7,977 research outputs found
On Some Positivity Properties of the Interquark Potential in QCD
We prove that the Fourier transform of the exponential e^{-\b V(R)} of the
{\bf static} interquark potential in QCD is positive. It has been shown by
Eliott Lieb some time ago that this property allows in the same limit of static
spin independent potential proving certain mass relation between baryons with
different quark flavors.Comment: 6 pages, latex with one postscript figur
Harvesting Entities from the Web Using Unique Identifiers -- IBEX
In this paper we study the prevalence of unique entity identifiers on the
Web. These are, e.g., ISBNs (for books), GTINs (for commercial products), DOIs
(for documents), email addresses, and others. We show how these identifiers can
be harvested systematically from Web pages, and how they can be associated with
human-readable names for the entities at large scale.
Starting with a simple extraction of identifiers and names from Web pages, we
show how we can use the properties of unique identifiers to filter out noise
and clean up the extraction result on the entire corpus. The end result is a
database of millions of uniquely identified entities of different types, with
an accuracy of 73--96% and a very high coverage compared to existing knowledge
bases. We use this database to compute novel statistics on the presence of
products, people, and other entities on the Web.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, 9 tables. Complete technical report for A.
Talaika, J. A. Biega, A. Amarilli, and F. M. Suchanek. IBEX: Harvesting
Entities from the Web Using Unique Identifiers. WebDB workshop, 201
The state space for two qutrits has a phase space structure in its core
We investigate the state space of bipartite qutrits. For states which are
locally maximally mixed we obtain an analog of the ``magic'' tetrahedron for
bipartite qubits--a magic simplex W. This is obtained via the Weyl group which
is a kind of ``quantization'' of classical phase space. We analyze how this
simplex W is embedded in the whole state space of two qutrits and discuss
symmetries and equivalences inside the simplex W. Because we are explicitly
able to construct optimal entanglement witnesses we obtain the border between
separable and entangled states. With our method we find also the total area of
bound entangled states of the parameter subspace under intervestigation. Our
considerations can also be applied to higher dimensions.Comment: 3 figure
Triaxial frequency sweep characterization for dense graded hot mix asphalt concrete mix design
Asphalt concrete mix design methods, such as the Marshall method, have historically been based on physical and phenomenological material testing empirically correlated to observed field performance. Changing pavement field state conditions such as increased trucking, poorer quality aggregate resources, and the aged state of road infrastructure in Saskatchewan have resulted in recent pavement performance to be outside traditional empirical performance prediction inference. It has been recognized worldwide that a mechanistic based asphalt concrete mix design methodology that directly quantifies structural behaviour of pavement under diverse field state conditions could significantly assist pavement design engineers. However, SHRP Level II and III mechanistic asphalt concrete characterization has been shown not to be pragmatic for characterizing asphalt concrete mixes. The objective of this research was to investigate the use of mechanistic material properties obtained from triaxial frequency sweep characterization in the rapid triaxial tester (RaTT) in conjunction with SHRP gyratory compaction properties for designing asphalt concrete for different asphalt cement contents, traffic loads, traffic speeds, and temperatures. RaTT testing was more responsive to variation in asphalt cement content outside of acceptable ranges of volumetric properties relative to Marshall stability and flow. This demonstrated the importance of specifying acceptable volumetric properties of asphalt concrete mixes. Correlation of material properties with volumetric measurements validated triaxial frequency sweep characterization in the RaTT.
Dynamic modulus, Poisson’s ratio, and phase angle results were in accordance with expected material behaviour, indicating that the RaTT provides reasonable asphalt concrete material properties. Also, the RaTT identified asphalt concrete to be a nonlinear viscoelastic material, as observed in the field. The RaTT was able to characterize SHRP gyratory compacted samples for the typical range of traction states, load frequencies, and temperatures that simulated a range of Saskatchewan field state conditions. Triaxial frequency sweep testing in the RaTT could significantly augment conventional volumetric mix analysis as well as the SHRP SuperpaveTM Level I asphalt concrete mix design system. RaTT testing was found to be cost effective, time efficient, and provided mechanistic material constitutive relations that can be employed for inelastic mechanistic mix design, road structural modelling, and asset management
Optical imaging of resonant electrical carrier injection into individual quantum dots
We image the micro-electroluminescence (EL) spectra of self-assembled InAs
quantum dots (QDs) embedded in the intrinsic region of a GaAs p-i-n diode and
demonstrate optical detection of resonant carrier injection into a single QD.
Resonant tunneling of electrons and holes into the QDs at bias voltages below
the flat-band condition leads to sharp EL lines characteristic of individual
QDs, accompanied by a spatial fragmentation of the surface EL emission into
small and discrete light- emitting areas, each with its own spectral
fingerprint and Stark shift. We explain this behavior in terms of Coulomb
interaction effects and the selective excitation of a small number of QDs
within the ensemble due to preferential resonant tunneling paths for carriers.Comment: 4 page
A second eigenvalue bound for the Dirichlet Schroedinger operator
Let be the th eigenvalue of the Schr\"odinger
operator with Dirichlet boundary conditions on a bounded domain and with the positive potential . Following the spirit of the
Payne-P\'olya-Weinberger conjecture and under some convexity assumptions on the
spherically rearranged potential , we prove that . Here denotes the ball, centered at the
origin, that satisfies the condition .
Further we prove under the same convexity assumptions on a spherically
symmetric potential , that decreases
when the radius of the ball increases.
We conclude with several results about the first two eigenvalues of the
Laplace operator with respect to a measure of Gaussian or inverted Gaussian
density
Early Cretaceous biogeographic and oceanographic synthesis of Leg 123 (off Northwestern Australia)
Biogeographic observations made by Leg 123 shipboard paleontologists for Lower Cretaceous nannofossils, foraminifers,
radiolarians, belemnites, and inoceramids are combined in this chapter to evaluate the paleoceanographic history
of the northwestern Australian margin and adjacent basins. Each fossil group is characterized at specific intervals of
Cretaceous time and compared with data from Tethyan and Southern Hemisphere high-latitude localities. Special attention
is given to the biogeographic observations made for the Falkland Plateau (DSDP Legs 36 and 71) and the Weddell Sea
(ODP Leg 113). Both areas have yielded valuable Lower Cretaceous fossil records of the circumantarctic high latitudes.
In general, the Neocomian fossil record from DSDP and ODP sites off northwestern Australia has important southern
high-latitude affinities and weak Tethyan influence. The same is true for the pelagic lithofacies: radiolarian chert and/or
nannofossil limestone, dominant in the Tethyan Lower Cretaceous, are minor lithologies in the Exmouth-Argo sites.
These observations, together with the young age of the Argo crust and plate tectonic considerations, suggest that the Argo
Basin was not part of the Tethys Realm.
The biogeography of the Neocomian radiolarian and nannofossil assemblages suggests opening of a seaway during
the Berriasian that connected the circumantarctic area with the Argo Basin, which resulted in the influx of southern
high-latitude waters.
This conclusion constrains the initial fit and break-up history of Gondwana. Our results favor the loose fit of the
western Australian margin with southeast India by Ricou et al. (1990), which accounts for a deeper water connection with
the Weddell-Mozambique basins via drowned marginal plateaus as early as the Berriasian. In fits of the du Toit-type
(1937), India would remain attached to Antarctica, at least until the late Valanginian, making such a connection
impossible.
After the Barremian, increasing Tethyan influence is evident in all fossil groups, although southern high-latitude taxa
are still present. Biogeographic domains, such as the southern extension of Nannoconus and Ticinella suggest paleolatitudes
of about 50°S for the Exmouth-Argo area. Alternatively, if paleolatitudes of about 35° are accepted, these
biogeographic limits were displaced northward at least 15° along Australia in comparison to the southern Atlantic. In this
case, the proto-circumantarctic current was deflected northward into an eastern boundary current off Australia and carried
circumantarctic cold water into the middle latitudes.
Late Aptian/early Albian time is characterized by mixing of Tethyan and southern faunal elements and a significant
gradient in Albian surface-water temperatures over 10° latitude along the Australian margin, as indicated by planktonic
foraminifers. Both phenomena may be indicative of convergence of temperate and antarctic waters near the Australian
margin. High fertility conditions, reflected by radiolarian cherts, are suggestive of coastal upwelling during that time
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