1,145 research outputs found

    Universal Lossless Compression with Unknown Alphabets - The Average Case

    Full text link
    Universal compression of patterns of sequences generated by independently identically distributed (i.i.d.) sources with unknown, possibly large, alphabets is investigated. A pattern is a sequence of indices that contains all consecutive indices in increasing order of first occurrence. If the alphabet of a source that generated a sequence is unknown, the inevitable cost of coding the unknown alphabet symbols can be exploited to create the pattern of the sequence. This pattern can in turn be compressed by itself. It is shown that if the alphabet size kk is essentially small, then the average minimax and maximin redundancies as well as the redundancy of every code for almost every source, when compressing a pattern, consist of at least 0.5 log(n/k^3) bits per each unknown probability parameter, and if all alphabet letters are likely to occur, there exist codes whose redundancy is at most 0.5 log(n/k^2) bits per each unknown probability parameter, where n is the length of the data sequences. Otherwise, if the alphabet is large, these redundancies are essentially at least O(n^{-2/3}) bits per symbol, and there exist codes that achieve redundancy of essentially O(n^{-1/2}) bits per symbol. Two sub-optimal low-complexity sequential algorithms for compression of patterns are presented and their description lengths analyzed, also pointing out that the pattern average universal description length can decrease below the underlying i.i.d.\ entropy for large enough alphabets.Comment: Revised for IEEE Transactions on Information Theor

    Wormhole Structures in Logarithmic-Corrected R2R^2 Gravity

    Full text link
    This paper is devoted to find the feasible shape functions for the construction of static wormhole geometry in the frame work of logarithmic-corrected R2R^2 gravity model. We discuss the asymptotically flat wormhole solutions sustained by the matter sources with anisotropic pressure, isotropic pressure and barotropic pressure. For anisotropic case, we consider three shape functions and evaluate the null energy conditions and weak energy conditions graphically along with their regions. Moreover, for barotropic and isotropic pressures, we find shape function analytically and discuss its properties. For the formation of traversable wormhole geometries, we cautiously choose the values of parameters involved in f(R)f(R) gravity model. We show explicitly that our wormhole solutions violates the non-existence theorem even with logarithmic corrections. We discuss all physical properties via graphical analysis and it is concluded that the wormhole solutions with relativistic formalism can be well justified with logarithmic corrections.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure

    Defect multiplets of N=1 supersymmetry in 4d

    Get PDF
    Any 4d theory possessing N=1\mathcal{N}=1 supersymmetry admits a so called S\mathcal{S}-multiplet, containing the conserved energy-momentum tensor and supercurrent. When a defect is introduced into such a theory, the S\mathcal{S}-multiplet receives contributions localised on the defect, which indicate the breaking of some translation symmetry and consequently also some supersymmetries. We call this the defect multiplet. We classify such terms corresponding to half-BPS defects which can be either three-dimensional, preserving 3d N=1\mathcal{N}=1, or two-dimensional, preserving N=(0,2)\mathcal{N}=(0,2). The new terms localised on the defect furnish multiplets of the reduced symmetry and give rise to the displacement operator

    Running couplings in equivariantly gauge-fixed SU(N) Yang--Mills theories

    Full text link
    In equivariantly gauge-fixed SU(N) Yang--Mills theories, the gauge symmetry is only partially fixed, leaving a subgroup HSU(N)H\subset SU(N) unfixed. Such theories avoid Neuberger's nogo theorem if the subgroup HH contains at least the Cartan subgroup U(1)N1U(1)^{N-1}, and they are thus non-perturbatively well defined if regulated on a finite lattice. We calculate the one-loop beta function for the coupling g~2=ξg2\tilde{g}^2=\xi g^2, where gg is the gauge coupling and ξ\xi is the gauge parameter, for a class of subgroups including the cases that H=U(1)N1H=U(1)^{N-1} or H=SU(M)×SU(NM)×U(1)H=SU(M)\times SU(N-M)\times U(1). The coupling g~\tilde{g} represents the strength of the interaction of the gauge degrees of freedom associated with the coset SU(N)/HSU(N)/H. We find that g~\tilde{g}, like gg, is asymptotically free. We solve the renormalization-group equations for the running of the couplings gg and g~\tilde{g}, and find that dimensional transmutation takes place also for the coupling g~\tilde{g}, generating a scale Λ~\tilde{\Lambda} which can be larger than or equal to the scale Λ\Lambda associated with the gauge coupling gg, but not smaller. We speculate on the possible implications of these results.Comment: 14 pages, late

    Length-based cryptanalysis: The case of Thompson's Group

    Full text link
    The length-based approach is a heuristic for solving randomly generated equations in groups which possess a reasonably behaved length function. We describe several improvements of the previously suggested length-based algorithms, that make them applicable to Thompson's group with significant success rates. In particular, this shows that the Shpilrain-Ushakov public key cryptosystem based on Thompson's group is insecure, and suggests that no practical public key cryptosystem based on this group can be secure.Comment: Final version, to appear in JM

    Polarised Raman and Infrared Spectra of Single Crystals of P-Chlorobromobenzene

    Get PDF
    corecore