63,457 research outputs found
The spans in Brownian motion
For , let be a -dimensional standard
Brownian motion. We study the -Brownian span set Span(d):=\{t-s;~
B^d_s=B^d_t~\mbox{for some}~0 \leq s \leq t\}. We prove that almost surely the
random set is -compact and dense in . In
addition, we show that almost surely; the Lebesgue
measure of is almost surely and its Hausdorff dimension is
almost surely; and the Hausdorff dimension of is almost
surely. We also list a number of conjectures and open problems.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figures. This paper is published by
http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.aihp/150062403
Sunk costs, market contestability, and the size distribution of firms
This paper offers a new economic explanation for the observed inter-industry differences in the size distribution of firms. The empirical estimates--based on three temporal (1982, 1987, and 1992) cross-sections of the four-digit United States manufacturing industries--indicate that increased market contestability, as signified by low sunk costs, tends to reduce the dispersion of firm sizes. These findings provide support for one of the key predictions of the theory of contestable markets: that market forces under contestability would tend to render any inefficient organization of the industry unsustainable and, consequently, tighten the distribution of firms around the optimum.Markets and Market Access,Economic Theory&Research,Water and Industry,Access to Markets,Debt Markets
Nonlinear Dual-Mode Control of Variable-Speed Wind Turbines with Doubly Fed Induction Generators
This paper presents a feedback/feedforward nonlinear controller for
variable-speed wind turbines with doubly fed induction generators. By
appropriately adjusting the rotor voltages and the blade pitch angle, the
controller simultaneously enables: (a) control of the active power in both the
maximum power tracking and power regulation modes, (b) seamless switching
between the two modes, and (c) control of the reactive power so that a
desirable power factor is maintained. Unlike many existing designs, the
controller is developed based on original, nonlinear,
electromechanically-coupled models of wind turbines, without attempting
approximate linearization. Its development consists of three steps: (i) employ
feedback linearization to exactly cancel some of the nonlinearities and perform
arbitrary pole placement, (ii) design a speed controller that makes the rotor
angular velocity track a desired reference whenever possible, and (iii)
introduce a Lyapunov-like function and present a gradient-based approach for
minimizing this function. The effectiveness of the controller is demonstrated
through simulation of a wind turbine operating under several scenarios.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on
Control Systems Technolog
Seismic analysis of 70 Ophiuchi A: A new quantity proposed
The basic intent of this paper is to model 70 Ophiuchi A using the latest
asteroseismic observations as complementary constraints and to determine the
fundamental parameters of the star. Additionally, we propose a new quantity to
lift the degeneracy between the initial chemical composition and stellar age.
Using the Yale stellar evolution code (YREC7), we construct a series of stellar
evolutionary tracks for the mass range = 0.85 -- 0.93 with
different composition (0.26 -- 0.30) and (0.017 -- 0.023).
Along these tracks, we select a grid of stellar model candidates that fall
within the error box in the HR diagram to calculate the theoretical
frequencies, the large- and small- frequency separations using the Guenther's
stellar pulsation code. Following the asymptotic formula of stellar -modes,
we define a quantity which is correlated with stellar age. Also, we
test it by theoretical adiabatic frequencies of many models. Many detailed
models of 70 Ophiuchi A have been listed in Table 3. By combining all
non-asteroseismic observations available for 70 Ophiuchi A with these
seismological data, we think that Model 60, Model 125 and Model 126, listed in
Table 3, are the optimum models presently. Meanwhile, we predict that the
radius of this star is about 0.860 -- 0.865 and the age is about
6.8 -- 7.0 Gyr with mass 0.89 -- 0.90 . Additionally, we prove that
the new quantity can be a useful indicator of stellar age.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, accepted by New Astronom
Gravitino Interactions from Yang-Mills Theory
We fabricate gravitino vertex interactions using as only input on-shell
Yang-Mills amplitudes and the Kawai-Lewellen-Tye gauge theory / gravity
relations. A useful result of this analysis is simpler tree-level Feynman rules
for gravitino scattering than in traditional gauges. All results are explicitly
verified until five point scattering.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, REVTe
Asteroseismic study of solar-like stars: A method of estimating stellar age
Asteroseismology, as a tool to use the indirect information contained in
stellar oscillations to probe the stellar interiors, is an active field of
research presently. Stellar age, as a fundamental property of star apart from
its mass, is most difficult to estimate. In addition, the estimating of stellar
age can provide the chance to study the time evolution of astronomical
phenomena. In our poster, we summarize our previous work and further present a
method to determine age of low-mass main-sequence star.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figures, submitted to IAUS25
Fitting stochastic epidemic models to gene genealogies using linear noise approximation
Phylodynamics is a set of population genetics tools that aim at
reconstructing demographic history of a population based on molecular sequences
of individuals sampled from the population of interest. One important task in
phylodynamics is to estimate changes in (effective) population size. When
applied to infectious disease sequences such estimation of population size
trajectories can provide information about changes in the number of infections.
To model changes in the number of infected individuals, current phylodynamic
methods use non-parametric approaches, parametric approaches, and stochastic
modeling in conjunction with likelihood-free Bayesian methods. The first class
of methods yields results that are hard-to-interpret epidemiologically. The
second class of methods provides estimates of important epidemiological
parameters, such as infection and removal/recovery rates, but ignores variation
in the dynamics of infectious disease spread. The third class of methods is the
most advantageous statistically, but relies on computationally intensive
particle filtering techniques that limits its applications. We propose a
Bayesian model that combines phylodynamic inference and stochastic epidemic
models, and achieves computational tractability by using a linear noise
approximation (LNA) --- a technique that allows us to approximate probability
densities of stochastic epidemic model trajectories. LNA opens the door for
using modern Markov chain Monte Carlo tools to approximate the joint posterior
distribution of the disease transmission parameters and of high dimensional
vectors describing unobserved changes in the stochastic epidemic model
compartment sizes (e.g., numbers of infectious and susceptible individuals). We
apply our estimation technique to Ebola genealogies estimated using viral
genetic data from the 2014 epidemic in Sierra Leone and Liberia.Comment: 43 pages, 6 figures in the main tex
Emergence of highly-designable protein-backbone conformations in an off-lattice model
Despite the variety of protein sizes, shapes, and backbone configurations
found in nature, the design of novel protein folds remains an open problem.
Within simple lattice models it has been shown that all structures are not
equally suitable for design. Rather, certain structures are distinguished by
unusually high designability: the number of amino-acid sequences for which they
represent the unique ground state; sequences associated with such structures
possess both robustness to mutation and thermodynamic stability. Here we report
that highly designable backbone conformations also emerge in a realistic
off-lattice model. The highly designable conformations of a chain of 23 amino
acids are identified, and found to be remarkably insensitive to model
parameters. While some of these conformations correspond closely to known
natural protein folds, such as the zinc finger and the helix-turn-helix motifs,
others do not resemble known folds and may be candidates for novel fold design.Comment: 7 figure
- …