9,102 research outputs found
Fortran IV trent-surface program for the IBM 360 model 40 computer
A Fortran IV trend surface program with polynomial contouring and residual plotting has been adapted to the University of Alaska IBM 360 Model 40 Computer. The program will compute equations of polynomials of the first through sixth degree, measures of the goodness of fit of the surfaces, tabulate original data, x y coordinates and corresponding residuals for each surface; contour each polynomial, and plot original values and residuals for each surface computed
Global unitary fixing and matrix-valued correlations in matrix models
We consider the partition function for a matrix model with a global unitary
invariant energy function. We show that the averages over the partition
function of global unitary invariant trace polynomials of the matrix variables
are the same when calculated with any choice of a global unitary fixing, while
averages of such polynomials without a trace define matrix-valued correlation
functions, that depend on the choice of unitary fixing. The unitary fixing is
formulated within the standard Faddeev-Popov framework, in which the squared
Vandermonde determinant emerges as a factor of the complete Faddeev-Popov
determinant. We give the ghost representation for the FP determinant, and the
corresponding BRST invariance of the unitary-fixed partition function. The
formalism is relevant for deriving Ward identities obeyed by matrix-valued
correlation functions.Comment: Tex, 22 page
A homological definition of the HOMFLY polynomial
We give a new definition of the knot invariant associated to the Lie algebra
su_{N+1}. The knot or link must be presented as the plat closure of a braid.
The invariant is then a homological intersection pairing between two
submanifolds of a configuration space of points in a disk. This generalizes
previous work on the Jones polynomial, which is the case N=1.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Structure and Properties of Hughston's Stochastic Extension of the Schr\"odinger Equation
Hughston has recently proposed a stochastic extension of the Schr\"odinger
equation, expressed as a stochastic differential equation on projective Hilbert
space. We derive new projective Hilbert space identities, which we use to give
a general proof that Hughston's equation leads to state vector collapse to
energy eigenstates, with collapse probabilities given by the quantum mechanical
probabilities computed from the initial state. We discuss the relation of
Hughston's equation to earlier work on norm-preserving stochastic equations,
and show that Hughston's equation can be written as a manifestly unitary
stochastic evolution equation for the pure state density matrix. We discuss the
behavior of systems constructed as direct products of independent subsystems,
and briefly address the question of whether an energy-based approach, such as
Hughston's, suffices to give an objective interpretation of the measurement
process in quantum mechanics.Comment: Plain Tex, no figure
Do Cognitive Test Scores Explain Higher U.S. Wage Inequality?
Using microdata from the 1994-8 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) for nine countries, we examine the role of cognitive skills in explaining higher wage inequality in the United States. We find that while the greater dispersion of cognitive test scores in the United States plays a part in explaining higher U.S. wage inequality, higher labor market prices (i.e., higher returns to measured human capital and cognitive performance) and greater residual inequality still play important roles, and are, on average, quantitatively considerably more important than differences in the distribution of test scores in explaining higher U.S. wage inequality
Discovery Potential for New Phenomena
We examine the ability of future facilities to discover and interpret
non-supersymmetric new phenomena. We first explore explicit manifestations of
new physics, including extended gauge sectors, leptoquarks, exotic fermions,
and technicolor models. We then take a more general approach where new physics
only reveals itself through the existence of effective interactions at lower
energy scales. [Summary Report of the New Phenomena Working Group. To appear in
the Proceedings of the 1996 DPF/DPB Summer Study on New Directions for High
Energy Physics - Snowmass96, Snowmass, CO, 25 June - 12 July 1996.]Comment: 18 pages, LaTex2
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