308 research outputs found
Assessment of subseasonal-to-seasonal (S2S) ensemble extreme precipitation forecast skill over Europe
Heavy precipitation can lead to floods and landslides, resulting in widespread damage and significant casualties. Some of its impacts can be mitigated if reliable forecasts and warnings are available. Of particular interest is the subseasonal-to-seasonal (S2S) prediction timescale. The S2S prediction timescale has received increasing attention in the research community because of its importance for many sectors. However, very few forecast skill assessments of precipitation extremes in S2S forecast data have been conducted. The goal of this article is to assess the forecast skill of rare events, here extreme precipitation, in S2S forecasts, using a metric specifically designed for extremes. We verify extreme precipitation events over Europe in the S2S forecast model from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. The verification is conducted against ERA5 reanalysis precipitation. Extreme precipitation is defined as daily precipitation accumulations exceeding the seasonal 95th percentile. In addition to the classical Brier score, we use a binary loss index to assess skill. The binary loss index is tailored to assess the skill of rare events. We analyze daily events that are locally and spatially aggregated, as well as 7 d extreme-event counts. Results consistently show a higher skill in winter compared to summer. The regions showing the highest skill are Norway, Portugal and the south of the Alps. Skill increases when aggregating the extremes spatially or temporally. The verification methodology can be adapted and applied to other variables, e.g., temperature extremes or river discharge.</p
Amorphous-amorphous transition and the two-step replica symmetry breaking phase
The nature of polyamorphism and amorphous-to-amorphous transition is
investigated by means of an exactly solvable model with quenched disorder, the
spherical s+p multi-spin interaction model. The analysis is carried out in the
framework of Replica Symmetry Breaking theory and leads to the identification
of low temperature glass phases of different kinds. Besides the usual
`one-step' solution, known to reproduce all basic properties of structural
glasses, also a physically consistent `two-step' solution arises. More
complicated phases are found as well, as temperature is further decreased,
expressing a complex variety of metastable states structures for amorphous
systems.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, longer version, new references adde
Landscape of solutions in constraint satisfaction problems
We present a theoretical framework for characterizing the geometrical
properties of the space of solutions in constraint satisfaction problems,
together with practical algorithms for studying this structure on particular
instances. We apply our method to the coloring problem, for which we obtain the
total number of solutions and analyze in detail the distribution of distances
between solutions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Replaced with published versio
Cusps and shocks in the renormalized potential of glassy random manifolds: How Functional Renormalization Group and Replica Symmetry Breaking fit together
We compute the Functional Renormalization Group (FRG) disorder- correlator
function R(v) for d-dimensional elastic manifolds pinned by a random potential
in the limit of infinite embedding space dimension N. It measures the
equilibrium response of the manifold in a quadratic potential well as the
center of the well is varied from 0 to v. We find two distinct scaling regimes:
(i) a "single shock" regime, v^2 ~ 1/L^d where L^d is the system volume and
(ii) a "thermodynamic" regime, v^2 ~ N. In regime (i) all the equivalent
replica symmetry breaking (RSB) saddle points within the Gaussian variational
approximation contribute, while in regime (ii) the effect of RSB enters only
through a single anomaly. When the RSB is continuous (e.g., for short-range
disorder, in dimension 2 <= d <= 4), we prove that regime (ii) yields the
large-N FRG function obtained previously. In that case, the disorder correlator
exhibits a cusp in both regimes, though with different amplitudes and of
different physical origin. When the RSB solution is 1-step and non- marginal
(e.g., d < 2 for SR disorder), the correlator R(v) in regime (ii) is
considerably reduced, and exhibits no cusp. Solutions of the FRG flow
corresponding to non-equilibrium states are discussed as well. In all cases the
regime (i) exhibits a cusp non-analyticity at T=0, whose form and thermal
rounding at finite T is obtained exactly and interpreted in terms of shocks.
The results are compared with previous work, and consequences for manifolds at
finite N, as well as extensions to spin glasses and related models are
discussed.Comment: v2: Note added in proo
The cavity method for large deviations
A method is introduced for studying large deviations in the context of
statistical physics of disordered systems. The approach, based on an extension
of the cavity method to atypical realizations of the quenched disorder, allows
us to compute exponentially small probabilities (rate functions) over different
classes of random graphs. It is illustrated with two combinatorial optimization
problems, the vertex-cover and coloring problems, for which the presence of
replica symmetry breaking phases is taken into account. Applications include
the analysis of models on adaptive graph structures.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Random multi-index matching problems
The multi-index matching problem (MIMP) generalizes the well known matching
problem by going from pairs to d-uplets. We use the cavity method from
statistical physics to analyze its properties when the costs of the d-uplets
are random. At low temperatures we find for d>2 a frozen glassy phase with
vanishing entropy. We also investigate some properties of small samples by
enumerating the lowest cost matchings to compare with our theoretical
predictions.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figure
Reducing multi-photon rates in pulsed down-conversion by temporal multiplexing
We present a simple technique to reduce the emission rate of higher-order
photon events from pulsed spontaneous parametric down-conversion. The technique
uses extra-cavity control over a mode locked ultrafast laser to simultaneously
increase repetition rate and reduce the energy of each pulse from the pump
beam. We apply our scheme to a photonic quantum gate, showing improvements in
the non-classical interference visibility for 2-photon and 4-photon
experiments, and in the quantum-gate fidelity and entangled state production in
the 2-photon case.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Bevacizumab plus mFOLFOX-6 or FOLFOXIRI in patients with initially unresectable liver metastases from colorectal cancer: the OLIVIA multinational randomised phase II trial
OLIVIA, a multinational phase II study, suggests that bevacizumab plus FOLFOXIRI improves outcomes, including response rates, resection rates, and progression-free survival, compared with bevacizumab plus mFOLFOX-6 in patients with initially unresectable liver metastases from colorectal cance
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