688 research outputs found
The Poetics of 'Making’ in the Manuscript Writings of Constance Aston Fowler
Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)FP/2007–2013/ERC Grant Agreement n. 615545Medieval and Early Modern Studie
Single-vehicle data of highway traffic - a statistical analysis
In the present paper single-vehicle data of highway traffic are analyzed in
great detail. By using the single-vehicle data directly empirical time-headway
distributions and speed-distance relations can be established. Both quantities
yield relevant information about the microscopic states. Several fundamental
diagrams are also presented, which are based on time-averaged quantities and
compared with earlier empirical investigations. In the remaining part
time-series analyses of the averaged as well as the single-vehicle data are
carried out. The results will be used in order to propose objective criteria
for an identification of the different traffic states, e.g. synchronized
traffic.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures, RevTe
Self-optimization, community stability, and fluctuations in two individual-based models of biological coevolution
We compare and contrast the long-time dynamical properties of two
individual-based models of biological coevolution. Selection occurs via
multispecies, stochastic population dynamics with reproduction probabilities
that depend nonlinearly on the population densities of all species resident in
the community. New species are introduced through mutation. Both models are
amenable to exact linear stability analysis, and we compare the analytic
results with large-scale kinetic Monte Carlo simulations, obtaining the
population size as a function of an average interspecies interaction strength.
Over time, the models self-optimize through mutation and selection to
approximately maximize a community fitness function, subject only to
constraints internal to the particular model. If the interspecies interactions
are randomly distributed on an interval including positive values, the system
evolves toward self-sustaining, mutualistic communities. In contrast, for the
predator-prey case the matrix of interactions is antisymmetric, and a nonzero
population size must be sustained by an external resource. Time series of the
diversity and population size for both models show approximate 1/f noise and
power-law distributions for the lifetimes of communities and species. For the
mutualistic model, these two lifetime distributions have the same exponent,
while their exponents are different for the predator-prey model. The difference
is probably due to greater resilience toward mass extinctions in the food-web
like communities produced by the predator-prey model.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures. Discussion of early-time dynamics added. J.
Math. Biol., in pres
Punctuated equilibria and 1/f noise in a biological coevolution model with individual-based dynamics
We present a study by linear stability analysis and large-scale Monte Carlo
simulations of a simple model of biological coevolution. Selection is provided
through a reproduction probability that contains quenched, random interspecies
interactions, while genetic variation is provided through a low mutation rate.
Both selection and mutation act on individual organisms. Consistent with some
current theories of macroevolutionary dynamics, the model displays
intermittent, statistically self-similar behavior with punctuated equilibria.
The probability density for the lifetimes of ecological communities is well
approximated by a power law with exponent near -2, and the corresponding power
spectral densities show 1/f noise (flicker noise) over several decades. The
long-lived communities (quasi-steady states) consist of a relatively small
number of mutualistically interacting species, and they are surrounded by a
``protection zone'' of closely related genotypes that have a very low
probability of invading the resident community. The extent of the protection
zone affects the stability of the community in a way analogous to the height of
the free-energy barrier surrounding a metastable state in a physical system.
Measures of biological diversity are on average stationary with no discernible
trends, even over our very long simulation runs of approximately 3.4x10^7
generations.Comment: 20 pages RevTex. Minor revisions consistent with published versio
A Current Mode Detector Array for Gamma-Ray Asymmetry Measurements
We have built a CsI(Tl) gamma-ray detector array for the NPDGamma experiment
to search for a small parity-violating directional asymmetry in the angular
distribution of 2.2 MeV gamma-rays from the capture of polarized cold neutrons
by protons with a sensitivity of several ppb. The weak pion-nucleon coupling
constant can be determined from this asymmetry. The small size of the asymmetry
requires a high cold neutron flux, control of systematic errors at the ppb
level, and the use of current mode gamma-ray detection with vacuum photo diodes
and low-noise solid-state preamplifiers. The average detector photoelectron
yield was determined to be 1300 photoelectrons per MeV. The RMS width seen in
the measurement is therefore dominated by the fluctuations in the number of
gamma rays absorbed in the detector (counting statistics) rather than the
intrinsic detector noise. The detectors were tested for noise performance,
sensitivity to magnetic fields, pedestal stability and cosmic background. False
asymmetries due to gain changes and electronic pickup in the detector system
were measured to be consistent with zero to an accuracy of in a few
hours. We report on the design, operating criteria, and the results of
measurements performed to test the detector array.Comment: 33 pages, 20 figures, 2 table
Corrections to Hawking-like Radiation for a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker Universe
Recently, a Hamilton-Jacobi method beyond semiclassical approximation in
black hole physics was developed by \emph{Banerjee} and
\emph{Majhi}\cite{beyond0}. In this paper, we generalize their analysis of
black holes to the case of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) universe. It is
shown that all the higher order quantum corrections in the single particle
action are proportional to the usual semiclassical contribution. The
corrections to the Hawking-like temperature and entropy of apparent horizon for
FRW universe are also obtained. In the corrected entropy, the area law involves
logarithmic area correction together with the standard inverse power of area
term.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, comments are welcome; v2: references added and
some typoes corrected, to appear in Euro.Phys.J.C; v3:a defect corrected. We
thank Dr.Elias Vagenas for pointing out a defect of our pape
A study of open strings ending on giant gravitons, spin chains and integrability
We systematically study the spectrum of open strings attached to half BPS
giant gravitons in the N=4 SYM AdS/CFT setup. We find that some null
trajectories along the giant graviton are actually null geodesics of AdS_5x
S^5, so that we can study the problem in a plane wave limit setup. We also find
the description of these states at weak 't Hooft coupling in the dual CFT. We
show how the dual description is given by an open spin chain with variable
number of sites. We analyze this system in detail and find numerical evidence
for integrability. We also discover an interesting instability of long open
strings in Ramond-Ramond backgrounds that is characterized by having a
continuum spectrum of the string, which is separated from the ground state by a
gap. This instability arises from accelerating the D-brane on which the strings
end via the Ramond-Ramond field. From the integrable spin chain point of view,
this instability prevents us from formulating the integrable structure in terms
of a Bethe Ansatz construction.Comment: 38 pages+appendices, 9 figures. Uses JHEP3. v2: added reference
Shortest paths on systems with power-law distributed long-range connections
We discuss shortest-path lengths on periodic rings of size L
supplemented with an average of pL randomly located long-range links whose
lengths are distributed according to P_l \sim l^{-\xpn}. Using rescaling
arguments and numerical simulation on systems of up to sites, we show
that a characteristic length exists such that for
. For small p we find
that the shortest-path length satisfies the scaling relation
\ell(r,\xpn,p)/\xi = f(\xpn,r/\xi). Three regions with different asymptotic
behaviors are found, respectively: a) \xpn>2 where , b)
1<\xpn<2 where 0<\theta_s(\xpn)<1/2 and, c) \xpn<1 where
behaves logarithmically, i.e. . The characteristic length is
of the form with \nu=1/(2-\xpn) in region b), but depends
on L as well in region c). A directed model of shortest-paths is solved and
compared with numerical results.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, revtex4. Submitted to PR
Black Holes in Higher-Dimensional Gravity
These lectures review some of the recent progress in uncovering the phase
structure of black hole solutions in higher-dimensional vacuum Einstein
gravity. The two classes on which we focus are Kaluza-Klein black holes, i.e.
static solutions with an event horizon in asymptotically flat spaces with
compact directions, and stationary solutions with an event horizon in
asymptotically flat space. Highlights include the recently constructed
multi-black hole configurations on the cylinder and thin rotating black rings
in dimensions higher than five. The phase diagram that is emerging for each of
the two classes will be discussed, including an intriguing connection that
relates the phase structure of Kaluza-Klein black holes with that of
asymptotically flat rotating black holes.Comment: latex, 49 pages, 5 figures. Lectures to appear in the proceedings of
the Fourth Aegean Summer School, Mytiline, Lesvos, Greece, September 17-22,
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