6,613 research outputs found
Theta-point polymers in the plane and Schramm-Loewner evolution
We study the connection between polymers at the theta temperature on the
lattice and Schramm-Loewner chains with constant step length in the continuum.
The latter realize a useful algorithm for the exact sampling of tricritical
polymers, where finite-chain effects are excluded. The driving function
computed from the lattice model via a radial implementation of the zipper
method is shown to converge to Brownian motion of diffusivity kappa=6 for large
times. The distribution function of an internal portion of walk is well
approximated by that obtained from Schramm-Loewner chains. The exponent of the
correlation length nu and the leading correction-to scaling exponent Delta_1
measured in the continuum are compatible with nu=4/7 (predicted for the theta
point) and Delta_1=72/91 (predicted for percolation). Finally, we compute the
shape factor and the asphericity of the chains, finding surprising accord with
the theta-point end-to-end values.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Completion of Choice
We systematically study the completion of choice problems in the Weihrauch
lattice. Choice problems play a pivotal role in Weihrauch complexity. For one,
they can be used as landmarks that characterize important equivalences classes
in the Weihrauch lattice. On the other hand, choice problems also characterize
several natural classes of computable problems, such as finite mind change
computable problems, non-deterministically computable problems, Las Vegas
computable problems and effectively Borel measurable functions. The closure
operator of completion generates the concept of total Weihrauch reducibility,
which is a variant of Weihrauch reducibility with total realizers. Logically
speaking, the completion of a problem is a version of the problem that is
independent of its premise. Hence, studying the completion of choice problems
allows us to study simultaneously choice problems in the total Weihrauch
lattice, as well as the question which choice problems can be made independent
of their premises in the usual Weihrauch lattice. The outcome shows that many
important choice problems that are related to compact spaces are complete,
whereas choice problems for unbounded spaces or closed sets of positive measure
are typically not complete.Comment: 30 page
A Parafermionic Generalization of the Jaynes Cummings Model
We introduce a parafermionic version of the Jaynes Cummings Hamiltonian, by
coupling Fock parafermions (nilpotent of order ) to a 1D harmonic
oscillator, representing the interaction with a single mode of the
electromagnetic field. We argue that for and there is no
difference between Fock parafermions and quantum spins . We
also derive a semiclassical approximation of the canonical partition function
of the model by assuming to be small in the regime of large enough
total number of excitations , where the dimension of the Hilbert space of
the problem becomes constant as a function of . We observe in this case an
interesting behaviour of the average of the bosonic number operator showing a
single crossover between regimes with different integer values of this
observable. These features persist when we generalize the parafermionic
Hamiltonian by deforming the bosonic oscillator with a generic function
; the deformed bosonic oscillator corresponds to a specific choice
of the deformation function . In this particular case, we observe at most
crossovers in the behavior of the mean bosonic number operator,
suggesting a phenomenology of superradiance similar to the atoms Jaynes
Cummings model.Comment: to appear on J.Phys.
Weihrauch goes Brouwerian
We prove that the Weihrauch lattice can be transformed into a Brouwer algebra
by the consecutive application of two closure operators in the appropriate
order: first completion and then parallelization. The closure operator of
completion is a new closure operator that we introduce. It transforms any
problem into a total problem on the completion of the respective types, where
we allow any value outside of the original domain of the problem. This closure
operator is of interest by itself, as it generates a total version of Weihrauch
reducibility that is defined like the usual version of Weihrauch reducibility,
but in terms of total realizers. From a logical perspective completion can be
seen as a way to make problems independent of their premises. Alongside with
the completion operator and total Weihrauch reducibility we need to study
precomplete representations that are required to describe these concepts. In
order to show that the parallelized total Weihrauch lattice forms a Brouwer
algebra, we introduce a new multiplicative version of an implication. While the
parallelized total Weihrauch lattice forms a Brouwer algebra with this
implication, the total Weihrauch lattice fails to be a model of intuitionistic
linear logic in two different ways. In order to pinpoint the algebraic reasons
for this failure, we introduce the concept of a Weihrauch algebra that allows
us to formulate the failure in precise and neat terms. Finally, we show that
the Medvedev Brouwer algebra can be embedded into our Brouwer algebra, which
also implies that the theory of our Brouwer algebra is Jankov logic.Comment: 36 page
Probabilistic Computability and Choice
We study the computational power of randomized computations on infinite
objects, such as real numbers. In particular, we introduce the concept of a Las
Vegas computable multi-valued function, which is a function that can be
computed on a probabilistic Turing machine that receives a random binary
sequence as auxiliary input. The machine can take advantage of this random
sequence, but it always has to produce a correct result or to stop the
computation after finite time if the random advice is not successful. With
positive probability the random advice has to be successful. We characterize
the class of Las Vegas computable functions in the Weihrauch lattice with the
help of probabilistic choice principles and Weak Weak K\H{o}nig's Lemma. Among
other things we prove an Independent Choice Theorem that implies that Las Vegas
computable functions are closed under composition. In a case study we show that
Nash equilibria are Las Vegas computable, while zeros of continuous functions
with sign changes cannot be computed on Las Vegas machines. However, we show
that the latter problem admits randomized algorithms with weaker failure
recognition mechanisms. The last mentioned results can be interpreted such that
the Intermediate Value Theorem is reducible to the jump of Weak Weak
K\H{o}nig's Lemma, but not to Weak Weak K\H{o}nig's Lemma itself. These
examples also demonstrate that Las Vegas computable functions form a proper
superclass of the class of computable functions and a proper subclass of the
class of non-deterministically computable functions. We also study the impact
of specific lower bounds on the success probabilities, which leads to a strict
hierarchy of classes. In particular, the classical technique of probability
amplification fails for computations on infinite objects. We also investigate
the dependency on the underlying probability space.Comment: Information and Computation (accepted for publication
Beyond the storage capacity: data driven satisfiability transition
Data structure has a dramatic impact on the properties of neural networks,
yet its significance in the established theoretical frameworks is poorly
understood. Here we compute the Vapnik-Chervonenkis entropy of a kernel machine
operating on data grouped into equally labelled subsets. At variance with the
unstructured scenario, entropy is non-monotonic in the size of the training
set, and displays an additional critical point besides the storage capacity.
Remarkably, the same behavior occurs in margin classifiers even with randomly
labelled data, as is elucidated by identifying the synaptic volume encoding the
transition. These findings reveal aspects of expressivity lying beyond the
condensed description provided by the storage capacity, and they indicate the
path towards more realistic bounds for the generalization error of neural
networks.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Balancing building and maintenance costs in growing transport networks
The costs associated to the length of links impose unavoidable constraints to
the growth of natural and artificial transport networks. When future network
developments can not be predicted, building and maintenance costs require
competing minimization mechanisms, and can not be optimized simultaneously.
Hereby, we study the interplay of building and maintenance costs and its impact
on the growth of transportation networks through a non-equilibrium model of
network growth. We show cost balance is a sufficient ingredient for the
emergence of tradeoffs between the network's total length and transport
effciency, of optimal strategies of construction, and of power-law temporal
correlations in the growth history of the network. Analysis of empirical ant
transport networks in the framework of this model suggests different ant
species may adopt similar optimization strategies.Comment: 4 pages main text, 2 pages references, 4 figure
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