44,775 research outputs found
Lower bounds of characteristic scale of topological modification of the Newtonian gravitation
We analytically work out the long-term orbital perturbations induced by the
first term of the expansion of the perturbing potential arising from the local
modification of the Newton's inverse square law due to a topology R^2 x S^1
with a compactified dimension of radius R recently proposed by Floratos and
Leontaris. We neither restrict to any specific spatial direction for the
asymmetry axis nor to particular orbital configurations of the test particle.
Thus, our results are quite general. Non-vanishing long-term variations occur
for all the usual osculating Keplerian orbital elements, apart from the
semimajor axis which is left unaffected. By using recent improvements in the
determination of the orbital motion of Saturn from Cassini data, we
preliminarily inferred R >= 4-6 kau. As a complementary approach, the putative
topological effects should be explicitly modeled and solved-for with a modified
version of the ephemerides dynamical models with which the same data sets
should be reprocessed.Comment: Latex, 6 pages, no tables, 1 figure, 3 references. Accepted for
publication in International Journal of Modern Physics D (IJMPD
Robust Non-Linear Regression Using The Dogleg Algorithm
What are the statistical and computational problems associated with robust nonlinear regression? This paper presents a number of possible approaches to these problems and develops a particular algorithm based on the work of Powell and Dennis.
Instability of fixed, low-thrust drag compensation
FORCED drag compensation using continuous low-thrustpropulsion has been considered for satellites in low Earth orbit. This simple, but nonoptimal, scheme merely requires that the thrust vector is directed opposite to the drag vector and that the magnitude of the two are equal. In principle, the drag force acting on the spacecraft could be determined onboard using accurate accelerometers. However, for small, low-cost spacecraft such sensors may beunavailable. An alternative strategy would be to Ž x the thrust magnitude equal to the expected air drag that would be experienced by the spacecraft. The thrust levelwould be periodically updated based on ground-based orbit determination. In this Engineering Note, it is shown that such a forced circular orbit with a Ž fixed thrust levelis exponentially unstable for all physically reasonable atmosphere models
Inside the Economist's Mind: The History of Modern Economic Thought, as Explained by Those Who Produced It
This is the front matter from a book of interviews to be published by Blackwell. The book is coedited by W. A. Barnett and P. A. Samuelson. The front matter includes the Table of Contents, Coeditor Preface by W. A. Barnett, Coeditor Foreword by Paul A. Samuelson, and History of Thought Introduction by E. Roy Weintraub. The front matter highlights some of the more startling and controversial statements contained in the interviews and puts the interviews into context relative to the history of modern economic thought. The interviews reprinted in this book include: (1) Wassily Leontief interviewed by Duncan Foley. (2) David Cass interviewed jointly by Steven Spear and Randall Wright. (3) Robert E. Lucas interviewed by Bennett T. McCallum. (4) Janos Kornai interviewed by Olivier Blanchard. (5) Franco Modigliani interviewed by William Barnett and Robert Solow. (6) Milton Friedman interviewed by John Taylor. (7) Paul A. Samuelson interviewed by William A. Barnett. (8) Paul Volcker interviewed by Perry Mehrling. (9) Martin Feldstein interviewed by James Poterba. (10) Christopher Sims interviewed by Lars Peter Hansen. (11) Robert Shiller interviewed by John Campbell. (12) Stanley Fischer interviewed by Olivier Blanchard. (13) Jacques Drèze interviewed by Pierre Dehez and Omar Licandro. (14) Tom Sargent interviewed by George Evans and Seppo Honkapohja. (15) Robert Aumann interviewed by Sergiu Hart. (16) James Tobin and Robert Shiller interviewed by David Colander.history of economic thought, Samuelson, macroeconomics, microeconomics, policy, interviews
Isochronal synchrony and bidirectional communication with delay-coupled nonlinear oscillators
We propose a basic mechanism for isochronal synchrony and communication with
mutually delay-coupled chaotic systems. We show that two Ikeda ring oscillators
(IROs), mutually coupled with a propagation delay, synchronize isochronally
when both are symmetrically driven by a third Ikeda oscillator. This
synchronous operation, unstable in the two delay-coupled oscillators alone,
facilitates simultaneous, bidirectional communication of messages with chaotic
carrier waveforms. This approach to combine both bidirectional and
unidirectional coupling represents an application of generalized
synchronization using a mediating drive signal for a spatially distributed and
internally synchronized multi-component system
Introduction: Urban revolutions in the age of global urbanism
This special issue, papers presented at an Urban Studies Foundation-funded conference in Jakarta (March 2011), examines the current ‘urban century’ in terms of three revolutions. Revolutions from above index the logics and norms of mainstream global urbanism, particularly the form they have taken as policymakers work with municipal officials worldwide to organise urban development around neoliberal norms. Revolutions from below refer to the multifaceted contestations of global urbanism that take place in and around cities, ranging from urban street demonstrations and occupations (such as those riveting the world in early 2011 when these papers were written) to the quotidian actions of those pursuing politics and livelihoods that subvert the norms of mainstream global urbanism. It also highlights conceptual revolutions, referencing the ongoing challenge of reconceptualising urban theory from the South – not simply as a hemispheric location or geopolitical category but an epistemological stance, staged from many different locations but always fraught with the differentials of power and the weight of historical geographies. Drawing on the insights of scholars writing from, and not just about, such locations, a further iteration in this ‘southern’ turn of urban theorising is proposed. This spatio-temporal conjunctural approach emphasises how the specificity of cities – their existence as entities that are at once singular and universal – emerges from spatio-temporal dynamics, connectivities and horizontal and vertical relations. Practically, such scholarship entails taking the field seriously through collaborative work that is multi-sited, engages people along the spectrum of academics and activists, and is presented before and scrutinised by multiple publics
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