6,286 research outputs found
Scalable Peer-to-Peer Indexing with Constant State
We present a distributed indexing scheme for peer to peer networks. Past work on distributed indexing traded off fast search times with non-constant degree topologies or network-unfriendly behavior such as flooding. In contrast, the scheme we present optimizes all three of these performance measures. That is, we provide logarithmic round searches while maintaining connections to a fixed number of peers and avoiding network flooding. In comparison to the well known scheme Chord, we provide competitive constant factors. Finally, we observe that arbitrary linear speedups are possible and discuss both a general brute force approach and specific economical optimizations
Polypyrrole Coated PET Fabrics for Thermal Applications
Polypyrrole can be chemically synthesized on PET fabrics, giving rise to textiles with high electric conductivity. These textiles are suitable for several applications from antistatic films to electromagnetic interference shielding devices. Here we discuss the thermal-electric performance and the heat generation of polypyrrole coated PET fabric samples, previously studied because of their electric conductivity and electromagnetic interference shielding effectiveness. The measured Seebeck effect is comparable with that of metallic thermocouples. Since polypyrrole shows extremely low thermal diffusivities regardless of the electrical conductivity, the low thermal conductivity gives significant advantage to the thermoelectric figure-of-merit ZT, comparable with that of some traditional inorganic thermoelectric materials. The heat generation is also investigated for possible heating textile devices. The results confirm polypyrrole as a prom- ising material for thermal electric applications due to its easy preparation in low cost processin
Importance of Understanding the Physical System in Selecting Separation of Variables Based Methods to Solve the Heat Conduction Partial Differential Equation
Separation of variables is a common method for producing an analytical based solution to partial differential equations. Despite the wide application of this method, often the physical phenomena described by the differential equations are not adequately involved in the discourse over the appropriate methods to solve a given problem, particularly in mathematics curricula. However, as mathematics is the tool to better understanding of the physical world, the meaning of the differential equation, boundary conditions, and initial conditions cannot be detached from the methods used to solve the differential equations. Failure to recognize the physical conditions being studied can lead to solution methods that are invalid or unphysical. This paper demonstrates how awareness of the physical nature of the system being investigated and its relationship to the mathematics can guide the selection of the relevant solution methods. To illustrate the importance of the comprehension of the physical meaning behind the mathematical equations and representations and the need to avoid rote application a solution technique, the logic behind the selection of the appropriate solution techniques for the one-dimensional transient heat conduction equation is considered under different imposed conditions which lead to different trends in system operation
Learning the monetary/fiscal interaction under trend inflation
How does a higher inflation target affect determinacy and learnability of rational expectations equilibria under alternative monetary/fiscal policy mixes in new Keynesian models? What is the role of central bank transparency? This article proves that in a non-Ricardian regime, determinacy and learnability conditions are insensitive to changes in trend inflation and to transparency issues: expectations stabilization requires taxes to react weakly to government debt. Conversely, a higher inflation target always destabilizes expectations under active monetary regimes. In a Ricardian regime, raising the inflation target requires a more hawkish central bank to attain determinacy. However, determinacy implies learnability only when agents are aware of both the inflation target and the central bank reaction function. If agents need to learn a positive inflation target, active monetary regimes are unstable. Therefore, fully disclosing the reaction function, including the target inflation rate, greatly increases the central bank\u2019s effectiveness in stabilizing expectations
On Resilient Behaviors in Computational Systems and Environments
The present article introduces a reference framework for discussing
resilience of computational systems. Rather than a property that may or may not
be exhibited by a system, resilience is interpreted here as the emerging result
of a dynamic process. Said process represents the dynamic interplay between the
behaviors exercised by a system and those of the environment it is set to
operate in. As a result of this interpretation, coherent definitions of several
aspects of resilience can be derived and proposed, including elasticity, change
tolerance, and antifragility. Definitions are also provided for measures of the
risk of unresilience as well as for the optimal match of a given resilient
design with respect to the current environmental conditions. Finally, a
resilience strategy based on our model is exemplified through a simple
scenario.Comment: The final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40860-015-0002-6 The paper considerably extends
the results of two conference papers that are available at http://ow.ly/KWfkj
and http://ow.ly/KWfgO. Text and formalism in those papers has been used or
adapted in the herewith submitted pape
Entanglement frustration in multimode Gaussian states
Bipartite entanglement between two parties of a composite quantum system can
be quantified in terms of the purity of one party and there always exists a
pure state of the total system that maximizes it (and minimizes purity). When
many different bipartitions are considered, the requirement that purity be
minimal for all bipartitions gives rise to the phenomenon of entanglement
frustration. This feature, observed in quantum systems with both discrete and
continuous variables, can be studied by means of a suitable cost function whose
minimizers are the maximally multipartite-entangled states (MMES). In this
paper we extend the analysis of multipartite entanglement frustration of
Gaussian states in multimode bosonic systems. We derive bounds on the
frustration, under the constraint of finite mean energy, in the low and high
energy limit.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Contribution to "Folding and Unfolding:
Interactions from Geometry. Workshop in honour of Giuseppe Marmo's 65th
birthday", 8-12 June 2011, Ischia (NA) Ital
Invariant measures on multimode quantum Gaussian states
We derive the invariant measure on the manifold of multimode quantum Gaussian
states, induced by the Haar measure on the group of Gaussian unitary
transformations. To this end, by introducing a bipartition of the system in two
disjoint subsystems, we use a parameterization highlighting the role of
nonlocal degrees of freedom -- the symplectic eigenvalues -- which characterize
quantum entanglement across the given bipartition. A finite measure is then
obtained by imposing a physically motivated energy constraint. By averaging
over the local degrees of freedom we finally derive the invariant distribution
of the symplectic eigenvalues in some cases of particular interest for
applications in quantum optics and quantum information.Comment: 17 pages, comments are welcome. v2: presentation improved and typos
corrected. Close to the published versio
Feynman graphs and the large dimensional limit of multipartite entanglement
We are interested in the properties of multipartite entanglement of a system
composed by -level parties (qudits).
Focussing our attention on pure states we want to tackle the problem of the
maximization of the entanglement for such systems. In particular we effort the
problem trying to minimize the purity of the system. It has been shown that not
for all systems this function can reach its lower bound, however it can be
proved that for all values of a can always be found such that the lower
bound can be reached.
In this paper we examine the high-temperature expansion of the distribution
function of the bipartite purity over all balanced bipartition considering its
optimization problem as a problem of statistical mechanics. In particular we
prove that the series characterizing the expansion converges and we analyze the
behavior of each term of the series as .Comment: 29 pages, 11 figure
Controlling inflation with timid monetary-fiscal regime changes
Can monetary policy control inflation when both monetary and fiscal policies change over time? When monetary policy is active, a long-run fiscal principle entails flexibility in fiscal policy that preserves determinacy even when deviating from passive fiscal, substantially for brief periods or timidly for prolonged periods. To guarantee a unique equilibrium, monetary and fiscal policies must coordinate not only within but also across regimes, and not simply on being active or passive, but also on their extent. The amplitude of deviations from the active monetary/passive fiscal benchmark determines whether a regime is Ricardian: timid deviations do not imply wealth effects
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