13,530 research outputs found
Inspection of fine wires simplified by capillary tube wire holder
Capillary tube wire holder provides a mount for fine wires for photomicrographs. The holder is mounted in a stainless steel tube and cast in a transparent casting material. It protects and permits easy location of the wire
Self-scaled barriers for irreducible symmetric cones
Self-scaled barrier functions are fundamental objects in the theory of
interior-point methods for linear optimization over symmetric cones, of which
linear and semidefinite programming are special cases. We are classifying all
self-scaled barriers over irreducible symmetric cones and show that these
functions are merely homothetic transformations of the universal barrier
function. Together with a decomposition theorem for self-scaled barriers this
concludes the algebraic classification theory of these functions. After
introducing the reader to the concepts relevant to the problem and tracing the
history of the subject, we start by deriving our result from first principles
in the important special case of semidefinite programming. We then generalise
these arguments to irreducible symmetric cones by invoking results from the
theory of Euclidean Jordan algebras.Comment: 12 page
Simultaneous Perturbation Algorithms for Batch Off-Policy Search
We propose novel policy search algorithms in the context of off-policy, batch
mode reinforcement learning (RL) with continuous state and action spaces. Given
a batch collection of trajectories, we perform off-line policy evaluation using
an algorithm similar to that by [Fonteneau et al., 2010]. Using this
Monte-Carlo like policy evaluator, we perform policy search in a class of
parameterized policies. We propose both first order policy gradient and second
order policy Newton algorithms. All our algorithms incorporate simultaneous
perturbation estimates for the gradient as well as the Hessian of the
cost-to-go vector, since the latter is unknown and only biased estimates are
available. We demonstrate their practicality on a simple 1-dimensional
continuous state space problem
Landscape Predictions from Cosmological Vacuum Selection
In BP models with hundreds of fluxes, we compute the effects of cosmological
dynamics on the probability distribution of landscape vacua. Starting from
generic initial conditions, we find that most fluxes are dynamically driven
into a different and much narrower range of values than expected from landscape
statistics alone. Hence, cosmological evolution will access only a tiny
fraction of the vacua with small cosmological constant. This leads to a host of
sharp predictions. Unlike other approaches to eternal inflation, the
holographic measure employed here does not lead to "staggering", an excessive
spread of probabilities that would doom the string landscape as a solution to
the cosmological constant problem.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, v4 prd format, minor editin
Tensor Microwave Background Fluctuations for Large Multipole Order
We present approximate formulas for the tensor BB, EE, TT, and TE multipole
coefficients for large multipole order l. The error in using the approximate
formula for the BB multipole coefficients is less than cosmic variance for
l>10. These approximate formulas make various qualitative properties of the
calculated multipole coefficients transparent: specifically, they show that,
whatever values are chosen for cosmological parameters, the tensor EE multipole
coefficients will always be larger than the BB coefficients for all l>15, and
that these coefficients will approach each other for l<<100. These
approximations also make clear how these multipole coefficients depend on
cosmological parameters.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D,
references and comments on earlier work on the subject added, cosmetic
modification of figure
Adhesion between a viscoelastic material and a solid surface
In this paper, we present a qualitative analysis of the dissipative processes
during the failure of the interface between a viscoelastic polymer and a solid
surface. We reassess the "viscoelastic trumpet" model [P.-G. de Gennes, C. R.
Acad. Sci. Paris, 307, 1949 (1988)], and show that, for a crosslinked polymer,
the interface toughness G(V) starts from a relatively low value, G_0, due to
local processes near the fracture tip, and rises up to a maximum of order (where and stand for the elastic
modulus of the material, respectively at low and high strain frequencies). This
enhancement of fracture energy is due to far-field viscous dissipation in the
bulk material, and begins for peel-rates V much lower than previously thought.
For a polymer melt, the adhesion energy is predicted to scale as 1/V. In the
second part of this paper, we compare some of our theoretical predictions with
experimental results about the viscoelastic adhesion between a
polydimethylsiloxane polymer melt and a glass surface. In particular, the
expected dependence of the fracture energy versus separation rate is confirmed
by the experimental data, and the observed changes in the concavity of the
crack profile are in good agreement with our simple model.Comment: Revised version to appear in Macromolecule
Dewetting on porous media with aspiration
We consider a porous solid covered with a water film (or with a drop) in
situations where the liquid is pumped in, either spontaneously (if the porous
medium is hydrophilic) or mechanically (by an external pump). The dynamics of
dewetting is then strongly modified. We analyse a few major examples: a)
horizontal films, which break at a certain critical thickness, b) the "modified
Landau-Levich problem" where a porous plate moves up from a bath and carries a
film: aspiration towards the plate limits the height H reached by the film, c)
certain situation where the hysteresis of contact angles is important.Comment: Revised version: The analysis of the 'modified Landau-Levich problem'
(section 3) has been significantly revised. It is now treated as a singular
perturbation problem (using boundary-layer techniques), leading to a more
accurate physical pictur
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