247 research outputs found
Lyapunov exponents of Green's functions for random potentials tending to zero
We consider quenched and annealed Lyapunov exponents for the Green's function
of , where the potentials , are i.i.d.
nonnegative random variables and is a scalar. We present a
probabilistic proof that both Lyapunov exponents scale like as
tends to 0. Here the constant is the same for the quenched as for
the annealed exponent and is computed explicitly. This improves results
obtained previously by Wei-Min Wang. We also consider other ways to send the
potential to zero than multiplying it by a small number.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures. 1 figure added, very minor corrections. To
appear in Probability Theory and Related Fields. The final publication is
available at http://www.springerlink.com, see
http://www.springerlink.com/content/p0873kv68315847x/?p=4106c52fc57743eba322052bb931e8ac&pi=21
Molecular Spiders with Memory
Synthetic bio-molecular spiders with "legs" made of single-stranded segments
of DNA can move on a surface which is also covered by single-stranded segments
of DNA complementary to the leg DNA. In experimental realizations, when a leg
detaches from a segment of the surface for the first time it alters that
segment, and legs subsequently bound to these altered segments more weakly.
Inspired by these experiments we investigate spiders moving along a
one-dimensional substrate, whose legs leave newly visited sites at a slower
rate than revisited sites. For a random walk (one-leg spider) the slowdown does
not effect the long time behavior. For a bipedal spider, however, the slowdown
generates an effective bias towards unvisited sites, and the spider behaves
similarly to the excited walk. Surprisingly, the slowing down of the spider at
new sites increases the diffusion coefficient and accelerates the growth of the
number of visited sites.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Excited Random Walk in One Dimension
We study the excited random walk, in which a walk that is at a site that
contains cookies eats one cookie and then hops to the right with probability p
and to the left with probability q=1-p. If the walk hops onto an empty site,
there is no bias. For the 1-excited walk on the half-line (one cookie initially
at each site), the probability of first returning to the starting point at time
t scales as t^{-(2-p)}. Although the average return time to the origin is
infinite for all p, the walk eats, on average, only a finite number of cookies
until this first return when p<1/2. For the infinite line, the probability
distribution for the 1-excited walk has an unusual anomaly at the origin. The
positions of the leftmost and rightmost uneaten cookies can be accurately
estimated by probabilistic arguments and their corresponding distributions have
power-law singularities near the origin. The 2-excited walk on the infinite
line exhibits peculiar features in the regime p>3/4, where the walk is
transient, including a mean displacement that grows as t^{nu}, with nu>1/2
dependent on p, and a breakdown of scaling for the probability distribution of
the walk.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, 2-column revtex4 format, for submission to J.
Phys.
Excited States of Ladder-type Poly-p-phenylene Oligomers
Ground state properties and excited states of ladder-type paraphenylene
oligomers are calculated applying semiempirical methods for up to eleven
phenylene rings. The results are in qualitative agreement with experimental
data. A new scheme to interpret the excited states is developed which reveals
the excitonic nature of the excited states. The electron-hole pair of the
S1-state has a mean distance of approximately 4 Angstroem.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figure
Toward conservational anthropology: addressing anthropocentric bias in anthropology
Anthropological literature addressing conservation and development often blames 'conservationists' as being neo-imperialist in their attempts to institute limits to commercial activities by imposing their post-materialist eco-ideology. The author argues that this view of conservationists is ironic in light of the fact that the very notion of 'development' is arguably an imposition of the (Western) elites. The anthropocentric bias in anthropology also permeates constructivist ethnographies of human-animal 'interactions,' which tend to emphasize the socio-cultural complexity and interconnectivity rather than the unequal and often extractive nature of this 'interaction.' Anthropocentrism is argued to be counteractive to reconciling conservationists' efforts at environmental protection with the traditional ontologies of the interdependency of human-nature relationship
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