8,305 research outputs found
Prefactor Reduction of the Guruswami-Sudan Interpolation Step
The concept of prefactors is considered in order to decrease the complexity
of the Guruswami-Sudan interpolation step for generalized Reed-Solomon codes.
It is shown that the well-known re-encoding projection due to Koetter et al.
leads to one type of such prefactors. The new type of Sierpinski prefactors is
introduced. The latter are based on the fact that many binomial coefficients in
the Hasse derivative associated with the Guruswami-Sudan interpolation step are
zero modulo the base field characteristic. It is shown that both types of
prefactors can be combined and how arbitrary prefactors can be used to derive a
reduced Guruswami-Sudan interpolation step.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
The Brown-Peterson spectrum is not at odd primes
Recently, Lawson has shown that the 2-primary Brown-Peterson spectrum does
not admit the structure of an ring spectrum, thus answering a question
of May in the negative. We extend Lawson's result to odd primes by proving that
the p-primary Brown-Peterson spectrum does not admit the structure of an
ring spectrum. We also show that there can be no map
of ring spectra at any prime.Comment: 21 pages, comments welcom
Probing dense QCD matter in the laboratory: The CBM experiment at FAIR
The Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) in Darmstadt will provide
unique research opportunities for the investigation of fundamental open
questions related to nuclear physics and astrophysics, including the
exploration of QCD matter under extreme conditions, which governs the structure
and dynamics of cosmic objects and phenomena like neutron stars, supernova
explosions, and neutron star mergers. The physics program of the Compressed
Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment is devoted to the production and investigation
of dense nuclear matter, with a focus on the high-density equation-of-state
(EOS), and signatures for new phases of dense QCD matter. According to the
present schedule, the CBM experiment will receive the first beams from the FAIR
accelerators in 2025. This article reviews promising observables, outlines the
CBM detector system, and presents results of physics performance studies.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. Physica Scripta 202
Strange mesons in dense nuclear matter
Experimental data on the production of kaons and antikaons in heavy ion
collisions at relativistic energies are reviewed with respect to in-medium
effects. The ratios measured in nucleus-nucleus collisions are 1 - 2
orders of magnitude larger than in proton-proton collisions. The azimuthal
angle distributions of mesons indicate a repulsive kaon-nucleon
potential. Microscopic transport calculations consistently explain both the
yields and the emission patterns of kaons and antikaons when assuming that
their properties are modified in dense nuclear matter. The production
excitation functions measured in light and heavy collision systems provide
evidence for a soft nuclear equation-of-state.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, Invited talk at the 7. international Conference
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, Strasbourg, July 3-7, 200
First Principles Calculations of Spin-Dependent Conductance of Graphene Flakes
Using ab initio density functional theory and quantum transport calculations
based on nonequilibrium Green's function formalism we study structural,
electronic, and transport properties of hydrogen-terminated short graphene
nanoribbons (graphene flakes) and their functionalization with vanadium atoms.
Rectangular graphene flakes are stable, having geometric and electronic
structures quite similar to that of extended graphene nanoribbons. We show that
a spin-polarized current can be produced by pure, hydrogenated rectangular
graphene flakes by exploiting the spatially-separated edge states of the flake
using asymmetric, non-magnetic contacts. Functionalization of the graphene
flake with magnetic adatoms such as vanadium also leads to spin-polarized
currents even with symmetric contacts. We observe and discuss sharp
discontinuities in the transmission spectra which arise from Fano resonances of
localized states in the flake.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Phys. Rev. B 78, issue 20 (Accepted, in
production); http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.78.20542
Perception is Reality: Change Leadership and Work Engagement
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate how employee perceptions of change and leadership might impact work engagement following major organizational change.
Design/methodology/approach
Social media invited US workers recently experiencing major organizational change to anonymously complete a web-based survey requesting qualitative and quantitative responses. Values-based coding and thematic analysis were used to explore qualitative data. Hierarchical and linear regression, and bootstrapped mediation were used to analyze quantitative data.
Findings
Analysis of qualitative data identified employees’ perceptions of ideal change and ideal leadership were well supported in the change leadership literature. Analysis of quantitative data indicated that employee perceptions of leadership fully mediated the relationship between employee perceptions of change and work engagement.
Practical implications
Study findings imply that how employees perceive change is explained by how they perceive leadership during change, and that these perceptions impact work engagement. Although these findings appear commonsensical, the less than stellar statistics on major organizational change may encourage leaders to become more follower-focused throughout the change process.
Originality/value
The study makes a contribution to an understudied area of organizational research, specifically applied information processing theory. This is the first study that identifies employee perceptions of leadership as a mediator for perceptions of change and work engagement. From a value perspective, leaders as successful change agents recognize significant cost savings in dollars and human welfare by maintaining healthy workplaces with highly engaged workers
Energy-transfer rate in a double-quantum-well system due to Coulomb coupling
We study the energy-transfer rate for electrons in a double-quantum-well
structure, where the layers are coupled through screened Coulomb interactions.
The energy-transfer rate between the layers (similar to the Coulomb drag effect
in which the momentum transfer rate is considered) is calculated as functions
of electron densities, interlayer spacing, the temperature difference of the
2DEGs, and the electron drift velocity in the drive layer. We employ the full
wave vector and frequency dependent random-phase approximation at finite
temperature to describe the effective interlayer Coulomb interaction. We find
that the collective modes (plasmons) of the system play a dominant role in the
energy transfer rates. The contribution of optical phonons to the transfer
rates through the phonon mediated Coulomb coupling mechanism has also been
considered.Comment: LaTex, 5 pages, 4 figures, uses grafik.sty (included
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