3,280 research outputs found
Moderate Growth Time Series for Dynamic Combinatorics Modelisation
Here, we present a family of time series with a simple growth constraint.
This family can be the basis of a model to apply to emerging computation in
business and micro-economy where global functions can be expressed from local
rules. We explicit a double statistics on these series which allows to
establish a one-to-one correspondence between three other ballot-like
strunctures
Recipe theorem for the Tutte polynomial for matroids, renormalization group-like approach
Using a quantum field theory renormalization group-like differential
equation, we give a new proof of the recipe theorem for the Tutte polynomial
for matroids. The solution of such an equation is in fact given by some
appropriate characters of the Hopf algebra of isomorphic classes of matroids,
characters which are then related to the Tutte polynomial for matroids. This
Hopf algebraic approach also allows to prove, in a new way, a matroid Tutte
polynomial convolution formula appearing in W. Kook {\it et. al., J. Comb.
Series} {\bf B 76} (1999).Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
The mechanics of shuffle products and their siblings
We carry on the investigation initiated in [15] : we describe new shuffle
products coming from some special functions and group them, along with other
products encountered in the literature, in a class of products, which we name
-shuffle products. Our paper is dedicated to a study of the latter
class, from a combinatorial standpoint. We consider first how to extend
Radford's theorem to the products in that class, then how to construct their
bi-algebras. As some conditions are necessary do carry that out, we study them
closely and simplify them so that they can be seen directly from the definition
of the product. We eventually test these conditions on the products mentioned
above
Controlling the dynamics of a coupled atom-cavity system by pure dephasing : basics and potential applications in nanophotonics
The influence of pure dephasing on the dynamics of the coupling between a
two-level atom and a cavity mode is systematically addressed. We have derived
an effective atom-cavity coupling rate that is shown to be a key parameter in
the physics of the problem, allowing to generalize the known expression for the
Purcell factor to the case of broad emitters, and to define strategies to
optimize the performances of broad emitters-based single photon sources.
Moreover, pure dephasing is shown to be able to restore lasing in presence of
detuning, a further demonstration that decoherence can be seen as a fundamental
resource in solid-state cavity quantum electrodynamics, offering appealing
perspectives in the context of advanced nano-photonic devices.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Sweedler's duals and SchĂĽtzenberger's calculus
We describe the problem of Sweedler's duals for bialgebras as essentially characterizing the domain of the transpose of the multiplication. This domain is the set of what could be called ``representative linear forms'' which are the elements of the algebraic dual which are also representative on the multiplicative semigroup of the algebra. When the algebra is free, this notion is indeed equivalent to that of rational functions of automata theory. For the sake of applications, the range of coefficients has been considerably broadened, i.e. extended to semirings, so that the results could be specialized to the boolean and multiplicity cases. This requires some caution (use of ``positive formulas'', iteration replacing inversion, stable submodules replacing finite-rank families for instance). For the theory and its applications has been created a rational calculus which can, in return, be applied to harness Sweedler's duals. A new theorem of rational closure and application to Hopf algebras of use in Physics and Combinatorics is provided. The concrete use of this ``calculus'' is eventually illustrated on an example
Approach to ground state and time-independent photon bound for massless spin-boson models
It is widely believed that an atom interacting with the electromagnetic field
(with total initial energy well-below the ionization threshold) relaxes to its
ground state while its excess energy is emitted as radiation. Hence, for large
times, the state of the atom+field system should consist of the atom in its
ground state, and a few free photons that travel off to spatial infinity.
Mathematically, this picture is captured by the notion of asymptotic
completeness. Despite some recent progress on the spectral theory of such
systems, a proof of relaxation to the ground state and asymptotic completeness
was/is still missing, except in some special cases (massive photons, small
perturbations of harmonic potentials). In this paper, we partially fill this
gap by proving relaxation to an invariant state in the case where the atom is
modelled by a finite-level system. If the coupling to the field is sufficiently
infrared-regular so that the coupled system admits a ground state, then this
invariant state necessarily corresponds to the ground state. Assuming slightly
more infrared regularity, we show that the number of emitted photons remains
bounded in time. We hope that these results bring a proof of asymptotic
completeness within reach.Comment: 45 pages, published in Annales Henri Poincare. This archived version
differs from the journal version because we corrected an inconsequential
mistake in Section 3.5.1: to do this, a new paragraph was added after Lemma
3.
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