57,961 research outputs found
On rational approximation of algebraic functions
We construct a new scheme of approximation of any multivalued algebraic
function by a sequence of rational
functions. The latter sequence is generated by a recurrence relation which is
completely determined by the algebraic equation satisfied by . Compared
to the usual Pad\'e approximation our scheme has a number of advantages, such
as simple computational procedures that allow us to prove natural analogs of
the Pad\'e Conjecture and Nuttall's Conjecture for the sequence
in the complement \mathbb{CP}^1\setminus
\D_{f}, where \D_{f} is the union of a finite number of segments of real
algebraic curves and finitely many isolated points. In particular, our
construction makes it possible to control the behavior of spurious poles and to
describe the asymptotic ratio distribution of the family . As an application we settle the so-called 3-conjecture of
Egecioglu {\em et al} dealing with a 4-term recursion related to a polynomial
Riemann Hypothesis.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX2e, revised version to appear in Advances
in Mathematic
A heater made from graphite composite material for potential deicing application
A surface heater was developed using a graphite fiber-epoxy composite as the heating element. This heater can be thin, highly electrically and thermally conductive, and can conform to an irregular surface. Therefore it may be used in an aircraft's thermal deicing system to quickly and uniformly heat the aircraft surface. One-ply of unidirectional graphite fiber-epoxy composite was laminated between two plies of fiber glass-epoxy composite, with nickel foil contacting the end portions of the composite and partly exposed beyond the composites for electrical contact. The model heater used brominated P-100 fibers from Amoco. The fiber's electrical resistivity, thermal conductivity and density were 50 micro ohms per centimeter, 270 W/m-K and 2.30 gm/cubic cm, respectively. The electricity was found to penetrate through the composite in the transverse direction to make an acceptably low foil-composite contact resistance. When conducting current, the heater temperature increase reached 50 percent of the steady state value within 20 sec. There was no overheating at the ends of the heater provided there was no water corrosion. If the foil-composite bonding failed during storage, liquid water exposure was found to oxidize the foil. Such bonding failure may be avoided if perforated nickel foil is used, so that the composite plies can bond to each other through the perforated holes and therefore lock the foil in place
Integrating Deconstruction and Recycling Into the Demolition Process in Buffalo, NY
Buffalo’s Comprehensive Plan currently calls for the demolition of 10,000 buildings over a period of ten years. While demolition contractors may recycle a small percentage of the waste created from demolitions, the process generates a great deal of waste that ends up in landfills. Many of the materials that are thrown away after a building is demolished are either reusable or recyclable. In order to lessen the negative environmental impact of building demolition, Buffalo needs to encourage demolition contractors to reuse and recycle more building materials. Even more effective than encouragement is requirement. Buffalo should require a minimum level of recycling in all its demolition contracts
Collective Responsibility for Oppression
Many contemporary forms of oppression are not primarily the result of formally organized collective action nor are they an unintended outcome of a combination of individual actions. This raises the question of collective responsibility. I argue that we can only determine who is responsible for oppression if we understand oppression as a matter of social practices that create obstacles for social change. This social practice view of oppression enables two insights: First, that there is an unproblematic sense in which groups can bear irreducible collective responsibility for oppression. Second, that there are derived forms of individual responsibility for members of dominant groups
Schwinger effect impacting primordial magnetogenesis
We explore the enhancement of an electromagnetic field in an inflationary
background with an anti-conductive plasma of scalar particles. The scalar
particles are created by Schwinger effect in curved spacetime and backreact to
the electromagnetic field. The possibility of a negative conductivity was
recently put forward in the context of the renormalization of the Schwinger
induced current in de Sitter spacetime. While a negative conductivity enhances
the produced magnetic field, we find that it is too weak to seed the observed
intergalactic magnetic field today. This results on pair creation in
inflationary scenario is however important for primordial scenarios of
magnetogenesis as the presence of a conductivity alters the spectral index of
the magnetic field. This also shows on a specific example that backreaction can
increase the electromagnetic field and not only suppress it.Comment: 8 pages, 0 figure, matches published versio
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Computationally efficient induction of classification rules with the PMCRI and J-PMCRI frameworks
In order to gain knowledge from large databases, scalable data mining technologies are needed. Data are captured on a large scale and thus databases are increasing at a fast pace. This leads to the utilisation of parallel computing technologies in order to cope with large amounts of data. In the area of classification rule induction, parallelisation of classification rules has focused on the divide and conquer approach, also known as the Top Down Induction of Decision Trees (TDIDT). An alternative approach to classification rule induction is separate and conquer which has only recently been in the focus of parallelisation. This work introduces and evaluates empirically a framework for the parallel induction of classification rules, generated by members of the Prism family of algorithms. All members of the Prism family of algorithms follow the separate and conquer approach.are increasing at a fast pace. This leads to the utilisation of parallel computing technologies in order to cope with large amounts of data. In the area of classification rule induction, parallelisation of classification rules has focused on the divide and conquer approach, also known as the Top Down Induction of Decision Trees (TDIDT). An alternative approach to classification rule induction is separate and conquer which has only recently been in the focus of parallelisation. This work introduces and evaluates empirically a framework for the parallel induction of classification rules, generated by members of the Prism family of algorithms. All members of the Prism family of algorithms follow the separate and conquer approach
Sets of Minimal Capacity and Extremal Domains
Let f be a function meromorphic in a neighborhood of infinity. The central
problem in the present investigation is to find the largest domain D \subset C
to which the function f can be extended in a meromorphic and singlevalued
manner. 'Large' means here that the complement C\D is minimal with respect to
(logarithmic) capacity. Such extremal domains play an important role in Pad'e
approximation. In the paper a unique existence theorem for extremal domains and
their complementary sets of minimal capacity is proved. The topological
structure of sets of minimal capacity is studied, and analytic tools for their
characterization are presented; most notable are here quadratic differentials
and a specific symmetry property of the Green function in the extremal domain.
A local condition for the minimality of the capacity is formulated and studied.
Geometric estimates for sets of minimal capacity are given. Basic ideas are
illustrated by several concrete examples, which are also used in a discussion
of the principal differences between the extremality problem under
investigation and some classical problems from geometric function theory that
possess many similarities, which for instance is the case for Chebotarev's
Problem
Joint attention in the first year: The coordination of gaze and affect between 7 and 10 months of age
We used a multilevel growth model to describe
the developmental trajectories of infant’s
coordinated attention between people and
objects between 7 and 10 months of age.
Additionally, we assed whether the
coordinated attention looks were accompanied
by smiles as infants interacted social partners.
These results confirm the emergence of visual
joint attention skills before the end of the first
year. These results will be useful in the
construction of robotic systems that engage in
joint attention
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