19,822 research outputs found
Multifractal Properties of the Random Resistor Network
We study the multifractal spectrum of the current in the two-dimensional
random resistor network at the percolation threshold. We consider two ways of
applying the voltage difference: (i) two parallel bars, and (ii) two points.
Our numerical results suggest that in the infinite system limit, the
probability distribution behaves for small current i as P(i) ~ 1/i. As a
consequence, the moments of i of order q less than q_c=0 do not exist and all
current of value below the most probable one have the fractal dimension of the
backbone. The backbone can thus be described in terms of only (i) blobs of
fractal dimension d_B and (ii) high current carrying bonds of fractal dimension
going from to d_B.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures; 1 reference added; to appear in Phys. Rev. E
(Rapid Comm
Scaling behavior in economics: I. Empirical results for company growth
We address the question of the growth of firm size. To this end, we analyze
the Compustat data base comprising all publicly-traded United States
manufacturing firms within the years 1974-1993. We find that the distribution
of firm sizes remains stable for the 20 years we study, i.e., the mean value
and standard deviation remain approximately constant. We study the distribution
of sizes of the ``new'' companies in each year and find it to be well
approximated by a log-normal. We find (i) the distribution of the logarithm of
the growth rates, for a fixed growth period of one year, and for companies with
approximately the same size displays an exponential form, and (ii) the
fluctuations in the growth rates -- measured by the width of this distribution
-- scale as a power law with , . We find
that the exponent takes the same value, within the error bars, for
several measures of the size of a company. In particular, we obtain:
for sales, for number of employees,
for assets, for cost of goods sold, and
for property, plant, & equipment.Comment: 16 pages LateX, RevTeX 3, 10 figures, to appear J. Phys. I France
(April 1997
Scaling behavior in economics: II. Modeling of company growth
In the preceding paper we presented empirical results describing the growth
of publicly-traded United States manufacturing firms within the years
1974--1993. Our results suggest that the data can be described by a scaling
approach. Here, we propose models that may lead to some insight into these
phenomena. First, we study a model in which the growth rate of a company is
affected by a tendency to retain an ``optimal'' size. That model leads to an
exponential distribution of the logarithm of the growth rate in agreement with
the empirical results. Then, we study a hierarchical tree-like model of a
company that enables us to relate the two parameters of the model to the
exponent , which describes the dependence of the standard deviation of
the distribution of growth rates on size. We find that , where defines the mean branching ratio of the hierarchical tree and
is the probability that the lower levels follow the policy of higher
levels in the hierarchy. We also study the distribution of growth rates of this
hierarchical model. We find that the distribution is consistent with the
exponential form found empirically.Comment: 19 pages LateX, RevTeX 3, 6 figures, to appear J. Phys. I France
(April 1997
Creating and Sharing Fedora Installation Package for Ubuntu
4th International Conference on Open RepositoriesThis presentation was part of the session : Conference PostersOpen repositories are enterprise information systems that face ongoing challenges of maintaining low operating costs, high efficiency, and high reliability. This poster proposal presents an open source strategy to help address some of these challenges. The NSF funded NSDL Materials Digital Library Pathway (MatDL) offers a Fedora-based open repository and is moving toward using the Ubuntu distribution of Linux on all of its servers to capitalize on the advantages of Ubuntu. However, currently there is no easy way to implement Ubuntu with Fedora-based repositories. This poster describes MatDL's efforts to co-develop and host a Fedora installation package for Ubuntu.The Materials Digital Library Pathway (DUE-0532831) is supported by the National Science Foundation
Molecular dynamics simulations of oxide memristors: crystal field effects
We present molecular-dynamic simulations of memory resistors (memristors)
including the crystal field effects on mobile ionic species such as oxygen
vacancies appearing during operation of the device. Vacancy distributions show
different patterns depending on the ratio of a spatial period of the crystal
field to a characteristic radius of the vacancy-vacancy interaction. There are
signatures of the orientational order and of spatial voids in the vacancy
distributions for some crystal field potentials. The crystal field stabilizes
the patterns after they are formed, resulting in a non-volatile switching of
the simulated devices.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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Applying Graph Theory to Examine the Dynamics of Student Discussions in Small-Group Learning.
Group work in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics courses is an effective means of improving student outcomes, and many different factors can influence the dynamics of student discussions and, ultimately, the success of collaboration. The substance and dynamics of group discussions are commonly examined using qualitative methods such as discourse analysis. To complement existing work in the literature, we developed a quantitative methodology that uses graph theory to map the progression of talk-turns of discussions within a group. We observed groups of students working with peer facilitators to solve problems in biological sciences, with three iterations of data collection and two major refinements of graph theory calculations. Results include general behaviors based on the turns in which different individuals talk and graph theory parameters to quantify group characteristics. To demonstrate the potential utility of the methodology, we present case studies with distinct patterns: a centralized group in which the peer facilitator behaves like an authority figure, a decentralized group in which most students talk their fair share of turns, and a larger group with subgroups that have implications for equity, diversity, and inclusion. Together, these results demonstrate that our adaptation of graph theory is a viable quantitative methodology to examine group discussions
Multiprotein DNA looping
DNA looping plays a fundamental role in a wide variety of biological
processes, providing the backbone for long range interactions on DNA. Here we
develop the first model for DNA looping by an arbitrarily large number of
proteins and solve it analytically in the case of identical binding. We uncover
a switch-like transition between looped and unlooped phases and identify the
key parameters that control this transition. Our results establish the basis
for the quantitative understanding of fundamental cellular processes like DNA
recombination, gene silencing, and telomere maintenance.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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