1,682 research outputs found
Noncommutative waves have infinite propagation speed
We prove the existence of global solutions to the Cauchy problem for
noncommutative nonlinear wave equations in arbitrary even spatial dimensions
where the noncommutativity is only in the spatial directions. We find that for
existence there are no conditions on the degree of the nonlinearity provided
the potential is positive. We furthermore prove that nonlinear noncommutative
waves have infinite propagation speed, i.e., if the initial conditions at time
0 have a compact support then for any positive time the support of the solution
can be arbitrarily large.Comment: 15 pages, references adde
Spiders fluoresce variably across many taxa
The evolution of fluorescence is largely unexplored, despite the newfound occurrence of this phenomenon in a variety of organisms. We document that spiders fluoresce under ultraviolet illumination, and find that the expression of this trait varies greatly among taxa in this species-rich group. All spiders we examined possess fluorophores in their haemolymph, but bright fluorescence appears to result when a spider sequesters fluorophores in its setae or cuticle. By sampling widely across spider taxa, we determine that fluorescent expression is labile and has evolved multiple times. Moreover, examination of the excitation and emission properties of extracted fluorophores reveals that spiders possess multiple fluorophores and that these differ among some families, indicating that novel fluorophores have evolved during spider diversification. Because many spiders fluoresce in wavelengths visible to their predators and prey (birds and insects), we propose that natural selection imposed by predator–prey interactions may drive the evolution of fluorescence in spiders
Electron-Phonon Interacation in Quantum Dots: A Solvable Model
The relaxation of electrons in quantum dots via phonon emission is hindered
by the discrete nature of the dot levels (phonon bottleneck). In order to
clarify the issue theoretically we consider a system of discrete fermionic
states (dot levels) coupled to an unlimited number of bosonic modes with the
same energy (dispersionless phonons). In analogy to the Gram-Schmidt
orthogonalization procedure, we perform a unitary transformation into new
bosonic modes. Since only of them couple to the fermions, a
numerically exact treatment is possible. The formalism is applied to a GaAs
quantum dot with only two electronic levels. If close to resonance with the
phonon energy, the electronic transition shows a splitting due to quantum
mechanical level repulsion. This is driven mainly by one bosonic mode, whereas
the other two provide further polaronic renormalizations. The numerically exact
results for the electron spectral function compare favourably with an analytic
solution based on degenerate perturbation theory in the basis of shifted
oscillator states. In contrast, the widely used selfconsistent first-order Born
approximation proves insufficient in describing the rich spectral features.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Open String Star as a Continuous Moyal Product
We establish that the open string star product in the zero momentum sector
can be described as a continuous tensor product of mutually commuting two
dimensional Moyal star products. Let the continuous variable parametrize the eigenvalues of the Neumann matrices; then the
noncommutativity parameter is given by .
For each , the Moyal coordinates are a linear combination of even
position modes, and the Fourier transform of a linear combination of odd
position modes. The commuting coordinate at is identified as the
momentum carried by half the string. We discuss the relation to Bars' work, and
attempt to write the string field action as a noncommutative field theory.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX. One reference adde
A hybrid ARIMA and artificial neural networks model to forecast particulate matter in urban areas: The case of Temuco, Chile
Air quality time series consists of complex linear and non-linear patterns and are difficult to forecast. Box-Jenkins Time Series (ARIMA) and multilinear regression (MLR) models have been applied to air quality forecasting in urban areas, but they have limited accuracy owing to their inability to predict extreme events. Artificial neural networks (ANN) can recognize non-linear patterns that include extremes. A novel hybrid model combining ARIMA and ANN to improve forecast accuracy for an area with limited air quality and meteorological data was applied to Temuco, Chile, where residential wood burning is a major pollution source during cold winters, using surface meteorological and PM10 measurements. Experimental results indicated that the hybrid model can be an effective tool to improve the PM10 forecasting accuracy obtained by either of the models used separately, and compared with a deterministic MLR. The hybrid model was able to capture 100% and 80% of alert and pre-emergency episodes, respectively. This approach demonstrates the potential to be applied to air quality forecasting in other cities and countries
Uniqueness of diffeomorphism invariant states on holonomy-flux algebras
Loop quantum gravity is an approach to quantum gravity that starts from the
Hamiltonian formulation in terms of a connection and its canonical conjugate.
Quantization proceeds in the spirit of Dirac: First one defines an algebra of
basic kinematical observables and represents it through operators on a suitable
Hilbert space. In a second step, one implements the constraints. The main
result of the paper concerns the representation theory of the kinematical
algebra: We show that there is only one cyclic representation invariant under
spatial diffeomorphisms.
While this result is particularly important for loop quantum gravity, we are
rather general: The precise definition of the abstract *-algebra of the basic
kinematical observables we give could be used for any theory in which the
configuration variable is a connection with a compact structure group. The
variables are constructed from the holonomy map and from the fluxes of the
momentum conjugate to the connection. The uniqueness result is relevant for any
such theory invariant under spatial diffeomorphisms or being a part of a
diffeomorphism invariant theory.Comment: 38 pages, one figure. v2: Minor changes, final version, as published
in CM
Hearing loss and satisfaction with healthcare: An unexplored relationship
Patient healthcare satisfaction has become increasingly important since Medicare’s introduction of the Hospital Care Quality Information from the Consumer Perspective (HCAHPS) survey. Greater satisfaction is associated with important healthcare outcomes including lower risk of 30-day readmission
Electron correlation resonances in the transport through a single quantum level
Correlation effects in the transport properties of a single quantum level
coupled to electron reservoirs are discussed theoretically using a
non-equilibrium Green functions approach. Our method is based on the
introduction of a second-order self-energy associated with the Coulomb
interaction that consistently eliminates the pathologies found in previous
perturbative calculations. We present results for the current-voltage
characteristic illustrating the different correlation effects that may be found
in this system, including the Kondo anomaly and Coulomb blockade. We finally
discuss the experimental conditions for the simultaneous observation of these
effects in an ultrasmall quantum dot.Comment: 4 pages (two columns), 3 figures under reques
Dynamical aspects of mean field plane rotators and the Kuramoto model
The Kuramoto model has been introduced in order to describe synchronization
phenomena observed in groups of cells, individuals, circuits, etc... We look at
the Kuramoto model with white noise forces: in mathematical terms it is a set
of N oscillators, each driven by an independent Brownian motion with a constant
drift, that is each oscillator has its own frequency, which, in general,
changes from one oscillator to another (these frequencies are usually taken to
be random and they may be viewed as a quenched disorder). The interactions
between oscillators are of long range type (mean field). We review some results
on the Kuramoto model from a statistical mechanics standpoint: we give in
particular necessary and sufficient conditions for reversibility and we point
out a formal analogy, in the N to infinity limit, with local mean field models
with conservative dynamics (an analogy that is exploited to identify in
particular a Lyapunov functional in the reversible set-up). We then focus on
the reversible Kuramoto model with sinusoidal interactions in the N to infinity
limit and analyze the stability of the non-trivial stationary profiles arising
when the interaction parameter K is larger than its critical value K_c. We
provide an analysis of the linear operator describing the time evolution in a
neighborhood of the synchronized profile: we exhibit a Hilbert space in which
this operator has a self-adjoint extension and we establish, as our main
result, a spectral gap inequality for every K>K_c.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
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