2,381 research outputs found
Charge Detection in a Closed-Loop Aharonov-Bohm Interferometer
We report on a study of complementarity in a two-terminal "closed-loop"
Aharonov-Bohm interferometer. In this interferometer, the simple picture of
two-path interference cannot be applied. We introduce a nearby quantum point
contact to detect the electron in a quantum dot inserted in the interferometer.
We found that charge detection reduces but does not completely suppress the
interference even in the limit of perfect detection. We attribute this
phenomenon to the unique nature of the closed-loop interferometer. That is, the
closed-loop interferometer cannot be simply regarded as a two-path
interferometer because of multiple reflections of electrons. As a result, there
exist indistinguishable paths of the electron in the interferometer and the
interference survives even in the limit of perfect charge detection. This
implies that charge detection is not equivalent to path detection in a
closed-loop interferometer. We also discuss the phase rigidity of the
transmission probability for a two-terminal conductor in the presence of a
detector.Comment: 4 pages with 4 figure
TRAVOS: Trust and Reputation in the Context of Inaccurate Information Sources
In many dynamic open systems, agents have to interact with one another to achieve their goals. Here, agents may be self-interested, and when trusted to perform an action for another, may betray that trust by not performing the action as required. In addition, due to the size of such systems, agents will often interact with other agents with which they have little or no past experience. There is therefore a need to develop a model of trust and reputation that will ensure good interactions among software agents in large scale open systems. Against this background, we have developed TRAVOS (Trust and Reputation model for Agent-based Virtual OrganisationS) which models an agent's trust in an interaction partner. Specifically, trust is calculated using probability theory taking account of past interactions between agents, and when there is a lack of personal experience between agents, the model draws upon reputation information gathered from third parties. In this latter case, we pay particular attention to handling the possibility that reputation information may be inaccurate
The Pulsation Mode and Distance of the Cepheid FF Aquilae
The determination of pulsation mode and distance for field Cepheids is a
complicated problem best resolved by a luminosity estimate. For illustration a
technique based on spectroscopic luminosity discrimination is applied to the
4.47d s-Cepheid FF Aql. Line ratios in high dispersion spectra of the variable
yield values of =-3.40+-0.02 s.e.(+-0.04 s.d.), average effective
temperature Teff=6195+-24 K, and intrinsic color (-)o = +0.506+-0.007,
corresponding to a reddening of E(B-V)=0.25+-0.01, or E(B-V)(B0)=0.26+-0.01.
The skewed light curve, intrinsic color, and luminosity of FF Aql are
consistent with fundamental mode pulsation for a small amplitude classical
Cepheid on the blue side of the instability strip, not a sinusoidal pulsator. A
distance of 413+-14 pc is estimated from the Cepheid's angular diameter in
conjunction with a mean radius of =39.0+-0.7 Rsun inferred from its
luminosity and effective temperature. The dust extinction towards FF Aql is
described by a ratio of total-to-selective extinction of
Rv=Av/E(B-V)=3.16+-0.34 according to the star's apparent distance modulus.Comment: To appear in ApJ
The Distribution of the Elements in the Galactic Disk III. A Reconsideration of Cepheids from l = 30 to 250 Degrees
This paper reports on the spectroscopic investigation of 238 Cepheids in the
northern sky. Of these stars, about 150 are new to the study of the galactic
abundance gradient. These new Cepheids bring the total number of Cepheids
involved in abundance distribution studies to over 400. In this work we also
consider systematics between various studies and also those which result from
the choice of models. We find systematic variations exist at the 0.06 dex level
both between studies and model atmospheres. In order to control the systematic
effects our final gradients depend only on abundances derived herein. A simple
linear fit to the Cepheid data from 398 stars yields a gradient d[Fe/H]/dRG =
-0.062 \pm 0.002 dex/kpc which is in good agreement with previously determined
values. We have also reexamined the region of the "metallicity island" of Luck
et al. (2006). With the doubling of the sample in that region and our
internally consistent abundances, we find there is scant evidence for a
distinct island. We also find in our sample the first reported Cepheid (V1033
Cyg) with a pronounced Li feature. The Li abundance is consistent with the star
being on its red-ward pass towards the first giant branch.Comment: 66 pages including tables, 12 figures, Accepted Astronomical Journa
The ART of IAM: The Winning Strategy for the 2006 Competition
In many dynamic open systems, agents have to interact with one another to achieve their goals. Here, agents may be self-interested, and when trusted to perform an action for others, may betray that trust by not performing the actions as required. In addition, due to the size of such systems, agents will often interact with other agents with which they have little or no past experience. This situation has led to the development of a number of trust and reputation models, which aim to facilitate an agent's decision making in the face of uncertainty regarding the behaviour of its peers. However, these multifarious models employ a variety of different representations of trust between agents, and measure performance in many different ways. This has made it hard to adequately evaluate the relative properties of different models, raising the need for a common platform on which to compare competing mechanisms. To this end, the ART Testbed Competition has been proposed, in which agents using different trust models compete against each other to provide services in an open marketplace. In this paper, we present the winning strategy for this competition in 2006, provide an analysis of the factors that led to this success, and discuss lessons learnt from the competition about issues of trust in multiagent systems in general. Our strategy, IAM, is Intelligent (using statistical models for opponent modelling), Abstemious (spending its money parsimoniously based on its trust model) and Moral (providing fair and honest feedback to those that request it)
Dynamics at the angle of repose: jamming, bistability, and collapse
When a sandpile relaxes under vibration, it is known that its measured angle
of repose is bistable in a range of values bounded by a material-dependent
maximal angle of stability; thus, at the same angle of repose, a sandpile can
be stationary or avalanching, depending on its history. In the nearly jammed
slow dynamical regime, sandpile collapse to a zero angle of repose can also
occur, as a rare event. We claim here that fluctuations of {\it dilatancy} (or
local density) are the key ingredient that can explain such varied phenomena.
In this work, we model the dynamics of the angle of repose and of the density
fluctuations, in the presence of external noise, by means of coupled stochastic
equations. Among other things, we are able to describe sandpile collapse in
terms of an activated process, where an effective temperature (related to the
density as well as to the external vibration intensity) competes against the
configurational barriers created by the density fluctuations.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure. Minor changes and update
Defective Production of Mitochondrial Ribosomes in the Poky Mutant of Neurospora crassa
Surface Properties of Aperiodic Ising Quantum Chains
We consider Ising quantum chains with quenched aperiodic disorder of the
coupling constants given through general substitution rules. The critical
scaling behaviour of several bulk and surface quantities is obtained by exact
real space renormalization.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, reference update
A record-driven growth process
We introduce a novel stochastic growth process, the record-driven growth
process, which originates from the analysis of a class of growing networks in a
universal limiting regime. Nodes are added one by one to a network, each node
possessing a quality. The new incoming node connects to the preexisting node
with best quality, that is, with record value for the quality. The emergent
structure is that of a growing network, where groups are formed around record
nodes (nodes endowed with the best intrinsic qualities). Special emphasis is
put on the statistics of leaders (nodes whose degrees are the largest). The
asymptotic probability for a node to be a leader is equal to the Golomb-Dickman
constant omega=0.624329... which arises in problems of combinatorical nature.
This outcome solves the problem of the determination of the record breaking
rate for the sequence of correlated inter-record intervals. The process
exhibits temporal self-similarity in the late-time regime. Connections with the
statistics of the cycles of random permutations, the statistical properties of
randomly broken intervals, and the Kesten variable are given.Comment: 30 pages,5 figures. Minor update
Conformal invariance and linear defects in the two-dimensional Ising model
Using conformal invariance, we show that the non-universal exponent eta_0
associated with the decay of correlations along a defect line of modified bonds
in the square-lattice Ising model is related to the amplitude A_0=xi_n/n of the
correlation length \xi_n(K_c) at the bulk critical coupling K_c, on a strip
with width n, periodic boundary conditions and two equidistant defect lines
along the strip, through A_0=(\pi\eta_0)^{-1}.Comment: Old paper, for archiving. 5 pages, 4 figures, IOP macro, eps
- …