54,541 research outputs found
Integrable Systems and Factorization Problems
The present lectures were prepared for the Faro International Summer School
on Factorization and Integrable Systems in September 2000. They were intended
for participants with the background in Analysis and Operator Theory but
without special knowledge of Geometry and Lie Groups. In order to make the main
ideas reasonably clear, I tried to use only matrix algebras such as
and its natural subalgebras; Lie groups used are either GL(n)
and its subgroups, or loop groups consisting of matrix-valued functions on the
circle (possibly admitting an extension to parts of the Riemann sphere). I hope
this makes the environment sufficiently easy to live in for an analyst. The
main goal is to explain how the factorization problems (typically, the matrix
Riemann problem) generate the entire small world of Integrable Systems along
with the geometry of the phase space, Hamiltonian structure, Lax
representations, integrals of motion and explicit solutions. The key tool will
be the \emph{% classical r-matrix} (an object whose other guise is the
well-known Hilbert transform). I do not give technical details, unless they may
be exposed in a few lines; on the other hand, all motivations are given in full
scale whenever possible.Comment: LaTeX 2.09, 69 pages. Introductory lectures on Integrable systems,
Classical r-matrices and Factorization problem
Relatively Coherent Sets as a Hierarchical Partition Method
Finite time coherent sets [8] have recently been defined by a measure based
objective function describing the degree that sets hold together, along with a
Frobenius-Perron transfer operator method to produce optimally coherent sets.
Here we present an extension to generalize the concept to hierarchially defined
relatively coherent sets based on adjusting the finite time coherent sets to
use relative mesure restricted to sets which are developed iteratively and
hierarchically in a tree of partitions. Several examples help clarify the
meaning and expectation of the techniques, as they are the nonautonomous double
gyre, the standard map, an idealized stratospheric flow, and empirical data
from the Mexico Gulf during the 2010 oil spill. Also for sake of analysis of
computational complexity, we include an appendic concerning the computational
complexity of developing the Ulam-Galerkin matrix extimates of the
Frobenius-Perron operator centrally used here
The pathological role of Wnt5a in psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis.
Psoriasis (PsO) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease with both local and systemic components. PsO-associated arthritis, known as psoriatic arthritis (PsA), develops in approximately 13%-25% of PsO patients. Various factors associated with both PsO and PsA indicate that these conditions are part of a single disease. Identification of novel targets for the development of drugs to treat both PsO and PsA is desirable to provide more patient-friendly treatment regimens. Such targets will likely represent 'common checkpoints' of inflammation, for example key components or transduction cascades of the signalling pathways involved. Emerging evidence supports involvement of the non-canonical Wnt signalling pathways in the development of both PsO and PsA, especially the Wnt5a-activated signalling cascades. These, together with interlinked factors, are crucial in the interactions among keratinocytes, immune cells and inflammatory factors in PsO, as well as among chondrocytes, osteoblasts and osteoclasts that trigger both subchondral bone remodelling and cartilage catabolism in PsA. This review focuses on the pathological role of Wnt5a signalling and its interaction with other interlinked pathways in both PsO and PsA, and also on the main challenges for future research, particularly with respect to molecules targeting Wnt signalling pathways for the treatment of PsO and PsA
Correcting low-frequency noise with continuous measurement
Low-frequency noise presents a serious source of decoherence in solid-state
qubits. When combined with a continuous weak measurement of the eigenstates,
the low-frequency noise induces a second-order relaxation between the qubit
states. Here we show that the relaxation provides a unique approach to
calibrate the low-frequency noise in the time-domain. By encoding one qubit
with two physical qubits that are alternatively calibrated, quantum logic gates
with high fidelity can be performed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitte
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