7,293 research outputs found
Quantum Monte Carlo simulations of a particle in a random potential
In this paper we carry out Quantum Monte Carlo simulations of a quantum
particle in a one-dimensional random potential (plus a fixed harmonic
potential) at a finite temperature. This is the simplest model of an interface
in a disordered medium and may also pertain to an electron in a dirty metal. We
compare with previous analytical results, and also derive an expression for the
sample to sample fluctuations of the mean square displacement from the origin
which is a measure of the glassiness of the system. This quantity as well as
the mean square displacement of the particle are measured in the simulation.
The similarity to the quantum spin glass in a transverse field is noted. The
effect of quantum fluctuations on the glassy behavior is discussed.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures included as eps files, uses RevTeX. Accepted for
publication in J. of Physics A: Mathematical and Genera
Quantum fluctuations and glassy behavior: The case of a quantum particle in a random potential
In this paper we expand our previous investigation of a quantum particle
subject to the action of a random potential plus a fixed harmonic potential at
a finite temperature T. In the classical limit the system reduces to a
well-known ``toy'' model for an interface in a random medium. It also applies
to a single quantum particle like an an electron subject to random
interactions, where the harmonic potential can be tuned to mimic the effect of
a finite box. Using the variational approximation, or alternatively, the limit
of large spatial dimensions, together with the use the replica method, and are
able to solve the model and obtain its phase diagram in the
plane, where is the particle's mass. The phase diagram is similar to that
of a quantum spin-glass in a transverse field, where the variable
plays the role of the transverse field. The glassy phase is characterized by
replica-symmetry-breaking. The quantum transition at zero temperature is also
discussed.Comment: revised version, 23 pages, revtex, 5 postscript figures in a separate
file figures.u
Of mice and men: Sparse statistical modeling in cardiovascular genomics
In high-throughput genomics, large-scale designed experiments are becoming
common, and analysis approaches based on highly multivariate regression and
anova concepts are key tools. Shrinkage models of one form or another can
provide comprehensive approaches to the problems of simultaneous inference that
involve implicit multiple comparisons over the many, many parameters
representing effects of design factors and covariates. We use such approaches
here in a study of cardiovascular genomics. The primary experimental context
concerns a carefully designed, and rich, gene expression study focused on
gene-environment interactions, with the goals of identifying genes implicated
in connection with disease states and known risk factors, and in generating
expression signatures as proxies for such risk factors. A coupled exploratory
analysis investigates cross-species extrapolation of gene expression
signatures--how these mouse-model signatures translate to humans. The latter
involves exploration of sparse latent factor analysis of human observational
data and of how it relates to projected risk signatures derived in the animal
models. The study also highlights a range of applied statistical and genomic
data analysis issues, including model specification, computational questions
and model-based correction of experimental artifacts in DNA microarray data.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-AOAS110 in the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Logarithmic roughening in a growth process with edge evaporation
Roughening transitions are often characterized by unusual scaling properties.
As an example we investigate the roughening transition in a solid-on-solid
growth process with edge evaporation [Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 2746 (1996)], where
the interface is known to roughen logarithmically with time. Performing
high-precision simulations we find appropriate scaling forms for various
quantities. Moreover we present a simple approximation explaining why the
interface roughens logarithmically.Comment: revtex, 6 pages, 7 eps figure
NICMOS Observations of Low-Redshift Quasar Host Galaxies
We have obtained Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer images of
16 radio quiet quasars observed as part of a project to investigate the
``luminosity/host-mass limit.'' The limit results were presented in McLeod,
Rieke, & Storrie-Lombardi (1999). In this paper, we present the images
themselves, along with 1- and 2-dimensional analyses of the host galaxy
properties. We find that our model-independent 1D technique is reliable for use
on ground-based data at low redshifts; that many radio-quiet quasars live in
deVaucouleurs-law hosts, although some of the techniques used to determine host
type are questionable; that complex structure is found in many of the hosts,
but that there are some hosts that are very smooth and symmetric; and that the
nuclei radiate at ~2-20% of the Eddington rate based on the assumption that all
galaxies have central black holes with a constant mass fraction of 0.6%.
Despite targeting hard-to-resolve hosts, we have failed to find any that imply
super-Eddington accretion rates.Comment: To appear in ApJ, 28 pages including degraded figures. Download the
paper with full-resolutio figures from
http://www.astro.wellesley.edu/kmcleod/mm.p
A comparison of the optical properties of radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars
We have made radio observations of 87 optically selected quasars at 5 GHz
with the VLA in order to measure the radio power for these objects and hence
determine how the fraction of radio-loud quasars varies with redshift and
optical luminosity. The sample has been selected from the recently completed
Edinburgh Quasar Survey and covers a redshift range of 0.3 < z < 1.5 and an
optical absolute magnitude range of -26.5 < M_{B} < -23.5 (h, q_{0} = 1/2). We
have also matched up other existing surveys with the FIRST and NVSS radio
catalogues and combined these data so that the optical luminosity-redshift
plane is now far better sampled than previously. We have fitted a model to the
probability of a quasar being radio-loud as a function of absolute magnitude
and redshift and from this model infer the radio-loud and radio-quiet optical
luminosity functions. The radio-loud optical luminosity function is featureless
and flatter than the radio-quiet one. It evolves at a marginally slower rate if
quasars evolve by density evolution, but the difference in the rate of
evolutions of the two different classes is much less than was previously
thought. We show, using Monte-Carlo simulations, that the observed difference
in the shape of the optical luminosity functions can be partly accounted for by
Doppler boosting of the optical continuum of the radio-loud quasars and explain
how this can be tested in the future.Comment: 33 pages, 9 postscript figures, uses the AAS aaspp4 LaTeX style file,
to appear in the 1 February 1999 issue of The Astrophysical Journa
Directed polymers on a Cayley tree with spatially correlated disorder
In this paper we consider directed walks on a tree with a fixed branching
ratio K at a finite temperature T. We consider the case where each site (or
link) is assigned a random energy uncorrelated in time, but correlated in the
transverse direction i.e. within the shell. In this paper we take the
transverse distance to be the hierarchical ultrametric distance, but other
possibilities are discussed. We compute the free energy for the case of
quenched disorder and show that there is a fundamental difference between the
case of short range spatial correlations of the disorder which behaves
similarly to the non-correlated case considered previously by Derrida and Spohn
and the case of long range correlations which has a totally different overlap
distribution which approaches a single delta function about q=1 for large L,
where L is the length of the walk. In the latter case the free energy is not
extensive in L for the intermediate and also relevant range of L values,
although in the true thermodynamic limit extensivity is restored. We identify a
crossover temperature which grows with L, and whenever T<T_c(L) the system is
always in the low temperature phase. Thus in the case of long-ranged
correlation as opposed to the short-ranged case a phase transition is absent.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure, standard latex. J. Phys. A, accepted for
publicatio
Localization of a polymer in random media: Relation to the localization of a quantum particle
In this paper we consider in detail the connection between the problem of a
polymer in a random medium and that of a quantum particle in a random
potential. We are interested in a system of finite volume where the polymer is
known to be {\it localized} inside a low minimum of the potential. We show how
the end-to-end distance of a polymer which is free to move can be obtained from
the density of states of the quantum particle using extreme value statistics.
We give a physical interpretation to the recently discovered one-step
replica-symmetry-breaking solution for the polymer (Phys. Rev. E{\bf 61}, 1729
(2000)) in terms of the statistics of localized tail states. Numerical
solutions of the variational equations for chains of different length are
performed and compared with quenched averages computed directly by using the
eigenfunctions and eigenenergies of the Schr\"odinger equation for a particle
in a one-dimensional random potential. The quantities investigated are the
radius of gyration of a free gaussian chain, its mean square distance from the
origin and the end-to-end distance of a tethered chain. The probability
distribution for the position of the chain is also investigated. The glassiness
of the system is explained and is estimated from the variance of the measured
quantities.Comment: RevTex, 44 pages, 13 figure
- …