The Q-closeness technique. An application to isoperimetric inequalities in 2-d lattices and to the Faber-Krahn inequality
Cycle 37th Oral Defence of the Phd Thesis
Gabriele Morselli - PhD Student in Mathematics
Abstract:
Variational problems and their quantitative stability in the continuous setting are a classical topic in mathematical analysis and calculus of variations. In recent years, however, increasing attention has been devoted to the challenges arising when extending these problems to discrete settings, motivated by material science and crystallisation theory. In the thesis, we establish maximal fluctuation estimates for minimizers of two variational problems on periodic lattices, by exploiting the Q-closeness technique introduced by Cicalese and Leonardi, which enables us to link discrete problems to the the continuous framework by associating suitable domains to configurations of points. In particular, we focus on the edge-isoperimetric problem and we propose a more canonical construction of the associated map for the d-dimensional square lattice, the honeycomb lattice and the triangular lattice; moreover, we briefly discuss the difficulties of extending this approach to other lattices. Finally, in the third chapter, we study a discrete Faber-Krahn inequality on Zd and we provide quantitative estimates for almost minimizers among configurations of fixed cardinality.