28,902 research outputs found

    Adaptive ACMS: A robust localized Approximated Component Mode Synthesis Method

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    We consider finite element methods of multiscale type to approximate solutions for two-dimensional symmetric elliptic partial differential equations with heterogeneous LL^\infty coefficients. The methods are of Galerkin type and follows the Variational Multiscale and Localized Orthogonal Decomposition--LOD approaches in the sense that it decouples spaces into multiscale and fine subspaces. In a first method, the multiscale basis functions are obtained by mapping coarse basis functions, based on corners used on primal iterative substructuring methods, to functions of global minimal energy. This approach delivers quasi-optimal a priori error energy approximation with respect to the mesh size, however it deteriorates with respect to high-contrast coefficients. In a second method, edge modes based on local generalized eigenvalue problems are added to the corner modes. As a result, optimal a priori error energy estimate is achieved which is mesh and contrast independent. The methods converge at optimal rate even if the solution has minimum regularity, belonging only to the Sobolev space H1H^1

    Hybrid Localized Spectral Decomposition for multiscale problems

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    We consider a finite element method for elliptic equation with heterogeneous and possibly high-contrast coefficients based on primal hybrid formulation. A space decomposition as in FETI and BDCC allows a sequential computations of the unknowns through elliptic problems and satisfies equilibrium constraints. One of the resulting problems is non-local but with exponentially decaying solutions, enabling a practical scheme where the basis functions have an extended, but still local, support. We obtain quasi-optimal a priori error estimates for low-contrast problems assuming minimal regularity of the solutions. To also consider the high-contrast case, we propose a variant of our method, enriching the space solution via local eigenvalue problems and obtaining optimal a priori error estimate that mitigates the effect of having coefficients with different magnitudes and again assuming no regularity of the solution. The technique developed is dimensional independent and easy to extend to other problems such as elasticity

    On multivariate quantiles under partial orders

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    This paper focuses on generalizing quantiles from the ordering point of view. We propose the concept of partial quantiles, which are based on a given partial order. We establish that partial quantiles are equivariant under order-preserving transformations of the data, robust to outliers, characterize the probability distribution if the partial order is sufficiently rich, generalize the concept of efficient frontier, and can measure dispersion from the partial order perspective. We also study several statistical aspects of partial quantiles. We provide estimators, associated rates of convergence, and asymptotic distributions that hold uniformly over a continuum of quantile indices. Furthermore, we provide procedures that can restore monotonicity properties that might have been disturbed by estimation error, establish computational complexity bounds, and point out a concentration of measure phenomenon (the latter under independence and the componentwise natural order). Finally, we illustrate the concepts by discussing several theoretical examples and simulations. Empirical applications to compare intake nutrients within diets, to evaluate the performance of investment funds, and to study the impact of policies on tobacco awareness are also presented to illustrate the concepts and their use.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AOS863 the Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Momentum and energy propagation in tapered granular chains

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    We study momentum and energy propagation in 1D tapered chains of spherical granules which interact according to a Hertz potential. In this work we apply the binary collision approximation, which is based on the assumption that transfer of energy along the chain occurs via a succession of two-particle collisions. Although the binary theory correctly captures the trends of increase or decrease of kinetic energy and momentum, the actual values of these quantities are not in good quantitative agreement with those obtained by numerically integrating the full equations of motion. To address this difficulty we have developed a mixed numerical/analytical correction algorithm to provide an improved estimate of the velocity of the particles during pulse propagation. With this corrected velocity we are in turn able to correctly predict the momentum and kinetic energy along the chain for several tapering configurations, specifically for forward linear, forward exponential, backward linear and backward exponential tapering

    Fast and High-Fidelity Entangling Gate through Parametrically Modulated Longitudinal Coupling

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    We investigate an approach to universal quantum computation based on the modulation of longitudinal qubit-oscillator coupling. We show how to realize a controlled-phase gate by simultaneously modulating the longitudinal coupling of two qubits to a common oscillator mode. In contrast to the more familiar transversal qubit-oscillator coupling, the magnitude of the effective qubit-qubit interaction does not rely on a small perturbative parameter. As a result, this effective interaction strength can be made large, leading to short gate times and high gate fidelities. We moreover show how the gate infidelity can be exponentially suppressed with squeezing and how the entangling gate can be generalized to qubits coupled to separate oscillators. Our proposal can be realized in multiple physical platforms for quantum computing, including superconducting and spin qubits.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Supplemental Materia

    Anisotropy Studies of the Unresolved Far-infrared Background

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    Dusty, starforming galaxies and active galactic nuclei that contribute to the integrated background intensity at far-infrared wavelengths trace the large-scale structure. Below the point source detection limit, correlations in the large-scale structure lead to clustered anisotropies in the unresolved component of the far-infrared background (FIRB). The angular power spectrum of the FIRB anisotropies could be measured in large-area surveys with the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) on the upcoming Herschel observatory. To study statistical properties of these anisotropies, the confusion from foreground Galactic dust emission needs to be reduced even in the ``cleanest'' regions of the sky.The multi-frequency coverage of SPIRE allows the foreground dust to be partly separated from the extragalactic background composed of dusty starforming galaxies as well as faint normal galaxies. The separation improves for fields with sizes greater than a few hundred square degrees and when combined with Planck data. We show that an area of about \sim 400 degrees2^2 observed for about 1000 hours with Herschel-SPIRE and complemented by Planck provides maximal information on the anisotropy power spectrum. We discuss the scientific studies that can be done with measurements of the unresolved FIRB anisotropies including a determination of the large scale bias and the small-scale halo occupation distribution of FIRB sources with fluxes below the point-source detection level.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, replaced to match the extended version, accepted by Ap
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