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Fitting Nice Functions To Data
ColloquiumSpeaker: | Kevin Luli, Yale University |
Location: | 1147 MSB |
Start time: | Fri, Jan 18 2013, 3:00PM |
Let X be a function space on R^n. Given an arbitrary subset E in R^n and a real-valued function f on E: Q1. How can we decide whether there exists F in X such that F(x) = f(x) on E? (2) If there exists F in X such that F(x) = f(x) on E, what's the simplest (or most efficient) way of computing F in terms of f? Moreover, if X is equipped with a norm ||.||, how small can we make ||F|| subject to F(x) = f(x) for x in E? These questions go back to H. Whitney 1934. Complete answers to these problems for X = C^m(R^n) and X = C^{m,1}(R^n) (highest derivatives are Lipschitz continuous) have been obtained in the last few years. In this talk, I will explain some new results in the setting of Sobolev spaces, with emphasis on the second question for finite set E. Along the way, I will also briefly describe how the first question is related to solving system of linear equations Ax = b (where A is a matrix of functions and b is a vector of functions) with the unknown x in the function space X = C^{m,1}(R^n). This talk draws on joint work with Charles Fefferman and Arie Israel.
Department Tea following in the Alder Room.