75,763 research outputs found
Tackling Diversity and Heterogeneity by Vertical Memory Management
Existing memory management mechanisms used in commodity computing machines
typically adopt hardware based address interleaving and OS directed random
memory allocation to service generic application requests. These conventional
memory management mechanisms are challenged by contention at multiple memory
levels, a daunting variety of workload behaviors, and an increasingly
complicated memory hierarchy. Our ISCA-41 paper proposes vertical partitioning
to eliminate shared resource contention at multiple levels in the memory
hierarchy. Combined with horizontal memory management policies, our framework
supports a flexible policy space for tackling diverse application needs in
production environment and is suitable for future heterogeneous memory systems
Learning a Rotation Invariant Detector with Rotatable Bounding Box
Detection of arbitrarily rotated objects is a challenging task due to the
difficulties of locating the multi-angle objects and separating them
effectively from the background. The existing methods are not robust to angle
varies of the objects because of the use of traditional bounding box, which is
a rotation variant structure for locating rotated objects. In this article, a
new detection method is proposed which applies the newly defined rotatable
bounding box (RBox). The proposed detector (DRBox) can effectively handle the
situation where the orientation angles of the objects are arbitrary. The
training of DRBox forces the detection networks to learn the correct
orientation angle of the objects, so that the rotation invariant property can
be achieved. DRBox is tested to detect vehicles, ships and airplanes on
satellite images, compared with Faster R-CNN and SSD, which are chosen as the
benchmark of the traditional bounding box based methods. The results shows that
DRBox performs much better than traditional bounding box based methods do on
the given tasks, and is more robust against rotation of input image and target
objects. Besides, results show that DRBox correctly outputs the orientation
angles of the objects, which is very useful for locating multi-angle objects
efficiently. The code and models are available at
https://github.com/liulei01/DRBox
Modular invariants and singularity indices of hyperelliptic fibrations
The modular invariants of a family of semistable curves are the degrees of
the corresponding divisors on the image of the moduli map. The singularity
indices were introduced by G. Xiao to classify singular fibers of hyperelliptic
fibrations and to compute global invariants locally. In the semistable case, we
show that the modular invariants corresponding with the boundary classes are
just the singularity indices. As an application, we show that the formula of
Xiao for relative Chern numbers is the same as that of Cornalba-Harris in the
semistable case.Comment: To appear in Chin. Ann. Math. (B
Analysis of inflationary model as
We study the inflationary model of [Muller:1989rp] for using the
result of Ref. [Motohashi:2014tra]. After reproducing the observable
quantities: the power spectral index , its corresponding running
and the tensor to scalar ration in terms of
e-folding number and , we show that inflation model is still alive
as is from to . In this range, our calculation confirms that
and agree with observations and is of order which
needs more precise observational constraints. We find that, as the value of
increases, all , and decrease. However, the precise
interdependence between these observables is such that this class of models can
in principle be tested by the next generation of dedicated satellite CMB
probes.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, some places are correctin
Dissipation Properties of Coupled Cavity Arrays
We propose an approach to analyze the dissipation properties of coupled
cavity arrays. Employing a kind of quasi-boson, it is shown that the coupling
to a bath renormalizes the localized mode and the interaction between cavities.
By virtue of without having to mention the coordinates of bath, this approach
would be great conceptual and, moreover, computation advantage. Based on the
result, a single-photon transport in the array is examined, and the total
transmission rate is presented. Besides, we also suggest a parameter to scale
quality of the array.Comment: 4 pages 2 figure
Energy-Efficient Power Allocation for Secure Communications in Large-Scale MIMO Relaying Systems
In this paper, we address the problem of energy-efficient power allocation
for secure communications in an amplify-and-forward (AF) large-scale
multiple-input multiple-output (LS-MIMO) relaying system in presence of a
passive eavesdropper. The benefits of an AF LS-MIMO relay are exploited to
significantly improve the secrecy performance, especially the secrecy energy
efficiency (bit per Joule). We first analyze the impact of transmit power at
the relay on the secrecy outage capacity, and prove that the secrecy outage
capacity is a concave function of transmit power under very practical
assumptions, i.e. no eavesdropper channel state information (CSI) and imperfect
legitimate CSI. Then, we propose an energy-efficient power allocation scheme to
maximize the secrecy energy efficiency. Finally, simulation results validate
the advantage of the proposed energy-efficient scheme compared to the capacity
maximization scheme.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Contact statistics highlight distinct organizing principles of proteins and RNA
Although both RNA and proteins have densely packed native structures, chain
organizations of these two biopolymers are fundamentally different. Motivated
by the recent discoveries in chromatin folding that interphase chromosomes have
territorial organization with signatures pointing to metastability, we analyzed
the biomolecular structures deposited in the Protein Data Bank and found that
the intrachain contact probabilities, as a function of the arc length
, decay in power-law over the intermediate range of ,
. We found that the contact probability scaling
exponent is for large RNA (),
for small sized RNA (), and for proteins. Given
that Gaussian statistics is expected for a fully equilibrated chain in polymer
melts, the deviation of value from for the subchains of
large RNA in the native state suggests that the chain configuration of RNA is
not fully equilibrated. It is visually clear that folded structures of large
sized RNA () adopt crumpled structures, partitioned into modular
multi-domains assembled by proximal sequences along the chain, whereas the
polypeptide chain of folded proteins looks better mixed with the rest of the
structure. Our finding of for large RNA might be an
ineluctable consequence of the hierarchical ordering of the secondary to
tertiary elements in the folding process.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Partial regularity of harmonic maps from a Riemannian manifold into a Lorentzian manifold
In this paper, we will study the partial regularity theorem for stationary
harmonic maps from a Riemannian manifold into a Lorentzian manifold. For a
weakly stationary harmonic map from a smooth bounded open domain
to a Lorentzian manifold with Dirichlet boundary condition,
we prove that it is smooth outside a closed set whose -dimension
Hausdorff measure is zero. Moreover, if the target manifold does not admit
any harmonic sphere , , we will show is smooth
Chaotic behavior in the accretion disk
The eccentric luminosity variation of quasars is still a mystery. Analytic
results of this behavior ranged from multi-periodic behavior to a purely random
process. Recently, we have used nonlinear time-series analysis to analyze the
light curve of 3C 273 and found its eccentric behavior may be chaos [L. Liu,
Chin. J. Astron. Astrophys. \textbf{6}, 663 (2006)]. This result induces us to
look for some nonlinear mechanism to explain the eccentric luminosity
variation. In this paper, we propose a simple non-linear accretion disk model
and find it shows a kind of chaotic behavior under some circumstances. Then we
compute the outburst energy , defined as the difference of the
maximum luminosity and the minimum luminosity, and the mean luminosity .
We find that in the chaotic domain, where
. In this domain, we also find that , where
is the mass of central black hole. These results are confirmed by or
compatible with some results from the observational data analysis [A. J. Pica
and A. G. Smith, Astrophys. J. \textbf{272}, 11 (1983); M. Wold, M. S.
Brotherton and Z. Shang, Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. \textbf{375}, 989 (2007)].Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Spatiotemporal Intermittency on the Growing Surface of Coupled Sandpiles
The surface of conservative coupled sandpiles in the self-organized
cooperative critical state is found to exhibit intermittency in both time and
space. The spatiotemporal intermittent structure is also found to be a
multifractal. The probability density of sand grain heights on the surface is
an asymptotic power law but with an exponential cut-off. The power spectra of
the time series of sand grain heights show a diversity of low-frequency
components over different sites on the surface and also over different ensemble
samples. This means that the long-term prediction according to the nearby
observations and the history experiences is very difficult in the world of
coupled sandpiles. Unlike the low-frequency spectra, the high-frequency spectra
seem to obey a universal law.Comment: 6 figure
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