Disturbing arithmetic

1985 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 375-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Grilliot

One long-range objective of logic is to find models of arithmetic with noteworthy properties, perhaps properties that imply some long-standing number theoretic conjectures. In areas of mathematics such as algebra or set theory, new models are often made by extending old models, that is, by adjoining new elements to already existing models. Usually the extension retains most of the characteristics of the old model with at least one exception that makes the new model interesting. However, such a scheme is difficult in the area of arithmetic. Many interesting properties of the fine structure of arithmetic are diophantine and hence unchangeable in extensions. For instance, one cannot change a prime number into a composite one by adjoining new elements.One could possibly get around this diophantine difficulty in one of two ways. One way is to change the usual language of addition and multiplication to an equivalent language that does not transmit so much information to extensions. For instance, multiplication is definable from the squaring function, as one sees from the identity 2xy = (x + y)2 − x2 − y2, and the squaring function in turn is definable either from the unary square predicate (as one sees from the fact that n = m2 if n and n + 2m + 1 are successive squares) or from the divisor relation (as one sees from the fact that n = m2 if n is the smallest number such that m divides n and m + 1 divides n + m). Either of these two alternatives to multiplication might make for interesting extensions.

2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 179-190
Author(s):  
Kacper Pluta ◽  
Marcin Janaszewski ◽  
Michał Postolski

Abstract The article presents new conception of 3D model of human bronchial tubes, which represents bronchial tubes extracted from CT images of the chest. The new algorithm which generates new model is an extension of the algorithm (basic algorithm) proposed by Hiroko Kitaoka, Ryuji Takaki and Bela Suki. The basic model has been extended by geometric deformations of branches and noise which occur in bronchial trees extracted from CT images. The article presents comparison of results obtained with the use of the new algorithm and the basic one. Moreover, the discussion of usefulness of generated new models for testing of algorithms for quantitative analysis of bronchial tubes based on CT images is also included.


2019 ◽  
pp. 727-742
Author(s):  
Andrew Duffy

Under threat from social media and interactive Web 2.0, the traditional media industry seeks new models to maintain its viability. This chapter studies both consumers and prospective producers of one genre—travel journalism—to advocate a model that could help arrest the industry's decline and return to growth. It argues that one way forward for traditional media would be a new model of curatorship, in which a professional journalist collaborates with amateur contributors. It suggests that such a hybrid arrangement will be recognisable neither as professional newsroom nor as amateur social media, but a new model with features of both. This offers a way forward so that rather than contributing to the declining fortunes of the traditional media industry, as many journalists fear, social media can instead encourage progress.


2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gonzalo Giribet ◽  
Erin McIntyre ◽  
Erhard Christian ◽  
Luis Espinasa ◽  
Rodrigo L. Ferreira ◽  
...  

Palpigradi are a poorly understood group of delicate arachnids, often found in caves or other subterranean habitats. Concomitantly, they have been neglected from a phylogenetic point of view. Here we present the first molecular phylogeny of palpigrades based on specimens collected in different subterranean habitats, both endogean (soil) and hypogean (caves), from Australia, Africa, Europe, South America and North America. Analyses of two nuclear ribosomal genes and COI under an array of methods and homology schemes found monophyly of Palpigradi, Eukoeneniidae and a division of Eukoeneniidae into four main clades, three of which include samples from multiple continents. This supports either ancient vicariance or long-range dispersal, two alternatives we cannot distinguish with the data at hand. In addition, we show that our results are robust to homology scheme and analytical method, encouraging further use of the markers employed in this study to continue drawing a broader picture of palpigrade relationships.


1990 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 519 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Hitchen ◽  
S Thurgate ◽  
P Jennings

LEED fine structure features are due to an interference between the measured beam (usually the specular) and a pre-emergent beam. This pre-emergent beam is internally reflected at the surface potential barrier and is subsequently diffracted by the substrate into the same direction as the beam under observation. As a result of the long-range image nature of the barrier potential, a rydberg-like series of peaks, converging on the emergence energy of the pre-emergent beam, is produced. Fine structure features, or threshold effects, occur at very low incident beam energies (typically <40 eV) and are extremely sensitive to the surface order of the crystal. The changes that occur to the fine structure features when atoms are adsorbed onto the surface contain information regarding the nature of the chemisorption process. In some cases it is possible to infer adsorption sites. In this work measurements are made of the fine structure features for the (001) and (111) surfaces of copper as a function of oxygen exposure. Analysis of these data shows that oxygen adsorption on (u(111) takes place in a disordered manner and results in a roughening of the surface, while for (u(OOl) the adsorption produces an ordered overlayer with oxygen atoms in the 2-fold bridge sites.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 509-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald J. W. Lambert ◽  
Douglas A. Dawson

A new model for combination effects gives descriptions of additivity, independence, synergy and antagonism and explains the multiple shapes of isoboles.


2003 ◽  
Vol 212 ◽  
pp. 604-611
Author(s):  
Linda J. Smith ◽  
Richard P.F. Norris ◽  
Paul A. Crowther

A new grid of ionizing fluxes for O-type and Wolf-Rayet stars is presented for use with evolutionary synthesis codes and analyses of single star H ii regions. A total of 230 expanding, non-LTE, line-blanketed model atmospheres have been calculated for five metallicities (0.05, 0.2, 0.4, 1 and 2 Z⊙). We have used the wm-basic code of Pauldrach et al. (2001) for O-type stars and the cmfgen code of Hillier & Miller (1998) for WR stars. The stellar wind parameters are scaled with metallicity for both O-type and WR stars. The ionizing fluxes of the new models, incorporated into the evolutionary synthesis code STARBURST99 (Leitherer et al. 1999), are compared with the predictions of the original starburst99 and Schaerer & Vacca (1998) for an instantaneous burst. We find large changes in the output ionizing fluxes as a function of age, especially below the He+ edge. In contrast to previous studies, nebular He ii λ4686 will be at, or just below, the detection limit in low metallicity starbursts during the WR phase. The new models have lower fluxes in the He i continuum for Z ≥ 0.4 Z⊙ and ages ≤ 7 Myr because of the increased line-blanketing. The accuracy of the new model atmosphere grid is tested by constructing photo-ionization models for an H ii region where the ionizing flux is provided by an instantaneous burst. The new models occupy the same region in nebular diagnostic diagrams as the observational data of Bresolin et al. (1999), particularly during the WR phase. The new model grid and updated starburst99 code can be downloaded from http://www.star.ucl.ac.uk/starburst.


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