4,676 research outputs found
A Geometric Monte Carlo Algorithm for the Antiferromagnetic Ising model with "Topological" Term at
In this work we study the two and three-dimensional antiferromagnetic Ising
model with an imaginary magnetic field at . In order to
perform numerical simulations of the system we introduce a new geometric
algorithm not affected by the sign problem. Our results for the model are
in agreement with the analytical solutions. We also present new results for the
model which are qualitatively in agreement with mean-field predictions
A New Perspective on Clustered Planarity as a Combinatorial Embedding Problem
The clustered planarity problem (c-planarity) asks whether a hierarchically
clustered graph admits a planar drawing such that the clusters can be nicely
represented by regions. We introduce the cd-tree data structure and give a new
characterization of c-planarity. It leads to efficient algorithms for
c-planarity testing in the following cases. (i) Every cluster and every
co-cluster (complement of a cluster) has at most two connected components. (ii)
Every cluster has at most five outgoing edges.
Moreover, the cd-tree reveals interesting connections between c-planarity and
planarity with constraints on the order of edges around vertices. On one hand,
this gives rise to a bunch of new open problems related to c-planarity, on the
other hand it provides a new perspective on previous results.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
The phase transitions in 2D Z(N) vector models for N>4
We investigate both analytically and numerically the renormalization group
equations in 2D Z(N) vector models. The position of the critical points of the
two phase transitions for N>4 is established and the critical index \nu\ is
computed. For N=7, 17 the critical points are located by Monte Carlo
simulations and some of the corresponding critical indices are determined. The
behavior of the helicity modulus is studied for N=5, 7, 17. Using these and
other available Monte Carlo data we discuss the scaling of the critical points
with N and some other open theoretical problems.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 10 tables; version to appear on Phys. Rev.
Critical behavior of 3D Z(N) lattice gauge theories at zero temperature
Three-dimensional lattice gauge theories at zero temperature are
studied for various values of . Using a modified phenomenological
renormalization group, we explore the critical behavior of the generalized
model for . Numerical computations are used to simulate
vector models for for lattices with linear extension up
to . We locate the critical points of phase transitions and establish
their scaling with . The values of the critical indices indicate that the
models with belong to the universality class of the three-dimensional
model. However, the exponent derived from the heat capacity is
consistent with the Ising universality class. We discuss a possible resolution
of this puzzle. We also demonstrate the existence of a rotationally symmetric
region within the ordered phase for all at least in the finite
volume.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, 8 table
Advances on Testing C-Planarity of Embedded Flat Clustered Graphs
We show a polynomial-time algorithm for testing c-planarity of embedded flat
clustered graphs with at most two vertices per cluster on each face.Comment: Accepted at GD '1
"COOPETITION" FOR CULTURAL TOURISM: AN ACCOUNTING HISTORY PERSPECTIVE
This research proposes an accounting history perspective on “coopetition”—a competitive approach based on cooperation—in the cultural tourism sector. The analysis is based on the International Museums Campaigns proclaimed by UNESCO in 1956 and 1957 and investigates the contribution of the Egyptian Museum of Turin, in the context of the local tourism system, in constructing an event and its related communication campaign. The purpose is to highlight, through accounting documents, the importance of coopetition in stimulating visitors’ presence and reaching higher shared socio-economic results
The fate of spiral galaxies in clusters: The star formation history of the anemic Virgo cluster galaxy NGC 4569
We present a new method for studying the star formation history of late-type cluster galaxies undergoing gas starvation or a ram pressure stripping event by combining bidimensional multifrequency observations with multizone models of galactic chemical and spectrophotometric evolution. This method is applied to the Virgo Cluster anemic galaxy NGC 4569. We extract radial profiles from recently obtained UV GALEX images at 1530 and 2310 Å, from visible and near-IR narrow (Hα) and broadband images at different wavelengths (u, B, g, V, r, i, z, J, H, and K), from Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images, and from atomic and molecular gas maps. The model in the absence of interaction (characterized by its rotation velocity and spin parameter) is constrained by the unperturbed H-band light profile and by the Hα rotation curve. We can reconstruct the observed total gas radial density profile and the light surface brightness profiles at all wavelengths in a ram pressure stripping scenario by making simple assumptions about the gas removal process and the orbit of NGC 4569 inside the cluster. The observed profiles cannot be reproduced by simply stopping gas infall, thus mimicking starvation. Gas removal is required, which is more efficient in the outer disk, inducing radial quenching in the star formation activity, as observed and reproduced by the model. This observational result, consistent with theoretical predictions that a galaxy cluster-IGM interaction is able to modify structural disk parameters without gravitational perturbations, is discussed in the framework of the origin of lenticular galaxies in cluster
CoPIRIDE : new technical expertise relating to the anionic polymerisation of 1,3-Butadiene
Abstract onl
- …