ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Unfortunately the proof of the main result of [1], Theorem 1, has a flaw. Namely, Lemma 13 used in the proof of Proposition 11 is correct only under an additional assumption that the operator $A$ is normal (adjoint for the one-sided shift operator in $l^2(mathbb N)$ provides a counterexample). Below we prove a version of Lemma 13 that does not require the normality assumption and apply it to prove Proposition 11. In addition, the same version of the lemma appears in paper [2] (as Lemma 3.1) where it is used in the proof of Theorem 1.6. We also explain here how to use the new version of Lemma 13 to correct the proof of Theorem 1.6 from [2].
In this article we study the top of the spectrum of the normalized Laplace operator on infinite graphs. We introduce the dual Cheeger constant and show that it controls the top of the spectrum from above and below in a similar way as the Cheeger cons
We consider the asymptotic behavior as $ntoinfty$ of the spectra of random matrices of the form [frac{1}{sqrt{n-1}}sum_{k=1}^{n-1}Z_{nk}rho_n ((k,k+1)),] where for each $n$ the random variables $Z_{nk}$ are i.i.d. standard Gaussian and the matrices $
We complete the proof of Proposition 5.3 of [GJR04].
Let $G$ be a connected undirected graph with $n$, $nge 3$, vertices and $m$ edges. Denote by $rho_1 ge rho_2 ge cdots > rho_n =0$ the normalized Laplacian eigenvalues of $G$. Upper and lower bounds of $rho_i$, $i=1,2,ldots , n-1$, are determined in terms of $n$ and general Randi c index, $R_{-1}$.
We investigate spectral properties of Kirchhoff Laplacians on radially symmetric antitrees. This class of metric graphs enjoys a rich group of symmetries, which enables us to obtain a decomposition of the corresponding Laplacian into the orthogonal s