6,237 research outputs found
Metabelian SL(n,C) representations of knot groups IV: twisted Alexander polynomials
In this paper we will study properties of twisted Alexander polynomials of knots corresponding to metabelian representations. In particular we answer a question of Wada about the twisted Alexander polynomial associated to the tensor product of two representations, and we settle several conjectures of Hirasawa and Murasugi
Splittings of knot groups
Let K be a knot of genus g. If K is fibered, then it is well known that the
knot group pi(K) splits only over a free group of rank 2g. We show that if K is
not fibered, then pi(K) splits over non-free groups of arbitrarily large rank.
Furthermore, if K is not fibered, then pi(K) splits over every free group of
rank at least 2g. However, pi(K) cannot split over a group of rank less than
2g. The last statement is proved using the recent results of Agol,
Przytycki-Wise and Wise.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figure
TOWARDS A FINANCIALLY OPTIMAL DESIGN OF IT SERVICES
The current financial crisis forces companies to allocate IT budgets more effectively and thus increases the demand for suitable methods to evaluate the financial impact of IT investments. This especially applies to service-orientation, a design paradigm which facilitates the standardisation and flexibilisation of business processes and IT applications, topics that currently are very much in vogue in science and practice. This paper focuses on the realisation of a new functionality by IT services and presents a methodology to determine their financially optimal functional scope on the continuum between realising just one IT service providing the whole functionality and realising many IT services each providing only a small share of functionality. This approach allows for a multi-period financial valuation of an uncertain demand for the new functionality, as well as of an uncertain company-wide reuse of the corresponding IT services. Finally, the methodology is evaluated by an example from a financial services provider
High rate locally-correctable and locally-testable codes with sub-polynomial query complexity
In this work, we construct the first locally-correctable codes (LCCs), and
locally-testable codes (LTCs) with constant rate, constant relative distance,
and sub-polynomial query complexity. Specifically, we show that there exist
binary LCCs and LTCs with block length , constant rate (which can even be
taken arbitrarily close to 1), constant relative distance, and query complexity
. Previously such codes were known to exist
only with query complexity (for constant ), and
there were several, quite different, constructions known.
Our codes are based on a general distance-amplification method of Alon and
Luby~\cite{AL96_codes}. We show that this method interacts well with local
correctors and testers, and obtain our main results by applying it to suitably
constructed LCCs and LTCs in the non-standard regime of \emph{sub-constant
relative distance}.
Along the way, we also construct LCCs and LTCs over large alphabets, with the
same query complexity , which additionally have
the property of approaching the Singleton bound: they have almost the
best-possible relationship between their rate and distance. This has the
surprising consequence that asking for a large alphabet error-correcting code
to further be an LCC or LTC with query
complexity does not require any sacrifice in terms of rate and distance! Such a
result was previously not known for any query complexity.
Our results on LCCs also immediately give locally-decodable codes (LDCs) with
the same parameters
Mechanism-based model characterizing bidirectional interaction between PEGylated liposomal CKD-602 (S-CKD602) and monocytes in cancer patients
S-CKD602 is a PEGylated liposomal formulation of CKD-602, a potent topoisomerase I inhibitor. The objective of this study was to characterize the bidirectional pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) interaction between S-CKD602 and monocytes. Plasma concentrations of encapsulated CKD-602 and monocytes counts from 45 patients with solid tumors were collected following intravenous administration of S-CKD602 in the phase I study. The PK-PD models were developed and fit simultaneously to the PK-PD data, using NONMEM®. The monocytopenia after administration of S-CKD602 was described by direct toxicity to monocytes in a mechanism-based model, and by direct toxicity to progenitor cells in bone marrow in a myelosuppression-based model. The nonlinear PK disposition of S-CKD602 was described by linear degradation and irreversible binding to monocytes in the mechanism-based model, and Michaelis-Menten kinetics in the myelosuppression-based model. The mechanism-based PK-PD model characterized the nonlinear PK disposition, and the bidirectional PK-PD interaction between S-CKD602 and monocytes. © 2012 Cárdenas et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd
The Turaev and Thurston norms
In 1986, W. Thurston introduced a (possibly degenerate) norm on the first
cohomology group of a 3-manifold. Inspired by this definition, Turaev
introduced in 2002 a analogous norm on the first cohomology group of a finite
2-complex. We show that if N is the exterior of a link in a rational homology
sphere, then the Thurston norm agrees with a suitable variation of Turaev's
norm defined on any 2-skeleton of N.Comment: 17 pages. V2: We deleted one direction of Lemma 4.5 since the proof
was incorrect. This does not affect any of the other results of the pape
The Optimal Single Copy Measurement for the Hidden Subgroup Problem
The optimization of measurements for the state distinction problem has
recently been applied to the theory of quantum algorithms with considerable
successes, including efficient new quantum algorithms for the non-abelian
hidden subgroup problem. Previous work has identified the optimal single copy
measurement for the hidden subgroup problem over abelian groups as well as for
the non-abelian problem in the setting where the subgroups are restricted to be
all conjugate to each other. Here we describe the optimal single copy
measurement for the hidden subgroup problem when all of the subgroups of the
group are given with equal a priori probability. The optimal measurement is
seen to be a hybrid of the two previously discovered single copy optimal
measurements for the hidden subgroup problem.Comment: 8 pages. Error in main proof fixe
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