5,665 research outputs found
A Tight Lower Bound on the Sub-Packetization Level of Optimal-Access MSR and MDS Codes
The first focus of the present paper, is on lower bounds on the
sub-packetization level of an MSR code that is capable of carrying out
repair in help-by-transfer fashion (also called optimal-access property). We
prove here a lower bound on which is shown to be tight for the case
by comparing with recent code constructions in the literature.
We also extend our results to an MDS code over the vector alphabet.
Our objective even here, is on lower bounds on the sub-packetization level
of an MDS code that can carry out repair of any node in a subset of
nodes, where each node is repaired (linear repair) by
help-by-transfer with minimum repair bandwidth. We prove a lower bound on
for the case of . This bound holds for any and
is shown to be tight, again by comparing with recent code constructions in the
literature. Also provided, are bounds for the case .
We study the form of a vector MDS code having the property that we can repair
failed nodes belonging to a fixed set of nodes with minimum repair
bandwidth and in optimal-access fashion, and which achieve our lower bound on
sub-packetization level . It turns out interestingly, that such a code
must necessarily have a coupled-layer structure, similar to that of the Ye-Barg
code.Comment: Revised for ISIT 2018 submissio
Radiative stability of neutrino-mass textures
Neutrino-mass textures proposed at high-scales are known to be unstable
against radiative corrections especially for nearly degenerate eigen values.
Within the renormalization group constraints we find a mechanism in a class of
gauge theories which guarantees reproduction of any high-scale texture at low
energies with radiative stability. We also show how the mechanism explains
solar and atmospheric neutrino anomalies through the bimaximal texture at high
scale.Comment: 4 pages REVTEX, 1 Postscript fi
Canonical Constraints on Leptonic Cp Violation using UHCR neutrino fluxes
It is shown that one can in principle constrain the CP-violating parameter
delta from measurements of four independant |V_{ij}|^2, or three of them and a
ratio, in the leptonic sector. To quantify our approach, using unitarity, we
derive simple expressions in terms of four independant |V_{ij}|^2 for
cos(delta) and an expression for sin^2(delta) from J^2. Thus, depending on the
values of |V_{ij}| and their accuracy, we can set meaningful limits on |delta|.
To illustrate numerically, if |V_{u1}|^2 is close to 0.1 with a 10% precision,
and if |V_{e3}^2 is larger than 0.005 and for values of |V_{e2}|^2 and
|V_{u3}|^2 that stay within +-0.1 of the current experimental data leads to a
bound pi/2 < |delta| < pi. Alternatively, a certain combination of parameters
with values of |V_{e3}|^2 larger than 0.01 leads to a closed bound of 73 <
|delta| < 103. In general, we find that it is better to use |V_{u1}|^2 or
|V_{t1}|^2 as the fourth independant |V_{ij}|^2 and that over most of the
parameter space, delta is least sensitive to |V_{e3}|^2. With just three
independant measurements (solar, atmospheric and reactor) it is impossible to
set limits on the CP phase. In this respect, we study the use of ultra high
energy cosmic (UHCR) neutrino fluxes as the additional fourth information. We
find that within the SM, neutrino fluxes of all three flavours will be very
similar but that pushing current neutrino data to their extreme values still
allowed, ratios of cosmic neutrino fluxes can differ by up to 20%; such large
discrepancies could imply negligibly small CP-violation. We also study a non
radiative neutrino decay model and find that the neutrino fluxes can differ by
a factor of up to 3 within this model and that an accuracy of 10% on the
neutrino fluxes is sufficient to set interestin limits on delta.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 5 table
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