41,892 research outputs found
A martingale concept for non-monotone information in a jump process framework
The classical concept of martingales and compensators bases on the monotony
of filtrations. This paper looks at the situation where innovations can have an
expiry date such that the information dynamics becomes non-monotone. The
central idea is to focus only on those properties that martingales and
compensators show on infinitesimally short intervals. Infinitesimal martingale
representations are derived that extend classical martingale representations to
non-monotone information. While the classical representations describe
innovations only, the extended representations have an additional symmetric
counterpart that quantifies the effect of information loss
Edge vulnerability in neural and metabolic networks
Biological networks, such as cellular metabolic pathways or networks of
corticocortical connections in the brain, are intricately organized, yet
remarkably robust toward structural damage. Whereas many studies have
investigated specific aspects of robustness, such as molecular mechanisms of
repair, this article focuses more generally on how local structural features in
networks may give rise to their global stability. In many networks the failure
of single connections may be more likely than the extinction of entire nodes,
yet no analysis of edge importance (edge vulnerability) has been provided so
far for biological networks. We tested several measures for identifying
vulnerable edges and compared their prediction performance in biological and
artificial networks. Among the tested measures, edge frequency in all shortest
paths of a network yielded a particularly high correlation with vulnerability,
and identified inter-cluster connections in biological but not in random and
scale-free benchmark networks. We discuss different local and global network
patterns and the edge vulnerability resulting from them.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Biological Cybernetic
Covariant 4-dimensional fuzzy spheres, matrix models and higher spin
We study in detail generalized 4-dimensional fuzzy spheres with twisted extra
dimensions. These spheres can be viewed as -equivariant projections of
quantized coadjoint orbits of . We show that they arise as solutions in
Yang-Mills matrix models, which naturally leads to higher-spin gauge theories
on . Several types of embeddings in matrix models are found, including one
with self-intersecting fuzzy extra dimensions , which
is expected to entail 2+1 generations.Comment: 41+7 pages, 4 figure
Photolysis of Diborane at 1849 Å
The photolysis of diborane at 1849 Å has been studied in a specially constructed, internal‐type mercury‐vapor lamp. The products have been found to be H_2, B_(4)H_(10), B_(5)H_(11), and, at low pressures, a —BH— polymer. Reaction orders at 4°C have been obtained from linear plots of reaction products vs time for a range of diborane pressures from 0.08 to 80 cm, and at two light intensities. Linear relations between products and time existed only at very low conversions (∼1%), which required the development of a low‐temperature separation method for manipulating and analyzing the traces of B_(4)H_(10) and B_(5)H_(11). Because of the reactivity of these compounds, a detailed conditioning procedure was employed for the glass system.
A mechanism consistant with the kinetic data and suggested by the kinetic results of thermal and photosensitized decomposition of diborane is postulated: the B_(5)H_(11) is assumed to be formed from a dissociation of B_(2)H_6 into BH_3's, the latter arising from an excited molecule. The B_(4)H_(10) and polymer are assumed to be formed from a dissociation of B_(2)H_6 into B_(2)H_5 and H, followed by radical recombination. There is a significant difference between the kinetics of thermal and photochemical B_(5)H_(11) formation, a result which may be due to the considerable energy excess of the 1849 quantum over that needed for dissociation (∼125‐kcal excess). These kinetic results raise a number of interesting questions, questions which can only be resolved through further investigations of effects due to light intensity, added inert gases, and temperature. The primary quantum yield of the step forming B_(2)H_5 and H is about 10 times higher than that of the one forming BH_3's. A rather rough estimate suggests that the former is of the order of magnitude of unity
An intramolecular theory of the mass-independent isotope effect for ozone. II. Numerical implementation at low pressures using a loose transition state
A theory is described for the variation in the rate constants for formation of different ozone isotopomers from oxygen atoms and molecules at low pressures. The theory is implemented using a simplified description which treats the transition state as loose. The two principal features of the theory are a phase space partitioning of the transition states of the two exit channels after formation of the energetic molecule and a small (ca. 15%) decrease in the effective density of states, rho [a "non-Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus (RRKM) effect"], for the symmetric ozone isotopomers [B. C. Hathorn and R. A. Marcus, J. Chem. Phys. 111, 4087 (1999)]. This decrease is in addition to the usual statistical factor of 2 for symmetric molecules. Experimentally, the scrambled systems show a "mass-independent" effect for the enrichments delta (for trace) and E (for heavily) enriched systems, but the ratios of the individual isotopomeric rate constants for unscrambled systems show a strongly mass-dependent behavior. The contrasting behavior of scrambled and unscrambled systems is described theoretically using a "phase space" partitioning factor. In scrambled systems an energetic asymmetric ozone isotopomer is accessed from both entrance channels and, as shown in paper I, the partitioning factor becomes unity throughout. In unscrambled systems, access to an asymmetric ozone is only from one entrance channel, and differences in zero-point energies and other properties, such as the centrifugal potential, determine the relative contributions (the partitioning factors) of the two exit channels to the lifetime of the resulting energetic ozone molecule. They are responsible for the large differences in individual recombination rate constants at low pressures. While the decrease in rho for symmetric systems is attributed to a small non-RRKM effect eta, these calculated results are independent of the exact origin of the decrease. The calculated "mass-independent" enrichments, delta and E, in scrambled systems are relatively insensitive to the transition state (TS), because of the absence of the partitioning factor in their case (for a fixed non-RRKM eta). They are compared with the data at room temperature. Calculated results for the ratios of individual isotopomeric rate constants for the strongly mass-independent behavior for unscrambled systems are quite sensitive to the nature of the TS because of the partitioning effect. The current data are available only at room temperature but the loose TS is valid only at low temperatures. Accordingly, the results calculated for the latter at 140 K represent a prediction, for any given eta. At present, a comparison of the 140 K results can be made only with room temperature data. They show the same trends as, and are in fortuitous agreement, with the data. Work is in progress on a description appropriate for room temperature
Cluster algebras in scattering amplitudes with special 2D kinematics
We study the cluster algebra of the kinematic configuration space
of a n-particle scattering amplitude restricted to the
special 2D kinematics. We found that the n-points two loop MHV remainder
function found in special 2D kinematics depend on a selection of
\XX-coordinates that are part of a special structure of the cluster algebra
related to snake triangulations of polygons. This structure forms a necklace of
hypercubes beads in the corresponding Stasheff polytope. Furthermore in , the cluster algebra and the selection of \XX-coordinates in special 2D
kinematics replicates the cluster algebra and the selection of \XX-coordinates
of two loop MHV amplitude in 4D kinematics.Comment: 22 page
An intramolecular theory of the mass-independent isotope effect for ozone. I
An intramolecular theory of the unusual mass-independent isotope effect for ozone formation and dissociation is described. The experiments include the enrichment factor, its dependence on the ambient pressure, the ratio of the formation rates of symmetric and asymmetric ozone isotopomers, the enrichment of ozone formed from heavily enriched oxygen isotopes, the comparison of that enrichment to that when the heavy isotopes are present in trace amounts, the isotopic exchange rate constant, and the large mass-dependent effect when individual rate constants are measured, in contrast with the mass-independent effect observed for scrambled mixtures. To explain the results it is suggested that apart from the usual symmetry number ratio of a factor of 2, the asymmetric ozone isotopomers have a larger density of reactive (coupled) quantum states, compared with that for the symmetric isotopomers (about 10%), due to being more "RRKM-like" (Rice–Ramsperger–Kessel–Marcus): Symmetry restricts the number of intramolecular resonances and coupling terms in the Hamiltonian which are responsible for making the motion increasingly chaotic and, thereby, increasingly statistical. As a result the behavior occurs regardless of whether the nuclei are bosons (16O, 18O) or fermions (17O). Two alternative mechanisms are also considered, one invoking excited electronic states and the other invoking symmetry control in the entrance channel. Arguments against each are given. An expression is given relating the mass-independent rates of the scrambled systems to the mass-dependent rates of the unscrambled ones, and the role played by a partitioning term in the latter is described. Different definitions for the enrichment factor for heavily enriched isotopic systems are also considered. In the present paper attention is focused on setting up theoretical expressions and discussing relationships. They provide a basis for future detailed calculations
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