4,000 research outputs found
QCD sum rule analysis of excited mass parameter
The mass parameter of orbitally excited baryons is calculated by
using QCD sum rule in the framework of heavy quark effective theory. Two kinds
of interpolating current for the excited heavy baryons are introduced. It is
obtained that GeV for the non-derivative
current and GeV for the current with
derivative. These results are consistent with experimental data.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, to appear in PL
SamACO: variable sampling ant colony optimization algorithm for continuous optimization
An ant colony optimization (ACO) algorithm offers
algorithmic techniques for optimization by simulating the foraging behavior of a group of ants to perform incremental solution
constructions and to realize a pheromone laying-and-following
mechanism. Although ACO is first designed for solving discrete
(combinatorial) optimization problems, the ACO procedure is
also applicable to continuous optimization. This paper presents
a new way of extending ACO to solving continuous optimization
problems by focusing on continuous variable sampling as a key
to transforming ACO from discrete optimization to continuous
optimization. The proposed SamACO algorithm consists of three
major steps, i.e., the generation of candidate variable values for
selection, the antsâ solution construction, and the pheromone
update process. The distinct characteristics of SamACO are the
cooperation of a novel sampling method for discretizing the
continuous search space and an efficient incremental solution
construction method based on the sampled values. The performance
of SamACO is tested using continuous numerical functions
with unimodal and multimodal features. Compared with some
state-of-the-art algorithms, including traditional ant-based algorithms
and representative computational intelligence algorithms
for continuous optimization, the performance of SamACO is seen
competitive and promising
Effect of Anchoring Groups on the Conduction Properties of Terphenyl Molecules Connected to Copper Leads
We report equilibrium and non-equilibrium conductance of terphenyl molecules with different anchoring groups including sulfur and nitrogen atom. The corresponding molecules are terphenyl-dithiols (TPDT) and diamino-terphenyl (DATP). The non-equilibrium Green's function (NEGF) technique has been implemented on the density functional tight-binding (DFTB) code to perform computations of the electronic transport properties of molecular devices. The NEGFs are used to compute the electronic density self-consistently with open boundary condition naturally encountered in transport problem which is imposed by the potentials at the contacts. As result, the value of the molecular conductance with amine groups is higher about ten times than the thiol anchored group
Sequential optimization for efficient high-quality object proposal generation
We are motivated by the need for a generic object proposal generation algorithm which achieves good balance between object detection recall, proposal localization quality and computational efficiency. We propose a novel object proposal algorithm, BING ++, which inherits the virtue of good computational efficiency of BING [1] but significantly improves its proposal localization quality. At high level we formulate the problem of object proposal generation from a novel probabilistic perspective, based on which our BING++ manages to improve the localization quality by employing edges and segments to estimate object boundaries and update the proposals sequentially. We propose learning the parameters efficiently by searching for approximate solutions in a quantized parameter space for complexity reduction. We demonstrate the generalization of BING++ with the same fixed parameters across different object classes and datasets. Empirically our BING++ can run at half speed of BING on CPU, but significantly improve the localization quality by 18.5 and 16.7 percent on both VOC2007 and Microhsoft COCO datasets, respectively. Compared with other state-of-the-art approaches, BING++ can achieve comparable performance, but run significantly faster
Some comments on the bi(tri)-Hamiltonian structure of Generalized AKNS and DNLS hierarchies
We give the correct prescriptions for the terms involving the inverse of the
derivative of the delta function, in the Hamiltonian structures of the AKNS and
DNLS systems, in order for the Jacobi identities to hold. We also establish
that the sl(2) AKNS and DNLS systems are tri-Hamiltonians and construct two
compatible Hamiltonian structures for the sl(3) AKNS system. We also give a
derivation of the recursion operator for the sl(n+1) DNLS system.Comment: 10 pages, LaTe
A simulation of weak-light phase-locking for space laser interferometer
A simulation was investigated to better understand the impacts and effects of the additional technical noises on weak-light phase-locking for space laser interferometer. The result showed that the locking precision was limited by the phase readout noise when the laser frequency noise and clock jitter noise were removed, and this result was then confirmed by a benchtop experimental test. The required space laser interferometer noise floor was recovered from the simulation which proved the validity of the simulation program. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.National Natural Science Foundation of China/61575209Chinese Academy of Sciences/XDB2303020
Simplified amino acid alphabets based on deviation of conditional probability from random background
The primitive data for deducing the Miyazawa-Jernigan contact energy or
BLOSUM score matrix consists of pair frequency counts. Each amino acid
corresponds to a conditional probability distribution. Based on the deviation
of such conditional probability from random background, a scheme for reduction
of amino acid alphabet is proposed. It is observed that evident discrepancy
exists between reduced alphabets obtained from raw data of the
Miyazawa-Jernigan's and BLOSUM's residue pair counts. Taking homologous
sequence database SCOP40 as a test set, we detect homology with the obtained
coarse-grained substitution matrices. It is verified that the reduced alphabets
obtained well preserve information contained in the original 20-letter
alphabet.Comment: 9 pages,3figure
MeV Tau Neutrino in Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking Model
A supersymmetric model which naturally accommodates MeV tau neutrino within
the framework of gauge mediated supersymmetry breaking is described. The lepton
number violation is originally introduced in the messenger sector of the
theory. A large slepton-Higgs mixing mass and a small lepton-higgsino mixing
mass are generated at one-loop. Scalar tau neutrino has non-vanishing vacuum
expectation value. These result in a non-zero \nu_{\tau} mass which is in the
range of (1-10) MeV.Comment: 18 pages, latex, two figure
Imaging Spectroscopy of a White-Light Solar Flare
We report observations of a white-light solar flare (SOL2010-06-12T00:57,
M2.0) observed by the Helioseismic Magnetic Imager (HMI) on the Solar Dynamics
Observatory (SDO) and the Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager
(RHESSI). The HMI data give us the first space-based high-resolution imaging
spectroscopy of a white-light flare, including continuum, Doppler, and magnetic
signatures for the photospheric FeI line at 6173.34{\AA} and its neighboring
continuum. In the impulsive phase of the flare, a bright white-light kernel
appears in each of the two magnetic footpoints. When the flare occurred, the
spectral coverage of the HMI filtergrams (six equidistant samples spanning
\pm172m{\AA} around nominal line center) encompassed the line core and the blue
continuum sufficiently far from the core to eliminate significant Doppler
crosstalk in the latter, which is otherwise a possibility for the extreme
conditions in a white-light flare. RHESSI obtained complete hard X-ray and
\Upsilon-ray spectra (this was the first \Upsilon-ray flare of Cycle 24). The
FeI line appears to be shifted to the blue during the flare but does not go
into emission; the contrast is nearly constant across the line profile. We did
not detect a seismic wave from this event. The HMI data suggest stepwise
changes of the line-of-sight magnetic field in the white-light footpoints.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, Accepted by Solar Physic
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