trivial class, the image of this map on K 0 does not overlap with classes coming from clopen sets in the transversal.

14 Twisted Gap Labeling for Marked Lattices (cont) Corollary When Λ is a marked lattice, the gap labeling group for A θ contains the image of the trace map on the noncommutative torus A θ.

15 Twisted Gap Labeling for Marked Lattices (cont) Corollary When Λ is a marked lattice, the gap labeling group for A θ contains the image of the trace map on the noncommutative torus A θ. Any quasicrystal can be deformed to a marked lattice in such a way that the corresponding transversal groupoids are isomorphic. Thus the tiling space is a fiber bundle over the torus with Cantor fiber p : Ω Λ T d. Corollary The induced map p is injective on K 0, and its image does not overlap with projections onto clopen sets in the transversal, except for the trivial class.

16 Interpretation in Terms of H Λ We can understand the image of the map i using the modules we constructed yesterday. For the symplectic cocycle σ, we constructed a module H Λ over A σ. Applying a linear map T to Λ does not change the transversal groupoid, but it does change the way that the cocycle σ sits inside H 2 (R trans ). Thus H T Λ is a module over a A θ where θ = T σ.

17 Interpretation in Terms of H Λ We can understand the image of the map i using the modules we constructed yesterday. For the symplectic cocycle σ, we constructed a module H Λ over A σ. Applying a linear map T to Λ does not change the transversal groupoid, but it does change the way that the cocycle σ sits inside H 2 (R trans ). Thus H T Λ is a module over a A θ where θ = T σ. Using this technique, we can construct modules over A θ for any θ. We can also construct many modules over A θ for any fixed θ by finding maps such that T σ = θ. The image of i consists of all such modules.

18 Constructing All Modules Unfortunately, the classes in the image of the map i, along with those coming from clopen sets in the transversal, do not in general exhaust K 0 (A θ ). What if we expand our scope, applying not just linear maps, but more general deformations which preserve the transversal groupoid?

19 Constructing All Modules Unfortunately, the classes in the image of the map i, along with those coming from clopen sets in the transversal, do not in general exhaust K 0 (A θ ). What if we expand our scope, applying not just linear maps, but more general deformations which preserve the transversal groupoid? Question Can all classes in K 0 (A θ ) be represented as H DΛ where D is a deformation in the sense of Clark/Sadun/Kellendonk? If so, we could compute the twisted gap labeling group from knowledge of how the deformations change the density of Λ.

20 Twisted Gap Labeling in Dimension Two In dimension two we can begin to get more complete results, because in dimension two K 0 actually is generated by the image of i, along with projections from the transversal. In this case the cocycle θ is determined by a single nonzero parameter (also denoted θ) and K 0 (A θ ) = Z +θ Z. Thus we have: Theorem Suppose Λ is a marked lattice in R 2. Then the twisted gap labeling group of A θ is generated by the patch frequencies of Λ, along with a single other number θvol(λ).

21 Twisted Gap Labeling for 2-D Lattice Subsets Corollary Let Λ be a quasicrystal which is a subset of a lattice in R 2. Then the twisted gap labeling group is generated by the patch frequencies, along with a single other number θ Dens(Λ).

22 Twisted Gap Labeling for 2-D Lattice Subsets Corollary Let Λ be a quasicrystal which is a subset of a lattice in R 2. Then the twisted gap labeling group is generated by the patch frequencies, along with a single other number θ Dens(Λ). Although any quasicrystal can be deformed to a lattice subset, it is unclear how such a deformation transforms a cocycle θ. Theorem (Julien/K.) If a deformation D is given by an asymptotically negligible class in H 1 (R trans ) then D σ = σ.

23 Twisted Gap Labeling for Common Examples Corollary Suppose Λ R 2 is a cut and project set or a Pisot substitution. Then the twisted gap labeling group is generated by the patch frequencies of Λ and θ Dens(Λ).

24 Twisted Gap Labeling for Common Examples Corollary Suppose Λ R 2 is a cut and project set or a Pisot substitution. Then the twisted gap labeling group is generated by the patch frequencies of Λ and Conjecture θ Dens(Λ). Suppose Λ is a two dimensional quasicrystal. Then the twisted gap labeling group is generated by the patch frequencies of Λ and θ Dens(Λ). Question What about higher dimensions, or when the cocycle θ is not the restriction of a cocycle on R 2d?

25 Outline Twisted Gap Labeling

26 NC Tori Recap Recall that a noncommutative torus A L is generated by time frequency shift operators taken from a lattice L acting on M 1 (R d ). When G(g, L) is a Gabor frame for L, the frame operator S L commutes with the action of A L, so is contained in the commutant of the action. The commutant is also a rotation algebra A L, where L is the adjoint lattice. Thus S L has an expansion in terms of time-frequency shifts from L, which we know as the Janssen representation.

27 Quasicrystal Algebras Recap Recall that we constructed a representation of the C -algebra A 1 on C(Ω trans, M 1 (R d )). We can think of A 1 as being generated by partial time-frequency shifts of the form I(χ z )Ψ(T ) = { π(z)ψ(t z) if z T 0 otherwise If G(g, Λ) is a Gabor frame, how does the frame operator fit into this picture?

28 Global Frame Operator We can define the global frame operator S as an operator on C(Ω trans, M 1 (R d )) by (SΨ)(T ) = S T Ψ(T ). The global frame operator S commutes with all operators in A.

29 Global Frame Operator We can define the global frame operator S as an operator on C(Ω trans, M 1 (R d )) by (SΨ)(T ) = S T Ψ(T ). The global frame operator S commutes with all operators in A. Similar to the case of lattice Gabor frames, we can try to find generators for End A H Λ, then express S in terms of those generators.

30 Eigenvalues and Eigenfunctions A function e k C(Ω Λ ) is an eigenfunction with eigenvalue k if e k (T z) = e 2πik z e k (T ) for all z R 2d. When an eigenfunction exists for a given eigenvalue, it is unique.

31 Eigenvalues and Eigenfunctions A function e k C(Ω Λ ) is an eigenfunction with eigenvalue k if e k (T z) = e 2πik z e k (T ) for all z R 2d. When an eigenfunction exists for a given eigenvalue, it is unique. We define the Bohr coefficient c k by 1 c k := lim e 2πik z. R vol(b R ) z Λ B R We have c k = 0 when k is not an eigenvalue. The c k are averages of exponential functions over the quasicrystal, and are also equal to the integrals of eigenfunctions over the transversal.

32 Eigenfunction Operators We can define operators τ k on C(Ω trans, M 1 (R d )) by (τ k Ψ)(T ) = e k (T )π(ǩ)ψ(t ) where k R 2d, e k is an eigenfunction with eigenvalue k, and ǩ is a symplectic transformation of the eigenvalue k : ( ) 0 I ǩ = k I 0

33 Eigenfunction Operators We can define operators τ k on C(Ω trans, M 1 (R d )) by (τ k Ψ)(T ) = e k (T )π(ǩ)ψ(t ) where k R 2d, e k is an eigenfunction with eigenvalue k, and ǩ is a symplectic transformation of the eigenvalue k : ( ) 0 I ǩ = k I 0 The operators τ k commute with all operators in A. We can think of them as fiberwise time-frequency shifts. They generate either a noncommutative torus or noncommutative solenoid inside End A H Λ.

34 Janssen Representation Although the operators τ k will never generate all of End A H Λ, we can still try to find an expansion of S in terms of the τ k using the trace on End A H Λ. We can compute Tr(Sτ k ) = c k N g i, π(ǩ)g i i=1 where g i are the windows of the frame. This suggests S = k Eig(Λ) i=1 N c k g i, π(ǩ)g i τ k. Unfortunately, this sum will not converge absolutely. Properly interpreted, this identity is true for cut and project sets.

35 Non-existence of Tight Frames Even though the previous expansion of the global frame operator does not always hold, we can use the trace computation to prove a non-existence result for tight multiwindow frames. Theorem Let Λ R 2d be a quasicrystal. Assume that the group of continuous eigenvalues Eig(Λ) is dense in R 2d, and that the Fourier-Bohr coefficients c k are non-zero in a neighborhood of 0. Also assume that the operators τ k generate a simple noncommutative torus or solenoid. Then it is not possible to find a tight multiwindow frame G(g 1,..., g N, Λ) where all g i M 1 (R d ).

36 Removing Some Assumptions I am inclined to believe that if the collection of eigenvalues is dense then the Fourier-Bohr coefficients must be non-zero in a neighborhood of the identity (this is true for cut and project sets). Perhaps this assumption always holds.

37 Removing Some Assumptions I am inclined to believe that if the collection of eigenvalues is dense then the Fourier-Bohr coefficients must be non-zero in a neighborhood of the identity (this is true for cut and project sets). Perhaps this assumption always holds. We could remove the simplicity assumption on the algebra generated by the τ k if we could compute lim R 1 Λ B R π(ǩ)(sλ g ) 1 2 π(z)g, (S Λ g ) 1? 1 2 π(z)g = Dens(Λ) δ k,0 z Λ B R whenever g M 1 (R d ) generates a Gabor frame for Λ and k is an eigenvalue.

38 Outline Twisted Gap Labeling

39 Lattice Dual Frames When L is a lattice, the frame operator S L commutes with time frequency shifts from L. Dual frame elements have the form g z = π(z)s 1 L g. What is the structure of the dual frame for a quasicrystal?

40 Using the Covariance Condition Suppose G(g, Λ) is a Gabor frame. In general, we only have S Λ π(z) = π(z)s Λ z. We can rewrite the dual frame elements as g z = S 1 Λ π(z)g = π(z)s 1 Λ z g.

41 Using the Covariance Condition Suppose G(g, Λ) is a Gabor frame. In general, we only have S Λ π(z) = π(z)s Λ z. We can rewrite the dual frame elements as g z = S 1 Λ π(z)g = π(z)s 1 Λ z g. But the functions S 1 Λ zg are exactly the functions you get by applying S 1 to the constant section Ψ g!

42 Approximating with Multi-Frames Since S 1 Ψ g is a continuous function on the transversal (a Cantor set) with values in M 1 (R d ), it can be approximated by a locally constant function. This amounts to saying that the dual frame elements can be approximated by a Gabor multiframe!

43 Approximating with Multi-Frames Since S 1 Ψ g is a continuous function on the transversal (a Cantor set) with values in M 1 (R d ), it can be approximated by a locally constant function. This amounts to saying that the dual frame elements can be approximated by a Gabor multiframe! 1. Cut transversal into n pieces. 2. For each piece choose a translate of Λ in that piece, say Λ z 1,... Λ z n and estimate each of S 1 Λ z i g. 3. To estimate S 1 Λ zg for other z, just check which piece Λ z lies in and use the function we already computed. 4. Now we can estimate the dual frame elements π(z)s 1 Λ z g for all z Λ!

44 Abstract Characterization Definition Let G = {g z } z Λ M 1 be a frame sequence where Λ is a quasicrystal. Then we call G a pattern equivariant Gabor system if the following condition holds: for every R > 0 there exists ɛ R > 0 so that whenever we have two points z, z Λ such that Λ z and Λ z agree on a ball of radius R then and ɛ R 0 as R. π(z) 1 g z π(z ) 1 g z M 1 < ɛ R

45 Abstract Characterization Definition Let G = {g z } z Λ M 1 be a frame sequence where Λ is a quasicrystal. Then we call G a pattern equivariant Gabor system if the following condition holds: for every R > 0 there exists ɛ R > 0 so that whenever we have two points z, z Λ such that Λ z and Λ z agree on a ball of radius R then and ɛ R 0 as R. Theorem π(z) 1 g z π(z ) 1 g z M 1 < ɛ R Let G(g, Λ) be a Gabor frame, Λ a quasicrystal. Then the dual frame g z is a pattern equivariant Gabor system.

46 Open Questions Can we realize End A (H Λ ) as a twisted quasicrystal algebra? If Λ has pure discrete spectrum, is the von Neumann closure of End A (H Λ ) generated by the eigenfunction operators τ k? These questions should be related to understanding the Fourier transform of the point measure λ Λ δ λ.

47 Open Questions Can we realize End A (H Λ ) as a twisted quasicrystal algebra? If Λ has pure discrete spectrum, is the von Neumann closure of End A (H Λ ) generated by the eigenfunction operators τ k? These questions should be related to understanding the Fourier transform of the point measure λ Λ δ λ. Given a class c in H 2 (R trans ), can we always find a deformation D such that D σ = c? My guess is no, but finding a counterexample would be instructive.

48 Open Questions Can we realize End A (H Λ ) as a twisted quasicrystal algebra? If Λ has pure discrete spectrum, is the von Neumann closure of End A (H Λ ) generated by the eigenfunction operators τ k? These questions should be related to understanding the Fourier transform of the point measure λ Λ δ λ. Given a class c in H 2 (R trans ), can we always find a deformation D such that D σ = c? My guess is no, but finding a counterexample would be instructive. Can we describe all deformations which fix the symplectic cocycle (i.e. D σ = σ)? Can we find an example where using more general deformations allows us to construct modules which do not come from noncommutative tori?

49 THANK YOU!!!!!

arxiv:math/ v2 [math.ds] 6 Jul 2018

arxiv:math/ v2 [math.ds] 6 Jul 2018 TILINGS, TILING SPACES AND TOPOLOGY LORENZO SADUN arxiv:math/0506054v2 [math.ds] 6 Jul 2018 Abstract. To understand an aperiodic tiling (or a quasicrystal modeled on an aperiodic tiling), we construct

More information

VARIOUS MATHEMATICAL ASPECTS TILING SPACES. Jean BELLISSARD 1 2. Collaborations: Georgia Institute of Technology & Institut Universitaire de France

VARIOUS MATHEMATICAL ASPECTS TILING SPACES. Jean BELLISSARD 1 2. Collaborations: Georgia Institute of Technology & Institut Universitaire de France GaTech January 24 2005 1 VARIOUS MATHEMATICAL ASPECTS of TILING SPACES Jean BELLISSARD 1 2 Georgia Institute of Technology & Institut Universitaire de France Collaborations: D. SPEHNER (Essen, Germany)

More information

TOPOLOGICAL BRAGG PEAKS AND HOW THEY CHARACTERISE POINT SETS

TOPOLOGICAL BRAGG PEAKS AND HOW THEY CHARACTERISE POINT SETS TOPOLOGICAL BRAGG PEAKS AND HOW THEY CHARACTERISE POINT SETS Johannes Kellendonk To cite this version: Johannes Kellendonk. TOPOLOGICAL BRAGG PEAKS AND HOW THEY CHARACTERISE POINT SETS. Article for the

More information

Twisted Higher Rank Graph C*-algebras

Twisted Higher Rank Graph C*-algebras Alex Kumjian 1, David Pask 2, Aidan Sims 2 1 University of Nevada, Reno 2 University of Wollongong East China Normal University, Shanghai, 21 May 2012 Introduction. Preliminaries Introduction k-graphs

More information

FROM CLASSICAL THETA FUNCTIONS TO TOPOLOGICAL QUANTUM FIELD THEORY

FROM CLASSICAL THETA FUNCTIONS TO TOPOLOGICAL QUANTUM FIELD THEORY FROM CLASSICAL THETA FUNCTIONS TO TOPOLOGICAL QUANTUM FIELD THEORY Răzvan Gelca Texas Tech University Alejandro Uribe University of Michigan WE WILL CONSTRUCT THE ABELIAN CHERN-SIMONS TOPOLOGICAL QUANTUM

More information

RIEMANNIAN GEOMETRY COMPACT METRIC SPACES. Jean BELLISSARD 1. Collaboration:

RIEMANNIAN GEOMETRY COMPACT METRIC SPACES. Jean BELLISSARD 1. Collaboration: RIEMANNIAN GEOMETRY of COMPACT METRIC SPACES Jean BELLISSARD 1 Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics Collaboration: I. PALMER (Georgia Tech, Atlanta) 1 e-mail:

More information

What is a Quasicrystal?

What is a Quasicrystal? July 23, 2013 Rotational symmetry An object with rotational symmetry is an object that looks the same after a certain amount of rotation. Rotational symmetry An object with rotational symmetry is an object

More information

Cartan sub-c*-algebras in C*-algebras

Cartan sub-c*-algebras in C*-algebras Plan Cartan sub-c*-algebras in C*-algebras Jean Renault Université d Orléans 22 July 2008 1 C*-algebra constructions. 2 Effective versus topologically principal. 3 Cartan subalgebras in C*-algebras. 4

More information

LAPLACIANS COMPACT METRIC SPACES. Sponsoring. Jean BELLISSARD a. Collaboration:

LAPLACIANS COMPACT METRIC SPACES. Sponsoring. Jean BELLISSARD a. Collaboration: LAPLACIANS on Sponsoring COMPACT METRIC SPACES Jean BELLISSARD a Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics Collaboration: I. PALMER (Georgia Tech, Atlanta) a e-mail:

More information

Lecture III: Neighbourhoods

Lecture III: Neighbourhoods Lecture III: Neighbourhoods Jonathan Evans 7th October 2010 Jonathan Evans () Lecture III: Neighbourhoods 7th October 2010 1 / 18 Jonathan Evans () Lecture III: Neighbourhoods 7th October 2010 2 / 18 In

More information

COHOMOLOGY. Sponsoring. Jean BELLISSARD

COHOMOLOGY. Sponsoring. Jean BELLISSARD Sponsoring Grant no. 0901514 COHOMOLOGY Jean BELLISSARD CRC 701, Bielefeld Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics e-mail: jeanbel@math.gatech.edu Main References

More information

WANNIER TRANSFORM APERIODIC SOLIDS. for. Jean BELLISSARD. Collaboration:

WANNIER TRANSFORM APERIODIC SOLIDS. for. Jean BELLISSARD. Collaboration: WANNIER TRANSFORM for APERIODIC SOLIDS Jean BELLISSARD Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics e-mail: jeanbel@math.gatech.edu Collaboration: G. DE NITTIS (SISSA,

More information

Dynamics and topology of matchbox manifolds

Dynamics and topology of matchbox manifolds Dynamics and topology of matchbox manifolds Steven Hurder University of Illinois at Chicago www.math.uic.edu/ hurder 11th Nagoya International Mathematics Conference March 21, 2012 Introduction We present

More information

A PROOF OF THE GAP LABELING CONJECTURE. 1. Introduction

A PROOF OF THE GAP LABELING CONJECTURE. 1. Introduction A PROOF OF THE GAP LABELING CONJECTURE JEROME KAMINKER AND IAN PUTNAM Abstract. We will give a proof of the Gap Labeling Conjecture formulated by Bellissard, [3]. It makes use of a version of Connes index

More information

Introduction to the Baum-Connes conjecture

Introduction to the Baum-Connes conjecture Introduction to the Baum-Connes conjecture Nigel Higson, John Roe PSU NCGOA07 Nigel Higson, John Roe (PSU) Introduction to the Baum-Connes conjecture NCGOA07 1 / 15 History of the BC conjecture Lecture

More information

THE NONCOMMUTATIVE TORUS

THE NONCOMMUTATIVE TORUS THE NONCOMMUTATIVE TORUS The noncommutative torus as a twisted convolution An ordinary two-torus T 2 with coordinate functions given by where x 1, x 2 [0, 1]. U 1 = e 2πix 1, U 2 = e 2πix 2, (1) By Fourier

More information

THE TOPOLOGY of TILING SPACES

THE TOPOLOGY of TILING SPACES Seoul National University March20, 2014 1 THE TOPOLOGY of Sponsoring TILING SPACES This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation Grant No. DMS-1160962 Jean BELLISSARD Georgia

More information

The Topology of Tiling Spaces

The Topology of Tiling Spaces East Lansing October 16, 2009 1 The Topology of Tiling Spaces Jean BELLISSARD East Lansing October 16, 2009 2 East Lansing October 16, 2009 3 East Lansing October 16, 2009 4 The Topology of Tiling Spaces

More information

Noncommutative Geometry

Noncommutative Geometry Noncommutative Geometry Alain Connes College de France Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques Paris, France ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. Harcourt Brace & Company, Publishers San Diego New York Boston London

More information

TILINGS APERIODIC MEDIA

TILINGS APERIODIC MEDIA Duke February 28 2003 1 TILINGS APERIODIC MEDIA and their NONCOMMUTATIVE GEOMETRY Jean BELLISSARD 1 2 Georgia Institute of Technology & Institut Universitaire de France Collaborations: D. SPEHNER (Essen,

More information

Modules over the noncommutative torus, elliptic curves and cochain quantization

Modules over the noncommutative torus, elliptic curves and cochain quantization Modules over the noncommutative torus, elliptic curves and cochain quantization Francesco D Andrea ( joint work with G. Fiore & D. Franco ) ((A B) C) D Φ (12)34 Φ 123 (A B) (C D) (A (B C)) D Φ 12(34) Φ

More information

Inequivalent bundle representations for the Noncommutative Torus

Inequivalent bundle representations for the Noncommutative Torus Inequivalent bundle representations for the Noncommutative Torus Chern numbers: from abstract to concrete Giuseppe De Nittis Mathematical Physics Sector of: SISSA International School for Advanced Studies,

More information

Aperiodic Substitution Tilings

Aperiodic Substitution Tilings Aperiodic Substitution Tilings Charles Starling January 4, 2011 Charles Starling () Aperiodic Substitution Tilings January 4, 2011 1 / 27 Overview We study tilings of R 2 which are aperiodic, but not completely

More information

The Hitchin map, local to global

The Hitchin map, local to global The Hitchin map, local to global Andrei Negut Let X be a smooth projective curve of genus g > 1, a semisimple group and Bun = Bun (X) the moduli stack of principal bundles on X. In this talk, we will present

More information

Gabor Frames. Karlheinz Gröchenig. Faculty of Mathematics, University of Vienna.

Gabor Frames. Karlheinz Gröchenig. Faculty of Mathematics, University of Vienna. Gabor Frames Karlheinz Gröchenig Faculty of Mathematics, University of Vienna http://homepage.univie.ac.at/karlheinz.groechenig/ HIM Bonn, January 2016 Karlheinz Gröchenig (Vienna) Gabor Frames and their

More information

Noncommutative geometry and quantum field theory

Noncommutative geometry and quantum field theory Noncommutative geometry and quantum field theory Graeme Segal The beginning of noncommutative geometry is the observation that there is a rough equivalence contravariant between the category of topological

More information

S-adic sequences A bridge between dynamics, arithmetic, and geometry

S-adic sequences A bridge between dynamics, arithmetic, and geometry S-adic sequences A bridge between dynamics, arithmetic, and geometry J. M. Thuswaldner (joint work with P. Arnoux, V. Berthé, M. Minervino, and W. Steiner) Marseille, November 2017 PART 3 S-adic Rauzy

More information

Cellular Automata and Tilings

Cellular Automata and Tilings Cellular Automata and Tilings Jarkko Kari Department of Mathematics, University of Turku, Finland TUCS(Turku Centre for Computer Science), Turku, Finland Outline of the talk (1) Cellular automata (CA)

More information

FRAMES AND TIME-FREQUENCY ANALYSIS

FRAMES AND TIME-FREQUENCY ANALYSIS FRAMES AND TIME-FREQUENCY ANALYSIS LECTURE 5: MODULATION SPACES AND APPLICATIONS Christopher Heil Georgia Tech heil@math.gatech.edu http://www.math.gatech.edu/ heil READING For background on Banach spaces,

More information

Meyer sets, topological eigenvalues, and cantor fiber bundles

Meyer sets, topological eigenvalues, and cantor fiber bundles Meyer sets, topological eigenvalues, and cantor fiber bundles Johannes Kellendonk, Lorenzo Sadun To cite this version: Johannes Kellendonk, Lorenzo Sadun. Meyer sets, topological eigenvalues, and cantor

More information

Theory of Aperiodic Solids:

Theory of Aperiodic Solids: Theory of Aperiodic Solids: Sponsoring from 1980 to present Jean BELLISSARD jeanbel@math.gatech.edu Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics Content 1. Aperiodic

More information

LECTURE 25-26: CARTAN S THEOREM OF MAXIMAL TORI. 1. Maximal Tori

LECTURE 25-26: CARTAN S THEOREM OF MAXIMAL TORI. 1. Maximal Tori LECTURE 25-26: CARTAN S THEOREM OF MAXIMAL TORI 1. Maximal Tori By a torus we mean a compact connected abelian Lie group, so a torus is a Lie group that is isomorphic to T n = R n /Z n. Definition 1.1.

More information

INSTANTON MODULI AND COMPACTIFICATION MATTHEW MAHOWALD

INSTANTON MODULI AND COMPACTIFICATION MATTHEW MAHOWALD INSTANTON MODULI AND COMPACTIFICATION MATTHEW MAHOWALD () Instanton (definition) (2) ADHM construction (3) Compactification. Instantons.. Notation. Throughout this talk, we will use the following notation:

More information

Fréchet differentiability of the norm of L p -spaces associated with arbitrary von Neumann algebras

Fréchet differentiability of the norm of L p -spaces associated with arbitrary von Neumann algebras Fréchet differentiability of the norm of L p -spaces associated with arbitrary von Neumann algebras (Part I) Fedor Sukochev (joint work with D. Potapov, A. Tomskova and D. Zanin) University of NSW, AUSTRALIA

More information

Additive Combinatorics Lecture 12

Additive Combinatorics Lecture 12 Additive Combinatorics Lecture 12 Leo Goldmakher Scribe: Gal Gross April 4th, 2014 Last lecture we proved the Bohr-to-gAP proposition, but the final step was a bit mysterious we invoked Minkowski s second

More information

Bloch Theory for 1D-FLC Aperiodic Media

Bloch Theory for 1D-FLC Aperiodic Media Sponsoring Bloch Theory for 1D-FLC Aperiodic Media CRC 701, Bielefeld, Germany Jean BELLISSARD Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics e-mail: jeanbel@math.gatech.edu

More information

Deformations of logarithmic connections and apparent singularities

Deformations of logarithmic connections and apparent singularities Deformations of logarithmic connections and apparent singularities Rényi Institute of Mathematics Budapest University of Technology Kyoto July 14th, 2009 Outline 1 Motivation Outline 1 Motivation 2 Infinitesimal

More information

Open Questions in Quantum Information Geometry

Open Questions in Quantum Information Geometry Open Questions in Quantum Information Geometry M. R. Grasselli Department of Mathematics and Statistics McMaster University Imperial College, June 15, 2005 1. Classical Parametric Information Geometry

More information

Functional Analysis Review

Functional Analysis Review Outline 9.520: Statistical Learning Theory and Applications February 8, 2010 Outline 1 2 3 4 Vector Space Outline A vector space is a set V with binary operations +: V V V and : R V V such that for all

More information

Categorical techniques for NC geometry and gravity

Categorical techniques for NC geometry and gravity Categorical techniques for NC geometry and gravity Towards homotopical algebraic quantum field theory lexander Schenkel lexander Schenkel School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Nottingham School

More information

Aperiodic Order in Dynamical Systems and Operator Algebras

Aperiodic Order in Dynamical Systems and Operator Algebras Aperiodic Order in Dynamical Systems and Operator Algebras Charles Starling February 22, 2012 1 Introduction and History This minicourse is meant to be an introduction to the theory of aperiodic tilings

More information

Dynamics of Group Actions and Minimal Sets

Dynamics of Group Actions and Minimal Sets University of Illinois at Chicago www.math.uic.edu/ hurder First Joint Meeting of the Sociedad de Matemática de Chile American Mathematical Society Special Session on Group Actions: Probability and Dynamics

More information

Global Maxwellians over All Space and Their Relation to Conserved Quantites of Classical Kinetic Equations

Global Maxwellians over All Space and Their Relation to Conserved Quantites of Classical Kinetic Equations Global Maxwellians over All Space and Their Relation to Conserved Quantites of Classical Kinetic Equations C. David Levermore Department of Mathematics and Institute for Physical Science and Technology

More information

Spectral Continuity Properties of Graph Laplacians

Spectral Continuity Properties of Graph Laplacians Spectral Continuity Properties of Graph Laplacians David Jekel May 24, 2017 Overview Spectral invariants of the graph Laplacian depend continuously on the graph. We consider triples (G, x, T ), where G

More information

Crossed products of irrational rotation algebras by finite subgroups of SL 2 (Z) are AF

Crossed products of irrational rotation algebras by finite subgroups of SL 2 (Z) are AF Crossed products of irrational rotation algebras by finite subgroups of SL 2 (Z) are AF N. Christopher Phillips 7 May 2008 N. Christopher Phillips () C (Z k, A θ ) is AF 7 May 2008 1 / 36 The Sixth Annual

More information

Symplectic varieties and Poisson deformations

Symplectic varieties and Poisson deformations Symplectic varieties and Poisson deformations Yoshinori Namikawa A symplectic variety X is a normal algebraic variety (defined over C) which admits an everywhere non-degenerate d-closed 2-form ω on the

More information

A Proof of the Gap Labeling Conjecture

A Proof of the Gap Labeling Conjecture Michigan Math. J. 51 (2003) A Proof of the Gap Labeling Conjecture Jerome Kaminker & Ian Putnam 1. Introduction The gap labeling conjecture as formulated by Bellissard [3] is a statement about the possible

More information

ON RIGIDITY OF ALGEBRAIC DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS

ON RIGIDITY OF ALGEBRAIC DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS ON RIGIDITY OF ALGEBRAIC DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS ALEX CLARK AND ROBBERT FOKKINK Abstract. We study topological rigidity of algebraic dynamical systems. In the first part of this paper we give an algebraic condition

More information

LECTURE 5: SOME BASIC CONSTRUCTIONS IN SYMPLECTIC TOPOLOGY

LECTURE 5: SOME BASIC CONSTRUCTIONS IN SYMPLECTIC TOPOLOGY LECTURE 5: SOME BASIC CONSTRUCTIONS IN SYMPLECTIC TOPOLOGY WEIMIN CHEN, UMASS, SPRING 07 1. Blowing up and symplectic cutting In complex geometry the blowing-up operation amounts to replace a point in

More information

Pseudogroups of foliations Algebraic invariants of solenoids The discriminant group Stable actions Wild actions Future work and references

Pseudogroups of foliations Algebraic invariants of solenoids The discriminant group Stable actions Wild actions Future work and references Wild solenoids Olga Lukina University of Illinois at Chicago Joint work with Steven Hurder March 25, 2017 1 / 25 Cantor laminations Let M be a compact connected metrizable topological space with a foliation

More information

Model sets, Meyer sets and quasicrystals

Model sets, Meyer sets and quasicrystals Model sets, Meyer sets and quasicrystals Technische Fakultät Universität Bielefeld University of the Philippines Manila 27. Jan. 2014 Model sets, Meyer sets and quasicrystals Quasicrystals, cut-and-project

More information

T-duality & noncommutative geometry

T-duality & noncommutative geometry T-duality & noncommutative geometry Type IIA Type IIB duality rephrased Higher Structures in String Theory and Quantum Field Theory Instructional workshop for students and junior researchers Mathai Varghese

More information

On the simplicity of twisted k-graph C -algebras

On the simplicity of twisted k-graph C -algebras Preliminary report of work in progress Alex Kumjian 1, David Pask 2, Aidan Sims 2 1 University of Nevada, Reno 2 University of Wollongong GPOTS14, Kansas State University, Manhattan, 27 May 2014 Introduction

More information

0.1 Complex Analogues 1

0.1 Complex Analogues 1 0.1 Complex Analogues 1 Abstract In complex geometry Kodaira s theorem tells us that on a Kähler manifold sufficiently high powers of positive line bundles admit global holomorphic sections. Donaldson

More information

Introduction to Group Theory

Introduction to Group Theory Chapter 10 Introduction to Group Theory Since symmetries described by groups play such an important role in modern physics, we will take a little time to introduce the basic structure (as seen by a physicist)

More information

Foliation dynamics, shape and classification

Foliation dynamics, shape and classification Foliation dynamics, shape and classification Steve Hurder University of Illinois at Chicago www.math.uic.edu/ hurder Theorem: [Denjoy, 1932] There exist a C 1 -foliation F of codimension-1 with an exceptional

More information

arxiv:math/ v2 [math.ca] 18 Dec 1999

arxiv:math/ v2 [math.ca] 18 Dec 1999 Illinois J. Math., to appear Non-symmetric convex domains have no basis of exponentials Mihail N. Kolountzakis 13 December 1998; revised October 1999 arxiv:math/9904064v [math.ca] 18 Dec 1999 Abstract

More information

Poisson geometry of b-manifolds. Eva Miranda

Poisson geometry of b-manifolds. Eva Miranda Poisson geometry of b-manifolds Eva Miranda UPC-Barcelona Rio de Janeiro, July 26, 2010 Eva Miranda (UPC) Poisson 2010 July 26, 2010 1 / 45 Outline 1 Motivation 2 Classification of b-poisson manifolds

More information

Entropy, mixing, and independence

Entropy, mixing, and independence Entropy, mixing, and independence David Kerr Texas A&M University Joint work with Hanfeng Li Let (X, µ) be a probability space. Two sets A, B X are independent if µ(a B) = µ(a)µ(b). Suppose that we have

More information

Tiling Dynamical Systems as an Introduction to Smale Spaces

Tiling Dynamical Systems as an Introduction to Smale Spaces Tiling Dynamical Systems as an Introduction to Smale Spaces Michael Whittaker (University of Wollongong) University of Otago Dunedin, New Zealand February 15, 2011 A Penrose Tiling Sir Roger Penrose Penrose

More information

121B: ALGEBRAIC TOPOLOGY. Contents. 6. Poincaré Duality

121B: ALGEBRAIC TOPOLOGY. Contents. 6. Poincaré Duality 121B: ALGEBRAIC TOPOLOGY Contents 6. Poincaré Duality 1 6.1. Manifolds 2 6.2. Orientation 3 6.3. Orientation sheaf 9 6.4. Cap product 11 6.5. Proof for good coverings 15 6.6. Direct limit 18 6.7. Proof

More information

Feshbach-Schur RG for the Anderson Model

Feshbach-Schur RG for the Anderson Model Feshbach-Schur RG for the Anderson Model John Z. Imbrie University of Virginia Isaac Newton Institute October 26, 2018 Overview Consider the localization problem for the Anderson model of a quantum particle

More information

arxiv: v1 [math.gt] 20 Dec 2017

arxiv: v1 [math.gt] 20 Dec 2017 SYMPLECTIC FILLINGS, CONTACT SURGERIES, AND LAGRANGIAN DISKS arxiv:1712.07287v1 [math.gt] 20 Dec 2017 JAMES CONWAY, JOHN B. ETNYRE, AND BÜLENT TOSUN ABSTRACT. This paper completely answers the question

More information

Periodic Approximant. Aperiodic Hamiltonians

Periodic Approximant. Aperiodic Hamiltonians Sponsoring Periodic Approximant to Aperiodic Hamiltonians CRC 701, Bielefeld, Germany Jean BELLISSARD Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta School of Mathematics & School of Physics e-mail: jeanbel@math.gatech.edu

More information

Hopf Fibrations. Consider a classical magnetization field in R 3 which is longitidinally stiff and transversally soft.

Hopf Fibrations. Consider a classical magnetization field in R 3 which is longitidinally stiff and transversally soft. Helmut Eschrig Leibniz-Institut für Festkörper- und Werkstofforschung Dresden Leibniz-Institute for Solid State and Materials Research Dresden Hopf Fibrations Consider a classical magnetization field in

More information

The Spinor Representation

The Spinor Representation The Spinor Representation Math G4344, Spring 2012 As we have seen, the groups Spin(n) have a representation on R n given by identifying v R n as an element of the Clifford algebra C(n) and having g Spin(n)

More information

Math 210C. A non-closed commutator subgroup

Math 210C. A non-closed commutator subgroup Math 210C. A non-closed commutator subgroup 1. Introduction In Exercise 3(i) of HW7 we saw that every element of SU(2) is a commutator (i.e., has the form xyx 1 y 1 for x, y SU(2)), so the same holds for

More information

QUANTIZATION VIA DIFFERENTIAL OPERATORS ON STACKS

QUANTIZATION VIA DIFFERENTIAL OPERATORS ON STACKS QUANTIZATION VIA DIFFERENTIAL OPERATORS ON STACKS SAM RASKIN 1. Differential operators on stacks 1.1. We will define a D-module of differential operators on a smooth stack and construct a symbol map when

More information

Triple derivations on von Neumann algebras

Triple derivations on von Neumann algebras Triple derivations on von Neumann algebras USA-Uzbekistan Conference on Analysis and Mathematical Physics California State University, Fullerton Bernard Russo University of California, Irvine May 20 23,

More information

Cohomology of higher rank graphs, an interim report.

Cohomology of higher rank graphs, an interim report. Cohomology of higher rank graphs, an interim report. Alex Kumjian 1, David Pask 2, Aidan Sims 2 1 University of Nevada, Reno 2 University of Wollongong GPOTS, Arizona State University Tempe, May 2011 Introduction

More information

Decouplings and applications

Decouplings and applications April 27, 2018 Let Ξ be a collection of frequency points ξ on some curved, compact manifold S of diameter 1 in R n (e.g. the unit sphere S n 1 ) Let B R = B(c, R) be a ball with radius R 1. Let also a

More information

Turbulence, representations, and trace-preserving actions

Turbulence, representations, and trace-preserving actions Turbulence, representations, and trace-preserving actions Hanfeng Li SUNY at Buffalo June 6, 2009 GPOTS-Boulder Joint work with David Kerr and Mikaël Pichot 1 / 24 Type of questions to consider: Question

More information

Convex Projective Structures on Non-hyperbolic 3-manifolds

Convex Projective Structures on Non-hyperbolic 3-manifolds Convex Projective Structures on Non-hyperbolic 3-manifolds Sam Ballas (joint with J. Danciger and G.-S. Lee) Higher Teichmüller theory and Higgs bundles Heidelberg November 3, 2015 Overview If you want

More information

Borel complexity and automorphisms of C*-algebras

Borel complexity and automorphisms of C*-algebras Martino Lupini York University Toronto, Canada January 15th, 2013 Table of Contents 1 Auto-homeomorphisms of compact metrizable spaces 2 Measure preserving automorphisms of probability spaces 3 Automorphisms

More information

Electrons in a periodic potential

Electrons in a periodic potential Chapter 3 Electrons in a periodic potential 3.1 Bloch s theorem. We consider in this chapter electrons under the influence of a static, periodic potential V (x), i.e. such that it fulfills V (x) = V (x

More information

Foliations, Fractals and Cohomology

Foliations, Fractals and Cohomology Foliations, Fractals and Cohomology Steven Hurder University of Illinois at Chicago www.math.uic.edu/ hurder Colloquium, University of Leicester, 19 February 2009 Steven Hurder (UIC) Foliations, fractals,

More information

Introduction to mathematical quasicrystals

Introduction to mathematical quasicrystals Introduction to mathematical quasicrystals F S W Alan Haynes Topics to be covered Historical overview: aperiodic tilings of Euclidean space and quasicrystals Lattices, crystallographic point sets, and

More information

MET Workshop: Exercises

MET Workshop: Exercises MET Workshop: Exercises Alex Blumenthal and Anthony Quas May 7, 206 Notation. R d is endowed with the standard inner product (, ) and Euclidean norm. M d d (R) denotes the space of n n real matrices. When

More information

4-MANIFOLDS: CLASSIFICATION AND EXAMPLES. 1. Outline

4-MANIFOLDS: CLASSIFICATION AND EXAMPLES. 1. Outline 4-MANIFOLDS: CLASSIFICATION AND EXAMPLES 1. Outline Throughout, 4-manifold will be used to mean closed, oriented, simply-connected 4-manifold. Hopefully I will remember to append smooth wherever necessary.

More information

BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL

BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL A weaker version of Bézout s theorem states that if C, D are projective plane curves of degrees c and d that intersect transversally, then C D = cd. The goal of this

More information

(E.-W. Zink, with A. Silberger)

(E.-W. Zink, with A. Silberger) 1 Langlands classification for L-parameters A talk dedicated to Sergei Vladimirovich Vostokov on the occasion of his 70th birthday St.Petersburg im Mai 2015 (E.-W. Zink, with A. Silberger) In the representation

More information

XX Eesti Arvutiteaduse Talvekool

XX Eesti Arvutiteaduse Talvekool XX Eesti Arvutiteaduse Talvekool Cellular automata, tilings and (un)computability Jarkko Kari Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of Turku Lecture 1: Tutorial on Cellular automata Introduction

More information

GEOMETRIC QUANTIZATION

GEOMETRIC QUANTIZATION GEOMETRIC QUANTIZATION 1. The basic idea The setting of the Hamiltonian version of classical (Newtonian) mechanics is the phase space (position and momentum), which is a symplectic manifold. The typical

More information

Homotopy and geometric perspectives on string topology

Homotopy and geometric perspectives on string topology Homotopy and geometric perspectives on string topology Ralph L. Cohen Stanford University August 30, 2005 In these lecture notes I will try to summarize some recent advances in the new area of study known

More information

Reciprocity maps with restricted ramification

Reciprocity maps with restricted ramification Reciprocity maps with restricted ramification Romyar Sharifi UCLA January 6, 2016 1 / 19 Iwasawa theory for modular forms Let be an p odd prime and f a newform of level N. Suppose that f is ordinary at

More information

1. Algebraic vector bundles. Affine Varieties

1. Algebraic vector bundles. Affine Varieties 0. Brief overview Cycles and bundles are intrinsic invariants of algebraic varieties Close connections going back to Grothendieck Work with quasi-projective varieties over a field k Affine Varieties 1.

More information

Connections for noncommutative tori

Connections for noncommutative tori Levi-Civita connections for noncommutative tori reference: SIGMA 9 (2013), 071 NCG Festival, TAMU, 2014 In honor of Henri, a long-time friend Connections One of the most basic notions in differential geometry

More information

We then have an analogous theorem. Theorem 1.2.

We then have an analogous theorem. Theorem 1.2. 1. K-Theory of Topological Stacks, Ryan Grady, Notre Dame Throughout, G is sufficiently nice: simple, maybe π 1 is free, or perhaps it s even simply connected. Anyway, there are some assumptions lurking.

More information

BRIAN OSSERMAN. , let t be a coordinate for the line, and take θ = d. A differential form ω may be written as g(t)dt,

BRIAN OSSERMAN. , let t be a coordinate for the line, and take θ = d. A differential form ω may be written as g(t)dt, CONNECTIONS, CURVATURE, AND p-curvature BRIAN OSSERMAN 1. Classical theory We begin by describing the classical point of view on connections, their curvature, and p-curvature, in terms of maps of sheaves

More information

EXPANDERS, EXACT CROSSED PRODUCTS, AND THE BAUM-CONNES CONJECTURE. 1. Introduction

EXPANDERS, EXACT CROSSED PRODUCTS, AND THE BAUM-CONNES CONJECTURE. 1. Introduction EXPANDERS, EXACT CROSSED PRODUCTS, AND THE BAUM-CONNES CONJECTURE PAUL BAUM, ERIK GUENTNER, AND RUFUS WILLETT Abstract. We reformulate the Baum-Connes conjecture with coefficients by introducing a new

More information

The Schrodinger Equation and Postulates Common operators in QM: Potential Energy. Often depends on position operator: Kinetic Energy 1-D case:

The Schrodinger Equation and Postulates Common operators in QM: Potential Energy. Often depends on position operator: Kinetic Energy 1-D case: The Schrodinger Equation and Postulates Common operators in QM: Potential Energy Often depends on position operator: Kinetic Energy 1-D case: 3-D case Time Total energy = Hamiltonian To find out about

More information

Hamiltonian Dynamics

Hamiltonian Dynamics Hamiltonian Dynamics CDS 140b Joris Vankerschaver jv@caltech.edu CDS Feb. 10, 2009 Joris Vankerschaver (CDS) Hamiltonian Dynamics Feb. 10, 2009 1 / 31 Outline 1. Introductory concepts; 2. Poisson brackets;

More information

EXOTIC SMOOTH STRUCTURES ON TOPOLOGICAL FIBRE BUNDLES B

EXOTIC SMOOTH STRUCTURES ON TOPOLOGICAL FIBRE BUNDLES B EXOTIC SMOOTH STRUCTURES ON TOPOLOGICAL FIBRE BUNDLES B SEBASTIAN GOETTE, KIYOSHI IGUSA, AND BRUCE WILLIAMS Abstract. When two smooth manifold bundles over the same base are fiberwise tangentially homeomorphic,

More information

Notes 10: Consequences of Eli Cartan s theorem.

Notes 10: Consequences of Eli Cartan s theorem. Notes 10: Consequences of Eli Cartan s theorem. Version 0.00 with misprints, The are a few obvious, but important consequences of the theorem of Eli Cartan on the maximal tori. The first one is the observation

More information

J þ in two special cases

J þ in two special cases 1 Preliminaries... 1 1.1 Operator Algebras and Hilbert Modules... 1 1.1.1 C Algebras... 1 1.1.2 Von Neumann Algebras... 4 1.1.3 Free Product and Tensor Product... 5 1.1.4 Hilbert Modules.... 6 1.2 Quantum

More information

Introduction to Gabor Analysis

Introduction to Gabor Analysis Theoretical and Computational Aspects Numerical Harmonic Group under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Hans Georg Feichtinger 30 Oct 2012 Outline 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 DFT/ idft Discrete Given an input signal f of

More information

Chapter 2 The Group U(1) and its Representations

Chapter 2 The Group U(1) and its Representations Chapter 2 The Group U(1) and its Representations The simplest example of a Lie group is the group of rotations of the plane, with elements parametrized by a single number, the angle of rotation θ. It is

More information

arxiv:math.oa/ v1 22 Nov 2000

arxiv:math.oa/ v1 22 Nov 2000 arxiv:math.oa/0011184 v1 22 Nov 2000 A module frame concept for Hilbert C*-modules Michael Frank and David R. Larson Abstract. The goal of the present paper is a short introduction to a general module

More information

Aperiodic tilings (tutorial)

Aperiodic tilings (tutorial) Aperiodic tilings (tutorial) Boris Solomyak U Washington and Bar-Ilan February 12, 2015, ICERM Boris Solomyak (U Washington and Bar-Ilan) Aperiodic tilings February 12, 2015, ICERM 1 / 45 Plan of the talk

More information

Geometry and Dynamics of singular symplectic manifolds. Session 9: Some applications of the path method in b-symplectic geometry

Geometry and Dynamics of singular symplectic manifolds. Session 9: Some applications of the path method in b-symplectic geometry Geometry and Dynamics of singular symplectic manifolds Session 9: Some applications of the path method in b-symplectic geometry Eva Miranda (UPC-CEREMADE-IMCCE-IMJ) Fondation Sciences Mathématiques de

More information