17,951 research outputs found
Wroclaw neutrino event generator
A neutrino event generator developed by the Wroclaw Neutrino Group is
described. The physical models included in the generator are discussed and
illustrated with the results of simulations. The considered processes are
quasi-elastic scattering and pion production modelled by combining the
resonance excitation and deep inelastic scattering.Comment: Talk given at 2nd Scandanavian Neutrino Workshop (SNOW 2006),
Stockholm, Sweden, 2-6 May 2006. 3 pages, 6 figure
Mobility and asymmetry effects in one-dimensional rock-paper-scissors games
As the behavior of a system composed of cyclically competing species is
strongly influenced by the presence of fluctuations, it is of interest to study
cyclic dominance in low dimensions where these effects are the most prominent.
We here discuss rock-paper-scissors games on a one-dimensional lattice where
the interaction rates and the mobility can be species dependent. Allowing only
single site occupation, we realize mobility by exchanging individuals of
different species. When the interaction and swapping rates are symmetric, a
strongly enhanced swapping rate yields an increased mixing of the species,
leading to a mean-field like coexistence even in one-dimensional systems. This
coexistence is transient when the rates are asymmetric, and eventually only one
species will survive. Interestingly, in our spatial games the dominating
species can differ from the species that would dominate in the corresponding
nonspatial model. We identify different regimes in the parameter space and
construct the corresponding dynamical phase diagram.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Monte Carlo Simulation of Ising Models with Dipole Interaction
Recently, a new memory effect was found in the metamagnetic domain structure
of the diluted Ising antiferromagnet by domain imaging
with Faraday contrast. Essential for this effect is the dipole interaction. We
simulate the low temperature behavior of diluted Ising-antiferromagnets by a
Monte Carlo simulation considering long range interaction. The metamagnetic
domain structure occurring due to the dipole interaction is investigated by
graphical representation. In the model considered the antiferromagnetic state
is stable for an external magnetic field smaller than a lower boundary
while for fields larger than an upper boundary the system is in the
saturated paramagnetic phase, where the spins are ferromagnetically polarized.
For magnetic fields in between these two boundaries a mixed phase occurs
consisting of ferromagnetic domains in an antiferromagnetic background. The
position of these ferromagnetic domains is stored in the system: after a cycle
in which the field is first removed and afterwards applied again the domains
reappear at their original positions. The reason for this effect can be found
in the frozen antiferromagnetic domain state which occurs after removing the
field.Comment: Latex, 10 pages; 3 postsript-figures, compressed tar-file, uuencoded,
report 10109
Seeking for a fingerprint: analysis of point processes in actigraphy recording
Motor activity of humans displays complex temporal fluctuations which can be
characterized by scale-invariant statistics, thus documenting that structure
and fluctuations of such kinetics remain similar over a broad range of time
scales. Former studies on humans regularly deprived of sleep or suffering from
sleep disorders predicted change in the invariant scale parameters with respect
to those representative for healthy subjects. In this study we investigate the
signal patterns from actigraphy recordings by means of characteristic measures
of fractional point processes. We analyse spontaneous locomotor activity of
healthy individuals recorded during a week of regular sleep and a week of
chronic partial sleep deprivation. Behavioural symptoms of lack of sleep can be
evaluated by analysing statistics of duration times during active and resting
states, and alteration of behavioural organization can be assessed by analysis
of power laws detected in the event count distribution, distribution of waiting
times between consecutive movements and detrended fluctuation analysis of
recorded time series. We claim that among different measures characterizing
complexity of the actigraphy recordings and their variations implied by chronic
sleep distress, the exponents characterizing slopes of survival functions in
resting states are the most effective biomarkers distinguishing between healthy
and sleep-deprived groups.Comment: Communicated at UPON2015, 14-17 July 2015, Barcelona. 21 pages, 11
figures; updated: figures 4-7, text revised, expanded Sec. 1,3,
Relativistic Iron Lines in Galactic Black Holes: Recent Results and Lines in the ASCA Archive
Recent observations with Chandra and XMM-Newton, aided by broad-band spectral
coverage from RXTE, have revealed skewed relativistic iron emission lines in
stellar-mass Galactic black hole systems. Such systems are excellent
laboratories for testing General Relativity, and relativistic iron lines
provide an important tool for making such tests. In this contribution to the
Proceedings of the 10th Annual Marcel Grossmann Meeting on General Relativity,
we briefly review recent developments and present initial results from fits to
archival ASCA observations of Galactic black holes. It stands to reason that
relativistic effects, if real, should be revealed in many systems (rather than
just one or two); the results of our archival work have borne-out this
expectation. The ASCA spectra reveal skewed, relativistic lines in XTE
J1550-564, GRO J1655-40, GRS 1915+105, and Cygnus X-1.Comment: to appear in the proc. of the 10th Annual Marcel Grossmann Meeting on
General Relativity, 5 pages, 1 figure, uses specific .cls and .sty file
Coevolution of dynamical states and interactions in dynamic networks
We explore the coupled dynamics of the internal states of a set of
interacting elements and the network of interactions among them. Interactions
are modeled by a spatial game and the network of interaction links evolves
adapting to the outcome of the game. As an example we consider a model of
cooperation, where the adaptation is shown to facilitate the formation of a
hierarchical interaction network that sustains a highly cooperative stationary
state. The resulting network has the characteristics of a small world network
when a mechanism of local neighbor selection is introduced in the adaptive
network dynamics. The highly connected nodes in the hierarchical structure of
the network play a leading role in the stability of the network. Perturbations
acting on the state of these special nodes trigger global avalanches leading to
complete network reorganization.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, for related material visit
http:www.imedea.uib.es/physdept
Impact of generalized benefit functions on the evolution of cooperation in spatial public goods games with continuous strategies
Cooperation and defection may be considered as two extreme responses to a
social dilemma. Yet the reality is much less clear-cut. Between the two
extremes lies an interval of ambivalent choices, which may be captured
theoretically by means of continuous strategies defining the extent of the
contributions of each individual player to the common pool. If strategies are
chosen from the unit interval, where 0 corresponds to pure defection and 1
corresponds to the maximal contribution, the question is what is the
characteristic level of individual investments to the common pool that emerges
if the evolution is guided by different benefit functions. Here we consider the
steepness and the threshold as two parameters defining an array of generalized
benefit functions, and we show that in a structured population there exist
intermediate values of both at which the collective contributions are maximal.
However, as the cost-to-benefit ratio of cooperation increases the
characteristic threshold decreases, while the corresponding steepness
increases. Our observations remain valid if more complex sigmoid functions are
used, thus reenforcing the importance of carefully adjusted benefits for high
levels of public cooperation.Comment: 8 two-column pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in Physical
Review
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