5,207 research outputs found
Gauge copies in the Landau-DeWitt gauge : a background invariant restriction
The Landau background gauge, also known as the Landau-DeWitt gauge, has found renewed interest during the past decade given its usefulness in accessing the confinement-deconfinement transition via the vacuum expectation value of the Polyakov loop, describable via an appropriate background. In this Letter, we revisit this gauge from the viewpoint of it displaying gauge (Gribov) copies. We generalize the Gribov-Zwanziger effective action in a BRST and background invariant way; this action leads to a restriction on the allowed gauge fluctuations, thereby eliminating the infinitesimal background gauge copies. The explicit background invariance of our action is in contrast with earlier attempts to write down and use an effective Gribov-Zwanziger action. It allows to address certain subtleties arising in these earlier works, such as a spontaneous and thus spurious Lorentz symmetry breaking, something which is now averted
The asymmetry of the dimension 2 gluon condensate: the finite temperature case
In this paper, we continue the work begun in a previous article. We compute,
in the formalism of local composite operators, the value of the asymmetry in
the dimension two condensate for finite temperatures. We find a positive value
for the asymmetry, which disappears when the temperature is increased. We also
compute the value of the full dimension two condensate for higher temperatures,
and we find that it decreases in absolute value, finally disappearing for
sufficiently high temperature. We also comment on the temperature dependence of
the electric and magnetic components of the condensate separately. We compare
our results with the corresponding lattice date found by Chernodub and
Ilgenfritz.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Learning through play: an educational computer game to introduce radar fundamentals
The information exchange has evolved from traditional books to computers and Internet in a few years' time. Our current university students were born in this age: they learn and have fun with different methods as previous generations did. These digital natives enjoy computer games. Thus, designing games for learning some selected topics could be a good teaching strategy for such collective and also for undergraduate university students. This paper describes the development and test of an educational computer game revolving around radar. The objective of the game RADAR Technology is to teach students about the fundamentals of radar, while having fun during the learning experience. Based on the principle that you learn better what you practice, the authors want to induce students to discover a difficult to understand topic by proposing them a different experience, in a format better adapted to their generation skills. The computer game has been tested with actual students and the obtained results seem to be very promising
Computing Zeta Functions of Nondegenerate Curves
In this paper we present a p-adic algorithm to compute the zeta function of a
nondegenerate curve over a finite field using Monsky-Washnitzer cohomology. The
paper vastly generalizes previous work since all known cases, e.g.
hyperelliptic, superelliptic and C_{ab} curves, can be transformed to fit the
nondegenerate case. For curves with a fixed Newton polytope, the property of
being nondegenerate is generic, so that the algorithm works for almost all
curves with given Newton polytope. For a genus g curve over F_{p^n}, the
expected running time is O(n^3g^6 + n^2g^{6.5}), whereas the space complexity
amounts to O(n^3g^4), assuming p is fixed.Comment: 41 page
Metallographic evaluation of the weldability of high strength aluminium alloys using friction spot welding
Friction spot welding is a recent solid-state welding technique well suited for spot-joining lightweight materials in overlap condition. Aerospace and transport industries show great interest in this technique to join high-strength aluminium alloys, but published research is still limited. In this project, the link between process parameters and weld quality is investigated for EN AW-7075-T6 material. Techniques used are metallographic qualification, measurement of hardness reduction and lap shear strength. This paper focusses on the metallographic investigation of the weld region and its imperfections. Increasing joining time and heat input creates an easier material flow resulting in fewer imperfections. Limited plunge depths lead to typical interface imperfections. Variation in the rotational speed shows distinctive stir zone shapes as a consequence of severe stirring and frictional heat
Automatic Brain Tumor Segmentation using Cascaded Anisotropic Convolutional Neural Networks
A cascade of fully convolutional neural networks is proposed to segment
multi-modal Magnetic Resonance (MR) images with brain tumor into background and
three hierarchical regions: whole tumor, tumor core and enhancing tumor core.
The cascade is designed to decompose the multi-class segmentation problem into
a sequence of three binary segmentation problems according to the subregion
hierarchy. The whole tumor is segmented in the first step and the bounding box
of the result is used for the tumor core segmentation in the second step. The
enhancing tumor core is then segmented based on the bounding box of the tumor
core segmentation result. Our networks consist of multiple layers of
anisotropic and dilated convolution filters, and they are combined with
multi-view fusion to reduce false positives. Residual connections and
multi-scale predictions are employed in these networks to boost the
segmentation performance. Experiments with BraTS 2017 validation set show that
the proposed method achieved average Dice scores of 0.7859, 0.9050, 0.8378 for
enhancing tumor core, whole tumor and tumor core, respectively. The
corresponding values for BraTS 2017 testing set were 0.7831, 0.8739, and
0.7748, respectively.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. MICCAI Brats Challenge 201
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