2,410 research outputs found

    Flux form Semi-Lagrangian methods for parabolic problems

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    A semi-Lagrangian method for parabolic problems is proposed, that extends previous work by the authors to achieve a fully conservative, flux-form discretization of linear and nonlinear diffusion equations. A basic consistency and convergence analysis are proposed. Numerical examples validate the proposed method and display its potential for consistent semi-Lagrangian discretization of advection--diffusion and nonlinear parabolic problems

    Preferential attachment in growing spatial networks

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    We obtain the degree distribution for a class of growing network models on flat and curved spaces. These models evolve by preferential attachment weighted by a function of the distance between nodes. The degree distribution of these models is similar to the one of the fitness model of Bianconi and Barabasi, with a fitness distribution dependent on the metric and the density of nodes. We show that curvature singularities in these spaces can give rise to asymptotic Bose-Einstein condensation, but transient condensation can be observed also in smooth hyperbolic spaces with strong curvature. We provide numerical results for spaces of constant curvature (sphere, flat and hyperbolic space) and we discuss the conditions for the breakdown of this approach and the critical points of the transition to distance-dominated attachment. Finally we discuss the distribution of link lengths.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures, revtex, final versio

    Condensation and topological phase transitions in a dynamical network model with rewiring of the links

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    Growing network models with both heterogeneity of the nodes and topological constraints can give rise to a rich phase structure. We present a simple model based on preferential attachment with rewiring of the links. Rewiring probabilities are modulated by the negative fitness of the nodes and by the constraint for the network to be a simple graph. At low temperatures and high rewiring rates, this constraint induces a Bose-Einstein condensation of paths of length 2, i.e. a new phase transition with an extended condensate of links. The phase space of the model includes further transitions in the scaling of the connected component and the degeneracy of the network.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure

    A fully semi-Lagrangian discretization for the 2D Navier--Stokes equations in the vorticity--streamfunction formulation

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    A numerical method for the two-dimensional, incompressible Navier--Stokes equations in vorticity--streamfunction form is proposed, which employs semi-Lagrangian discretizations for both the advection and diffusion terms, thus achieving unconditional stability without the need to solve linear systems beyond that required by the Poisson solver for the reconstruction of the streamfunction. A description of the discretization of Dirichlet boundary conditions for the semi-Lagrangian approach to diffusion terms is also presented. Numerical experiments on classical benchmarks for incompressible flow in simple geometries validate the proposed method

    Properties of neutrality tests based on allele frequency spectrum

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    One of the main necessities for population geneticists is the availability of statistical tools that enable to accept or reject the neutral Wright-Fisher model with high power. A number of statistical tests have been developed to detect specific deviations from the null frequency spectrum in different directions (i.e., Tajima's D, Fu and Li's F and D test, Fay and Wu's H). Recently, a general framework was proposed to generate all neutrality tests that are linear functions of the frequency spectrum. In this framework, a family of optimal tests was developed to have almost maximum power against a specific alternative evolutionary scenario. Following these developments, in this paper we provide a thorough discussion of linear and nonlinear neutrality tests. First, we present the general framework for linear tests and emphasize the importance of the property of scalability with the sample size (that is, the results of the tests should not depend on the sample size), which, if missing, can guide to errors in data interpretation. The motivation and structure of linear optimal tests are discussed. In a further generalization, we develop a general framework for nonlinear neutrality tests and we derive nonlinear optimal tests for polynomials of any degree in the frequency spectrum.Comment: 42 pages, 3 figures, elsarticl

    Non-Abelian vortices and monopoles in SO(N) theories

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    Non-Abelian BPS vortex solutions are constructed in N=2 theories with gauge groups SO(N)\times U(1). The model has N_f flavors of chiral multiplets in the vector representation of SO(N), and we consider a color-flavor locked vacuum in which the gauge symmetry is completely broken, leaving a global SO(N)_{C+F} diagonal symmetry unbroken. Individual vortices break this symmetry, acquiring continuous non-Abelian orientational moduli. By embedding this model in high-energy theories with a hierarchical symmetry breaking pattern such as SO(N+2) --> SO(N)\times U(1) --> 1, the correspondence between non-Abelian monopoles and vortices can be established through homotopy maps and flux matching, generalizing the known results in SU(N) theories. We find some interesting hints about the dual (non-Abelian) transformation properties among the monopoles.Comment: LaTeX, 26 pages and 4 figure

    Universality classes of interaction structures for NK fitness landscapes

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    Kauffman's NK-model is a paradigmatic example of a class of stochastic models of genotypic fitness landscapes that aim to capture generic features of epistatic interactions in multilocus systems. Genotypes are represented as sequences of LL binary loci. The fitness assigned to a genotype is a sum of contributions, each of which is a random function defined on a subset of k≤Lk \le L loci. These subsets or neighborhoods determine the genetic interactions of the model. Whereas earlier work on the NK model suggested that most of its properties are robust with regard to the choice of neighborhoods, recent work has revealed an important and sometimes counter-intuitive influence of the interaction structure on the properties of NK fitness landscapes. Here we review these developments and present new results concerning the number of local fitness maxima and the statistics of selectively accessible (that is, fitness-monotonic) mutational pathways. In particular, we develop a unified framework for computing the exponential growth rate of the expected number of local fitness maxima as a function of LL, and identify two different universality classes of interaction structures that display different asymptotics of this quantity for large kk. Moreover, we show that the probability that the fitness landscape can be traversed along an accessible path decreases exponentially in LL for a large class of interaction structures that we characterize as locally bounded. Finally, we discuss the impact of the NK interaction structures on the dynamics of evolution using adaptive walk models.Comment: 61 pages, 9 figure
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