2,238 research outputs found
Escaping from nonhyperbolic chaotic attractors
We study the noise-induced escape process from chaotic attractors in
nonhyperbolic systems. We provide a general mechanism of escape in the low
noise limit, employing the theory of large fluctuations. Specifically, this is
achieved by solving the variational equations of the auxiliary Hamiltonian
system and by incorporating the initial conditions on the chaotic attractor
unambiguously. Our results are exemplified with the H{\'e}non and the Ikeda map
and can be implemented straightforwardly to experimental data.Comment: replaced with published versio
A Feasibility Study on Miniaturizing an Automatic Amino Acid Analyzer for Use on Apollo Mission and Mars Voyager Mission Progress Report, Jun. - Dec. 1966
Miniaturizing automatic amino acid analyzer for Apollo and Voyager mission
A Feasibility Study on Miniaturizing an Automatic Amino Acid Analyzer for Use on Apollo Mission and Mars Voyager Mission Progress Report, Jan. - Jun. 1967
Miniaturizing n automatic amino acid analyzer for use on Apollo mission and Mars Voyager missio
Stability Properties of Nonhyperbolic Chaotic Attractors under Noise
We study local and global stability of nonhyperbolic chaotic attractors
contaminated by noise. The former is given by the maximum distance of a noisy
trajectory from the noisefree attractor, while the latter is provided by the
minimal escape energy necessary to leave the basin of attraction, calculated
with the Hamiltonian theory of large fluctuations. We establish the important
and counterintuitive result that both concepts may be opposed to each other.
Even when one attractor is globally more stable than another one, it can be
locally less stable. Our results are exemplified with the Holmes map, for two
different sets of parameter, and with a juxtaposition of the Holmes and the
Ikeda maps. Finally, the experimental relevance of these findings is pointed
out.Comment: Phys.Rev. Lett., to be publishe
International chemical identifier for reactions (RInChI).
The Reaction InChI (RInChI) extends the idea of the InChI, which provides a unique descriptor of molecular structures, towards reactions. Prototype versions of the RInChI have been available since 2011. The first official release (RInChI-V1.00), funded by the InChI Trust, is now available for download ( http://www.inchi-trust.org/downloads/ ). This release defines the format and generates hashed representations (RInChIKeys) suitable for database and web operations. The RInChI provides a concise description of the key data in chemical processes, and facilitates the manipulation and analysis of reaction data
Stumping and Stunts: Walking in Circles in the “Go-As-You-Please” Race
New York City, 1884: 14 contestants set out to walk round and round a track for six days in the “go-as-you-please” race, taking as little rest as possible. What does this durational act tell us about a type of performance just beginning to be named in New York slang as a “stunt”? Anticipating early-20th-century dance marathons and later durational performance art, the race enacted and troubled circulation, revealing fault lines of valorization: between work and leisure, work and life, and sporting and theatrical performance
Simulation of Fluid Flow During Direct Synthesis of HO in a Microstructured Membrane Reactor
A microstructured membrane reactor has been developed to overcome the safety and productivity challenge of the direct synthesis of hydrogen peroxide. A single membrane is employed for separate, continuous dosage of the gaseous reactants hydrogen and oxygen to the solid catalyst present in the aqueous solvent. Using a custom OpenFOAM® model, the impact of catalyst‐coated static mixers with different mixer geometries is studied. It is demonstrated that the custom fluid guiding elements outperform the investigated commercial static mixer under the flow conditions relevant to this application
All Who Wander: On the Prevalence and Characteristics of Multi-community Engagement
Although analyzing user behavior within individual communities is an active
and rich research domain, people usually interact with multiple communities
both on- and off-line. How do users act in such multi-community environments?
Although there are a host of intriguing aspects to this question, it has
received much less attention in the research community in comparison to the
intra-community case. In this paper, we examine three aspects of
multi-community engagement: the sequence of communities that users post to, the
language that users employ in those communities, and the feedback that users
receive, using longitudinal posting behavior on Reddit as our main data source,
and DBLP for auxiliary experiments. We also demonstrate the effectiveness of
features drawn from these aspects in predicting users' future level of
activity.
One might expect that a user's trajectory mimics the "settling-down" process
in real life: an initial exploration of sub-communities before settling down
into a few niches. However, we find that the users in our data continually post
in new communities; moreover, as time goes on, they post increasingly evenly
among a more diverse set of smaller communities. Interestingly, it seems that
users that eventually leave the community are "destined" to do so from the very
beginning, in the sense of showing significantly different "wandering" patterns
very early on in their trajectories; this finding has potentially important
design implications for community maintainers. Our multi-community perspective
also allows us to investigate the "situation vs. personality" debate from
language usage across different communities.Comment: 11 pages, data available at
https://chenhaot.com/pages/multi-community.html, Proceedings of WWW 2015
(updated references
White matter changes and confrontation naming in retired aging national football league athletes
Using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), we assessed the relationship of white matter integrity and performance on the Boston Naming Test (BNT) in a group of retired professional football players and a control group. We examined correlations between fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) with BNT T-scores in an unbiased voxelwise analysis processed with tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS). We also analyzed the DTI data by grouping voxels together as white matter tracts and testing each tract's association with BNT T-scores. Significant voxelwise correlations between FA and BNT performance were only seen in the retired football players (p < 0.02). Two tracts had mean FA values that significantly correlated with BNT performance: forceps minor and forceps major. White matter integrity is important for distributed cognitive processes, and disruption correlates with diminished performance in athletes exposed to concussive and subconcussive brain injuries, but not in controls without such exposure
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