60 research outputs found
Machine Learning-Based Feasibility Checks for Dynamic Time Slot Management
Online grocers typically let customers choose a delivery time slot to receive their goods. To ensure a reliable service, the retailer may want to close time slots as capacity fills up. The number of customers that can be served per slot largely depends on the specific order sizes and delivery locations.
Conceptually, checking whether it is possible to serve a certain customer in a certain time slot given a set of already accepted customer orders involves solving a vehicle routing problem with time windows. This is challenging in practice as there is little time available and not all relevant information is known in advance. We explore the use of machine learning to support time slot decisions in this
context. Our results on realistic instances using a commercial route solver suggest that machine learning can be a promising way to assess the feasibility of customer insertions. On large-scale routing problems it performs better than insertion heuristic
On the linear forms of the Schrodinger equation
Generalizing the linearisation procedure used by Dirac and later by
L\'evy-Leblond, we derive the first-order non-relativistic wave equations for
particles of spin 1 and spin 3/2 starting from the Schrodinger equation
Scaling anomaly in cosmic string background
We show that the classical scale symmetry of a particle moving in cosmic
string background is broken upon inequivalent quantization of the classical
system, leading to anomaly. The consequence of this anomaly is the formation of
single bound state in the coupling interval \gamma\in(-1,1). The inequivalent
quantization is characterized by a 1-parameter family of self-adjoint extension
parameter \omega. It has been conjectured that the formation of loosely bound
state in cosmic string background may lead to the so called anomalous
scattering cross section for the particles, which is usually seen in molecular
physics.Comment: 4 pages,1 figur
The nuclear energy density functional formalism
The present document focuses on the theoretical foundations of the nuclear
energy density functional (EDF) method. As such, it does not aim at reviewing
the status of the field, at covering all possible ramifications of the approach
or at presenting recent achievements and applications. The objective is to
provide a modern account of the nuclear EDF formalism that is at variance with
traditional presentations that rely, at one point or another, on a {\it
Hamiltonian-based} picture. The latter is not general enough to encompass what
the nuclear EDF method represents as of today. Specifically, the traditional
Hamiltonian-based picture does not allow one to grasp the difficulties
associated with the fact that currently available parametrizations of the
energy kernel at play in the method do not derive from a genuine
Hamilton operator, would the latter be effective. The method is formulated from
the outset through the most general multi-reference, i.e. beyond mean-field,
implementation such that the single-reference, i.e. "mean-field", derives as a
particular case. As such, a key point of the presentation provided here is to
demonstrate that the multi-reference EDF method can indeed be formulated in a
{\it mathematically} meaningful fashion even if does {\it not} derive
from a genuine Hamilton operator. In particular, the restoration of symmetries
can be entirely formulated without making {\it any} reference to a projected
state, i.e. within a genuine EDF framework. However, and as is illustrated in
the present document, a mathematically meaningful formulation does not
guarantee that the formalism is sound from a {\it physical} standpoint. The
price at which the latter can be enforced as well in the future is eventually
alluded to.Comment: 64 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Euroschool Lecture Notes in Physics
Vol.IV, Christoph Scheidenberger and Marek Pfutzner editor
Hamilton's Formalism for Systems with Constraints
The main goal of these lectures is to introduce and review the Hamiltonian
formalism for classical constrained systems and in particular gauge theories.
Emphasis is put on the relation between local symmetries and constraints and on
the relation between Lagrangean and Hamiltonian symmetries.Comment: 52 pages, revised LATEX version, ETH-TH/93-48, Lectures given at the
Seminar "The Canonical Formalism in Classical and Quantum General
Relativity", Bad Honnef, September 9
In-plane Hall effect in c-axis-oriented MgB2 thin films
We have measured the longitudinal resistivity and the Hall resistivity in the
ab-plane of highly c-axis-oriented MgB2 thin films. In the normal state, the
Hall coefficient (R_H) behaves as R_H ~ T with increasing temperature (T) up to
130 K and then deviates from that linear T-dependence at higher temperatures.
The T^2 dependence of the cotangent of the Hall angle is only observed above
130 K. The mixed-state Hall effect reveals no sign anomaly over a wide range of
current densities from 10^2 to 10^4 A/cm^2 and for magnetic fields up to 5 T.Comment: 5 pages including 5 figure
SciPy 1.0: fundamental algorithms for scientific computing in Python.
SciPy is an open-source scientific computing library for the Python programming language. Since its initial release in 2001, SciPy has become a de facto standard for leveraging scientific algorithms in Python, with over 600 unique code contributors, thousands of dependent packages, over 100,000 dependent repositories and millions of downloads per year. In this work, we provide an overview of the capabilities and development practices of SciPy 1.0 and highlight some recent technical developments
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