140,072 research outputs found
Cooperation between Top-Down and Bottom-Up Theorem Provers
Top-down and bottom-up theorem proving approaches each have specific
advantages and disadvantages. Bottom-up provers profit from strong redundancy
control but suffer from the lack of goal-orientation, whereas top-down provers
are goal-oriented but often have weak calculi when their proof lengths are
considered. In order to integrate both approaches, we try to achieve
cooperation between a top-down and a bottom-up prover in two different ways:
The first technique aims at supporting a bottom-up with a top-down prover. A
top-down prover generates subgoal clauses, they are then processed by a
bottom-up prover. The second technique deals with the use of bottom-up
generated lemmas in a top-down prover. We apply our concept to the areas of
model elimination and superposition. We discuss the ability of our techniques
to shorten proofs as well as to reorder the search space in an appropriate
manner. Furthermore, in order to identify subgoal clauses and lemmas which are
actually relevant for the proof task, we develop methods for a relevancy-based
filtering. Experiments with the provers SETHEO and SPASS performed in the
problem library TPTP reveal the high potential of our cooperation approaches
Fixed point resolution in extended WZW-models
A formula is derived for the fixed point resolution matrices of simple
current extended WZW-models and coset conformal field theories. Unlike the
analogous matrices for unextended WZW-models, these matrices are in general not
symmetric, and they may have field-dependent twists. They thus provide
non-trivial realizations of the general conditions presented in earlier work
with Fuchs and Schweigert.Comment: 21 pages, Phyzz
Real dimension groups
We show the characterization analogous to dimension groups of partially
ordered real vector spaces with interpolation works, but sequential direct
limits of simplicial vector spaces only under strong assumptions. We also
provide and generalize a proof of a result of Fuchs asserting that the real
polynomial algebra with pointwise ordering coming from an interval satisfies
Riesz interpolatio
Braiding in Conformal Field Theory and Solvable Lattice Models
Braiding matrices in rational conformal field theory are considered. The
braiding matrices for any two block four point function are computed, in
general, using the holomorphic properties of the blocks and the holomorphic
properties of rational conformal field theory. The braidings of with
the fundamental are evaluated and are used as examples. Solvable interaction
round the face lattice models are constructed from these braiding matrices, and
their Boltzmann weights are given. This allows, in particular, for the
derivation of the Boltzmann weights of such solvable height models.Comment: 18p
A matrix S for all simple current extensions
A formula is presented for the modular transformation matrix S for any simple
current extension of the chiral algebra of a conformal field theory. This
provides in particular an algorithm for resolving arbitrary simple current
fixed points, in such a way that the matrix S we obtain is unitary and
symmetric and furnishes a modular group representation. The formalism works in
principle for any conformal field theory. A crucial ingredient is a set of
matrices S^J_{ab}, where J is a simple current and a and b are fixed points of
J. We expect that these input matrices realize the modular group for the torus
one-point functions of the simple currents. In the case of WZW-models these
matrices can be identified with the S-matrices of the orbit Lie algebras that
we introduced in a previous paper. As a special case of our conjecture we
obtain the modular matrix S for WZW-theories based on group manifolds that are
not simply connected, as well as for most coset models.Comment: Phyzzx, 53 pages 1 uuencoded figure Arrow in figure corrected;
Forgotten acknowledment to funding organization added; DESY preprint-number
adde
Remarks on deixis
The prevailing conception of deixis is oriented to the idea of 'concrete' physical and perceptual characteristics of the situation of speech. Signs standardly adduced as typical deictics are I, you, here, now, this, that. I and you are defined as meaning "the person producing the utterance in question" and "the person spoken to", here and now as meaning "where the speaker is at utterance time" and "at the moment the utterance is made" (also, "at the place/time of the speech exchange"); similarly, the meanings of this and that are as a rule defined via proximity to speaker's physical location. The elements used in such definitions form the conceptual framework of most of the general characterisations of deixis in the literature. [...] There is much in the literature, of course, that goes far beyond this framework . A great variety of elements, mostly with very abstract meanings, have been found to share deictic characteristics although they do not fit into the personnel-place-time-of-utterance schema. The adequacy of that schema is also called into question by many observations to the effect that the use of such standard deictics as here, now, this, that cannot really be accounted for on its basis, and by the far-reaching possibilities of orienting deictics to reference points in situations other than the situation of speech, to 'deictic centers' other than the speaker. [...] Analyses along the lines of the standard conception regularly acknowledge the existence of deviations from the assumed basic meanings. One traditional solution attributes them to speaker's "subjectivity", or to differences between "physical" and "psychological" space or time; in a similar vein, metaphorical extensions may be said to be at play, or a distinction between prototypical and non-prototypical meanings invoked. Quite apart from the question of the relative merits of these explanatory principles, which I do not wish to discuss here, the problem with all such accounts is that the definitions of the assumed basic meanings themselves are founded on axiom rather than analysis of situated use. The logical alternative, of course, is to set out for more abstract and comprehensive meaning definitions from the start. In fact, a number of recent, discourse-oriented, treatments of the demonstratives proceed this way; they view those elements as processing instructions rather than signs with inherently spatial denotation (Isard 1975, Hawkins 1978, Kirsner 1979, Linde 1979 , Ehlich 1982.
Structural Relaxations in a Simple Model Molten Salt
The structural relaxations of a dense, binary mixture of charged hard spheres
are studied using the Mode Coupling Theory (MCT). Qualitative differences to
non--ionic systems are shown to result from the long--range Coulomb interaction
and charge ordering in dense molten salts. The presented non--equilibrium
results are determined by the equilibrium structure, which is input using the
well studied Mean Spherical Approximation.Comment: 6 pages, 4 Postscript figures, uses epsfig.sty, rotate.sty, here.st
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