18,399 research outputs found

    Nickel hydrogen capacity loss

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    The results of tests to assess capacity loss in nickel hydrogen cells are presented in outline form. The effects of long storage (greater than 1 month), high hydrogen pressure storage, high cobalt content, and recovery actions are addressed

    A subset solution to the sign problem in random matrix simulations

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    We present a solution to the sign problem in dynamical random matrix simulations of a two-matrix model at nonzero chemical potential. The sign problem, caused by the complex fermion determinants, is solved by gathering the matrices into subsets, whose sums of determinants are real and positive even though their cardinality only grows linearly with the matrix size. A detailed proof of this positivity theorem is given for an arbitrary number of fermion flavors. We performed importance sampling Monte Carlo simulations to compute the chiral condensate and the quark number density for varying chemical potential and volume. The statistical errors on the results only show a mild dependence on the matrix size and chemical potential, which confirms the absence of sign problem in the subset method. This strongly contrasts with the exponential growth of the statistical error in standard reweighting methods, which was also analyzed quantitatively using the subset method. Finally, we show how the method elegantly resolves the Silver Blaze puzzle in the microscopic limit of the matrix model, where it is equivalent to QCD.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, as published in Phys. Rev. D; added references; in Sec. VB: added discussion of model satisfying the Silver Blaze for all N (proof in Appendix E

    Immersed and virtually embedded pi_1-injective surfaces in graph manifolds

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    We show that many 3-manifold groups have no nonabelian surface subgroups. For example, any link of an isolated complex surface singularity has this property. In fact, we determine the exact class of closed graph-manifolds which have no immersed pi_1-injective surface of negative Euler characteristic. We also determine the class of closed graph manifolds which have no finite cover containing an embedded such surface. This is a larger class. Thus, manifolds M^3 exist which have immersed pi_1-injective surfaces of negative Euler characteristic, but no such surface is virtually embedded (finitely covered by an embedded surface in some finite cover of M^3).Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol1/agt-1-20.abs.htm

    An explicit counterexample to the Lagarias-Wang finiteness conjecture

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    The joint spectral radius of a finite set of real d×dd \times d matrices is defined to be the maximum possible exponential rate of growth of long products of matrices drawn from that set. A set of matrices is said to have the \emph{finiteness property} if there exists a periodic product which achieves this maximal rate of growth. J.C. Lagarias and Y. Wang conjectured in 1995 that every finite set of real d×dd \times d matrices satisfies the finiteness property. However, T. Bousch and J. Mairesse proved in 2002 that counterexamples to the finiteness conjecture exist, showing in particular that there exists a family of pairs of 2×22 \times 2 matrices which contains a counterexample. Similar results were subsequently given by V.D. Blondel, J. Theys and A.A. Vladimirov and by V.S. Kozyakin, but no explicit counterexample to the finiteness conjecture has so far been given. The purpose of this paper is to resolve this issue by giving the first completely explicit description of a counterexample to the Lagarias-Wang finiteness conjecture. Namely, for the set \mathsf{A}_{\alpha_*}:= \{({cc}1&1\\0&1), \alpha_*({cc}1&0\\1&1)\} we give an explicit value of \alpha_* \simeq 0.749326546330367557943961948091344672091327370236064317358024...] such that Aα∗\mathsf{A}_{\alpha_*} does not satisfy the finiteness property.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figure
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