1,072 research outputs found
A new conjecture extends the GM law for percolation thresholds to dynamical situations
The universal law for percolation thresholds proposed by Galam and Mauger
(GM) is found to apply also to dynamical situations. This law depends solely on
two variables, the space dimension d and a coordinance numberq. For regular
lattices, q reduces to the usual coordination number while for anisotropic
lattices it is an effective coordination number. For dynamical percolation we
conjecture that the law is still valid if we use the number q_2 of second
nearest neighbors instead of q. This conjecture is checked for the dynamic
epidemic model which considers the percolation phenomenon in a mobile
disordered system. The agreement is good.Comment: 8 pages, latex, 3 figures include
Networks of equities in financial markets
We review the recent approach of correlation based networks of financial
equities. We investigate portfolio of stocks at different time horizons,
financial indices and volatility time series and we show that meaningful
economic information can be extracted from noise dressed correlation matrices.
We show that the method can be used to falsify widespread market models by
directly comparing the topological properties of networks of real and
artificial markets.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in EPJ
CREEP OF CRACKED POLYMER FIBER REINFORCED CONCRETE UNDER SUSTAINED TENSILE LOADING
In fiber reinforced concrete (FRC), fibers are added to the fresh concrete mix in order to improve the residual tensile strength, the toughness and/or durability of a concrete element. Cur- rently, structural applications remain relatively scarce as the time-dependent behavior of FRC is still poorly understood. This paper reports the first results of an experimental campaign regarding the creep of cracked polymer FRC. In the test setup, cylindrical, notched FRC specimens are considered. The concrete is reinforced with structural polymeric fibers for use in load-bearing applications. In a first step, the material is characterized according to the European Standard EN14651. Secondly, the samples are precracked to localize the creep deformations and to monitor the crack growth in time. The samples are subjected to a sustained tensile load, whereby different load levels with respect to the individual residual strength are considered. The results of the first months of creep loading will be detailed and discussed in the paper
Scaling in the Bombay Stock Exchange Index
In this paper we study BSE Index financial time series for fractal and
multifractal behaviour. We show that Bombay stock Exchange (BSE)Index time
series is mono-fractal and can be represented by a fractional Brownian motion.Comment: 11 pages,3 figure
Long lasting instabilities in granular mixtures
We have performed experiments of axial segregation in the Oyama's drum. We
have tested binary granular mixtures during very long times. The segregation
patterns have been captured by a CCD camera and spatio-temporal graphs are
created. We report the occurence of instabilities which can last several hours.
We stress that those instabilities originate from the competition between axial
and radial segregations. We put into evidence the occurence of giant
fluctuations in the fraction of grain species along the surface during the
unstable periods.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, (2002
Removal of C-ring from the CD-ring skeleton of 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3 does not alter its target tissue metabolism significantly
Scaling of the distribution of price fluctuations of individual companies
We present a phenomenological study of stock price fluctuations of individual
companies. We systematically analyze two different databases covering
securities from the three major US stock markets: (a) the New York Stock
Exchange, (b) the American Stock Exchange, and (c) the National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotation stock market. Specifically, we consider
(i) the trades and quotes database, for which we analyze 40 million records for
1000 US companies for the 2-year period 1994--95, and (ii) the Center for
Research and Security Prices database, for which we analyze 35 million daily
records for approximately 16,000 companies in the 35-year period 1962--96. We
study the probability distribution of returns over varying time scales , where varies by a factor of ---from 5 min up to
4 years. For time scales from 5~min up to approximately 16~days, we
find that the tails of the distributions can be well described by a power-law
decay, characterized by an exponent ---well outside the
stable L\'evy regime . For time scales days, we observe results consistent with a slow
convergence to Gaussian behavior. We also analyze the role of cross
correlations between the returns of different companies and relate these
correlations to the distribution of returns for market indices.Comment: 10pages 2 column format with 11 eps figures. LaTeX file requiring
epsf, multicol,revtex. Submitted to PR
Growing Cayley trees described by Fermi distribution
We introduce a model for growing Cayley trees with thermal noise. The
evolution of these hierarchical networks reduces to the Eden model and the
Invasion Percolation model in the limit , respectively.
We show that the distribution of the bond strengths (energies) is described by
the Fermi statistics. We discuss the relation of the present results with the
scale-free networks described by Bose statistics
Model of correlated sequential adsorption of colloidal particles
We present results of a new model of sequential adsorption in which the
adsorbing particles are correlated with the particles attached to the
substrate. The strength of the correlations is measured by a tunable parameter
. The model interpolates between free ballistic adsorption in the limit
and a strongly correlated phase, appearing for
and characterized by the emergence of highly ordered structures. The phenomenon
is manifested through the analysis of several magnitudes, as the jamming limit
and the particle-particle correlation function. The effect of correlations in
one dimension manifests in the increased tendency to particle chaining in the
substrate. In two dimensions the correlations induce a percolation transition,
in which a spanning cluster of connected particles appears at a certain
critical value . Our study could be applicable to more general
situations in which the coupling between correlations and disorder is relevant,
as for example, in the presence of strong interparticle interactions.Comment: 6 pages, 8 EPS figures. Phys. Rev. E (in press
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