10,691 research outputs found
Quantum Hyperbolic Invariants Of 3-Manifolds With PSL(2,C)-Characters
We construct {\it quantum hyperbolic invariants} (QHI) for triples
, where is a compact closed oriented 3-manifold, is a
flat principal bundle over with structural group PSL(2,\mc), and is a
non-empty link in . These invariants are based on the Faddeev-Kashaev's {\it
quantum dilogarithms}, interpreted as matrix valued functions of suitably
decorated hyperbolic ideal tetrahedra. They are explicitely computed as state
sums over the decorated hyperbolic ideal tetrahedra of the {\it idealization}
of any fixed {\it \Dd-triangulation}; the \Dd-triangulations are simplicial
1-cocycle descriptions of in which the link is realized as a
Hamiltonian subcomplex. We also discuss how to set the Volume Conjecture for
the coloured Jones invariants of hyperbolic knots in in the
framework of the general QHI theory.Comment: 49 pages, 17 figures. Together with our paper `Classical And Quantum
Dilogarithmic Invariants Of Flat PSL(2,C)-Bundles Over 3-Manifolds' avalaible
on the same ArXiv, this develops with full details the results announced in
math.GT/021106
Fractal properties of quantum spacetime
We show that in general a spacetime having a quantum group symmetry has also
a scale dependent fractal dimension which deviates from its classical value at
short scales, a phenomenon that resembles what observed in some approaches to
quantum gravity. In particular we analyze the cases of a quantum sphere and of
\k-Minkowski, the latter being relevant in the context of quantum gravity.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; some minor corrections; reference adde
Towards an expanded model of litigation
Introduction: The call for contributions for this workshop describes the important new challenges for the legal search
community this domain brings. Rather than just understanding the challenges this domain poses in terms of
their technical properties, we would like to suggest that understanding these challenges as socio-technical
challenges will be important. That is, as well as calling for research on a technical level to address these
challenges we are also calling for work to understand the social practices of those involved in e-discovery
(ED) and related legal work. A particularly interesting feature of this field is that it is likely that search
technologies will (at least semi-)automate responsiveness review in the relatively near term and this will
change the way that the work is organised and done in many ways – offering new possibilities for new
ways of organising the work. As well as designing those technologies for automating responsiveness
review we need to be envisioning how the work will be done in the future, how these technologies will
impact the organisation of the case and so on. In this position paper we therefore outline the importance of
understanding the wider social context of ED when designing tools and technologies to support and change
the work. We would like to reinforce and expand on Conrad’s call for IR researchers to understand just
what ED entails [2], include the stages that come both before and after core retrieval activities.
The importance of considering the social aspects of work in the design of the technology has been
established for some time. Ushering in this ‘turn to the social,’ and focusing on interface design, Gentner
and Grudin [4] described how the GUI has already changed from an interface for engineers, representing
the engineering model of the machine to one that supported single ‘everyman’ users (based on ideas from
psychology). From then onwards the interface has evolved to support groups of users, taking into account
the social and organisational contexts of use. This has particular resonance for the design of ED
technologies: during ED in particular and the wider legal process there are often many lawyers involved –
reviewing documents, determining issues, etc. Even if the way that their work is organised currently is not
seen as collaborative in the traditional sense – with individual lawyers working on individual document sets
to review them - their work needs to be coordinated and it seems likely that their work could be enhanced
by, for example, knowledge of what their colleagues had found, how the case was shaping up, new key
terms and facts turned up and so on. Work is often modelled for the purposes of design using process
models, but this misses out on the richness and variety actually found when one examines how the work is
carried out [3]. Technologies which strictly enforce the process models can often hinder the work, or end
up being worked around as was the case with workflow systems since people interpret processes very
flexibly to get the work done ([1], [3]). Other studies in other fields have found similar problems when
systems are designed on for example cognitive models of how the work is done; they often do not take into
account the situated nature of the work and thus they can be very difficult to use [5]. We believe, like [2],
that a clear understanding of the social practices of ED is vital for the creation of high-quality, meaningful
tools and technologies. We furthermore propose that work practice studies, to be used in combination with
other methods, are a central part of getting the detailed understanding of the work practices central to
designing useful and intelligent tools. Work practice studies would involve ethnographies, consisting
primarily of observation, undertaken of practitioners engaging in the work of ED
Characterization of qubit chains by Feynman probes
We address the characterization of qubit chains and assess the performances
of local measurements compared to those provided by Feynman probes, i.e.
nonlocal measurements realized by coupling a single qubit regis- ter to the
chain. We show that local measurements are suitable to estimate small values of
the coupling and that a Bayesian strategy may be successfully exploited to
achieve optimal precision. For larger values of the coupling Bayesian local
strategies do not lead to a consistent estimate. In this regime, Feynman probes
may be exploited to build a consistent Bayesian estimator that saturates the
Cram\'er-Rao bound, thus providing an effective characterization of the chain.
Finally, we show that ultimate bounds to precision, i.e. saturation of the
quantum Cram\'er-Rao bound, may be achieved by a two-step scheme employing
Feynman probes followed by local measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Study of the trace metal ion influence on the turnover of soil organic matter in cultivated contaminated soils
The role of metals in the behaviour of soil organic matter (SOM) is not well documented. Therefore, we investigated the influence of metals (Pb, Zn, Cu and Cd) on the dynamic of SOM in contaminated soils where maize (C4 plant) replaced C3 cultures. Three pseudogley brown leached soil profiles under maize with a decreasing gradient in metals concentrations were sampled. On size fractions, stable carbon isotopic ratio (d13C), metals, organic carbon and nitrogen concentrations were measured in function of depth. The determined sequence for the amount of C4 organic matter in the bulk fractions: M3 (0.9) > M2 (0.4) > M1 (0.3) is in agreement with a significant influence of metals on the SOM turnover. New C4 SOM, mainly present in the labile coarser fractions and less contaminated by metals than the stabilised C3 SOM of the clay fraction, is more easily degraded by microorganism
Asymptotic safety in higher-derivative gravity
We study the non-perturbative renormalization group flow of higher-derivative
gravity employing functional renormalization group techniques. The
non-perturbative contributions to the -functions shift the known
perturbative ultraviolet fixed point into a non-trivial fixed point with three
UV-attractive and one UV-repulsive eigendirections, consistent with the
asymptotic safety conjecture of gravity. The implication of this transition on
the unitarity problem, typically haunting higher-derivative gravity theories,
is discussed.Comment: 8 pages; 1 figure; revised versio
Alexander quandle lower bounds for link genera
We denote by Q_F the family of the Alexander quandle structures supported by
finite fields. For every k-component oriented link L, every partition P of L
into h:=|P| sublinks, and every labelling z of such a partition by the natural
numbers z_1,...,z_n, the number of X-colorings of any diagram of (L,z) is a
well-defined invariant of (L,P), of the form q^(a_X(L,P,z)+1) for some natural
number a_X(L,P,z). Letting X and z vary in Q_F and among the labellings of P,
we define a derived invariant A_Q(L,P)=sup a_X(L,P,z).
If P_M is such that |P_M|=k, we show that A_Q(L,P_M) is a lower bound for
t(L), where t(L) is the tunnel number of L. If P is a "boundary partition" of L
and g(L,P) denotes the infimum among the sums of the genera of a system of
disjoint Seifert surfaces for the L_j's, then we show that A_Q(L,P) is at most
2g(L,P)+2k-|P|-1. We set A_Q(L):=A_Q(L,P_m), where |P_m|=1. By elaborating on a
suitable version of a result by Inoue, we show that when L=K is a knot then
A_Q(K) is bounded above by A(K), where A(K) is the breadth of the Alexander
polynomial of K. However, for every g we exhibit examples of genus-g knots
having the same Alexander polynomial but different quandle invariants A_Q.
Moreover, in such examples A_Q provides sharp lower bounds for the genera of
the knots. On the other hand, A_Q(L) can give better lower bounds on the genus
than A(L), when L has at least two components.
We show that in order to compute A_Q(L) it is enough to consider only
colorings with respect to the constant labelling z=1. In the case when L=K is a
knot, if either A_Q(K)=A(K) or A_Q(K) provides a sharp lower bound for the knot
genus, or if A_Q(K)=1, then A_Q(K) can be realized by means of the proper
subfamily of quandles X=(F_p,*), where p varies among the odd prime numbers.Comment: 36 pages; 16 figure
Core-Shell Charge Transfer in Plasmonic Fe@Ag Nanoparticles on MgO Film
In this work we report the interfacial charge transfer between the Fe core and Ag shell in self-organized nanoparticles on MgO films on Mo(001). Predeposited Fe nanoparticles organize in a square network with long-range order on the oxide surface guided by the MgO coincidence lattice. When Ag is added, it covers the Fe nanoparticles, forming a shell. By means of XPS and UPS we show that a charge transfer occurs between the Fe core and the Ag shell, determining the oxidation of part of the Fe atoms and a negative charging of the Ag shell. This is confirmed by band bending and core level shifts. As a consequence of the Fe@Ag morphology and composition the plasmonic response of the nanoparticles is modified with respect to pure Ag nanoparticles
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