Turnpike in infinite dimension
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5079420
DOI10.4153/S0008439521000382zbMath1502.37013arXiv2012.06808OpenAlexW3169496064MaRDI QIDQ5079420
Paolo Leonetti, Michele Caprio
Publication date: 27 May 2022
Published in: Canadian Mathematical Bulletin (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2012.06808
Continuous maps (54C05) Fixed-point theorems (47H10) Fixed-point and coincidence theorems (topological aspects) (54H25) Special maps on metric spaces (54E40) Gradient-like behavior; isolated (locally maximal) invariant sets; attractors, repellers for topological dynamical systems (37B35) Ideal and statistical convergence (40A35) Dynamics in general topological spaces (37B02)
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Neighborhood turnpike theorem for continuous-time optimization models
- \(A\)-statistical cluster points in finite dimensional spaces and application to turnpike theorem
- Densities for sets of natural numbers vanishing on a given family
- Characterizations of the ideal core
- Turnpike theorem for terminal functionals in infinite horizon optimal control problems
- Characterizations of ideal cluster points
- Turnpike conditions in infinite dimensional optimal control
- Turnpike properties in the calculus of variations and optimal control
- On relation between the ideal core and ideal cluster points
- Statistical Limit Points
- An Exponential Turnpike Theorem for Dissipative Discrete Time Optimal Control Problems
- Statistical limit superior and limit inferior
- Statistical cluster points and turnpike*
- On the Turnpike Phenomenon for Optimal Boundary Control Problems with Hyperbolic Systems
- Abstract densities and ideals of sets
- A Measure Theoretical Subsequence Characterization of Statistical Convergence
- On the Turnpike Property and the Receding-Horizon Method for Linear-Quadratic Optimal Control Problems
- Uniform Turnpike Theorems for Finite Markov Decision Processes
- On the notions of upper and lower density
- Statistical cluster points and turnpike theorem in nonconvex problems.