11,840 research outputs found

    Functional renormalization group approach to the Yang-Lee edge singularity

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    We determine the scaling properties of the Yang-Lee edge singularity as described by a one-component scalar field theory with imaginary cubic coupling, using the nonperturbative functional renormalization group in 3≤d≤63 \leq d\leq 6 Euclidean dimensions. We find very good agreement with high-temperature series data in d=3d = 3 dimensions and compare our results to recent estimates of critical exponents obtained with the four-loop ϵ=6−d\epsilon = 6-d expansion and the conformal bootstrap. The relevance of operator insertions at the corresponding fixed point of the RG β\beta functions is discussed and we estimate the error associated with O(∂4)\mathcal{O}(\partial^4) truncations of the scale-dependent effective action.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, updated reference to supplementary materia

    On spinodal points and Lee-Yang edge singularities

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    We address a number of outstanding questions associated with the analytic properties of the universal equation of state of the ϕ4\phi^4 theory, which describes the critical behavior of the Ising model and ubiquitous critical points of the liquid-gas type. We focus on the relation between spinodal points that limit the domain of metastability for temperatures below the critical temperature, i.e., T<TcT < T_{\rm c}, and Lee-Yang edge singularities that restrict the domain of analyticity around the point of zero magnetic field HH for T>TcT > T_{\rm c}. The extended analyticity conjecture (due to Fonseca and Zamolodchikov) posits that, for T<TcT < T_{\rm c}, the Lee-Yang edge singularities are the closest singularities to the real HH axis. This has interesting implications, in particular, that the spinodal singularities must lie off the real HH axis for d<4d < 4, in contrast to the commonly known result of the mean-field approximation. We find that the parametric representation of the Ising equation of state obtained in the ε=4−d\varepsilon = 4-d expansion, as well as the equation of state of the O(N){\rm O}(N)-symmetric ϕ4\phi^4 theory at large NN, are both nontrivially consistent with the conjecture. We analyze the reason for the difficulty of addressing this issue using the ε\varepsilon expansion. It is related to the long-standing paradox associated with the fact that the vicinity of the Lee-Yang edge singularity is described by Fisher's ϕ3\phi^3 theory, which remains nonperturbative even for d→4d\to 4, where the equation of state of the ϕ4\phi^4 theory is expected to approach the mean-field result. We resolve this paradox by deriving the Ginzburg criterion that determines the size of the region around the Lee-Yang edge singularity where mean-field theory no longer applies.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures; v2: shortened Sec. 4.1 and streamlined arguments/notation in Sec. 4.2, details moved to appendix, added reference 1

    Race and Socioeconomic Factors Affect Opportunities for Better Health

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    Examines racial/ethnic disparities in mortality and diabetes rates and the links between income and health within and across groups. Explores how race/ethnicity affects income at a given education level or socioeconomic conditions at a given income level

    Variable Hardy Spaces

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    We develop the theory of variable exponent Hardy spaces. Analogous to the classical theory, we give equivalent definitions in terms of maximal operators. We also show that distributions in these spaces have an atomic decomposition including a "finite" decomposition; this decomposition is more like the decomposition for weighted Hardy spaces due to Stromberg and Torchinsky than the classical atomic decomposition. As an application of the atomic decomposition we show that singular integral operators are bounded on variable Hardy spaces with minimal regularity assumptions on the exponent function

    Improving Christofides' Algorithm for the s-t Path TSP

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    We present a deterministic (1+sqrt(5))/2-approximation algorithm for the s-t path TSP for an arbitrary metric. Given a symmetric metric cost on n vertices including two prespecified endpoints, the problem is to find a shortest Hamiltonian path between the two endpoints; Hoogeveen showed that the natural variant of Christofides' algorithm is a 5/3-approximation algorithm for this problem, and this asymptotically tight bound in fact has been the best approximation ratio known until now. We modify this algorithm so that it chooses the initial spanning tree based on an optimal solution to the Held-Karp relaxation rather than a minimum spanning tree; we prove this simple but crucial modification leads to an improved approximation ratio, surpassing the 20-year-old barrier set by the natural Christofides' algorithm variant. Our algorithm also proves an upper bound of (1+sqrt(5))/2 on the integrality gap of the path-variant Held-Karp relaxation. The techniques devised in this paper can be applied to other optimization problems as well: these applications include improved approximation algorithms and improved LP integrality gap upper bounds for the prize-collecting s-t path problem and the unit-weight graphical metric s-t path TSP.Comment: 31 pages, 5 figure

    Coacervation of starch

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    Call number: LD2668 .T4 1964 Y94Master of Scienc
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