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Supporting Computer-supported collaborative work (CSCW) in conceptual design
In order to gain a better understanding of online conceptual collaborative design processes this paper investigates how student designers make use of a shared virtual synchronous environment when engaged in conceptual design. The software enables users to talk to each other and share sketches when they are remotely located. The paper describes a novel methodology for observing and analysing collaborative design processes by adapting the concepts of grounded theory. Rather than concentrating on narrow aspects of the final artefacts, emerging “themes” are generated that provide a broader picture of collaborative design process and context descriptions. Findings on the themes of “grounding – mutual understanding” and “support creativity” complement findings from other research, while important themes associated with “near-synchrony” have not been emphasised in other research. From the study, a series of design recommendations are made for the development of tools to support online computer-supported collaborative work in design using a shared virtual environment
New Types of Thermodynamics from -Dimensional Black Holes
For normal thermodynamic systems superadditivity , homogeneity \H and
concavity \C of the entropy hold, whereas for -dimensional black holes
the latter two properties are violated. We show that -dimensional black
holes exhibit qualitatively new types of thermodynamic behaviour, discussed
here for the first time, in which \C always holds, \H is always violated
and may or may not be violated, depending of the magnitude of the black
hole mass. Hence it is now seen that neither superadditivity nor concavity
encapsulate the meaning of the second law in all situations.Comment: WATPHYS-TH93/05, Latex, 10 pgs. 1 figure (available on request), to
appear in Class. Quant. Gra
Statistical Mechanics of Relativistic One-Dimensional Self-Gravitating Systems
We consider the statistical mechanics of a general relativistic
one-dimensional self-gravitating system. The system consists of -particles
coupled to lineal gravity and can be considered as a model of
relativistically interacting sheets of uniform mass. The partition function and
one-particle distitrubion functions are computed to leading order in
where is the speed of light; as results for the
non-relativistic one-dimensional self-gravitating system are recovered. We find
that relativistic effects generally cause both position and momentum
distribution functions to become more sharply peaked, and that the temperature
of a relativistic gas is smaller than its non-relativistic counterpart at the
same fixed energy. We consider the large-N limit of our results and compare
this to the non-relativistic case.Comment: latex, 60 pages, 22 figure
Decoherent Histories Quantum Mechanics with One 'Real' Fine-Grained History
Decoherent histories quantum theory is reformulated with the assumption that
there is one "real" fine-grained history, specified in a preferred complete set
of sum-over-histories variables. This real history is described by embedding it
in an ensemble of comparable imagined fine-grained histories, not unlike the
familiar ensemble of statistical mechanics. These histories are assigned
extended probabilities, which can sometimes be negative or greater than one. As
we will show, this construction implies that the real history is not completely
accessible to experimental or other observational discovery. However,
sufficiently and appropriately coarse-grained sets of alternative histories
have standard probabilities providing information about the real fine-grained
history that can be compared with observation. We recover the probabilities of
decoherent histories quantum mechanics for sets of histories that are recorded
and therefore decohere. Quantum mechanics can be viewed as a classical
stochastic theory of histories with extended probabilities and a well-defined
notion of reality common to all decoherent sets of alternative coarse-grained
histories.Comment: 11 pages, one figure, expanded discussion and acknowledgment
An experimental study of intermodulation effects in an atomic fountain frequency standard
The short-term stability of passive atomic frequency standards, especially in
pulsed operation, is often limited by local oscillator noise via
intermodulation effects. We present an experimental demonstration of the
intermodulation effect on the frequency stability of a continuous atomic
fountain clock where, under normal operating conditions, it is usually too
small to observe. To achieve this, we deliberately degrade the phase stability
of the microwave field interrogating the clock transition. We measure the
frequency stability of the locked, commercial-grade local oscillator, for two
modulation schemes of the microwave field: square-wave phase modulation and
square-wave frequency modulation. We observe a degradation of the stability
whose dependence with the modulation frequency reproduces the theoretical
predictions for the intermodulation effect. In particular no observable
degradation occurs when this frequency equals the Ramsey linewidth.
Additionally we show that, without added phase noise, the frequency instability
presently equal to 2x10-13 at 1s, is limited by atomic shot-noise and therefore
could be reduced were the atomic flux increased
Symmetry Breaking Using Value Precedence
We present a comprehensive study of the use of value precedence constraints
to break value symmetry. We first give a simple encoding of value precedence
into ternary constraints that is both efficient and effective at breaking
symmetry. We then extend value precedence to deal with a number of
generalizations like wreath value and partial interchangeability. We also show
that value precedence is closely related to lexicographical ordering. Finally,
we consider the interaction between value precedence and symmetry breaking
constraints for variable symmetries.Comment: 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligenc
Proteomics of Cytochrome c Oxidase-Negative versus -Positive Muscle Fiber Sections in Mitochondrial Myopathy
The mosaic distribution of cytochrome c oxidase(+) (COX+) and COX - muscle fibers in mitochondrial disorders allows the sampling of fibers with compensated and decompensated mitochondrial function from the same individual. We apply laser capture microdissection to excise individual COX+ and COX- fibers from the biopsies of mitochondrial myopathy patients. Using mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we quantify >4,000 proteins per patient. While COX+ fibers show a higher expression of respiratory chain components, COX- fibers display protean adaptive responses, including upregulation of mitochondrial ribosomes, translation proteins, and chaperones. Upregulated proteins include C1QBP, required for mitoribosome formation and protein synthesis, and STOML2, which organizes cardiolipin-enriched microdomains and the assembly of respiratory supercomplexes. Factoring in fast/slow fiber type, COX (-) slow fibers show a compensatory upregulation of beta-oxidation, the AAA(+) protease AFG3L1, and the OPA1-dependent cristae remodeling program. These findings reveal compensatory mechanisms in muscle fibers struggling with energy shortage and metabolic stress
Two-dimensional gravitation and Sine-Gordon-Solitons
Some aspects of two-dimensional gravity coupled to matter fields, especially
to the Sine-Gordon-model are examined. General properties and boundary
conditions of possible soliton-solutions are considered. Analytic
soliton-solutions are discovered and the structure of the induced space-time
geometry is discussed. These solutions have interesting features and may serve
as a starting point for further investigations.Comment: 23 pages, latex, references added, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Self-completeness and spontaneous dimensional reduction
A viable quantum theory of gravity is one of the biggest challenges facing
physicists. We discuss the confluence of two highly expected features which
might be instrumental in the quest of a finite and renormalizable quantum
gravity -- spontaneous dimensional reduction and self-completeness. The former
suggests the spacetime background at the Planck scale may be effectively
two-dimensional, while the latter implies a condition of maximal compression of
matter by the formation of an event horizon for Planckian scattering. We
generalize such a result to an arbitrary number of dimensions, and show that
gravity in higher than four dimensions remains self-complete, but in lower
dimensions it is not. In such a way we established an "exclusive disjunction"
or "exclusive or" (XOR) between the occurrence of self-completeness and
dimensional reduction, with the goal of actually reducing the unknowns for the
scenario of the physics at the Planck scale. Potential phenomenological
implications of this result are considered by studying the case of a
two-dimensional dilaton gravity model resulting from dimensional reduction of
Einstein gravity.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; v3: final version in press on Eur. Phys. J. Plu
N-body Gravity and the Schroedinger Equation
We consider the problem of the motion of bodies in a self-gravitating
system in two spacetime dimensions. We point out that this system can be mapped
onto the quantum-mechanical problem of an N-body generalization of the problem
of the H molecular ion in one dimension. The canonical gravitational
N-body formalism can be extended to include electromagnetic charges. We derive
a general algorithm for solving this problem, and show how it reduces to known
results for the 2-body and 3-body systems.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, references added, typos corrected, final version
that appears in CQ
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