1,152 research outputs found

    Elasticity of Filamentous Kagome Lattice

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    The diluted kagome lattice, in which bonds are randomly removed with probability 1−p1-p, consists of straight lines that intersect at points with a maximum coordination number of four. If lines are treated as semi-flexible polymers and crossing points are treated as crosslinks, this lattice provides a simple model for two-dimensional filamentous networks. Lattice-based effective medium theories and numerical simulations for filaments modeled as elastic rods, with stretching modulus μ\mu and bending modulus κ\kappa, are used to study the elasticity of this lattice as functions of pp and κ\kappa. At p=1p=1, elastic response is purely affine, and the macroscopic elastic modulus GG is independent of κ\kappa. When κ=0\kappa = 0, the lattice undergoes a first-order rigidity percolation transition at p=1p=1. When κ>0\kappa > 0, GG decreases continuously as pp decreases below one, reaching zero at a continuous rigidity percolation transition at p=pb≈0.605p=p_b \approx 0.605 that is the same for all non-zero values of κ\kappa. The effective medium theories predict scaling forms for GG, which exhibit crossover from bending dominated response at small κ/μ\kappa/\mu to stretching-dominated response at large κ/μ\kappa/\mu near both p=1p=1 and p=pbp=p_b, that match simulations with no adjustable parameters near p=1p=1. The affine response as p→1p\rightarrow 1 is identified with the approach to a state with sample-crossing straight filaments treated as elastic rods.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure

    Criticality and isostaticity in fiber networks

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    The rigidity of elastic networks depends sensitively on their internal connectivity and the nature of the interactions between constituents. Particles interacting via central forces undergo a zero-temperature rigidity-percolation transition near the isostatic threshold, where the constraints and internal degrees of freedom are equal in number. Fibrous networks, such as those that form the cellular cytoskeleton, become rigid at a lower threshold due to additional bending constraints. However, the degree to which bending governs network mechanics remains a subject of considerable debate. We study disordered fibrous networks with variable coordination number, both above and below the central-force isostatic point. This point controls a broad crossover from stretching- to bending-dominated elasticity. Strikingly, this crossover exhibits an anomalous power-law dependence of the shear modulus on both stretching and bending rigidities. At the central-force isostatic point---well above the rigidity threshold---we find divergent strain fluctuations together with a divergent correlation length ξ\xi, implying a breakdown of continuum elasticity in this simple mechanical system on length scales less than ξ\xi.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Adaptive Relaxed ADMM: Convergence Theory and Practical Implementation

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    Many modern computer vision and machine learning applications rely on solving difficult optimization problems that involve non-differentiable objective functions and constraints. The alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) is a widely used approach to solve such problems. Relaxed ADMM is a generalization of ADMM that often achieves better performance, but its efficiency depends strongly on algorithm parameters that must be chosen by an expert user. We propose an adaptive method that automatically tunes the key algorithm parameters to achieve optimal performance without user oversight. Inspired by recent work on adaptivity, the proposed adaptive relaxed ADMM (ARADMM) is derived by assuming a Barzilai-Borwein style linear gradient. A detailed convergence analysis of ARADMM is provided, and numerical results on several applications demonstrate fast practical convergence.Comment: CVPR 201
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