43,338 research outputs found
Phase diagram of two-species Bose-Einstein condensates in an optical lattice
The exact macroscopic wave functions of two-species Bose-Einstein condensates
in an optical lattice beyond the tight-binding approximation are studied by
solving the coupled nonlinear Schrodinger equations. The phase diagram for
superfluid and insulator phases of the condensates is determined analytically
according to the macroscopic wave functions of the condensates, which are seen
to be traveling matter waves.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
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Imaging the atomic structure of activated carbon
The precise atomic structure of activated carbon is unknown, despite its huge commercial importance in the purification of air and water. Diffraction methods have been extensively applied to the study of microporous carbons, but cannot provide an unequivocal identification of their structure. Here we show that the structure of a commercial activated carbon can be imaged directly using aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. Images are presented both of the as-produced carbon and of the carbon following heat treatment at 2000 degrees C. In the 2000 degrees C carbon clear evidence is found for the presence of pentagonal rings, suggesting that the carbons have a fullerene-related structure. Such a structure would help to explain the properties of activated carbon, and would also have important implications for the modelling of adsorption on microporous carbons
ETEA: A euclidean minimum spanning tree-Based evolutionary algorithm for multiobjective optimization
© the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyAbstract The Euclidean minimum spanning tree (EMST), widely used in a variety of domains, is a minimum spanning tree of a set of points in the space, where the edge weight between each pair of points is their Euclidean distance. Since the generation of an EMST is entirely determined by the Euclidean distance between solutions (points), the properties of EMSTs have a close relation with the distribution and position information of solutions. This paper explores the properties of EMSTs and proposes an EMST-based Evolutionary Algorithm (ETEA) to solve multiobjective optimization problems (MOPs). Unlike most EMO algorithms that focus on the Pareto dominance relation, the proposed algorithm mainly considers distance-based measures to evaluate and compare individuals during the evolutionary search. Specifically in ETEA, four strategies are introduced: 1) An EMST-based crowding distance (ETCD) is presented to estimate the density of individuals in the population; 2) A distance comparison approach incorporating ETCD is used to assign the fitness value for individuals; 3) A fitness adjustment technique is designed to avoid the partial overcrowding in environmental selection; 4) Three diversity indicators-the minimum edge, degree, and ETCD-with regard to EMSTs are applied to determine the survival of individuals in archive truncation. From a series of extensive experiments on 32 test instances with different characteristics, ETEA is found to be competitive against five state-of-the-art algorithms and its predecessor in providing a good balance among convergence, uniformity, and spread.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of the United Kingdom under
Grant EP/K001310/1, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 61070088
Equilibrium problems for Raney densities
The Raney numbers are a class of combinatorial numbers generalising the
Fuss--Catalan numbers. They are indexed by a pair of positive real numbers
with and , and form the moments of a probability
density function. For certain the latter has the interpretation as the
density of squared singular values for certain random matrix ensembles, and in
this context equilibrium problems characterising the Raney densities for and have recently been proposed. Using two
different techniques --- one based on the Wiener--Hopf method for the solution
of integral equations and the other on an analysis of the algebraic equation
satisfied by the Green's function --- we establish the validity of the
equilibrium problems for general and similarly use both methods to
identify the equilibrium problem for ,
and . The Wiener--Hopf method is used to extend the latter
to parameters for a non-negative integer,
and also to identify the equilibrium problem for a family of densities with
moments given by certain binomial coefficients.Comment: 13 page
A global wire planning scheme for Network-on-Chip.
As technology scales down, the interconnect for on-chip global communication becomes the delay bottleneck. In order to provide well-controlled global wire delay and efficient global communication, a packet switched Network-on-Chip (NoC) architecture was proposed by different authors. In this paper, the NoC system parameters constrained by the interconnections are studied. Predictions on scaled system parameters such as clock frequency, resource size, global communication bandwidth and inter-resource delay are made for future technologies. Based on these parameters, a global wire planning scheme is proposed
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