47,369 research outputs found
Interval type-2 fuzzy automata and Interval type-2 fuzzy grammar
The purpose of the present work is to introduce and study the concept of interval
type-2 (IT2) fuzzy grammar which recognizes the given IT2 fuzzy languages. The
relationship between IT2 fuzzy automata and IT2 fuzzy (weak) regular grammars is
discussed. Specifically, the results we obtained here are (i ) IT2 fuzzy weak regular
grammar and IT2 fuzzy regular grammar generate the same classes of IT2 fuzzy
languages (ii ) for a given IT2 fuzzy regular grammars, there exists an IT2 fuzzy
automata such that they accept the same IT2 fuzzy languages, and vice versa. In
addition, we define some operations on IT2 fuzzy languages and it is shown that IT2
fuzzy languages recognized by IT2 fuzzy automata are closed under the operations
of union, intersection, concatenation and Kleene closure, but are not closed under
complement
The diversity of Indian Brachionidae (Rotifera: Eurotatoria: Monogononta) and their distribution
We evaluate diversity status of the Brachionidae of India and present an annotated checklist of 46 species
excluding dubious and unconfirmed reports. These merit biodiversity value as ~27% of the global diversity of the taxon and
~81% of its Oriental species. We observed two Australasian elements, two Oriental endemics, one Indian endemic, one paleotropical
and one cosmo (sub) tropical species. The cold-water Keratella serrulata and Notholca squamula are new records from
eastern Himalayas. Maximum brachionid diversity (32 species) from Assam state of northeast India (NEI) is followed by the
reports of 27 and 26 species from Tamil Nadu and West Bengal, respectively; 25 species each from Tripura and Maharashtra;
and 24 species from Jammu & Kashmir. Brachionus, the most diverse brachionid genus, is widely distributed in India with low
richness in hill states of NEI and coastal waters in particular. The Indian brachionid taxonomy is confounded with unconfirmed
reports, misidentifications, invalid taxa, and inconsistent treatment of morphological variants, while analysis of cryptic
diversity in Brachionus calyciflorus, B. caudatus, B. forficula, B. plicatilis, B. quadridentatus, B. urceolaris, Keratella cochlearis
and K. quadrata species-groups awaits attention
Application of Relativistic Coupled-cluster Theory to Electron Impact Excitations of Mg in the Plasma Environment
A relativistic coupled-cluster (RCC) theory is implemented to study electron
impact excitations of atomic species. As a test case, the electron impact
excitations of the resonance transitions
are investigated in the singly charged magnesium (Mg) ion using this
theory. Accuracies of wave functions of Mg are justified by evaluating its
attachment energies of the relevant states and compared with the experimental
values. The continuum wave function of the projectile electron are obtained by
solving Dirac equations assuming distortion potential as static potential of
the ground state of Mg. Comparison of the calculated electron impact
excitation differential and total cross-sections with the available
measurements are found to be in very good agreements at various incident
electron energies. Further, calculations are carried out in the plasma
environment in the Debye H\"uckel model framework, which could be useful in the
astrophysics. Influence of plasma strength on the cross-sections as well as
linear polarization of the photon emission in the transition is investigated for different incident electron energies.Comment: 9 pages, 1 table and 3 figure
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