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Articles 1471 - 1500 of 27387
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Odds And Ends, Jimmie D. Lawson
Something, Gerhard Gierz
The Structure Of Locally Integral Involutive Po-Monoids And Semirings, José Gil-Férez, Peter Jipsen, Siddhartha Lodhia
The Structure Of Locally Integral Involutive Po-Monoids And Semirings, José Gil-Férez, Peter Jipsen, Siddhartha Lodhia
Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science Faculty Articles and Research
We show that every locally integral involutive partially ordered monoid (ipo-monoid) A = (A,⩽, ·, 1,∼,−), and in particular every locally integral involutive semiring, decomposes in a unique way into a family {Ap : p ∈ A+} of integral ipo-monoids, which we call its integral components. In the semiring case, the integral components are semirings. Moreover, we show that there is a family of monoid homomorphisms Φ = {φpq : Ap → Aq : p ⩽ q}, indexed on the positive cone (A+,⩽), so that the structure of A can be recovered as a glueing R ΦAp of its integral …
Modeling And Computation For Unsteady Blood Flow And Solute Concentration In A Constricted Porous Artery, Daniel N. Riahi, Saulo Orizaga
Modeling And Computation For Unsteady Blood Flow And Solute Concentration In A Constricted Porous Artery, Daniel N. Riahi, Saulo Orizaga
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations
We investigated a physical system for unsteady blood flow and solute transport in a section of a constricted porous artery. The aim of this study was to determine effects of hematocrit, stenosis, pulse oscillation, diffusion, convection and chemical reaction on the solute transport. The significance of this study was uncovering combined roles played by stenosis height, hematocrit, pulse oscillation period, reactive rate, blood speed, blood pressure force and radial and axial extent of the porous artery on the solute transported by the blood flow in the described porous artery. We used both analytical and computational methods to determine blood flow …
Mastery Based Grading For Secondary Mathematics, Anderson Trimm
Mastery Based Grading For Secondary Mathematics, Anderson Trimm
Professional Learning Day
Dr. Trimm will discuss in detail his design and implementation of a mastery grading system in calculus at IMSA and how it offers many benefits over traditional grading. Dr. Trimm will also explain how it makes creating assessments and grading easier and less work for the teacher, while being more accurate.
A Result In The Theory Of Twin Primes, Nelson Carella
A Result In The Theory Of Twin Primes, Nelson Carella
Publications and Research
This article determines a lower bound for the number of twin primes $p$ and $p+2$ up to a large number $x$.
Optimal Monohedral Tilings Of Hyperbolic Surfaces, Leonardo Digiosia, Jahangir Habib, Jack Hirsch, Lea Kenigsberg, Kevin Li, Dylanger Pittman, Jackson Petty, Christopher Xue, Weitao Zhu
Optimal Monohedral Tilings Of Hyperbolic Surfaces, Leonardo Digiosia, Jahangir Habib, Jack Hirsch, Lea Kenigsberg, Kevin Li, Dylanger Pittman, Jackson Petty, Christopher Xue, Weitao Zhu
Rose-Hulman Undergraduate Mathematics Journal
The hexagon is the least-perimeter tile in the Euclidean plane for any given area. On hyperbolic surfaces, this "isoperimetric" problem differs for every given area, as solutions do not scale. Cox conjectured that a regular k-gonal tile with 120-degree angles is isoperimetric. For area π/3, the regular heptagon has 120-degree angles and therefore tiles many hyperbolic surfaces. For other areas, we show the existence of many tiles but provide no conjectured optima. On closed hyperbolic surfaces, we verify via a reduction argument using cutting and pasting transformations and convex hulls that the regular 7-gon is the optimal n-gonal tile of …
The Determining Number And Cost Of 2-Distinguishing Of Select Kneser Graphs, James E. Garrison
The Determining Number And Cost Of 2-Distinguishing Of Select Kneser Graphs, James E. Garrison
Rose-Hulman Undergraduate Mathematics Journal
A graph $G$ is said to be \emph{d-distinguishable} if there exists a not-necessarily proper coloring with $d$ colors such that only the trivial automorphism preserves the color classes. For a 2-distinguishing labeling, the \emph{ cost of $2$-distinguishing}, denoted $\rho(G),$ is defined as the minimum size of a color class over all $2$-distinguishing colorings of $G$. Our work also utilizes \emph{determining sets} of $G, $ sets of vertices $S \subseteq G$ such that every automorphism of $G$ is uniquely determined by its action on $S.$ The \emph{determining number} of a graph is the size of a smallest determining set. We investigate …
Linking Mathematical Models And Trap Data To Infer The Proliferation, Abundance, And Control Of Aedes Aegypti, Jing Chen, Xi Huo, Andre B. B. Wilke, John C. Beier, Chalmers Vasquez, William Petrie, Robert Stephen Cantrell, Chris Cosner, Shigui Ruan
Linking Mathematical Models And Trap Data To Infer The Proliferation, Abundance, And Control Of Aedes Aegypti, Jing Chen, Xi Huo, Andre B. B. Wilke, John C. Beier, Chalmers Vasquez, William Petrie, Robert Stephen Cantrell, Chris Cosner, Shigui Ruan
Mathematics Faculty Articles
Aedes aegypti is one of the most dominant mosquito species in the urban areas of Miami-Dade County, Florida, and is responsible for the local arbovirus transmissions. Since August 2016, mosquito traps have been placed throughout the county to improve surveillance and guide mosquito control and arbovirus outbreak response. In this paper, we develop a deterministic mosquito population model, estimate model parameters by using local entomological and temperature data, and use the model to calibrate the mosquito trap data from 2017 to 2019. We further use the model to compare the Ae. aegypti population and evaluate the impact of rainfall intensity …
Why Gliding Symmetry Used To Be Prevalent In Biology But Practically Disappeared, Julio C. Urenda, Vladik Kreinovich
Why Gliding Symmetry Used To Be Prevalent In Biology But Practically Disappeared, Julio C. Urenda, Vladik Kreinovich
Departmental Technical Reports (CS)
At present, many living creatures have symmetries; in particular, the left-right symmetry is ubiquitous. Interestingly, 600 million years ago, very fee living creatures had the left-right symmetry: most of them had a gliding symmetry, symmetry with respect to shift along a line followed by reflection in this line. This symmetry is really seen in living creatures today. In this paper, we provide a physical-based geometric explanation for this symmetry change: we explain both why gliding symmetry was ubiquitous, and why at present, it is rarely observed, while the left-right symmetry is prevalent.
On Maps With Continuous Path Lifting, Jeremy Brazas, Atish Mitra
On Maps With Continuous Path Lifting, Jeremy Brazas, Atish Mitra
Mathematics Faculty Publications
We study a natural generalization of covering projections defined in terms of unique lifting properties. A map p : E -+ X has the continuous path-covering property if all paths in X lift uniquely and continuously (rel. basepoint) with respect to the compactopen topology. We show that maps with this property are closely related to fibrations with totally path-disconnected fibers and to the natural quotient topology on the homotopy groups. In particular, the class of maps with the continuous path-covering property lies properly between Hurewicz fibrations and Serre fibrations with totally path-disconnected fibers. We extend the usual classification of covering …
Free Quasitopological Groups, Jeremy Brazas, Sarah Emery
Free Quasitopological Groups, Jeremy Brazas, Sarah Emery
Mathematics Faculty Publications
In this paper, we study the topological structure of a universal construction related to quasitopological groups: the free quasitopological group F-q(X) on a space X. We show that free quasitopological groups may be constructed directly as quotient spaces of free semitopological monoids, which are themselves constructed by iterating product spaces equipped with the "cross topology." Using this explicit description of F-q(X), we show that for any T-1 space X, F-q(X) is the direct limit of closed subspaces F-q(X)(n) of words of length at most n. We also prove that the natural map i(n): (sic)(n)(i=0)(X boolean OR X-1)(circle times i) - …
The World Is Cognizable: An Argument Based On Hoermander's Theorem, Miroslav Svitek, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich
The World Is Cognizable: An Argument Based On Hoermander's Theorem, Miroslav Svitek, Olga Kosheleva, Vladik Kreinovich
Departmental Technical Reports (CS)
Is the world cognizable? Is it, in principle, possible to predict the future state of the world based on the measurements and observations performed in a local area -- e.g., in the Solar system? In this paper, we use general physicists' principles and a mathematical theorem about partial differential equations to show that such prediction is indeed, theoretically possible.
Generations Of Reason: A Family’S Search For Meaning In Post-Newtonian England (Book Review), Calvin Jongsma
Generations Of Reason: A Family’S Search For Meaning In Post-Newtonian England (Book Review), Calvin Jongsma
Faculty Work Comprehensive List
Reviewed Title: Generations of Reason: A Family's Search for Meaning in Post-Newtonian England by Joan L. Richards. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2021. 456 pp. ISBN: 9780300255492.
Mathematical Models For Thalassemia, Hamda Mohammed Al Dhaheri
Mathematical Models For Thalassemia, Hamda Mohammed Al Dhaheri
Theses
Thalassemia is a genetic blood disorder caused by gene mutation or deletion in a blood protein called hemoglobin. Treatment of thalassemia requires a life-long blood transfusion and removal of excessive iron in the blood stream, which usually causes a big pressure on health care systems. Various forms of thalassemia control measures have been used to reduce the prevalence of thalassemia major. This has resulted in a substantial reduction in the prevalence of thalassemia. However, the thalassemia carrier population remains high, which could lead to an increase in the thalassemia major population through carrier-to-carrier marriages. Thus, we developed two mathematical models …
Regular Simplices Within Doubly Transitive Equiangular Tight Frames, Evan C. Lake
Regular Simplices Within Doubly Transitive Equiangular Tight Frames, Evan C. Lake
Theses and Dissertations
An equiangular tight frame (ETF) yields an optimal way to pack a given number of lines into a given space of lesser dimension. Every ETF has minimal coherence, and this makes it potentially useful for compressed sensing. But, its usefulness also depends on its spark: the size of the smallest linearly dependent subsequence of the ETF. When formed into a sensing matrix, a larger spark means a lower chance that information is lost when sensing a sparse vector. Spark is difficult to compute in general, but if an ETF contains a regular simplex, then every such simplex is a linearly …
Finsler Pp-Waves And The Penrose Limit, Amir Babak Aazami, Miguel Ángel Javaloyes, Marcus C. Werner
Finsler Pp-Waves And The Penrose Limit, Amir Babak Aazami, Miguel Ángel Javaloyes, Marcus C. Werner
Mathematics
We extend the notion of a Lorentzian pp-wave to that of Finsler spacetimes by providing a coordinate-independent definition of a Finsler pp-wave with respect to the Chern connection; our definition also includes the special case of a plane wave. This treatment introduces suitable lightlike coordinates, in analogy with the Lorentzian case, and utilizes the anisotropic calculus recently developed by one of the authors. We then extend Penrose’s “plane wave limit” to the setting of Finsler spacetimes. New examples of such Finsler pp-waves are also presented. © 2023, The Author(s).
Prescribing The Q¯ ′ -Curvature On Pseudo-Einstein Cr 3-Manifolds, Ali Maalaoui
Prescribing The Q¯ ′ -Curvature On Pseudo-Einstein Cr 3-Manifolds, Ali Maalaoui
Mathematics
In this paper we study the problem of prescribing the Q ¯ ′ -curvature on embeddable pseudo-Einstein CR 3-manifolds. In the first stage we study the problem in the compact setting and we show that under natural assumptions, one can prescribe any positive (resp. negative) CR pluriharmonic function, if ∫ M Q ′ d v θ > 0 (resp. ∫ M Q ′ d v θ < 0 ). In the second stage, we study the problem in the non-compact setting of the Heisenberg group. Under mild assumptions on the prescribed function, we prove existence of a one parameter family of solutions. In fact, we show that one can find two kinds of solutions: normal ones that satisfy an isoperimetric inequality and non-normal ones that have a biharmonic leading term.
The available download on this page is the author manuscript accepted for publication. This version has undergone full peer review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading …
Induced Correlation And Its Effects In The Performance Of Fused Classification Systems, Mary K. Collins
Induced Correlation And Its Effects In The Performance Of Fused Classification Systems, Mary K. Collins
Theses and Dissertations
Classification systems are abundant in modern-day life. The United States Air Force uses classification systems across many applications such as radar, satellite, and infrared sensing just to name a few. Combining classification systems allows an opportunity to get more accurate results. Using the known information from already built and tested systems that can be mathematically combined can give insight into the performance of the fused system without having to build a combined system. Leveraging this can save time, resources, and money. This work examines the correlation effects of fusing two classifier systems, each with only two labels, using the Boolean …
P-Adic Cellular Neural Networks, B. A. Zambrano-Luna, Wilson A. Zuniga-Galindo
P-Adic Cellular Neural Networks, B. A. Zambrano-Luna, Wilson A. Zuniga-Galindo
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations
In this article we introduce the p-adic cellular neural networks which are mathematical generalizations of the classical cellular neural networks (CNNs) introduced by Chua and Yang. The new networks have infinitely many cells which are organized hierarchically in rooted trees, and also they have infinitely many hidden layers. Intuitively, the p-adic CNNs occur as limits of large hierarchical discrete CNNs. More precisely, the new networks can be very well approximated by hierarchical discrete CNNs. Mathematically speaking, each of the new networks is modeled by one integro-differential equation depending on several p-adic spatial variables and the time. We …
Hearing Healthcare Professionals’ Views About Over-The-Counter (Otc) Hearing Aids: Analysis Of Retrospective Survey Data, Vinaya Manchaiah, Anu Sharma, Hansapani Rodrigo, Abram Bailey, Karina C. De Sousa, De Wet Swanepoel
Hearing Healthcare Professionals’ Views About Over-The-Counter (Otc) Hearing Aids: Analysis Of Retrospective Survey Data, Vinaya Manchaiah, Anu Sharma, Hansapani Rodrigo, Abram Bailey, Karina C. De Sousa, De Wet Swanepoel
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations
Over-the-counter hearing aids have been available to consumers in the US since 17 October 2022 following a ruling by the Food and Drug Administration. However, their reception by hearing healthcare professionals (HHP) has been mixed, and concerns have been expressed by many HHPs. The aim of this study was to examine the concerns that HHPs have towards over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids. The study used a retrospective survey design. The survey data of HHPs (n = 730) was obtained from Hearing Tracker. A 22-item structured questionnaire was administered using a Question Scout platform. Descriptive analyses examined reported areas of concern and …
A Clustering Linear Combination Method For Multiple Phenotype Association Studies Based On Gwas Summary Statistics, Meida Wang, Xuewei Cao, Shuanglin Zhang, Qiuying Sha
A Clustering Linear Combination Method For Multiple Phenotype Association Studies Based On Gwas Summary Statistics, Meida Wang, Xuewei Cao, Shuanglin Zhang, Qiuying Sha
Michigan Tech Publications
There is strong evidence showing that joint analysis of multiple phenotypes in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) can increase statistical power when detecting the association between genetic variants and human complex diseases. We previously developed the Clustering Linear Combination (CLC) method and a computationally efficient CLC (ceCLC) method to test the association between multiple phenotypes and a genetic variant, which perform very well. However, both of these methods require individual-level genotypes and phenotypes that are often not easily accessible. In this research, we develop a novel method called sCLC for association studies of multiple phenotypes and a genetic variant based on …
Pricing Multi-Asset Contingent Claims In A Multi-Dimensional Binomial Market, Jarek Kedra, Assaf Libman, Victoria Steblovskaya
Pricing Multi-Asset Contingent Claims In A Multi-Dimensional Binomial Market, Jarek Kedra, Assaf Libman, Victoria Steblovskaya
Journal of Stochastic Analysis
No abstract provided.
Translation Of: Sur Des Familles Remarquables D’Hypersurfaces Isoparamétriques Dans Les Espaces Sphériques, Mathematische Zeitschrift 45, 335–367 (1939), By Élie Cartan., Thomas E. Cecil
Mathematics and Computer Science Department Faculty Scholarship
English title: On remarkable families of isoparametric hypersurfaces in spherical spaces
This is an English translation of the article "Sur des familles remarquables d’hypersurfaces isoparamétriques dans les espaces sphériques," which was originally published in Mathematische Zeitschrift 45, 335–367 (1939), by Élie Cartan.
A note from Thomas E. Cecil, translator: This is an unofficial translation of the original paper which was written in French. All references should be made to the original paper.
Mathematics Subject Classification Numbers: 53B25, 53C40, 53C42
A Permanent Inequality For Positive Semidefinite Matrices, Vehbi Emrah Paksoy
A Permanent Inequality For Positive Semidefinite Matrices, Vehbi Emrah Paksoy
Mathematics Faculty Articles
In this paper, we prove an inequality involving the permanent of a positive semidefinite matrix and its leading submatrices. We obtain a result in the similar spirit of Bapat-Sunder per-max conjecture.
The Development Of Sociomathematical Norms In The Transition To Tertiary Exam-Oriented Individualistic Mathematics Education In An East Asian Context, Woong Lim, Hyunkyoung Yoon, Younggon Bae, Oh Nam Kwon
The Development Of Sociomathematical Norms In The Transition To Tertiary Exam-Oriented Individualistic Mathematics Education In An East Asian Context, Woong Lim, Hyunkyoung Yoon, Younggon Bae, Oh Nam Kwon
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations
This study investigates social, mathematical, and sociomathematical norms perceived by college students in an engineering mathematics course and examines the students’ sense of mathematics as signals of individual merit. Data sources include a survey and one-on-one interviews with 38 students. The findings help illustrate student perceptions of academic social norms in a large-lecture course represented by the acquisition model of learning in college, detached from communal and collaborative disciplinary practices. Findings provide insights into the local educational context of an East Asian country as a case study when exam-oriented mathematics is institutionalized as normalcy.
Iterated Jump Graphs, Fran Herr, Legrand Jones Ii
Iterated Jump Graphs, Fran Herr, Legrand Jones Ii
Rose-Hulman Undergraduate Mathematics Journal
The jump graph J(G) of a simple graph G has vertices which represent edges in G where two vertices in J(G) are adjacent if and only if the corresponding edges in G do not share an endpoint. In this paper, we examine sequences of graphs generated by iterating the jump graph operation and characterize the behavior of this sequence for all initial graphs. We build on work by Chartrand et al. who showed that a handful of jump graph sequences terminate and two sequences converge. We extend these results by showing that there are no non-trivial repeating sequences of jump …
The Chromatic Index Of Ring Graphs, Lilian Shaffer
The Chromatic Index Of Ring Graphs, Lilian Shaffer
Rose-Hulman Undergraduate Mathematics Journal
The goal of graph edge coloring is to color a graph G with as few colors as possible such that each edge receives a color and that adjacent edges, that is, different edges incident to a common vertex, receive different colors. The chromatic index, denoted χ′(G), is the minimum number of colors required for such a coloring to be possible. There are two important lower bounds for χ′(G) on every graph: maximum degree, denoted ∆(G), and density, denoted ω(G). Combining these two lower bounds, we know that every graph’s chromatic index must be at least ∆(G) or …
Richard Whately's Revitalization Of Syllogistic Logic, Calvin Jongsma
Richard Whately's Revitalization Of Syllogistic Logic, Calvin Jongsma
Faculty Work Comprehensive List
This is an expanded version of the first chapter Richard Whately’s Revitalization of Syllogistic Logic in Aristotle’s Syllogism and the Creation of Modern Logic edited by Lukas M. Verburgt and Matteo Cosci (Bloomsbury, 2023). Drawing upon the author’s 1982 Ph. D. dissertation (https://digitalcollections.dordt.edu/faculty_work/230/ ) and more current scholarship, this essay traces the critical historical background to Whately’s work in more detail than could be done in the published version.
The Malliavin-Stein Method For Normal Random Walks With Dependent Increments, Ian Flint, Nicolas Privault, Giovanni Luca Torrisi
The Malliavin-Stein Method For Normal Random Walks With Dependent Increments, Ian Flint, Nicolas Privault, Giovanni Luca Torrisi
Journal of Stochastic Analysis
No abstract provided.