On complete measurability of multifunctions defined on product spaces.
This paper is devoted to research on local properties of functions and multidimensional singular integrals in terms of their mean oscillation. The conditions guaranteeing existence of a derivative in the L p-sense at a given point are found. Spaces which remain invariant under singular integral operators are considered.
It is proved that the following conditions are equivalent: (a) f is an almost everywhere continuous function on ; (b) f = g + h, where g,h are strongly quasicontinuous on ; (c) f = c + gh, where c ∈ ℝ and g,h are strongly quasicontinuous on .
We determine conditions in order that a differentiable function be approximable from above by analytic functions, being left invariate on a fixed analytic subset which is a locally complete intersection.
It is quite natural to conjecture that a positively homogeneous function with degree d ≥ 2 on satisfies the Łojasiewicz gradient inequality with exponent θ = 1/d without any need for an analyticity assumption. We show that this property is true under some additional hypotheses, but not always, even for N = 2.
In this paper we consider a class of copulas, called quasi-concave; we compare them with other classes of copulas and we study conditions implying symmetry for them. Recently, a measure of asymmetry for copulas has been introduced and the maximum degree of asymmetry for them in this sense has been computed: see Nelsen R.B., Extremes of nonexchangeability, Statist. Papers 48 (2007), 329–336; Klement E.P., Mesiar R., How non-symmetric can a copula be?, Comment. Math. Univ. Carolin. 47 (2006), 141–148....
Let P(X,ℱ) denote the property: For every function f: X × ℝ → ℝ, if f(x,h(x)) is continuous for every h: X → ℝ from ℱ, then f is continuous. We investigate the assumptions of a theorem of Luzin, which states that P(ℝ,ℱ) holds for X = ℝ and ℱ being the class C(X) of all continuous functions from X to ℝ. The question for which topological spaces P(X,C(X)) holds was investigated by Dalbec. Here, we examine P(ℝⁿ,ℱ) for different families ℱ. In particular, we notice that P(ℝⁿ,"C¹") holds, where...