Minimal scalings and structural properties of scalable frames (1508.02266v2)
Abstract: For a unit-norm frame $F = {f_i}{i=1}k$ in $\Rn$, a scaling is a vector $c=(c(1),\dots,c(k))\in \R{\geq 0}k$ such that ${\sqrt{c(i)}f_i}{i =1}k$ is a Parseval frame in $\Rn$. If such a scaling exists, $F$ is said to be scalable. A scaling $c$ is a minimal scaling if ${f_i : c(i)>0}$ has no proper scalable subframe. It is known that the set of all scalings of $F$ is a convex polytope whose vertices correspond to minimal scalings. In this paper, we provide an estimation of the number of minimal scalings of a scalable frame and a characterization of when minimal scalings are affinely dependent. Using this characterization, we can conclude that all strict scalings $c=(c(1),\dots,c(k))\in \R{> 0}k$ of $F$ have the same structural property. We also present the uniqueness of orthogonal partitioning property of any set of minimal scalings, which provides all possible tight subframes of a given scaled frame.
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