2,605 research outputs found

    Boltzmann-Gibbs entropy is sufficient but not necessary for the likelihood factorization required by Einstein

    Full text link
    In 1910 Einstein published a crucial aspect of his understanding of Boltzmann entropy. He essentially argued that the likelihood function of any system composed by two probabilistically independent subsystems {\it ought} to be factorizable into the likelihood functions of each of the subsystems. Consistently he was satisfied by the fact that Boltzmann (additive) entropy fulfills this epistemologically fundamental requirement. We show here that entropies (e.g., the qq-entropy on which nonextensive statistical mechanics is based) which generalize the BG one through violation of its well known additivity can {\it also} fulfill the same requirement. This fact sheds light on the very foundations of the connection between the micro- and macro-scopic worlds.Comment: 5 pages including 2 figure

    Primate Craniofacial Function and Biology

    Get PDF
    Book review: Primate Craniofacial Function and Biolog

    Validity and Failure of the Boltzmann Weight

    Full text link
    The dynamics and thermostatistics of a classical inertial XY model, characterized by long-range interactions, are investigated on dd-dimensional lattices (d=1,2,d=1,2, and 3), through molecular dynamics. The interactions between rotators decay with the distance rijr_{ij} like~1/rijα1/r_{ij}^{\alpha} (α≥0\alpha \geq 0), where α→∞\alpha\to\infty and α=0\alpha=0 respectively correspond to the nearest-neighbor and infinite-range interactions. We verify that the momenta probability distributions are Maxwellians in the short-range regime, whereas qq-Gaussians emerge in the long-range regime. Moreover, in this latter regime, the individual energy probability distributions are characterized by long tails, corresponding to qq-exponential functions. The present investigation strongly indicates that, in the long-range regime, central properties fall out of the scope of Boltzmann-Gibbs statistical mechanics, depending on dd and α\alpha through the ratio α/d\alpha/d.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. To appear in EP

    Primate Craniofacial Function and Biology

    Get PDF
    Book review: Primate Craniofacial Function and Biolog

    Day-to-day Variability of Stuttering

    Get PDF
    Variability has long been known to be a primary feature of the disorder of stuttering (Bloodstein & Bernstein Ratner, 2008; Costello & Ingham, 1984; Yaruss, 1997a, 1997b). Many factors that affect variability have been investigated (Brown, 1937; Johnson & Brown, 1935; Quarrington, Conway, & Siegel, 1962) yet the typical range of variability experienced by speakers remains unknown. This study will examine the speech of six adult speakers in three spontaneous speaking situations and two reading tasks. The frequency, duration, and types of stuttered events that occur on the tasks will be compared within and between speakers. The focus will be on describing variability in stuttering frequency and duration within speakers and attempting to detect consistent patterns between speakers

    Possible Implication of a Single Nonextensive pTp_T Distribution for Hadron Production in High-Energy pppp Collisions

    Full text link
    Multiparticle production processes in pppp collisions at the central rapidity region are usually considered to be divided into independent "soft" and "hard" components. The first is described by exponential (thermal-like) transverse momentum spectra in the low-pTp_T region with a scale parameter TT associated with the temperature of the hadronizing system. The second is governed by a power-like distributions of transverse momenta with power index nn at high-pTp_T associated with the hard scattering between partons. We show that the hard-scattering integral can be approximated as a nonextensive distribution of a quasi-power-law containing a scale parameter TT and a power index n=1/(q−1)n=1/(q -1), where qq is the nonextensivity parameter. We demonstrate that the whole region of transverse momenta presently measurable at LHC experiments at central rapidity (in which the observed cross sections varies by 1414 orders of magnitude down to the low pTp_T region) can be adequately described by a single nonextensive distribution. These results suggest the dominance of the hard-scattering hadron-production process and the approximate validity of a "no-hair" statistical-mechanical description of the pTp_T spectra for the whole pTp_T region at central rapidity for pppp collisions at high-energies.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures; presented by G.Wilk at the XLIV International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics; 8 - 12 September 2014 - Bologna, ITAL
    • …
    corecore