Graduiertenkolleg: Methods for Discrete Structures

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
faculty | junior-faculty | postdocs | students | associate students | former students | former associate students
|
locations | Term schedule | history
|
predoc-courses | schools | block-courses | workshops
partners


Monday Lecture and Colloquium


Monday, April 20, 2015

Technische Universität Berlin
Institut für Mathematik
Straße des 17. Juni 136
10623 Berlin
room MA 041



Lecture - 14:15

Stefan Felsner - TU Berlin

Contact Representations of Planar Graphs

Abstract:
In the first part of this talk we survey results about representations of planar graphs as contact graphs of internally disjoint geometric objects in two and three dimensions. In the course we point to some open problems in the area. The second part is about characterizations of graphs admitting a straight line triangle representation (SLTR). It is shown that if it exists an SLTR can be computed as the solution of a linear system of equations. As a byproduct we reprove a characterization of stretchable contact systems of pseudosegments. (joint work with Nieke Aerts)




Colloquium - 16:00

Romanos-Diogenes Malikiosis - TU Berlin

Full spark Gabor Frames in Finite Dimensions

Abstract:
A Gabor frame is the set of all time-frequency translates of a complex function and is a fundamental tool in utilizing communications channels with wide applications in time-frequency analysis and signal processing. When the domain of the function is a finite cyclic group of order N , then the Gabor frame forms a design on the complex sphere in N dimensions; when the N2 unit vectors that constitute this Gabor frame are pairwise equiangular then the Gabor frame forms a spherical 2-design, and in addition, it has minimal coherence, an ideal property in terms of compressive sensing (whether such an equiangular set exists is also known as the SIC-POVM existence problem, which is open since 1999).
In this talk, we will deal with the question of existence of a Gabor frame such that every N vectors form a basis (the discrete analogue of the HRT conjecture); such a frame is called a full spark Gabor frame. This question was posed by Lawrence, Pfander and Walnut in 2005 and was answered in the affirmative by the speaker in 2013 unconditionally. This result has applications in operator identication, operator sampling, and compressive sensing.



Letzte Aktualisierung: 08.04.2015