18,717 research outputs found
Non-thermal radiation of black hole off canonical typicality
We study the Hawking radiation of black holes by considering the canonical
typicality. For the universe consisting of black holes and their outer part, we
directly obtain a non-thermal radiation spectrum of an arbitrary black hole
from its entropy, which only depends on a few external qualities (known as
hairs), such as mass, charge, and angular momentum. Our result shows that the
spectrum of the non-thermal radiation is independent of the detailed quantum
tunneling dynamics across black hole horizon. We prove that the black hole
information paradox is naturally resolved by taking account the correlation
between black hole and its radiation in our approach.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, pulished on Europhysics Letters, comments are
welcome
Dark information of black hole radiation raised by dark energy
The "lost" information of black hole through the Hawking radiation was
discovered being stored in the correlation among the non-thermally radiated
particles [Phys. Rev. Lett 85, 5042 (2000), Phys. Lett. B 675, 1 (2009)]. This
correlation information, which has not yet been proved locally observable in
principle, is named by dark information. In this paper, we systematically study
the influences of dark energy on black hole radiation, especially on the dark
information. Calculating the radiation spectrum in the existence of dark energy
by the approach of canonical typicality, which is reconfirmed by the quantum
tunneling method, we find that the dark energy will effectively lower the
Hawking temperature, and thus makes the black hole has longer life time. It is
also discovered that the non-thermal effect of the black hole radiation is
enhanced by dark energy so that the dark information of the radiation is
increased. Our observation shows that, besides the mechanical effect (e.g.,
gravitational lensing effect), the dark energy rises the the stored dark
information, which could be probed by a non-local coincidence measurement
similar to the coincidence counting of the Hanbury-Brown -Twiss experiment in
quantum optics.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, complete journal-info of Ref.[4] is added,
comments are welcome ([email protected]
Network monitoring in multicast networks using network coding
In this paper we show how information contained in robust network codes can be used for passive inference of possible locations of link failures or losses in a network. For distributed randomized network coding, we bound the probability of being able to distinguish among a given set of failure events, and give some experimental results for one and two link failures in randomly generated networks. We also bound the required field size and complexity for designing a robust network code that distinguishes among a given set of failure events
Playing is believing: the role of beliefs in multi-agent learning
We propose a new classification for multi-agent learning algorithms, with each league of players characterized by both their possible strategies and possible beliefs. Using this classification, we review the optimality of existing algorithms and discuss some insights that can be gained. We propose an incremental improvement to the existing algorithms that seems to achieve average payoffs that are at least the Nash equilibrium payoffs in the long-run against fair opponents.Singapore-MIT Alliance (SMA
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