3,598 research outputs found
Hybridizing Physics and Neural ODEs for Predicting Plasma Inductance Dynamics in Tokamak Fusion Reactors
While fusion reactors known as tokamaks hold promise as a firm energy source,
advances in plasma control, and handling of events where control of plasmas is
lost, are needed for them to be economical. A significant bottleneck towards
applying more advanced control algorithms is the need for better plasma
simulation, where both physics-based and data-driven approaches currently fall
short. The former is bottle-necked by both computational cost and the
difficulty of modelling plasmas, and the latter is bottle-necked by the
relative paucity of data. To address this issue, this work applies the neural
ordinary differential equations (ODE) framework to the problem of predicting a
subset of plasma dynamics, namely the coupled plasma current and internal
inductance dynamics. As the neural ODE framework allows for the natural
inclusion of physics-based inductive biases, we train both physics-based and
neural network models on data from the Alcator C-Mod fusion reactor and find
that a model that combines physics-based equations with a neural ODE performs
better than both existing physics-motivated ODEs and a pure neural ODE model
Convective and absolute Eckhaus instability leading to modulated waves in a finite box
We report experimental study of the secondary modulational instability of a
one-dimensional non-linear traveling wave in a long bounded channel. Two
qualitatively different instability regimes involving fronts of spatio-temporal
defects are linked to the convective and absolute nature of the instability.
Both transitions appear to be subcritical. The spatio-temporal defects control
the global mode structure.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures (ReVTeX 4 and amsmath.sty), final versio
Self-organized transition to coherent activity in disordered media
Synchronized oscillations are of critical functional importance in many
biological systems. We show that such oscillations can arise without
centralized coordination in a disordered system of electrically coupled
excitable and passive cells. Increasing the coupling strength results in waves
that lead to coherent periodic activity, exhibiting cluster, local and global
synchronization under different conditions. Our results may explain the
self-organized transition in a pregnant uterus from transient, localized
activity initially to system-wide coherent excitations just before delivery.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Decision-making without a brain: how an amoeboid organism solves the two-armed bandit
Several recent studies hint at shared patterns in decision-making between taxonomically distant organisms, yet few studies demonstrate and dissect mechanisms of decision-making in simpler organisms. We examine decision-making in the unicellular slime mould Physarum polycephalum using a classical decision problem adapted from human and animal decision-making studies: the two-armed bandit problem. This problem has previously only been used to study organisms with brains, yet here we demonstrate that a brainless unicellular organism compares the relative qualities of multiple options, integrates over repeated samplings to perform well in random environments, and combines information on reward frequency and magnitude in order to make correct and adaptive decisions. We extend our inquiry by using Bayesian model selection to determine the most likely algorithm used by the cell when making decisions. We deduce that this algorithm centres around a tendency to exploit environments in proportion to their reward experienced through past sampling. The algorithm is intermediate in computational complexity between simple, reactionary heuristics and calculation-intensive optimal performance algorithms, yet it has very good relative performance. Our study provides insight into ancestral mechanisms of decision-making and suggests that fundamental principles of decision-making, information processing and even cognition are shared among diverse biological systems
Ce-L3-XAS study of the temperature dependence of the 4f occupancy in the Kondo system Ce2Rh3Al9
We have used temperature dependent x-ray absorption at the Ce-L3 edge to
investigate the recently discovered Kondo compound Ce2Rh3Al9. The systematic
changes of the spectral lineshape with decreasing temperature are analyzed and
found to be related to a change in the occupation number, n_f, as the
system undergoes a transition into a Kondo state. The temperature dependence of
indicates a characteristic temperature of 150K, which is clearly related
with the high temperature anomaly observed in the magnetic susceptibility of
the same system. The further anomaly observed in the resistivity of this system
at low temperature (ca. 20K) has no effect on n_f and is thus not of Kondo
origin.Comment: 7 pages, three figures, submitted to PR
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