4,739 research outputs found
On the Normality of Numbers to Different Bases
We prove independence of normality to different bases We show that the set of
real numbers that are normal to some base is Sigma^0_4 complete in the Borel
hierarchy of subsets of real numbers. This was an open problem, initiated by
Alexander Kechris, and conjectured by Ditzen 20 years ago
Mathematic & mathematics education: searching for common ground, edited by M. Fried and T. Dreyfus, New York, Springer, 2014, 402 pp., £90, ISBN 978-94-007-7472-8
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Research in Mathematics Education on 22nd Aug 2014, available online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14794802.2014.93735
Normal Numbers and the Borel Hierarchy
We show that the set of absolutely normal numbers is -complete in the Borel hierarchy of subsets of real numbers. Similarly,
the set of absolutely normal numbers is -complete in the effective
Borel hierarchy
Irrationality exponent, Hausdorff dimension and effectivization
We generalize the classical theorem by Jarnik and Besicovitch on the irrationality exponents of real numbers and Hausdorff dimension and show that the two notions are independent. For any real number a greater than or equal to 2 and any non-negative real b be less than or equal to 2 / a, we show that there is a Cantor-like set with Hausdorff dimension equal to b such that, with respect to its uniform measure, almost all real numbers have irrationality exponent equal to a. We give an analogous result relating the irrationality exponent and the effective Hausdorff dimension of individual real numbers. We prove that there is a Cantor-like set such that, with respect to its uniform measure, almost all elements in the set have effective Hausdorff dimension equal to b and irrationality exponent equal to a. In each case, we obtain the desired set as a distinguished path in a tree of Cantor sets.Fil: Becher, Veronica Andrea. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de Investigación en Ciencias de la Computación. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Investigación en Ciencias de la Computación; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de Computación; ArgentinaFil: Reimann, Jan. State University of Pennsylvania; Estados UnidosFil: Slaman, Theodore A.. University of California. Department of Mathematics; Estados Unido
Perfect Necklaces
We introduce a variant of de Bruijn words that we call perfect necklaces. Fix
a finite alphabet. Recall that a word is a finite sequence of symbols in the
alphabet and a circular word, or necklace, is the equivalence class of a word
under rotations. For positive integers k and n, we call a necklace
(k,n)-perfect if each word of length k occurs exactly n times at positions
which are different modulo n for any convention on the starting point. We call
a necklace perfect if it is (k,k)-perfect for some k. We prove that every
arithmetic sequence with difference coprime with the alphabet size induces a
perfect necklace. In particular, the concatenation of all words of the same
length in lexicographic order yields a perfect necklace. For each k and n, we
give a closed formula for the number of (k,n)-perfect necklaces. Finally, we
prove that every infinite periodic sequence whose period coincides with some
(k,n)-perfect necklace for any n, passes all statistical tests of size up to k,
but not all larger tests. This last theorem motivated this work
A computable absolutely normal Liouville number
We give an algorithm that computes an absolutely normal Liouville number.Fil: Becher, Veronica Andrea. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de Computación; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Heiber, Pablo Ariel. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de Computación; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Slaman, Theodore A.. University of California at Berkeley; Estados Unido
Top-Quark Pair Production Beyond Next-to-Leading Order
We report on recent calculations of the differential cross section for
top-quark pair production at hadron colliders. The results are differential
with respect to the top-pair invariant mass and to the partonic scattering
angle. In these calculations, which were carried out by employing
soft-collinear effective theory techniques, we resummed threshold logarithms up
to next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic order. Starting from the differential
cross section, it is possible to obtain theoretical predictions for the
invariant-mass distribution and the total cross section. We summarize here our
results for these observables, and we compare them with the results obtained
from different calculational methods.Comment: Talk presented at Loops and Legs in Quantum Field Theory 2010,
Woerlitz, Germany, April 25-30, 2010. 6 page
On the Structure of Infrared Singularities of Gauge-Theory Amplitudes
A closed formula is obtained for the infrared singularities of dimensionally
regularized, massless gauge-theory scattering amplitudes with an arbitrary
number of legs and loops. It follows from an all-order conjecture for the
anomalous-dimension matrix of n-jet operators in soft-collinear effective
theory. We show that the form of this anomalous dimension is severely
constrained by soft-collinear factorization, non-abelian exponentiation, and
the behavior of amplitudes in collinear limits. Using a diagrammatic analysis,
we demonstrate that these constraints imply that to three-loop order the
anomalous dimension involves only two-parton correlations, with the possible
exception of a single color structure multiplying a function of conformal cross
ratios depending on the momenta of four external partons, which would have to
vanish in all two-particle collinear limits. We argue that such a function does
not appear at three-loop order, and that the same is true in higher orders. Our
formula predicts Casimir scaling of the cusp anomalous dimension to all orders
in perturbation theory, and we explicitly check that the constraints exclude
the appearance of higher Casimir invariants at four loops. Using known results
for the quark and gluon form factors, we derive the three-loop coefficients of
the 1/epsilon^n pole terms (with n=1,...,6) for an arbitrary n-parton
scattering amplitude in massless QCD. This generalizes Catani's two-loop
formula proposed in 1998.Comment: 46 pages, 9 figures; v2: improved treatment of collinear limits,
references added; v3: improved discussion of non-abelian exponentiation,
references updated; v4: typo in eq. (17) fixed, references updated; v5:
additional term in (17
Propagation of sound through the Earth's atmosphere. 1: Measurement of sound absorption in the air. 2: Measurement of ground impedance
The fabrication of parts for the acoustic ground impedance meter was completed, and the instrument tested. Acoustic ground impedance meter, automatic data processing system, cooling system for the resonant tube, and final results of sound absorption in N2-H2O gas mixtures at elevated temperatures are described
Examining the mismatch between the training and assessment of band and orchestra conductors in Michigan.
The dissertation builds on the research literature studying conductor training and the musical attributes requisite for adequate conducting skill and musical performance. The study also provides evidence that effective tools for evaluation of band and orchestra conductors are prevalent throughout the music education literature. Public school administrators, however, are generally unaware of that literature and often lack adequate assessment instruments to measure conductor effectiveness in rehearsal settings. Conductors have been teaching in the public schools for almost a century, however, many still undergo assessment procedures as if they were in an academic classroom. The study was assisted by the Michigan School Band and Orchestra Association (MSBOA) who provided a clean set of respondents representing middle school and high school conductors from the State of Michigan. Three research questions framed the study. The first research question identified to what extent the conductors\u27 formal training matched up with the musical attributes requisite for adequate conducting skill and musical performance. The literature review provided the context for a comparison of these training attributes based on the frequency of those attributes found in the research studies. The survey results from the study respondents provided a compilation of the means and standard deviations of the conductors\u27 formal training as compared with the musical attributes requisite to adequate conducting skill and musical performance. The second research question investigated whether the conductors perceived that their review process evaluated these same musical attributes. The researcher used a Pearson-Product Moment correlation analysis to compare the means of those musical skills received in their studies with the assessment criteria used by administrators. This method measured the strength of the relationship between the training and the assessment instruments used by administrators in the public schools. For the third research question, the study determined to what extent the review process contributed to their job satisfaction. The researcher used a regression analysis to compare overall job satisfaction with the evaluative process and with specific variables that correlated to job satisfaction or dissatisfaction. A regression analysis instrument measured the difference for each factor to determine the statistical association that assessment variables had with job satisfaction. The final chapter summarizes the study\u27s implications for conductor assessment and provides a possible framework for use in Michigan public schools for administrators to effectively evaluate conductors. This proposed assessment instrument aligns the formal musical training attributes found in the literature with those of successful musical performance practices and offers opportunities for growth and continued development of the conductor
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