A Computational Rational Function, Its Difference-Differential Calculus, and Practical Applications

Authors

  • Ahlaam Salih Ahmed Department of Mathematics Faculty of Science, Bani Waleed University, LIBYA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55544/sjmars.1.2.8

Keywords:

Agricultural, Groundwater Quality, Fertilizers, environment, diseases

Abstract

Noncommutative rational functions, which extend classical rational functions to settings where variables do not commute, play a crucial role in various domains including system theory, control, optimization, and formal language theory. This paper provides a comprehensive exploration of these functions, focusing on their construction, properties, and the mathematical tools needed for their analysis. We begin by defining noncommutative rational functions and discussing their algebraic structure, highlighting the absence of a canonical form akin to coprime fraction representations in the commutative case. The realization theory for noncommutative rational functions is then developed, extending classical concepts such as state space models, controllability, observability, and minimality to the noncommutative setting. This theory provides a structured framework for representing noncommutative rational functions in a minimal state space form, which is essential for applications in system theory and control. To further analyze these functions, we introduce a difference-differential calculus specifically designed for noncommutative rational functions. This calculus generalizes traditional differentiation and finite difference operators to the noncommutative context, allowing for the detailed study of how these functions change with respect to noncommutative variables. The calculus also enables the development of higher-order operators and finite difference formulas, which are useful in various analytical and computational applications.

References

Harvey Friedman. Equality between functionals. In Rohit Parikh, editor, Proceedings of Logic Colloquium ’73, volume 53 of Lecture Notes in Mathematics, pages 22–37, 1975.

Bill MacCartney and Christopher D. Manning. An extended model of natural logic. In Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Computational Semantics (IWCS- 8), 2009.

Rowan Nairn, Cleo Condoravdi, and Lauri Karttunen. Computing relative polarity for tex- tual inference. In Proceedings of ICoS-5 (Inference in Computational Semantics), Buxton, UK, 2006.

Victor S´anchez-Valencia. Studies on Natural Logic and Categorial Grammar. PhD thesis, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1991.

Johan van Benthem. Essays in Logical Semantics. Reidel, Dordrecht, 1986.

Johan van Benthem. Language in Action: Categories, Lambdas, and Dynamic Logic, volume 130 of Studies in Logic. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1991.

Johan van Benthem. A brief history of natural logic. In M. Nath Mitra M. Chakraborty,

B. L¨owe and S. Sarukkai, editors, Logic, Navya-Nyaya and Applications, Homage to Bimal Krishna Matilal. College Publications, London, 2008.

Jan van Eijck. Natural logic for natural language. In Balder ten Cate and Henk Zeevat, ed- itors, 6th International Tbilisi Symposium on Logic, Language, and Computation. Springer, 2007.

Downloads

Published

2022-04-30

How to Cite

Ahmed, A. S. (2022). A Computational Rational Function, Its Difference-Differential Calculus, and Practical Applications. Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies, 1(2), 57–65. https://doi.org/10.55544/sjmars.1.2.8

Issue

Section

Articles

Similar Articles

<< < 1 2 3 4 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.