10,817 research outputs found
Comparison of Four Space Propulsion Methods for Reducing Transfer Times of Manned Mars Mission
We assess the possibility of reducing the travel time of a manned mission to
Mars by examining four different propulsion methods, and keeping the mass at
departure under 2,500 tonnes, for a fixed architecture. We evaluated
representative systems of three different state of the art technologies
(chemical, nuclear thermal, and electric), and one advance technology, the
"Pure Electro-Magnetic Thrust" (PEMT) concept (proposed by Rubbia). A mission
architecture mostly based on the Design Reference Architecture 5.0 is assumed
in order to estimate the mass budget, that influences the performance of the
propulsion system. Pareto curves of the duration of the mission and time of
flight versus mass of mission are drawn. We conclude that the ion engine
technology, combined with the classical chemical engine, yields the shortest
mission times for this architecture with the lowest mass, and that chemical
propulsion alone is the best to minimise travel time. The results obtained
using the PEMT suggest that it could be a more suitable solution for farther
destinations than Mars.Comment: Change in title, abstract and presentation so to clarify the main
results. 14 pages, 7 figures and 2 table
General properties of overlap probability distributions in disordered spin systems. Toward Parisi ultrametricity
For a very general class of probability distributions in disordered Ising
spin systems, in the thermodynamical limit, we prove the following property for
overlaps among real replicas. Consider the overlaps among s replicas. Add one
replica s+1. Then, the overlap q(a,s+1) between one of the first s replicas,
let us say a, and the added s+1 is either independent of the former ones, or it
is identical to one of the overlaps q(a,b), with b running among the first s
replicas, excluding a. Each of these cases has equal probability 1/s.Comment: LaTeX2e, 11 pages. Submitted to Journal of Physics A: Mathematical
and General. Also available at
http://rerumnatura.zool.su.se/stefano/ms/ghigu.p
Interpolating the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick replica trick
The interpolation techniques have become, in the past decades, a powerful
approach to lighten several properties of spin glasses within a simple
mathematical framework. Intrinsically, for their construction, these schemes
were naturally implemented into the cavity field technique, or its variants as
the stochastic stability or the random overlap structures. However the first
and most famous approach to mean field statistical mechanics with quenched
disorder is the replica trick. Among the models where these methods have been
used (namely, dealing with frustration and complexity), probably the best known
is the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glass: In this paper we are pleased to
apply the interpolation scheme to the replica trick framework and test it
directly to the cited paradigmatic model: interestingly this allows to obtain
easily the replica-symmetric control and, synergically with the broken replica
bounds, a description of the full RSB scenario, both coupled with several minor
theorems. Furthermore, by treating the amount of replicas as an
interpolating parameter (far from its original interpretation) this can be
though of as a quenching temperature close to the one introduce in
off-equilibrium approaches and, within this viewpoint, the proof of the
attended commutativity of the zero replica and the infinite volume limits can
be obtained.Comment: This article is dedicated to David Sherrington on the occasion of his
seventieth birthda
Replica symmetry breaking in mean field spin glasses trough Hamilton-Jacobi technique
During the last years, through the combined effort of the insight, coming
from physical intuition and computer simulation, and the exploitation of
rigorous mathematical methods, the main features of the mean field
Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glass model have been firmly established. In
particular, it has been possible to prove the existence and uniqueness of the
infinite volume limit for the free energy, and its Parisi expression, in terms
of a variational principle, involving a functional order parameter. Even the
expected property of ultrametricity, for the infinite volume states, seems to
be near to a complete proof. The main structural feature of this model, and
related models, is the deep phenomenon of spontaneous replica symmetry breaking
(RSB), discovered by Parisi many years ago. By expanding on our previous work,
the aim of this paper is to investigate a general frame, where replica symmetry
breaking is embedded in a kind of mechanical scheme of the Hamilton-Jacobi
type. Here, the analog of the "time" variable is a parameter characterizing the
strength of the interaction, while the "space" variables rule out
quantitatively the broken replica symmetry pattern. Starting from the simple
cases, where annealing is assumed, or replica symmetry, we build up a
progression of dynamical systems, with an increasing number of space variables,
which allow to weaken the effect of the potential in the Hamilton-Jacobi
equation, as the level of symmetry braking is increased. This new machinery
allows to work out mechanically the general K-step RSB solutions, in a
different interpretation with respect to the replica trick, and lightens easily
their properties as existence or uniqueness.Comment: 24 pages, no figure
Lack of Ultrametricity in the Low-Temperature phase of 3D Ising Spin Glasses
We study the low-temperature spin-glass phases of the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick
(SK) model and of the 3-dimensional short range Ising spin glass (3dISG). For
the SK model, evidence for ultrametricity becomes clearer as the system size
increases, while for the short-range case our results indicate the opposite,
i.e. lack of ultrametricity. Our results are obtained by a recently proposed
method that uses clustering to focus on the relevant parts of phase space and
reduce finite size effects. Evidence that the mean field solution does not
apply in detail to the 3dISG is also found by another method which does not
rely on clustering
Relación angular radiológica de las superficies articulares de la tibia en sujetos asintomáticos
Se efectuó un estudio radiológico para determinar la relación angular existente
entre las superficies articulares proximal y distal de 108 tibias correspondientes a 54 pacientes
asintomáticos, de edades entre 14 y 72 años (media: 29,8). La medición se llevó a cabo con un
«cobbometro» de Oxford en proyección anteroposterior y lateral. El ángulo medio entre ambas
superficies fue de 3,3 ± 2,6° (intervalo de confianza al 95%: 2,8-3,8°) en proyección anteroposterior
y de 5,5 ± 3,9° (intervalo de confianza: 4,7-6,3°) en proyección lateral. Cuando se consideró
para cada paciente, la diferencia media de esta relación angular entre las tibias derechas e izquierdas
fue inferior a 0,5° en ambas proyecciones.The angular relationship between proximal and distal articular surfaces was determined,
through an Oxford Cobbometer, in 108 tibiae of 54 asymptomalic patients aging 14 to
72 years (mean: 30). Mean angle between both surfaces was 3.3 ± 2.6° (95% confidence interval:
2.8-3.8°) for the anteroposterior view and 5.5 ± 3.9° (95% confidence interval: 4.7-6.3°) for the lateral
view. When considered individually for each patient, mean difference of this angular relationship
among right and left tibiae was lesser than 0.5° for both projections
How glassy are neural networks?
In this paper we continue our investigation on the high storage regime of a
neural network with Gaussian patterns. Through an exact mapping between its
partition function and one of a bipartite spin glass (whose parties consist of
Ising and Gaussian spins respectively), we give a complete control of the whole
annealed region. The strategy explored is based on an interpolation between the
bipartite system and two independent spin glasses built respectively by
dichotomic and Gaussian spins: Critical line, behavior of the principal
thermodynamic observables and their fluctuations as well as overlap
fluctuations are obtained and discussed. Then, we move further, extending such
an equivalence beyond the critical line, to explore the broken ergodicity phase
under the assumption of replica symmetry and we show that the quenched free
energy of this (analogical) Hopfield model can be described as a linear
combination of the two quenched spin-glass free energies even in the replica
symmetric framework
- …