The first non-zero eigenvalue is the leading term in the spectrum of a self-adjoint operator. It plays a critical role in various applications and is treated in a large number of textbooks. There is a well-known varia...The first non-zero eigenvalue is the leading term in the spectrum of a self-adjoint operator. It plays a critical role in various applications and is treated in a large number of textbooks. There is a well-known variational formula for it (called the Min-Max Principle) which is especially effective for an upper bound of the eigenvalue. However, for the lower bound of the spectral gap, some dual variational formulas have been obtained only very recently. The original proofs are probabilistic. Some analytic proofs in one-dimensional case are proposed and certain extension is made.展开更多
基金Project supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 19631060)Qiu Shi Science & Technology Foundation, DPFIHE, MCSEC and MCMCAS.
文摘The first non-zero eigenvalue is the leading term in the spectrum of a self-adjoint operator. It plays a critical role in various applications and is treated in a large number of textbooks. There is a well-known variational formula for it (called the Min-Max Principle) which is especially effective for an upper bound of the eigenvalue. However, for the lower bound of the spectral gap, some dual variational formulas have been obtained only very recently. The original proofs are probabilistic. Some analytic proofs in one-dimensional case are proposed and certain extension is made.