2,231 research outputs found
Interacting Spreading Processes in Multilayer Networks: A Systematic Review
© 2013 IEEE. The world of network science is fascinating and filled with complex phenomena that we aspire to understand. One of them is the dynamics of spreading processes over complex networked structures. Building the knowledge-base in the field where we can face more than one spreading process propagating over a network that has more than one layer is a challenging task, as the complexity comes both from the environment in which the spread happens and from characteristics and interplay of spreads' propagation. As this cross-disciplinary field bringing together computer science, network science, biology and physics has rapidly grown over the last decade, there is a need to comprehensively review the current state-of-the-art and offer to the research community a roadmap that helps to organise the future research in this area. Thus, this survey is a first attempt to present the current landscape of the multi-processes spread over multilayer networks and to suggest the potential ways forward
Debye mass and heavy quark potential in a PNJL quark plasma
We calculate the Debye mass for the screening of the heavy quark potential in
a plasma of massless quarks coupled to the temporal gluon background governed
by the Polyakov loop potential within the PNJL model in RPA approximation. We
give a physical motivation for a recent phenomenological fit of lattice data by
applying the calculated Debye mass with its suppression in the confined phase
due to the Polyakov-loop to a description of the temperature dependence of the
singlet free energy for QCD with a heavy quark pair at infinite separation. We
compare the result to lattice data.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, contribution to Proceedings of the 6th
International Conference on "Critical Point and Onset of Deconfinement", to
appear in Phys. At. Nucl., vol. 7
Limits on the Mass, Velocity and Orbit of PSR J19336211
We present a high-precision timing analysis of PSR J19336211, a
millisecond pulsar (MSP) with a 3.5-ms spin period and a white dwarf (WD)
companion, using data from the Parkes radio telescope. Since we have accurately
measured the polarization properties of this pulsar we have applied the matrix
template matching approach in which the times of arrival are measured using
full polarimetric information. We achieved a weighted root-mean-square timing
residuals (rms) of the timing residuals of 1.23 , 15.5
improvement compared to the total intensity timing analysis. After studying the
scintillation properties of this pulsar we put constraints on the inclination
angle of the system. Based on these measurements and on mapping we put
a 2- upper limit on the companion mass (0.44 M). Since this
mass limit cannot reveal the nature of the companion we further investigate the
possibility of the companion to be a He WD. Applying the orbital period-mass
relation for such WDs, we conclude that the mass of a He WD companion would be
about 0.260.01 M which, combined with the measured mass function
and orbital inclination limits, would lead to a light pulsar mass
1.0 M. This result seems unlikely based on current neutron star
formation models and we therefore conclude that PSR J19336211 most likely
has a CO WD companion, which allows for a solution with a more massive pulsar
A New 5 Flavour NLO Analysis and Parametrizations of Parton Distributions of the Real Photon
New, radiatively generated, NLO quark (u,d,s,c,b) and gluon densities in a
real, unpolarized photon are presented. We perform three global fits, based on
the NLO DGLAP evolution equations for Q^2>1 GeV^2, to all the available
structure function F_2^gamma(x,Q^2) data. As in our previous LO analysis we
utilize two theoretical approaches. Two models, denoted as FFNS_{CJK}1 & 2 NLO,
adopt the so-called Fixed Flavour-Number Scheme for calculation of the
heavy-quark contributions to F_2^gamma(x,Q^2), the CJK NLO model applies the
ACOT(chi) scheme. We examine the results of our fits by a comparison with the
LEP data for the Q^2 dependence of the F_2^gamma, averaged over various
x-regions, and the F_2,c^gamma. Grid parametrizations of the parton densities
for all fits are provided.Comment: 49 pages, 27 postscript figures; FORTRAN programs available at
http://www.fuw.edu.pl/~pjank/param.htm
Quiver Diagonalization and Open BPS States
We show that motivic DonaldsonâThomas invariants of a symmetric quiver Q, captured by the generating function P Q, can be encoded in another quiver Q (â) of (almost always) infinite size, whose only arrows are loops, and whose generating function P Q  (â) is equal to P Q upon appropriate identification of generating parameters. Consequences of this statement include a generalization of the proof of integrality of DonaldsonâThomas and LabastidaâMariñoâOoguriâVafa invariants that count open BPS states, as well as expressing motivic DonaldsonâThomas invariants of an arbitrary symmetric quiver in terms of invariants of m-loop quivers. In particular, this means that the already known combinatorial interpretation of invariants of m-loop quivers extends to arbitrary symmetric quivers
Permutohedra for knots and quivers
The knots-quivers correspondence states that various characteristics of a
knot are encoded in the corresponding quiver and the moduli space of its
representations. However, this correspondence is not a bijection: more than one
quiver may be assigned to a given knot and encode the same information. In this
work we study this phenomenon systematically and show that it is generic rather
than exceptional. First, we find conditions that characterize equivalent
quivers. Then we show that equivalent quivers arise in families that have the
structure of permutohedra, and the set of all equivalent quivers for a given
knot is parameterized by vertices of a graph made of several permutohedra glued
together. These graphs can be also interpreted as webs of dual 3d
theories. All these results are intimately related to
properties of homological diagrams for knots, as well as to multi-cover skein
relations that arise in counting of holomorphic curves with boundaries on
Lagrangian branes in Calabi-Yau three-folds.Comment: 72 pages, 36 figure
Mrgprd Enhances Excitability in Specific Populations of Cutaneous Murine Polymodal Nociceptors
The Mas-related G protein-coupled receptor D (Mrgprd) is selectively expressed in nonpeptidergic nociceptors that innervate the outer layers of mammalian skin. The function of Mrgprd in nociceptive neurons and the physiologically relevant somatosensory stimuli that activate Mrgprd^-expressing (Mrgprd^+) neurons are currently unknown. To address these issues, we studied three Mrgprd knock-in mouse lines using an ex vivo somatosensory preparation to examine the role of the Mrgprd receptor and Mrgprd+ afferents in cutaneous somatosensation. In mouse hairy skin, Mrgprd, as marked by expression of green fluorescent protein reporters, was expressed predominantly in the population of nonpeptidergic, TRPV1-negative, C-polymodal nociceptors. In mice lacking Mrgprd, this population of nociceptors exhibited decreased sensitivity to cold, heat, and mechanical stimuli. Additionally, in vitro patch-clamp studies were performed on cultured dorsal root ganglion neurons from Mrgprd^(â/â) and Mrgprd^(+/â) mice. These studies revealed a higher rheobase in neurons from Mrgprd^(â/â) mice than from Mrgprd^(+/â) mice. Furthermore, the application of the Mrgprd ligand ÎČ-alanine significantly reduced the rheobase and increased the firing rate in neurons from Mrgprd^(+/â) mice but was without effect in neurons from Mrgprd^(â/â) mice. Our results demonstrate that Mrgprd influences the excitability of polymodal nonpeptidergic nociceptors to mechanical and thermal stimuli
Strategic distribution of seeds to support diffusion in complex networks
© 2018 Jankowski et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Usually, the launch of the diffusion process is triggered by a few early adoptersâi.e., seeds of diffusion. Many studies have assumed that all seeds are activated once to initiate the diffusion process in social networks and therefore are focused on finding optimal ways of choosing these nodes according to a limited budget. Despite the advances in identifying influencing spreaders, the strategy of activating all seeds at the beginning might not be sufficient in accelerating and maximising the coverage of diffusion. Also, it does not capture real scenarios in which marketing campaigns continuously monitor and support the diffusion process by seeding more nodes. More recent studies investigate the possibility of activating additional seeds as the diffusion process goes forward. In this work, we further examine this approach and search for optimal ways of distributing seeds during the diffusion process according to a pre-allocated seeding budget. Theoretically, we show that a universally best solution does not exist, and we prove that finding an optimal distribution of supporting seeds over time for a particular network is an NP-hard problem. Numerically, we evaluate several seeding strategies on different networks regarding maximising the coverage and minimising the spreading time. We find that each network topology has a best strategy given some spreading parameters. Our findings can be crucial in identifying the best strategies for budget allocation in different scenarios such as marketing or political campaigns
Crossing barriers in planetesimal formation: The growth of mm-dust aggregates with large constituent grains
Collisions of mm-size dust aggregates play a crucial role in the early phases of planet formation. It is for example currently unclear whether there is a bouncing barrier where millimeter aggregates no longer grow by sticking. We developed a laboratory setup that allowed us to observe collisions of dust aggregates levitating at mbar pressures and elevated temperatures of 800 K. We report on collisions between basalt dust aggregates of from 0.3 to 5 mm in size at velocities between 0.1 and 15 cm/s. Individual grains are smaller than 25 Όm in size. We find that for all impact energies in the studied range sticking occurs at a probability of 32.1 ± 2.5% on average. In general, the sticking probability decreases with increasing impact parameter. The sticking probability increases with energy density (impact energy per contact area). We also observe collisions of aggregates that were formed by a previous sticking of two larger aggregates. Partners of these aggregates can be detached by a second collision with a probability of on average 19.8 ± 4.0%. The measured accretion efficiencies are remarkably high compared to other experimental results. We attribute this to the relatively large dust grains used in our experiments, which make aggregates more susceptible to restructuring and energy dissipation. Collisional hardening by compaction might not occur as the aggregates are already very compact with only 54 ± 1% porosity. The disassembly of previously grown aggregates in collisions might stall further aggregate growth. However, owing to the levitation technique and the limited data statistics, no conclusive statement about this aspect can yet be given. We find that the detachment efficiency decreases with increasing velocities and accretion dominates in the higher velocity range. For high accretion efficiencies, our experiments suggest that continued growth in the mm-range with larger constituent grains would be a viable way to produce larger aggregates, which might in turn form the seeds to proceed to growing planetesimals. © 2012 ESO
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Thermal Stability and Mechanical Behavior of Ultra-Fine Bcc Ta and v Coatings
Ultra-refined microstructures of both tantalum (Ta) and vanadium (V) are produced using electron-beam evaporation and magnetron sputtering deposition. The thermal stability of the micron-to-submicron grain size foils is examined to quantify the kinetics and activation energy of diffusion, as well as identify the temperature transition in dominant mechanism from grain boundary to lattice diffusion. The activation energies for boundary diffusion in Ta and V determined from grain growth are 0.3 and 0.2 eV{center_dot}atom{sup -1}, respectively, versus lattice diffusion values of 4.3 and 3.2 eV{center_dot}atom{sup -1}, respectively. The mechanical behavior, as characterized by strength and hardness, is found to inversely scale with square-root grain size according to the Hall-Petch relationship. The strength of Ta and V increases two-fold from 400 MPa, as the grain size decreases from 2 to 0.75 {micro}m
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