1,288 research outputs found
Replica symmetric evaluation of the information transfer in a two-layer network in presence of continuous+discrete stimuli
In a previous report we have evaluated analytically the mutual information
between the firing rates of N independent units and a set of multi-dimensional
continuous+discrete stimuli, for a finite population size and in the limit of
large noise. Here, we extend the analysis to the case of two interconnected
populations, where input units activate output ones via gaussian weights and a
threshold linear transfer function. We evaluate the information carried by a
population of M output units, again about continuous+discrete correlates. The
mutual information is evaluated solving saddle point equations under the
assumption of replica symmetry, a method which, by taking into account only the
term linear in N of the input information, is equivalent to assuming the noise
to be large. Within this limitation, we analyze the dependence of the
information on the ratio M/N, on the selectivity of the input units and on the
level of the output noise. We show analytically, and confirm numerically, that
in the limit of a linear transfer function and of a small ratio between output
and input noise, the output information approaches asymptotically the
information carried in input. Finally, we show that the information loss in
output does not depend much on the structure of the stimulus, whether purely
continuous, purely discrete or mixed, but only on the position of the threshold
nonlinearity, and on the ratio between input and output noise.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Stability of the replica symmetric solution for the information conveyed by by a neural network
The information that a pattern of firing in the output layer of a feedforward
network of threshold-linear neurons conveys about the network's inputs is
considered. A replica-symmetric solution is found to be stable for all but
small amounts of noise. The region of instability depends on the contribution
of the threshold and the sparseness: for distributed pattern distributions, the
unstable region extends to higher noise variances than for very sparse
distributions, for which it is almost nonexistant.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures. Also available at
http://www.mrc-bbc.ox.ac.uk/~schultz/papers.html . Submitted to Phys. Rev. E
Minor change
Possible Contribution to Electron and Positron Fluxes from Pulsars and their Nebulae
The AMS-02 experiment confirms the excess of positrons in cosmic rays (CRs)
for energy above 10 GeV with respect to the secondary production of positrons
in the interstellar medium. This is interpreted as evidence of the existence of
a primary source of these particles. Possible candidates are dark matter or
astrophysical sources. In this work we discuss the possible contribution due to
pulsars and their nebulae. Our key assumption is that the primary spectrum of
electrons and positrons at the source is the same of the well known photon
spectrum observed from gamma-rays telescopes. Using a diffusion model in the
Galaxy we propagate the source spectra up to the Solar System. We compare our
results with the recent experiments and with the LIS modelComment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 14th ICATPP Conference, Villa
Olmo 23-27 September 201
Pulsar Wind Nebulae as a source of the observed electron and positron excess at high energy: the case of Vela-X
We investigate, in terms of production from pulsars and their nebulae, the
cosmic ray positron and electron fluxes above GeV, observed by the
AMS-02 experiment up to 1 TeV. We concentrate on the Vela-X case. Starting from
the gamma-ray photon spectrum of the source, generated via synchrotron and
inverse Compton processes, we estimated the electron and positron injection
spectra. Several features are fixed from observations of Vela-X and unknown
parameters are borrowed from the Crab nebula. The particle spectra produced in
the pulsar wind nebula are then propagated up to the Solar System, using a
diffusion model. Differently from previous works, the omnidirectional intensity
excess for electrons and positrons is obtained as a difference between the
AMS-02 data and the corresponding local interstellar spectrum. An equal amount
of electron and positron excess is observed and we interpreted this excess
(above 100 GeV in the AMS-02 data) as a supply coming from Vela-X. The
particle contribution is consistent with models predicting the gamma-ray
emission at the source. The input of a few more young pulsars is also allowed,
while below 100 GeV more aged pulsars could be the main contributors.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of High Energy Astrophysics
(2015
An associative network with spatially organized connectivity
We investigate the properties of an autoassociative network of
threshold-linear units whose synaptic connectivity is spatially structured and
asymmetric. Since the methods of equilibrium statistical mechanics cannot be
applied to such a network due to the lack of a Hamiltonian, we approach the
problem through a signal-to-noise analysis, that we adapt to spatially
organized networks. The conditions are analyzed for the appearance of stable,
spatially non-uniform profiles of activity with large overlaps with one of the
stored patterns. It is also shown, with simulations and analytic results, that
the storage capacity does not decrease much when the connectivity of the
network becomes short range. In addition, the method used here enables us to
calculate exactly the storage capacity of a randomly connected network with
arbitrary degree of dilution.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures; Accepted for publication in JSTA
The Neutron Stars Census
The paucity of old isolated accreting neutron stars in ROSAT observations is
used to derive a lower limit on the mean velocity of neutron stars at birth.
The secular evolution of the population is simulated following the paths of a
statistical sample of stars for different values of the initial kick velocity,
drawn from an isotropic Gaussian distribution with mean velocity . The spin--down, induced by dipole losses and the
interaction with the ambient medium, is tracked together with the dynamical
evolution in the Galactic potential, allowing for the determination of the
fraction of stars which are, at present, in each of the four possible stages:
Ejector, Propeller, Accretor, and Georotator. Taking from the ROSAT All Sky
Survey an upper limit of accreting neutron stars within pc
from the Sun, we infer a lower bound for the mean kick velocity, corresponding to a velocity dispersion
km s. The same conclusion is reached for both
a constant magnetic field ( G) and a magnetic field decaying
exponentially with a timescale yr. Such high velocities are
consistent with those derived from radio pulsar observations. Present results,
moreover, constrain the fraction of low velocity stars, which could have
escaped pulsar statistics, to less than 1%.Comment: 13 pages, 6 PostScript figures, accepted to Ap
Optical and infrared photometry of the blazar PKS0537-441
We present a large collection of photometric data on the Blazar PKS 0537-441
in the VRIJHK bands taken in 2004-2009. At least three flare-like episodes with
months duration, and >3 mag amplitude are apparent. The spectral energy
distribution is consistent with a power law, and no indication of a thermal
component is found. We searched for short time scale variability, and an
interesting event was identified in the J band, with a duration of ~25 minutes.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, in press in ApJ
Bondi Accretion and the Problem of the Missing Isolated Neutron Stars
A large number of neutron stars (NSs), ~10^9, populate the Galaxy, but only a
tiny fraction of them is observable during the short radio pulsar lifetime. The
majority of these isolated NSs, too cold to be detectable by their own thermal
emission, should be visible in X-rays as a result of accretion from the
interstellar medium. The ROSAT all sky survey has however shown that such
accreting isolated NSs are very elusive: only a few tentative candidates have
been identified, contrary to theoretical predictions that up to several
thousands should be seen. We suggest that the fundamental reason for this
discrepancy lies in the use of the standard Bondi formula to estimate the
accretion rates. We compute the expected source counts using updated estimates
of the pulsar velocity distribution, realistic hydrogen atmosphere spectra, and
a modified expression for the Bondi accretion rate as suggested by recent MHD
simulations, and supported by direct observations in the case of accretion
around supermassive black holes in nearby galaxies and in our own. We find
that, whereas the inclusion of atmospheric spectra partly compensates for the
reduction in the counts due to the higher mean velocities of the new
distribution, the modified Bondi formula dramatically suppresses the source
counts. The new predictions are consistent with a null detection at the ROSAT
sensitivity.Comment: accepted to ApJ; 19 pages, 4 figure
The elusiveness of old neutron stars
Old neutron stars (ONSs) which have radiated away their internal and
rotational energy may still shine if accreting the interstellar medium. Despite
their large number, only two promising candidates have been detected so far and
rather stringent limits on their observability follow from the analysis of
ROSAT surveys. This contrasts with optimistic theoretical estimates that
predicted a large number of sources in ROSAT fields. We have reconsidered the
issue of ONSs observability, accounting for the spin and magnetic field
evolution over the neutron star lifetime. In the framework of a spin-induced
field decay model, we show that the total number of ONSs which are, at present,
in the accretion stage is reduced by a factor ~5 over previous figures if the
characteristic timescale for crustal current dissipation is ~ 10^8 - 10^9 yr.
This brings theoretical predictions much closer to observational limits. Most
ONSs should be at present in the propeller phase and, if subject to episodic
flaring, they could be observable.Comment: 10 pages Latex, 5 ps figures. To be formatted with the AASTeX
package. Accepted for publication in Ap
Population synthesis of old neutron stars in the Galaxy
The paucity of old isolated accreting neutron stars in ROSAT observations is
used to derive a lower limit on the mean velocity of neutron stars at birth.
The secular evolution of the population is simulated following the paths of a
statistical sample of stars for different values of the initial kick velocity,
drawn from an isotropic Gaussian distribution with mean velocity . The spin-down, induced by dipole losses and the
interaction with the ambient medium, is tracked together with the dynamical
evolution in the Galactic potential, allowing for the determination of the
fraction of stars which are, at present, in each of the four possible stages:
Ejector, Propeller, Accretor, and Georotator. Taking from the ROSAT All Sky
Survey an upper limit of accreting neutron stars within pc
from the Sun, we infer a lower bound for the mean kick velocity, \ga
200-300 . The same conclusion is reached for both a constant
( G) and a magnetic field decaying exponentially with a
timescale yr. Present results, moreover, constrain the fraction of
low velocity stars, which could have escaped pulsar statistics, to \la 1%.Comment: 8 pages, 4 PostScript figures, to appear in the proceedings of IAU
Symposium 19
- …