70,974 research outputs found
Spin-Boson Model with Diagonal and Off-Diagonal Coupling to Two Independent Baths: Ground-State Phase Transition in the Deep Sub-Ohmic Regime
We investigate a spin-boson model with two boson baths that are coupled to
two perpendicular components of the spin by employing the density matrix
renormalization group method with an optimized boson basis. It is revealed that
in the deep sub-Ohmic regime there exists a novel second-order phase transition
between two types of doubly degenerate states, which is reduced to one of the
usual type for nonzero tunneling. In addition, it is found that expectation
values of the spin components display jumps at the phase boundary in the
absence of bias and tunneling.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A Chinese Way of Democratization?
With an equal social structure, China seems to be better prepared for a functioning democracy than other developing countries. It has stayed authoritarian because the CCP has successfully diverted the demand for democratization through tactics of economic growth, expansion of civil liberty, and selective accountability. However, the results of these tactics inevitably bring about forces and elements arguing and even fighting for democratization. As a result, there are more democratic elements in China than people usually believe and these elements are growing. Chinas path to democratization may prove to be appropriate taking into account Chinas recent history and cultural heritage.democracy, social structure, economic growth, expansion of civil liberty, and selective accountability
The Disinterested Government: An Interpretation of China's Economic Success in the Reform Era
In the last 30 years, China has achieved high economic growth and successfully transformed its economy from a planned economy to a market-based system. The country, to a large extent, has attained success through the recommendations proposed by standard economic theory. However, the role of political economy has been omitted from the literature: how did China adopt the right economic policies and the appropriate road to reform? This paper attempts to answer this question. The central assumption of the paper is that China achieved success because the Chinese government has been a disinterested party, i.e., a government that does not favour any particular sections of the population and prioritizes the long-term welfare of the whole society. In this paper, we first define and analyse the concept of disinterested governments, and then proceed to provide several examples to demonstrate that China has been characterized by a disinterested government. Based on a theoretical model, we also discuss the reasons of theDisinterested governments, the China miracle, econimic reform
Poisson Matrix Completion
We extend the theory of matrix completion to the case where we make Poisson
observations for a subset of entries of a low-rank matrix. We consider the
(now) usual matrix recovery formulation through maximum likelihood with proper
constraints on the matrix , and establish theoretical upper and lower bounds
on the recovery error. Our bounds are nearly optimal up to a factor on the
order of . These bounds are obtained by adapting
the arguments used for one-bit matrix completion \cite{davenport20121}
(although these two problems are different in nature) and the adaptation
requires new techniques exploiting properties of the Poisson likelihood
function and tackling the difficulties posed by the locally sub-Gaussian
characteristic of the Poisson distribution. Our results highlight a few
important distinctions of Poisson matrix completion compared to the prior work
in matrix completion including having to impose a minimum signal-to-noise
requirement on each observed entry. We also develop an efficient iterative
algorithm and demonstrate its good performance in recovering solar flare
images.Comment: Submitted to IEEE for publicatio
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