25,967 research outputs found
Optimizing Thermochromism of Solution-Processed VO Nanocomposite Films for Chromogenic Fenestration
Vanadium (IV) oxide is one of the most promising materials for thermochromic
films due to its unique, reversible crystal phase transition from monoclinic
(M1) to rutile (R) at its critical temperature (T) which corresponds to a
change in optical properties: above T, VO films exhibit a decreased
transmittance for wavelengths of light in the near-infrared region. However, a
high transmittance modulation often sacrifices luminous transmittance which is
necessary for commercial and residential applications of this technology. In
this study, we explore the potential for synthesis of VO films in a matrix
of metal oxide nanocrystals, using InO, TiO, and ZnO as diluents.
We seek to optimize the annealing conditions to yield desirable optical
properties. Although the films diluted with TiO and ZnO failed to show
transmittance modulation, those diluted with InO exhibited strong
thermochromism. Our investigation introduces a novel window film consisting of
a 0.93 metal ionic molar ratio VO-InO nanocrystalline matrix,
demonstrating a significant increase in luminous transmittance without any
measurable impact on thermochromic character. Furthermore, solution-processing
mitigates costs, allowing this film to be synthesized 4x-7x cheaper than
industry standards. This study represents a crucial development in film
chemistry and paves the way for further application of VO nanocomposite
films in chromogenic fenestration.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figure
Spectral Implications of Variability in GRB Fireballs
Cosmological -ray bursts originate from relativistic winds. Temporal
fluctuations in the wind velocity can give rise to internal shocks which
dissipate a significant fraction of the wind kinetic energy. Part of the energy
dissipated is transferred to the electrons through Fermi acceleration. If the
post shock fluid is strongly magnetized, the relativistic electrons cool
initially through synchrotron emission, and later through Compton scattering.
The upsacttered radiation triggers a cascade of -pairs. We compute
the final spectrum for a wide range of parameter values for the emission
region. We show that the spectral diversity observed by BATSE can be naturally
explained by emission from internal shocks, which are associated with the
observed source variability.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure; talk given at the VIII Marcel Grossmann Meeting on
General Relativity, Jerusalem, June 1997 (to appear in the proceedings
Average value of solutions of the bipartite quadratic assignment problem and linkages to domination analysis
In this paper we study the complexity and domination analysis in the context
of the \emph{bipartite quadratic assignment problem}. Two variants of the
problem, denoted by BQAP1 and BQAP2, are investigated. A formula for
calculating the average objective function value of all solutions
is presented whereas computing the median objective function value is shown to
be NP-hard. We show that any heuristic algorithm that produces a solution with
objective function value at most has the domination ratio at
least . Analogous results for the standard \emph{quadratic
assignment problem} is an open question. We show that computing a solution
whose objective function value is no worse than that of
solutions of BQAP1 or
solutions of BQAP2, is NP-hard for any fixed natural numbers and such
that . However, a solution with the domination number
for BQAP1 and
for BQAP2, can be found in
time
Fair Outlier Detection
An outlier detection method may be considered fair over specified sensitive
attributes if the results of outlier detection are not skewed towards
particular groups defined on such sensitive attributes. In this task, we
consider, for the first time to our best knowledge, the task of fair outlier
detection. In this work, we consider the task of fair outlier detection over
multiple multi-valued sensitive attributes (e.g., gender, race, religion,
nationality, marital status etc.). We propose a fair outlier detection method,
FairLOF, that is inspired by the popular LOF formulation for neighborhood-based
outlier detection. We outline ways in which unfairness could be induced within
LOF and develop three heuristic principles to enhance fairness, which form the
basis of the FairLOF method. Being a novel task, we develop an evaluation
framework for fair outlier detection, and use that to benchmark FairLOF on
quality and fairness of results. Through an extensive empirical evaluation over
real-world datasets, we illustrate that FairLOF is able to achieve significant
improvements in fairness at sometimes marginal degradations on result quality
as measured against the fairness-agnostic LOF method.Comment: In Proceedings of The 21th International Conference on Web
Information Systems Engineering (WISE 2020), Amsterdam and Leiden, The
Netherland
A characterization of linearizable instances of the quadratic minimum spanning tree problem
We investigate special cases of the quadratic minimum spanning tree problem
(QMSTP) on a graph that can be solved as a linear minimum spanning
tree problem. Characterization of such problems on graphs with special
properties are given. This include complete graphs, complete bipartite graphs,
cactuses among others. Our characterization can be verified in time.
In the case of complete graphs and when the cost matrix is given in factored
form, we show that our characterization can be verified in time.
Related open problems are also indicated
The generalized vertex cover problem and some variations
In this paper we study the generalized vertex cover problem (GVC), which is a
generalization of various well studied combinatorial optimization problems. GVC
is shown to be equivalent to the unconstrained binary quadratic programming
problem and also equivalent to some other variations of the general GVC. Some
solvable cases are identified and approximation algorithms are suggested for
special cases. We also study GVC on bipartite graphs and identify some
polynomially solvable cases. We show that GVC on bipartite graphs is equivalent
to the bipartite unconstrained 0-1 quadratic programming problem. Integer
programming formulations of GVC and related problems are presented and
establish half-integrality property on some variables for the corresponding
linear programming relaxations. We also discuss special cases of GVC where all
feasible solutions are independent sets or vertex covers. These problems are
observed to be equivalent to the maximum weight independent set problem or
minimum weight vertex cover problem along with some algorithmic results.Comment: 24 page
Heuristic algorithms for the bipartite unconstrained 0-1 quadratic programming problem
We study the Bipartite Unconstrained 0-1 Quadratic Programming Problem (BQP)
which is a relaxation of the Unconstrained 0-1 Quadratic Programming Problem
(QP). Applications of the BQP include mining discrete patterns from binary
data, approximating matrices by rank-one binary matrices, computing cut-norm of
a matrix, and solving optimization problems such as maximum weight biclique,
bipartite maximum weight cut, maximum weight induced subgraph of a bipartite
graph, etc. We propose several classes of heuristic approaches to solve the BQP
and discuss a number of construction algorithms, local search algorithms and
their combinations. Results of extensive computational experiments are reported
to establish the practical performance of our algorithms. For this purpose, we
propose several sets of test instances based on various applications of the
BQP. Our algorithms are compared with state-of-the-art heuristics for QP which
can also be used to solve BQP with reformulation. We also study theoretical
properties of the neighborhoods and algorithms. In particular, we establish
complexity of all neighborhood search algorithms and establish tight worst-case
performance ratio for the greedy algorithm.Comment: 17 page
Bottleneck flows in networks
The bottleneck network flow problem (BNFP) is a generalization of several
well-studied bottleneck problems such as the bottleneck transportation problem
(BTP), bottleneck assignment problem (BAP), bottleneck path problem (BPP), and
so on. In this paper we provide a review of important results on this topic and
its various special cases. We observe that the BNFP can be solved as a sequence
of maximum flow problems. However, special augmenting path based
algorithms for the maximum flow problem can be modified to obtain algorithms
for the BNFP with the property that these variations and the corresponding
maximum flow algorithms have identical worst case time complexity. On unit
capacity network we show that BNFP can be solved in . This improves the best available
algorithm by a factor of . On unit capacity simple graphs, we
show that BNFP can be solved in time. As a consequence
we have an algorithm for the BTP with unit arc
capacities
Representations of quadratic combinatorial optimization problems: A case study using the quadratic set covering problem
The objective function of a quadratic combinatorial optimization problem
(QCOP) can be represented by two data points, a quadratic cost matrix Q and a
linear cost vector c. Different, but equivalent, representations of the pair
(Q, c) for the same QCOP are well known in literature. Research papers often
state that without loss of generality we assume Q is symmetric, or
upper-triangular or positive semidefinite, etc. These representations however
have inherently different properties. Popular general purpose 0-1 QCOP solvers
such as GUROBI and CPLEX do not suggest a preferred representation of Q and c.
Our experimental analysis discloses that GUROBI prefers the upper triangular
representation of the matrix Q while CPLEX prefers the symmetric representation
in a statistically significant manner. Equivalent representations, although
preserve optimality, they could alter the corresponding lower bound values
obtained by various lower bounding schemes. For the natural lower bound of a
QCOP, symmetric representation produced tighter bounds, in general. Effect of
equivalent representations when CPLEX and GUROBI run in a heuristic mode are
also explored. Further, we review various equivalent representations of a QCOP
from the literature that have theoretical basis to be viewed as strong and
provide new theoretical insights for generating such equivalent representations
making use of constant value property and diagonalization (linearization) of
QCOP instances.Comment: 36 page
New Results on the Existence of Open Loop Nash Equilibria in Discrete Time Dynamic Games
We address the problem of finding conditions which guarantee the existence of
open-loop Nash equilibria in discrete time dynamic games (DTDGs). The classical
approach to DTDGs involves analyzing the problem using optimal control theory
which yields results mainly limited to linear-quadratic games. We show the
existence of equilibria for a class of DTDGs where the cost function of players
admits a quasi-potential function which leads to new results and, in some
cases, a generalization of similar results from linear-quadratic games. Our
results are obtained by introducing a new formulation for analysing DTDGs using
the concept of a conjectured state by the players. In this formulation, the
state of the game is modelled as dependent on players. Using this formulation
we show that there is an optimisation problem such that the solution of this
problem gives an equilibrium of the DTDG.
To extend the result for more general games, we modify the DTDG with an
additional constraint of consistency of the conjectured state. Any equilibrium
of the original game is also an equilibrium of this modified game with
consistent conjectures.
In the modified game, we show the existence of equilibria for DTDGs where the
cost function of players admits a potential function. We end with conditions
under which an equilibrium of the game with consistent conjectures is an
-Nash equilibria of the original game.Comment: 12 pages, under review with the IEEE Transactions on Automatic
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