914 research outputs found

    Coalition Formation Game for Cooperative Cognitive Radio Using Gibbs Sampling

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    This paper considers a cognitive radio network in which each secondary user selects a primary user to assist in order to get a chance of accessing the primary user channel. Thus, each group of secondary users assisting the same primary user forms a coaltion. Within each coalition, sequential relaying is employed, and a relay ordering algorithm is used to make use of the relays in an efficient manner. It is required then to find the optimal sets of secondary users assisting each primary user such that the sum of their rates is maximized. The problem is formulated as a coalition formation game, and a Gibbs Sampling based algorithm is used to find the optimal coalition structure.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure

    The Dot-com Meltdown and the Web

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    Presents findings from a survey conducted between August and September 2001. Looks at how the collapse of the dot-com economy has had tangible effects on personal lives, and how online Americans have made quick adjustments to the changing Web environment

    The Social Medium Selection Game

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    We consider in this paper competition of content creators in routing their content through various media. The routing decisions may correspond to the selection of a social network (e.g. twitter versus facebook or linkedin) or of a group within a given social network. The utility for a player to send its content to some medium is given as the difference between the dissemination utility at this medium and some transmission cost. We model this game as a congestion game and compute the pure potential of the game. In contrast to the continuous case, we show that there may be various equilibria. We show that the potential is M-concave which allows us to characterize the equilibria and to propose an algorithm for computing it. We then give a learning mechanism which allow us to give an efficient algorithm to determine an equilibrium. We finally determine the asymptotic form of the equilibrium and discuss the implications on the social medium selection problem

    Reply to comments on ‘On the steadiness of separating meandering currents’

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    The authors thank Nof et al. for their comments on the authors’ paper ‘‘On the steadiness of separating meandering currents.’’ The authors’ paper was motivated by a series of papers by Nof et al. Under a certain set of conditions (reduced gravity, steady state, no meridional velocity at outflow, and parallel outflow), Nof et al. showed that a separating and retroflecting frictionless current cannot be steady because of a momentum imbalance. The main conclusion of the authors’ paper was that they agree with the Nof et al. result that a momentum imbalance exists and extended the proof to all possible configurations of retroflecting currents, even including friction. The authors’ results point to a new mechanism for the generation of variability in the ocean that is not related to dynamical instability of the flow. The main claim in the comments is that the authors incorrectly argued in the appendix that the steadystate solutions presented by Nof et al. in several papers fulfill the extra constraint u2 5g9h. In the original paper, the authors showed that it follows from the geostrophic assumption stated implicitly in all these Nof et al. papers, because the flow is assumed to be parallel. Nof et al. now argue that the flow is only approximately geostrophic in all Nof et al. papers. The authors show in this reply that for steady weakly meandering outflows approximate geostrophy does lead to a momentum imbalance paradox as Nof et al. claim. However, for a steady strongly meandering outflow, approximate geostrophy is not enough and one has to use the method explored by van Leeuwen and De Ruijter to derive a momentum imbalance paradox

    On the movements of deep mesoscale eddies in the North Atlantic

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    A simplified three layer model is considered in order to examine the movements of deep mesoscale eddies such as the isolated Mediterranean eddies observed off the Bahamas. These anticyclonic eddies are found in the permanent thermocline more than 6000 km away from their parent water mass and are characterized by a lens-like cross section...

    On the migration of isolated eddies with application to Gulf Stream rings

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    An analytical model describing the β-induced drift of isolated nonlinear eddies such as the cold- and warm-core rings observed in the Atlantic Ocean is proposed. The ocean is approximated by two layers and attention is focused on frictionless upper ocean eddies whose surface area is finite. These isolated eddies are nonlinear in the sense that (a) the corresponding Rossby number is relatively large and (b) the interface vertical displacements ( amplitudes ) are comparable to the upper layer undisturbed depth. Solutions for steadily translating eddies which carry their entire mass as they move are sought. Examination of the problem in a moving coordinate system enables one to construct such solutions analytically by using the equations of motion in an integrated form and a power series expansion.Significant differences between the behavior of cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies are found. Although both cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies drift to the west due to β, their speeds and dynamical behavior are very different. For some range of parameters the β-induced drift of an anticyclonic eddy differs by as much as 400% from the drift of a cyclonic eddy with similar characteristics. Furthermore, the β-induced translation of cyclonic eddies increases with size and decreases with amplitude whereas the speed of anticyclonic eddies decreases with size and increases with increasing amplitude. In addition, the translation of anticyclonic eddies is larger than the long wave speed (based on the undisturbed depth) whereas the translation of cyclonic eddies is smaller than the long wave speed. Since such a dynamical behavior is not revealed by quasi-geostrophic theory (which does not distinguish between cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies) it is suggested that nonlinearity plays an important role in the dynamics of some isolated rings.Application of the theory to the Gulf Stream rings suggests that the self-propelled movement due to β is ≈2 cm sec−1 for cold-core rings and ≈1 cm sec−1 for warm-core rings. Each ring may carry as much as 8–10,000 km3 of upper ocean water as it moves

    On the dynamics of equatorial outflows with application to the Amazon\u27s basin

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    A simplified model is considered in order to describe the dynamics of outflows of rivers or sea straits located at or near the equator. The model is steady, frictionless aod nondiffusive but the motions are not constrained to be quasigeostrophic. The geometry of the oceanic basin into which the outflow debouches is approximated by a wedge and the vertical structure of the flow is represented by two layers of different densities. Approximate solutions to the potential vorticity equation and the Bernoulli integral are obtained analytically...
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