51,747 research outputs found
Status of the ILC Main Linac BPM R&D
An introduction and the status of R&D activities for a high-resolution,
"cold" beam position monitor (BPM) and the related read-out electronics are
discussed. Two different BPM detector concepts, to be attached to the SC
quadrupole and located inside the ILC cryomodule, are currently under
investigation: A resonant dipole-mode cavity-style BPM pickup, developed at
Fermilab, and a re-entrant resonant coaxial waveguide BPM, designed by
CEA-Saclay. While the 1.5 GHz dipole-mode cavity BPM is still in the R&D phase,
the re-entrant BPM has already passed first beam tests, including its read-out
system. Furthermore, the LAPP group is developing radiation tolerant digital
read-out systems, which are tested at the CLIC test facility (CTF).Comment: LCWS / ILC08 conference contribution, 6 pages, 6 figure
Social Network Games with Obligatory Product Selection
Recently, Apt and Markakis introduced a model for product adoption in social
networks with multiple products, where the agents, influenced by their
neighbours, can adopt one out of several alternatives (products). To analyze
these networks we introduce social network games in which product adoption is
obligatory.
We show that when the underlying graph is a simple cycle, there is a
polynomial time algorithm allowing us to determine whether the game has a Nash
equilibrium. In contrast, in the arbitrary case this problem is NP-complete. We
also show that the problem of determining whether the game is weakly acyclic is
co-NP hard.
Using these games we analyze various types of paradoxes that can arise in the
considered networks. One of them corresponds to the well-known Braess paradox
in congestion games. In particular, we show that social networks exist with the
property that by adding an additional product to a specific node, the choices
of the nodes will unavoidably evolve in such a way that everybody is strictly
worse off.Comment: In Proceedings GandALF 2013, arXiv:1307.416
The Efficacy of Group Selection is Increased by Coexistence Dynamics within Groups
Selection on the level of loosely associated groups has been suggested as a route towards the evolution of cooperation between individuals and the subsequent formation of higher-level biological entities. Such group selection explanations remain problematic, however, due to the narrow range of parameters under which they can overturn within-group selection that favours selfish behaviour. In principle, individual selection could act on such parameters so as to strengthen the force of between-group selection and hence increase cooperation and individual fitness, as illustrated in our previous work. However, such a process cannot operate in parameter regions where group selection effects are totally absent, since there would be no selective gradient to follow. One key parameter, which when increased often rapidly causes group selection effects to tend to zero, is initial group size, for when groups are formed randomly then even moderately sized groups lack significant variance in their composition. However, the consequent restriction of any group selection effect to small sized groups is derived from models that assume selfish types will competitively exclude their more cooperative counterparts at within-group equilibrium. In such cases, diversity in the migrant pool can tend to zero and accordingly variance in group composition cannot be generated. In contrast, we show that if within-group dynamics lead to a stable coexistence of selfish and cooperative types, then the range of group sizes showing some effect of group selection is much larger
Quantum Hall Physics - hierarchies and CFT techniques
The fractional quantum Hall effect, being one of the most studied phenomena
in condensed matter physics during the past thirty years, has generated many
groundbreaking new ideas and concepts. Very early on it was realized that the
zoo of emerging states of matter would need to be understood in a systematic
manner. The first attempts to do this, by Haldane and Halperin, set an agenda
for further work which has continued to this day. Since that time the idea of
hierarchies of quasiparticles condensing to form new states has been a pillar
of our understanding of fractional quantum Hall physics. In the thirty years
that have passed since then, a number of new directions of thought have
advanced our understanding of fractional quantum Hall states, and have extended
it in new and unexpected ways. Among these directions is the extensive use of
topological quantum field theories and conformal field theories, the
application of the ideas of composite bosons and fermions, and the study of
nonabelian quantum Hall liquids. This article aims to present a comprehensive
overview of this field, including the most recent developments.Comment: added section on experimental status, 59 pages+references, 3 figure
Response Function of the Fractional Quantized Hall State on a Sphere II: Exact Diagonalization
We study the excitation spectra and the dynamical structure factor of quantum
Hall states in a finite size system through exact diagonalization. Comparison
is made between the numerical results so obtained and the analytic results
obtained from a modified RPA in the preceding companion paper. We find good
agreement between the results at low energies.Comment: 22 pages (REVTeX 3.0). 10 figures available on request. Complete
postscript file (including figures) for this paper are available on the World
Wide Web at http://cmtw.harvard.edu/~simon/ ; Preprint number HU-CMT-94S0
Dispersion and fidelity in quantum interferometry
We consider Mach-Zehnder and Hong-Ou-Mandel interferometers with nonclassical
states of light as input, and study the effect that dispersion inside the
interferometer has on the sensitivity of phase measurements. We study in detail
a number of different one- and two-photon input states, including Fock, dual
Fock, N00N states, and photon pairs from parametric downconversion. Assuming
there is a phase shift in one arm of the interferometer, we compute
the probabilities of measurement outcomes as a function of , and then
compute the Shannon mutual information between and the measurements.
This provides a means of quantitatively comparing the utility of various input
states for determining the phase in the presence of dispersion. In addition, we
consider a simplified model of parametric downconversion for which
probabilities can be explicitly computed analytically, and which serves as a
limiting case of the more realistic downconversion model.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
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