1,606 research outputs found

    Exceptional String: Instanton Expansions and Seiberg-Witten Curve

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    We investigate instanton expansions of partition functions of several toric E-string models using local mirror symmetry and elliptic modular forms. We also develop a method to obtain the Seiberg--Witten curve of E-string with arbitrary Wilson lines with the help of elliptic functions.Comment: 71 pages, three Wilson line

    Liveness-Based Garbage Collection for Lazy Languages

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    We consider the problem of reducing the memory required to run lazy first-order functional programs. Our approach is to analyze programs for liveness of heap-allocated data. The result of the analysis is used to preserve only live data---a subset of reachable data---during garbage collection. The result is an increase in the garbage reclaimed and a reduction in the peak memory requirement of programs. While this technique has already been shown to yield benefits for eager first-order languages, the lack of a statically determinable execution order and the presence of closures pose new challenges for lazy languages. These require changes both in the liveness analysis itself and in the design of the garbage collector. To show the effectiveness of our method, we implemented a copying collector that uses the results of the liveness analysis to preserve live objects, both evaluated (i.e., in WHNF) and closures. Our experiments confirm that for programs running with a liveness-based garbage collector, there is a significant decrease in peak memory requirements. In addition, a sizable reduction in the number of collections ensures that in spite of using a more complex garbage collector, the execution times of programs running with liveness and reachability-based collectors remain comparable

    Seiberg-Witten Curve for the E-String Theory

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    We construct the Seiberg-Witten curve for the E-string theory in six-dimensions. The curve is expressed in terms of affine E_8 characters up to level 6 and is determined by using the mirror-type transformation so that it reproduces the number of holomorphic curves in the Calabi-Yau manifold and the amplitudes of N=4 U(n) Yang-Mills theory on 1/2 K3. We also show that our curve flows to known five- and four-dimensional Seiberg-Witten curves in suitable limits.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure; appendix C adde

    Giant magnetoimpedance in Vitrovac amorphous ribbons over [0.3-400 MHz] frequency range

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    Giant magneto impedance (GMI) effect for as-cast Vitrovac®^{\textrm{\scriptsize\textregistered}} amorphous ribbons (Vacuumschmelze, Germany) in two configurations (parallel and normal to the ribbon axis) is studied over the frequency range [0.3-400 MHz] and under static magnetic fields -160 Oe <Hdc<< H_{dc} < +160 Oe. A variety of peak features and GMI ratio values, falling within a small field range, are observed and discussed.Comment: Paper submitted to International Conference on Magnetism 2003 (ICM Rome 2003

    Quiver Theories from D6-branes via Mirror Symmetry

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    We study N=1 four dimensional quiver theories arising on the worldvolume of D3-branes at del Pezzo singularities of Calabi-Yau threefolds. We argue that under local mirror symmetry D3-branes become D6-branes wrapped on a three torus in the mirror manifold. The type IIB (p,q) 5-brane web description of the local del Pezzo, being closely related to the geometry of its mirror manifold, encodes the geometry of 3-cycles and is used to obtain gauge groups, quiver diagrams and the charges of the fractional branes.Comment: 30 pages, citations adde

    MQCD, ('Barely') G_2 Manifolds and (Orientifold of) a Compact Calabi-Yau

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    We begin with a discussion on two apparently disconnected topics - one related to nonperturbative superpotential generated from wrapping an M2-brane around a supersymmetric three cycle embedded in a G_2-manifold evaluated by the path-integral inside a path-integral approach of [1], and the other centered around the compact Calabi-Yau CY_3(3,243) expressed as a blow-up of a degree-24 Fermat hypersurface in WCP^4[1,1,2,8,12]. For the former, we compare the results with the ones of Witten on heterotic world-sheet instantons [2]. The subtopics covered in the latter include an N=1 triality between Heterotic, M- and F-theories, evaluation of RP^2-instanton superpotential, Picard-Fuchs equation for the mirror Landau-Ginsburg model corresponding to CY_3(3,243), D=11 supergravity corresponding to M-theory compactified on a `barely' G_2 manifold involving CY_3(3,243) and a conjecture related to the action of antiholomorphic involution on period integrals. We then show an indirect connection between the two topics by showing a connection between each one of the two and Witten's MQCD [3]. As an aside, we show that in the limit of vanishing "\zeta", a complex constant that appears in the Riemann surfaces relevant to definining the boundary conditions for the domain wall in MQCD, the infinite series of [4] used to represent a suitable embedding of a supersymmetric 3-cycle in a G_2-mannifold, can be summed.Comment: 37 pages, LaTex; PARTLY based on talks given at ``Seventh Workshop on QCD" [session on "Strings, Branes and (De-)Construction"], Jan 6-10, 2003, La Cittadelle, Villefranche-sur-Mer, France; Fourth Workshop on ``Gauge Fields and Strings", Feb 25-Mar 1, 2003, Jena, Germany; ``XII Oporto Meeting on Geometry, Topology and Strings", July 17-20, 2003, Oporto, Portugal; "SQS03" - International Workshop on "Supersymmetries and Quantum Symmetries', July 24-29, 2003, JINR, Dubna, Russia; poster presented at ``XIV International Congress on Mathematical Physics", July 28-Aug 2, 2003, Lisbon, Portuga

    Finite Automata for the Sub- and Superword Closure of CFLs: Descriptional and Computational Complexity

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    We answer two open questions by (Gruber, Holzer, Kutrib, 2009) on the state-complexity of representing sub- or superword closures of context-free grammars (CFGs): (1) We prove a (tight) upper bound of 2O(n)2^{\mathcal{O}(n)} on the size of nondeterministic finite automata (NFAs) representing the subword closure of a CFG of size nn. (2) We present a family of CFGs for which the minimal deterministic finite automata representing their subword closure matches the upper-bound of 22O(n)2^{2^{\mathcal{O}(n)}} following from (1). Furthermore, we prove that the inequivalence problem for NFAs representing sub- or superword-closed languages is only NP-complete as opposed to PSPACE-complete for general NFAs. Finally, we extend our results into an approximation method to attack inequivalence problems for CFGs

    Vibration and buckling of thin-walled composite I-beams with arbitrary lay-ups under axial loads and end moments

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    A finite element model with seven degrees of freedom per node is developed to study vibration and buckling of thin-walled composite I-beams with arbitrary lay-ups under constant axial loads and equal end moments. This model is based on the classical lamination theory, and accounts for all the structural coupling coming from material anisotropy. The governing differential equations are derived from the Hamilton’s principle. Numerical results are obtained for thin-walled composite I-beams to investigate the effects of axial force, bending moment and fiber orientation on the buckling moments, natural frequencies, and corresponding vibration mode shapes as well as axial-moment-frequency interaction curves
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