24,242 research outputs found
Critical exponents for the long-range Ising chain using a transfer matrix approach
The critical behavior of the Ising chain with long-range ferromagnetic
interactions decaying with distance , , is investigated
using a numerically efficient transfer matrix (TM) method. Finite size
approximations to the infinite chain are considered, in which both the number
of spins and the number of interaction constants can be independently
increased. Systems with interactions between spins up to 18 sites apart and up
to 2500 spins in the chain are considered. We obtain data for the critical
exponents associated with the correlation length based on the Finite
Range Scaling (FRS) hypothesis. FRS expressions require the evaluation of
derivatives of the thermodynamical properties, which are obtained with the help
of analytical recurrence expressions obtained within the TM framework. The Van
den Broeck extrapolation procedure is applied in order to estimate the
convergence of the exponents. The TM procedure reduces the dimension of the
matrices and circumvents several numerical matrix operations.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Conference NEXT Sigma Ph
On the necessity to include event-by-event fluctuations in experimental evaluation of elliptical flow
Elliptic flow at RHIC is computed event-by-event with NeXSPheRIO. We show
that when symmetry of the particle distribution in relation to the reaction
plane is assumed, as usually done in the experimental extraction of elliptic
flow, there is a disagreement between the true and reconstructed elliptic flows
(15-30% for =0, 30% for =0.5 GeV). We suggest a possible way to
take into account the asymmetry and get good agreement between these elliptic
flows
Fluctuation of the Initial Conditions and Its Consequences on Some Observables
We show effects of the event-by-event fluctuation of the initial conditions
(IC) in hydrodynamic description of high-energy nuclear collisions on some
observables. Such IC produce not only fluctuations in observables but, due to
their bumpy structure, several non-trivial effects appear. They enhance
production of isotropically distributed high-pT particles, making v2 smaller
there. Also, they reduce v2 in the forward and backward regions where the
global matter density is smaller, so where such effects become more
efficacious. They may also produce the so-called ridge effect in the two
large-pT particle correlation.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, presented at the IV Workshop on Particle
Correlations and Femtoscopy (WPCF2008), Krakow, Poland, 11-14 Sep 200
Model for the growth of the World Airline Network
We propose a probabilistic growth model for transport networks which employs
a balance between popularity of nodes and the physical distance between nodes.
By comparing the degree of each node in the model network and the WAN, we
observe that the difference between the two is minimized for .
Interestingly, this is the value obtained for the node-node correlation
function in the WAN. This suggests that our model explains quite well the
growth of airline networks.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Collaboration networks from a large CV database: dynamics, topology and bonus impact
Understanding the dynamics of research production and collaboration may
reveal better strategies for scientific careers, academic institutions and
funding agencies. Here we propose the use of a large and multidisciplinar
database of scientific curricula in Brazil, namely, the Lattes Platform, to
study patterns of scientific production and collaboration. In this database,
detailed information about publications and researchers are made available by
themselves so that coauthorship is unambiguous and individuals can be evaluated
by scientific productivity, geographical location and field of expertise. Our
results show that the collaboration network is growing exponentially for the
last three decades, with a distribution of number of collaborators per
researcher that approaches a power-law as the network gets older. Moreover,
both the distributions of number of collaborators and production per researcher
obey power-law behaviors, regardless of the geographical location or field,
suggesting that the same universal mechanism might be responsible for network
growth and productivity.We also show that the collaboration network under
investigation displays a typical assortative mixing behavior, where teeming
researchers (i.e., with high degree) tend to collaborate with others alike.
Finally, our analysis reveals that the distinctive collaboration profile of
researchers awarded with governmental scholarships suggests a strong bonus
impact on their productivity.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Amphibia, Anura, Pipidae, <i>Pipa pipa,/i>: Distribution extension, new state record and geographic distribution map
Phase retrieval by hyperplanes
We show that a scalable frame does phase retrieval if and only if the
hyperplanes of its orthogonal complements do phase retrieval. We then show this
result fails in general by giving an example of a frame for which
does phase retrieval but its induced hyperplanes fail phase retrieval.
Moreover, we show that such frames always exist in for any
dimension . We also give an example of a frame in which fails
phase retrieval but its perps do phase retrieval. We will also see that a
family of hyperplanes doing phase retrieval in must contain at
least hyperplanes. Finally, we provide an example of six hyperplanes in
which do phase retrieval
- …
