13,437 research outputs found
Delay differential equations driven by Levy processes: stationarity and Feller properties
We consider a stochastic delay differential equation driven by a general Levy
process. Both, the drift and the noise term may depend on the past, but only
the drift term is assumed to be linear. We show that the segment process is
eventually Feller, but in general not eventually strong Feller on the Skorokhod
space. The existence of an invariant measure is shown by proving tightness of
the segments using semimartingale characteristics and the Krylov-Bogoliubov
method. A counterexample shows that the stationary solution in completely
general situations may not be unique, but in more specific cases uniqueness is
established.Comment: 28 page
Laser radar studies: A study of the feasibility of remote measurement of atmospheric density and turbidity by means of rotational Raman scattering of laser light
A remote sensing technique is described which utilizes elastic scattering and rotational Raman scattering of laser light in the atmosphere to obtain soundings of turbidity, transmissivity and density. A scheme is devised whereby, through selective weighting of the rotational Raman lines, the effect of atmospheric temperature structure may be eliminated. The close spectral proximity of the elastic and Raman-scattered signals, combined with the fact that the Raman scattering is quite weak, produces special requirements for the spectroscopic and light-gathering components of a rotational Raman laser radar system. These requirements are investigated. A computation of typical signal-to-noise ratios is made. It is shown that daytime signal-to-noise ratios greater than 10 db are to be expected for observation heights of 5 km and below. For nighttime work, 10 db signal-to-noise ratios are achievable to altitudes as high as 15 km
Effect of load introduction on graphite epoxy compression specimens
Compression testing of modern composite materials is affected by the manner in which the compressive load is introduced. Two such effects are investigated: (1) the constrained edge effect which prevents transverse expansion and is common to all compression testing in which the specimen is gripped in the fixture; and (2) nonuniform gripping which induces bending into the specimen. An analytical model capable of quantifying these foregoing effects was developed which is based upon the principle of minimum complementary energy. For pure compression, the stresses are approximated by Fourier series. For pure bending, the stresses are approximated by Legendre polynomials
Osmotic force resisting chain insertion in a colloidal suspension
We consider the problem of inserting a stiff chain into a colloidal
suspension of particles that interact with it through excluded volume forces.
The free energy of insertion is associated with the work of creating a cavity
devoid of colloid and sufficiently large to accomodate the chain. The
corresponding work per unit length is the force that resists the entry of the
chain into the colloidal suspension. In the case of a hard sphere fluid, this
work can be calculated straightforwardly within the scaled particle theory; for
solutions of flexible polymers, on the other hand, we employ simple scaling
arguments. The forces computed in these ways are shown, for nanometer chain and
colloid diameters, to be of the order of tens of pN for solution volume
fraction for biophysical processes such as the ejection of DNA from viral
capsids into the cell cytoplasm.Comment: 16 pages,3 figures. Accepted for publication in European Physical
Journal
Transaction Costs in Dealer Markets: Evidence From The London Stock Exchange
This paper describes regularities in the intraday spreads and prices quoted by dealers on the London Stock Exchange. It develops a measure of spread-related transaction costs, one that recognizes dealers' willingness to price trades within their quoted spreads. This measure of transaction costs shows that trading costs are systematically related to a trade's size, characteristics of the trading counterparties, and security characteristics. Customers pay the full spread on small trades while medium to large trades receive more favorable execution. Market makers only discount very large customer trades while dealers regularly discount medium to large trades. Inter-dealer trades generally receive favorable execution, and discounts increase in size. Market makers do not discount trades with each other over the phone, but do discount when trading anonymously using inter-dealer-brokers. Quoted and touch spreads are falling in the number of market makers. The rate of decline is interpreted as reflecting economies of scale in market making.
Anomalous Hall effect in the Co-based Heusler compounds CoFeSi and CoFeAl
The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in the Heusler compounds CoFeSi and
CoFeAl is studied in dependence of the annealing temperature to achieve a
general comprehension of its origin. We have demonstrated that the crystal
quality affected by annealing processes is a significant control parameter to
tune the electrical resistivity as well as the anomalous Hall
resistivity . Analyzing the scaling behavior of in
terms of points to a temperature-dependent skew scattering as the
dominant mechanism in both Heusler compounds
Strong Magnetization Measured in the Cool Cores of Galaxy Clusters
Tangential discontinuities, seen as X-ray edges known as cold fronts (CFs),
are ubiquitous in cool-core galaxy clusters. We analyze all 17 deprojected CF
thermal profiles found in the literature, including three new CFs we
tentatively identify (in clusters A2204 and 2A0335). We discover small but
significant thermal pressure drops below all nonmerger CFs, and argue that they
arise from strong magnetic fields below and parallel to the discontinuity,
carrying 10%-20% of the pressure. Such magnetization can stabilize the CFs, and
explain the CF-radio minihalo connection.Comment: PRL accepted, additional control tests adde
Robots as persons? Implications for moral education
At present there is a clear distinction between robots and persons. In this article I explore the possibility that this distinction may not hold in perpetuity, as some robots attain personhood. I argue that personhood is an emergent property in both the development of individuals and the evolution of life, that personhood may not require a carbon-based existence, and that, given that robots are being made with ever greater powers of cognition, at some point these powers of cognition may reach the point at which we need to start talking of robots as having minds and being persons. This will have implications for how we treat robots, for how we design robots and for how we understand ourselves and other creatures. There are also implications for moral education that may need to be taken seriously
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