34,499 research outputs found
An investigation of tandem row high head pump inducers Interim report
Streamline calculations for tandem row high head pump inducer
Clustering in Hilbert space of a quantum optimization problem
The solution space of many classical optimization problems breaks up into
clusters which are extensively distant from one another in the Hamming metric.
Here, we show that an analogous quantum clustering phenomenon takes place in
the ground state subspace of a certain quantum optimization problem. This
involves extending the notion of clustering to Hilbert space, where the
classical Hamming distance is not immediately useful. Quantum clusters
correspond to macroscopically distinct subspaces of the full quantum ground
state space which grow with the system size. We explicitly demonstrate that
such clusters arise in the solution space of random quantum satisfiability
(3-QSAT) at its satisfiability transition. We estimate both the number of these
clusters and their internal entropy. The former are given by the number of
hardcore dimer coverings of the core of the interaction graph, while the latter
is related to the underconstrained degrees of freedom not touched by the
dimers. We additionally provide new numerical evidence suggesting that the
3-QSAT satisfiability transition may coincide with the product satisfiability
transition, which would imply the absence of an intermediate entangled
satisfiable phase.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Approximating random quantum optimization problems
We report a cluster of results regarding the difficulty of finding
approximate ground states to typical instances of the quantum satisfiability
problem -QSAT on large random graphs. As an approximation strategy, we
optimize the solution space over `classical' product states, which in turn
introduces a novel autonomous classical optimization problem, PSAT, over a
space of continuous degrees of freedom rather than discrete bits. Our central
results are: (i) The derivation of a set of bounds and approximations in
various limits of the problem, several of which we believe may be amenable to a
rigorous treatment. (ii) A demonstration that an approximation based on a
greedy algorithm borrowed from the study of frustrated magnetism performs well
over a wide range in parameter space, and its performance reflects structure of
the solution space of random -QSAT. Simulated annealing exhibits
metastability in similar `hard' regions of parameter space. (iii) A
generalization of belief propagation algorithms introduced for classical
problems to the case of continuous spins. This yields both approximate
solutions, as well as insights into the free energy `landscape' of the
approximation problem, including a so-called dynamical transition near the
satisfiability threshold. Taken together, these results allow us to elucidate
the phase diagram of random -QSAT in a two-dimensional
energy-density--clause-density space.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Lacie phase 1 Classification and Mensuration Subsystem (CAMS) rework experiment
An experiment was designed to test the ability of the Classification and Mensuration Subsystem rework operations to improve wheat proportion estimates for segments that had been processed previously. Sites selected for the experiment included three in Kansas and three in Texas, with the remaining five distributed in Montana and North and South Dakota. The acquisition dates were selected to be representative of imagery available in actual operations. No more than one acquisition per biophase were used, and biophases were determined by actual crop calendars. All sites were worked by each of four Analyst-Interpreter/Data Processing Analyst Teams who reviewed the initial processing of each segment and accepted or reworked it for an estimate of the proportion of small grains in the segment. Classification results, acquisitions and classification errors and performance results between CAMS regular and ITS rework are tabulated
Coal desulfurization process
A method for chlorinolysis of coal is an organic solvent at a moderate temperautre and atmospheric pressure has been proven to be effective in removing sulfur, particularly the organic sulfur, from coal. Chlorine gas is bubbled through a slurry of moist coal in chlorinated solvent. The chlorinated coal is separated, hydrolyzed and the dechlorinated. Preliminary results of treating a high sulfutr (4.77%S) bituminous coal show that up to 70% organic sulfur, 90% hyritic sulfur and 76% total sulfur can be removed. The treated coal is dechlorinated by heating at 500 C. The presence of moisture helps to remove organic sulfur
Unitarity and the Hilbert space of quantum gravity
Under the premises that physics is unitary and black hole evaporation is
complete (no remnants, no topology change), there must exist a one-to-one
correspondence between states on future null and timelike infinity and on any
earlier spacelike Cauchy surface (e.g., slices preceding the formation of the
hole). We show that these requirements exclude a large set of semiclassical
spacetime configurations from the Hilbert space of quantum gravity. In
particular, the highest entropy configurations, which account for almost all of
the volume of semiclassical phase space, would not have quantum counterparts,
i.e. would not correspond to allowed states in a quantum theory of gravity.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, revtex; minor changes in v2 (version published in
Class. Quant. Grav.
Trellis phase codes for power-bandwith efficient satellite communications
Support work on improved power and spectrum utilization on digital satellite channels was performed. Specific attention is given to the class of signalling schemes known as continuous phase modulation (CPM). The specific work described in this report addresses: analytical bounds on error probability for multi-h phase codes, power and bandwidth characterization of 4-ary multi-h codes, and initial results of channel simulation to assess the impact of band limiting filters and nonlinear amplifiers on CPM performance
Tendency of spherically imploding plasma liners formed by merging plasma jets to evolve toward spherical symmetry
Three dimensional hydrodynamic simulations have been performed using smoothed
particle hydrodynamics (SPH) in order to study the effects of discrete jets on
the processes of plasma liner formation, implosion on vacuum, and expansion.
The pressure history of the inner portion of the liner was qualitatively and
quantitatively similar from peak compression through the complete stagnation of
the liner among simulation results from two one dimensional
radiationhydrodynamic codes, 3D SPH with a uniform liner, and 3D SPH with 30
discrete plasma jets. Two dimensional slices of the pressure show that the
discrete jet SPH case evolves towards a profile that is almost
indistinguishable from the SPH case with a uniform liner, showing that
non-uniformities due to discrete jets are smeared out by late stages of the
implosion. Liner formation and implosion on vacuum was also shown to be robust
to Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth. Interparticle mixing for a liner
imploding on vacuum was investigated. The mixing rate was very small until
after peak compression for the 30 jet simulation.Comment: 28 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasmas (2012
CEDNIK: Phenotypic and molecular characterization of an additional patient and review of the literature
Synaptosomal-associated protein 29 (SNAP29) is a t-SNARE protein that is implicated in intracellular vesicle fusion. Mutations in the SNAP29 gene have been associated with cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and keratoderma syndrome (CEDNIK). In patients with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, mutations in SNAP29 on the nondeleted chromosome are linked to similar ichthyotic and neurological phenotypes. Here, the authors report a patient with cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and keratoderma syndrome who presented with global developmental delay, polymicrogyria, dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, optic nerve dysplasia, gaze apraxia, and dysmorphic features. He has developed ichthyosis and palmoplantar keratoderma as he has grown. Exome sequencing identified a homozygous nonsense mutation in SNAP29 gene designated as c.85C>T (p.Arg29X). The authors compare the findings in the proband with previously reported cases. The previously unreported mutation in this patient and his phenotype add to the characterization of cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and keratoderma syndrome and the accumulating scientific evidence that implicates synaptic protein dysfunction in various neuroectodermal conditions
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