4,406 research outputs found

    Criticality for branching processes in random environment

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    We study branching processes in an i.i.d. random environment, where the associated random walk is of the oscillating type. This class of processes generalizes the classical notion of criticality. The main properties of such branching processes are developed under a general assumption, known as Spitzer's condition in fluctuation theory of random walks, and some additional moment condition. We determine the exact asymptotic behavior of the survival probability and prove conditional functional limit theorems for the generation size process and the associated random walk. The results rely on a stimulating interplay between branching process theory and fluctuation theory of random walks.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009117904000000928 in the Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    MoodBar: Increasing new user retention in Wikipedia through lightweight socialization

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    Socialization in online communities allows existing members to welcome and recruit newcomers, introduce them to community norms and practices, and sustain their early participation. However, socializing newcomers does not come for free: in large communities, socialization can result in a significant workload for mentors and is hard to scale. In this study we present results from an experiment that measured the effect of a lightweight socialization tool on the activity and retention of newly registered users attempting to edit for the first time Wikipedia. Wikipedia is struggling with the retention of newcomers and our results indicate that a mechanism to elicit lightweight feedback and to provide early mentoring to newcomers improves their chances of becoming long-term contributors.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for presentation at CSCW'1

    Cell organization in soft media due to active mechanosensing

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    Adhering cells actively probe the mechanical properties of their environment and use the resulting information to position and orient themselves. We show that a large body of experimental observations can be consistently explained from one unifying principle, namely that cells strengthen contacts and cytoskeleton in the direction of large effective stiffness. Using linear elasticity theory to model the extracellular environment, we calculate optimal cell organization for several situations of interest and find excellent agreement with experiments for fibroblasts, both on elastic substrates and in collagen gels: cells orient in the direction of external tensile strain, they orient parallel and normal to free and clamped surfaces, respectively, and they interact elastically to form strings. Our method can be applied for rational design of tissue equivalents. Moreover our results indicate that the concept of contact guidance has to be reevaluated. We also suggest that cell-matrix contacts are upregulated by large effective stiffness in the environment because in this way, build-up of force is more efficient.Comment: Revtex, 7 pages, 4 Postscript files include

    Percolation transition of hydration water at hydrophilic surfaces

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    An analysis of water clustering is used to study the quasi-2D percolation transition of water adsorbed at planar hydrophilic surfaces. Above the critical temperature of the layering transition (quasi-2D liquid-vapor phase transition of adsorbed molecules) a percolation transition occurs at some threshold surface coverage, which increases with increasing temperature. The location of the percolation line is consistent with the existence of a percolation transition at the critical point. The percolation threshold at a planar surface is weakly sensitive to the size of the system when its lateral dimension increases from 80 to 150 A. The size distribution of the largest water cluster shows a specific two-peaks structure in a wide range of surface coverage : the lower- and higher-size peaks represent contributions from non-spanning and spanning clusters, respectively. The ratio of the average sizes of spanning and non-spanning largest clusters is about 1.8 for all studied planes. The two-peak structure becomes more pronounced with decreasing size of the planar surface and strongly enhances at spherical surfaces.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure

    Alpha decay chains study for the recently observed superheavy element Z=117 within the Isospin Cluster Model

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    The recently observed α\alpha-decay chains 293−294117^{293-294}117 were produced by the fusion reactions with target 249Bk^{249}Bk and projectile 48Ca^{48}Ca at Dubna in Russia. The reported cross-sections for the mentioned reaction are σ=0.5(+1.1,−0.4)\sigma=0.5(+1.1,-0.4)pb and σ\sigma=1.3(+1.5,-0.6)pbpb at E∗=35MeVE^{*}=35MeV and E∗=39MeVE^{*}=39MeV, respectively. The Q-values of α\alpha-decay and the half-lives Log10T1/2αLog_{10}T^{\alpha}_{1/2}(s) are calculated for the α\alpha-decay chains of 293−294117^{293-294}117 nuclei, within the framework of Isospin Cluster Model (ICM). In the ICM model the proximity energy is improved by using the isospin dependent radius of parent, daughter and alpha particle. The binding energy B(Ai,Zi)B(A_{i}, Z_{i}) (i=1,2) of any nucleus of mass number A and atomic number Z was obtained from a phenomenological and more genaralized BW formula given by \cite{samanta02}. The calculated results in ICM are compared with the experimental results and other theoretical Macro-Microscopic(M-M), RMF(with NL3 and SFU Gold forces parameter) model calculations. The estimated values of α\alpha-decay half-lives are in good agreement with the recent data. The ICM calculation is in favor of the persence of magic number at N=172

    Gauge Consistent Wilson Renormalization Group II: Non-Abelian Case

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    We give a wilsonian formulation of non-abelian gauge theories explicitly consistent with axial gauge Ward identitities. The issues of unitarity and dependence on the quantization direction are carefully investigated. A wilsonian computation of the one-loop QCD beta function is performed.Comment: 34 pages, 1 eps figure, latex2e. Minor changes, version to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phy
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