scholarly journals An Analogue of the Thue-Morse Sequence

10.37236/948 ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Ferrand

We consider the finite binary words $Z(n)$, $n \in {\Bbb N}$, defined by the following self-similar process: $Z(0):=0$, $Z(1):=01$, and $Z(n+1):=Z(n)\cdot\overline{Z(n-1)}$, where the dot $\cdot$ denotes word concatenation, and $\overline{w}$ the word obtained from $w$ by exchanging the zeros and the ones. Denote by $Z(\infty)=01110100 \dots$ the limiting word of this process, and by $z(n)$ the $n$'th bit of this word. This sequence $z$ is an analogue of the Thue-Morse sequence. We show that a theorem of Bacher and Chapman relating the latter to a "Sierpiński matrix" has a natural analogue involving $z$. The semi-infinite self-similar matrix which plays the role of the Sierpiński matrix here is the zeta matrix of the poset of finite subsets of ${\Bbb N}$ without two consecutive elements, ordered by inclusion. We observe that this zeta matrix is nothing but the exponential of the incidence matrix of the Hasse diagram of this poset. We prove that the corresponding Möbius matrix has a simple expression in terms of the zeta matrix and the sequence $z$.

1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 1216-1228 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Herrero ◽  
P. Bernard

Abstract The basic assumption that the self-similarity and the spectral law of the seismic body-wave radiation (e.g., ω-square model) must find their origin in some simple self-similar process during the seismic rupture led us to construct a kinematic, self-similar model of earthquakes. It is first assumed that the amplitude of the slip distribution high-pass filtered at high wavenumber does not depend on the size of the ruptured fault. This leads to the following “k-square” model for the slip spectrum, for k > 1/L: Δ~uL(k)=CΔσμLk2, where L is the ruptured fault dimension, k the radial wavenumber, Δσ the mean stress drop, μ the rigidity, and C an adimensional constant of the order of 1. The associated stress-drop spectrum, for k > 1/L, is approximated by Δ~σL(k)=ΔσLk. The rupture front is assumed to propagate on the fault plane with a constant velocity v, and the rise time function is assumed to be scale dependent. The partial slip associated to a given wavelength 1/k is assumed to be completed in a time 1/kv, based on simple dynamical considerations. We therefore considered a simple dislocation model (instantaneous slip at the final value), which indeed correctly reproduces this self-similar characteristic of the slip duration at any scale. For a simple rectangular fault with isochrones propagating in the x direction, the resulting far-field displacement spectrum is related to the slip spectrum as u˜(ω)=FΔ~u(kx=1Cdωv,ky=0), where the factor F includes radiation pattern and distance effect, and Cd is the classical directivity coefficient 1/[1 − v/c cos (θ)]. The k-square model for the slip thus leads to the ω-square model, with the assumptions above. Independently of the adequacy of these assumptions, which should be tested with dynamic numerical models, such a kinematic model has several important applications. It may indeed be used for generating realistic synthetics at any frequency, including body waves, surface waves, and near-field terms, even for sites close to the fault, which is often of particular importance; it also provides some clues for estimating the weighting factors for the empirical Green's function methods. Finally, the slip spectrum may easily be modified in order to model other power-law decay of the radiation spectra, as well as composite earthquakes.


Author(s):  
Rebekah Sheldon

In the conclusion of The Child to Come, the book asks, ‘What happens when the life figured by the child--innocent, self-similar human life at home on a homely Earth--no longer has the strength to hold back the vitality that animates it?’ This chapter looks at two kinds of texts that consider this question: Anthropocene cinema and Young Adult Fiction. By focusing on the role of human action, the Anthropocene obscures a far more threatening reality: the collapse of the regulative. In relation, both children’s literature and young adult literature grow out of and as disciplinary apparatuses trained on that fraught transit between the presumptive difference of those still in their minority and the socially necessary sameness that is inscribed into fully attained adulthood.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 213-223
Author(s):  
El Hassan Lakhel ◽  
Abdelmonaim Tlidi

Abstract Hermite processes are self-similar processes with stationary increments; the Hermite process of order 1 is fractional Brownian motion (fBm) and the Hermite process of order 2 is the Rosenblatt process. In this paper we consider a class of impulsive neutral stochastic functional differential equations with variable delays driven by Rosenblatt process with index {H\in(\frac{1}{2},1)} , which is a special case of a self-similar process with long-range dependence. More precisely, we prove an existence and uniqueness result, and we establish some conditions, ensuring the exponential decay to zero in mean square for the mild solution by means of the Banach fixed point theory. Finally, an illustrative example is given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the obtained result.


2019 ◽  
Vol 492 (2) ◽  
pp. 1770-1777
Author(s):  
Maryam Ghasemnezhad

ABSTRACT To study the role of Hall effect on the structure of accretion disc, we have considered a toroidal magnetic field in our paper. To study the vertical structure of the disc, we have written a set of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations in the spherical coordinates (r, θ, ϕ) based on the two assumptions of axisymmetric and steady state. Also, we employed the self-similar solutions in the radial direction to obtain the structure of the disc in the θ-direction. We have solved a set of ordinary differential equations in the θ-coordinate with symmetrical boundary conditions in the equatorial plane. In order to describe the behaviour of Hall effect, we introduced the ΛH parameter that was called the dimensionless Hall Elsasser number. The strength of the Hall effect is measured by the inverse of dimensionless Hall Elsasser number. We have shown that the strong Hall effect decreases the accretion rate or infall velocity and size of inflow part. It has also been found the Hall effect is maximum in the equatorial plane and gets the value close to zero near the boundary, and it has the antidiffusive nature. The results display that the strong Hall effect makes the standard accretion sub-Keplerian disc becomes thinner. Our solutions have shown the Hall effect leads to transport magnetic flux outward in the upper layer of the disc and it produces outflows in the surface of the disc.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noah Ribeck ◽  
Joseph S. Mulka ◽  
Luis Zaman ◽  
Brian D. Connelly ◽  
Richard E. Lenski

ABSTRACTIn an asexual population, the fate of a beneficial mutation depends on how its lineage competes against other mutant lineages in the population. With high beneficial mutation rates or large population sizes, competition between contending mutations is strong, and successful lineages can accumulate multiple mutations before any single one achieves fixation. Most current theory about asexual population dynamics either neglects this multiple-mutations regime or introduces simplifying assumptions that may not apply. Here, we develop a theoretical framework that describes the dynamics of adaptation and substitution over all mutation-rate regimes by conceptualizing the population as a collection of continuously adapting lineages. This model of “lineage interference” shows that each new mutant’s advantage over the rest of the population must be above a critical threshold in order to likely achieve fixation, and we derive a simple expression for that threshold. We apply this framework to examine the role of beneficial mutations with different effect sizes across the transition to the multiple-mutations regime.


Author(s):  
A.V. Attetkov ◽  
I.K. Volkov ◽  
K.A. Gaydaenko

The paper considers the problem of determining temperature field parameters in a radiation-trans-parent isotropic solid body containing an absorptive inclusion, when the system features phase transitions. We identify sufficient conditions, meeting which ensures the possibility of self-similar heat transfer process taking place in the system under con-sideration. We qualitatively investigated physical properties of the self-similar process under study and determined its specifics. We provide a theoretical validation of implementing a thermostating mode of the moving phase transition boundary in the heat transfer process investigated


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