3,665 research outputs found
A Characterization of Discrete Time Soliton Equations
We propose a method to characterize discrete time evolution equations, which
generalize discrete time soliton equations, including the -difference
Painlev\'e IV equations discussed recently by Kajiwara, Noumi and Yamada.Comment: 13 page
A Super-Integrable Discretization of the Calogero Model
A time-discretization that preserves the super-integrability of the Calogero
model is obtained by application of the integrable time-discretization of the
harmonic oscillator to the projection method for the Calogero model with
continuous time. In particular, the difference equations of motion, which
provide an explicit scheme for time-integration, are explicitly presented for
the two-body case. Numerical results exhibit that the scheme conserves all
the conserved quantities of the (two-body) Calogero model with a
precision of the machine epsilon times the number of iterations.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures. Added references. Corrected typo
Probability redistribution using time hopping for reinforcement learning
—A method for using the Time Hopping technique as a tool for probability redistribution is proposed. Applied to reinforcement learning in a simulation, it is able to re-shape the state probability distribution of the underlying Markov decision process as desired. This is achieved by modifying the target selection strategy of Time Hopping appropriately. Experiments with a robot maze reinforcement learning problem show that the method improves the exploration efficiency by re-shaping the state probability distribution to an almost uniform distribution
A survey of Hirota's difference equations
A review of selected topics in Hirota's bilinear difference equation (HBDE)
is given. This famous 3-dimensional difference equation is known to provide a
canonical integrable discretization for most important types of soliton
equations. Similarly to the continuous theory, HBDE is a member of an infinite
hierarchy. The central point of our exposition is a discrete version of the
zero curvature condition explicitly written in the form of discrete
Zakharov-Shabat equations for M-operators realized as difference or
pseudo-difference operators. A unified approach to various types of M-operators
and zero curvature representations is suggested. Different reductions of HBDE
to 2-dimensional equations are considered. Among them discrete counterparts of
the KdV, sine-Gordon, Toda chain, relativistic Toda chain and other typical
examples are discussed in detail.Comment: LaTeX, 43 pages, LaTeX figures (with emlines2.sty
Hypothesis of two-dimensional stripe arrangement and its implications for the superconductivity in high-Tc cuprates
The hypothesis that holes doped into high-Tc cuprate superconductors organize
themselves in two-dimensional (2D) array of diagonal stripes is discussed, and,
on the basis of this hypothesis, a new microscopic model of superconductivity
is proposed and solved. The model describes two kinds of hole states localized
either inside the stripes or in the antiferromagnetic domains between the
stripes. The characteristic energy difference between these two kinds of states
is identified with the pseudogap. The superconducting (SC) order parameter
predicted by the model has two components, whose phases exhibit a complex
dependence on the the center-of-mass coordinate. The model predictions for the
tunneling characteristics and for the dependence of the critical temperature on
the superfluid density show good quantitative agreement with a number of
experiments. The model, in particular, predicts that the SC peaks in the
tunneling spectra are asymmetric, only when the ratio of the SC gap to the
critical temperature is greater than 4. It is also proposed that, at least in
some high-Tc cuprates, there exist two different superconducting states
corresponding to the same doping concentration and the same critical
temperature. Finally, the checkerboard pattern in the local density of states
observed by scanning tunneling microscopy in Bi-2212 is interpreted as coming
from the states localized around the centers of stripe elements forming the 2D
superstructure.Comment: Text close to the published version. This version is 10 per cent
shorter than the previous one. All revisions are mino
On a family of solutions of the KP equation which also satisfy the Toda lattice hierarchy
We describe the interaction pattern in the - plane for a family of
soliton solutions of the Kadomtsev-Petviashvili (KP) equation,
. Those solutions also satisfy the
finite Toda lattice hierarchy. We determine completely their asymptotic
patterns for , and we show that all the solutions (except the
one-soliton solution) are of {\it resonant} type, consisting of arbitrary
numbers of line solitons in both aymptotics; that is, arbitrary incoming
solitons for interact to form arbitrary outgoing solitons
for . We also discuss the interaction process of those solitons,
and show that the resonant interaction creates a {\it web-like} structure
having holes.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, submitted to JPA; Math. Ge
Integrable dynamics of Toda-type on the square and triangular lattices
In a recent paper we constructed an integrable generalization of the Toda law
on the square lattice. In this paper we construct other examples of integrable
dynamics of Toda-type on the square lattice, as well as on the triangular
lattice, as nonlinear symmetries of the discrete Laplace equations on the
square and triangular lattices. We also construct the - function
formulations and the Darboux-B\"acklund transformations of these novel
dynamics.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Exact shock solution of a coupled system of delay differential equations: a car-following model
In this paper, we present exact shock solutions of a coupled system of delay
differential equations, which was introduced as a traffic-flow model called
{\it the car-following model}. We use the Hirota method, originally developed
in order to solve soliton equations. %While, with a periodic boundary
condition, this system has % a traveling-wave solution given by elliptic
functions. The relevant delay differential equations have been known to allow
exact solutions expressed by elliptic functions with a periodic boundary
conditions. In the present work, however, shock solutions are obtained with
open boundary, representing the stationary propagation of a traffic jam.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Quasi-Solitons in Dissipative Systems and Exactly Solvable Lattice Models
A system of first-order differential-difference equations with time lag
describes the formation of density waves, called as quasi-solitons for
dissipative systems in this paper. For co-moving density waves, the system
reduces to some exactly solvable lattice models. We construct a shock-wave
solution as well as one-quasi-soliton solution, and argue that there are
pseudo-conserved quantities which characterize the formation of the co-moving
waves. The simplest non-trivial one is given to discuss the presence of a
cascade phenomena in relaxation process toward the pattern formation.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages, 1 figur
A Molecular Line Observation toward Massive Clumps Associated with Infrared Dark Clouds
We have surveyed the N2H+ J=1-0, HC3N J=5-4, CCS J_N=4_3-3_2, NH3 (J, K) =
(1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), and CH3OH J=7-6 lines toward the 55 massive clumps
associated with infrared dark clouds by using the Nobeyama Radio Observatory 45
m telescope and the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment 10 m telescope.
The N2H+, HC3N, and NH3 lines are detected toward most of the objects. On the
other hand, the CCS emission is detected toward none of the objects. The
[CCS]/[N2H+] ratios are found to be mostly lower than unity even in the Spitzer
24 micron dark objects. This suggests that most of the massive clumps are
chemically more evolved than the low-mass starless cores. The CH3OH emission is
detected toward 18 out of 55 objects. All the CH3OH-detected objects are
associated with the Spitzer 24 micron sources, suggesting that star formation
has already started in all the CH3OH-detected objects. The velocity widths of
the CH3OH J_K=7_0-6_0 A+ and 7_{-1}-6_{-1} E lines are broader than those of
N2H+ J=1-0. The CH3OH J_K=7_0-6_0 A+ and 7_{-1}-6_{-1} E lines tend to have
broader linewidth in the MSX dark objects than in the others, the former being
younger or less luminous than the latter. The origin of the broad emission is
discussed in terms of the interaction between an outflow and an ambient cloud.Comment: Accepted to Ap
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