3,733 research outputs found
Low-energy expansion formula for one-dimensional Fokker-Planck and Schr\"odinger equations with asymptotically periodic potentials
We consider one-dimensional Fokker-Planck and Schr\"odinger equations with a
potential which approaches a periodic function at spatial infinity. We extend
the low-energy expansion method, which was introduced in previous papers, to be
applicable to such asymptotically periodic cases. Using this method, we study
the low-energy behavior of the Green function.Comment: author-created, un-copyedited version of an article accepted for
publication in Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretica
A multi-dimensional SRBM: Geometric views of its product form stationary distribution
We present a geometric interpretation of a product form stationary
distribution for a -dimensional semimartingale reflecting Brownian motion
(SRBM) that lives in the nonnegative orthant. The -dimensional SRBM data can
be equivalently specified by geometric objects: an ellipse and rays.
Using these geometric objects, we establish necessary and sufficient conditions
for characterizing product form stationary distribution. The key idea in the
characterization is that we decompose the -dimensional problem to
two-dimensional SRBMs, each of which is determined by an
ellipse and two rays. This characterization contrasts with the algebraic
condition of [14]. A -station tandem queue example is presented to
illustrate how the product form can be obtained using our characterization.
Drawing the two-dimensional results in [1,7], we discuss potential optimal
paths for a variational problem associated with the three-station tandem queue.
Except Appendix D, the rest of this paper is almost identical to the QUESTA
paper with the same title
The Emergence of Scaling in Sequence-based Physical Models of Protein Evolution
It has recently been discovered that many biological systems, when
represented as graphs, exhibit a scale-free topology. One such system is the
set of structural relationships among protein domains. The scale-free nature of
this and other systems has previously been explained using network growth
models that, while motivated by biological processes, do not explicitly
consider the underlying physics or biology. In the present work we explore a
sequence-based model for the evolution protein structures and demonstrate that
this model is able to recapitulate the scale-free nature observed in graphs of
real protein structures. We find that this model also reproduces other
statistical feature of the protein domain graph. This represents, to our
knowledge, the first such microscopic, physics-based evolutionary model for a
scale-free network of biological importance and as such has strong implications
for our understanding of the evolution of protein structures and of other
biological networks.Comment: 20 pages (including figures), 4 figures, to be submitted to PNA
The BAR approach for multiclass queueing networks with SBP service policies
The basic adjoint relationship (BAR) approach is an analysis technique based
on the stationary equation of a Markov process. This approach was introduced to
study heavy-traffic, steady-state convergence of generalized Jackson networks
in which each service station has a single job class. We extend it to
multiclass queueing networks operating under static-buffer-priority (SBP)
service disciplines. Our extension makes a connection with Palm distributions
that allows one to attack a difficulty arising from queue-length truncation,
which appears to be unavoidable in the multiclass setting.
For multiclass queueing networks operating under SBP service disciplines, our
BAR approach provides an alternative to the "interchange of limits" approach
that has dominated the literature in the last twenty years. The BAR approach
can produce sharp results and allows one to establish steady-state convergence
under three additional conditions: stability, state space collapse (SSC) and a
certain matrix being "tight." These three conditions do not appear to depend on
the interarrival and service-time distributions beyond their means, and their
verification can be studied as three separate modules. In particular, they can
be studied in a simpler, continuous-time Markov chain setting when all
distributions are exponential.
As an example, these three conditions are shown to hold in reentrant lines
operating under last-buffer-first-serve discipline. In a two-station,
five-class reentrant line, under the heavy-traffic condition, the tight-matrix
condition implies both the stability condition and the SSC condition. Whether
such a relationship holds generally is an open problem
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