6,895 research outputs found
Partition theory: A very simple illustration
We illustrate the main features of a recently proposed method based on
ensemble density functional theory to divide rigorously a complex molecular
system into its parts [M.H. Cohen and A. Wasserman, J. Phys. Chem. A 111, 2229
(2007)]. The illustrative system is an analog of the hydrogen molecule for
which analytic expressions for the densities of the parts (hydrogen "atoms")
are found along with the "reactivity potential" that enters the theory. While
previous formulations of Chemical Reactivity Theory lead to zero, or undefined,
values for the chemical hardness of the isolated parts, we demonstrate they can
acquire a finite and positive hardness within the present formulation.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Cosmology in the Randall-Sundrum Brane World Scenario
The cosmology of the Randall-Sundrum scenario for a positive tension brane in
a 5-D Universe with localized gravity has been studied extensively recently.
Here we extend it to more general situations. We consider the time-dependent
situation where the two sides of the brane are different AdS/Schwarzschild
spaces. We show that the expansion rate in these models during inflation could
be larger than in brane worlds with compactified extra dimensions of fixed
size. The enhanced expansion rate could lead to the production of density
perturbations of substantially larger amplitude.Comment: 11 pages, revte
Interpretation of the angular dependence of the de Haas-van Alphen effect in MgB_2
We present detailed results for the amplitude and field dependence of the de
Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) signal arising from the electron-like sheet of
Fermi surface in MgB_2. Our data and analysis show that the dip in dHvA
amplitude when the field is close to the basal plane is caused by a beat
between two very similar dHvA frequencies and not a spin-zero effect as
previously assumed. Our results imply that the Stoner enhancement factors in
MgB_2 are small on both the Sigma and Pi sheets.Comment: 4 pages with figures. Submitted to PR
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
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On the effectiveness of run-time checks
Run-time checks are often assumed to be a cost-effective way of improving the dependability of software components, by checking required properties of their outputs and flagging an output as incorrect if it fails the check. However, evaluating how effective they are going to be in a future application is difficult, since the effectiveness of a check depends on the unknown faults of the program to which it is applied. A programming contest, providing thousands of programs written to the same specifications, gives us the opportunity to systematically test run-time checks to observe statistics of their effects on actual programs. In these examples, run-time checks turn out to be most effective for unreliable programs. For more reliable programs, the benefit is relatively low as compared to the gain that can be achieved by other (more expensive) measures, most notably multiple-version diversity
Social dynamics in conferences: analyses of data from the Live Social Semantics application
Popularity and spread of online social networking in recent years has given a great momentum to the study of dynamics and patterns of social interactions. However, these studies have often been confined to the online world, neglecting its interdependencies with the offline world. This is mainly due to the lack of real data that spans across this divide. The Live Social Semantics application is a novel platform that dissolves this divide, by collecting and integrating data about people from (a) their online social networks and tagging activities from popular social networking sites, (b) their publications and co-authorship networks from semantic repositories, and (c) their real-world face-to-face contacts with other attendees collected via a network of wearable active sensors. This paper investigates the data collected by this application during its deployment at three major conferences, where it was used by more than 400 people. Our analyses show the robustness of the patterns of contacts at various conferences, and the influence of various personal properties (e.g. seniority, conference attendance) on social networking patterns
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