33,247 research outputs found
Singularities and nonhyperbolic manifolds do not coincide
We consider the billiard flow of elastically colliding hard balls on the flat
-torus (), and prove that no singularity manifold can even
locally coincide with a manifold describing future non-hyperbolicity of the
trajectories. As a corollary, we obtain the ergodicity (actually the Bernoulli
mixing property) of all such systems, i.e. the verification of the
Boltzmann-Sinai Ergodic Hypothesis.Comment: Final version, to appear in Nonlinearit
The quantum group, Harper equation and the structure of Bloch eigenstates on a honeycomb lattice
The tight-binding model of quantum particles on a honeycomb lattice is
investigated in the presence of homogeneous magnetic field. Provided the
magnetic flux per unit hexagon is rational of the elementary flux, the
one-particle Hamiltonian is expressed in terms of the generators of the quantum
group . Employing the functional representation of the quantum group
the Harper equation is rewritten as a systems of two coupled
functional equations in the complex plane. For the special values of
quasi-momentum the entangled system admits solutions in terms of polynomials.
The system is shown to exhibit certain symmetry allowing to resolve the
entanglement, and basic single equation determining the eigenvalues and
eigenstates (polynomials) is obtained. Equations specifying locations of the
roots of polynomials in the complex plane are found. Employing numerical
analysis the roots of polynomials corresponding to different eigenstates are
solved out and the diagrams exhibiting the ordered structure of one-particle
eigenstates are depicted.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Algorithm Diversity for Resilient Systems
Diversity can significantly increase the resilience of systems, by reducing
the prevalence of shared vulnerabilities and making vulnerabilities harder to
exploit. Work on software diversity for security typically creates variants of
a program using low-level code transformations. This paper is the first to
study algorithm diversity for resilience. We first describe how a method based
on high-level invariants and systematic incrementalization can be used to
create algorithm variants. Executing multiple variants in parallel and
comparing their outputs provides greater resilience than executing one variant.
To prevent different parallel schedules from causing variants' behaviors to
diverge, we present a synchronized execution algorithm for DistAlgo, an
extension of Python for high-level, precise, executable specifications of
distributed algorithms. We propose static and dynamic metrics for measuring
diversity. An experimental evaluation of algorithm diversity combined with
implementation-level diversity for several sequential algorithms and
distributed algorithms shows the benefits of algorithm diversity
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