517 research outputs found
A new proof of the flat wall theorem
We give an elementary and self-contained proof, and a numerical improvement, of a weaker form of the excluded clique minor theorem of Robertson and Seymour, the following. Let t,r >= 1 be integers, and let R = 49152t(24) (40t(2) +r). An r-wall is obtained from a 2r x r-grid by deleting every odd vertical edge in every odd row and every even vertical edge in every even row, then deleting the two resulting vertices of degree one, and finally subdividing edges arbitrarily. The vertices of degree two that existed before the subdivision are called the pegs of the r-wall. Let G be a graph with no Kt minor, and let W be an R-wall in G. We prove that there exist a set A subset of V(G) of size at most 12288t(24) and an r-subwall W' of W such that V(W') n A = 0 and W' is a flat wall in G A in the following sense. There exists a separation (X, Y) of G A such that X boolean AND Y is a subset of the vertex set of the cycle C' that bounds the outer face of W', V(W') subset of Y, every peg of W' belongs to X and the graph G[Y] can almost be drawn in the unit disk with the vertices X n Y drawn on the boundary of the disk in the order determined by C'. Here almost means that the assertion holds after repeatedly removing parts of the graph separated from X n Y by a cutset Z of size at most three, and adding all edges with both ends in Z. Our proof gives rise to an algorithm that runs in polynomial time even when r and t are part of the input instance. The proof is self-contained in the sense that it uses only results whose proofs can be found in textbooks. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc
Packing six T-joins in plane graphs
Let G be a plane graph and T an even subset of its vertices. It
has been conjectured that if all T-cuts of G have the same parity and
the size of every T-cut is at least k, then G contains k edge-disjoint
T-joins. The case k = 3 is equivalent to the Four Color Theorem, and
the cases k = 4, which was conjectured by Seymour, and k = 5 were
proved by Guenin. We settle the next open case k = 6
Box representations of embedded graphs
A -box is the cartesian product of intervals of and a
-box representation of a graph is a representation of as the
intersection graph of a set of -boxes in . It was proved by
Thomassen in 1986 that every planar graph has a 3-box representation. In this
paper we prove that every graph embedded in a fixed orientable surface, without
short non-contractible cycles, has a 5-box representation. This directly
implies that there is a function , such that in every graph of genus , a
set of at most vertices can be removed so that the resulting graph has a
5-box representation. We show that such a function can be made linear in
. Finally, we prove that for any proper minor-closed class ,
there is a constant such that every graph of
without cycles of length less than has a 3-box representation,
which is best possible.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures - revised versio
Anderson transition of three dimensional phonon modes
Anderson transition of the phonon modes is studied numerically. The critical
exponent for the divergence of the localization length is estimated using the
transfer matrix method, and the statistics of the modes is analyzed. The latter
is shown to be in excellent agreement with the energy level statistics of the
disrodered electron system belonging to the orthogonal universality class.Comment: 2 pages and another page for 3 figures, J. Phys. Soc. Japa
Magnetotransport in inhomogeneous magnetic fields
Quantum transport in inhomogeneous magnetic fields is investigated
numerically in two-dimensional systems using the equation of motion method. In
particular, the diffusion of electrons in random magnetic fields in the
presence of additional weak uniform magnetic fields is examined. It is found
that the conductivity is strongly suppressed by the additional uniform magnetic
field and saturates when the uniform magnetic field becomes on the order of the
fluctuation of the random magnetic field. The value of the conductivity at this
saturation is found to be insensitive to the magnitude of the fluctuation of
the random field. The effect of random potential on the magnetoconductance is
also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Novel Studies on the \eta' Effective Lagrangian
The effective Lagrangian for \eta' incorporating the effect of the QCD
\theta-angle has been developed previously. We revisit this Lagrangian and
carry out its canonical quantization with particular attention to the test
function spaces of constraints and the topology of the \eta'-field. In this
way, we discover a new chirally symmetric coupling of this field to chiral
multiplets which involves in particular fermions. This coupling violates P and
T symmetries. In a subsequent paper, we will evaluate its contribution to the
electric dipole moment (EDM) of fermions. Our motivation is to test whether the
use of mixed states restores P and T invariance, so that EDM vanishes. This
calculation will be shown to have striking new physical consequences.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure; V2: NEW TITLE; revised version to be published in
JHEP; references adde
Electronic properties of disordered corner-sharing tetrahedral lattices
We have examined the behaviour of noninteracting electrons moving on a
corner-sharing tetrahedral lattice into which we introduce a uniform (box)
distribution, of width W, of random on-site energies. We have used both the
relative localization length and the spectral rigidity to analyze the nature of
the eigenstates, and have determined both the mobility edge trajectories as a
function of W, and the critical disorder, Wc, beyond which all states are
localized. We find (i) that the mobility edge trajectories (energies Ec vs.
disorder W) are qualitatively different from those found for a simple cubic
lattice, and (ii) that the spectral rigidity is scale invariant at Wc and thus
provides a reliable method of estimating this quantity -- we find Wc/t=14.5. We
discuss our results in the context of the metal-to-insulator transition
undergone by LiAlyTi{2-y}O4 in a quantum site percolation model that also
includes the above-mentioned Anderson disorder, and show that the effects
produced by Anderson disorder are far less important than those produced by
quantum site percolation, at least in the determination of the doping
concentration at which the metal-to-insulator transition is predicted to occur
The Neutron Electric Dipole Moment in the Instanton Vacuum: Quenched Versus Unquenched Simulations
We investigate the role played by the fermionic determinant in the evaluation
of the CP-violating neutron electric dipole moment (EDM) adopting the Instanton
Liquid Model. Significant differences between quenched and unquenched
calculations are found. In the case of unquenched simulations the neutron EDM
decreases linearly with the quark mass and is expected to vanish in the chiral
limit. On the contrary, within the quenched approximation, the neutron EDM
increases as the quark mass decreases and is expected to diverge as (1/m)**Nf
in the chiral limit. We argue that such a qualitatively different behavior is a
parameter-free, semi-classical prediction and occurs because the neutron EDM is
sensitive to the topological structure of the vacuum. The present analysis
suggests that quenched and unquenched lattice QCD simulations of the neutron
EDM as well as of other observables governed by topology might show up
important differences in the quark mass dependence, for mq < Lambda(QCD).Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
Generalized Conformal Symmetry and Oblique AdS/CFT Correspondence for Matrix Theory
The large N behavior of Matrix theory is discussed on the basis of the
previously proposed generalized conformal symmetry. The concept of `oblique'
AdS/CFT correspondence, in which the conformal symmetry involves both the
space-time coordinates and the string coupling constant, is proposed. Based on
the explicit predictions for two-point correlators, possible implications for
the Matrix-theory conjecture are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages, 2 figures, written version of the talk presented at
Strings'9
Toy model for two chiral nonets
Motivated by the possibility that nonets of scalar mesons might be described
as mixtures of "two quark" and "four quark" components, we further study a toy
model in which corresponding chiral nonets (containing also the pseudoscalar
partners) interact with each other. Although the "two quark" and "four quark"
chiral fields transform identically under SU(3) SU(3)
transformations they transform differently under the U(1) transformation
which essentially counts total (quark + antiquark) content of the mesons. To
implement this we formulate an effective Lagrangian which mocks up the U(1)
behavior of the underlying QCD. We derive generating equations which yield Ward
identity type relations based only on the assumed symmetry structure. This is
applied to the mass spectrum of the low lying pseudoscalars and scalars. as
well as their "excitations". Assuming isotopic spin invariance, it is possible
to disentangle the amount of"two quark" vs."four quark" content in the
pseudoscalar type states and in the scalar type states.
It is found that a small "four quark" content in the lightest pseudoscalars is
consistent with a large "four quark" content in the lightest of the scalar
mesons. The present toy model also allows one to easily estimate the
strength of a "four quark" vacuum condensate. There seems to be a rich and
interesting structure.Comment: Numerical results updated, typos corrected, references update
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