9,809 research outputs found
PL 4-manifolds admitting simple crystallizations: framed links and regular genus
Simple crystallizations are edge-coloured graphs representing PL 4-manifolds
with the property that the 1-skeleton of the associated triangulation equals
the 1-skeleton of a 4-simplex. In the present paper, we prove that any
(simply-connected) PL -manifold admitting a simple crystallization
admits a special handlebody decomposition, too; equivalently, may be
represented by a framed link yielding , with exactly
components ( being the second Betti number of ). As a
consequence, the regular genus of is proved to be the double of
. Moreover, the characterization of any such PL -manifold by
, where is the gem-complexity of (i.e. the
non-negative number , being the minimum order of a crystallization of
) implies that both PL invariants gem-complexity and regular genus turn out
to be additive within the class of all PL -manifolds admitting simple
crystallizations (in particular: within the class of all "standard"
simply-connected PL 4-manifolds).Comment: 14 pages, no figures; this is a new version of the former paper "A
characterization of PL 4-manifolds admitting simple crystallizations
Computing Matveev's complexity via crystallization theory: the boundary case
The notion of Gem-Matveev complexity has been introduced within
crystallization theory, as a combinatorial method to estimate Matveev's
complexity of closed 3-manifolds; it yielded upper bounds for interesting
classes of such manifolds. In this paper we extend the definition to the case
of non-empty boundary and prove that for each compact irreducible and
boundary-irreducible 3-manifold it coincides with the modified Heegaard
complexity introduced by Cattabriga, Mulazzani and Vesnin. Moreover, via
Gem-Matveev complexity, we obtain an estimation of Matveev's complexity for all
Seifert 3-manifolds with base and two exceptional fibers and,
therefore, for all torus knot complements.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figure
Report on the EU-US Workshop on Large Scientific Databases
This joint workshop was set up under the auspices of the Joint European Commission/National Science Foundation Strategy Group that met in Budapest in September 1998. The meeting derived from a joint collaboration agreement between the EC and NSF, signed by Dr. George Metakides (Director of Information Technologies for the EC) and Prof. Juris Hartmanis (Director of Computer and Information Science and Engineering at the NSF). Some themes that were identified include:
digital libraries
human-centered computing and virtual environments
large scientific databases, and
intelligent implants
This report expresses the conclusions and recommendations of the Workshop on Large Scientific Databases, held in Annapolis, Maryland, USA in September 1999. The purpose of the workshop was to develop a report to the funding agencies outlining a possible solicitation to the research community, with emphasis on joint European-US work on Large Scientific Databases. Before the workshop, each participant submitted a position paper (these are available at the web site http://www.cacr.caltech.edu/euus). The results of the position papers, presentations, and group discussion are summarized in this report. There were 12 participants from Europe and 12 from the United States, and they are listed at the end of this report. The last section of this report describes possible funding mechanisms
Global analysis of muon decay measurements
We have performed a global analysis of muon decay measurements to establish
model-independent limits on the space-time structure of the muon decay matrix
element. We find limits on the scalar, vector and tensor coupling of right- and
left-handed muons to right- and left-handed electrons. The limits on those
terms that involve the decay of right-handed muons to left-handed electrons are
more restrictive than in previous global analyses, while the limits on the
other non-standard model interactions are comparable. The value of the Michel
parameter eta found in the global analysis is -0.0036 \pm 0.0069, slightly more
precise than the value found in a more restrictive analysis of a recent
measurement. This has implications for the Fermi coupling constant G_F.Comment: 5 pages, 3 table
Refractive effects in the scattering of loosely bound nuclei
A study of the interaction of loosely bound nuclei 6,7Li at 9 and 19 AMeV
with light targets has been undertaken. With the determination of unambiguous
optical potentials in mind, elastic data for four projectile-target
combinations and one neutron transfer reaction 13C(7Li,8Li)12C have been
measured on a large angular range. The kinematical regime encompasses a region
where the mean field (optical potential) has a marked variation with mass and
energy, but turns out to be sufficiently surface transparent to allow strong
refractive effects to be manifested in elastic scattering data at intermediate
angles. The identified exotic feature, a "plateau" in the angular distributions
at intermediate angles, is fully confirmed in four reaction channels and
interpreted as a pre-rainbow oscillation resulting from the interference of the
barrier and internal barrier farside scattering subamplitudes.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables to submit to Phys. Rev.
A combinatorial smoothness criterion for spherical varieties
We suggest a combinatorial criterion for the smoothness of an arbitrary
spherical variety using the classification of multiplicity-free spaces,
generalizing an earlier result of Camus for spherical varieties of type .Comment: 14 pages, 2 table
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