14,342 research outputs found

    Scalable Unix Commands for Parallel Processors: A High-Performance Implementation

    Get PDF
    We describe a family of MPI applications we call the Parallel Unix Commands. These commands are natural parallel versions of common Unix user commands such as ls, ps, and find, together with a few similar commands particular to the parallel environment. We describe the design and implementation of these programs and present some performance results on a 256-node Linux cluster. The Parallel Unix Commands are open source and freely available.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Expectation adjustment in the housing market: insights from the Scottish auction system

    Get PDF
    This paper examines price expectation adjustment of house buyers and sellers to rapid changes in the housing market using data from Scotland where houses are sold through 'first-price sealed-bid' auctions. These auctions provide more information on market signals, incentives and the behaviour of market participants than private treaty sales. This paper therefore provides a theoretical framework for analysing revealed preference data generated from these auctions. We specifically focus on the analysis of the selling to asking price difference, the 'bid-premium'. The bid-premium is shown to be affected by expectations of future price movements, market duration and high bidding frequency. The bid-premium reflects consumers' expectations, adapting to market conditions more promptly than asking price setting behaviour and final sale prices. The volatile conditions of the recent housing market bubble are fully reflected in the bid-premium, whereas the asking and sale prices are much less prone to rapid movements

    Thermal signatures of Little-Parks effect in the heat capacity of mesoscopic superconducting rings

    Full text link
    We present the first measurements of thermal signatures of the Little-Parks effect using a highly sensitive nanocalorimeter. Small variations of the heat capacity C_pC\_p of 2.5 millions of non interacting micrometer-sized superconducting rings threaded by a magnetic flux Ί\Phi have been measured by attojoule calorimetry. This non-invasive method allows the measurement of thermodynamic properties -- and hence the probing of the energy levels -- of nanosystems without perturbing them electrically. It is observed that C_pC\_p is strongly influenced by the fluxoid quantization (Little-Parks effect) near the critical temperature T_cT\_c. The jump of C_pC\_p at the superconducting phase transition is an oscillating function of Ί\Phi with a period Ί_0=h/2e\Phi\_0=h/2e, the magnetic flux quantum, which is in agreement with the Ginzburg-Landau theory of superconductivity.Comment: To be published in Physical Review B, Rapid Communication
    • 

    corecore