26,599 research outputs found
Link invariants from -state vertex models: an alternative construction independent of statistical models
We reproduce the hierarchy of link invariants associated to the series of
-state vertex models with a method different from the original construction
due to Akutsu, Deguchi and Wadati. The alternative method substitutes the
`crossing symmetry' property exhibited by the Boltzmann weights of the vertex
models by a similar property which, for the purpose of constructing link
invariants, encodes the same information but requires only the limit of the
Boltzmann weights when the spectral parameter is sent to infinity.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, uses epsf.sty. To appear in Nucl. Phys.
Noncommutativity and Discrete Physics
The purpose of this paper is to present an introduction to a point of view
for discrete foundations of physics. In taking a discrete stance, we find that
the initial expression of physical theory must occur in a context of
noncommutative algebra and noncommutative vector analysis. In this way the
formalism of quantum mechanics occurs first, but not necessarily with the usual
interpretations. The basis for this work is a non-commutative discrete calculus
and the observation that it takes one tick of the discrete clock to measure
momentum.Comment: LaTeX, 23 pages, no figure
Antichaos in a Class of Random Boolean Cellular Automata
A variant of Kauffman's model of cellular metabolism is presented. It is a
randomly generated network of boolean gates, identical to Kauffman's except for
a small bias in favor of boolean gates that depend on at most one input. The
bias is asymptotic to 0 as the number of gates increases. Upper bounds on the
time until the network reaches a state cycle and the size of the state cycle,
as functions of the number of gates , are derived. If the bias approaches 0
slowly enough, the state cycles will be smaller than for some . This
lends support to Kauffman's claim that in his version of random network the
average size of the state cycles is approximately .Comment: 12 pages. A uuencoded, tar-compressed postscipt file containing
figures has been adde
Teleportation Topology
We discuss the structure of teleportation. By associating matrices to the
preparation and measurement states, we show that for a unitary transformation M
there is a full teleportation procedure for obtaining M|S> from a given state
|S>. The key to this construction is a diagrammatic intepretation of matrix
multiplication that applies equally well to a topological composition of a
maximum and a minimum that underlies the structure of the teleportation. This
paper is a preliminary report on joint work with H. Carteret and S. Lomonaco.Comment: LaTeX document, 16 pages, 8 figures, Talk delivered at the Xth
International Conference on Quantum Optics, Minsk, Belaru
Evolution of Canalizing Boolean Networks
Boolean networks with canalizing functions are used to model gene regulatory
networks. In order to learn how such networks may behave under evolutionary
forces, we simulate the evolution of a single Boolean network by means of an
adaptive walk, which allows us to explore the fitness landscape. Mutations
change the connections and the functions of the nodes. Our fitness criterion is
the robustness of the dynamical attractors against small perturbations. We find
that with this fitness criterion the global maximum is always reached and that
there is a huge neutral space of 100% fitness. Furthermore, in spite of having
such a high degree of robustness, the evolved networks still share many
features with "chaotic" networks.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures; revised and extended versio
Closing probabilities in the Kauffman model: an annealed computation
We define a probabilistic scheme to compute the distributions of periods,
transients and weigths of attraction basins in Kauffman networks. These
quantities are obtained in the framework of the annealed approximation, first
introduced by Derrida and Pomeau. Numerical results are in good agreement with
the computed values of the exponents of average periods, but show also some
interesting features which can not be explained whithin the annealed
approximation.Comment: latex, 36 pages, figures added in uufiles format,error in epsffile
nam
Minimal surface representations of virtual knots and links
Kuperberg [Algebr. Geom. Topol. 3 (2003) 587-591] has shown that a virtual
knot corresponds (up to generalized Reidemeister moves) to a unique embedding
in a thichened surface of minimal genus. If a virtual knot diagram is
equivalent to a classical knot diagram then this minimal surface is a sphere.
Using this result and a generalised bracket polynomial, we develop methods that
may determine whether a virtual knot diagram is non-classical (and hence
non-trivial). As examples we show that, except for special cases, link diagrams
with a single virtualization and link diagrams with a single virtual crossing
are non-classical.Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol5/agt-5-22.abs.html Version 5: a
minor correction and a citation adde
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