11,008 research outputs found
On the variational distance of two trees
A widely studied model for generating sequences is to ``evolve'' them on a
tree according to a symmetric Markov process. We prove that model trees tend to
be maximally ``far apart'' in terms of variational distance.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051606000000196 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Water and the Biology of Prions and Plaques
This is an attempt to account for the insolubility and/or aggregation of prions and plaques in terms of a model of water consisting of an equilibrium between high 
density and low density microdomains. Hydrophobic molecules, including proteins, 
accumulate selectively into stable populations, enriched in high density water, at 
charged sites on biopolymers. In enriched high density water, proteins are probably 
partially unfolded and may precipitate out when released. All extracellular matrices 
contain such charged polymers. Prions, which have been shown to accumulate in soils 
and clays containing silicates and aluminates also probably accumulate in 
extracellular matrices. 
 
Release of proteins follows hydrolysis of the charged groups by highly reactive high 
density water. This is normally a slow process but is greatly accelerated by urea. 
Plaques may form with age and disease because of accumulation of urea and, perhaps, 
glucose in the blood. This favours precipitation of proteins emerging from matrices, 
rather than refolding and solution. Dialysis should, therefore, interfere with plaque 
formation and impede the development of some age-related diseases
A Hamiltonian treatment of stimulated Brillouin scattering in nanoscale integrated waveguides
We present a multimode Hamiltonian formulation for the problem of
opto-acoustic interactions in optical waveguides. We establish a Hamiltonian
representation of the acoustic field and then introduce a full system with a
simple opto-acoustic coupling that includes both photoelastic/electrostrictive
and radiation pressure/moving boundary effects. The Heisenberg equations of
motion are used to obtain coupled mode equations for quantized envelope
operators for the optical and acoustic fields. We show that the coupling
coefficients obtained coincide with those established earlier, but our
formalism provides a much simpler demonstration of the connection between
radiation pressure and moving boundary effects than in previous work [C. Wolff
et al, Physical Review A 92, 013836 (2015)].Comment: 39 pages: 20 pages for main article + 19 pages supplementary
information; 3 figure
Multiple output production with undesirable outputs : an application to nitrogen surplus in agriculture
Many production processes yield both good outputs and undesirable ones (e.g., pollutants). In this article we develop a generalization of a stochastic frontier model that is appropriate for such technologies. We discuss efficiency analysis and, in particular, define technical and environmental efficiency in the context of our model. We develop methods for carrying out Bayesian inference and apply them to a panel data set of Dutch dairy farms, where excess nitrogen production constitutes an important environmental problem
Bayesian modelling of skewness and kurtosis with two-piece scale and shape distributions
We formalise and generalise the definition of the family of univariate double
two--piece distributions, obtained by using a density--based transformation of
unimodal symmetric continuous distributions with a shape parameter. The
resulting distributions contain five interpretable parameters that control the
mode, as well as the scale and shape in each direction. Four-parameter
subfamilies of this class of distributions that capture different types of
asymmetry are discussed. We propose interpretable scale and location-invariant
benchmark priors and derive conditions for the propriety of the corresponding
posterior distribution. The prior structures used allow for meaningful
comparisons through Bayes factors within flexible families of distributions.
These distributions are applied to data from finance, internet traffic and
medicine, comparing them with appropriate competitors
A search for rapid optical variability in radio-quiet quasars
The detection of rapid variability on a time-scale of hours in radio-quiet
quasars (RQQSOs) could be a powerful discriminator between starburst, accretion
disc and relativistic jet models of these sources. This paper contains an
account of a dedicated search for rapid optical variability in RQQSOs. The
technique used differential photometry between the RQQSO and stars in the same
field of view of the CCD. The 23 RQQSOs that were observed all have high
luminosities (-27 1.
The total amount of observation time was about 60 hours and these observations
are part of an ongoing programme, started in September 1990, to search for
rapid variability in RQQSOs. No evidence for short-term variability greater
than about 0.1 magnitudes was detected in any of the 23 sources, however
long-term variability was recorded for the radio-quiet quasar PG 2112+059. The
finding charts are included here because they identify the RQQSO and the
reference stars used in the photometry, and hence are available for use by
other observers.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&AS. 10 pages, 3 figures. Figure 1
(finding charts) available by anonymous ftp from:
bermuda.ucd.ie:/pub/outgoing/charts.eps.g
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