Limiting absorption principle

In mathematics, the limiting absorption principle (LAP) is a concept from operator theory and scattering theory that consists of choosing the "correct" resolvent of a linear operator at the essential spectrum based on the behavior of the resolvent near the essential spectrum. The term is often used to indicate that the resolvent, when considered not in the original space (which is usually the L 2 {\displaystyle L^{2}} space), but in certain weighted spaces (usually L s 2 {\displaystyle L_{s}^{2}} , see below), has a limit as the spectral parameter approaches the essential spectrum.

Source: Wikipedia — Limiting absorption principle (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Limiting absorption principle

In mathematics, the limiting absorption principle (LAP) is a concept from operator theory and scattering theory that consists of choosing the "correct" resolvent of a linear operator at the essential spectrum based on the behavior of the resolvent near the essential spectrum. The term is often used to indicate that the resolvent, when considered not in the original space (which is usually the L 2 {\displaystyle L^{2}} space), but in certain weighted spaces (usually L s 2 {\displaystyle L_{s}^{2}} , see below), has a limit as the spectral parameter approaches the essential spectrum.

Source: Wikipedia "Limiting absorption principle" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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