4,062 research outputs found
Fundamental measure theory for mixtures of parallel hard cubes. II. Phase behavior of the one-component fluid and of the binary mixture
A previously developed fundamental measure fucntional [J. Chem. Phys.
vol.107, 6379 (1997)] is used to study the phase behavior of a system of
parallel hard cubes. The single-component fluid exhibits a continuous
transition to a solid with an anomalously large density of vacancies. The
binary mixture has a demixing transition for edge-length ratios below 0.1.
Freezing in this mixture reveals that at least the phase rich in large cubes
lies in the region where the uniform fluid is unstable, hence suggesting a
fluid-solid phase separation. A method is develop to study very asymmetric
binary mixtures by taking the limit of zero size ratio (scaling the density and
fugacity of the solvent as appropriate) in the semi-grand ensemble where the
chemical potential of the solvent is fixed. With this procedure the mixture is
exactly mapped onto a one-component fluid of parallel adhesive hard cubes. At
any density and solvent fugacity the large cubes are shown to collapse into a
close-packed solid. Nevertheless the phase diagram contains a large
metastability region with fluid and solid phases. Upon introduction of a slight
polydispersity in the large cubes the system shows the typical phase diagram of
a fluid with an isostructural solid-solid transition (with the exception of a
continuous freezing). Consequences about the phase behavior of binary mixtures
of hard core particles are then drawn.Comment: 14 pages, 6 eps figures, uses revtex, amstex, epsfig, and multicol
style file
Weak-Scale Hidden Sector and Energy Transport in Fireball Models of Gamma-Ray Bursts
The annihilation of pairs of very weakly interacting particles in the
neibourghood of gamma-ray sources is introduced here as a plausible mechanism
to overcome the baryon load problem. This way we can explain how these very
high energy gamma-ray bursts can be powered at the onset of very energetic
events like supernovae (collapsars) explosions or coalescences of binary
neutron stars. Our approach uses the weak-scale hidden sector models in which
the Higgs sector of the standard model is extended to include a gauge singlet
that only interacts with the Higgs particle. These particles would be produced
either during the implosion of the red supergiant star core or at the aftermath
of a neutron star binary merger. The whole energetics and timescales of the
relativistic blast wave, the fireball, are reproduced.Comment: 4 pp, 1 ps fig, text revised and improve
Imperfect Imitation Can Enhance Cooperation
The promotion of cooperation on spatial lattices is an important issue in
evolutionary game theory. This effect clearly depends on the update rule: it
diminishes with stochastic imitative rules whereas it increases with
unconditional imitation. To study the transition between both regimes, we
propose a new evolutionary rule, which stochastically combines unconditional
imitation with another imitative rule. We find that, surprinsingly, in many
social dilemmas this rule yields higher cooperative levels than any of the two
original ones. This nontrivial effect occurs because the basic rules induce a
separation of timescales in the microscopic processes at cluster interfaces.
The result is robust in the space of 2x2 symmetric games, on regular lattices
and on scale-free networks.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The Shared Reward Dilemma
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding
it. We study the effect of sharing a reward among cooperators in the most
stringent form of social dilemma, namely the Prisoner's Dilemma. Specifically,
for a group of players that collect payoffs by playing a pairwise Prisoner's
Dilemma game with their partners, we consider an external entity that
distributes a fixed reward equally among all cooperators. Thus, individuals
confront a new dilemma: on the one hand, they may be inclined to choose the
shared reward despite the possibility of being exploited by defectors; on the
other hand, if too many players do that, cooperators will obtain a poor reward
and defectors will outperform them. By appropriately tuning the amount to be
shared a vast variety of scenarios arises, including traditional ones in the
study of cooperation as well as more complex situations where unexpected
behavior can occur. We provide a complete classification of the equilibria of
the -player game as well as of its evolutionary dynamics.Comment: Major rewriting, new appendix, new figure
The Economic Value of A Passport: A Model of Citizenship and the Social Dividend in a Global Economy -
In a world of fully mobile capital and highly immobile labour, citizenship is effectively an entitlement to the 'dividend' arising from the social infrastructure accumulated in a particular country of birth. The paper opens with the reasons why the passport (ie citizenship) can in consequence be considered as an economic asset with a value that can in principle be determined analytically. A simple endogenous growth model is set up which defines the level and growth of per capita income in a world economy where capital is fully mobile and labour is fully immobile, and where governments set a rate of taxation such as to achieve the optimal balance between the stocks of private capital and social infrastructure. The 'passport value' is then defined as the difference between national income net of capital charges, wage costs and taxes when divided equally among the population; and is shown to depend on per capita income, the rate of growth and the parameters of the production function. A preliminary estimate of the main variables in the model, and the scale of expenditure on social infrastructure, for a wide range of countries suggests what the order of magnitude of the 'value of a passport' might be. A brief section on the wider implications of the findings concludes.
A white dwarf-neutron star relativistic binary model for soft gamma-ray repeaters
A scenario for SGRs is introduced in which gravitational radiation reaction
effects drive the dynamics of an ultrashort orbital period X-ray binary
embracing a high-mass donor white dwarf (WD) to a rapidly rotating low
magnetised massive neutron star (NS) surrounded by a thick, dense and massive
accretion torus. Driven by GR reaction, sparsely, the binary separation
reduces, the WD overflows its Roche lobe and the mass transfer drives unstable
the accretion disk around the NS. As the binary circular orbital period is a
multiple integer number () of the period of the WD fundamental mode (Pons et
al. 2002), the WD is since long pulsating at its fundamental mode; and most of
its harmonics, due to the tidal interaction with its NS orbital companion.
Hence, when the powerful irradiation glows onto the WD; from the fireball
ejected as part of the disk matter slumps onto the NS, it is partially
absorbed. This huge energy excites other WD radial (-mode) pulsations
(Podsiadlowski 1991,1995). After each mass-transfer episode the binary
separation (and orbital period) is augmented significantly (Deloye & Bildsten
2003; Al\'ecyan & Morsink 2004) due to the binary's angular momentum
redistribution. Thus a new adiabatic inspiral phase driven by GR reaction
starts which brings the binary close again, and the process repeats. This model
allows to explain most of SGRs observational features: their recurrent
activity, energetics of giant superoutbursts and quiescent stages, and
particularly the intriguing subpulses discovered by BeppoSAX (Feroci et al.
1999), which are suggested here to be {\it overtones} of the WD radial
fundamental mode (see the accompanying paper: Mosquera Cuesta 2004b).Comment: This paper was submitted as a "Letter to the Editor" of MNRAS in July
17/2004. Since that time no answer or referee report was provided to the
Author [MNRAS publication policy limits reviewal process no longer than one
month (+/- half more) for the reviewal of this kind of submission). I hope
this contribution is not receiving a similar "peer-reviewing" as given to the
A. Dar and A. De Rujula's "Cannonball model for gamma-ray bursts", or to the
R.K. Williams' "Penrose process for energy extraction from rotating black
holes". The author welcomes criticisms and suggestions on this pape
Catastrophic regime shifts in model ecological communities are true phase transitions
Ecosystems often undergo abrupt regime shifts in response to gradual external
changes. These shifts are theoretically understood as a regime switch between
alternative stable states of the ecosystem dynamical response to smooth changes
in external conditions. Usual models introduce nonlinearities in the
macroscopic dynamics of the ecosystem that lead to different stable attractors
among which the shift takes place. Here we propose an alternative explanation
of catastrophic regime shifts based on a recent model that pictures ecological
communities as systems in continuous fluctuation, according to certain
transition probabilities, between different micro-states in the phase space of
viable communities. We introduce a spontaneous extinction rate that accounts
for gradual changes in external conditions, and upon variations on this control
parameter the system undergoes a regime shift with similar features to those
previously reported. Under our microscopic viewpoint we recover the main
results obtained in previous theoretical and empirical work (anomalous
variance, hysteresis cycles, trophic cascades). The model predicts a gradual
loss of species in trophic levels from bottom to top near the transition. But
more importantly, the spectral analysis of the transition probability matrix
allows us to rigorously establish that we are observing the fingerprints, in a
finite size system, of a true phase transition driven by background
extinctions.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, revised versio
An optimal transportation approach for assessing almost stochastic order
When stochastic dominance does not hold, we can improve
agreement to stochastic order by suitably trimming both distributions. In this
work we consider the Wasserstein distance, , to stochastic
order of these trimmed versions. Our characterization for that distance
naturally leads to consider a -based index of disagreement with
stochastic order, . We provide asymptotic
results allowing to test vs , that,
under rejection, would give statistical guarantee of almost stochastic
dominance. We include a simulation study showing a good performance of the
index under the normal model
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