1,246 research outputs found
Critical behavior of a cellular automaton highway traffic model
We derive the critical behavior of a CA traffic flow model using an order
parameter breaking the symmetry of the jam-free phase. Random braking appears
to be the symmetry-breaking field conjugate to the order parameter. For
, we determine the values of the critical exponents ,
and using an order-3 cluster approximation and computer
simulations. These critical exponents satisfy a scaling relation, which can be
derived assuming that the order parameter is a generalized homogeneous function
of and p in the vicinity of the phase transition point.Comment: 6 pages, 12 figure
Top-philic Vector-Like Portal to Scalar Dark Matter
We investigate the phenomenology of scalar singlet dark matter candidates
that couple dominantly to the Standard Model via a Yukawa interaction with the
top quark and a colored vector-like fermion. We estimate the viability of this
vector-like portal scenario with respect to the most recent bounds from dark
matter direct and indirect detection, as well as to dark matter and vector-like
mediator searches at colliders. Moreover, we take QCD radiative corrections
into account in all our theoretical calculations. This work complements
analyses related both to models featuring a scalar singlet coupled through a
vector-like portal to light quarks, and to scenarios in which the dark matter
is a Majorana singlet coupled to the Standard Model through scalar colored
particles (akin to simplified models inspired by supersymmetry). Our study puts
especially forward the complementarity of different search strategies from
different contexts, and we show that current experiments allow for testing dark
matter masses ranging up to 700 GeV and mediator masses ranging up to 6 TeV.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures; version accepted by PR
Graded Differential Geometry of Graded Matrix Algebras
We study the graded derivation-based noncommutative differential geometry of
the -graded algebra of complex -matrices
with the ``usual block matrix grading'' (for ). Beside the
(infinite-dimensional) algebra of graded forms the graded Cartan calculus,
graded symplectic structure, graded vector bundles, graded connections and
curvature are introduced and investigated. In particular we prove the
universality of the graded derivation-based first-order differential calculus
and show, that is a ``noncommutative graded manifold'' in a
stricter sense: There is a natural body map and the cohomologies of and its body coincide (as in the case of ordinary graded manifolds).Comment: 21 pages, LATE
Diagenetic Layers in the Upper Walls of Valles Marineris, Mars: Evidence for Drastic Climate Change Since the Mid-Hesperian
A packet of relatively resistant layers, totaling approx. 400 m thickness, is present at the tops of the chasma walls throughout Valles Marineris. The packet consists of an upper dark layer (approx. 50 m thick), a central bright layer (approx. 250 m thick), and a lower dark layer (approx. 100 m thick). The packet appears continuous and of nearly constant thickness and depth below ground surface over the whole Valles system (4000 km E-W, 800 km N-S), independent of elevation (3-10 km) and age of plateau surface (Noachian through upper Hesperian). The packet continues undisturbed beneath the boundary between surface units of Noachian and Hesperian ages, and continues undisturbed beneath impact craters transected by chasma walls. These attributes are not consistent with layer formation by volcanic or sedimentary deposition, and are consistent with layer formation in situ, i.e., by diagenesis, during or after upper Hesperian time. Diagenesis seems to require the action of aqueous solutions in the near subsurface, which are not now stable in the Valles Marineris area. To permit the stability of aqueous solutions, Mars must have had a fairly dense atmosphere, greater than or equal to 1 bar CO2, when the layers formed. Obliquity variations appear to be incapable of producing such a massive atmosphere so late in Mars' history
Cellular automaton rules conserving the number of active sites
This paper shows how to determine all the unidimensional two-state cellular
automaton rules of a given number of inputs which conserve the number of active
sites. These rules have to satisfy a necessary and sufficient condition. If the
active sites are viewed as cells occupied by identical particles, these
cellular automaton rules represent evolution operators of systems of identical
interacting particles whose total number is conserved. Some of these rules,
which allow motion in both directions, mimic ensembles of one-dimensional
pseudo-random walkers. Numerical evidence indicates that the corresponding
stochastic processes might be non-Gaussian.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Cyclic Statistics In Three Dimensions
While 2-dimensional quantum systems are known to exhibit non-permutation,
braid group statistics, it is widely expected that quantum statistics in
3-dimensions is solely determined by representations of the permutation group.
This expectation is false for certain 3-dimensional systems, as was shown by
the authors of ref. [1,2,3]. In this work we demonstrate the existence of
``cyclic'', or , {\it non-permutation group} statistics for a system of n
> 2 identical, unknotted rings embedded in . We make crucial use of a
theorem due to Goldsmith in conjunction with the so called Fuchs-Rabinovitch
relations for the automorphisms of the free product group on n elements.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, LaTex, minor page reformattin
Discovering clinical phronesis.
Phronesis is often described as a 'practical wisdom' adapted to the matters of everyday human life. Phronesis enables one to judge what is at stake in a situation and what means are required to bring about a good outcome. In medicine, phronesis tends to be called upon to deal with ethical issues and to offer a critique of clinical practice as a straightforward instrumental application of scientific knowledge. There is, however, a paucity of empirical studies of phronesis, including in medicine. Using a hermeneutic and phenomenological approach, this inquiry explores how phronesis is manifest in the stories of clinical practice of eleven exemplary physicians. The findings highlight five overarching themes: ethos (or character) of the physician, clinical habitus revealed in physician know-how, encountering the patient with attentiveness, modes of reasoning amidst complexity, and embodied perceptions (such as intuitions or gut feeling). The findings open a discussion about the contingent nature of clinical situations, a hermeneutic mode of clinical thinking, tacit dimensions of being and doing in clinical practice, the centrality of caring relations with patients, and the elusive quality of some aspects of practice. This study deepens understandings of the nature of phronesis within clinical settings and proposes 'Clinical phronesis' as a descriptor for its appearance and role in the daily practice of (exemplary) physicians
An Analysis of the Representations of the Mapping Class Group of a Multi-Geon Three-Manifold
It is well known that the inequivalent unitary irreducible representations
(UIR's) of the mapping class group of a 3-manifold give rise to ``theta
sectors'' in theories of quantum gravity with fixed spatial topology. In this
paper, we study several families of UIR's of and attempt to understand the
physical implications of the resulting quantum sectors. The mapping class group
of a three-manifold which is the connected sum of with a finite number
of identical irreducible primes is a semi-direct product group. Following
Mackey's theory of induced representations, we provide an analysis of the
structure of the general finite dimensional UIR of such a group. In the picture
of quantized primes as particles (topological geons), this general
group-theoretic analysis enables one to draw several interesting qualitative
conclusions about the geons' behavior in different quantum sectors, without
requiring an explicit knowledge of the UIR's corresponding to the individual
primes.Comment: 52 pages, harvmac, 2 postscript figures, epsf required. Added an
appendix proving the semi-direct product structure of the MCG, corrected an
error in the characterization of the slide subgroup, reworded extensively.
All our analysis and conclusions remain as befor
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