1,754 research outputs found
Localizability in de Sitter space
An analogue of the Newton-Wigner position operator is defined for a massive
neutral scalar field in de Sitter space. The one-particle subspace of the
theory, consisting of positive-energy solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation
selected by the Hadamard condition, is identified with an irreducible
representation of de Sitter group. Postulates of localizability analogous to
those written by Wightman for fields in Minkowski space are formulated on it,
and a unique solution is shown to exist. A simple expression for the
time-evolution of the operator is presented.Comment: Presentation improved; references adde
Ways to open innovation: main agents and sources in the Portuguese case
Facing increasing open innovation trends, Portuguese enterprises are considering the related processes and impacts. Thus, this work aims to identify the sectors whose enterprises most engage in open innovation (such as cooperation on this issue) and which sources/agents are most used. This is analyzed by sector and type of innovation as an interesting way of differentiation for better open innovation strategy delineation. Using the data from the Community Innovation Survey (CIS-2012), it first appraises the nature of the innovation process, either cooperative or firm-based, as the starting level of analysis. Then, it differentiates the results by sector illustrating which cooperation sources/agents are most used (scope) and relative intensity of use (scale). This is important to assess levels of openness and related factors. Results show that main innovating sectors in Portugal are of three types: research-based, knowledge-based and service-based. They reveal an increasing focus on knowledge and services, trends that have been leading to more active openness towards innovation. For instance, health and construction are increasing their openness for innovating and internationalizing processes. However, Portuguese innovation is still more firm-based (in-house) than cooperation-based, especially concerning new products' launching. This work and future analyzes around it can contribute to encourage the open innovation strategy in more sectors of the economy as an easy and effective way to cope with rapid trends and changes. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
The Two-Point Function and the Effective Magnetic Field in Diluted Ising Models on the Cayley Tree
Some results on the two-point function and on the analytic structure of the
momenta of the effective fugacity at the origin for a class of diluted
ferromagnetic Ising models on the Cayley tree are presented.Comment: 22 page
Questioning Aesthetics: Are Archivists Qualified to Make Appraisal or Reappraisal Decisions Based on Aesthetic Judgments?
During the appraisal or reappraisal process, an item may be either accessioned into or remain intact as part of a collection owing to its intrinsic value. Judgments regarding the intrinsic value of an item range from the purely subjective to the totally ambiguous. The concept of intrinsic value experienced growing interest from the National Archives and Records Service (NAAS) as they began to embark on a large-scale reformatting project in 1979. Planning for this project raised the issue of whether certain documents should be retained in their original format or be destroyed following reformatting. In response to this issue, NAAS established the Committee on Intrinsic Value. The committee was charged with the task of defining intrinsic value and then determining its qualities, characteristics, and applications. By 1982, the committee had published Intrinsic Value in Archival Material. This report resulted in a very broad attempt to examine this issue with respect to the reappraisal and preservation of archival documents. The following is a synopsis of the results of their investigation
Aspects of Two-Level Systems under External Time Dependent Fields
The dynamics of two-level systems in time-dependent backgrounds is under
consideration. We present some new exact solutions in special backgrounds
decaying in time. On the other hand, following ideas of Feynman, Vernon and
Hellwarth, we discuss in detail the possibility to reduce the quantum dynamics
to a classical Hamiltonian system. This, in particular, opens the possibility
to directly apply powerful methods of classical mechanics (e.g. KAM methods) to
study the quantum system. Following such an approach, we draw conclusions of
relevance for ``quantum chaos'' when the external background is periodic or
quasi-periodic in time.Comment: To appear in J. Phys. A. Mathematical and Genera
Multiple classical limits in relativistic and nonrelativistic quantum mechanics
The existence of a classical limit describing interacting particles in a
second-quantized theory of identical particles with bosonic symmetry is proved.
This limit exists in addition to a previously established classical limit with
a classical field behavior, showing that the limit of the theory
is not unique. An analogous result is valid for a free massive scalar field:
two distinct classical limits are proved to exist, describing a system of
particles or a classical field. The introduction of local operators in order to
represent kinematical properties of interest is shown to break the permutation
symmetry under some localizability conditions, allowing the study of individual
particle properties.Comment: 13 page
On exploiting haptic cues for self-supervised learning of depth-based robot navigation affordances
This article presents a method for online learning of robot navigation affordances from spatiotemporally correlated haptic and depth cues. The method allows the robot to incrementally learn which objects present in the environment are actually traversable. This is a critical requirement for any wheeled robot performing in natural environments, in which the inability to discern vegetation from non-traversable obstacles frequently hampers terrain progression. A wheeled robot prototype was developed in order to experimentally validate the proposed method. The robot prototype obtains haptic and depth sensory feedback from a pan-tilt telescopic antenna and from a structured light sensor, respectively. With the presented method, the robot learns a mapping between objects' descriptors, given the range data provided by the sensor, and objects' stiffness, as estimated from the interaction between the antenna and the object. Learning confidence estimation is considered in order to progressively reduce the number of required physical interactions with acquainted objects. To raise the number of meaningful interactions per object under time pressure, the several segments of the object under analysis are prioritised according to a set of morphological criteria. Field trials show the ability of the robot to progressively learn which elements of the environment are traversable.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Self-supervised learning of depth-based navigation affordances from haptic cues
This paper presents a ground vehicle capable of exploiting haptic cues to learn navigation affordances from depth cues. A simple pan-tilt telescopic antenna and a Kinect sensor, both fitted to the robot’s body frame, provide the required haptic and depth sensory feedback, respectively. With the antenna, the robot determines whether an object is traversable by the robot. Then, the interaction outcome is associated to the object’s depth-based descriptor. Later on, the robot to predict if a newly observed object is traversable just by inspecting its depth-based appearance uses this acquired knowledge. A set of field trials show the ability of the to robot progressively learn which elements of the environment are traversable.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
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