5,803 research outputs found
Bispectrum Inversion with Application to Multireference Alignment
We consider the problem of estimating a signal from noisy
circularly-translated versions of itself, called multireference alignment
(MRA). One natural approach to MRA could be to estimate the shifts of the
observations first, and infer the signal by aligning and averaging the data. In
contrast, we consider a method based on estimating the signal directly, using
features of the signal that are invariant under translations. Specifically, we
estimate the power spectrum and the bispectrum of the signal from the
observations. Under mild assumptions, these invariant features contain enough
information to infer the signal. In particular, the bispectrum can be used to
estimate the Fourier phases. To this end, we propose and analyze a few
algorithms. Our main methods consist of non-convex optimization over the smooth
manifold of phases. Empirically, in the absence of noise, these non-convex
algorithms appear to converge to the target signal with random initialization.
The algorithms are also robust to noise. We then suggest three additional
methods. These methods are based on frequency marching, semidefinite relaxation
and integer programming. The first two methods provably recover the phases
exactly in the absence of noise. In the high noise level regime, the invariant
features approach for MRA results in stable estimation if the number of
measurements scales like the cube of the noise variance, which is the
information-theoretic rate. Additionally, it requires only one pass over the
data which is important at low signal-to-noise ratio when the number of
observations must be large
The space of hyperkähler metrics on a 4-manifold with boundary
Let X be a compact 4-manifold with boundary. We study the space of hyperk¨ahler
triples ω1, ω2, ω3 on X, modulo diffeomorphisms which are the identity on the boundary. We
prove that this moduli space is a smooth infinite-dimensional manifold and describe the tangent
space in terms of triples of closed anti-self-dual 2-forms. We also explore the corresponding
boundary value problem: a hyperk¨ahler triple restricts to a closed framing of the bundle of
2-forms on the boundary; we identify the infinitesimal deformations of this closed framing that
can be filled in to hyperk¨ahler deformations of the original triple. Finally we study explicit
examples coming from gravitational instantons with isometric actions of SU(2)
Search strategies of Wikipedia readers
The quest for information is one of the most common activity of human beings. Despite the the impressive progress of search engines, not to miss the needed piece of information could be still very tough, as well as to acquire specific competences and knowledge by shaping and following the proper learning paths. Indeed, the need to find sensible paths in information networks is one of the biggest challenges of our societies and, to effectively address it, it is important to investigate the strategies adopted by human users to cope with the cognitive bottleneck of finding their way in a growing sea of information. Here we focus on the case of Wikipedia and investigate a recently released dataset about users’ click on the English Wikipedia, namely the English Wikipedia Clickstream. We perform a semantically charged analysis to uncover the general patterns followed by information seekers in the multi-dimensional space of Wikipedia topics/categories. We discover the existence of well defined strategies in which users tend to start from very general, i.e., semantically broad, pages and progressively narrow down the scope of their navigation, while keeping a growing semantic coherence. This is unlike strategies associated to tasks with predefined search goals, namely the case of the Wikispeedia game. In this case users first move from the ‘particular’ to the ‘universal’ before focusing down again to the required target. The clear picture offered here represents a very important stepping stone towards a better design of information networks and recommendation strategies, as well as the construction of radically new learning paths
SeeBridge information delivery manual (IDM) for next generation bridge inspection
Innovative solutions for rapid and intelligent survey and assessment methods are required in maintenance, repair, retrofit and rebuild of enormous numbers of bridges in service throughout the world. Motivated by this need, a next-generation integrated bridge inspection system named SeeBridge is proposed. To frame the system, an Information Delivery Manual (IDM) was compiled to specify the technical components, activities and information exchanges in the SeeBridge process. The IDM supports development of the system by rigorously defining the information and data repositories that structure bridge engineers' knowledge. The SeeBridge process is mapped, parts of the data repositories are presented and the future use of the IDM is discussed
The 3-3-1 model with S_4 flavor symmetry
We construct a 3-3-1 model based on family symmetry S_4 responsible for the
neutrino and quark masses. The tribimaximal neutrino mixing and the diagonal
quark mixing have been obtained. The new lepton charge \mathcal{L} related to
the ordinary lepton charge L and a SU(3) charge by L=2/\sqrt{3} T_8+\mathcal{L}
and the lepton parity P_l=(-)^L known as a residual symmetry of L have been
introduced which provide insights in this kind of model. The expected vacuum
alignments resulting in potential minimization can origin from appropriate
violation terms of S_4 and \mathcal{L}. The smallness of seesaw contributions
can be explained from the existence of such terms too. If P_l is not broken by
the vacuum values of the scalar fields, there is no mixing between the exotic
and the ordinary quarks at the tree level.Comment: 20 pages, revised versio
Robot rights? Towards a social-relational justification of moral consideration \ud
Should we grant rights to artificially intelligent robots? Most current and near-future robots do not meet the hard criteria set by deontological and utilitarian theory. Virtue ethics can avoid this problem with its indirect approach. However, both direct and indirect arguments for moral consideration rest on ontological features of entities, an approach which incurs several problems. In response to these difficulties, this paper taps into a different conceptual resource in order to be able to grant some degree of moral consideration to some intelligent social robots: it sketches a novel argument for moral consideration based on social relations. It is shown that to further develop this argument we need to revise our existing ontological and social-political frameworks. It is suggested that we need a social ecology, which may be developed by engaging with Western ecology and Eastern worldviews. Although this relational turn raises many difficult issues and requires more work, this paper provides a rough outline of an alternative approach to moral consideration that can assist us in shaping our relations to intelligent robots and, by extension, to all artificial and biological entities that appear to us as more than instruments for our human purpose
The Interplay between Neutrinos and Charged Leptons in the Minimal SU(3)_LxU(1)_N Gauge Model
In the minimal SU(3)_LxU(1)_N gauge model with a global L_e-L_mu-L_tau (=L')
symmetry and a discrete Z_4 symmetry, it is found that the interplay between
neutrinos and charged leptons contained in triplets of \psi^i=(\nu^i_L,
\ell^i_L, \ell^{ci}_L) (i=1,2,3) naturally leads to the large mixing angle
(LMA) MSW solution. The model includes two (anti)sextet Higgs scalars, S^(0)
with L'=0 and S^(+) with L'=2, which, respectively, couple to \psi^1\psi^{2,3}
for the electron mass and masses of atmospheric neutrinos and to
\psi^{2,3}\psi^{2,3} for the \mu- and \tau-masses and one-loop radiative
neutrino masses relevant to solar neutrinos. This mechanism is realized by
utilizing an additional residual discrete symmetry supplied by explicitly
broken L', which guarantees the absence of tree-level neutrino mass terms of
the \psi^{2,3}\psi^{2,3}-type. Pure rotation effects due to the diagonalization
of neutrino and charged-lepton mass matrices are estimated to yield \Delta
m^2_\odot/\Delta m^2_{atm} \leq (m_e/m_\mu)^{3/2}=O(10^{-4}) but the radiative
effects supersede the rotation effects to yield \Delta m^2_\odot/\Delta
m^2_{atm}=O(10^{-2}) as the LMA solution.Comment: 16 pages, RevTeX, including 2 figures with typos and misprints
corrected and with modifications in sections II-B and V, accepted by Nuclear
Physics
The first super-Earth Detection from the High Cadence and High Radial Velocity Precision Dharma Planet Survey
The Dharma Planet Survey (DPS) aims to monitor about 150 nearby very bright
FGKM dwarfs (within 50 pc) during 20162020 for low-mass planet detection and
characterization using the TOU very high resolution optical spectrograph
(R100,000, 380-900nm). TOU was initially mounted to the 2-m Automatic
Spectroscopic Telescope at Fairborn Observatory in 2013-2015 to conduct a pilot
survey, then moved to the dedicated 50-inch automatic telescope on Mt. Lemmon
in 2016 to launch the survey. Here we report the first planet detection from
DPS, a super-Earth candidate orbiting a bright K dwarf star, HD 26965. It is
the second brightest star ( mag) on the sky with a super-Earth
candidate. The planet candidate has a mass of 8.47,
period of d, and eccentricity of . This RV
signal was independently detected by Diaz et al. (2018), but they could not
confirm if the signal is from a planet or from stellar activity. The orbital
period of the planet is close to the rotation period of the star (3944.5 d)
measured from stellar activity indicators. Our high precision photometric
campaign and line bisector analysis of this star do not find any significant
variations at the orbital period. Stellar RV jitters modeled from star spots
and convection inhibition are also not strong enough to explain the RV signal
detected. After further comparing RV data from the star's active magnetic phase
and quiet magnetic phase, we conclude that the RV signal is due to
planetary-reflex motion and not stellar activity.Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
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