27,868 research outputs found
Central Charge and the Andrews-Bailey Construction
From the equivalence of the bosonic and fermionic representations of
finitized characters in conformal field theory, one can extract mathematical
objects known as Bailey pairs. Recently Berkovich, McCoy and Schilling have
constructed a `generalized' character formula depending on two parameters \ra
and , using the Bailey pairs of the unitary model . By taking
appropriate limits of these parameters, they were able to obtain the characters
of model , model , and the unitary model with
central charge . In this letter we computed the effective
central charge associated with this `generalized' character formula using a
saddle point method. The result is a simple expression in dilogarithms which
interpolates between the central charges of these unitary models.Comment: Latex2e, requires cite.sty package, 13 pages. Additional footnote,
citation and reference
On the Development of SCILAB Compatible Software for the Analysis and Control of Repetitive Processes
In this paper further results on the development of a SCILAB compatible software package for the analysis and control of repetitive processes is described. The core of the package consists of a simulation tool which enables the user to inspect the response of a given example to an input, design a control law for stability and/or performance, and also simulate the response of a controlled process to a specified reference signal
Microgravity: A Teacher's Guide With Activities in Science, Mathematics, and Technology
The purpose of this curriculum supplement guide is to define and explain microgravity and show how microgravity can help us learn about the phenomena of our world. The front section of the guide is designed to provide teachers of science, mathematics, and technology at many levels with a foundation in microgravity science and applications. It begins with background information for the teacher on what microgravity is and how it is created. This is followed with information on the domains of microgravity science research; biotechnology, combustion science, fluid physics, fundamental physics, materials science, and microgravity research geared toward exploration. The background section concludes with a history of microgravity research and the expectations microgravity scientists have for research on the International Space Station. Finally, the guide concludes with a suggested reading list, NASA educational resources including electronic resources, and an evaluation questionnaire
Body fluid volume and electrolyte derangements in fasting semiannual report no. 1, dec. 1, 1964 - mar. 31, 1965
Electrolyte balance studies on rats maintained in metabolism cages - body fluid volume and electrolyte derangements by fasting in col
A Feynman-Kac Formula for Anticommuting Brownian Motion
Motivated by application to quantum physics, anticommuting analogues of
Wiener measure and Brownian motion are constructed. The corresponding Ito
integrals are defined and the existence and uniqueness of solutions to a class
of stochastic differential equations is established. This machinery is used to
provide a Feynman-Kac formula for a class of Hamiltonians. Several specific
examples are considered.Comment: 21 page
An implementation of the programming structural synthesis system (PROSSS)
A particular implementation of the programming structural synthesis system (PROSSS) is described. This software system combines a state of the art optimization program, a production level structural analysis program, and user supplied, problem dependent interface programs. These programs are combined using standard command language features existing in modern computer operating systems. PROSSS is explained in general with respect to this implementation along with the steps for the preparation of the programs and input data. Each component of the system is described in detail with annotated listings for clarification. The components include options, procedures, programs and subroutines, and data files as they pertain to this implementation. An example exercising each option in this implementation to allow the user to anticipate the type of results that might be expected is presented
Old and New Fields on Super Riemann Surfaces
The ``new fields" or ``superconformal functions" on super Riemann
surfaces introduced recently by Rogers and Langer are shown to coincide with
the Abelian differentials (plus constants), viewed as a subset of the functions
on the associated super Riemann surface. We confirm that, as originally
defined, they do not form a super vector space.Comment: 9 pages, LaTex. Published version: minor changes for clarity, two new
reference
Fixed Point and Aperiodic Tilings
An aperiodic tile set was first constructed by R.Berger while proving the
undecidability of the domino problem. It turned out that aperiodic tile sets
appear in many topics ranging from logic (the Entscheidungsproblem) to physics
(quasicrystals) We present a new construction of an aperiodic tile set that is
based on Kleene's fixed-point construction instead of geometric arguments. This
construction is similar to J. von Neumann self-reproducing automata; similar
ideas were also used by P. Gacs in the context of error-correcting
computations. The flexibility of this construction allows us to construct a
"robust" aperiodic tile set that does not have periodic (or close to periodic)
tilings even if we allow some (sparse enough) tiling errors. This property was
not known for any of the existing aperiodic tile sets.Comment: v5: technical revision (positions of figures are shifted
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