48,992 research outputs found

    A general framework for boundary equilibrium bifurcations of Filippov systems

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    As parameters are varied a boundary equilibrium bifurcation (BEB) occurs when an equilibrium collides with a discontinuity surface in a piecewise-smooth system of ODEs. Under certain genericity conditions, at a BEB the equilibrium either transitions to a pseudo-equilibrium (on the discontinuity surface) or collides and annihilates with a coexisting pseudo-equilibrium. These two scenarios are distinguished by the sign of a certain inner product. Here it is shown that this sign can be determined from the number of unstable directions associated with the two equilibria by using techniques developed by Feigin. A new normal form is proposed for BEBs in systems of any number of dimensions. The normal form involves a companion matrix, as does the leading order sliding dynamics, and so the connection to the stability of the equilibria is explicit. In two dimensions the parameters of the normal form distinguish, in a simple way, the eight topologically distinct cases for the generic local dynamics at a BEB. A numerical exploration in three dimensions reveals that BEBs can create multiple attractors and chaotic attractors, and that the equilibrium at the BEB can be unstable even if both equilibria are stable. The developments presented here stem from seemingly unutilised similarities between BEBs in discontinuous systems (specifically Filippov systems as studied here) and BEBs in continuous systems for which analogous results are, to date, more advanced

    The stability of parallel-propagating circularly polarized Alfvén waves revisited

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    The parametric instability of parallel-propagating circularly polarized Alfven waves (pump waves) is revisited. The stability of these waves is determined by the linearized system of magnetohydrodynamic equations with periodic coefficients. The variable substitution that reduces this system of equations to a system with constant coefficients is suggested. The system with constant coefficients is used to derive the dispersion equation that was previously derived by many authors with the use of different approaches. The dependences of general stability properties on the dimensionless amplitude of the pump wave a and the ratio of the sound and Alfven speed b are studied analytically. It is shown that, for any a and b, there are such quantities k(1) and k(2) that a perturbation with the dimensionless wavenumber k is unstable if k(1)(2) 1, k(1) is a monotonically increasing function of a. For any b, k(1) tends to a limiting value approximately equal to 1.18 as a -> infinity

    DISSPLA plotting routines for the G-189A EC/LS computer program

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    Data from a G-189A execution is formatted and plotted. The plotting may be done at the time of execution of the program. DISSPLA plot packages are used. The user has the choice of FR80 or TEKTRONIX output

    Semistability vs. nefness for (Higgs) vector bundles

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    According to Miyaoka, a vector bundle E on a smooth projective curve is semistable if and only if a certain numerical class in the projectivized bundle PE is nef. We establish a similar criterion for the semistability of Higgs bundles: namely, such a bundle is semistable if and only if for every integer s between 0 and the rank of E, a suitable numerical class in the scheme parametrizing the rank s locally-free Higgs quotients of E is nef. We also extend this result to higher-dimensional complex projective varieties by showing that the nefness of the above mentioned classes is equivalent to the semistability of the Higgs bundle E together with the vanishing of the discriminant of E.Comment: Comments: 20 pages, Latex2e, no figures. v2 includes a generalization to complex projective manifolds of any dimension. To appear in Diff. Geom. App

    Transient-mediated fate determination in a transcriptional circuit of HIV

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    Steady-state behavior and bistability have been proposed as mechanisms for decision-making in gene circuits. However, transient gene expression has also been proposed to control cell fate with the decision arbitrated by the lifetime of the expression transient. Here, we report that transcriptional positive-feedback plays a critical role in determining HIV infected cell-fate by extending the duration of Tat expression transients far beyond what protein half-life modulation can achieve. To directly quantify feedback strength and its effects on the duration of Tat transcriptional pulses, we exploit the noise inherent to gene-expression and measure shifts in the autocorrelation of expression noise. The results indicate that transcriptional positive-feedback extends the single-cell Tat expression lifetime by ~6-fold for both minimal Tat circuits and full-length, actively-replicating HIV-1. Importantly, artificial weakening of Tat positive-feedback shortened the duration of Tat expression transients and biased the probability in favor of latency. Thus, transcriptional positive-feedback appears to modulate transient expression lifetime and thereby control cell-fate in HIV

    Luminescence Dating of Sediments from Ancient Irrigation Features, and Associated with Occupation of the Hinterland around Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka

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    This study supports a new investigation into the development and decline of irrigation and associated human activity in the Anuradhapura Hinterland, Sri Lanka (section 2). Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) age determinations have been made for a variety of sediments from bund and tank systems, irrigation channels, palaeosols and ceramic scatter horizons in the Anuradhapura hinterland (section 3). The geomorphological and archaeological significance of the age determinations has been reviewed in the light of the luminescence results and the samples’ depositional contexts, to constrain the deposition/formation dates of the sampled sediments integrate the OSL results with independent archaeological and historical expectations (section 6). A total of 26 age determinations were made (section 5.3). Dose rate determinations were made using thick source beta counting, high-resolution gamma spectrometry, field gamma spectrometry, measured water contents and calculated cosmic dose rates (sections 4.2.1, 5.1). Equivalent dose determinations were made (sections 4.2.2, 5.2) using the OSL signals from sand sized grains of quartz separated from each sample. Dose rates ranged from 1.1 to 5.0 mGy/a, equivalent dose values ranged from 0.29 to 33 Gy. Age estimates for these samples ranged from 0.14 to 13 ka, the average being 2.9 ka ± 3.1 (section 5.3). Uncertainties on the age estimates were commonly 7% at one standard error. The OSL age estimates from the largest bund and some ceramic scatter sites were greater than 2000 BC. This is older than expected on archaeological grounds and further investigation of these sites may be warranted. The OSL results from the other samples in the present study date bund construction during the initial urbanisation of Anuradhapura c. 400BC, coincident with the major Nachchaduwa bund construction c. 300AD, and in the Late Iron Age / Early Mediaeval period c. 600AD. They date abandonment of one irrigation channel to the 8th Century AD and its infill up to the late 10th Century when Anuradhapura was finally sacked. A further 8 age estimates, from silts and colluvium, relate to the collapse of infrastructure in the Anuradhapura hinterland during the 10th century and continued landscape response during the 11th century, followed by the lead-in to restoration of the irrigation system during the colonial era

    Recognition of settlement patterns against a complex background

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    Photointerpretation of aerial color infrared photography for analysis of urban land us
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