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Overall, this work combines together - in two volumes - four formally distinct topics of modern analysis and their applications: Hardy classes of holomorphic functions; spectral theory of Hankel and Toeplitz operators; function models for linear operators and free interpolations; and infinite-dimensional system theory and signal processing. This, the second volume, contains parts C and D of the whole.
Together with the companion volume by the same author, Operators, Functions, and Systems: An Easy Reading. Volume 1: Hardy, Hankel, and Toeplitz, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, Vol. 92, AMS, 2002, this unique work combines four major topics of modern analysis and its applications: A. Hardy classes of holomorphic functions, B. Spectral theory of Hankel and Toeplitz operators, C. Function models for linear operators and free interpolations, and D. Infinite-dimensional system theory and signal processing. This volume contains Parts C and D. Function models for linear operators and free interpolations: This is a universal topic and, indeed, is the most influential operator theory technique in the post-spectral-theorem era. In this book, its capacity is tested by solving generalized Carleson-type interpolation problems. Infinite-dimensional system theory and signal processing: This topic is the touchstone of the three previously developed techniques. The presence of this applied topic in a pure mathematics environment reflects important changes in the mathematical landscape of the last 20 years, in that the role of the main consumer and customer of harmonic, complex, and operator analysis has more and more passed from differential equations, scattering theory, and probability to control theory and signal processing. This and the companion volume are geared toward a wide audience of readers, from graduate students to professional mathematicians. They develop an elementary approach to the subject while retaining an expert level that can be applied in advanced analysis and selected applications.
One of two volumes, this text combines distinct topics of modern analysis and its applications: Hardy classes of holomorphic functions; spectral theory of Hankel and Toeplitz operators. Each topic has important implications for complex analysis.
One of two volumes, this text combines distinct topics of modern analysis and its applications: Hardy classes of holomorphic functions; spectral theory of Hankel and Toeplitz operators. Each topic has important implications for complex analysis.
One of two volumes, this text combines distinct topics of modern analysis and its applications: Hardy classes of holomorphic functions; spectral theory of Hankel and Toeplitz operators. Each topic has important implications for complex analysis.
If one takes the intuitive point of view that a system is a black box whose inputs and outputs are time functions or time series it is natural to adopt an operator theoretic approach to the stUdy of such systems. Here the black box is modeled by an operator which maps an input time function into an output time function. Such an approach yields a unification of the continuous (time function) and discrete (time series) theories and simultaneously allows one to formulate a single theory which is valid for time-variable distributed and nonlinear systems. Surprisingly, however, the great potential for such an approach has only recently been realized. Early attempts to apply classical operator theory typically having failed when optimal controllers proved to be non-causal, feedback systems unstable or coupling networks non-lossless. Moreover, attempts to circumvent these difficulties by adding causality or stability constraints to the problems failed when it was realized that these time based concepts were undefined and; in fact, undefinable; in the Hilbert and Banach spaces of classical operator theory.
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