13,340 research outputs found
Scattering states of a particle, with position-dependent mass, in a symmetric heterojunction
The study of a particle with position-dependent effective mass (pdem), within
a double heterojunction is extended into the complex domain --- when the region
within the heterojunctions is described by a non Hermitian
symmetric potential. After obtaining the exact analytical solutions, the
reflection and transmission coefficients are calculated, and plotted as a
function of the energy. It is observed that at least two of the characteristic
features of non Hermitian symmetric systems --- viz., left / right
asymmetry and anomalous behaviour at spectral singularity, are preserved even
in the presence of pdem. The possibility of charge conservation is also
discussed.Comment: 12 pages, including 6 figures; Journal of Physics A : Math. Theor.
(2012
Boundary crossing Random Walks, clinical trials and multinomial sequential estimation
A sufficient condition for the uniqueness of multinomial sequential unbiased
estimators is provided generalizing a classical result for binomial samples.
Unbiased estimators are applied to infer the parameters of multidimensional or
multinomial Random Walks which are observed until they reach a boundary. An
application to clinical trials is presented
Position and structure of the subtropical/Azores front region from combined Lagrangian and remote sensing (IR/altimeter/SeaWIFS) measurements
The position and structure of the North Atlantic Subtropical Front is studied using Lagrangian flow tracks and remote sensing (AVHRR imagery: TOPEX/POSEIDON altimetry: SeaWiFS) in a broad region ( similar to 31 degree to similar to 36 degree N) of marked gradient of dynamic height (Azores Current) that extends from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR), near similar to 40 degree W, to the Eastern Boundary ( similar to 10 degree W). Drogued Argos buoy and ALACE tracks are superposed on infrared satellite images in the Subtropical Front region. Cold (cyclonic) structures, called storms, and warm (anticyclonic) structures of 100-300 km in size can be found on the south side of the Subtropical Front outcrop, which has a temperature contrast of about 1 degree C that can be followed for similar to 2500 km near 35 degree N. Warmer water adjacent to the outcrop is flowing eastward (Azores Current) but some warm water is returned westward about 300 km to the south (southern Counterflow). Estimates of horizontal diffusion in a Storm (D=2.2t10 super(2) m super(2) s super(-1)) and in the Subtropical Front region near 200 m depth (D sub(x)=1.3t10 super(4) m super(2) s super(-1), D sub(y)=2.6t10 super(3) m super(2) s super(-1)) are made from the Lagrangian tracks. Altimeter and in situ measurements show that Storms track westwards. Storms are separated by about 510 km and move westward at 2.7 km d super(-1). Remote sensing reveals that some initial structures start evolving as far east as 23 degree W but are more organized near 29 degree W and therefore Storms are about 1 year old when they reach the MAR (having travelled a distance of 1000 km). Structure and seasonality in SeaWiFS data in the region is examined
Seeing a c-theorem with holography
There is no known model in holography exhibiting a -theorem where the
central charges of the dual CFT are distinct. We examine a holographic model of
RG flows in a framework where the bulk gravity theory contains higher curvature
terms. The latter allows us to distinguish the flow of the central charges
and in the dual field theories in four dimensions. One finds that the flow
of is naturally monotonic but that of is not. Extending the analysis of
holographic RG flows to higher dimensions, we are led to formulate a novel
c-theorem in arbitrary dimensions for a universal coefficient appearing in the
entanglement entropy of the fixed point CFT's.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, v2: minor change
Coupling of Transport and Chemical Processes in Catalytic Combustion
Catalytic combustors have demonstrated the ability to operate efficiently over a much wider range of fuel air ratios than are imposed by the flammability limits of conventional combustors. Extensive commercial use however needs the following: (1) the design of a catalyst with low ignition temperature and high temperature stability, (2) reducing fatigue due to thermal stresses during transient operation, and (3) the development of mathematical models that can be used as design optimization tools to isolate promising operating ranges for the numerous operating parameters. The current program of research involves the development of a two dimensional transient catalytic combustion model and the development of a new catalyst with low temperature light-off and high temperature stablity characteristics
Extracting Weak Phase Information from B -> V_1 V_2 Decays
We describe a new method for extracting weak, CP-violating phase information,
with no hadronic uncertainties, from an angular analysis of B -> V_1 V_2
decays, where V_1 and V_2 are vector mesons. The quantity can be cleanly obtained from the study of decays such as B_d^0(t) ->
D^{*\pm} \rho^\mp, D^{*\pm} a_1^{\mp}, D^{*0} K^{*0}, etc. Similarly, one can
use B_s^0(t) -> D_s^{*\pm} K^{*\mp} to extract . There are no
penguin contributions to these decays. It is possible that will be the second function of CP phases, after , to be
measured at B-factories.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, no figure
When Queueing Meets Coding: Optimal-Latency Data Retrieving Scheme in Storage Clouds
In this paper, we study the problem of reducing the delay of downloading data
from cloud storage systems by leveraging multiple parallel threads, assuming
that the data has been encoded and stored in the clouds using fixed rate
forward error correction (FEC) codes with parameters (n, k). That is, each file
is divided into k equal-sized chunks, which are then expanded into n chunks
such that any k chunks out of the n are sufficient to successfully restore the
original file. The model can be depicted as a multiple-server queue with
arrivals of data retrieving requests and a server corresponding to a thread.
However, this is not a typical queueing model because a server can terminate
its operation, depending on when other servers complete their service (due to
the redundancy that is spread across the threads). Hence, to the best of our
knowledge, the analysis of this queueing model remains quite uncharted.
Recent traces from Amazon S3 show that the time to retrieve a fixed size
chunk is random and can be approximated as a constant delay plus an i.i.d.
exponentially distributed random variable. For the tractability of the
theoretical analysis, we assume that the chunk downloading time is i.i.d.
exponentially distributed. Under this assumption, we show that any
work-conserving scheme is delay-optimal among all on-line scheduling schemes
when k = 1. When k > 1, we find that a simple greedy scheme, which allocates
all available threads to the head of line request, is delay optimal among all
on-line scheduling schemes. We also provide some numerical results that point
to the limitations of the exponential assumption, and suggest further research
directions.Comment: Original accepted by IEEE Infocom 2014, 9 pages. Some statements in
the Infocom paper are correcte
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