1,795 research outputs found
Finite size corrections to disordered systems on Erd\"{o}s-R\'enyi random graphs
We study the finite size corrections to the free energy density in disorder
spin systems on sparse random graphs, using both replica theory and cavity
method. We derive an analytical expressions for the corrections in the
replica symmetric phase as a linear combination of the free energies of open
and closed chains. We perform a numerical check of the formulae on the Random
Field Ising Model at zero temperature, by computing finite size corrections to
the ground state energy density.Comment: Submitted to PR
Quantum tunneling as a classical anomaly
Classical mechanics is a singular theory in that real-energy classical
particles can never enter classically forbidden regions. However, if one
regulates classical mechanics by allowing the energy E of a particle to be
complex, the particle exhibits quantum-like behavior: Complex-energy classical
particles can travel between classically allowed regions separated by potential
barriers. When Im(E) -> 0, the classical tunneling probabilities persist.
Hence, one can interpret quantum tunneling as an anomaly. A numerical
comparison of complex classical tunneling probabilities with quantum tunneling
probabilities leads to the conjecture that as ReE increases, complex classical
tunneling probabilities approach the corresponding quantum probabilities. Thus,
this work attempts to generalize the Bohr correspondence principle from
classically allowed to classically forbidden regions.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Seeds Buffering for Information Spreading Processes
Seeding strategies for influence maximization in social networks have been
studied for more than a decade. They have mainly relied on the activation of
all resources (seeds) simultaneously in the beginning; yet, it has been shown
that sequential seeding strategies are commonly better. This research focuses
on studying sequential seeding with buffering, which is an extension to basic
sequential seeding concept. The proposed method avoids choosing nodes that will
be activated through the natural diffusion process, which is leading to better
use of the budget for activating seed nodes in the social influence process.
This approach was compared with sequential seeding without buffering and single
stage seeding. The results on both real and artificial social networks confirm
that the buffer-based consecutive seeding is a good trade-off between the final
coverage and the time to reach it. It performs significantly better than its
rivals for a fixed budget. The gain is obtained by dynamic rankings and the
ability to detect network areas with nodes that are not yet activated and have
high potential of activating their neighbours.Comment: Jankowski, J., Br\'odka, P., Michalski, R., & Kazienko, P. (2017,
September). Seeds Buffering for Information Spreading Processes. In
International Conference on Social Informatics (pp. 628-641). Springe
Theories for influencer identification in complex networks
In social and biological systems, the structural heterogeneity of interaction
networks gives rise to the emergence of a small set of influential nodes, or
influencers, in a series of dynamical processes. Although much smaller than the
entire network, these influencers were observed to be able to shape the
collective dynamics of large populations in different contexts. As such, the
successful identification of influencers should have profound implications in
various real-world spreading dynamics such as viral marketing, epidemic
outbreaks and cascading failure. In this chapter, we first summarize the
centrality-based approach in finding single influencers in complex networks,
and then discuss the more complicated problem of locating multiple influencers
from a collective point of view. Progress rooted in collective influence
theory, belief-propagation and computer science will be presented. Finally, we
present some applications of influencer identification in diverse real-world
systems, including online social platforms, scientific publication, brain
networks and socioeconomic systems.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
The marginally stable Bethe lattice spin glass revisited
Bethe lattice spins glasses are supposed to be marginally stable, i.e. their
equilibrium probability distribution changes discontinuously when we add an
external perturbation. So far the problem of a spin glass on a Bethe lattice
has been studied only using an approximation where marginally stability is not
present, which is wrong in the spin glass phase. Because of some technical
difficulties, attempts at deriving a marginally stable solution have been
confined to some perturbative regimes, high connectivity lattices or
temperature close to the critical temperature. Using the cavity method, we
propose a general non-perturbative approach to the Bethe lattice spin glass
problem using approximations that should be hopeful consistent with marginal
stability.Comment: 23 pages Revised version, hopefully clearer that the first one: six
pages longe
Periodic orbits for classical particles having complex energy
This paper revisits earlier work on complex classical mechanics in which it
was argued that when the energy of a classical particle in an analytic
potential is real, the particle trajectories are closed and periodic, but that
when the energy is complex, the classical trajectories are open. Here it is
shown that there is a discrete set of eigencurves in the complex-energy plane
for which the particle trajectories are closed and periodic.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
PT-symmetry breaking in complex nonlinear wave equations and their deformations
We investigate complex versions of the Korteweg-deVries equations and an Ito
type nonlinear system with two coupled nonlinear fields. We systematically
construct rational, trigonometric/hyperbolic, elliptic and soliton solutions
for these models and focus in particular on physically feasible systems, that
is those with real energies. The reality of the energy is usually attributed to
different realisations of an antilinear symmetry, as for instance PT-symmetry.
It is shown that the symmetry can be spontaneously broken in two alternative
ways either by specific choices of the domain or by manipulating the parameters
in the solutions of the model, thus leading to complex energies. Surprisingly
the reality of the energies can be regained in some cases by a further breaking
of the symmetry on the level of the Hamiltonian. In many examples some of the
fixed points in the complex solution for the field undergo a Hopf bifurcation
in the PT-symmetry breaking process. By employing several different variants of
the symmetries we propose many classes of new invariant extensions of these
models and study their properties. The reduction of some of these models yields
complex quantum mechanical models previously studied.Comment: 50 pages, 39 figures (compressed in order to comply with arXiv
policy; higher resolutions maybe obtained from the authors upon request
Measurement of the production of charged pions by protons on a tantalum target
A measurement of the double-differential cross-section for the production of
charged pions in proton--tantalum collisions emitted at large angles from the
incoming beam direction is presented. The data were taken in 2002 with the HARP
detector in the T9 beam line of the CERN PS. The pions were produced by proton
beams in a momentum range from 3 \GeVc to 12 \GeVc hitting a tantalum target
with a thickness of 5% of a nuclear interaction length. The angular and
momentum range covered by the experiment (100 \MeVc \le p < 800 \MeVc and
0.35 \rad \le \theta <2.15 \rad) is of particular importance for the design
of a neutrino factory. The produced particles were detected using a
small-radius cylindrical time projection chamber (TPC) placed in a solenoidal
magnet. Track recognition, momentum determination and particle identification
were all performed based on the measurements made with the TPC. An elaborate
system of detectors in the beam line ensured the identification of the incident
particles. Results are shown for the double-differential cross-sections
at four incident
proton beam momenta (3 \GeVc, 5 \GeVc, 8 \GeVc and 12 \GeVc). In addition, the
pion yields within the acceptance of typical neutrino factory designs are shown
as a function of beam momentum. The measurement of these yields within a single
experiment eliminates most systematic errors in the comparison between rates at
different beam momenta and between positive and negative pion production.Comment: 49 pages, 31 figures. Version accepted for publication on Eur. Phys.
J.
Analogue read-out chip for Si strip detector modules for LHC experiments
We present a 128-channel analogue front-end chip SCTA128 for readout of silicon strip detectors employed in the inner tracking detectors of LHC experiments. The architecture of the chip and critical design issues are discussed. The performance of the chip has been evaluated in detail in bench tests and is presented in the paper. The chip is used to read out prototype analogue modules compatible in size, functionality and performance with the ATLAS SCT base line modules. Several full size detector modules equipped with SCTA128 chips have been built and tested successfully in the lab with E particles as well as in beam tests
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