786 research outputs found
Taking Heisenberg's Potentia Seriously
It is argued that quantum theory is best understood as requiring an
ontological duality of res extensa and res potentia, where the latter is
understood per Heisenberg's original proposal, and the former is roughly
equivalent to Descartes' 'extended substance.' However, this is not a dualism
of mutually exclusive substances in the classical Cartesian sense, and
therefore does not inherit the infamous 'mind-body' problem. Rather, res
potentia and res extensa are proposed as mutually implicative ontological
extants that serve to explain the key conceptual challenges of quantum theory;
in particular, nonlocality, entanglement, null measurements, and wave function
collapse. It is shown that a natural account of these quantum perplexities
emerges, along with a need to reassess our usual ontological commitments
involving the nature of space and time.Comment: Final version, to appear in International Journal of Quantum
Foundation
On Upper Bounds for Toroidal Mosaic Numbers
In this paper, we work to construct mosaic representations of knots on the
torus, rather than in the plane. This consists of a particular choice of the
ambient group, as well as different definitions of contiguous and suitably
connected. We present conditions under which mosaic numbers might decrease by
this projection, and present a tool to measure this reduction. We show that the
order of edge identification in construction of the torus sometimes yields
different resultant knots from a given mosaic when reversed. Additionally, in
the Appendix we give the catalog of all 2 by 2 torus mosaics.Comment: 10 pages, 111 figure
Cognitive aircraft hazard advisory system (CAHAS)
Integrated surveillance systems and methods for processing multiple sensor inputs and determining a best route for avoiding multiple hazards. An example method performed on a first aircraft includes generating a plurality of routes for avoiding a previously determined alert from a first advisory system. Then, probability of success information is generated at other advisory systems for each of the plurality of routes. The best route of the plurality of routes is determined based on the generated probabilities and output to the flight crew or other aircraft. The probability of success information includes a previously defined uncertainty value. The uncertainty value corresponds to quality of data provided to or provided by the respective advisory system
Quantum SU(2) faithfully detects mapping class groups modulo center
The Jones-Witten theory gives rise to representations of the (extended)
mapping class group of any closed surface Y indexed by a semi-simple Lie group
G and a level k. In the case G=SU(2) these representations (denoted V_A(Y))
have a particularly simple description in terms of the Kauffman skein modules
with parameter A a primitive 4r-th root of unity (r=k+2). In each of these
representations (as well as the general G case), Dehn twists act as
transformations of finite order, so none represents the mapping class group
M(Y) faithfully. However, taken together, the quantum SU(2) representations are
faithful on non-central elements of M(Y). (Note that M(Y) has non-trivial
center only if Y is a sphere with 0, 1, or 2 punctures, a torus with 0, 1, or 2
punctures, or the closed surface of genus = 2.) Specifically, for a non-central
h in M(Y) there is an r_0(h) such that if r>= r_0(h) and A is a primitive 4r-th
root of unity then h acts projectively nontrivially on V_A(Y). Jones' [J]
original representation rho_n of the braid groups B_n, sometimes called the
generic q-analog-SU(2)-representation, is not known to be faithful. However, we
show that any braid h not= id in B_n admits a cabling c = c_1,...,c_n so that
rho_N (c(h)) not= id, N=c_1 + ... + c_n.Comment: Published by Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol6/paper18.abs.html Version 4: Sentence
added to proof of lemma 4.1, page 536, lines 7-
Parameter estimation for Boolean models of biological networks
Boolean networks have long been used as models of molecular networks and play
an increasingly important role in systems biology. This paper describes a
software package, Polynome, offered as a web service, that helps users
construct Boolean network models based on experimental data and biological
input. The key feature is a discrete analog of parameter estimation for
continuous models. With only experimental data as input, the software can be
used as a tool for reverse-engineering of Boolean network models from
experimental time course data.Comment: Web interface of the software is available at
http://polymath.vbi.vt.edu/polynome
An extended Hubbard model with ring exchange: a route to a non-Abelian topological phase
We propose an extended Hubbard model on a 2D Kagome lattice with an
additional ring-exchange term. The particles can be either bosons or spinless
fermions . At a special filling fraction of 1/6 the model is analyzed in the
lowest non-vanishing order of perturbation theory. Such ``undoped'' model is
closely related to the Quantum Dimer Model. We show how to arrive at an exactly
soluble point whose ground state manifold is the extensively degenerate
``d-isotopy space'', a necessary precondition for for a certain type of
non-Abelian topological order. Near the ``special'' values, , this space is expected to collapse to a stable topological phase
with anyonic excitations closely related to SU(2) Chern-Simons theory at level
k.Comment: 4 pages, 2 colour figures, submitted to PRL. For an extended
treatment of a more general family of models see cond-mat/030912
Quantum Invariants of Templates
We define invariants for templates that appear in certain dynamical systems. Invariants are derived from certain bialgebras. Diagrammatic relations between projections of templates and the algebraic structures are used to define invariants. We also construct 3-manifolds via framed links associated to tamplate diagrams, so that any 3-manifold invariant can be used as a template invariant
Coronavirus disease (Covid-19): psychoeducational variables involved in the health emergency
This monograph has allowed us to present a psychoeducational view of the effects
of the COVID-19 pandemic. We confirm here that research in education contributes its
own evidence and specific models for identifying this problem
Diassociative algebras and Milnor's invariants for tangles
We extend Milnor's mu-invariants of link homotopy to ordered (classical or
virtual) tangles. Simple combinatorial formulas for mu-invariants are given in
terms of counting trees in Gauss diagrams. Invariance under Reidemeister moves
corresponds to axioms of Loday's diassociative algebra. The relation of tangles
to diassociative algebras is formulated in terms of a morphism of corresponding
operads.Comment: 17 pages, many figures; v2: several typos correcte
- …