MAGIC057: Spectral Theory of Ordinary Differential Operators

Course details

A specialist MAGIC course

Semester

Autumn 2019
Monday, October 7th to Friday, December 13th

Hours

Live lecture hours
10
Recorded lecture hours
0
Total advised study hours
40

Timetable

Tuesdays
11:05 - 11:55 (UK)

Description

Ordinary differential operators appear naturally in many problems of mathematical physics as well as questions of pure mathematics such as the stability of minimal surfaces. Their spectra often have direct significance, e.g. as sets of vibration frequencies or admissible energies in quantum mechanics. Moreover, ordinary differential operators provide important and sometimes surprising examples in the spectral theory of linear operators.


This course gives a detailed introduction to the spectral theory of boundary value problems for Sturm-Liouville and related ordinary differential operators. The subject is characterised by a combination of methods from linear operator theory, ordinary differential equations and asymptotic analysis. The topics covered include regular boundary value problems, Weyl-Titchmarsh theory of singular boundary value problems, the spectral representation theorem as well as recent developments of oscillation theory as a modern tool of spectral analysis.

Prerequisites

The course is planned to be self-contained and only requires knowledge of mathematical analysis. Some familiarity with ordinary differential equations and/or linear operator theory will be helpful.

Related courses

Syllabus

  1. Regular Sturm-Liouville boundary value problems: Hilbert-Schmidt method, resolvents and Green's function, Stieltjes integrals and the spectral function
  2. Singular boundary value problems: Weyl's alternative, Helly's selection and integration theorems, Stieltjes inversion formula, generalised Fourier transform, spectral function, spectral measures and types
  3. Oscillation methods of spectral analysis: Prüfer variables, generalised Sturm comparison and oscillation theorems, uniform subordinacy theory, Kotani's theorem

Lecturer

  • KS

    Professor Karl Michael Schmidt

    University
    Cardiff University

Bibliography

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Assessment

The assessment for this course will be released on Monday 6th January 2020 at 00:00 and is due in before Sunday 19th January 2020 at 23:59.

The assessment will consist of a number of questions to be selected from a list (related, but not restricted to the questions at the end of lecture note chapters). The pass mark will be 50%.

Please note that you are not registered for assessment on this course.

Files

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Lectures

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