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  1. null (Ed.)
    A new optimal control based representation for stationary action trajectories is constructed by exploiting connections between semiconvexity, semiconcavity, and stationarity. This new representation is used to verify a known two-point boundary value problem characterization of stationary action. 
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  2. By exploiting min-plus linearity, semiconcavity, and semigroup properties of dynamic programming, a fundamental solution semigroup for a class of approximate finite horizon linear infinite dimensional optimal control problems is constructed. Elements of this fundamental solution semigroup are parameterized by the time horizon, and can be used to approximate the solution of the corresponding finite horizon optimal control problem for any terminal cost. They can also be composed to compute approximations on longer horizons. The value function approximation provided takes the form of a min-plus convolution of a kernel with the terminal cost. A general construction for this kernel is provided, along with a spectral representation for a restricted class of sub-problems. 
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  3. A class of nonlinear, stochastic staticization control problems (including minimization problems with smooth, convex, coercive payoffs) driven by diffusion dynamics and constant diffusion coefficient is considered. Using dynamic programming and tools from static duality, a fundamental solution form is obtained where the same solution can be used for a variety of terminal costs without re-solution of the problem. Further, this fundamental solution takes the form of a deterministic control problem rather than a stochastic control problem. 
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  4. A new optimal control based representation for stationary action trajectories is constructed by exploiting connections between semiconvexity, semiconcavity, and stationarity. This new representation is used to verify a known two-point boundary value problem characterization of stationary action. 
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  5. A class of nonlinear, stochastic staticization control problems (including minimization problems with smooth, convex, coercive payoffs) driven by diffusion dynamics with constant diffusion coefficient is considered. A fundamental solution form is obtained where the same solution can be used for a limited variety of terminal costs without re-solution of the problem. One may convert this fundamental solution form from a stochastic control problem form to a deterministic control problem form. This yields an equivalence between certain second-order (in space) Hamilton-Jacobi partial differential equations (HJ PDEs) and associated first-order HJ PDEs. This reformulation has substantial numerical implications. 
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  6. Existence and uniqueness results for stochastic differential equations (SDEs) under exceptionally weak conditions are well known in the case where the diffusion coefficient is nondegenerate. Here, existence and uniqueness of a strong solution is obtained in the case of degenerate SDEs in a class that is motivated by diffusion representations for solution of Schrödinger initial value problems. In such examples, the dimension of the range of the diffusion coefficient is exactly half that of the state. In addition to the degeneracy, two types of discontinuities and singularities in the drift are allowed, where these are motivated by the structure of the Coulomb potential and the resulting solutions to the dequantized Schrödinger equation. The first type consists of discontinuities that may occur on a possibly high-dimensional manifold (up to codimension one). The second consists of singularities that may occur on a lower-dimensional manifold (up to codimension two). 
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