6,557 research outputs found
Post-mission Viking data anaysis
Three Mars data analysis projects from the Viking Mars program were identified initially, and three more came into being as the work proceeded. All together, these six pertained to: (1) the veritical distribution of scattering particles in the Martian atmosphere at various locations in various seasons, (2) the physical parameters that define photometric properties of the Martian surface and atmosphere, (3) patterns of dust-cloud and global dust-storm development, (4) a direct comparison of near-simultaneous Viking and ground-based observations, (5) the annual formation and dissipation of polar frost caps, and (6) evidence concerning possible present-day volcanism or venting. A list of publications pertaining to the appropriate projects is included
Patterns of link reciprocity in directed networks
We address the problem of link reciprocity, the non-random presence of two
mutual links between pairs of vertices. We propose a new measure of reciprocity
that allows the ordering of networks according to their actual degree of
correlation between mutual links. We find that real networks are always either
correlated or anticorrelated, and that networks of the same type (economic,
social, cellular, financial, ecological, etc.) display similar values of the
reciprocity. The observed patterns are not reproduced by current models. This
leads us to introduce a more general framework where mutual links occur with a
conditional connection probability. In some of the studied networks we discuss
the form of the conditional connection probability and the size dependence of
the reciprocity.Comment: Final version accepted for publication on Physical Review Letter
Waiting time dynamics of priority-queue networks
We study the dynamics of priority-queue networks, generalizations of the
binary interacting priority queue model introduced by Oliveira and Vazquez
[Physica A {\bf 388}, 187 (2009)]. We found that the original AND-type protocol
for interacting tasks is not scalable for the queue networks with loops because
the dynamics becomes frozen due to the priority conflicts. We then consider a
scalable interaction protocol, an OR-type one, and examine the effects of the
network topology and the number of queues on the waiting time distributions of
the priority-queue networks, finding that they exhibit power-law tails in all
cases considered, yet with model-dependent power-law exponents. We also show
that the synchronicity in task executions, giving rise to priority conflicts in
the priority-queue networks, is a relevant factor in the queue dynamics that
can change the power-law exponent of the waiting time distribution.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, minor changes, final published versio
Continuum states from time-dependent density functional theory
Linear response time-dependent density functional theory is used to study
low-lying electronic continuum states of targets that can bind an extra
electron. Exact formulas to extract scattering amplitudes from the
susceptibility are derived in one dimension. A single-pole approximation for
scattering phase shifts in three dimensions is shown to be more accurate than
static exchange for singlet electron-He scattering.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, J. Chem. Phys. accepte
Analysis of weighted networks
The connections in many networks are not merely binary entities, either
present or not, but have associated weights that record their strengths
relative to one another. Recent studies of networks have, by and large, steered
clear of such weighted networks, which are often perceived as being harder to
analyze than their unweighted counterparts. Here we point out that weighted
networks can in many cases be analyzed using a simple mapping from a weighted
network to an unweighted multigraph, allowing us to apply standard techniques
for unweighted graphs to weighted ones as well. We give a number of examples of
the method, including an algorithm for detecting community structure in
weighted networks and a new and simple proof of the max-flow/min-cut theorem.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Characteristic length of random knotting for cylindrical self-avoiding polygons
We discuss the probability of random knotting for a model of self-avoiding
polygons whose segments are given by cylinders of unit length with radius .
We show numerically that the characteristic length of random knotting is
roughly approximated by an exponential function of the chain thickness .Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Maximal-entropy random walk unifies centrality measures
In this paper analogies between different (dis)similarity matrices are
derived. These matrices, which are connected to path enumeration and random
walks, are used in community detection methods or in computation of centrality
measures for complex networks. The focus is on a number of known centrality
measures, which inherit the connections established for similarity matrices.
These measures are based on the principal eigenvector of the adjacency matrix,
path enumeration, as well as on the stationary state, stochastic matrix or mean
first-passage times of a random walk. Particular attention is paid to the
maximal-entropy random walk, which serves as a very distinct alternative to the
ordinary random walk used in network analysis.
The various importance measures, defined both with the use of ordinary random
walk and the maximal-entropy random walk, are compared numerically on a set of
benchmark graphs. It is shown that groups of centrality measures defined with
the two random walks cluster into two separate families. In particular, the
group of centralities for the maximal-entropy random walk, connected to the
eigenvector centrality and path enumeration, is strongly distinct from all the
other measures and produces largely equivalent results.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Clustering in Complex Directed Networks
Many empirical networks display an inherent tendency to cluster, i.e. to form
circles of connected nodes. This feature is typically measured by the
clustering coefficient (CC). The CC, originally introduced for binary,
undirected graphs, has been recently generalized to weighted, undirected
networks. Here we extend the CC to the case of (binary and weighted) directed
networks and we compute its expected value for random graphs. We distinguish
between CCs that count all directed triangles in the graph (independently of
the direction of their edges) and CCs that only consider particular types of
directed triangles (e.g., cycles). The main concepts are illustrated by
employing empirical data on world-trade flows
Anderson lattice with explicit Kondo coupling: general features and the field-induced suppression of heavy-fermion state in ferromagnetic phase
We apply the extended (statistically-consistent, SGA) Gutzwiller-type
approach to the periodic Anderson model (PAM) in an applied magnetic field and
in the strong correlation limit. The finite-U corrections are included
systematically by transforming PAM into the form with Kondo-type interaction
and residual hybridization, appearing both at the same time. This effective
Hamiltonian represents the essence of \textit{Anderson-Kondo lattice model}. We
show that in ferromagnetic phases the low-energy single-particle states are
strongly affected by the presence of the applied magnetic field. We also find
that for large values of hybridization strength the system enters the so-called
\textit{locked heavy fermion state}. In this state the chemical potential lies
in the majority-spin hybridization gap and as a consequence, the system
evolution is insensitive to further increase of the applied field. However, for
a sufficiently strong magnetic field, the system transforms from the locked
state to the fully spin-polarized phase. This is accompanied by a metamagnetic
transition, as well as by drastic reduction of the effective mass of
quasiparticles. In particular, we observe a reduction of effective mass
enhancement in the majority-spin subband by as much as 20% in the fully
polarized state. The findings are consistent with experimental results for
CeLaB compounds. The mass enhancement for the spin-minority
electrons may also diminish with the increasing field, unlike for the
quasiparticles states in a single narrow band in the same limit of strong
correlations
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