19,598 research outputs found
Bilinear Coagulation Equations
We consider coagulation equations of Smoluchowski or Flory type where the
total merge rate has a bilinear form for a vector of
conserved quantities , generalising the multiplicative kernel. For these
kernels, a gelation transition occurs at a finite time , which can be given exactly in terms of an eigenvalue problem in
finite dimensions. We prove a hydrodynamic limit for a stochastic coagulant,
including a corresponding phase transition for the largest particle, and
exploit a coupling to random graphs to extend analysis of the limiting process
beyond the gelation time.Comment: Generalises the previous version to focus on general coagulation
processes of bilinear type, without restricting to the single example of the
previous version. The previous results are mentioned as motivation, and all
results of the previous version can be obtained from this more general
versio
Properties of the solutions of delocalised coagulation and inception problems with outflow boundaries
Well posedness is established for a family of equations modelling particle
populations undergoing delocalised coagulation, advection, inflow and outflow
in a externally specified velocity field. Very general particle types are
allowed while the spatial domain is a bounded region of -dimensional space
for which every point lies on exactly one streamline associated with the
velocity field. The problem is formulated as a semi-linear ODE in the Banach
space of bounded measures on particle position and type space. A local
Lipschitz property is established in total variation norm for the propagators
(generalised semi-groups) associated with the problem and used to construct a
Picard iteration that establishes local existence and global uniqueness for any
initial condition. The unique weak solution is shown further to be a
differentiable or at least bounded variation strong solution under smoothness
assumptions on the parameters of the coagulation interaction. In the case of
one spatial dimension strong differentiability is established even for
coagulation parameters with a particular bounded variation structure in space.
This one dimensional extension establishes the convergence of the simulation
processes studied in [Patterson, Stoch. Anal. Appl. 31, 2013] to a unique and
differentiable limit
Traffic flow densities in large transport networks
We consider transport networks with nodes scattered at random in a large
domain. At certain local rates, the nodes generate traffic flowing according to
some navigation scheme in a given direction. In the thermodynamic limit of a
growing domain, we present an asymptotic formula expressing the local traffic
flow density at any given location in the domain in terms of three fundamental
characteristics of the underlying network: the spatial intensity of the nodes
together with their traffic generation rates, and of the links induced by the
navigation. This formula holds for a general class of navigations satisfying a
link-density and a sub-ballisticity condition. As a specific example, we verify
these conditions for navigations arising from a directed spanning tree on a
Poisson point process with inhomogeneous intensity function.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
Large deviations in relay-augmented wireless networks
We analyze a model of relay-augmented cellular wireless networks. The network
users, who move according to a general mobility model based on a Poisson point
process of continuous trajectories in a bounded domain, try to communicate with
a base station located at the origin. Messages can be sent either directly or
indirectly by relaying over a second user. We show that in a scenario of an
increasing number of users, the probability that an atypically high number of
users experiences bad quality of service over a certain amount of time, decays
at an exponential speed. This speed is characterized via a constrained entropy
minimization problem. Further, we provide simulation results indicating that
solutions of this problem are potentially non-unique due to symmetry breaking.
Also two general sources for bad quality of service can be detected, which we
refer to as isolation and screening.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures; corrected several misprint
Large-deviation principles for connectable receivers in wireless networks
We study large-deviation principles for a model of wireless networks
consisting of Poisson point processes of transmitters and receivers,
respectively. To each transmitter we associate a family of connectable
receivers whose signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio is larger than a certain
connectivity threshold. First, we show a large-deviation principle for the
empirical measure of connectable receivers associated with transmitters in
large boxes. Second, making use of the observation that the receivers
connectable to the origin form a Cox point process, we derive a large-deviation
principle for the rescaled process of these receivers as the connection
threshold tends to zero. Finally, we show how these results can be used to
develop importance-sampling algorithms that substantially reduce the variance
for the estimation of probabilities of certain rare events such as users being
unable to connectComment: 29 pages, 2 figure
The Dwarf Nova PQ Andromedae
We report a photometric study of the WZ Sagittae-type dwarf nova PQ
Andromedae. The light curve shows strong (0.05 mag full amplitude) signals with
periods of 1263(1) and 634(1) s, and a likely double-humped signal with
P=80.6(2) min. We interpret the first two as nonradial pulsation periods of the
underlying white dwarf, and the last as the orbital period of the underlying
binary. We estimate a distance of 150(50) pc from proper motions and the two
standard candles available: the white dwarf and the dwarf-nova outburst. At
this distance, the K magnitude implies that the secondary is probably fainter
than any star on the main sequence -- indicating a mass below the Kumar limit
at 0.075 M_sol. PQ And may be another "period bouncer", where evolution now
drives the binary out to longer period.Comment: PDF, 13 pages, 2 figures; accepted, in press, to appear September
2005, PASP; more info at http://cba.phys.columbia.edu
Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans
We sequenced the genomes of a 7,000-year-old farmer from Germany and eight 8,000-year-old hunter-gatherers from Luxembourg and Sweden. We analysed these and other ancient genomes¹-₄ with 2,345 contemporary humans to show that most present-day Europeans derive from at least three highly differentiated populations:west European hunter-gatherers, who contributed ancestry to all Europeans but not to Near Easterners; ancient north Eurasians related to Upper Palaeolithic Siberians³, who contributed to both Europeans and Near Easterners; and early European farmers, who were mainly of Near Eastern origin but also harboured west European hunter-gatherer related ancestry.We model these populations’ deep relationships and show that early European farmers had 44% ancestry from a ‘basal Eurasian’ population that split before the diversification of other non-African lineage
SMaSH: A Benchmarking Toolkit for Human Genome Variant Calling
Motivation: Computational methods are essential to extract actionable
information from raw sequencing data, and to thus fulfill the promise of
next-generation sequencing technology. Unfortunately, computational tools
developed to call variants from human sequencing data disagree on many of their
predictions, and current methods to evaluate accuracy and computational
performance are ad-hoc and incomplete. Agreement on benchmarking variant
calling methods would stimulate development of genomic processing tools and
facilitate communication among researchers.
Results: We propose SMaSH, a benchmarking methodology for evaluating human
genome variant calling algorithms. We generate synthetic datasets, organize and
interpret a wide range of existing benchmarking data for real genomes, and
propose a set of accuracy and computational performance metrics for evaluating
variant calling methods on this benchmarking data. Moreover, we illustrate the
utility of SMaSH to evaluate the performance of some leading single nucleotide
polymorphism (SNP), indel, and structural variant calling algorithms.
Availability: We provide free and open access online to the SMaSH toolkit,
along with detailed documentation, at smash.cs.berkeley.edu
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