247,841 research outputs found
Rank-frequency relation for Chinese characters
We show that the Zipf's law for Chinese characters perfectly holds for
sufficiently short texts (few thousand different characters). The scenario of
its validity is similar to the Zipf's law for words in short English texts. For
long Chinese texts (or for mixtures of short Chinese texts), rank-frequency
relations for Chinese characters display a two-layer, hierarchic structure that
combines a Zipfian power-law regime for frequent characters (first layer) with
an exponential-like regime for less frequent characters (second layer). For
these two layers we provide different (though related) theoretical descriptions
that include the range of low-frequency characters (hapax legomena). The
comparative analysis of rank-frequency relations for Chinese characters versus
English words illustrates the extent to which the characters play for Chinese
writers the same role as the words for those writing within alphabetical
systems.Comment: To appear in European Physical Journal B (EPJ B), 2014 (22 pages, 7
figures
Electron screening and its effects on Big-Bang nucleosynthesis
We study the effects of electron screening on nuclear reaction rates
occurring during the Big Bang nucleosynthesis epoch. The sensitivity of the
predicted elemental abundances on electron screening is studied in details. It
is shown that electron screening does not produce noticeable results in the
abundances unless the traditional Debye-H\"uckel model for the treatment of
electron screening in stellar environments is enhanced by several orders of
magnitude. The present work rules out electron screening as a relevant
ingredient to Big Bang nucleosynthesis and ruling out exotic possibilities for
the treatment of screening, beyond the mean-field theoretical approach.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, more references included. To appear in Phys. Rev.
New Duality Transformations in Orbifold Theory
We find new duality transformations which allow us to construct the stress
tensors of all the twisted sectors of any orbifold A(H)/H, where A(H) is the
set of all current-algebraic conformal field theories with a finite symmetry
group H \subset Aut(g). The permutation orbifolds with H = Z_\lambda and H =
S_3 are worked out in full as illustrations but the general formalism includes
both simple and semisimple g. The motivation for this development is the
recently-discovered orbifold Virasoro master equation, whose solutions are
identified by the duality transformations as sectors of the permutation
orbifolds A(D_\lambda)/Z_\lambda.Comment: 48 pages,typos correcte
Subshifts, MSO Logic, and Collapsing Hierarchies
We use monadic second-order logic to define two-dimensional subshifts, or
sets of colorings of the infinite plane. We present a natural family of
quantifier alternation hierarchies, and show that they all collapse to the
third level. In particular, this solves an open problem of [Jeandel & Theyssier
2013]. The results are in stark contrast with picture languages, where such
hierarchies are usually infinite.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. To appear in conference proceedings of TCS 2014,
published by Springe
A simple interpretation of quantum mirages
In an interesting new experiment the electronic structure of a magnetic atom
adsorbed on the surface of Cu(111), observed by STM, was projected into a
remote location on the same surface. The purpose of the present paper is to
interpret this experiment with a model Hamiltonian, using ellipses of the size
of the experimental ones, containing about 2300 atoms. The charge distribution
for the different wavefunctions is analyzed, in particular, for those with
energy close to the Fermi energy of copper Ef. Some of them show two symmetric
maxima located on the principal axis of the ellipse but not necessarily at the
foci. If a Co atom is adsorbed at the site where the wavefunction with energy
has a maximum and the interaction is small, the main effect of the
adsorbed atom will be to split this particular wavefunction in two. The total
charge density will remain the same but the local density of states will
present a dip at Ef at any site where the charge density is large enough. We
relate the presence of this dip to the observation of quantum mirages. Our
interpretation suggests that other sites, apart from the foci of the ellipses,
can be used for projecting atomic images and also indicates the conditions for
other non magnetic adsorbates to produce mirages.Comment: 3 pages, 3 Fig
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