3,918 research outputs found
Uniform shrinking and expansion under isotropic Brownian flows
We study some finite time transport properties of isotropic Brownian flows.
Under a certain nondegeneracy condition on the potential spectral measure, we
prove that uniform shrinking or expansion of balls under the flow over some
bounded time interval can happen with positive probability. We also provide a
control theorem for isotropic Brownian flows with drift. Finally, we apply the
above results to show that under the nondegeneracy condition the length of a
rectifiable curve evolving in an isotropic Brownian flow with strictly negative
top Lyapunov exponent converges to zero as with positive
probability
Equilibration in phi^4 theory in 3+1 dimensions
The process of equilibration in phi^4 theory is investigated for a
homogeneous system in 3+1 dimensions and a variety of out-of-equilibrium
initial conditions, both in the symmetric and broken phase, by means of the 2PI
effective action. Two Phi-derivable approximations including scattering effects
are used: the two-loop and the ``basketball'', the latter corresponding to the
truncation of the 2PI effective action at O(lambda^2). The approach to
equilibrium, as well as the kinetic and chemical equilibration is investigated.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, uses axodraw, minor corrections adde
Removing the mask -- reconstructing a scalar field on the sphere from a masked field
The paper analyses a spectral approach to reconstructing %the image of a
scalar field on the sphere, given only information about a masked version of
the field together with precise information about the (smooth) mask. The theory
is developed for a general mask, and later specialized to the case of an
axially symmetric mask. Numerical experiments are given for the case of an
axial mask motivated by the cosmic microwave background, assuming that the
underlying field is a realization of a Gaussian random field with an artificial
angular power spectrum of moderate degree (). The recovery is
highly satisfactory in the absence of noise and even in the presence of
moderate noise
Identification of the dominant recombination process for perovskite solar cells based on machine learning
Over the past decade, perovskite solar cells have become one of the major research interests of the photovoltaic community, and they are now on the brink of catching up with the classical inorganic solar cells, with efficiency now reaching up to 25%. However, significant improvements are still achievable by reducing recombination losses. The aim of this work is to develop a fast and easy-to-use tool to pinpoint the main losses in perovskite solar cells. We use large-scale drift-diffusion simulations to get a better understanding of the light intensity dependence of the open-circuit voltage and how it correlates to the dominant recombination process. We introduce an automated identification tool using machine learning methods to pinpoint the dominant loss using the light intensity-dependent performances as an input. The machine learning was trained using >2 million simulations and gives an accuracy of the prediction up to 82%. Le Corre et al. demonstrate the application of machine learning methods to identify the dominant recombination process in perovskite solar cells with 82% accuracy. The machine learning algorithms are trained and tested using large-scale drift-diffusion simulations, and their applicability on real solar cells is also demonstrated on devices previously reported
Reassessment of the evolution of wheat chromosomes 4A, 5A, and 7B.
Key messageComparison of genome sequences of wild emmer wheat and Aegilops tauschii suggests a novel scenario of the evolution of rearranged wheat chromosomes 4A, 5A, and 7B. Past research suggested that wheat chromosome 4A was subjected to a reciprocal translocation T(4AL;5AL)1 that occurred in the diploid progenitor of the wheat A subgenome and to three major rearrangements that occurred in polyploid wheat: pericentric inversion Inv(4AS;4AL)1, paracentric inversion Inv(4AL;4AL)1, and reciprocal translocation T(4AL;7BS)1. Gene collinearity along the pseudomolecules of tetraploid wild emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides, subgenomes AABB) and diploid Aegilops tauschii (genomes DD) was employed to confirm these rearrangements and to analyze the breakpoints. The exchange of distal regions of chromosome arms 4AS and 4AL due to pericentric inversion Inv(4AS;4AL)1 was detected, and breakpoints were validated with an optical Bionano genome map. Both breakpoints contained satellite DNA. The breakpoints of reciprocal translocation T(4AL;7BS)1 were also found. However, the breakpoints that generated paracentric inversion Inv(4AL;4AL)1 appeared to be collocated with the 4AL breakpoints that had produced Inv(4AS;4AL)1 and T(4AL;7BS)1. Inv(4AS;4AL)1, Inv(4AL;4AL)1, and T(4AL;7BS)1 either originated sequentially, and Inv(4AL;4AL)1 was produced by recurrent chromosome breaks at the same breakpoints that generated Inv(4AS;4AL)1 and T(4AL;7BS)1, or Inv(4AS;4AL)1, Inv(4AL;4AL)1, and T(4AL;7BS)1 originated simultaneously. We prefer the latter hypothesis since it makes fewer assumptions about the sequence of events that produced these chromosome rearrangements
Inverting Ray-Knight identity
We provide a short proof of the Ray-Knight second generalized Theorem, using
a martingale which can be seen (on the positive quadrant) as the Radon-Nikodym
derivative of the reversed vertex-reinforced jump process measure with respect
to the Markov jump process with the same conductances. Next we show that a
variant of this process provides an inversion of that Ray-Knight identity. We
give a similar result for the Ray-Knight first generalized Theorem.Comment: 18 page
Statistical Analysis of a Semilinear Hyperbolic System Advected by a White in Time Random Velocity Field
We study a system of semilinear hyperbolic equations passively advected by
smooth white noise in time random velocity fields. Such a system arises in
modeling non-premixed isothermal turbulent flames under single-step kinetics of
fuel and oxidizer. We derive closed equations for one-point and multi-point
probability distribution functions (PDFs) and closed form analytical formulas
for the one point PDF function, as well as the two-point PDF function under
homogeneity and isotropy. Exact solution formulas allows us to analyze the
ensemble averaged fuel/oxidizer concentrations and the motion of their level
curves. We recover the empirical formulas of combustion in the thin reaction
zone limit and show that these approximate formulas can either underestimate or
overestimate average concentrations when reaction zone is not tending to zero.
We show that the averaged reaction rate slows down locally in space due to
random advection induced diffusion; and that the level curves of ensemble
averaged concentration undergo diffusion about mean locations.Comment: 18 page
Polymer transport in random flow
The dynamics of polymers in a random smooth flow is investigated in the
framework of the Hookean dumbbell model. The analytical expression of the
time-dependent probability density function of polymer elongation is derived
explicitly for a Gaussian, rapidly changing flow. When polymers are in the
coiled state the pdf reaches a stationary state characterized by power-law
tails both for small and large arguments compared to the equilibrium length.
The characteristic relaxation time is computed as a function of the Weissenberg
number. In the stretched state the pdf is unstationary and exhibits
multiscaling. Numerical simulations for the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes flow
confirm the relevance of theoretical results obtained for the delta-correlated
model.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figure
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