Approximation of the quadratic numerical range of block operator matrices (Q1946544): Difference between revisions

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Property / author: Marco Marlettta / rank
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Property / full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00020-012-1971-y / rank
 
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Property / cites work: A new concept for block operator matrices: The quadratic numerical range / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 08:25, 6 July 2024

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Approximation of the quadratic numerical range of block operator matrices
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    Approximation of the quadratic numerical range of block operator matrices (English)
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    15 April 2013
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    Let \({\mathcal H}={\mathcal H}_1\oplus {\mathcal H}_2\) be a decomposition of a complex Hilbert space \({\mathcal H}\) into the orthogonal sum of two subspaces and let \({\mathcal A}=[A_{ij}]_{i,j=1}^{2}\) be the block operator matrix representation of a (not necessarily bounded) linear operator \({\mathcal A}\) on \({\mathcal H}\). The quadratic numerical range \(W^2({\mathcal A})\) is the set of all eigenvalues of \(2\times 2\) matrices \({\mathcal A}_{x_1,x_2}=[ \langle A_{ij}x_j,x_i\rangle/\| x_i\| \|x_j\|]_{i,j=1}^{2}\), where \(x_1\in {\mathcal D}(A_{11})\cap {\mathcal D}(A_{21})\) and \(x_2\in {\mathcal D}(A_{12})\cap {\mathcal D}(A_{22})\) are non-zero vectors and \({\mathcal D}(\cdot)\) denotes the domain of an operator. In the paper, the computation of \(W^2({\mathcal A})\) by projection methods is considered. These methods yield a subset of the quadratic numerical range under very weak hypotheses. Only when one wants to generate the whole set \(W^2({\mathcal A})\), some extra assumptions are necessary. Some analytical results about the large-\(\lambda\) shape of the quadratic numerical range for certain classes of block operator matrices are proved as well and applied to a Hain-Lüst problem. The paper illustrates the practical difficulties associated with the computation of quadratic numerical ranges.
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    block operator matrix
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    quadratic numerical range
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    projection method
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    Hain-Lüst operator
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    spectral pollution
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