• Title/Summary/Keyword: real polynomials

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CLASSIFICATION OF CLASSICAL ORTHOGONAL POLYNOMIALS

  • Kwon, Kil-H.;Lance L.Littlejohn
    • Journal of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.973-1008
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    • 1997
  • We reconsider the problem of calssifying all classical orthogonal polynomial sequences which are solutions to a second-order differential equation of the form $$ \ell_2(x)y"(x) + \ell_1(x)y'(x) = \lambda_n y(x). $$ We first obtain new (algebraic) necessary and sufficient conditions on the coefficients $\ell_1(x)$ and $\ell_2(x)$ for the above differential equation to have orthogonal polynomial solutions. Using this result, we then obtain a complete classification of all classical orthogonal polynomials : up to a real linear change of variable, there are the six distinct orthogonal polynomial sets of Jacobi, Bessel, Laguerre, Hermite, twisted Hermite, and twisted Jacobi.cobi.

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ON ZERO DISTRIBUTIONS OF SOME SELF-RECIPROCAL POLYNOMIALS WITH REAL COEFFICIENTS

  • Han, Seungwoo;Kim, Seon-Hong;Park, Jeonghun
    • The Pure and Applied Mathematics
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.69-77
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    • 2017
  • If q(z) is a polynomial of degree n with all zeros in the unit circle, then the self-reciprocal polynomial $q(z)+x^nq(1/z)$ has all its zeros on the unit circle. One might naturally ask: where are the zeros of $q(z)+x^nq(1/z)$ located if q(z) has different zero distribution from the unit circle? In this paper, we study this question when $q(z)=(z-1)^{n-k}(z-1-c_1){\cdots}(z-1-c_k)+(z+1)^{n-k}(z+1+c_1){\cdots}(z+1+c_k)$, where $c_j$ > 0 for each j, and q(z) is a 'zeros dragged' polynomial from $(z-1)^n+(z+1)^n$ whose all zeros lie on the imaginary axis.

REPRESENTATION OF SOME BINOMIAL COEFFICIENTS BY POLYNOMIALS

  • Kim, Seon-Hong
    • Bulletin of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.44 no.4
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    • pp.677-682
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    • 2007
  • The unique positive zero of $F_m(z):=z^{2m}-z^{m+1}-z^{m-1}-1$ leads to analogues of $2(\array{2n\\k}\)$(k even) by using hypergeometric functions. The minimal polynomials of these analogues are related to Chebyshev polynomials, and the minimal polynomial of an analogue of $2(\array{2n\\k}\)$(k even>2) can be computed by using an analogue of $2(\array{2n\\k}\)$. In this paper we show that the analogue of $2(\array{2n\\2}\)$. In this paper we show that the analygue $2(\array{2n\\2}\)$ is the only real zero of its minimal polynomial, and has a different representation, by using a polynomial of smaller degree than $F_m$(z).

Self-organizing Networks with Activation Nodes Based on Fuzzy Inference and Polynomial Function (펴지추론과 다항식에 기초한 활성노드를 가진 자기구성네트윅크)

  • 김동원;오성권
    • 제어로봇시스템학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2000.10a
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    • pp.15-15
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    • 2000
  • In the past couple of years, there has been increasing interest in the fusion of neural networks and fuzzy logic. Most of the existing fused models have been proposed to implement different types of fuzzy reasoning mechanisms and inevitably they suffer from the dimensionality problem when dealing with complex real-world problem. To overcome the problem, we propose the self-organizing networks with activation nodes based on fuzzy inference and polynomial function. The proposed model consists of two parts, one is fuzzy nodes which each node is operated as a small fuzzy system with fuzzy implication rules, and its fuzzy system operates with Gaussian or triangular MF in Premise part and constant or regression polynomials in consequence part. the other is polynomial nodes which several types of high-order polynomials such as linear, quadratic, and cubic form are used and are connected as various kinds of multi-variable inputs. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method, time series data for gas furnace process has been applied.

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A multi-modal neural network using Chebyschev polynomials

  • Ikuo Yoshihara;Tomoyuki Nakagawa;Moritoshi Yasunaga;Abe, Ken-ichi
    • 제어로봇시스템학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 1998.10a
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    • pp.250-253
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    • 1998
  • This paper presents a multi-modal neural network composed of a preprocessing module and a multi-layer neural network module in order to enhance the nonlinear characteristics of neural network. The former module is based on spectral method using Chebyschev polynomials and transforms input data into spectra. The latter module identifies the system using the spectra generated by the preprocessing module. The omnibus numerical experiments show that the method is applicable to many a nonlinear dynamic system in the real world, and that preprocessing using Chebyschev polynomials reduces the number of neurons required for the multi-layer neural network.

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REAL WEIGHT FUNCTIONS FOR THE CIRCLE POLYNOMIALS BY THE REGULARIZATION

  • Lee, J.K.;Lee, C.H.;Han, D.H.
    • Journal of applied mathematics & informatics
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    • v.28 no.1_2
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    • pp.473-485
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    • 2010
  • We consider the differential equation $$(x^2\;-\;1)u_{xx}\;+\;2xyu_{xy}\;+\;(y^2\;-\;1)u_{yy}\;+\;gxu_x\;+\;gyu_y\;=\;\lambda_nu,\;(*)$$ where $\lambda_n\;=\;n(n\;+\;9\;-\;1)$. We show that the differential equation (*) has a polynomial set as solutions if $g\;{\neq}\;-1$, -3, -5, $\cdots$. Also, we construct an orthogonalizing distributional weight for g < 1 and $g\;{\neq}\;1$, 0, -1, $\cdots$ by regularizing a one-dimensional integral with a singularity on the endpoint of the interval.

Study on mapping of dark matter clustering from real space to redshift space

  • Zheng, Yi;Song, Yong-Seon
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.38.2-38.2
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    • 2016
  • The mapping of dark matter clustering from real to redshift spaces introduces the anisotropic property to the measured density power spectrum in redshift space, known as the Redshift Space Distortion (hereafter RSD) effect. The mapping formula is intrinsically non-linear, which is complicated by the higher order polynomials due to the indefinite cross correlations between the density and velocity fields, and the Finger-of-God (hereafter FoG) effect due to the randomness of the peculiar velocity field. Furthermore, the rigorous test of this mapping formula is contaminated by the unknown non-linearity of the density and velocity fields, including their auto- and cross-correlations, for calculating which our theoretical calculation breaks down beyond some scales. Whilst the full higher order polynomials remains unknown, the other systematics can be controlled consistently within the same order truncation in the expansion of the mapping formula, as shown in this paper. The systematic due to the unknown non-linear density and velocity fields is removed by separately measuring all terms in the expansion using simulations. The uncertainty caused by the velocity randomness is controlled by splitting the FoG term into two pieces, 1) the non-local FoG term being independent of the separation vector between two different points, and 2) the local FoG term appearing as an indefinite polynomials which is expanded in the same order as all other perturbative polynomials. Using 100 realizations of simulations, we find that the best fitted non-local FoG function is Gaussian, with only one scale-independent free parameter, and that our new mapping formulation accurately reproduces the observed power spectrum in redshift space at the smallest scales by far, up to k ~ 0.3 h/Mpc, considering the resolution of future experiments.

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REAL ROOT ISOLATION OF ZERO-DIMENSIONAL PIECEWISE ALGEBRAIC VARIETY

  • Wu, Jin-Ming;Zhang, Xiao-Lei
    • Journal of applied mathematics & informatics
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    • v.29 no.1_2
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    • pp.135-143
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    • 2011
  • As a zero set of some multivariate splines, the piecewise algebraic variety is a kind of generalization of the classical algebraic variety. This paper presents an algorithm for isolating real roots of the zero-dimensional piecewise algebraic variety which is based on interval evaluation and the interval zeros of univariate interval polynomials in Bernstein form. An example is provided to show the proposed algorithm is effective.

ON A GENERALIZED UPPER BOUND FOR THE EXPONENTIAL FUNCTION

  • Kim, Seon-Hong
    • Journal of the Chungcheong Mathematical Society
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.7-10
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    • 2009
  • With the introduction of a new parameter $n{\geq}1$, Kim generalized an upper bound for the exponential function that implies the inequality between the arithmetic and geometric means. By a change of variable, this generalization is equivalent to exp $(\frac{n(x-1)}{n+x-1})\;\leq\;\frac{n-1+x^n}{n}$ for real ${n}\;{\geq}\;1$ and x > 0. In this paper, we show that this inequality is true for real x > 1 - n provided that n is an even integer.

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