3,304 research outputs found
Every contact manifold can be given a non-fillable contact structure
Recently Francisco Presas Mata constructed the first examples of closed
contact manifolds of dimension larger than 3 that contain a plastikstufe, and
hence are non-fillable. Using contact surgery on his examples we create on
every sphere S^{2n-1}, n>1, an exotic contact structure \xi_- that also
contains a plastikstufe. As a consequence, every closed contact manifold M
(except S^1) can be converted into a contact manifold that is not
(semi-positively) fillable by taking the connected sum of M with
(S^{2n-1},\xi_-).Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
A note on Reeb dynamics on the tight 3-sphere
We show that a nondegenerate tight contact form on the 3-sphere has exactly
two simple closed Reeb orbits if and only if the differential in linearized
contact homology vanishes. Moreover, in this case the Floquet multipliers and
Conley-Zehnder indices of the two Reeb orbits agree with those of a suitable
irrational ellipsoid in 4-space.Comment: 20 pages, no figure
Playing with parameters: structural parameterization in graphs
When considering a graph problem from a parameterized point of view, the
parameter chosen is often the size of an optimal solution of this problem (the
"standard" parameter). A natural subject for investigation is what happens when
we parameterize such a problem by various other parameters, some of which may
be the values of optimal solutions to different problems. Such research is
known as parameterized ecology. In this paper, we investigate seven natural
vertex problems, along with their respective parameters: the size of a maximum
independent set, the size of a minimum vertex cover, the size of a maximum
clique, the chromatic number, the size of a minimum dominating set, the size of
a minimum independent dominating set and the size of a minimum feedback vertex
set. We study the parameterized complexity of each of these problems with
respect to the standard parameter of the others.Comment: 17 page
Compactness results in Symplectic Field Theory
This is one in a series of papers devoted to the foundations of
Symplectic Field Theory sketched in [Y Eliashberg, A Givental and H
Hofer, Introduction to Symplectic Field Theory,
Geom. Funct. Anal. Special Volume, Part II (2000) 560--673]. We prove
compactness results for moduli spaces of holomorphic curves arising in
Symplectic Field Theory. The theorems generalize Gromov's compactness theorem
in [M Gromov, Pseudo-holomorphic curves in symplectic manifolds, Invent. Math.
82 (1985) 307--347] as well as compactness theorems in Floer homology theory,
[A Floer, The unregularized gradient flow of the symplectic action, Comm. Pure
Appl. Math. 41 (1988) 775--813 and Morse theory for Lagrangian intersections,
J. Diff. Geom. 28 (1988) 513--547], and in contact geometry, [H Hofer,
Pseudo-holomorphic curves and Weinstein conjecture in dimension three, Invent.
Math. 114 (1993) 307--347 and
H Hofer, K Wysocki and E Zehnder, Foliations of the Tight Three
Sphere, Annals of Mathematics, 157 (2003) 125--255].Comment: Published by Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol7/paper25.abs.htm
Enough
This collection of short stories follows the themes of trauma and the feeling of not being enough for yourself or others. This includes the pressures we put on ourselves to keep trying to be “right” or what we’re “supposed to be”. The idea is apparent that reaching out instead of self- isolating benefits the characters. What also connects these works is a hint of Southern flair, family, and humor. An irreverent voice connects the work and most of the characters. The inclusion of humor to get through suffering and as a way to talk about tough subjects is a concurrent theme. Body issues, sexual trauma, and aging among other themes are all touched upon and delivered with a side of pole dancing, a GoPro on a fat beagle, a night out with Nana’s ashes and more
An exact sequence for contact- and symplectic homology
A symplectic manifold with contact type boundary induces
a linearization of the contact homology of with corresponding linearized
contact homology . We establish a Gysin-type exact sequence in which the
symplectic homology of maps to , which in turn maps to
, by a map of degree -2, which then maps to . Furthermore, we
give a description of the degree -2 map in terms of rational holomorphic curves
with constrained asymptotic markers, in the symplectization of .Comment: Final version. Changes for v2: Proof of main theorem supplemented
with detailed discussion of continuation maps. Description of degree -2 map
rewritten with emphasis on asymptotic markers. Sec. 5.2 rewritten with
emphasis on 0-dim. moduli spaces. Transversality discussion reorganized for
clarity (now Remark 9). Various other minor modification
Rock-Around Orbits
The ability to observe resident space objects (RSOs) is a necessary requirement
for space situational awareness. While objects in a Low-Earth Orbit are easily ob-
servable by ground-based sensors, diffculties arise when trying to monitor objects
with larger orbits far above the Earth's surface, e.g. a Geostationary Orbit. Camera
systems mounted on satellites can provide an eff ective way to observe these objects.
Using a satellite with a speci c orbit relative to the RSO's orbit, one can passively
observe all the objects that share the RSO's orbit over a given time without active
maneuvering.
An orbit can be defi ned by ve parameters: semi-major axis, eccentricity, right
ascension of ascending node, inclination, and argument of perigee (a; e;
; i; !). Using
these parameters, one can create an orbit that will surround the target orbit allowing
the satellite in the Rock-Around Orbit (RAO) orbit to have a 360 degree view of
RSOs in the target orbit. The RAO orbit can be applied to any circular or elliptical
target orbit; and for any target orbit, there are many possible RAO orbits. Therefore,
diff erent methods are required to narrow down the selection of RAO orbits. These
methods use distance limitations, time requirements, orbit perturbations, and other
factors to limit the orbit selections.
The first step is to determine the range of RAO semi-major axes for any given
target orbit by ensuring the RAO orbit does not exceed a prescribed maximum al-
lowable distance, dmax from the target orbit. It is then necessary to determine the
eccentricity range for each possible RAO semi-major axis. This is done by ensuring the RAO still does not exceed dmax but also ensuring that the RAO orbit travels
inside and outside of the target orbit. This comprises one half of the rock-around
motion. The final step is to determine the inclination of the RAO orbit. Only a
small inclination different from that of the target orbit is required to complete the
rock-around motion while the maximum inclination is found by making sure the RAO
orbit does not exceed dmax.
It is then important to consider orbit perturbations, since they can destroy the
synchronization between the RAO and target orbit. By examining the e ffects of the
linear J2 perturbations on the right ascension of ascending node and argument of
perigee, the correct semi-major axis, eccentricity, and inclination can be chosen to
minimize the amount of fuel required for station keeping. The optimal values can be
found by finding the Delta v needed for di fferent combinations of the variables and then
choosing the values that provide the minimum Delta v.
For any target orbit, there are multiple RAO orbit possibilities that can provide
360 degree coverage of a target orbit. Even after eliminating some of them based
on the methods already described, there are still many possibilities. The rest of the
elimination process would then be based on the mission requirements which could be
the range of an on-board sensor, the thruster or reaction wheel controls, or any other
number of possibilities
Methods and results of modeling and transmission-line calculations of the superconducting dipole chains of CERN's LHC collider
Electrical modeling and simulation of the LHC magnet strings are being used to determine the key parameters that are needed for the design of the powering and energy extraction equipment. Poles and zeros of the Laplace expression approximating the Bode plot of the measured coil impedance are used to synthesize an R/L/C model of the magnet. Subsequently, this model is used to simulate the behavior of the LHC main dipole magnet string. Lumped transmission line behavior, impedance, resonance, propagation of the power supply ripple, ramping errors, energy extraction transients and their damping are presented in this paper. (3 refs)
A Methodology for Engineering Collaborative and ad-hoc Mobile Applications using SyD Middleware
Today’s web applications are more collaborative and utilize standard and ubiquitous Internet protocols. We have earlier developed System on Mobile Devices (SyD) middleware to rapidly develop and deploy collaborative applications over heterogeneous and possibly mobile devices hosting web objects. In this paper, we present the software engineering methodology for developing SyD-enabled web applications and illustrate it through a case study on two representative applications: (i) a calendar of meeting application, which is a collaborative application and (ii) a travel application which is an ad-hoc collaborative application. SyD-enabled web objects allow us to create a collaborative application rapidly with limited coding effort. In this case study, the modular software architecture allowed us to hide the inherent heterogeneity among devices, data stores, and networks by presenting a uniform and persistent object view of mobile objects interacting through XML/SOAP requests and responses. The performance results we obtained show that the application scales well as we increase the group size and adapts well within the constraints of mobile devices
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