11,186 research outputs found
Countable groups are mapping class groups of hyperbolic 3-manifolds
We prove that for every countable group G there exists a hyperbolic
3-manifold M such that the isometry group of M, the mapping class group of M,
and the outer automorphism group of the fundamental group of M are isomorphic
to G.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Dehn filling of cusped hyperbolic 3-manifolds with geodesic boundary
We define for each g>=2 and k>=0 a set M_{g,k} of orientable hyperbolic
3-manifolds with toric cusps and a connected totally geodesic boundary of
genus g. Manifolds in M_{g,k} have Matveev complexity g+k and Heegaard genus
g+1, and their homology, volume, and Turaev-Viro invariants depend only on g
and k. In addition, they do not contain closed essential surfaces. The
cardinality of M_{g,k} for a fixed k has growth type g^g. We completely
describe the non-hyperbolic Dehn fillings of each M in M_{g,k}, showing that,
on any cusp of any hyperbolic manifold obtained by partially filling M, there
are precisely 6 non-hyperbolic Dehn fillings: three contain essential discs,
and the other three contain essential annuli. This gives an infinite class of
large hyperbolic manifolds (in the sense of Wu) with boundary-reducible and
annular Dehn fillings having distance 2, and allows us to prove that the
corresponding upper bound found by Wu is sharp. If M has one cusp only, the
three boundary-reducible fillings are handlebodies.Comment: 28 pages, 16 figure
One-point statistics and intermittency of induced electric field in the solar wind
The interplanetary induced electric field e=vxb is studied, using solar wind
time series. The probability distribution functions (PDFs) of the electric
field components are measured from the data and their non-gaussianity is
discussed. Moreover, for the first time we show that the electric field
turbulence is characterized by intermittency. This point is addressed by
studying, as usual, the scaling of the PDFs of field increments, which allows a
quantitative characterization of intermittency.Comment: Accepted for publication on Europhysics Letters, April 22th, 200
Exploring a New ExpAce: The Complementarities between Experimental Economics and Agent-based Computational Economics
What is the relationship, if any, between Experimental Economics and Agent-based Computational Economics? Experimental Economics (EXP) investigates individual behaviour (and the emergence of aggregate regularities) by means of human subject experiments. Agent-based Computational Economics (ACE), on the other hand, studies the relationships between the micro and the macro level with the aid of artificial experiments. Note that the way ACE makes use of experiments to formulate theories is indeed similar to the way EXP does. The question we want to address is whether they can complement and integrate with each other. What can Agent-based computational Economics give to, and take from, Experimental Economics? Can they help and sustain each other, and ultimately gain space out of their restricted respective niches of practitioners? We believe that the answer to all these questions is yes: there can be and there should be profitable “contaminations” in both directions, of which we provide a first comprehensive discussion.Experimental Economics, Agent-based Computational Economics, Agent-Based Models, Simulation.
Financial integration, international portfolio choice and the European Monetary Union
We investigate the determinants of bilateral international equity and bond portfolio reallocation across a large cross section of countries over the 1997 to 2001 period. We first argue that financial integration is not a global phenomenon, as equity and bond home biases declined significantly only among European countries, Australia, New Zealand and Singapore. Then, we show that the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) eased the access to the equity market and, to a larger extent, the bond market; thereby, enhancing regional financial integration in the euro area. Beside the effect of the EMU, the strongest determinants of the changes in portfolio weights are expected diversification benefits and the initial degree of underweight. JEL Classification: C13, C21, F37, G11EMU, home bias, International portfolio weights, Risk diversification
The M101 group complex: new dwarf galaxy candidates and spatial structure
The fine details of the large-scale structure in the local universe provide
important empirical benchmarks for testing cosmological models of structure
formation. Dwarf galaxies are key object for such studies. Enlarge the sample
of known dwarf galaxies in the local universe. We performed a search for faint,
unresolved low-surface brightness dwarf galaxies in the M101 group complex,
including the region around the major spiral galaxies M101, M51, and M63 lying
at a distance 7.0, 8.6, and 9.0 Mpc, respectively. The new dwarf galaxy sample
can be used in a first step to test for significant substructure in the
2D-distribution and in a second step to study the spatial distribution of the
galaxy complex. Using filtering algorithms we surveyed 330 square degrees of
imaging data obtained from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The images were
visually inspected. The spatial distribution of known galaxies and candidates
was analyzed transforming the system into a M101 eigenframe, using the
geometrical alignment of the group. We discovered 15 new dwarf galaxies and
carried out surface photometry in the g and r bands. The similarity of the
photometric properties of these dwarfs to those of Local Group dwarfs suggest
membership to the M101 group complex. The sky distribution of the candidates
follows the thin planar structure outlined by the known members of the three
subgroups. The ~3Mpc long filamentary structure has a rms thickness of 67 kpc.
The planar structure of the embedded M101 subgroup is even thinner, with rms=46
kpc. The formation of this structure might be due to the expansion of the Local
Void to which it borders. Other implications are discussed as well. We show the
viability of SDSS data to extend the sample of dwarfs in the local universe and
test cosmological models on small scales.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Exceptional thermodynamics: The equation of state of G(2) gauge theory
We present a lattice study of the equation of state in Yang-Mills theory
based on the exceptional G(2) gauge group. As is well-known, at zero
temperature this theory shares many qualitative features with real-world QCD,
including the absence of colored states in the spectrum and dynamical string
breaking at large distances. In agreement with previous works, we show that at
finite temperature this theory features a first-order deconfining phase
transition, whose nature can be studied by a semi-classical computation. We
also show that the equilibrium thermodynamic observables in the deconfined
phase bear striking quantitative similarities with those found in SU(N) gauge
theories: in particular, these quantities exhibit nearly perfect
proportionality to the number of gluon degrees of freedom, and the trace
anomaly reveals a characteristic quadratic dependence on the temperature, also
observed in SU(N) Yang-Mills theories (both in four and in three spacetime
dimensions). We compare our lattice data with analytical predictions from
effective models, and discuss their implications for the deconfinement
mechanism and high-temperature properties of strongly interacting,
non-supersymmetric gauge theories. Our results give strong evidence for the
conjecture that the thermal deconfining transition is governed by a universal
mechanism, common to all simple gauge groups.Comment: 1+36 pages, 8 figures; v2, 1+41 pages, 9 figures: scale setting
improved, discussion in section 1 slightly expanded, comments on the Monte
Carlo algorithm added, new references included, affiliation details for one
of the authors updated, minor misprints corrected: version published in the
journa
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