8,124 research outputs found
Link power coordination for energy conservation in complex communication networks
Communication networks consume huge, and rapidly growing, amount of energy.
However, a lot of the energy consumption is wasted due to the lack of global
link power coordination in these complex systems. This paper proposes several
link power coordination schemes to achieve energy-efficient routing by
progressively putting some links into energy saving mode and hence aggregating
traffic during periods of low traffic load. We show that the achievable energy
savings not only depend on the link power coordination schemes, but also on the
network topologies. In the random network, there is no scheme that can
significantly outperform others. In the scale-free network, when the largest
betweenness first (LBF) scheme is used, phase transition of the networks'
transmission capacities during the traffic cooling down phase is observed.
Motivated by this, a hybrid link power coordination scheme is proposed to
significantly reduce the energy consumption in the scale-free network. In a
real Internet Service Provider (ISP)'s router-level Internet topology, however,
the smallest betweenness first (SBF) scheme significantly outperforms other
schemes.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Mastermind is NP-Complete
In this paper we show that the Mastermind Satisfiability Problem (MSP) is
NP-complete. The Mastermind is a popular game which can be turned into a
logical puzzle called Mastermind Satisfiability Problem in a similar spirit to
the Minesweeper puzzle. By proving that MSP is NP-complete, we reveal its
intrinsic computational property that makes it challenging and interesting.
This serves as an addition to our knowledge about a host of other puzzles, such
as Minesweeper, Mah-Jongg, and the 15-puzzle
A Categorical View on Algebraic Lattices in Formal Concept Analysis
Formal concept analysis has grown from a new branch of the mathematical field
of lattice theory to a widely recognized tool in Computer Science and
elsewhere. In order to fully benefit from this theory, we believe that it can
be enriched with notions such as approximation by computation or
representability. The latter are commonly studied in denotational semantics and
domain theory and captured most prominently by the notion of algebraicity, e.g.
of lattices. In this paper, we explore the notion of algebraicity in formal
concept analysis from a category-theoretical perspective. To this end, we build
on the the notion of approximable concept with a suitable category and show
that the latter is equivalent to the category of algebraic lattices. At the
same time, the paper provides a relatively comprehensive account of the
representation theory of algebraic lattices in the framework of Stone duality,
relating well-known structures such as Scott information systems with further
formalisms from logic, topology, domains and lattice theory.Comment: 36 page
Closures in Binary Partial Algebras
AbstractTwo procedures for computing closures in binary partial algebras (BPA) are introduced: a Fibonacci-style procedure for closures in associative BPAs, and a multistage procedure for closures in associative, commutative and idempotent BPAs. Ramifications in areas such as resolution theorem proving, graph-theoretic algorithms, formal languages and formal concept analysis are discussed. In particular, the multistage procedure, when applied to formal concept analysis, results in a new algorithm outperforming leading algorithms for computing concept sets
Revisit of directed flow in relativistic heavy-ion collisions from a multiphase transport model
We have revisited several interesting questions on how the rapidity-odd
directed flow is developed in relativistic Au+Au collisions at
= 200 and 39 GeV based on a multiphase transport model. As the
partonic phase evolves with time, the slope of the parton directed flow at
midrapidity region changes from negative to positive as a result of the later
dynamics at 200 GeV, while it remains negative at 39 GeV due to the shorter
life time of the partonic phase. The directed flow splitting for various quark
species due to their different initial eccentricities is observed at 39 GeV,
while the splitting is very small at 200 GeV. From a dynamical coalescence
algorithm with Wigner functions, we found that the directed flow of hadrons is
a result of competition between the coalescence in momentum and coordinate
space as well as further modifications by the hadronic rescatterings.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, version after major revisio
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