3 resultados para sparse matrices

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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Compressed sensing is a new paradigm in signal processing which states that for certain matrices sparse representations can be obtained by a simple l1-minimization. In this thesis we explore this paradigm for higher-dimensional signal. In particular three cases are being studied: signals taking values in a bicomplex algebra, quaternionic signals, and complex signals which are representable by a nonlinear Fourier basis, a so-called Takenaka-Malmquist system.

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The main results of this paper are twofold: the first one is a matrix theoretical result. We say that a matrix is superregular if all of its minors that are not trivially zero are nonzero. Given a a×b, a ≥ b, superregular matrix over a field, we show that if all of its rows are nonzero then any linear combination of its columns, with nonzero coefficients, has at least a−b + 1 nonzero entries. Secondly, we make use of this result to construct convolutional codes that attain the maximum possible distance for some fixed parameters of the code, namely, the rate and the Forney indices. These results answer some open questions on distances and constructions of convolutional codes posted in the literature.

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The energy of a symmetric matrix is the sum of the absolute values of its eigenvalues. We introduce a lower bound for the energy of a symmetric partitioned matrix into blocks. This bound is related to the spectrum of its quotient matrix. Furthermore, we study necessary conditions for the equality. Applications to the energy of the generalized composition of a family of arbitrary graphs are obtained. A lower bound for the energy of a graph with a bridge is given. Some computational experiments are presented in order to show that, in some cases, the obtained lower bound is incomparable with the well known lower bound $2\sqrt{m}$, where $m$ is the number of edges of the graph.