27,968 research outputs found
Enhanced Cluster Computing Performance Through Proportional Fairness
The performance of cluster computing depends on how concurrent jobs share
multiple data center resource types like CPU, RAM and disk storage. Recent
research has discussed efficiency and fairness requirements and identified a
number of desirable scheduling objectives including so-called dominant resource
fairness (DRF). We argue here that proportional fairness (PF), long recognized
as a desirable objective in sharing network bandwidth between ongoing flows, is
preferable to DRF. The superiority of PF is manifest under the realistic
modelling assumption that the population of jobs in progress is a stochastic
process. In random traffic the strategy-proof property of DRF proves
unimportant while PF is shown by analysis and simulation to offer a
significantly better efficiency-fairness tradeoff.Comment: Submitted to Performance 201
Multi-resource fairness: Objectives, algorithms and performance
Designing efficient and fair algorithms for sharing multiple resources
between heterogeneous demands is becoming increasingly important. Applications
include compute clusters shared by multi-task jobs and routers equipped with
middleboxes shared by flows of different types. We show that the currently
preferred objective of Dominant Resource Fairness has a significantly less
favorable efficiency-fairness tradeoff than alternatives like Proportional
Fairness and our proposal, Bottleneck Max Fairness. In addition to other
desirable properties, these objectives are equally strategyproof in any
realistic scenario with dynamic demand
Microbial Foodborne Disease: Hospitalizations, Medical Costs and Potential Demand for Safer Food
Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Health Economics and Policy,
Affine motion of 2d incompressible fluids surrounded by vacuum and flows in
The affine motion of two-dimensional (2d) incompressible fluids surrounded by
vacuum can be reduced to a completely integrable and globally solvable
Hamiltonian system of ordinary differential equations for the deformation
gradient in . In the case of perfect fluids, the
motion is given by geodesic flow in with the
Euclidean metric, while for magnetically conducting fluids (MHD), the motion is
governed by a harmonic oscillator in . A complete
classification of the dynamics is given including rigid motions, rotating
eddies with stable and unstable manifolds, and solutions with vanishing
pressure. For perfect fluids, the displacement generically becomes unbounded,
as . For MHD, solutions are bounded and generically
quasi-periodic and recurrent.Comment: 60 pages, 7 figure
Maximal antichains of minimum size
Let be a natural number, and let be a set . We study the problem to find the smallest possible size of a
maximal family of subsets of such that
contains only sets whose size is in , and for all
, i.e. is an antichain. We present a
general construction of such antichains for sets containing 2, but not 1.
If our construction asymptotically yields the smallest possible size
of such a family, up to an error. We conjecture our construction to be
asymptotically optimal also for , and we prove a weaker bound for
the case . Our asymptotic results are straightforward applications of
the graph removal lemma to an equivalent reformulation of the problem in
extremal graph theory which is interesting in its own right.Comment: fixed faulty argument in Section 2, added reference
Emergence of novel magnetic order at finite temperature in overdoped pnictides
We examine the temperature dependence of the magnetic ordering in the
frustrated Heisenberg model in presence of two different kind of
dopants: vacancies or magnetic impurities. We demonstrate that, irrespective to
their magnetic ratio, the introduction of impurities quenches the order by
disorder selection mechanism associated with an Ising-like phase transition at
low temperatures and gives way to a (anticollinear) order . The
presence of dopants triggers a non trivial competition between entropically
selected states (collinear) and energetically favoured ones (anticollinear) in
dependence of both dilution and temperature. While in case of magnetic
impurity, the interesting magnetic phases are observed for full range of
temperature and doping, in case of nonmagnetic impurities every magnetic order
is destroyed at all temperatures above dilution. At fixed low
temperature and tuning the doping we show a first order phase transition
leading to the re-entrance of the Ising-like order with percolation of islands
of order. At fixed doping and varying the temperature we observe a
transition from the anticollinear to the collinear phase assisted by a new
emerging magnetic phase in the presence of magnetic impurities, whilst in case
of vacancies this transition is characterised by a coexistent region of both.
Furthermore, tuning the magnetic moment of the impurities, a complete collapse
of the Ising-like order is attained. This is in agreement with observations of
Ir dopant atoms in superconducting Ba(FeIr)As with
Implementation of rigorous renormalization group method for ground space and low-energy states of local Hamiltonians
The practical success of polynomial-time tensor network methods for computing
ground states of certain quantum local Hamiltonians has recently been given a
sound theoretical basis by Arad, Landau, Vazirani, and Vidick. The convergence
proof, however, relies on "rigorous renormalization group" (RRG) techniques
which differ fundamentally from existing algorithms. We introduce an efficient
implementation of the theoretical RRG procedure which finds MPS ansatz
approximations to the ground spaces and low-lying excited spectra of local
Hamiltonians in situations of practical interest. In contrast to other schemes,
RRG does not utilize variational methods on tensor networks. Rather, it
operates on subsets of the system Hilbert space by constructing approximations
to the global ground space in a tree-like manner. We evaluate the algorithm
numerically, finding similar performance to DMRG in the case of a gapped
nondegenerate Hamiltonian. Even in challenging situations of criticality, or
large ground-state degeneracy, or long-range entanglement, RRG remains able to
identify candidate states having large overlap with ground and low-energy
eigenstates, outperforming DMRG in some cases.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Sensitivity of Pagurus bernhardus (L.) to substrate-borne vibration and anthropogenic noise
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. Despite the prevalence of vibration produced by anthropogenic activities impacting the seabed there are few data and little information as to whether these are detected by crustaceans and whether they interfere with their behaviour. Here the sensitivity of unconditioned Pagurus bernhardus to substrate-borne vibration was quantified by exposure to sinusoidal vibrations of 5-410Hz of varied amplitudes using the staircase method of threshold determination, with threshold representing the detection of the response and two behavioural responses used as reception indicators: movement of the second antenna and onset or cessation of locomotion. Thresholds were compared to measured vibrations close to anthropogenic operations and to the time in captivity prior to tests. Behaviour varied according to the strength of the stimulus with a significant difference in average threshold values between the two behavioural indicators, although there was an overlap between the two, with overall sensitivity ranging from 0.09-0.44ms -2 (root mean squared, RMS). Crabs of shortest duration in captivity prior to tests had significantly greater sensitivity to vibration, down to 0.02ms -2 (RMS). The sensitivity of P. bernhardus fell well within the range of vibrations measured near anthropogenic operations. The data indicate that anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations have a clear effect on the behaviour of a common marine crustacean. The study emphasises that these vibrations are an important component of noise pollution that requires further attention to understand the long term effects on marine crustaceans
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