The projection onto the cross

08/09/2021
by   Heinz H. Bauschke, et al.
0

We consider the set of pairs of orthogonal vectors in Hilbert space, which is also called the cross because it is the union of the horizontal and vertical axes in the Euclidean plane when the underlying space is the real line. Crosses, which are nonconvex sets, play a significant role in various branches of nonsmooth analysis such as feasibility problems and optimization problems. In this work, we study crosses and show that in infinite-dimensional settings, they are never weakly (sequentially) closed. Nonetheless, crosses do turn out to be proximinal (i.e., they always admit projections) and we provide explicit formulas for the projection onto the cross in all cases.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
07/10/2014

Numerical investigation of lensless zoomable holographic multiple projections to tilted planes

This paper numerically investigates the feasibility of lensless zoomable...
research
05/26/2023

Bilipschitz group invariants

Consider the quotient of a real Hilbert space by a subgroup of its ortho...
research
11/06/2017

Projection Theorems Using Effective Dimension

In this paper we use the theory of computing to study fractal dimensions...
research
10/17/2019

New proper orthogonal decomposition approximation theory for PDE solution data

In our previous work [Singler, SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 52 (2014), no. 2, 85...
research
01/19/2020

On Dykstra's algorithm: finite convergence, stalling, and the method of alternating projections

A popular method for finding the projection onto the intersection of two...
research
11/27/2021

Projection-based Classification of Surfaces for 3D Human Mesh Sequence Retrieval

We analyze human poses and motion by introducing three sequences of easi...
research
05/19/2021

Projection matrices and related viewing frustums: new ways to create and apply

In computer graphics, the field of view of a camera is represented by a ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset