1,656 research outputs found
HISCAT: A proposed new scatter facility in Northern Scandinavia
It is proposed that a new versatile ionospheric and atmospheric scatter radar be constructed in northern Scandavia through a multinational collaborative effort. The new facility tentatively named HISCAT (High frequency, High power, High latitude, Heating and Ionospheric Scatter facility), should be used for scientific investigations of: the physics of the neutral (middle) atmosphere; fundamental plasma phenomena, natural or artificially induced in the ionosphere; electrodynamic conditions at high altitudes above the auroral region and in the polar cap ionosphere; plasma waves in the solar atmosphere. The system should thus be able to operate as a mesosphere-stratosphere-troposphere (MST) radar, a so-called ionospheric modification facility, incoherent-scatter radar, coherent-scatter radar, and solar radar. Basically, the new facility should be a device that can operate simultaneously on several frequencies in the frequency range 5 to 50 MHz not covered by other instruments. It should comprise: powerful transmitters, capable of delivering a total average power of several megawatts; an advanced phased antenna array of high gain forming one or two steerable and well collimated beams; and an advanced data collection and analysis system
Solar Protons and Magnetic Storms in July 1961
Injun i satellite observations of solar protons and magnetic storm
Prediction and explanation in the multiverse
Probabilities in the multiverse can be calculated by assuming that we are
typical representatives in a given reference class. But is this class well
defined? What should be included in the ensemble in which we are supposed to be
typical? There is a widespread belief that this question is inherently vague,
and that there are various possible choices for the types of reference objects
which should be counted in. Here we argue that the ``ideal'' reference class
(for the purpose of making predictions) can be defined unambiguously in a
rather precise way, as the set of all observers with identical information
content. When the observers in a given class perform an experiment, the class
branches into subclasses who learn different information from the outcome of
that experiment. The probabilities for the different outcomes are defined as
the relative numbers of observers in each subclass. For practical purposes,
wider reference classes can be used, where we trace over all information which
is uncorrelated to the outcome of the experiment, or whose correlation with it
is beyond our current understanding. We argue that, once we have gathered all
practically available evidence, the optimal strategy for making predictions is
to consider ourselves typical in any reference class we belong to, unless we
have evidence to the contrary. In the latter case, the class must be
correspondingly narrowed.Comment: Minor clarifications adde
Anthropic reasoning in multiverse cosmology and string theory
Anthropic arguments in multiverse cosmology and string theory rely on the
weak anthropic principle (WAP). We show that the principle, though ultimately a
tautology, is nevertheless ambiguous. It can be reformulated in one of two
unambiguous ways, which we refer to as WAP_1 and WAP_2. We show that WAP_2, the
version most commonly used in anthropic reasoning, makes no physical
predictions unless supplemented by a further assumption of "typicality", and we
argue that this assumption is both misguided and unjustified. WAP_1, however,
requires no such supplementation; it directly implies that any theory that
assigns a non-zero probability to our universe predicts that we will observe
our universe with probability one. We argue, therefore, that WAP_1 is
preferable, and note that it has the benefit of avoiding the inductive
overreach characteristic of much anthropic reasoning.Comment: 7 pages. Expanded discussion of selection effects and some minor
clarifications, as publishe
The influence of ion binding and ion specific potentials on the double layer pressure between charged bilayers at low salt concentrations
Measurements of surface forces between double-chained cationic bilayers adsorbed onto molecularly smooth mica surfaces across different millimolar salt solutions have revealed a large degree of ion specificity [Pashley et al., J. Phys. Chem. 90, 1637 (1986)]. This has been interpreted in terms of highly specific anion binding to the adsorbed bilayers. We show here that inclusion in the double layer theory of nonspecific ion binding and ion specific nonelectrostatic potentials acting between ions and the two surfaces can account for the phenomenon. It also gives the right Hofmeister series for the double layer pressure.M.B. thanks the Swedish Research Council and the German
Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller Forschungvereinigungen
Otto von Guericke e.V. AiF for financial support.
E.R.A.L. and F.W.T. thank FAPERJ and CNPq the Brazilian
Agencies for financial support
Drude model and Lifshitz formula
Since nearly 10 years, it is known that inserting the permittivity of the
Drude model into the Lifshitz formula for free energy causes a violation of the
third law of thermodynamics. In this paper we show that the standard Matsubara
formulation for free energy contains a contribution that is non-perturbative in
the relaxation parameter. We argue that the correct formula must have a
perturbative expansion and conclude that the standard Matsubara formulation
with the permittivity of the Drude model inserted is not correct. We trace the
non-perturbative contribution in the complex frequency plane, where it shows up
as a self-intersection or a bifurcation of the integration path.Comment: accepted for publication in EPJ
Sequential Extensions of Causal and Evidential Decision Theory
Moving beyond the dualistic view in AI where agent and environment are
separated incurs new challenges for decision making, as calculation of expected
utility is no longer straightforward. The non-dualistic decision theory
literature is split between causal decision theory and evidential decision
theory. We extend these decision algorithms to the sequential setting where the
agent alternates between taking actions and observing their consequences. We
find that evidential decision theory has two natural extensions while causal
decision theory only has one.Comment: ADT 201
Self-Modification of Policy and Utility Function in Rational Agents
Any agent that is part of the environment it interacts with and has versatile
actuators (such as arms and fingers), will in principle have the ability to
self-modify -- for example by changing its own source code. As we continue to
create more and more intelligent agents, chances increase that they will learn
about this ability. The question is: will they want to use it? For example,
highly intelligent systems may find ways to change their goals to something
more easily achievable, thereby `escaping' the control of their designers. In
an important paper, Omohundro (2008) argued that goal preservation is a
fundamental drive of any intelligent system, since a goal is more likely to be
achieved if future versions of the agent strive towards the same goal. In this
paper, we formalise this argument in general reinforcement learning, and
explore situations where it fails. Our conclusion is that the self-modification
possibility is harmless if and only if the value function of the agent
anticipates the consequences of self-modifications and use the current utility
function when evaluating the future.Comment: Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) 201
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