37,055 research outputs found
The reconstruction of Rh(001) upon oxygen adsorption
We report on a first-principles study of the structure of O/Rh(001) at half a
monolayer of oxygen coverage, performed using density-functional theory. We
find that oxygen atoms sit at the center of the black squares of a chess-board,
, pattern. This structure is unstable against a rhomboid
distortion of the black squares, which shortens the distance between an O atom
and two of the four neighboring Rh atoms, while lengthening the distance with
respect to the other two. We actually find that the surface energy is further
lowered by allowing the O atom to get off the short diagonal of the rhombus so
formed. We predict that the latter distortion is associated with an
order-disorder transition, occurring below room temperature. The above rhomboid
distortion of the square lattice may be seen as a rotation of the empty, white,
squares. Our findings are at variance with recent claims based on STM images,
according to which it is instead the black squares which would rotate. We argue
that these images are indeed compatible with our predicted reconstruction
pattern.Comment: 14 pages (inclusive of 5 figures). To appear on Surface Scienc
Is a Technological Singularity near also for bots in MMOGs?
Using the idea of the Technological Singularity this essay offers some reflections on the possible future of bots in Massively Multiplayer Online Games (MMOGs). The paper starts by briefly introducing the notion of Technological Singularity as the advent of a super-intelligent Artificial Intelligence that could threaten human existence. Bots are computer programs that automate repetitive and time consuming activities for the Internet user. In MMOGs, bots are often used to cheat and could have nefarious effects on the gameplay. Assuming that bots are rudimentary forms of Artificial Intelligence that also pose a threat to MMOGs and their players, the paper presents some evidence-based trends of the future evolution of bots and the implications of these for Virtual Worlds research
Moving Image Preservation in Libraries
published or submitted for publicatio
Smoothness and asymptotic estimates of densities for SDEs with locally smooth coefficients and applications to square root-type diffusions
We study smoothness of densities for the solutions of SDEs whose coefficients
are smooth and nondegenerate only on an open domain . We prove that a smooth
density exists on and give upper bounds for this density. Under some
additional conditions (mainly dealing with the growth of the coefficients and
their derivatives), we formulate upper bounds that are suitable to obtain
asymptotic estimates of the density for large values of the state variable
("tail" estimates). These results specify and extend some results by Kusuoka
and Stroock [J. Fac. Sci. Univ. Tokyo Sect. IA Math. 32 (1985) 1--76], but our
approach is substantially different and based on a technique to estimate the
Fourier transform inspired from Fournier [Electron. J. Probab. 13 (2008)
135--156] and Bally [Integration by parts formula for locally smooth laws and
applications to equations with jumps I (2007) The Royal Swedish Academy of
Sciences]. This study is motivated by existing models for financial securities
which rely on SDEs with non-Lipschitz coefficients. Indeed, we apply our
results to a square root-type diffusion (CIR or CEV) with coefficients
depending on the state variable, that is, a situation where standard techniques
for density estimation based on Malliavin calculus do not apply. We establish
the existence of a smooth density, for which we give exponential estimates and
study the behavior at the origin (the singular point).Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AAP717 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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