Frank–Wolfe algorithm

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 17:51, 15 December 2013 by 190.105.4.72 (talk) (link to phil wolfe)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

28 year-old Painting Investments Worker Truman from Regina, usually spends time with pastimes for instance interior design, property developers in new launch ec Singapore and writing. Last month just traveled to City of the Renaissance. In combinatorial mathematics, a small set of positive integers

S={s0,s1,s2,s3,}

is one such that the infinite sum

1s0+1s1+1s2+1s3+

converges. A large set is one whose sum of reciprocals diverges.

Examples

  • The set {1,2,4,8,} of powers of 2 is known to be a small set, and so is the set of any geometric sequence (i.e. of the form abn with a ≥ 1, b ≥ 2 and n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ...).
  • The set of numbers whose decimal representations exclude 7 (or any digit one prefers) is small. That is, for example, the set
{,6,8,,16,18,,66,68,69,80,}
is small. (This has been generalized to other bases as well.) See Kempner series.

Properties

  • A union of finitely many small sets is small, as the sum of two convergent series is a convergent series. A union of infinitely many small sets is either a small set (e.g. the sets of p2, p3, p4, ... where p is prime) or a large set (e.g. the sets {n2+k:n>0} for k > 0). Also, a large set minus a small set is still large. A large set minus a large set is either a small set (e.g. the set of all prime powers pn with n ≥ 1 minus the set of all primes) or a large set (e.g. the set of all positive integers minus the set of all positive even numbers). In set theoretic terminology, the small sets form an ideal.
{1,xs1,xs2,xs3,}
is dense in the uniform norm topology of continuous functions on a closed interval. This is a generalization of the Stone–Weierstrass theorem.

Open problems

There are many sets about which it is not known whether they are large or small.

Not known how to identify a large set or a small set, except proving by exhaustion.

Paul Erdős famously asked the question of whether any set that does not contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions must necessarily be small. He offered a prize of $3000 for the solution to this problem, more than for any of his other conjectures, and joked that this prize offer violated the minimum wage law.[1] This question is still open.

Notes

43 year old Petroleum Engineer Harry from Deep River, usually spends time with hobbies and interests like renting movies, property developers in singapore new condominium and vehicle racing. Constantly enjoys going to destinations like Camino Real de Tierra Adentro.

References

  • A. D. Wadhwa (1975). An interesting subseries of the harmonic series. American Mathematical Monthly 82 (9) 931–933. Glazier Alfonzo from Chicoutimi, has lots of interests which include lawn darts, property developers house for sale in singapore singapore and cigar smoking. During the last year has made a journey to Cultural Landscape and Archaeological Remains of the Bamiyan Valley.
  1. Carl Pomerance, Paul Erdős, Number Theorist Extraordinaire. (Part of the article The Mathematics of Paul Erdős), in Notices of the AMS, January, 1998.