80 research outputs found
Switch between critical percolation modes in city traffic dynamics
Percolation transition is widely observed in networks ranging from biology to
engineering. While much attention has been paid to network topologies, studies
rarely focus on critical percolation phenomena driven by network dynamics.
Using extensive real data, we study the critical percolation properties in city
traffic dynamics. Our results suggest that two modes of different critical
percolation behaviors are switching in the same network topology under
different traffic dynamics. One mode of city traffic (during nonrush hours or
days off) has similar critical percolation characteristics as small world
networks, while the other mode (during rush hours on working days) tends to
behave as a 2D lattice. This switching behavior can be understood by the fact
that the high-speed urban roads during nonrush hours or days off (that are
congested during rush hours) represent effective long-range connections, like
in small world networks. Our results might be useful for understanding and
improving traffic resilience.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Daqing Li, Ziyou Gao and H. Eugene Stanley are
the corresponding authors ([email protected], [email protected],
[email protected]
Structure and morphology of X-ray selected AGN hosts at 1<z<3 in CANDELS-COSMOS field
We analyze morphologies of the host galaxies of 35 X-ray selected active
galactic nucleus (AGNs) at in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS)
field using Hubble Space Telescope/WFC3 imaging taken from the Cosmic Assembly
Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS). We build a control
sample of 350 galaxies in total, by selecting ten non-active galaxies drawn
from the same field with the similar stellar mass and redshift for each AGN
host. By performing two dimensional fitting with GALFIT on the surface
brightness profile, we find that the distribution of Srsic index (n) of
AGN hosts does not show a statistical difference from that of the control
sample. We measure the nonparametric morphological parameters (the asymmetry
index A, the Gini coefficient G, the concentration index C and the M20 index)
based on point source subtracted images. All the distributions of these
morphological parameters of AGN hosts are consistent with those of the control
sample. We finally investigate the fraction of distorted morphologies in both
samples by visual classification. Only 15% of the AGN hosts have highly
distorted morphologies, possibly due to a major merger or interaction. We find
there is no significant difference in the distortion fractions between the AGN
host sample and control sample. We conclude that the morphologies of X-ray
selected AGN hosts are similar to those of nonactive galaxies and most AGN
activity is not triggered by major merger.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal Letter
(E)-N′-[4-(DimethylÂamino)ÂbenzylÂidene]-4-methylÂbenzohydrazide methanol monosolvate
In the title compound, C17H19N3O·CH3OH, the hydrazone molÂecule exists in a trans geometry with respect to the methylÂidene unit and the dihedral angle between the two substituted benzene rings is 42.6 (2)°. In the crystal, the components are linked through N—H⋯O and O—H⋯O hydrogen bonds, forming [100] chains of alternating hydrazone and methanol molÂecules
Scale-free resilience of real traffic jams
The concept of resilience can be realized in natural and engineering systems, representing the ability of system to adapt and recover from various disturbances. Although resilience is a critical property needed for understanding and managing the risks and collapses of transportation system, an accepted and useful definition of resilience for urban traffic as well as its statistical property under perturbations is still missing. Here we define city traffic resilience based on the spatio-temporal clusters of congestion in real traffic, and find that the resilience follows a scale free distribution in two-dimensional city road networks and one-dimensional highways, with different exponents, but similar exponents in different days and different cities. The traffic resilience is also revealed to have a novel scaling relation between the cluster size of the spatio-temporal jam and its recovery duration, independent of microscopic details. Our findings of universal traffic resilience can provide indication towards better understanding and designing these complex engineering systems under internal and external disturbances.
Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Document type: Articl
Scale-free Resilience of Real Traffic Jams
The concept of resilience can be realized in natural and engineering systems,
representing the ability of system to adapt and recover from various
disturbances. Although resilience is a critical property needed for
understanding and managing the risks and collapses of transportation system, an
accepted and useful definition of resilience for urban traffic as well as its
statistical property under perturbations is still missing. Here we define city
traffic resilience based on the spatio-temporal clusters of congestion in real
traffic, and find that the resilience follows a scale free distribution in
two-dimensional city road networks and one-dimensional highways, with different
exponents, but similar exponents in different days and different cities. The
traffic resilience is also revealed to have a novel scaling relation between
the cluster size of the spatio-temporal jam and its recovery duration,
independent of microscopic details. Our findings of universal traffic
resilience can provide indication towards better understanding and designing
these complex engineering systems under internal and external disturbances.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
An Open Unified Addressing System for 6G Communication Networks
With the rapid and continuous development of the Internet, it is foreseeable that current addressing schemes and fixed-length IP addresses would create further bottlenecks and limitations in realizing future 6G networking requirements, such as massive connections, resource-constrained communication, and heterogeneous hyper interconnections and guaranteeing agreement-based services and KPIs. Moreover, the locator-based addressing semantic is unsuitable for mobile and content-oriented networks. Thus, this paper proposes the Open Unified Addressing (OUA) system, a novel, flexible, multi-semantic and hierarchical addressing architecture that better supports the flexibility and extensibility of the Internet protocol framework in the context of 6G Communications. The OUA addresses several limitations in the current IP protocol and improves communication efficiency. According to the evaluation with two typical forwarding models, the results show that the OUA system has almost no impact on forwarding delay. Moreover, it can provide scalable addressing spaces and shorten the route convergence time
Progressive Text-to-Image Diffusion with Soft Latent Direction
In spite of the rapidly evolving landscape of text-to-image generation, the
synthesis and manipulation of multiple entities while adhering to specific
relational constraints pose enduring challenges. This paper introduces an
innovative progressive synthesis and editing operation that systematically
incorporates entities into the target image, ensuring their adherence to
spatial and relational constraints at each sequential step. Our key insight
stems from the observation that while a pre-trained text-to-image diffusion
model adeptly handles one or two entities, it often falters when dealing with a
greater number. To address this limitation, we propose harnessing the
capabilities of a Large Language Model (LLM) to decompose intricate and
protracted text descriptions into coherent directives adhering to stringent
formats. To facilitate the execution of directives involving distinct semantic
operations-namely insertion, editing, and erasing-we formulate the Stimulus,
Response, and Fusion (SRF) framework. Within this framework, latent regions are
gently stimulated in alignment with each operation, followed by the fusion of
the responsive latent components to achieve cohesive entity manipulation. Our
proposed framework yields notable advancements in object synthesis,
particularly when confronted with intricate and lengthy textual inputs.
Consequently, it establishes a new benchmark for text-to-image generation
tasks, further elevating the field's performance standards.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
Fine-grained Appearance Transfer with Diffusion Models
Image-to-image translation (I2I), and particularly its subfield of appearance
transfer, which seeks to alter the visual appearance between images while
maintaining structural coherence, presents formidable challenges. Despite
significant advancements brought by diffusion models, achieving fine-grained
transfer remains complex, particularly in terms of retaining detailed
structural elements and ensuring information fidelity. This paper proposes an
innovative framework designed to surmount these challenges by integrating
various aspects of semantic matching, appearance transfer, and latent
deviation. A pivotal aspect of our approach is the strategic use of the
predicted space by diffusion models within the latent space of diffusion
processes. This is identified as a crucial element for the precise and natural
transfer of fine-grained details. Our framework exploits this space to
accomplish semantic alignment between source and target images, facilitating
mask-wise appearance transfer for improved feature acquisition. A significant
advancement of our method is the seamless integration of these features into
the latent space, enabling more nuanced latent deviations without necessitating
extensive model retraining or fine-tuning. The effectiveness of our approach is
demonstrated through extensive experiments, which showcase its ability to
adeptly handle fine-grained appearance transfers across a wide range of
categories and domains. We provide our code at
https://github.com/babahui/Fine-grained-Appearance-TransferComment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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