260 research outputs found
Equilibrium Configurations of Homogeneous Fluids in General Relativity
By means of a highly accurate, multi-domain, pseudo-spectral method, we
investigate the solution space of uniformly rotating, homogeneous and
axisymmetric relativistic fluid bodies. It turns out that this space can be
divided up into classes of solutions. In this paper, we present two new classes
including relativistic core-ring and two-ring solutions. Combining our
knowledge of the first four classes with post-Newtonian results and the
Newtonian portion of the first ten classes, we present the qualitative
behaviour of the entire relativistic solution space. The Newtonian disc limit
can only be reached by going through infinitely many of the aforementioned
classes. Only once this limiting process has been consummated, can one proceed
again into the relativistic regime and arrive at the analytically known
relativistic disc of dust.Comment: 8 pages, colour figures, v3: minor additions including one reference,
accepted by MNRA
Restoring betatron phase coherence in a beam-loaded laser-wakefield accelerator
Matched beam loading in laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA), characterizing
the state of flattening of the acceleration electric field along the bunch,
leads to the minimization of energy spread at high bunch charges. Here, we
demonstrate by independently controlling injected charge and acceleration
gradients, using the self-truncated ionization injection scheme, that minimal
energy spread coincides with a reduction of the normalized beam divergence.
With the simultaneous confirmation of a constant beam radius at the plasma
exit, deduced from betatron radiation spectroscopy, we attribute this effect to
the reduction of chromatic betatron decoherence. Thus, beam loaded LWFA enables
highest longitudinal and transverse phase space densities
Improved resource efficiency and cascading utilisation of renewable materials
In light of various environmental problems and challenges concerning resource allocation, the utilisation of renewable resources is increasingly important for the efficient use of raw materials. Therefore, cascading utilisation (i.e., the multiple material utilisations of renewable resources prior to their conversion into energy) and approaches that aim to further increase resource efficiency (e.g., the utilisation of by-products) can be considered guiding principles. This paper therefore introduces the Special Volume “Improved Resource Efficiency and Cascading Utilisation of Renewable Materials”. Because both research aspects, resource efficiency and cascading utilisation, belong to several disciplines, the Special Volume adopts an interdisciplinary perspective and presents 16 articles, which can be divided into four subjects: Innovative Materials based on Renewable Resources and their Impact on Sustainability and Resource Efficiency, Quantitative Models for the Integrated Optimisation of Production and Distribution in Networks for Renewable Resources, Information Technology-based Collaboration in Value Generating Networks for Renewable Resources, and Consumer Behaviour towards Eco-friendly Products. The interdisciplinary perspective allows a comprehensive overview of current research on resource efficiency, which is supplemented with 15 book reviews showing the extent to which textbooks of selected disciplines already refer to resource efficiency. This introductory article highlights the relevance of the four subjects, presents summaries of all papers, and discusses future research directions. The overall contribution of the Special Volume is that it bridges the resource efficiency research of selected disciplines and that it presents several approaches for more environmentally sound production and consumption
Maximal mass of uniformly rotating homogeneous stars in Einsteinian gravity
Using a multi domain spectral method, we investigate systematically the
general-relativistic model for axisymmetric uniformly rotating, homogeneous
fluid bodies generalizing the analytically known Maclaurin and Schwarzschild
solutions. Apart from the curves associated with these solutions and a further
curve of configurations that rotate at the mass shedding limit, two more curves
are found to border the corresponding two parameter set of solutions. One of
them is a Newtonian lens shaped sequence bifurcating from the Maclaurin
spheroid sequence, while the other one corresponds to highly relativistic
bodies with an infinite central pressure. The properties of the configuration
for which both the gravitational and the baryonic masses, moreover angular
velocity, angular momentum as well as polar red shift obtain their maximal
values are discussed in detail. In particular, by comparison with the static
Schwarzschild solution, we obtain an increase of 34.25% in the gravitational
mass. Moreover, we provide exemplarily a discussion of angular velocity and
gravitational mass on the entire solution class.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, submitted to A&A, corrected eq. for W,
W' in 3.
On small-noise equations with degenerate limiting system arising from volatility models
The one-dimensional SDE with non Lipschitz diffusion coefficient is widely
studied in mathematical finance. Several works have proposed asymptotic
analysis of densities and implied volatilities in models involving instances of
this equation, based on a careful implementation of saddle-point methods and
(essentially) the explicit knowledge of Fourier transforms. Recent research on
tail asymptotics for heat kernels [J-D. Deuschel, P.~Friz, A.~Jacquier, and
S.~Violante. Marginal density expansions for diffusions and stochastic
volatility, part II: Applications. 2013, arxiv:1305.6765] suggests to work with
the rescaled variable : while
allowing to turn a space asymptotic problem into a small- problem
with fixed terminal point, the process satisfies a SDE in
Wentzell--Freidlin form (i.e. with driving noise ). We prove a
pathwise large deviation principle for the process as
. As it will become clear, the limiting ODE governing the
large deviations admits infinitely many solutions, a non-standard situation in
the Wentzell--Freidlin theory. As for applications, the -scaling
allows to derive exact log-asymptotics for path functionals of the process:
while on the one hand the resulting formulae are confirmed by the CIR-CEV
benchmarks, on the other hand the large deviation approach (i) applies to
equations with a more general drift term and (ii) potentially opens the way to
heat kernel analysis for higher-dimensional diffusions involving such an SDE as
a component.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Collisions between tunable halo dimers: exploring an elementary four-body process with identical bosons
We study inelastic collisions in a pure, trapped sample of Feshbach molecules
made of bosonic cesium atoms in the quantum halo regime. We measure the
relaxation rate coefficient for decay to lower-lying molecular states and study
the dependence on scattering length and temperature. We identify a pronounced
loss minimum with varying scattering length along with a further suppression of
loss with decreasing temperature. Our observations provide insight into the
physics of a few-body quantum system that consists of four identical bosons at
large values of the two-body scattering length.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Delay Management Including Capacities of Stations
The question of delay management is whether passenger trains should wait for delayed feeder trains or should depart on time. Solutions to this problem strongly depend on the available capacity of the railway infrastructure. Although the limited capacity of the tracks has been considered in delay management models, the limited capacity of the stations has been neglected so far. In this paper, we develop a model for the delay management problem that includes the capacities of the stations. This model allows rescheduling the platform track assignment. Furthermore, we propose an iterative heuristic in which we first solve the delay management model with a fixed platform track assignment, and then improve this platform track assignment in each step. We show that the latter problem can be solved in polynomial time by describing it as a minimum cost flow model. Finally, we present an extension of the model that balances the delay of the passengers on one hand and the number of changes in the platform track assignment on the other. All models are evaluated on real-world instances from Netherlands Railways
The Railway Line Frequency and Size Setting Problem
[EN] The problem studied in this paper takes as input data a set of lines
forming a railway network, and an origin¿destination (OD) matrix. The OD pairs
may use either the railway network or an alternative transportation mode. The
objective is to determine the frequency/headway of each line as well as its number
of carriages, so that the net profit of the railway network is maximized. We propose
a mixed integer non-linear programming formulation for this problem. Because of
the computational intractability of this model, we develop four algorithms: a mixed
integer linear programming (MIP) model, a MIP-based iterative algorithm, a
shortest-path based algorithm, and a local search. These four algorithms are tested
and compared over a set of randomly generated instances. An application over a
case study shows that only the local search heuristic is capable of dealing with large
instances.This research was partly funded by the Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council under Grant 2015-06189, by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spain)/FEDER under projects MTM2012-37048, MTM2015-67706-P and DPI2012-36243-C02-01, and by Junta de Andalucía (Spain)/FEDER under excellence project P10-FQM-5849. Part of this research was done while Federico Perea was enjoying a research visit to CIRRELT, funded by the Universitat Politècnica de València, under program PAID-00-15. This support is gratefully acknowledged. Thanks are due to the referees for their valuable comments.De-Los-Santos, A.; Laporte, G.; Mesa, JA.; Perea Rojas Marcos, F. (2017). The Railway Line Frequency and Size Setting Problem. Public Transport. 9(1-2):33-53. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12469-017-0154-2S335391-2Albrecht T (2009) Automated timetable design for demand-oriented service on suburban railways. Public Transport 1(1):5–20Caprara A, Kroon L, Monaci M, Peeters M, Toth P (2007) Passenger Railway optimization. In: Barnhart C, Laporte G (eds) Handbooks in operations research and management science, vol 14. Transportation, chapter 3. North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp 129–187De-Los-Santos A, Laporte G, Mesa J, Perea F (2014) Simultaneous frequency and capacity setting in uncapacitated metro lines in presence of a competing mode. Transp Res Proc 3:289–298Desaulniers G, Hickman M (2007) Public transport. In: Barnhart C, Laporte G (eds) Handbook in operations research and management science, vol 14, Transportation, chapter 2. North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp 69–127Gallo M, Montella B, D’Acierno L (2011) The transit network design problem with elastic demand and internalisation of external costs: An application to rail frequency optimisation. Transp Res Part C Emerg Technol 19(6):1276–1305Laporte G, Marín A, Mesa JA, Perea F (2011) Designing robust rapid transit networks with alternative routes. J Adv Transp 45(1):54–65Marín A, García-Ródenas R (2009) Location of infrastructure in urban railway networks. Comput Oper Res 36(5):1461–1477Michaelis M, Schöbel A (2009) Integrating line planning, timetable, and vehicle scheduling: a customer oriented heuristic. Public Transport 1(3):211–232Perea F, Mesa JA, Laporte G (2014) Adding a new station and a road link to a road-rail network in the presence of modal competition. Transp Res Part B Methodol 68:1–16Schmidt M, Schöbel A (2015) The complexity of integrating passenger routing decisions in public transportation models. Networks 65(3):228–243Schmidt ME (2014) Integrating routing decisions in public transportation problems. Springer, New YorkSchöbel A (2012) Line planning in public transportation. OR Spectrum 34:491–510van Oort N, van Nes R (2009) Regularity analysis for optimizing urban transit network design. Public Transport 1(2):155–168Vuchic VR (2005) Urban transit: operations, planning, and economics. Wiley, Hoboken, New Jerse
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