3,954 research outputs found
A Linear Iterative Unfolding Method
A frequently faced task in experimental physics is to measure the probability
distribution of some quantity. Often this quantity to be measured is smeared by
a non-ideal detector response or by some physical process. The procedure of
removing this smearing effect from the measured distribution is called
unfolding, and is a delicate problem in signal processing, due to the
well-known numerical ill behavior of this task. Various methods were invented
which, given some assumptions on the initial probability distribution, try to
regularize the unfolding problem. Most of these methods definitely introduce
bias into the estimate of the initial probability distribution. We propose a
linear iterative method, which has the advantage that no assumptions on the
initial probability distribution is needed, and the only regularization
parameter is the stopping order of the iteration, which can be used to choose
the best compromise between the introduced bias and the propagated statistical
and systematic errors. The method is consistent: "binwise" convergence to the
initial probability distribution is proved in absence of measurement errors
under a quite general condition on the response function. This condition holds
for practical applications such as convolutions, calorimeter response
functions, momentum reconstruction response functions based on tracking in
magnetic field etc. In presence of measurement errors, explicit formulae for
the propagation of the three important error terms is provided: bias error,
statistical error, and systematic error. A trade-off between these three error
terms can be used to define an optimal iteration stopping criterion, and the
errors can be estimated there. We provide a numerical C library for the
implementation of the method, which incorporates automatic statistical error
propagation as well.Comment: Proceedings of ACAT-2011 conference (Uxbridge, United Kingdom), 9
pages, 5 figures, changes of corrigendum include
A strongly polynomial algorithm for generalized flow maximization
A strongly polynomial algorithm is given for the generalized flow
maximization problem. It uses a new variant of the scaling technique, called
continuous scaling. The main measure of progress is that within a strongly
polynomial number of steps, an arc can be identified that must be tight in
every dual optimal solution, and thus can be contracted. As a consequence of
the result, we also obtain a strongly polynomial algorithm for the linear
feasibility problem with at most two nonzero entries per column in the
constraint matrix.Comment: minor correction
Magnetic phase diagram of an Fe monolayer on W(110) and Ta(110) surfaces based on ab initio calculations
We present detailed investigations of the magnetic properties of an Fe
monolayer on W and Ta (110) surfaces based on the ab initio screened
Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker method. By calculating tensorial exchange coupling
coefficients, the ground states of the systems are determined using atomistic
spin dynamics simulations. Different types of ground states are found in the
systems as a function of relaxation of the Fe layer. In case of W(110)
substrate this is reflected in a reorientation of the easy axis from in-plane
to out-of-plane. For Ta(110) a switching appears from the ferromagnetic state
to a cycloidal spin spiral state, then to another spin spiral state with a
larger wave vector and, for large relaxations, a rotation of the normal vector
of the spin spiral is found. Classical Monte Carlo simulations indicate
temperature-induced transitions between the different magnetic phases observed
in the Fe/Ta(110) system. These phase transitions are analyzed both
quantitatively and qualitatively by finite-temperature spin wave theory.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
Ab initio study of mixed clusters of water and N,N′-dimethylethyleneurea
Intermolecular interactions between a single water and two N,N′-dimethylethyleneurea (DMEU) molecules have been investigated using local and density-fitting approximations of the standard Moller-Plesset perturbation theory (DF-LMP2) with the aug-ccpVTZ basis set. Six stable configurations have been found. In the first three, the water molecule intercalates between two DMEU molecules. In the next three configurations, the water molecule is attached to a stacked DMEU dimer, and these structures are more stable than the first three. These results support the view that DMEU molecules can form contact pairs in dilute aqueous solutions. © 2011
Approximating Minimum Cost Connectivity Orientation and Augmentation
We investigate problems addressing combined connectivity augmentation and
orientations settings. We give a polynomial-time 6-approximation algorithm for
finding a minimum cost subgraph of an undirected graph that admits an
orientation covering a nonnegative crossing -supermodular demand function,
as defined by Frank. An important example is -edge-connectivity, a
common generalization of global and rooted edge-connectivity.
Our algorithm is based on a non-standard application of the iterative
rounding method. We observe that the standard linear program with cut
constraints is not amenable and use an alternative linear program with
partition and co-partition constraints instead. The proof requires a new type
of uncrossing technique on partitions and co-partitions.
We also consider the problem setting when the cost of an edge can be
different for the two possible orientations. The problem becomes substantially
more difficult already for the simpler requirement of -edge-connectivity.
Khanna, Naor, and Shepherd showed that the integrality gap of the natural
linear program is at most when and conjectured that it is constant
for all fixed . We disprove this conjecture by showing an
integrality gap even when
Effect of positional inaccuracies on multielectrode results
This paper investigates the effect of electrode positioning errors on the inverted
pseudosection. Instead of random spacing errors (as usually assumed in geoelectrics)
we exactly measured this effect among field conditions. In the field, in spite of the
greatest possible care, the electrode positions contain some inaccuracy: either in case
of dense undergrowth, or varied topography, or very rocky field. In all these cases, it
is not possible to put the electrodes in their theoretical position. As a consequence,
the position data will contain some error. The inaccuracies were exactly determined
by using a laser distance meter. The geometrical data from real field conditions and
by using Wenner-α, Wenner-β, pole-dipole and pole-pole arrays were then considered
over homogeneous half space.
As we have found, the positioning errors can be regarded as insignificant, even
in case of relatively uncomfortable field conditions. However, in case of very rocky
surface the distortions are more significant, but it is still possible to make some corrections:
either by neglecting a few electrode positions with the greatest positioning
error, or to minimize the inline errors, even on the price that offline deviations are
high
Evolutionary trees: an integer multicommodity max-flow-min-cut theorem
In biomathematics, the extensions of a leaf-colouration of a binary tree to the whole vertex set with minimum number of colour-changing edges are extensively studied. Our paper generalizes the problem for trees; algorithms and a Menger-type theorem are presented. The LP dual of the problem is a multicommodity flow problem, for which a max-flow-min-cut theorem holds. The problem that we solve is an instance of the NP-hard multiway cut problem
Theoretical study of the role of the tip in enhancing the sensitivity of differential conductance tunneling spectroscopy on magnetic surfaces
Based on a simple model for spin-polarized scanning tunneling spectroscopy
(SP-STS) we study how tip magnetization and electronic structure affects the
differential conductance (dI/dV) tunneling spectrum of an Fe(001) surface. We
take into account energy dependence of the vacuum decay of electron states, and
tip electronic structure either using an ideal model or based on ab initio
electronic structure calculation. In the STS approach, topographic and magnetic
contributions to dI/dV can clearly be distinguished and analyzed separately.
Our results suggest that the sensitivity of STS on a magnetic sample can be
tuned and even enhanced by choosing the appropriate magnetic tip and bias
setpoint, and the effect is governed by the effective spin-polarization.Comment: 22 pages manuscript, 4 figures;
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.83.21441
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