12,071 research outputs found

    A relation between chiral central charge and ground state degeneracy in 2+1-dimensional topological orders

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    A bosonic topological order on dd-dimensional closed space Σd\Sigma^d may have degenerate ground states. The space Σd\Sigma^d with different shapes (different metrics) form a moduli space MΣd{\cal M}_{\Sigma^d}. Thus the degenerate ground states on every point in the moduli space MΣd{\cal M}_{\Sigma^d} form a complex vector bundle over MΣd{\cal M}_{\Sigma^d}. It was suggested that the collection of such vector bundles for dd-dimensional closed spaces of all topologies completely characterizes the topological order. Using such a point of view, we propose a direct relation between two seemingly unrelated properties of 2+1-dimensional topological orders: (1) the chiral central charge cc that describes the many-body density of states for edge excitations (or more precisely the thermal Hall conductance of the edge), (2) the ground state degeneracy DgD_g on closed genus gg surface. We show that cDg/2Z, g3c D_g/2 \in \mathbb{Z},\ g\geq 3 for bosonic topological orders. We explicitly checked the validity of this relation for over 140 simple topological orders. For fermionic topological orders, let Dg,σeD_{g,\sigma}^{e} (Dg,σoD_{g,\sigma}^{o}) be the degeneracy with even (odd) number of fermions for genus-gg surface with spin structure σ\sigma. Then we have 2cDg,σeZ2c D_{g,\sigma}^{e} \in \mathbb{Z} and 2cDg,σoZ2c D_{g,\sigma}^{o} \in \mathbb{Z} for g3g\geq 3.Comment: 8 pages. This paper supersedes Section XIV of an unpublished work arXiv:1405.5858. We add new results on fermionic topological orders and some numerical check

    A General Framework for Complex Network Applications

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    Complex network theory has been applied to solving practical problems from different domains. In this paper, we present a general framework for complex network applications. The keys of a successful application are a thorough understanding of the real system and a correct mapping of complex network theory to practical problems in the system. Despite of certain limitations discussed in this paper, complex network theory provides a foundation on which to develop powerful tools in analyzing and optimizing large interconnected systems.Comment: 8 page

    A classification of 3+1D bosonic topological orders (I): the case when point-like excitations are all bosons

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    Topological orders are new phases of matter beyond Landau symmetry breaking. They correspond to patterns of long-range entanglement. In recent years, it was shown that in 1+1D bosonic systems there is no nontrivial topological order, while in 2+1D bosonic systems the topological orders are classified by a pair: a modular tensor category and a chiral central charge. In this paper, we propose a partial classification of topological orders for 3+1D bosonic systems: If all the point-like excitations are bosons, then such topological orders are classified by unitary pointed fusion 2-categories, which are one-to-one labeled by a finite group GG and its group 4-cocycle ω4H4[G;U(1)]\omega_4 \in \mathcal H^4[G;U(1)] up to group automorphisms. Furthermore, all such 3+1D topological orders can be realized by Dijkgraaf-Witten gauge theories.Comment: An important new result "Untwisted sector of dimension reduction is the Drinfeld center of E" is added in Sec. IIIC; other minor refinements and improvements; 23 pages, 10 figure

    A theory of 2+1D fermionic topological orders and fermionic/bosonic topological orders with symmetries

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    We propose that, up to invertible topological orders, 2+1D fermionic topological orders without symmetry and 2+1D fermionic/bosonic topological orders with symmetry GG are classified by non-degenerate unitary braided fusion categories (UBFC) over a symmetric fusion category (SFC); the SFC describes a fermionic product state without symmetry or a fermionic/bosonic product state with symmetry GG, and the UBFC has a modular extension. We developed a simplified theory of non-degenerate UBFC over a SFC based on the fusion coefficients NkijN^{ij}_k and spins sis_i. This allows us to obtain a list that contains all 2+1D fermionic topological orders (without symmetry). We find explicit realizations for all the fermionic topological orders in the table. For example, we find that, up to invertible p+ipp+\hspace{1pt}\mathrm{i}\hspace{1pt} p fermionic topological orders, there are only four fermionic topological orders with one non-trivial topological excitation: (1) the K=(1002)K={\scriptsize \begin{pmatrix} -1&0\\0&2\end{pmatrix}} fractional quantum Hall state, (2) a Fibonacci bosonic topological order 214/5B2^B_{14/5} stacking with a fermionic product state, (3) the time-reversal conjugate of the previous one, (4) a primitive fermionic topological order that has a chiral central charge c=14c=\frac14, whose only topological excitation has a non-abelian statistics with a spin s=14s=\frac14 and a quantum dimension d=1+2d=1+\sqrt{2}. We also proposed a categorical way to classify 2+1D invertible fermionic topological orders using modular extensions.Comment: 23 pages, 8 table

    Estimation and Decomposition of China’s Provincial Total Factor Productivity: Based on DEA Malmquist Index Method

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    Total factor productivity is thought to be the key factor to economic development, while related empirical studies on China’s total factor productivity estimation is limited. This paper using a Malmquist index model, estimated China’s provincial total factor productivity during 2009-2015, and decomposed total factor productivity into technological progress, technological efficiency and scale efficiency to study its affecting factors. The main results show that China’s total factor productivity has a limited contribution to economic development compared with before and total factor productivity in China has been declining since 2011.We also found the growth rate of China’s total factor productivity in less developed areas was greater than that of more developed areas, in which technological progress contributed most. However, further analysis shows that although China’s past TFP growth depend on technological progress, its effect is fading. We believe this paper have important policy implications that China should pay more attention to improving TFP through promoting efficiency, and China should also further improve self-innovation to promote technological progress growth. Keywords: economic growth, malmquist index model, total factor productivit

    Rejoinder: Quantifying the Fraction of Missing Information for Hypothesis Testing in Statistical and Genetic Studies

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    Rejoinder to "Quantifying the Fraction of Missing Information for Hypothesis Testing in Statistical and Genetic Studies" [arXiv:1102.2774]Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-STS244REJ the Statistical Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Quantifying the Fraction of Missing Information for Hypothesis Testing in Statistical and Genetic Studies

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    Many practical studies rely on hypothesis testing procedures applied to data sets with missing information. An important part of the analysis is to determine the impact of the missing data on the performance of the test, and this can be done by properly quantifying the relative (to complete data) amount of available information. The problem is directly motivated by applications to studies, such as linkage analyses and haplotype-based association projects, designed to identify genetic contributions to complex diseases. In the genetic studies the relative information measures are needed for the experimental design, technology comparison, interpretation of the data, and for understanding the behavior of some of the inference tools. The central difficulties in constructing such information measures arise from the multiple, and sometimes conflicting, aims in practice. For large samples, we show that a satisfactory, likelihood-based general solution exists by using appropriate forms of the relative Kullback--Leibler information, and that the proposed measures are computationally inexpensive given the maximized likelihoods with the observed data. Two measures are introduced, under the null and alternative hypothesis respectively. We exemplify the measures on data coming from mapping studies on the inflammatory bowel disease and diabetes. For small-sample problems, which appear rather frequently in practice and sometimes in disguised forms (e.g., measuring individual contributions to a large study), the robust Bayesian approach holds great promise, though the choice of a general-purpose "default prior" is a very challenging problem.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-STS244 the Statistical Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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