1,293 research outputs found
Disordered systems and Burgers' turbulence
Talk presented at the International Conference on Mathematical Physics
(Brisbane 1997). This is an introduction to recent work on the scaling and
intermittency in forced Burgers turbulence. The mapping between Burgers'
equation and the problem of a directed polymer in a random medium is used in
order to study the fully developped turbulence in the limit of large
dimensions. The stirring force corresponds to a quenched (spatio temporal)
random potential for the polymer, correlated on large distances. A replica
symmetry breaking solution of the polymer problem provides the full probability
distribution of the velocity difference between points separated by a
distance much smaller than the correlation length of the forcing. This
exhibits a very strong intermittency which is related to regions of shock
waves, in the fluid, and to the existence of metastable states in the directed
polymer problem. We also mention some recent computations on the finite
dimensional problem, based on various analytical approaches (instantons,
operator product expansion, mapping to directed polymers), as well as a
conjecture on the relevance of Burgers equation (with the length scale playing
the role of time) for the description of the functional renormalisation group
flow for the effective pinning potential of a manifold pinned by impurities.Comment: Latex, 11 page
Message passing in random satisfiability problems
This talk surveys the recent development of message passing procedures for
solving constraint satisfaction problems. The cavity method from statistical
physics provides a generalization of the belief propagation strategy that is
able to deal with the clustering of solutions in these problems. It allows to
derive analytic results on their phase diagrams, and offers a new algorithmic
framework.Comment: Talk given at NIPS 2003; 8 page
Computation of a universal deformation ring
We compute the universal deformation ring of an odd Galois two dimensional
representation of Gal with an upper triangular image, where is the
maximal abelian pro--extension of unramified outside a finite
set of places S, being a free pro--extension of a subextension
of the field fixed by the kernel of the representation. We establish a
link between the latter universal deformation ring and the universal
deformation ring of the representation of Gal, where is the
maximal pro--extension of unramified outside . We then give some
examples.
This paper was accepted for publication in the Mathematical Proceedings of
the Cambridge philosophical society (May 99)
Elastic Rod Model of a Supercoiled DNA Molecule
We study the elastic behaviour of a supercoiled DNA molecule. The simplest
model is that of a rod like chain, involving two elastic constants, the bending
and the twist rigidities. We show that this model is singular and needs a small
distance cut-off, which is a natural length scale giving the limit of validity
of the model, of the order of the double helix pitch. The rod like chain in
presence of the cutoff is able to reproduce quantitatively the experimentally
observed effects of supercoiling on the elongation-force characteristics, in
the small supercoiling regime. An exact solution of the model, using both
transfer matrix techniques and its mapping to a quantum mechanics problem,
allows to extract, from the experimental data,the value of the twist rigidity.
We also analyse the variation of the torque and the writhe to twist ratio
versus supercoiling, showing analytically the existence of a rather sharp
crossover regime which can be related to the excitation of plectonemic-like
structures. Finally we study the extension fluctuations of a stretched and
supercoiled DNA molecule, both at fixed torque and at fixed supercoiling angle,
and we compare the theoretical predictions to some preliminary experimental
data.Comment: 29 pages Revtex 5 figure
Group Testing with Random Pools: optimal two-stage algorithms
We study Probabilistic Group Testing of a set of N items each of which is
defective with probability p. We focus on the double limit of small defect
probability, p>1, taking either p->0
after or with . In both settings
the optimal number of tests which are required to identify with certainty the
defectives via a two-stage procedure, , is known to scale as
. Here we determine the sharp asymptotic value of and construct a class of two-stage algorithms over which
this optimal value is attained. This is done by choosing a proper bipartite
regular graph (of tests and variable nodes) for the first stage of the
detection. Furthermore we prove that this optimal value is also attained on
average over a random bipartite graph where all variables have the same degree,
while the tests have Poisson-distributed degrees. Finally, we improve the
existing upper and lower bound for the optimal number of tests in the case
with .Comment: 12 page
The Bethe lattice spin glass revisited
So far the problem of a spin glass on a Bethe lattice has been solved only at
the replica symmetric level, which is wrong in the spin glass phase. Because of
some technical difficulties, attempts at deriving a replica symmetry breaking
solution have been confined to some perturbative regimes, high connectivity
lattices or temperature close to the critical temperature.
Using the cavity method, we propose a general non perturbative solution of
the Bethe lattice spin glass problem at a level of approximation which is
equivalent to a one step replica symmetry breaking solution. The results
compare well with numerical simulations. The method can be used for many finite
connectivity problems appearing in combinatorial optimization.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
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