7,254 research outputs found
Erectable modular space station Patent
Manned space station collapsible for launching and self-erectable in orbi
The effect of additive noise on dynamical hysteresis
We investigate the properties of hysteresis cycles produced by a
one-dimensional, periodically forced Langevin equation. We show that depending
on amplitude and frequency of the forcing and on noise intensity, there are
three qualitatively different types of hysteresis cycles. Below a critical
noise intensity, the random area enclosed by hysteresis cycles is concentrated
near the deterministic area, which is different for small and large driving
amplitude. Above this threshold, the area of typical hysteresis cycles depends,
to leading order, only on the noise intensity. In all three regimes, we derive
mathematically rigorous estimates for expectation, variance, and the
probability of deviations of the hysteresis area from its typical value.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figure
On the noise-induced passage through an unstable periodic orbit II: General case
Consider a dynamical system given by a planar differential equation, which
exhibits an unstable periodic orbit surrounding a stable periodic orbit. It is
known that under random perturbations, the distribution of locations where the
system's first exit from the interior of the unstable orbit occurs, typically
displays the phenomenon of cycling: The distribution of first-exit locations is
translated along the unstable periodic orbit proportionally to the logarithm of
the noise intensity as the noise intensity goes to zero. We show that for a
large class of such systems, the cycling profile is given, up to a
model-dependent change of coordinates, by a universal function given by a
periodicised Gumbel distribution. Our techniques combine action-functional or
large-deviation results with properties of random Poincar\'e maps described by
continuous-space discrete-time Markov chains.Comment: 44 pages, 4 figure
Universality of residence-time distributions in non-adiabatic stochastic resonance
We present mathematically rigorous expressions for the residence-time and
first-passage-time distributions of a periodically forced Brownian particle in
a bistable potential. For a broad range of forcing frequencies and amplitudes,
the distributions are close to periodically modulated exponential ones.
Remarkably, the periodic modulations are governed by universal functions,
depending on a single parameter related to the forcing period. The behaviour of
the distributions and their moments is analysed, in particular in the low- and
high-frequency limits.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure New version includes distinction between
first-passage-time and residence-time distribution
Memory Effects and Scaling Laws in Slowly Driven Systems
This article deals with dynamical systems depending on a slowly varying
parameter. We present several physical examples illustrating memory effects,
such as metastability and hysteresis, which frequently appear in these systems.
A mathematical theory is outlined, which allows to show existence of hysteresis
cycles, and determine related scaling laws.Comment: 28 pages (AMS-LaTeX), 18 PS figure
Rituals of an African Zionist Church
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented December 1967
On the Rational Type 0f Moment Angle Complexes
In this note it is shown that the moment angle complexes Z(K;(D^2,,S^1))
which are rationally elliptic are a product of odd spheres and a diskComment: This version avoids the use of an incorrect result from the
literature in the proof of Theorem 1.3. There is some text overlap with
arXiv:1410.645
Beyond the Fokker-Planck equation: Pathwise control of noisy bistable systems
We introduce a new method, allowing to describe slowly time-dependent
Langevin equations through the behaviour of individual paths. This approach
yields considerably more information than the computation of the probability
density. The main idea is to show that for sufficiently small noise intensity
and slow time dependence, the vast majority of paths remain in small space-time
sets, typically in the neighbourhood of potential wells. The size of these sets
often has a power-law dependence on the small parameters, with universal
exponents. The overall probability of exceptional paths is exponentially small,
with an exponent also showing power-law behaviour. The results cover time spans
up to the maximal Kramers time of the system. We apply our method to three
phenomena characteristic for bistable systems: stochastic resonance, dynamical
hysteresis and bifurcation delay, where it yields precise bounds on transition
probabilities, and the distribution of hysteresis areas and first-exit times.
We also discuss the effect of coloured noise.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figure
Metastability in Interacting Nonlinear Stochastic Differential Equations II: Large-N Behaviour
We consider the dynamics of a periodic chain of N coupled overdamped
particles under the influence of noise, in the limit of large N. Each particle
is subjected to a bistable local potential, to a linear coupling with its
nearest neighbours, and to an independent source of white noise. For strong
coupling (of the order N^2), the system synchronises, in the sense that all
oscillators assume almost the same position in their respective local potential
most of the time. In a previous paper, we showed that the transition from
strong to weak coupling involves a sequence of symmetry-breaking bifurcations
of the system's stationary configurations, and analysed in particular the
behaviour for coupling intensities slightly below the synchronisation
threshold, for arbitrary N. Here we describe the behaviour for any positive
coupling intensity \gamma of order N^2, provided the particle number N is
sufficiently large (as a function of \gamma/N^2). In particular, we determine
the transition time between synchronised states, as well as the shape of the
"critical droplet", to leading order in 1/N. Our techniques involve the control
of the exact number of periodic orbits of a near-integrable twist map, allowing
us to give a detailed description of the system's potential landscape, in which
the metastable behaviour is encoded
Debating the OO debate: where is the problem?
Abstract: In this paper we discuss problems related to the teaching of object-oriented programming (OOP). We argue that more research on how the computer science teacher understands OOP would be beneficial. Our argument takes its point of departure in three sets of studies: (1) an ongoing study on how computer science teachers understand core concepts of OOP, (2) a study of how the teaching of OOP is discussed within the CS community, and (3) a set of studies that discuss the different ways in which CS teachers experience their teaching. This paper reports on an ongoing study of the different ways in which computing science teachers understand object- oriented programming, and what they mean when use the term objects first.. The phenomenographic research approach has been applied to the analysis of a discussion that occurred in the SIGCSE-members mailing list. Two understandings of objects first have been identified: (1) as an extension of imperative programming, and (2) as conceptually different from imperative programming. These two understandings are illustrated via the differing ways in which computing science teachers use the term polymorphism
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