91 research outputs found
Diffusive persistence and the `sign-time' distribution
We present a new method for extracting the persistence exponent theta for the
diffusion equation, based on the distribution P of `sign-times'. With the aid
of a numerically verified Ansatz for P we derive an exact formula for theta in
arbitrary spatial dimension d. Our results are in excellent agreement with
previous numerical studies. Furthermore, our results indicate a qualitative
change in P above d ~ 36, signalling the existence of a sharp change in the
ergodic properties of the diffusion field.Comment: 5 pages, 2 tar gzip figures (Latex), subm. to PRE (Rapid Comm), new
reference adde
A geometrical angle on Feynman integrals
A direct link between a one-loop N-point Feynman diagram and a geometrical
representation based on the N-dimensional simplex is established by relating
the Feynman parametric representations to the integrals over contents of
(N-1)-dimensional simplices in non-Euclidean geometry of constant curvature. In
particular, the four-point function in four dimensions is proportional to the
volume of a three-dimensional spherical (or hyperbolic) tetrahedron which can
be calculated by splitting into birectangular ones. It is also shown that the
known formula of reduction of the N-point function in (N-1) dimensions
corresponds to splitting the related N-dimensional simplex into N rectangular
ones.Comment: 47 pages, including 42 pages of the text (in plain Latex) and 5 pages
with the figures (in a separate Latex file, requires axodraw.sty) a note and
three references added, minor problem with notation fixe
Eutactic quantum codes
We consider sets of quantum observables corresponding to eutactic stars.
Eutactic stars are systems of vectors which are the lower dimensional
``shadow'' image, the orthogonal view, of higher dimensional orthonormal bases.
Although these vector systems are not comeasurable, they represent redundant
coordinate bases with remarkable properties. One application is quantum secret
sharing.Comment: 6 page
Invariant and polynomial identities for higher rank matrices
We exhibit explicit expressions, in terms of components, of discriminants,
determinants, characteristic polynomials and polynomial identities for matrices
of higher rank. We define permutation tensors and in term of them we construct
discriminants and the determinant as the discriminant of order , where
is the dimension of the matrix. The characteristic polynomials and the
Cayley--Hamilton theorem for higher rank matrices are obtained there from
Hyperdeterminants as integrable discrete systems
We give the basic definitions and some theoretical results about
hyperdeterminants, introduced by A. Cayley in 1845. We prove integrability
(understood as 4d-consistency) of a nonlinear difference equation defined by
the 2x2x2-hyperdeterminant. This result gives rise to the following hypothesis:
the difference equations defined by hyperdeterminants of any size are
integrable.
We show that this hypothesis already fails in the case of the
2x2x2x2-hyperdeterminant.Comment: Standard LaTeX, 11 pages. v2: corrected a small misprint in the
abstrac
Classification of multipartite entangled states by multidimensional determinants
We find that multidimensional determinants "hyperdeterminants", related to
entanglement measures (the so-called concurrence or 3-tangle for the 2 or 3
qubits, respectively), are derived from a duality between entangled states and
separable states. By means of the hyperdeterminant and its singularities, the
single copy of multipartite pure entangled states is classified into an onion
structure of every closed subset, similar to that by the local rank in the
bipartite case. This reveals how inequivalent multipartite entangled classes
are partially ordered under local actions. In particular, the generic entangled
class of the maximal dimension, distinguished as the nonzero hyperdeterminant,
does not include the maximally entangled states in Bell's inequalities in
general (e.g., in the qubits), contrary to the widely known
bipartite or 3-qubit cases. It suggests that not only are they never locally
interconvertible with the majority of multipartite entangled states, but they
would have no grounds for the canonical n-partite entangled states. Our
classification is also useful for the mixed states.Comment: revtex4, 10 pages, 4 eps figures with psfrag; v2 title changed, 1
appendix added, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Volumes of polytopes in spaces of constant curvature
We overview the volume calculations for polyhedra in Euclidean, spherical and
hyperbolic spaces. We prove the Sforza formula for the volume of an arbitrary
tetrahedron in and . We also present some results, which provide a
solution for Seidel problem on the volume of non-Euclidean tetrahedron.
Finally, we consider a convex hyperbolic quadrilateral inscribed in a circle,
horocycle or one branch of equidistant curve. This is a natural hyperbolic
analog of the cyclic quadrilateral in the Euclidean plane. We find a few
versions of the Brahmagupta formula for the area of such quadrilateral. We also
present a formula for the area of a hyperbolic trapezoid.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, 58 reference
Volume formula for a -symmetric spherical tetrahedron through its edge lengths
The present paper considers volume formulae, as well as trigonometric
identities, that hold for a tetrahedron in 3-dimensional spherical space of
constant sectional curvature +1. The tetrahedron possesses a certain symmetry:
namely rotation through angle in the middle points of a certain pair of
its skew edges.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures; enhanced and improved exposition, typos
corrected; Arkiv foer Matematik, 201
Error bounds for the large-argument asymptotic expansions of the Hankel and Bessel functions
In this paper, we reconsider the large-argument asymptotic expansions of the
Hankel, Bessel and modified Bessel functions and their derivatives. New
integral representations for the remainder terms of these asymptotic expansions
are found and used to obtain sharp and realistic error bounds. We also give
re-expansions for these remainder terms and provide their error estimates. A
detailed discussion on the sharpness of our error bounds and their relation to
other results in the literature is given. The techniques used in this paper
should also generalize to asymptotic expansions which arise from an application
of the method of steepest descents.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Acta Applicandae
Mathematica
Counting the Faces of Randomly-Projected Hypercubes and Orthants, with Applications
Abstract. Let A be an n by N real-valued matrix with n < N; we count the number of k-faces fk(AQ) when Q is either the standard N-dimensional hypercube IN or else the positive orthant RN +. To state results simply, consider a proportional-growth asymptotic, where for fixed ÎŽ, Ï in (0, 1), we have a sequence of matrices An,Nn and of integers kn with n/Nn â ÎŽ, kn/n â Ï as n â â. If each matrix An,Nn has its columns in general position, then fk(AIN)/fk(I N) tends to zero or one depending on whether Ï> min(0, 2 â ÎŽâ1) or Ï < min(0, 2 â ÎŽâ1). Also, if each An,Nn is a random draw from a distribution which is invariant under right multiplication by signed permutations, then fk(ARN +)/fk(RN +) tends almost surely to zero or one depending on whether Ï> min(0, 2 â ÎŽâ1) or Ï < min(0, 2 â ÎŽâ1). We make a variety of contrasts to related work on projections of the simplex and/or cross-polytope. These geometric face-counting results have implications for signal processing, information theory, inverse problems, and optimization. Indeed, face counting is related to conditions for uniqueness of solutions of underdetermine
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