scholarly journals Non-simple conformal loop ensembles on Liouville quantum gravity and the law of CLE percolation interfaces

Author(s):  
Jason Miller ◽  
Scott Sheffield ◽  
Wendelin Werner

AbstractWe study the structure of the Liouville quantum gravity (LQG) surfaces that are cut out as one explores a conformal loop-ensemble $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa '}$$ CLE κ ′ for $$\kappa '$$ κ ′ in (4, 8) that is drawn on an independent $$\gamma $$ γ -LQG surface for $$\gamma ^2=16/\kappa '$$ γ 2 = 16 / κ ′ . The results are similar in flavor to the ones from our companion paper dealing with $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa }$$ CLE κ for $$\kappa $$ κ in (8/3, 4), where the loops of the CLE are disjoint and simple. In particular, we encode the combined structure of the LQG surface and the $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa '}$$ CLE κ ′ in terms of stable growth-fragmentation trees or their variants, which also appear in the asymptotic study of peeling processes on decorated planar maps. This has consequences for questions that do a priori not involve LQG surfaces: In our paper entitled “CLE Percolations” described the law of interfaces obtained when coloring the loops of a $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa '}$$ CLE κ ′ independently into two colors with respective probabilities p and $$1-p$$ 1 - p . This description was complete up to one missing parameter $$\rho $$ ρ . The results of the present paper about CLE on LQG allow us to determine its value in terms of p and $$\kappa '$$ κ ′ . It shows in particular that $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa '}$$ CLE κ ′ and $$\hbox {CLE}_{16/\kappa '}$$ CLE 16 / κ ′ are related via a continuum analog of the Edwards-Sokal coupling between $$\hbox {FK}_q$$ FK q percolation and the q-state Potts model (which makes sense even for non-integer q between 1 and 4) if and only if $$q=4\cos ^2(4\pi / \kappa ')$$ q = 4 cos 2 ( 4 π / κ ′ ) . This provides further evidence for the long-standing belief that $$\hbox {CLE}_{\kappa '}$$ CLE κ ′ and $$\hbox {CLE}_{16/\kappa '}$$ CLE 16 / κ ′ represent the scaling limits of $$\hbox {FK}_q$$ FK q percolation and the q-Potts model when q and $$\kappa '$$ κ ′ are related in this way. Another consequence of the formula for $$\rho (p,\kappa ')$$ ρ ( p , κ ′ ) is the value of half-plane arm exponents for such divide-and-color models (a.k.a. fuzzy Potts models) that turn out to take a somewhat different form than the usual critical exponents for two-dimensional models.

2021 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Mikhail

Abstract Phillips et al. make a strong case that knowledge representations should play a larger role in cognitive science. Their arguments are reinforced by comparable efforts to place moral knowledge, rather than moral beliefs, at the heart of a naturalistic moral psychology. Conscience, Kant's synthetic a priori, and knowledge attributions in the law all point in a similar direction.


Philosophy ◽  
1929 ◽  
Vol 4 (16) ◽  
pp. 453-466
Author(s):  
A. C. Ewing

Some modern thinkers have supposed that “cause” is an outworn notion, or at least that it is one of which modern science has no need. This is due mainly to the discovery that, while the scientist can give us general laws as to what in fact happens, he cannot help us to discern the reason for the laws or the inward nature of the forces on which they depend. He can tell us the “that” but not the “why”; he cannot show us in a single case that the effect follows necessarily a priori from the nature of the cause, that any other effect than the one which actually takes place would be logically impossible. He has studied the law of gravitation, but this law does not enable him to see why material bodies should attract each other in this fashion; it is only a generalized statement of the fact that they do. He knows that certain substances, if absorbed by eating, will nourish and others destroy our tissues; but he cannot say why they should do so. He can no doubt analyse them further and discover that, for example, meat is nourishing because it contains a large proportion of nitrogenous matter, but he could not tell a priori whether this nitrogenous matter would be likely to nourish or to poison us. Only where mathematics can be applied do we see necessity in such a way that any alternative becomes inconceivable to us; but mathematics alone can never establish from a quantity present here and now what quantity there will be at a later time or in another part of space. Mathematics can show, e.g., that, if there is 2 + 2 here and now, there must be 4 here and now, not that, if there is 2 + 2 here and now, there will be 4 in an hour's time or a mile away; and therefore it cannot be made the sole basis of any causal law whatever.


2012 ◽  
Vol 706 ◽  
pp. 34-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oriane Aubert ◽  
Michael Le Bars ◽  
Patrice Le Gal ◽  
Philip S. Marcus

AbstractWe validate a new law for the aspect ratio $\ensuremath{\alpha} = H/ L$ of vortices in a rotating, stratified flow, where $H$ and $L$ are the vertical half-height and horizontal length scale of the vortices. The aspect ratio depends not only on the Coriolis parameter $f$ and buoyancy (or Brunt–Väisälä) frequency $\bar {N} $ of the background flow, but also on the buoyancy frequency ${N}_{c} $ within the vortex and on the Rossby number $\mathit{Ro}$ of the vortex, such that $\ensuremath{\alpha} = f \mathop{ [\mathit{Ro}(1+ \mathit{Ro})/ ({ N}_{c}^{2} \ensuremath{-} {\bar {N} }^{2} )] }\nolimits ^{1/ 2} $. This law for $\ensuremath{\alpha} $ is obeyed precisely by the exact equilibrium solution of the inviscid Boussinesq equations that we show to be a useful model of our laboratory vortices. The law is valid for both cyclones and anticyclones. Our anticyclones are generated by injecting fluid into a rotating tank filled with linearly stratified salt water. In one set of experiments, the vortices viscously decay while obeying our law for $\ensuremath{\alpha} $, which decreases over time. In a second set of experiments, the vortices are sustained by a slow continuous injection. They evolve more slowly and have larger $\vert \mathit{Ro}\vert $ while still obeying our law for $\ensuremath{\alpha} $. The law for $\ensuremath{\alpha} $ is not only validated by our experiments, but is also shown to be consistent with observations of the aspect ratios of Atlantic meddies and Jupiter’s Great Red Spot and Oval BA. The relationship for $\ensuremath{\alpha} $ is derived and examined numerically in a companion paper by Hassanzadeh, Marcus & Le Gal (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 706, 2012, pp. 46–57).


Author(s):  
Rémi Rhodes1 ◽  
Vincent Vargas2

The purpose of this chapter is to explain the probabilistic construction of Polyakov’s Liouville quantum gravity using the theory of Gaussian multiplicative chaos. In particular, this chapter contains a detailed description of the so-called Liouville measures of the theory and their conjectured relation to the scaling limit of large planar maps properly embedded in the sphere. This chapter is rather short and requires no prior knowledge on the topic.


1974 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 456-462
Author(s):  
Haim H. Cohn

It may appear unduly pretentious to speak of the Spirit of the Law of a State which just completed but 25 years of independent legislative and judicial life. States with legislative and judicial records of hundreds of years may find it difficult, and perhaps also rather unprofitable, to delve into speculations of the Spirit behind their laws. In most cases, the general trend and the political motivation of the creation and the administration of law are anyhow known beforehand and well defined a priori—be it the realization of democracy by the rule of law, be it the implementation of socialism or communism, or the self-assertion of a fascist or communist dictatorship. Add to such trends and motivations the national legal traditions which a State inherited and consciously or unconsciously continues to maintain—and you will obtain, for what it may be worth or useful, a fair overall picture of the “Spirit”.of its laws.


2020 ◽  
pp. 213-225
Author(s):  
Karl Kraus

This chapter talks about how certain irregularities appear in a different light the moment they are weighed against the administration of justice. According to guidelines established by the chief judge of a regional court and published in the Deutsche Juristenzeitung, a series of actions such as bodily harm, wrongful detention, and manslaughter are to be “determined by the national interest.” Consequently, these are exempt a priori from presumption of culpability, whereas hitherto the criminal proceedings first had to be quashed. There will be no repetition of the devious stratagem applied in the case of the Potempa murderers, whose lives hung by a thread while their official careers were set back by several months. What is required of judges is a certain independence when interpreting the law, to prevent them from going astray on such an important matter.


2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 2493-2508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grant W. Petty ◽  
Ke Li

Abstract A new approach to passive microwave retrievals of precipitation is described that relies on an objective dimensional reduction procedure to filter, normalize, and decorrelate geophysical background noise while retaining the majority of radiometric information concerning precipitation. The dimensional reduction also sharply increases the effective density of any a priori database used in a Bayesian retrieval scheme. The method is applied to passive microwave data from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), reducing the original nine channels to three “pseudochannels” that are relatively insensitive to most background variations occurring within each of seven surface classes (one ocean plus six land and coast) for which they are defined. These pseudochannels may be used in any retrieval algorithm, including the current standard Goddard profiling algorithm (GPROF), in place of the original channels. The same methods are also under development for the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory Microwave Imager (GMI). Starting with the pseudochannel definitions, a new Bayesian algorithm for retrieving the surface rain rate is described. The algorithm uses an a priori database populated with matchups between the TRMM precipitation radar (PR) and the TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI). The explicit goal of the algorithm is to retrieve the PR-derived best estimate of the surface rain rate in portions of the TMI swath not covered by the PR. A unique feature of the new algorithm is that it provides robust posterior Bayesian probabilities of pixel-averaged rain rate exceeding various thresholds. Validation and intercomparison of the new algorithm is the subject of a companion paper.


1996 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 205-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Tennant ◽  

2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (18) ◽  
pp. 185201
Author(s):  
Max R Atkin ◽  
Benjamin Niedner ◽  
John F Wheater

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