UNiON Scholar
UNiON Web Scholar iON AI About Scholar
112 scholarly results for math.QA
Scholar iON Academic Synthesis
The body of research presented spans various domains, each employing mathematical and physical models to address complex problems. Lei and Huang's work introduces a statistical physics-based model for protein folding, highlighting universal elastic energy principles through the CSAW simulation. Troha and Hauser's study provides a quadratic programming model to incorporate startup costs in electricity price modeling, emphasizing the impact of grid operator interventions on reducing price spikes. Zarai et al. focus on optimizing mRNA translation down regulation using the ribosome flow model, revealing insights into the strategic alteration of ribosomal transition rates. Fujii et al. advance quantum computation within cavity QED by constructing complex quantum gates using a mathematically rigorous approach in the weak coupling regime. Collectively, these studies underscore the application of mathematical rigor to solve interdisciplinary problems, enhancing understanding and innovation in protein dynamics, energy economics, genetic regulation, and quantum computing.
πŸŽ“ Deep dive with Scholar iON β†’
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Protein Folding: A Perspective From Statistical Physics
Jinzhi Lei; Kerson Huang
2010 arXiv Open Access
In this paper, we introduce an approach to the protein folding problem from the point of view of statistical physics. Protein folding is a stochastic process by which a polypeptide folds into its characteristic and functional 3D structure from random coil. The process involves an intricate interplay between global geometry and local structure, and each protein seems to present special problems. We introduce CSAW (conditioned self-avoiding walk), a model of protein folding that combines the features of self-avoiding walk (SAW) and the Monte Carlo method. In this model, the unfolded protein chain is treated as a random coil described by SAW. Folding is induced by hydrophobic forces and other interactions, such as hydrogen bonding, which can be taken into account by imposing conditions on SAW. Conceptually, the mathematical basis is a generalized Langevin equation. To illustrate the flexibility and capabilities of the model, we consider several examples, including helix formation, elastic properties, and the transition in the folding of myoglobin. From the CSAW simulation and physical arguments, we find a universal elastic energy for proteins, which depends only on the radius of gyration $R_{g}$ and the residue number $N$. The elastic energy gives rise to scaling laws $R_{g}\sim N^Ξ½$ in different regions with exponents $Ξ½=3/5,3/7,2/5$, consistent with the observed unfolded stage, pre-globule, and molten globule, respectively. These results indicate that CSAW can serve as a theoretical laboratory to study universal principles in protein folding.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
The impact of startup costs and the grid operator on the power price equilibrium
Miha Troha; Raphael Hauser
2014 arXiv Open Access
In this paper we propose a quadratic programming model that can be used for calculating the term structure of electricity prices while explicitly modeling startup costs of power plants. In contrast to other approaches presented in the literature, we incorporate the startup costs in a mathematically rigorous manner without relying on ad hoc heuristics. Moreover, we propose a tractable approach for estimating the startup costs of power plants based on their historical production. Through numerical simulations applied to the entire UK power grid, we demonstrate that the inclusion of startup costs is necessary for the modeling of electricity prices in realistic power systems. Numerical results show that startup costs make electricity prices very spiky. In the second part of the paper, we extend the initial model by including the grid operator who is responsible for managing the grid. Numerical simulations demonstrate that robust decision making of the grid operator can significantly decrease the number and severity of spikes in the electricity price and improve the reliability of the power grid.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Optimal Down Regulation of mRNA Translation
Yoram Zarai; Michael Margaliot; Tamir Tuller
2016 arXiv Open Access
Down regulation of mRNA translation is an important problem in various bio-medical domains ranging from developing effective medicines for tumors and for viral diseases to developing attenuated virus strains that can be used for vaccination. Here, we study the problem of down regulation of mRNA translation using a mathematical model called the ribosome flow model (RFM). In the RFM, the mRNA molecule is modeled as a chain of $n$ sites. The flow of ribosomes between consecutive sites is regulated by $n+1$ transition rates. Given a set of feasible transition rates, that models the outcome of all possible mutations, we consider the problem of maximally down regulating the translation rate by altering the rates within this set of feasible rates. Under certain conditions on the feasible set, we show that an optimal solution can be determined efficiently. We also rigorously analyze two special cases of the down regulation optimization problem. Our results suggest that one must focus on the position along the mRNA molecule where the transition rate has the strongest effect on the protein production rate. However, this rate is not necessarily the slowest transition rate along the mRNA molecule. We discuss some of the biological implications of these results.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Cavity QED and Quantum Computation in the Weak Coupling Regime II : Complete Construction of the Controlled-Controlled NOT Gate
Kazuyuki Fujii; Kyoko Higashida; Ryosuke Kato; Yukako Wada
2005 arXiv Open Access
In this paper we treat a cavity QED quantum computation. Namely, we consider a model of quantum computation based on n atoms of laser-cooled and trapped linearly in a cavity and realize it as the n atoms Tavis-Cummings Hamiltonian interacting with n external (laser) fields. We solve the Schr{\" o}dinger equation of the model in the weak coupling regime to construct the controlled NOT gate in the case of n=2, and to construct the controlled-controlled NOT gate in the case of n=3 by making use of several resonance conditions and rotating wave approximation associated to them. We also present an idea to construct general quantum circuits. The approach is more sophisticated than that of the paper [K. Fujii, Higashida, Kato and Wada, Cavity QED and Quantum Computation in the Weak Coupling Regime, J. Opt. B : Quantum Semiclass. Opt. {\bf 6} (2004), 502]. Our method is not heuristic but completely mathematical, and the significant feature is based on a consistent use of Rabi oscillations.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Top-down Automated Theorem Proving (Notes for Sir Timothy)
C. E. Larson; N. Van Cleemput
2023 arXiv Open Access
We describe a "top down" approach for automated theorem proving (ATP). Researchers might usefully investigate the forms of the theorems mathematicians use in practice, carefully examine how they differ and are proved in practice, and code all relevant domain concepts. These concepts encode a large portion of the knowledge in any domain. Furthermore, researchers should write programs that produce proofs of the kind that human mathematicians write (and publish); this means proofs that might sometimes have mistakes; and this means making inferences that are sometimes invalid. This approach is meant to contrast with the historically dominant "bottom up" approach: coding fundamental types (typically sets), axioms and rules for (valid) inference, and building up from this foundation to the theorems of mathematical practice and to their outstanding questions. It is an important fact that the actual proofs that mathematicians publish in math journals do not look like the formalized proofs of Russell & Whitehead's Principia Mathematica (or modern computer systems like Lean that automate some of this formalization). We believe some "lack of rigor" (in mathematical practice) is human-like, and can and should be leveraged for ATP.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
The Omega Counter, a Frequency Counter Based on the Linear Regression
E. Rubiola; M. Lenczner; P. -Y. Bourgeois; F. Vernotte
2015 arXiv Open Access
This article introduces the Ξ© counter, a frequency counter -- or a frequency-to-digital converter, in a different jargon -- based on the Linear Regression (LR) algorithm on time stamps. We discuss the noise of the electronics. We derive the statistical properties of the Ξ© counter on rigorous mathematical basis, including the weighted measure and the frequency response. We describe an implementation based on a SoC, under test in our laboratory, and we compare the Ξ© counter to the traditional Ξ  and Ξ› counters. The LR exhibits optimum rejection of white phase noise, superior to that of the Ξ  and Ξ› counters. White noise is the major practical problem of wideband digital electronics, both in the instrument internal circuits and in the fast processes which we may want to measure. The Ξ© counter finds a natural application in the measurement of the Parabolic Variance, described in the companion article arXiv:1506.00687 [physics.data-an].
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Comment on quant-ph/0506105: The modified Grover algorithm cannot speedup unsorted database search
Gui Lu Long
2005 arXiv Open Access
In a recent paper (quant-ph/0506105), A S Gupta, M. Gupta and A. Pathak proposed a modified Grover algorithm that would exponentially accelerate the unsorted database search problem if the number of marked items is known. If this were true, it would represent a major fundamental breakthrough in computer science, mathematics, quantum information and other related branches of sciences. However the algorithm is not valid. We will explain it in this brief comment.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
A Compositional Distributional Semantics, Two Concrete Constructions, and some Experimental Evaluations
Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh; Edward Grefenstette
2011 arXiv Open Access
We provide an overview of the hybrid compositional distributional model of meaning, developed in Coecke et al. (arXiv:1003.4394v1 [cs.CL]), which is based on the categorical methods also applied to the analysis of information flow in quantum protocols. The mathematical setting stipulates that the meaning of a sentence is a linear function of the tensor products of the meanings of its words. We provide concrete constructions for this definition and present techniques to build vector spaces for meaning vectors of words, as well as that of sentences. The applicability of these methods is demonstrated via a toy vector space as well as real data from the British National Corpus and two disambiguation experiments.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
A computational model of the bottlenose dolphin sonar: Feature-extracting method
T. Zorikov
2009 arXiv Open Access
The data describing a process of echo-image formation in bottlenose dolphin sonar perception were accumulated in our experimental explorations. These data were formalized mathematically and used in the computational model, comparative testing of which in echo-discrimination tasks revealed no less capabilities then those of bottlenose dolphins.
arxiv.org Β· scholarly article
Multiplicative Langevin Process for Volatilities Produces Observed Q-Variance Regularities
William H. Press; Alex Dannenberg
2026 arXiv Open Access
Q-variance (so-called) posits a statistical relationship $\mathbf{E}(Οƒ^2 | z) = Οƒ_0^2 + \tfrac{1}{2}z^2$ between an asset's volatility $Οƒ^2$, as observed in a time interval $T$, and its (suitably scaled) return $z$ in the same interval. We here show that this relationship is {\em exactly equivalent} to to positing an Inverse Gamma probability distribution for $Οƒ^2$ itself. We then show that such a distribution is exactly generated by a multiplicative Langevin process with an arbitrary, settable coherence time $Ο„_c$, so that very nearly the same Q-variance relationship will hold for all $T \ll Ο„_c$.