29 research outputs found
A NSFD discretization of two-dimensional singularly perturbed semilinear convection-diffusion problems
Despite the availability of an abundant literature on singularly perturbed problems,
interest toward non-linear problems has been limited. In particular, parameter-uniform
methods for singularly perturbed semilinear problems are quasi-non-existent. In this
article, we study a two-dimensional semilinear singularly perturbed convection-diffusion
problems. Our approach requires linearization of the continuous semilinear problem
using the quasilinearization technique. We then discretize the resulting linear problems
in the framework of non-standard finite difference methods. A rigorous convergence
analysis is conducted showing that the proposed method is first-order parameter-uniform
convergent. Finally, two test examples are used to validate the theoretical findings
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Assessing market attractiveness for mergers and acquisitions: the M&A Attractiveness Index Score
This paper presents a new scoring methodology designed to measure a country's capability to attract and sustain business investment activity in the forms of cross-border inflow and domestic mergers and acquisitions (M&A). We compute a theoretically grounded Index of Attractiveness for M&A purposes based on groups of country development factors which have been identified as key drivers of corporate investment activity in economics, finance and management literature. By using the Index, which has been successfully tested against country-level M&A activity in a time series analysis, we show that the drivers of M&A activity differ significantly at different stages of country maturity. Specifically, for mature countries, the quality of their regulatory systems, political stability, socio-economic environment and the sophistication of their physical infrastructure as well as the availability of sizeable assets all determine differences in country-level M&A volume and value activity. For countries at the transitional stage, it is instead their economic and financial health, socio-economic environment, technological developments and the quality of their infrastructure and the availability of sizeable assets which drive M&A activity. We also prove the predictability power of the Index, by a set of Granger causality tests, showing not only how country-level development drives future M&A activity but also how, to some extent, the inverse relationship is also true, i.e. that M&A activity can contribute to country development
Beta function of k deformed AdS5 Ă— S 5 string theory
We calculate the one loop beta function for the would-be marginal coupling on
the world sheet of the k deformed sigma models associated to a quantum group
with q=exp(i pi/k). This includes the bosonic principal chiral models and
symmetric space sigma models but also the k deformed semi-symmetric space sigma
model describing strings in a deformation of AdS_5 x S^5. The world sheet sigma
model is a current-current deformation of the gauged WZW model for the
supergroup PSU(2,2|4) with level k. In the string theory context the beta
function is shown to vanish because of the vanishing of the Killing form of
PSU(2,2|4) which is another piece of evidence that the k deformed theories
define consistent string theories.Comment: 26 pages, some typos correcte
Giant magnons of string theory in the lambda background
The analogues of giant magnon configurations are studied on the string world
sheet in the lambda background. This is a discrete deformation of the
AdS(5)xS(5) background that preserves the integrability of the world sheet
theory. Giant magnon solutions are generated using the dressing method and
their dispersion relation is found. This reduces to the usual dyonic giant
magnon dispersion relation in the appropriate limit and becomes relativistic in
another limit where the lambda model becomes the generalized sine-Gordon theory
of the Pohlmeyer reduction. The scattering of giant magnons is then shown in
the semi-classical limit to be described by the quantum S-matrix that is a
quantum group deformation of the conventional giant magnon S-matrix. It is
further shown that in the small g limit, a sector of the S-matrix is related to
the XXZ spin chain whose spectrum matches the spectrum of magnon bound states.Comment: 53 pages, 6 figures, final version to appear in JHE
Classical and quantum aspects of Yang-Baxter Wess-Zumino models
We investigate the integrable Yang-Baxter deformation of the 2d Principal Chiral Model with a Wess-Zumino term. For arbitrary groups, the one-loop -functions are calculated and display a surprising connection between classical and quantum physics: the classical integrability condition is necessary to prevent new couplings being generated by renormalisation. We show these theories admit an elegant realisation of Poisson-Lie T-duality acting as a simple inversion of coupling constants. The self-dual point corresponds to the Wess-Zumino-Witten model and is the IR fixed point under RG. We address the possibility of having supersymmetric extensions of these models showing that extended supersymmetry is not possible in general
Yang Baxter and anisotropic sigma and lambda models, cyclic RG and exact S-matrices
Integrable deformation of SU(2) sigma and lambda models are considered at the classical and quantum levels. These are the Yang-Baxter and XXZ-type anisotropic deformations. The XXZ type deformations are UV safe in one regime, while in another regime, like the Yang-Baxter deformations, they exhibit cyclic RG behaviour. The associated affine quantum group symmetry, realised classically at the Poisson bracket level, has q a complex phase in the UV safe regime and q real in the cyclic RG regime, where q is an RG invariant. Based on the symmetries and RG flow we propose exact factorisable S-matrices to describe the scattering of states in the lambda models, from which the sigma models follow by taking a limit and non-abelian T-duality. In the cyclic RG regimes, the S-matrices are periodic functions of rapidity, at large rapidity, and in the Yang-Baxter case violate parity
Temporal changes in the epidemiology, management, and outcome from acute respiratory distress syndrome in European intensive care units: a comparison of two large cohorts
Background: Mortality rates for patients with ARDS remain high. We assessed temporal changes in the epidemiology and management of ARDS patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation in European ICUs. We also investigated the association between ventilatory settings and outcome in these patients. Methods: This was a post hoc analysis of two cohorts of adult ICU patients admitted between May 1–15, 2002 (SOAP study, n = 3147), and May 8–18, 2012 (ICON audit, n = 4601 admitted to ICUs in the same 24 countries as the SOAP study). ARDS was defined retrospectively using the Berlin definitions. Values of tidal volume, PEEP, plateau pressure, and FiO2 corresponding to the most abnormal value of arterial PO2 were recorded prospectively every 24 h. In both studies, patients were followed for outcome until death, hospital discharge or for 60 days. Results: The frequency of ARDS requiring mechanical ventilation during the ICU stay was similar in SOAP and ICON (327[10.4%] vs. 494[10.7%], p = 0.793). The diagnosis of ARDS was established at a median of 3 (IQ: 1–7) days after admission in SOAP and 2 (1–6) days in ICON. Within 24 h of diagnosis, ARDS was mild in 244 (29.7%), moderate in 388 (47.3%), and severe in 189 (23.0%) patients. In patients with ARDS, tidal volumes were lower in the later (ICON) than in the earlier (SOAP) cohort. Plateau and driving pressures were also lower in ICON than in SOAP. ICU (134[41.1%] vs 179[36.9%]) and hospital (151[46.2%] vs 212[44.4%]) mortality rates in patients with ARDS were similar in SOAP and ICON. High plateau pressure (> 29 cmH2O) and driving pressure (> 14 cmH2O) on the first day of mechanical ventilation but not tidal volume (> 8 ml/kg predicted body weight [PBW]) were independently associated with a higher risk of in-hospital death. Conclusion: The frequency of and outcome from ARDS remained relatively stable between 2002 and 2012. Plateau pressure > 29 cmH2O and driving pressure > 14 cmH2O on the first day of mechanical ventilation but not tidal volume > 8 ml/kg PBW were independently associated with a higher risk of death. These data highlight the continued burden of ARDS and provide hypothesis-generating data for the design of future studies
D-branes in λ-deformations
We show that the geometric interpretation of D-branes in WZW models as twisted conjugacy classes persists in the --deformed theory. We obtain such configurations by demanding that a monodromy matrix constructed from the Lax connection of the --deformed theory continues to produce conserved charges in the presence of boundaries. In this way the D-brane configurations obtained correspond to ``integrable'' boundary configurations. We illustrate this with examples based on and , and comment on the relation of these D-branes to both non-Abelian T-duality and Poisson-Lie T-duality. We show that the D2 supported by D0 charge in the --deformed theory map, under analytic continuation together with Poisson-Lie T-duality, to D3 branes in the -deformation of the principal chiral model