11,848 research outputs found
Force distribution in a randomly perturbed lattice of identical particles with pair interaction
We study the statistics of the force felt by a particle in the class of
spatially correlated distribution of identical point-like particles,
interacting via a pair force (i.e. gravitational or Coulomb), and
obtained by randomly perturbing an infinite perfect lattice. In the first part
we specify the conditions under which the force on a particle is a well defined
stochastic quantity. We then study the small displacements approximation,
giving both the limitations of its validity, and, when it is valid, an
expression for the force variance. In the second part of the paper we extend to
this class of particle distributions the method introduced by Chandrasekhar to
study the force probability density function in the homogeneous Poisson
particle distribution. In this way we can derive an approximate expression for
the probability distribution of the force over the full range of perturbations
of the lattice, i.e., from very small (compared to the lattice spacing) to very
large where the Poisson limit is recovered. We show in particular the
qualitative change in the large-force tail of the force distribution between
these two limits. Excellent accuracy of our analytic results is found on
detailed comparison with results from numerical simulations. These results
provide basic statistical information about the fluctuations of the
interactions (i) of the masses in self-gravitating systems like those
encountered in the context of cosmological N-body simulations, and (ii) of the
charges in the ordered phase of the One Component Plasma.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
A Note on Mirror Symmetry for Manifolds with Spin(7) Holonomy
Starting from the superconformal algebras associated with manifolds, I
extend the algebra to the manifolds with spin(7) holonomy. I show how the
mirror symmetry in manifolds with spin(7) holonomy arises as the automorphism
in the extended sperconformal algebra. The automorphism is realized as 14 kinds
of T-dualities on the supersymmetric toroidal fibrations. One class of
Joyce's orbifolds are pairwise identified under the symmetry.Comment: 12 pages, harvmac bi
Quasi-stationary states and the range of pair interactions
"Quasi-stationary" states are approximately time-independent out of
equilibrium states which have been observed in a variety of systems of
particles interacting by long-range interactions. We investigate here the
conditions of their occurrence for a generic pair interaction V(r \rightarrow
\infty) \sim 1/r^a with a > 0, in d>1 dimensions. We generalize analytic
calculations known for gravity in d=3 to determine the scaling parametric
dependences of their relaxation rates due to two body collisions, and report
extensive numerical simulations testing their validity. Our results lead to the
conclusion that, for a < d-1, the existence of quasi-stationary states is
ensured by the large distance behavior of the interaction alone, while for a >
d-1 it is conditioned on the short distance properties of the interaction,
requiring the presence of a sufficiently large soft-core in the interaction
potential.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; final version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
AGROINDUSTRIALIZATION IN EMERGING MARKETS: OVERVIEW AND STRATEGIC CONTEXT
This article offers an overview for a special issue on agroindustrialization. It reviews eleven articles analyzing the agroindustrialization process in Latin America and Asia. It sets out a conceptual framework from the organizational economics and strategic management literature to enhance the understanding of the process of agroindustrialization from a competitive strategy point of view.Agribusiness, Industrial Organization,
Evidence-based retrieval in evidence-based medicine
pre-printObjective: Clinical decisions based on a meta-analysis that is based on an ineffective retrieval strategy may have serious negative consequences for patients. The study objective was to investigate the extent to which meta-analyses report proof of their retrieval strategies' effectiveness. Methods: The authors examined a random sample (n 5 100) of articles in the 1996 to 2002 full-text subset of Ovid MEDLINE indexed as ‘‘meta-analysis.'' We classified the articles in three ways: the article (A) reported both a retrieval strategy in sufficient detail (such that it could be repeated) and with evidence of the strategy's effectiveness, (B) reported a retrieval strategy in sufficient detail but not with evidence of the strategy's effectiveness, or (C) neither reported a strategy in detail nor evidence of the strategy's effectiveness. Articles classified as (A) were further classified according to the level of evidence reported. Results: Of the eighty-nine articles in our final analysis, six (6.7%) were classified as category (A), fifty-seven (64%) as (B), and twenty-six (29%) as (C). Articles in category (A) reported a previously validated search, a published strategy, or strategy based on expert opinion. Conclusion: Peer-review standards must be developed that require authors of meta-analyses to report evidence for the effectiveness of their retrieval strategies
Primordial Magnetic Fields, Right Electrons, and the Abelian Anomaly
In the standard model there are charges with abelian anomaly only (e.g.
right-handed electron number) which are effectively conserved in the early
universe until some time shortly before the electroweak scale. A state at
finite chemical potential of such a charge, possibly arising due to asymmetries
produced at the GUT scale, is unstable to the generation of hypercharge
magnetic field. Quite large magnetic fields ( gauss at GeV with typical inhomogeneity scale ) can be
generated. These fields may be of cosmological interest, potentially acting as
seeds for amplification to larger scale magnetic fields through non-linear
mechanisms. Previously derived bounds on exotic violating operators may
also be evaded.Comment: Revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett.. Analysis has been
extended to larger chemical potentials, for which large magnetic fields
survive at the electroweak scale. Previous bounds on violating
operators are also evaded in this cas
A combinatorial approach to knot recognition
This is a report on our ongoing research on a combinatorial approach to knot
recognition, using coloring of knots by certain algebraic objects called
quandles. The aim of the paper is to summarize the mathematical theory of knot
coloring in a compact, accessible manner, and to show how to use it for
computational purposes. In particular, we address how to determine colorability
of a knot, and propose to use SAT solving to search for colorings. The
computational complexity of the problem, both in theory and in our
implementation, is discussed. In the last part, we explain how coloring can be
utilized in knot recognition
The Connection Between Pulsation, Mass Loss and Circumstellar Shells in Classical Cepheids
Recent observations of Cepheids using infrared interferometry and Spitzer
photometry have detected the presence of circumstellar envelopes (CSE) of dust
and it has been hypothesized that the CSE's are due to dust forming in a
Cepheid wind. Here we use a modified Castor, Abbott & Klein formalism to
produce a Cepheid wind, and this is used to estimate the contribution of mass
loss to the Cepheid mass discrepancy Furthermore, we test the OGLE-III
Classical Cepheids using the IR fluxes from the SAGE survey to determine if
Large Magellanic Cloud Cepheids have CSE's. It is found that IR excess is a
common phenomenon for LMC Cepheids and that the resulting mass-loss rates can
explain at least a fraction of the Cepheid mass discrepancy, depending on the
assumed dust-to-gas ratio in the wind.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, proceeding for "Stellar Pulsation: Challenges for
Theory and Observation", Santa Fe 200
Unusual nanostructures of "lattice matched" InP on AlInAs
We show that the morphology of the initial monolayers of InP on
Al0.48In0.52As grown by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy does not follow the
expected layer-by-layer growth mode of lattice-matched systems, but instead
develops a number of low-dimensional structures, e.g., quantum dots and wires.
We discuss how the macroscopically strain-free heteroepitaxy might be strongly
affected by local phase separation/alloying-induced strain and that the
preferred aggregation of adatom species on the substrate surface and reduced
wettability of InP on AlInAs surfaces might be the cause of the unusual (step)
organization and morpholog
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