2,327 research outputs found

    Analytical Characterization of Volatile Active Principles from the Leaves of the Alboroseum Backer Plant

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    The study presents for the first time the data concerning the qualitative and quantitative determination of the volatile active principles from the leaves of the Alboroseum Backer plant (Crassulaceae). After the extraction of volatile active principles in water, analytical separation and quantitative determination using a GC/MS technique was performed. The compounds detected, are belonging to the following classes: aldehydes, ketones, aromatic hydrocarbons and alcohols. South African Journal of Chemistry Vol.55 2002: 67-7

    An Efficient Algorithm for Enumerating Chordless Cycles and Chordless Paths

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    A chordless cycle (induced cycle) CC of a graph is a cycle without any chord, meaning that there is no edge outside the cycle connecting two vertices of the cycle. A chordless path is defined similarly. In this paper, we consider the problems of enumerating chordless cycles/paths of a given graph G=(V,E),G=(V,E), and propose algorithms taking O(E)O(|E|) time for each chordless cycle/path. In the existing studies, the problems had not been deeply studied in the theoretical computer science area, and no output polynomial time algorithm has been proposed. Our experiments showed that the computation time of our algorithms is constant per chordless cycle/path for non-dense random graphs and real-world graphs. They also show that the number of chordless cycles is much smaller than the number of cycles. We applied the algorithm to prediction of NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) spectra, and increased the accuracy of the prediction

    On Renormalization Group Flows and Polymer Algebras

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    In this talk methods for a rigorous control of the renormalization group (RG) flow of field theories are discussed. The RG equations involve the flow of an infinite number of local partition functions. By the method of exact beta-function the RG equations are reduced to flow equations of a finite number of coupling constants. Generating functions of Greens functions are expressed by polymer activities. Polymer activities are useful for solving the large volume and large field problem in field theory. The RG flow of the polymer activities is studied by the introduction of polymer algebras. The definition of products and recursive functions replaces cluster expansion techniques. Norms of these products and recursive functions are basic tools and simplify a RG analysis for field theories. The methods will be discussed at examples of the Φ4\Phi^4-model, the O(N)O(N) σ\sigma-model and hierarchical scalar field theory (infrared fixed points).Comment: 32 pages, LaTeX, MS-TPI-94-12, Talk presented at the conference ``Constructive Results in Field Theory, Statistical Mechanics and Condensed Matter Physics'', 25-27 July 1994, Palaiseau, Franc

    Quantum Field Theory: Where We Are

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    We comment on the present status, the concepts and their limitations, and the successes and open problems of the various approaches to a relativistic quantum theory of elementary particles, with a hindsight to questions concerning quantum gravity and string theory.Comment: To appear in: An Assessment of Current Paradigms in the Physics of Fundamental Phenomena, to be published by Springer Verlag (2006

    Absence of Scaling in the Integer Quantum Hall Effect

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    We have studied the conductivity peak in the transition region between the two lowest integer Quantum Hall states using transmission measurements of edge magnetoplasmons. The width of the transition region is found to increase linearly with frequency but remains finite when extrapolated to zero frequency and temperature. Contrary to prevalent theoretical pictures, our data does not show the scaling characteristics of critical phenomena.These results suggest that a different mechanism governs the transition in our experiment.Comment: Minor changes and new references include

    Sparse Kneser graphs are Hamiltonian

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    For integers k≥1 and n≥2k+1, the Kneser graph K(n,k) is the graph whose vertices are the k-element subsets of {1,…,n} and whose edges connect pairs of subsets that are disjoint. The Kneser graphs of the form K(2k+1,k) are also known as the odd graphs. We settle an old problem due to Meredith, Lloyd, and Biggs from the 1970s, proving that for every k≥3, the odd graph K(2k+1,k) has a Hamilton cycle. This and a known conditional result due to Johnson imply that all Kneser graphs of the form K(2k+2a,k) with k≥3 and a≥0 have a Hamilton cycle. We also prove that K(2k+1,k) has at least 22k−6 distinct Hamilton cycles for k≥6. Our proofs are based on a reduction of the Hamiltonicity problem in the odd graph to the problem of finding a spanning tree in a suitably defined hypergraph on Dyck words

    Frequency Scaling of Microwave Conductivity in the Integer Quantum Hall Effect Minima

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    We measure the longitudinal conductivity σxx\sigma_{xx} at frequencies 1.246GHzf10.051.246 {\rm GHz} \le f \le 10.05 GHz over a range of temperatures 235mKT4.2235 {\rm mK} \le T \le 4.2 K with particular emphasis on the Quantum Hall plateaus. We find that Re(σxx)Re(\sigma_{xx}) scales linearly with frequency for a range of magnetic field around the center of the plateaus, i.e. where σxx(ω)σxxDC\sigma_{xx}(\omega) \gg \sigma_{xx}^{DC}. The width of this scaling region decreases with higher temperature and vanishes by 1.2 K altogether. Comparison between localization length determined from σxx(ω)\sigma_{xx}(\omega) and DC measurements on the same wafer show good agreement.Comment: latex 4 pages, 4 figure

    Algorithmic Analysis of Array-Accessing Programs

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    For programs whose data variables range over Boolean or finite domains, program verification is decidable, and this forms the basis of recent tools for software model checking. In this paper, we consider algorithmic verification of programs that use Boolean variables, and in addition, access a single array whose length is potentially unbounded, and whose elements range over pairs from Σ × D, where Σ is a finite alphabet and D is a potentially unbounded data domain. We show that the reachability problem, while undecidable in general, is (1) Pspace-complete for programs in which the array-accessing for-loops are not nested, (2) solvable in Ex-pspace for programs with arbitrarily nested loops if array elements range over a finite data domain, and (3) decidable for a restricted class of programs with doubly-nested loops. The third result establishes connections to automata and logics defining languages over data words
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