1,023 research outputs found

    Remarks on the boundary set of spectral equipartitions

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    Given a bounded open set Ω\Omega in Rn\mathbb{R}^n (or a compact Riemannian manifold with boundary), and a partition of Ω\Omega by kk open sets ωj\omega_j, we consider the quantity maxjλ(ωj)\max_j \lambda(\omega_j), where λ(ωj)\lambda(\omega_j) is the ground state energy of the Dirichlet realization of the Laplacian in ωj\omega_j. We denote by Lk(Ω)\mathfrak{L}_k(\Omega) the infimum of maxjλ(ωj)\max_j \lambda(\omega_j) over all kk-partitions. A minimal kk-partition is a partition which realizes the infimum. The purpose of this paper is to revisit properties of nodal sets and to explore if they are also true for minimal partitions, or more generally for spectral equipartitions. We focus on the length of the boundary set of the partition in the 2-dimensional situation.Comment: Final version to appear in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society

    Algorithmic Information Theory and Foundations of Probability

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    The use of algorithmic information theory (Kolmogorov complexity theory) to explain the relation between mathematical probability theory and `real world' is discussed

    Entanglement and criticality in translational invariant harmonic lattice systems with finite-range interactions

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    We discuss the relation between entanglement and criticality in translationally invariant harmonic lattice systems with non-randon, finite-range interactions. We show that the criticality of the system as well as validity or break-down of the entanglement area law are solely determined by the analytic properties of the spectral function of the oscillator system, which can easily be computed. In particular for finite-range couplings we find a one-to-one correspondence between an area-law scaling of the bi-partite entanglement and a finite correlation length. This relation is strict in the one-dimensional case and there is strog evidence for the multi-dimensional case. We also discuss generalizations to couplings with infinite range. Finally, to illustrate our results, a specific 1D example with nearest and next-nearest neighbor coupling is analyzed.Comment: 4 pages, one figure, revised versio

    Uniqueness of the solution to inverse scattering problem with scattering data at a fixed direction of the incident wave

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    Let q(x)q(x) be real-valued compactly supported sufficiently smooth function. It is proved that the scattering data A(β,α0,k)A(\beta,\alpha_0,k) βS2\forall \beta\in S^2, k>0,\forall k>0, determine qq uniquely. Here α0S2\alpha_0\in S^2 is a fixed direction of the incident plane wave

    Uniqueness theorem for inverse scattering problem with non-overdetermined data

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    Let q(x)q(x) be real-valued compactly supported sufficiently smooth function, qH0(Ba)q\in H^\ell_0(B_a), Ba:={x:xa,xR3B_a:=\{x: |x|\leq a, x\in R^3 . It is proved that the scattering data A(β,β,k)A(-\beta,\beta,k) βS2\forall \beta\in S^2, k>0\forall k>0 determine qq uniquely. here A(β,α,k)A(\beta,\alpha,k) is the scattering amplitude, corresponding to the potential qq

    Diffusion on non exactly decimable tree-like fractals

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    We calculate the spectral dimension of a wide class of tree-like fractals by solving the random walk problem through a new analytical technique, based on invariance under generalized cutting-decimation transformations. These fractals are generalizations of the NTD lattices and they are characterized by non integer spectral dimension equal or greater then 2, non anomalous diffusion laws, dynamical dimension splitting and absence of phase transitions for spin models.Comment: 5 pages Latex, 3 figures (figures are poscript files

    Rigid motions: action-angles, relative cohomology and polynomials with roots on the unit circle

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    Revisiting canonical integration of the classical solid near a uniform rotation, canonical action angle coordinates, hyperbolic and elliptic, are constructed in terms of various power series with coefficients which are polynomials in a variable r2r^2 depending on the inertia moments. Normal forms are derived via the analysis of a relative cohomology problem and shown to be obtainable without the use of ellitptic integrals (unlike the derivation of the action-angles). Results and conjectures also emerge about the properties of the above polynomials and the location of their roots. In particular a class of polynomials with all roots on the unit circle arises.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur

    Local entanglement generation in the adiabatic regime

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    We study entanglement generation in a pair of qubits interacting with an initially correlated system. Using time independent perturbation theory and the adiabatic theorem, we show conditions under which the qubits become entangled as the joint system evolves into the ground state of the interacting theory. We then apply these results to the case of qubits interacting with a scalar quantum field. We study three different variations of this setup; a quantum field subject to Dirichlet boundary conditions, a quantum field interacting with a classical potential and a quantum field that starts in a thermal state.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. v2: reference [14] adde

    Competition for Popularity in Bipartite Networks

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    We present a dynamical model for rewiring and attachment in bipartite networks in which edges are added between nodes that belong to catalogs that can either be fixed in size or growing in size. The model is motivated by an empirical study of data from the video rental service Netflix, which invites its users to give ratings to the videos available in its catalog. We find that the distribution of the number of ratings given by users and that of the number of ratings received by videos both follow a power law with an exponential cutoff. We also examine the activity patterns of Netflix users and find bursts of intense video-rating activity followed by long periods of inactivity. We derive ordinary differential equations to model the acquisition of edges by the nodes over time and obtain the corresponding time-dependent degree distributions. We then compare our results with the Netflix data and find good agreement. We conclude with a discussion of how catalog models can be used to study systems in which agents are forced to choose, rate, or prioritize their interactions from a very large set of options.Comment: 13 Pages, 19 Figure
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