3,581 research outputs found
Incompleteness and jump hierarchies
This paper is an investigation of the relationship between G\"odel's second
incompleteness theorem and the well-foundedness of jump hierarchies. It follows
from a classic theorem of Spector's that the relation is well-founded. We provide an alternative proof of
this fact that uses G\"odel's second incompleteness theorem instead of the
theory of admissible ordinals. We then derive a semantic version of the second
incompleteness theorem, originally due to Mummert and Simpson, from this
result. Finally, we turn to the calculation of the ranks of reals in this
well-founded relation. We prove that, for any , if the rank of
is , then is the admissible
ordinal. It follows, assuming suitable large cardinal hypotheses, that, on a
cone, the rank of is .Comment: 11 pages. Corrects a mistake in the statements of two result
Martin's conjecture for regressive functions on the hyperarithmetic degrees
We answer a question of Slaman and Steel by showing that a version of
Martin's conjecture holds for all regressive functions on the hyperarithmetic
degrees. A key step in our proof, which may have applications to other cases of
Martin's conjecture, consists of showing that we can always reduce to the case
of a continuous function.Comment: 12 page
Linear impulse response in hot round jets
International audienceThe linear impulse response is retrieved from a numerical solution of the spatial eigenvalue problem, which is derived from the fully compressible equations of motion. Changes in the spatiotemporal stability of heated versus isothermal jets are shown to arise solely from the effect of the baroclinic torque. By considering the full linear impulse response, the competition between jet column modes and shear layer modes is characterized. Jet column modes are only found to occur for axisymmetric disturbances. In thin shear layer jets, the jet column mode is shown to prevail at low group velocities, whereas axisymmetric and helical shear layer modes dominate at high group velocities. The absolute mode of zero group velocity is found to always be of the jet column type. Although only convectively unstable, the maximum growth rates of the shear layer modes greatly exceed those of the jet column modes in thin shear layer jets. In thick shear layer jets, axisymmetric modes of mixed jet column/shear layer type arise. The weakened maximum growth rate of mixed modes accounts for the dominance of helical modes in temporal stability studies of thick shear layer jets. © 2007 American Institute of Physics
Part 1 of Martin's Conjecture for order-preserving and measure-preserving functions
Martin's Conjecture is a proposed classification of the definable functions
on the Turing degrees. It is usually divided into two parts, the first
classifies functions which are not above the identity and the second of
classifies functions which are above the identity. Slaman and Steel proved the
second part of the conjecture for Borel functions which are order-preserving
(i.e. which preserve Turing reducibility). We prove the first part of the
conjecture for all order-preserving functions. We do this by introducing a
class of functions on the Turing degrees which we call "measure-preserving" and
proving that part 1 of Martin's Conjecture holds for all measure-preserving
functions and also that all non-trivial order-preserving functions are
measure-preserving. Our result on measure-preserving functions has several
other consequences for Martin's Conjecture, including an equivalence between
part 1 of the conjecture and a statement about the structure of the
Rudin-Keisler order on ultrafilters on the Turing degrees.Comment: 44 pages; updated to correct some attributions and fix some typo
A Note on a Question of Sacks: It is Harder to Embed Height Three Partial Orders than Height Two Partial Orders
A long-standing conjecture of Sacks states that it is provable in ZFC that
every locally countable partial order of size continuum embeds into the Turing
degrees. We show that this holds for partial orders of height two, but provide
evidence that it is hard to extend this result even to partial orders of height
three. In particular, we show that the result for height two partial orders
holds both in certain extensions of ZF with only limited forms of choice and in
the Borel setting (where the partial orders and embeddings are required to be
Borel measurable), but that the analogous result for height three partial
orders fails in both of these settings. We also formulate a general obstacle to
embedding partial orders into the Turing degrees, which explains why our
particular proof for height two partial orders cannot be extended to height
three partial orders, even in ZFC. We finish by discussing how our results
connect to the theory of countable Borel equivalence relations.Comment: 19 page
Coding information into all infinite subsets of a dense set
Suppose you have an uncomputable set and you want to find a set , all
of whose infinite subsets compute . There are several ways to do this, but
all of them seem to produce a set which is fairly sparse. We show that this
is necessary in the following technical sense: if is uncomputable and
is a set of positive lower density then has an infinite subset which does
not compute . We will show that this theorem is sharp in certain senses and
also prove a quantitative version formulated in terms of Kolmogorov complexity.
Our results use a modified version of Mathias forcing and build on work by
Seetapun and others on the reverse math of Ramsey's theorem for pairs.Comment: 30 page
Global linear stability of a model subsonic jet
The global stability of a subsonic jet is investigated using a model base flow designed to fit experimental results for turbulent mean flows. Eigenmodes are computed for axisymmetric perturbations in order to investigate the nature of typically observed large-scale coherent oscillations ("preferred mode"). We do not find evidence that this preferred mode corre- sponds to the least damped global mode. Non-modal stability is also considered through the computation of optimal perturbations. Although non-axisymmetric perturbations (in particular for azimuthal wavenumber m = 1) are subject to larger transient growth, these reach their peak amplitude far downstream of the potential core, and therefore they are less likely to be observed
Frequency selection in globally unstable round jets
International audienceThe self-sustained formation of synchronized ring vortices in hot subsonic jets is investigated by direct numerical simulation of the axisymmetric equations of motion. The onset of global instability and the global frequency of synchronized oscillations are examined as functions of the ambient-to-jet temperature ratio and the initial jet shear layer thickness. The numerical results are found to follow the predictions from nonlinear global instability theory; global instability sets in as the unperturbed flow is absolutely unstable over a region of finite streamwise extent at the inlet, and the global frequency near the global instability threshold corresponds to the absolute frequency of the inlet profile. In strongly supercritical thin shear layer jets, however, the simulations display global frequencies well above the absolute frequency, in agreement with experimental results. The inner structure of rolled-up vortices in hot jets displays fine layers of positive and negative vorticity that are produced and maintained by the action of the baroclinic torque. © 2007 American Institute of Physics
Aerodynamic sound generation by global modes in hot jets
International audienceThe acoustic field generated by the synchronized vortex street in self-excited hot subsonic jets is investigated via direct numerical simulation of the compressible equations of motion in an axisymmetric geometry. The simulation simultaneously resolves both the aerodynamic near field and the acoustic far field. Self-sustained near-field oscillations in the present flow configurations have been described as nonlinear global modes in an earlier study. The associated acoustic far field is found to be that of a compact dipole, emanating from the location of vortex roll-up. A far-field solution of the axisymmetric Lighthill equation is derived, on the basis of the source term formulation of Lilley (AGARD-CP, vol. 131, 1974, pp. 13.1-13.12). With the near-field source distributions obtained from the direct numerical simulations, the Lighthill solution is in good agreement with the far-field simulation results. Fluctuations of the enthalpy flux within the jet are identified as the dominant aeroacoustic source. Superdirective effects are found to be negligible. © 2010 Cambridge University Press
A Unified Statistical Framework for Evaluating Predictive Methods
Predictive analytics is an important part of the business intelligence and decision support systems literature and likely to grow in importance with the emergence of big data as a discipline. Despite their importance, the accuracy of predictive methods is often not assessed using statistical hypothesis tests. Furthermore, there is no commonly agreed upon standard as to which questions should be examined when evaluating predictive methods. We fill this gap by defining three questions that involve the overall and comparative predictive accuracy of the new method. We then present a unified statistical framework for evaluating predictive methods that can be used to address all three of these questions. The framework is particularly versatile and can be applied to most problems and datasets. In addition to these practical advantages over hypotheses tests used in previous literature, the framework has the theoretical advantage that it is not necessary to assume a normal distribution
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