3,479 research outputs found
Minimal Riesz Energy Point Configurations for Rectifiable d-Dimensional Manifolds
For a compact set A in Euclidean space we consider the asymptotic behavior of
optimal (and near optimal) N-point configurations that minimize the Riesz
s-energy (corresponding to the potential 1/t^s) over all N-point subsets of A,
where s>0. For a large class of manifolds A having finite, positive
d-dimensional Hausdorff measure, we show that such minimizing configurations
have asymptotic limit distribution (as N tends to infinity with s fixed) equal
to d-dimensional Hausdorff measure whenever s>d or s=d. In the latter case we
obtain an explicit formula for the dominant term in the minimum energy. Our
results are new even for the case of the d-dimensional sphere.Comment: paper: 29 pages and addendum: 4 page
Reflections On Contributing To “Big Discoveries” About The Fly Clock: Our Fortunate Paths As Post-Docs With 2017 Nobel Laureates Jeff Hall, Michael Rosbash, And Mike Young
In the early 1980s Jeff Hall and Michael Rosbash at Brandeis University and Mike Young at Rockefeller University set out to isolate the period (per) gene, which was recovered in a revolutionary genetic screen by Ron Konopka and Seymour Benzer for mutants that altered circadian behavioral rhythms. Over the next 15 years the Hall, Rosbash and Young labs made a series of groundbreaking discoveries that defined the molecular timekeeping mechanism and formed the basis for them being awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Here the authors recount their experiences as post-docs in the Hall, Rosbash and Young labs from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, and provide a perspective of how basic research conducted on a simple model system during that era profoundly influenced the direction of the clocks field and established novel approaches that are now standard operating procedure for studying complex behavior
Mesh ratios for best-packing and limits of minimal energy configurations
For -point best-packing configurations on a compact metric
space , we obtain estimates for the mesh-separation ratio
, which is the quotient of the covering radius of
relative to and the minimum pairwise distance between points in
. For best-packing configurations that arise as limits of
minimal Riesz -energy configurations as , we prove that
and this bound can be attained even for the sphere.
In the particular case when N=5 on with the Euclidean metric, we
prove our main result that among the infinitely many 5-point best-packing
configurations there is a unique configuration, namely a square-base pyramid
, that is the limit (as ) of 5-point -energy
minimizing configurations. Moreover,
Quasi-uniformity of Minimal Weighted Energy Points on Compact Metric Spaces
For a closed subset of a compact metric space possessing an
-regular measure with , we prove that whenever
, any sequence of weighted minimal Riesz -energy configurations
on (for `nice' weights) is
quasi-uniform in the sense that the ratios of its mesh norm to separation
distance remain bounded as grows large. Furthermore, if is an
-rectifiable compact subset of Euclidean space ( an integer)
with positive and finite -dimensional Hausdorff measure, it is possible
to generate such a quasi-uniform sequence of configurations that also has (as
) a prescribed positive continuous limit distribution with respect
to -dimensional Hausdorff measure. As a consequence of our energy
related results for the unweighted case, we deduce that if is a compact
manifold without boundary, then there exists a sequence of -point
best-packing configurations on whose mesh-separation ratios have limit
superior (as ) at most 2
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