996 research outputs found
Logical Pluralism: Where the Conflict Really Lies
Recent years have seen a surge of attention to the problem of logical pluralism; most of which has been a reaction to Beall and Restall’s account of logical pluralism as the existence of more than one equally correct semantic relation of logical consequence. The underlying thesis is that the indeterminacy of the notion of validity goes beyond what the inductive-deductive distinction can precisify. The notion of deductive validity itself is indeterminate as well and this indeterminacy has its roots in the indeterminacy of the more fundamental notion of case. Cases are what make the premisses and the conclusion of an argument true; the most notable example being Tarskian models for classical logic. Deductive validity is the preservation of truth across all cases. This paper argues that unless this account of logical pluralism is supplemented with an argument in favor of the equal legitimacy of the purported cases it becomes merely a semi-controversial exposition of how different logics can be generated
Correlations between Abelian Monopoles and center vortices
We study the correlations between center vortices and Abelian monopoles for
SU() gauge group. Combining fractional fluxes of monopoles, center vortex
fluxes are constructed in the thick center vortex model. Calculating the
potentials induced by fractional fluxes constructing the center vortex flux in
a thick center vortex-like model and comparing with the potential induced by
center vortices, we observe an attraction between fractional fluxes of
monopoles constructing the center vortex flux. We conclude that the center
vortex flux is stable, as expected. In addition, we show that adding a
contribution of the monopole-antimonopole pairs in the potentials induced by
center vortices ruins the Casimir scaling at intermediate regime.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Version accepted for publication in Nucl. Phys.
Center vortices as composites of monopole fluxes
We study the relation between the flux of a center vortex obtained from the
center vortex model and the flux formed between monopoles obtained from the
Abelian gauge fixing method. Motivated by the Monte Carlo simulations which
have shown that almost all monopoles are sitting on the top of vortices, we
construct the fluxes of center vortices for and gauge groups
using fractional fluxes of monopoles. Then, we compute the potentials in the
fundamental representation induced by center vortices and fractional fluxes of
monopoles. We show that by combining the fractional fluxes of monopoles one can
produce the center vortex fluxes for gauge group in a "center vortex
model". Comparing the potentials, we conclude that the fractional fluxes of
monopoles attract each other.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Contribution to the conference "Quark Confinement
and the Hadron Spectrum XI", Saint Petersburg, Russia, 7-12 Sep 201
Contributions of the center vortices and vacuum domain in potentials between static sources
In this paper, we study the role of the domain structure of the Yang Mills
vacuum. The Casimir scaling and -ality are investigated in the potentials
between static sources in various representations for and gauge
groups based on the domain structure model using square ansatz for angle
. We also discuss about the contributions of the vacuum domain
and center vortices in the static potentials. As a result, the potentials
obtained from vacuum domains agree with Casimir scaling better than the ones
obtained from center vortices. The reasons of these observations are
investigated by studying the behavior of the potentials obtained from vacuum
domains and center vortices and the properties of the group factors. Then, the
vacuum domains in and gauge groups are compared and we argue
that the vacuum is filled with center vortices of its subgroups.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, Resolutions of two figures are improved to
conform to the version published in JHE
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Silicon Germanium BiCMOS Integrated Circuits for Scalable Cryogenic Sensing Applications
This dissertation is focused on an investigation of BiCMOS cryogenic low noise amplifiers (LNAs) based on Silicon-germanium (SiGe) heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs) for simultaneous low noise and low power design and also taking advantage of CMOS circuitry for adding flexibility to the LNA design. Cryogenic LNAs\u27 scalability challenges are discussed and addressed in the dissertation. To achieve that, first, HBTs of three state-of-the-art technologies are characterized and modeled at cryogenic temperature. It is shown that SiGe HBT provides a promising compromise of noise temperature, power consumption, and bandwidth. Moreover, a scalable on-chip approach is proposed and verified for biasing of SiGe HBTs based LNAs. Finally, the first cryogenic re-configurable LNA is designed, implemented, and measured
Longitudinal models of iron status in a population-based cohort of mothers and children in southwest England
Longitudinal data requires special statistical methods because the observations on one subject tend to be correlated. (Although subjects can usually be assumed to be independent). When subjects are individually observed at varying sets of times with or without missing data, as is the case of ALSPAC data during pregnancy, then the resulting data is referred to as unbalanced data. This can cause further complications for the analysis.
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to longitudinal research of this topic by using mixed-effects models, which provide a powerful and flexible tool for the analysis of balanced and unbalanced data.
Although progress has been made in the study reported in this thesis, further extensions are required. As the longitudinal data typically need some structured covariance models, the overall findings indicate that when the number of occasions is large with some missing values, the use of polynomial function is inadequate to describe the model. This study highlights an approach that applies cubic spline in longitudinal modelling, including an emphasis on the use of graphical representation for exploratory analysis and the assessment of model fit.
Cubic splines provide a flexible tool for longitudinal data. The main objective of this study is to investigate a methodology to incorporate cubic spline with linear mixed models in modelling longitudinal data with number of time points and missing values
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