3,792 research outputs found
Communication Complexity Protocol for Q-trits
Consider a function where its entries are distributed among many parties.
Suppose each party is allowed to transmit only a limited amount of information
to a net. One can use a classical protocol to guess the value of the global
function. Is there a quantum protocol improving the results of all classical
protocols? Brukner et. al. showed the deep connection between such problems and
the theory of Bell's inequalities. Here we generalize the theory to trits.
There the best classical protocol fails whereas the quantum protocol yields the
correct answer.Comment: 8 page
Systematic errors due to linear congruential random-number generators with the Swendsen-Wang algorithm: A warning
We show that linear congruential pseudo-random-number generators can cause
systematic errors in Monte Carlo simulations using the Swendsen-Wang algorithm,
if the lattice size is a multiple of a very large power of 2 and one random
number is used per bond. These systematic errors arise from correlations within
a single bond-update half-sweep. The errors can be eliminated (or at least
radically reduced) by updating the bonds in a random order or in an aperiodic
manner. It also helps to use a generator of large modulus (e.g. 60 or more
bits).Comment: Revtex4, 4 page
Information-Based Physics: An Observer-Centric Foundation
It is generally believed that physical laws, reflecting an inherent order in
the universe, are ordained by nature. However, in modern physics the observer
plays a central role raising questions about how an observer-centric physics
can result in laws apparently worthy of a universal nature-centric physics.
Over the last decade, we have found that the consistent apt quantification of
algebraic and order-theoretic structures results in calculi that possess
constraint equations taking the form of what are often considered to be
physical laws. I review recent derivations of the formal relations among
relevant variables central to special relativity, probability theory and
quantum mechanics in this context by considering a problem where two observers
form consistent descriptions of and make optimal inferences about a free
particle that simply influences them. I show that this approach to describing
such a particle based only on available information leads to the mathematics of
relativistic quantum mechanics as well as a description of a free particle that
reproduces many of the basic properties of a fermion. The result is an approach
to foundational physics where laws derive from both consistent descriptions and
optimal information-based inferences made by embedded observers.Comment: To be published in Contemporary Physics. The manuscript consists of
43 pages and 9 Figure
Modeling a Sensor to Improve its Efficacy
Robots rely on sensors to provide them with information about their
surroundings. However, high-quality sensors can be extremely expensive and
cost-prohibitive. Thus many robotic systems must make due with lower-quality
sensors. Here we demonstrate via a case study how modeling a sensor can improve
its efficacy when employed within a Bayesian inferential framework. As a test
bed we employ a robotic arm that is designed to autonomously take its own
measurements using an inexpensive LEGO light sensor to estimate the position
and radius of a white circle on a black field. The light sensor integrates the
light arriving from a spatially distributed region within its field of view
weighted by its Spatial Sensitivity Function (SSF). We demonstrate that by
incorporating an accurate model of the light sensor SSF into the likelihood
function of a Bayesian inference engine, an autonomous system can make improved
inferences about its surroundings. The method presented here is data-based,
fairly general, and made with plug-and play in mind so that it could be
implemented in similar problems.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, submitted to the special issue of "Sensors for
Robotics
A Spinorial Formulation of the Maximum Clique Problem of a Graph
We present a new formulation of the maximum clique problem of a graph in
complex space. We start observing that the adjacency matrix A of a graph can
always be written in the form A = B B where B is a complex, symmetric matrix
formed by vectors of zero length (null vectors) and the maximum clique problem
can be transformed in a geometrical problem for these vectors. This problem, in
turn, is translated in spinorial language and we show that each graph uniquely
identifies a set of pure spinors, that is vectors of the endomorphism space of
Clifford algebras, and the maximum clique problem is formalized in this setting
so that, this much studied problem, may take advantage from recent progresses
of pure spinor geometry
Random and exhaustive generation of permutations and cycles
In 1986 S. Sattolo introduced a simple algorithm for uniform random
generation of cyclic permutations on a fixed number of symbols. This algorithm
is very similar to the standard method for generating a random permutation, but
is less well known.
We consider both methods in a unified way, and discuss their relation with
exhaustive generation methods. We analyse several random variables associated
with the algorithms and find their grand probability generating functions,
which gives easy access to moments and limit laws.Comment: 9 page
Anomalous diffusion at percolation threshold in high dimensions on 10^18 sites
Using an inverse of the standard linear congruential random number generator,
large randomly occupied lattices can be visited by a random walker without
having to determine the occupation status of every lattice site in advance. In
seven dimensions, at the percolation threshold with L^7 sites and L < 420, we
confirm the expected time-dependence of the end-to-end distance (including the
corrections to the asymptotic behavior).Comment: 8 pages including figures, presentation improved, for
Int.J.Mod.Phys.
A generatingfunctionology approach to a problem of Wilf
Wilf posed the following problem: determine asymptotically as
the probability that a randomly chosen part size in a randomly chosen
composition of n has multiplicity m. One solution of this problem was given by
Hitczenko and Savage. In this paper, we study this question using the
techniques of generating functions and singularity analysis.Comment: 12 page
Molecular dynamics simulations of ballistic annihilation
Using event-driven molecular dynamics we study one- and two-dimensional
ballistic annihilation. We estimate exponents and that describe
the long-time decay of the number of particles () and of
their typical velocity (). To a good accuracy our results
confirm the scaling relation . In the two-dimensional case our
results are in a good agreement with those obtained from the Boltzmann kinetic
theory.Comment: 4 pages; some changes; Physical Review E (in press
Complementary algorithms for graphs and percolation
A pair of complementary algorithms are presented. One of the pair is a fast
method for connecting graphs with an edge. The other is a fast method for
removing edges from a graph. Both algorithms employ the same tree based graph
representation and so, in concert, can arbitrarily modify any graph. Since the
clusters of a percolation model may be described as simple connected graphs, an
efficient Monte Carlo scheme can be constructed that uses the algorithms to
sweep the occupation probability back and forth between two turning points.
This approach concentrates computational sampling time within a region of
interest. A high precision value of pc = 0.59274603(9) was thus obtained, by
Mersenne twister, for the two dimensional square site percolation threshold.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, poster version presented at statphys23 (2007
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