19,043 research outputs found

    Parallel and Distributed Simulation from Many Cores to the Public Cloud (Extended Version)

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    In this tutorial paper, we will firstly review some basic simulation concepts and then introduce the parallel and distributed simulation techniques in view of some new challenges of today and tomorrow. More in particular, in the last years there has been a wide diffusion of many cores architectures and we can expect this trend to continue. On the other hand, the success of cloud computing is strongly promoting the everything as a service paradigm. Is parallel and distributed simulation ready for these new challenges? The current approaches present many limitations in terms of usability and adaptivity: there is a strong need for new evaluation metrics and for revising the currently implemented mechanisms. In the last part of the paper, we propose a new approach based on multi-agent systems for the simulation of complex systems. It is possible to implement advanced techniques such as the migration of simulated entities in order to build mechanisms that are both adaptive and very easy to use. Adaptive mechanisms are able to significantly reduce the communication cost in the parallel/distributed architectures, to implement load-balance techniques and to cope with execution environments that are both variable and dynamic. Finally, such mechanisms will be used to build simulations on top of unreliable cloud services.Comment: Tutorial paper published in the Proceedings of the International Conference on High Performance Computing and Simulation (HPCS 2011). Istanbul (Turkey), IEEE, July 2011. ISBN 978-1-61284-382-

    The Simulation Model Partitioning Problem: an Adaptive Solution Based on Self-Clustering (Extended Version)

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    This paper is about partitioning in parallel and distributed simulation. That means decomposing the simulation model into a numberof components and to properly allocate them on the execution units. An adaptive solution based on self-clustering, that considers both communication reduction and computational load-balancing, is proposed. The implementation of the proposed mechanism is tested using a simulation model that is challenging both in terms of structure and dynamicity. Various configurations of the simulation model and the execution environment have been considered. The obtained performance results are analyzed using a reference cost model. The results demonstrate that the proposed approach is promising and that it can reduce the simulation execution time in both parallel and distributed architectures

    Spin equilibrium in strongly-magnetized accreting stars

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    Strongly magnetized accreting stars are often hypothesized to be in `spin equilibrium' with their surrounding accretion flows, which requires that the accretion rate changes more slowly than it takes the star to reach spin equilibrium. This is not true for most magnetically accreting stars, which have strongly variable accretion outbursts on time-scales much shorter than the time it would take to reach spin equilibrium. This paper examines how accretion outbursts affect the time a star takes to reach spin equilibrium and its final equilibrium spin period. I consider several different models for angular momentum loss -- either carried away in an outflow, lost to a stellar wind, or transferred back to the accretion disc (the `trapped disc'). For transient sources, the outflow scenario leads to significantly longer times to reach spin equilibrium (\sim10x), and shorter equilibrium spin periods than would be expected from spin equilibrium arguments, while the `trapped disc' does not. The results suggest that disc trapping plays a significant role in the spin evolution of strongly magnetic stars, with some caveats for young stellar objects.Comment: version accepted by MNRAS; some significant changes to conclusions about FU Ori star

    Low Energy Neutrino Measurements

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    Low Energy solar neutrino detection plays a fundamental role in understanding both solar astrophysics and particle physics. After introducing the open questions on both fields, we review here the major results of the last two years and expectations for the near future from Borexino, Super-Kamiokande, SNO and KamLAND experiments as well as from upcoming (SNO+) and planned (LENA) experiments. Scintillator neutrino detectors are also powerful antineutrino detectors such as those emitted by the Earth crust and mantle. First measurements of geo-neutrinos have occurred and can bring fundamental contribution in understanding the geophysics of the planet.Comment: 18 pages, 36 figures, proceedings of XXV Lepton Photon, 22 to 27 August 2011, published on 2012-10-0

    Quasi-Periodic Oscillations in magnetars: linking variability and emission

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    I present recent results studying flare emission in magnetars. Strong quasi-periodic oscillations observed in the tail of giant magnetar flares are frequently interpreted as evidence for global seismic oscillations. I demonstrate that such a global oscillation is not directly observable in the lightcurve. New work suggests the amplitude for the strongest QPO stays nearly constant in the rotation phases where it is observed, which I argue suggests it is produced by an additional emission process from the star.Comment: Proceedings of IAUS 291 "Neutron Stars and Pulsars: Challenges and Opportunities after 80 years", J. van Leeuwen (ed.); 4 pages, 3 figure

    Latent space models for multidimensional network data

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    Network data are any relational data recorded among a group of individuals, the nodes. When multiple relations are recorded among the same set of nodes, a more complex object arises, which we refer to as “multidimensional network”, or “multiplex”, where different relations corresponding to different networks. In the past, statistical analysis of networks has mainly focused on single-relation network data, referring to a single relation of interest. Only in recent years statistical models specifically tailored for multiplex data begun to be developed. In this context, only a few works have been introduced in the literature with the aim at extending the latent space modeling framework to multiplex data. Such framework postulates that nodes may be characterized by latent positions in a p-dimensional Euclidean space and that the presence/absence of an edge between any two nodes depends on such positions. When considering multidimensional network data, latent space models can help capture the associations between the nodes and summarize the observed structure in the different networks composing a multiplex. This dissertation discusses some latent space models for multidimensional network data, to account for different features that observed multiplex data may present. A first proposal allows to jointly represent the different networks into a single latent space, so that average similarities between the nodes may be captured as proximities in such space. A second work introduces a class of latent space models with node-specific effects, in order to deal with different degrees of heterogeneity within and between networks in multiplex data, corresponding to different types of node-specific behaviours. A third work addresses the issue of clustering of the nodes in the latent space, a frequently observed feature in many real world network and multidimensional network data. Here, clusters of nodes in the latent space correspond to communities of nodes in the multiplex. The proposed models are illustrated both via simulation studies and real world applications, to study their perfomances and abilities

    A Study of Perennial Philosophy and Psychedelic Experience, with a Proposal to Revise W. T. Stace’s Core Characteristics of Mystical Experience

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    A Study of Perennial Philosophy and Psychedelic Experience, with a Proposal to Revise W. T. Stace’s Core Characteristics of Mystical Experience ©Ed D’Angelo 2018 Abstract According to the prevailing paradigm in psychedelic research today, when used within an appropriate set and setting, psychedelics can reliably produce an authentic mystical experience. According to the prevailing paradigm, an authentic mystical experience is one that possesses the common or universal characteristics of mystical experience as identified by the philosopher W. T. Stace in his 1960 work Mysticism and Philosophy. Stace’s common characteristics of mystical experience are the basis for the Hood Mysticism Questionnaire, which is the most widely used quantitative measure of mystical experience in experimental studies of psychedelic experience. In this paper, I trace the historical roots of Stace’s common characteristics of mystical experience back to Christian Neoplatonism and apophatic theology, and I trace those, in turn, back to Plato’s concept of the Good and to Aristotle’s concept of God as active intellect. I argue that Stace’s common characteristics of mystical experience are not universal or culturally invariant but are the product of a specifically Christian religious and moral tradition that has its roots in ancient Greek metaphysics. My paper concludes with a revised list of common characteristics of psychedelic experience that is a better candidate for a list of invariant structures of psychedelic experience than Stace’s common characteristics of Christian mystical experience
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