1,944 research outputs found
Effective action in spherical domains
The effective action on an orbifolded sphere is computed for minimally
coupled scalar fields. The results are presented in terms of derivatives of
Barnes zeta-functions and it is shown how these may be evaluated. Numerical
values are shown. An analytical, heat-kernel derivation of the Ces\`aro-Fedorov
formula for the number of symmetry planes of a regular solid is also presented.Comment: 18 pages, Plain TeX (Mailer oddities possibly corrected.
Studying Wythoff and Zometool Constructions using Maple
We describe a Maple package that serves at least four purposes. First, one
can use it to compute whether or not a given polyhedral structure is Zometool
constructible. Second, one can use it to manipulate Zometool objects, for
example to determine how to best build a given structure. Third, the package
allows for an easy computation of the polytopes obtained by the kaleiodoscopic
construction called the Wythoff construction. This feature provides a source of
multiple examples. Fourth, the package allows the projection on Coxeter planesComment: 11 pages, 11 figure
Exploiting classical nucleation theory for reverse self-assembly
In this paper we introduce a new method to design interparticle interactions
to target arbitrary crystal structures via the process of self-assembly. We
show that it is possible to exploit the curvature of the crystal nucleation
free-energy barrier to sample and select optimal interparticle interactions for
self-assembly into a desired structure. We apply this method to find
interactions to target two simple crystal structures: a crystal with simple
cubic symmetry and a two-dimensional plane with square symmetry embedded in a
three-dimensional space. Finally, we discuss the potential and limits of our
method and propose a general model by which a functionally infinite number of
different interaction geometries may be constructed and to which our reverse
self-assembly method could in principle be applied.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Published in the Journal of Chemical Physic
Mixing Convex Polytopes
The mixing operation for abstract polytopes gives a natural way to construct
the minimal common cover of two polytopes. In this paper, we apply this
construction to the regular convex polytopes, determining when the mix is again
a polytope, and completely determining the structure of the mix in each case
Geometrical Frustration and Static Correlations in Hard-Sphere Glass Formers
We analytically and numerically characterize the structure of hard-sphere
fluids in order to review various geometrical frustration scenarios of the
glass transition. We find generalized polytetrahedral order to be correlated
with increasing fluid packing fraction, but to become increasingly irrelevant
with increasing dimension. We also find the growth in structural correlations
to be modest in the dynamical regime accessible to computer simulations.Comment: 21 pages; part of the "Special Topic Issue on the Glass Transition
Infinitesimal rigidity of a compact hyperbolic 4-orbifold with totally geodesic boundary
Kerckhoff and Storm conjectured that compact hyperbolic n-orbifolds with
totally geodesic boundary are infinitesimally rigid when n>3. This paper
verifies this conjecture for a specific example based on the 4-dimensional
hyperbolic 120-cell.Comment: 9 page
Symmetry in Regular Polyhedra Seen as 2D Möbius Transformations: Geodesic and Panel Domes Arising from 2D Diagrams
This paper shows a methodology for reducing the complex design process of space structures to an adequate selection of points lying on a plane. This procedure can be directly implemented in a bi-dimensional plane when we substitute (i) Euclidean geometry by bi-dimensional projection of the elliptic geometry and (ii) rotations/symmetries on the sphere by Möbius transformations on the plane. These graphs can be obtained by sites, specific points obtained by homological transformations in the inversive plane, following the analogous procedure defined previously in the three-dimensional space. From the sites, it is possible to obtain different partitions of the plane, namely, power diagrams, Voronoi diagrams, or Delaunay triangulations. The first
would generate geo-tangent structures on the sphere; the second, panel structures; and the third, lattice structures
Majority-vote model on hyperbolic lattices
We study the critical properties of a non-equilibrium statistical model, the
majority-vote model, on heptagonal and dual heptagonal lattices. Such lattices
have the special feature that they only can be embedded in negatively curved
surfaces. We find, by using Monte Carlo simulations and finite-size analysis,
that the critical exponents , and are different
from those of the majority-vote model on regular lattices with periodic
boundary condition, which belongs to the same universality class as the
equilibrium Ising model. The exponents are also from those of the Ising model
on a hyperbolic lattice. We argue that the disagreement is caused by the
effective dimensionality of the hyperbolic lattices. By comparative studies, we
find that the critical exponents of the majority-vote model on hyperbolic
lattices satisfy the hyperscaling relation
, where is an
effective dimension of the lattice. We also investigate the effect of boundary
nodes on the ordering process of the model.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
On the epistemic view of quantum states
We investigate the strengths and limitations of the Spekkens toy model, which
is a local hidden variable model that replicates many important properties of
quantum dynamics. First, we present a set of five axioms that fully encapsulate
Spekkens' toy model. We then test whether these axioms can be extended to
capture more quantum phenomena, by allowing operations on epistemic as well as
ontic states. We discover that the resulting group of operations is isomorphic
to the projective extended Clifford Group for two qubits. This larger group of
operations results in a physically unreasonable model; consequently, we claim
that a relaxed definition of valid operations in Spekkens' toy model cannot
produce an equivalence with the Clifford Group for two qubits. However, the new
operations do serve as tests for correlation in a two toy bit model, analogous
to the well known Horodecki criterion for the separability of quantum states.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure
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