864 research outputs found
The level set method for the two-sided eigenproblem
We consider the max-plus analogue of the eigenproblem for matrix pencils
Ax=lambda Bx. We show that the spectrum of (A,B) (i.e., the set of possible
values of lambda), which is a finite union of intervals, can be computed in
pseudo-polynomial number of operations, by a (pseudo-polynomial) number of
calls to an oracle that computes the value of a mean payoff game. The proof
relies on the introduction of a spectral function, which we interpret in terms
of the least Chebyshev distance between Ax and lambda Bx. The spectrum is
obtained as the zero level set of this function.Comment: 34 pages, 4 figures. Changes with respect to the previous version: we
explain relation to mean-payoff games and discrete event systems, and show
that the reconstruction of spectrum is pseudopolynomia
Minimal half-spaces and external representation of tropical polyhedra
We give a characterization of the minimal tropical half-spaces containing a
given tropical polyhedron, from which we derive a counter example showing that
the number of such minimal half-spaces can be infinite, contradicting some
statements which appeared in the tropical literature, and disproving a
conjecture of F. Block and J. Yu. We also establish an analogue of the
Minkowski-Weyl theorem, showing that a tropical polyhedron can be equivalently
represented internally (in terms of extreme points and rays) or externally (in
terms of half-spaces containing it). A canonical external representation of a
polyhedron turns out to be provided by the extreme elements of its tropical
polar. We characterize these extreme elements, showing in particular that they
are determined by support vectors.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, example added with a new figure, figures
improved, references update
Computing the vertices of tropical polyhedra using directed hypergraphs
We establish a characterization of the vertices of a tropical polyhedron
defined as the intersection of finitely many half-spaces. We show that a point
is a vertex if, and only if, a directed hypergraph, constructed from the
subdifferentials of the active constraints at this point, admits a unique
strongly connected component that is maximal with respect to the reachability
relation (all the other strongly connected components have access to it). This
property can be checked in almost linear-time. This allows us to develop a
tropical analogue of the classical double description method, which computes a
minimal internal representation (in terms of vertices) of a polyhedron defined
externally (by half-spaces or hyperplanes). We provide theoretical worst case
complexity bounds and report extensive experimental tests performed using the
library TPLib, showing that this method outperforms the other existing
approaches.Comment: 29 pages (A4), 10 figures, 1 table; v2: Improved algorithm in section
5 (using directed hypergraphs), detailed appendix; v3: major revision of the
article (adding tropical hyperplanes, alternative method by arrangements,
etc); v4: minor revisio
Tropical Fourier-Motzkin elimination, with an application to real-time verification
We introduce a generalization of tropical polyhedra able to express both
strict and non-strict inequalities. Such inequalities are handled by means of a
semiring of germs (encoding infinitesimal perturbations). We develop a tropical
analogue of Fourier-Motzkin elimination from which we derive geometrical
properties of these polyhedra. In particular, we show that they coincide with
the tropically convex union of (non-necessarily closed) cells that are convex
both classically and tropically. We also prove that the redundant inequalities
produced when performing successive elimination steps can be dynamically
deleted by reduction to mean payoff game problems. As a complement, we provide
a coarser (polynomial time) deletion procedure which is enough to arrive at a
simply exponential bound for the total execution time. These algorithms are
illustrated by an application to real-time systems (reachability analysis of
timed automata).Comment: 29 pages, 8 figure
Tropical analogues of a Dempe-Franke bilevel optimization problem
We consider the tropical analogues of a particular bilevel optimization
problem studied by Dempe and Franke and suggest some methods of solving these
new tropical bilevel optimization problems. In particular, it is found that the
algorithm developed by Dempe and Franke can be formulated and its validity can
be proved in a more general setting, which includes the tropical bilevel
optimization problems in question. We also show how the feasible set can be
decomposed into a finite number of tropical polyhedra, to which the tropical
linear programming solvers can be applied.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Has the common genet (Genetta genetta) spread into south-eastern France and Italy ?
The common genet (Genetta genetta) is a small carnivoran that was probably introduced from Maghreb into south-western Europe. We reassessed its easternmost European distribution from 110-mostly new-data collected in south-eastern France and Italy, and tested for potential habitat selection, to finally re-evaluate the role of the Rhone as a geographic barrier against eastward migrations. The species was more frequent in river valleys, wetlands and low-mountainous areas (south-eastern France), but also occurred in high-mountainous zones at the French-Italian border. Our results evidenced a significant increase of records (13-fold the number of occurrences previously known) and an apparent absence of habitat selection by the common genet, suggesting a recent, natural spread from the right bank of the Rhne through a zone of 30km with artificial bridges. We finally provide a synthetic, re-assessed distribution map of the common genet in France and Italy, combining 4317 occurrences from French national databases and the 110 records collected herein
Cyclic projectors and separation theorems in idempotent convex geometry
Semimodules over idempotent semirings like the max-plus or tropical semiring
have much in common with convex cones. This analogy is particularly apparent in
the case of subsemimodules of the n-fold cartesian product of the max-plus
semiring it is known that one can separate a vector from a closed subsemimodule
that does not contain it. We establish here a more general separation theorem,
which applies to any finite collection of closed semimodules with a trivial
intersection. In order to prove this theorem, we investigate the spectral
properties of certain nonlinear operators called here idempotent cyclic
projectors. These are idempotent analogues of the cyclic nearest-point
projections known in convex analysis. The spectrum of idempotent cyclic
projectors is characterized in terms of a suitable extension of Hilbert's
projective metric. We deduce as a corollary of our main results the idempotent
analogue of Helly's theorem.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Stability and convergence in discrete convex monotone dynamical systems
We study the stable behaviour of discrete dynamical systems where the map is
convex and monotone with respect to the standard positive cone. The notion of
tangential stability for fixed points and periodic points is introduced, which
is weaker than Lyapunov stability. Among others we show that the set of
tangentially stable fixed points is isomorphic to a convex inf-semilattice, and
a criterion is given for the existence of a unique tangentially stable fixed
point. We also show that periods of tangentially stable periodic points are
orders of permutations on letters, where is the dimension of the
underlying space, and a sufficient condition for global convergence to periodic
orbits is presented.Comment: 36 pages, 1 fugur
Droplet actuation induced by coalescence: experimental evidences and phenomenological modeling
This paper considers the interaction between two droplets placed on a
substrate in immediate vicinity. We show here that when the two droplets are of
different fluids and especially when one of the droplet is highly volatile, a
wealth of fascinating phenomena can be observed. In particular, the interaction
may result in the actuation of the droplet system, i.e. its displacement over a
finite length. In order to control this displacement, we consider droplets
confined on a hydrophilic stripe created by plasma-treating a PDMS substrate.
This controlled actuation opens up unexplored opportunities in the field of
microfluidics. In order to explain the observed actuation phenomenon, we
propose a simple phenomenological model based on Newton's second law and a
simple balance between the driving force arising from surface energy gradients
and the viscous resistive force. This simple model is able to reproduce
qualitatively and quantitatively the observed droplet dynamics
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