49,530 research outputs found
Wilson lines and UV sensitivity in magnetic compactifications
We investigate the ultraviolet (UV) behaviour of 6D N=1 supersymmetric
effective (Abelian) gauge theories compactified on a two-torus () with
magnetic flux. To this purpose we compute offshell the one-loop correction to
the Wilson line state self-energy. The offshell calculation is actually
necessary to capture the usual effective field theory expansion in powers of
. Particular care is paid to the regularization of the
(divergent) momentum integrals, which is relevant for identifying the
corresponding counterterm(s). We find a counterterm which is a new higher
dimensional effective operator of dimension d=6, that is enhanced for a larger
compactification area (where the effective theory applies) and is consistent
with the symmetries of the theory. Its consequences are briefly discussed and
comparison is made with orbifold compactifications without flux.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure; (v2: added references and paragraph on page 7
Entanglement-assisted communication of classical and quantum information
We consider the problem of transmitting classical and quantum information
reliably over an entanglement-assisted quantum channel. Our main result is a
capacity theorem that gives a three-dimensional achievable rate region. Points
in the region are rate triples, consisting of the classical communication rate,
the quantum communication rate, and the entanglement consumption rate of a
particular coding scheme. The crucial protocol in achieving the boundary points
of the capacity region is a protocol that we name the classically-enhanced
father protocol. The classically-enhanced father protocol is more general than
other protocols in the family tree of quantum Shannon theoretic protocols, in
the sense that several previously known quantum protocols are now child
protocols of it. The classically-enhanced father protocol also shows an
improvement over a time-sharing strategy for the case of a qubit dephasing
channel--this result justifies the need for simultaneous coding of classical
and quantum information over an entanglement-assisted quantum channel. Our
capacity theorem is of a multi-letter nature (requiring a limit over many uses
of the channel), but it reduces to a single-letter characterization for at
least three channels: the completely depolarizing channel, the quantum erasure
channel, and the qubit dephasing channel.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, simplification of capacity region--it
now has the simple interpretation as the unit resource capacity region
translated along the classically-enhanced father trade-off curv
Entanglement generation with a quantum channel and a shared state
We introduce a new protocol, the channel-state coding protocol, to quantum
Shannon theory. This protocol generates entanglement between a sender and
receiver by coding for a noisy quantum channel with the aid of a noisy shared
state. The mother and father protocols arise as special cases of the
channel-state coding protocol, where the channel is noiseless or the state is a
noiseless maximally entangled state, respectively. The channel-state coding
protocol paves the way for formulating entanglement-assisted quantum
error-correcting codes that are robust to noise in shared entanglement.
Finally, the channel-state coding protocol leads to a Smith-Yard
superactivation, where we can generate entanglement using a zero-capacity
erasure channel and a non-distillable bound entangled state.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Spectroscopic diagnostic for the mineralogy of large dust grains
We examine the thermal infrared spectra of large dust grains of different
chemical composition and mineralogy. Strong resonances in the optical
properties result in detectable spectral structure even when the grain is much
larger than the wavelength at which it radiates. We apply this to the thermal
infrared spectra of compact amorphous and crystalline silicates. The weak
resonances of amorphous silicates at 9.7 and 18 micron virtually disappear for
grains larger than about 10 micron. In contrast, the strong resonances of
crystalline silicates produce emission dips in the infrared spectra of large
grains; these emission dips are shifted in wavelength compared to the emission
peaks commonly seen in small crystalline silicate grains. We discuss the effect
of a fluffy or compact grain structure on the infrared emission spectra of
large grains, and apply our theory to the dust shell surrounding Vega.Comment: Submitted to A&A Letter
Near-infrared emission from sublimating dust in collisionally active debris disks
Hot exozodiacal dust is thought to be responsible for excess near-infrared
(NIR) emission emanating from the innermost parts of some debris disks. The
origin of this dust, however, is still a matter of debate. We test whether hot
exozodiacal dust can be supplied from an exterior parent belt by
Poynting-Robertson (P-R) drag, paying special attention to the pile-up of dust
that occurs due to the interplay of P-R drag and dust sublimation.
Specifically, we investigate whether pile-ups still occur when collisions are
taken into account, and if they can explain the observed NIR excess. We compute
the steady-state distribution of dust in the inner disk by solving the
continuity equation. First, we derive an analytical solution under a number of
simplifying assumptions. Second, we develop a numerical debris disk model that
for the first time treats the complex interaction of collisions, P-R drag, and
sublimation in a self-consistent way. From the resulting dust distributions we
generate thermal emission spectra and compare these to observed excess NIR
fluxes. We confirm that P-R drag always supplies a small amount of dust to the
sublimation zone, but find that a fully consistent treatment yields a maximum
amount of dust that is about 7 times lower than that given by analytical
estimates. The NIR excess due this material is much smaller (<10^-3 for A-type
stars with parent belts at >1 AU) than the values derived from interferometric
observations (~10^-2). Pile-up of dust still occurs when collisions are
considered, but its effect on the NIR flux is insignificant. Finally, the
cross-section in the innermost regions is clearly dominated by barely bound
grains.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, A&A accepte
Analytical modelling of hot-spot traffic in deterministically-routed k-ary n-cubes
Many research studies have proposed analytical models to evaluate the performance of k-ary n-cubes with deterministic wormhole routing. Such models however have so far been confined to uniform traffic distributions. There has been hardly any model proposed that deal with non-uniform traffic distributions that could arise due to, for instance, the presence of hot-spots in the network. This paper proposes the first analytical model to predict message latency in k-ary n-cubes with deterministic routing in the presence of hot-spots. The validity of the model is demonstrated by comparing analytical results with those obtained through extensive simulation experiments
Test vectors for Rankin-Selberg -functions
We study the local zeta integrals attached to a pair of generic
representations of , , over a -adic
field. Through a process of unipotent averaging we produce a pair of
corresponding Whittaker functions whose zeta integral is non-zero, and we
express this integral in terms of the Langlands parameters of and .
In many cases, these Whittaker functions also serve as a test vector for the
associated Rankin-Selberg (local) -function.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1804.0772
Price Discovery in Time and Space: The Course of Condominium Prices in Singapore
Despite evidence that aggregate housing price are predictable, a random walk in time and independence in space are two maintained hypotheses in the empirical models for housing price measurement used by government and commercial companies. This paper examines the price discovery process in individual dwellings over time and space by relaxing both assumptions, using data from the Singapore private condominium market. We develop a model that tests directly the hypotheses that the prices of individual dwellings follow a random walk over time and that the price of an individual dwelling is independent of the price of a neighboring dwelling. The model is general enough to include other widely used models of housing price determination, such as Bailey, Muth, and Nourse (1963), Case and Shiller (1987) and Redfearn and Quigley (2000), as special cases. The empirical results clearly support mean reversion in housing prices and also diffusion of innovations over space. Our estimates of the level of housing prices, derived from a generalized repeat sales model, suggest that serial and spatial correlation matters in the computation of price indices and the estimation of price levels. investment returns is completely absent.
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