25,373 research outputs found
Calibrations, Monopoles and Fuzzy Funnels
We present new non-Abelian solitonic configurations in the low energy
effective theory describing a collection of N parallel D1--branes. These
configurations preserve 1/4, 1/8, 1/16 and 1/32 of the spacetime supersymmetry.
They are solutions to a set of generalised Nahm's equations which are related
to self-duality equations in eight dimensions. Our solutions represent
D1--branes which expand into fuzzy funnel configurations ending on collections
of intersecting D3--branes. Supersymmetry dictates that such intersecting
D3--branes must lie on a calibrated three-surface of spacetime and we argue
that the generalised Nahm's equations encode the data for the construction of
magnetic monopoles on the relevant three-surfaces.Comment: 19 pages. Latex. v2: added references and acknowledgmen
Myth Making in the Heartland – Did Agriculture Elect the New President?
This essay addresses the role of America’s farmers in electing President Donald Trump. This role may not have been as large as the agricultural community and others have suggested. Additionally, this essay cautions the agricultural community against taking too much credit for the election of a politician and party whose interests are often at odds with agricultural interests
A Swiss Pocket Knife for Computability
This research is about operational- and complexity-oriented aspects of
classical foundations of computability theory. The approach is to re-examine
some classical theorems and constructions, but with new criteria for success
that are natural from a programming language perspective.
Three cornerstones of computability theory are the S-m-ntheorem; Turing's
"universal machine"; and Kleene's second recursion theorem. In today's
programming language parlance these are respectively partial evaluation,
self-interpretation, and reflection. In retrospect it is fascinating that
Kleene's 1938 proof is constructive; and in essence builds a self-reproducing
program.
Computability theory originated in the 1930s, long before the invention of
computers and programs. Its emphasis was on delimiting the boundaries of
computability. Some milestones include 1936 (Turing), 1938 (Kleene), 1967
(isomorphism of programming languages), 1985 (partial evaluation), 1989 (theory
implementation), 1993 (efficient self-interpretation) and 2006 (term register
machines).
The "Swiss pocket knife" of the title is a programming language that allows
efficient computer implementation of all three computability cornerstones,
emphasising the third: Kleene's second recursion theorem. We describe
experiments with a tree-based computational model aiming for both fast program
generation and fast execution of the generated programs.Comment: In Proceedings Festschrift for Dave Schmidt, arXiv:1309.455
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