10,384 research outputs found
BDDC and FETI-DP under Minimalist Assumptions
The FETI-DP, BDDC and P-FETI-DP preconditioners are derived in a particulary
simple abstract form. It is shown that their properties can be obtained from
only on a very small set of algebraic assumptions. The presentation is purely
algebraic and it does not use any particular definition of method components,
such as substructures and coarse degrees of freedom. It is then shown that
P-FETI-DP and BDDC are in fact the same. The FETI-DP and the BDDC
preconditioned operators are of the same algebraic form, and the standard
condition number bound carries over to arbitrary abstract operators of this
form. The equality of eigenvalues of BDDC and FETI-DP also holds in the
minimalist abstract setting. The abstract framework is explained on a standard
substructuring example.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, also available at
http://www-math.cudenver.edu/ccm/reports
Multispace and Multilevel BDDC
BDDC method is the most advanced method from the Balancing family of
iterative substructuring methods for the solution of large systems of linear
algebraic equations arising from discretization of elliptic boundary value
problems. In the case of many substructures, solving the coarse problem exactly
becomes a bottleneck. Since the coarse problem in BDDC has the same structure
as the original problem, it is straightforward to apply the BDDC method
recursively to solve the coarse problem only approximately. In this paper, we
formulate a new family of abstract Multispace BDDC methods and give condition
number bounds from the abstract additive Schwarz preconditioning theory. The
Multilevel BDDC is then treated as a special case of the Multispace BDDC and
abstract multilevel condition number bounds are given. The abstract bounds
yield polylogarithmic condition number bounds for an arbitrary fixed number of
levels and scalar elliptic problems discretized by finite elements in two and
three spatial dimensions. Numerical experiments confirm the theory.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, 20 references. Formal changes onl
Double Neutron Star Populations and Formation Channels
In the past five years, the number of known double neutron stars (DNS) in the
Milky Way has roughly doubled. We argue that the observed sample can be split
into three distinct sub-populations based on their orbital characteristics: (i)
short-period, low-eccentricity binaries; (ii) wide binaries; and (iii)
short-period, high-eccentricity binaries. These sub-populations also exhibit
distinct spin period and spindown rate properties. We focus on sub-population
(iii), which contains the Hulse-Taylor binary. Contrary to previous analysis,
we demonstrate that, if they are the product of primordial binary evolution,
the and distribution of these systems requires that the
second-born NSs must have been formed with small natal kicks (25 km
s) and have pre-SN masses narrowly distributed around 3.2 M.
These constraints challenge binary evolution theory and further predict closely
aligned spin and orbital axes, inconsistent with the Hulse-Taylor binary's
measured spin-orbit misalignment angle of 20. Motivated by
the similarity of these DNSs to B2127+11C, a DNS residing in the globular
cluster M15, we argue that this sub-population is consistent with being formed
in, and then ejected from, globular clusters. This scenario provides a pathway
for the formation and merger of DNSs in stellar environments without recent
star formation, as observed in the host galaxy population of short gamma ray
bursts and the recent detection by LIGO of a merging DNS in an old stellar
population.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ
Interference and the lossless lossy beam splitter
By directing the input light into a particular mode it is possible to obtain
as output all of the input light for a beam splitter that is 50% absorbing.
This effect is also responsible for nonlinear quantum interference when two
photons are incident on the beam splitter.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in J. Mod. Op
Abstracts of NASA-ASRDI publications relevant to aerospace safety research
Abstracts covering the following areas are presented: (1) oxygen technology; (2) fire safety; (3) accidents/incidents; (4) toxic spills; (5) aircraft safety; (6) structural failures; (7) nuclear systems; (8) fluid flow; and (9) zero gravity combustion
Insights into neutralization of animal viruses gained from study of influenza virus
It has long been known that the binding of antibodies to viruses can result in a loss of infectivity, or neutralization, but little is understood of the mechanism or mechanisms of this process. This is probably because neutralization is a multifactorial phenomenon depending upon the nature of the virus itself, the particular antigenic site involved, the isotype of immunoglobulin and the ratio of virus to immunoglobulin (see below). Thus not only is it likely that neutralization of one virus will differ from another but that changing the circumstances of neutralization can change the mechanism itself. To give coherence to the topic we are concentrating this review on one virus, influenza type A which is itself well studied and reasonably well understood [1–3]. Reviews of the older literature can be found in references 4 to 7
Studies of waveform requirements for intermediate mass-ratio coalescence searches with advanced detectors
The coalescence of a stellar-mass compact object into an intermediate-mass
black hole (intermediate mass-ratio coalescence; IMRAC) is an important
astrophysical source for ground-based gravitational-wave interferometers in the
so-called advanced configuration. However, the ability to carry out effective
matched-filter based searches for these systems is limited by the lack of
reliable waveforms. Here we consider binaries in which the intermediate-mass
black hole has mass in the range 24 - 200 solar masses with a stellar-mass
companion having masses in the range 1.4 - 18.5 solar masses. In addition, we
constrain the mass ratios, q, of the binaries to be in the range 1/140 < q <
1/10 and we restrict our study to the case of circular binaries with
non-spinning components. We investigate the relative contribution to the
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the three different phases of the coalescence:
inspiral, merger and ringdown. We show that merger and ringdown contribute to a
substantial fraction of the total SNR over a large portion of the mass
parameter space, although in a limited portion the SNR is dominated by the
inspiral phase. We further identify three regions in the IMRAC mass-space in
which: (i) inspiral-only searches could be performed with losses in detection
rates L in the range 10% < L < 27%, (ii) searches based on inspiral-only
templates lead to a loss in detection rates in the range 27% < L < 50%$, and
(iii) templates that include merger and ringdown are essential to prevent
losses in detection rates greater than 50%. We investigate the effectiveness
with which the inspiral-only portion of the IMRAC waveform space is covered by
comparing several existing waveform families in this regime. Our results
reinforce the importance of extensive numerical relativity simulations of
IMRACs and the need for further studies of suitable approximation schemes in
this mass range.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Quantum Bayesian methods and subsequent measurements
After a derivation of the quantum Bayes theorem, and a discussion of the
reconstruction of the unknown state of identical spin systems by repeated
measurements, the main part of this paper treats the problem of determining the
unknown phase difference of two coherent sources by photon measurements. While
the approach of this paper is based on computing correlations of actual
measurements (photon detections), it is possible to derive indirectly a
probability distribution for the phase difference. In this approach, the
quantum phase is not an observable, but a parameter of an unknown quantum
state. Photon measurements determine a probability distribution for the phase
difference. The approach used in this paper takes into account both photon
statistics and the finite efficiency of the detectors.Comment: Expanded and corrected version. 13 pages, 1 figur
Characteristics and processing of fps-16/ jimsphere raw radar data
Error analysis of fps-16/jimsphere raw radar dat
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