103 research outputs found
Stochastic Process Associated with Traveling Wave Solutions of the Sine-Gordon Equation
Stochastic processes associated with traveling wave solutions of the
sine-Gordon equation are presented. The structure of the forward Kolmogorov
equation as a conservation law is essential in the construction and so is the
traveling wave structure. The derived stochastic processes are analyzed
numerically. An interpretation of the behaviors of the stochastic processes is
given in terms of the equation of motion.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures; corrected typo
Operator monotones, the reduction criterion and the relative entropy
We introduce the theory of operator monotone functions and employ it to
derive a new inequality relating the quantum relative entropy and the quantum
conditional entropy. We present applications of this new inequality and in
particular we prove a new lower bound on the relative entropy of entanglement
and other properties of entanglement measures.Comment: Final version accepted for publication, added references in reference
[1] and [13
Loewner evolution driven by a stochastic boundary point
We consider evolution in the unit disk in which the sample paths are
represented by the trajectories of points evolving randomly under the
generalized Loewner equation. The driving mechanism differs from the SLE
evolution, but nevertheless solutions possess similar invariance properties.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
Conformal invariance in two-dimensional turbulence
Simplicity of fundamental physical laws manifests itself in fundamental
symmetries. While systems with an infinity of strongly interacting degrees of
freedom (in particle physics and critical phenomena) are hard to describe, they
often demonstrate symmetries, in particular scale invariance. In two dimensions
(2d) locality often promotes scale invariance to a wider class of conformal
transformations which allow for nonuniform re-scaling. Conformal invariance
allows a thorough classification of universality classes of critical phenomena
in 2d. Is there conformal invariance in 2d turbulence, a paradigmatic example
of strongly-interacting non-equilibrium system? Here, using numerical
experiment, we show that some features of 2d inverse turbulent cascade display
conformal invariance. We observe that the statistics of vorticity clusters is
remarkably close to that of critical percolation, one of the simplest
universality classes of critical phenomena. These results represent a new step
in the unification of 2d physics within the framework of conformal symmetry.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
The Energy Application Domain Extension for CityGML: enhancing interoperability for urban energy simulations
The road towards achievement of the climate protection goals requires, among the rest, a thorough rethinking of the
energy planning tools (and policies) at all levels, from local to global. Nevertheless, it is in the cities where the largest
part of energy is produced and consumed, and therefore it makes sense to focus the attention particularly on the cities
as they yield great potentials in terms of energy consumption reduction and efficiency increase. As a direct
consequence, a comprehensive knowledge of the demand and supply of energy resources, including their spatial
distribution within urban areas, is therefore of utmost importance. Precise, integrated knowledge about 3D urban
space, i.e. all urban (above and underground) features, infrastructures, their functional and semantic characteristics, and
their mutual dependencies and interrelations play a relevant role for advanced simulation and analyses.
As a matter of fact, what in the last years has proven to be an emerging and effective approach is the adoption of
standard-based, integrated semantic 3D virtual city models, which represent an information hub for most of the abovementioned
needs. In particular, being based on open standards (e.g. on the CityGML standard by the Open Geospatial
Consortium), virtual city models firstly reduce the effort in terms of data preparation and provision. Secondly, they offer
clear data structures, ontologies and semantics to facilitate data exchange between different domains and applications.
However, a standardised and omni-comprehensive urban data model covering also the energy domain is still missing
at the time of writing (January 2018). Even CityGML falls partially short when it comes to the definition of specific
entities and attributes for energy-related applications.
Nevertheless, and starting from the current version of CityGML (i.e. 2.0), this article describes the conception and the
definition of an Energy Application Domain Extension (ADE) for CityGML. The Energy ADE is meant to offer a unique
and standard-based data model to fill, on one hand, the above-mentioned gap, and, on the other hand, to allow for
both detailed single-building energy simulation (based on sophisticated models for building physics and occupant
behaviour) and city-wide, bottom-up energy assessments, with particular focus on the buildings sector. The overall
goal is to tackle the existing data interoperability issues when dealing with energy-related applications at urban scale.
The article presents the rationale behind the Energy ADE, it describes its main characteristics, the relation to other
standards, and provides some examples of current applications and case studies already adopting it
Integrable (2+1)-dimensional systems of hydrodynamic type
We describe the results that have so far been obtained in the classification
problem for integrable (2+1)-dimensional systems of hydrodynamic type. The
systems of Gibbons--Tsarev type are the most fundamental here. A whole class of
integrable (2+1)-dimensional models is related to each such system. We present
the known GT systems related to algebraic curves of genus g=0 and g=1 and also
a new GT system corresponding to algebraic curves of genus g=2. We construct a
wide class of integrable models generated by the simplest GT system, which was
not considered previously because it is in a sense trivial.Comment: 47 pages, no figure
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