@article{8973, abstract = {We consider the symmetric simple exclusion process in Zd with quenched bounded dynamic random conductances and prove its hydrodynamic limit in path space. The main tool is the connection, due to the self-duality of the process, between the invariance principle for single particles starting from all points and the macroscopic behavior of the density field. While the hydrodynamic limit at fixed macroscopic times is obtained via a generalization to the time-inhomogeneous context of the strategy introduced in [41], in order to prove tightness for the sequence of empirical density fields we develop a new criterion based on the notion of uniform conditional stochastic continuity, following [50]. In conclusion, we show that uniform elliptic dynamic conductances provide an example of environments in which the so-called arbitrary starting point invariance principle may be derived from the invariance principle of a single particle starting from the origin. Therefore, our hydrodynamics result applies to the examples of quenched environments considered in, e.g., [1], [3], [6] in combination with the hypothesis of uniform ellipticity.}, author = {Redig, Frank and Saada, Ellen and Sau, Federico}, issn = {1083-6489}, journal = {Electronic Journal of Probability}, publisher = { Institute of Mathematical Statistics}, title = {{Symmetric simple exclusion process in dynamic environment: Hydrodynamics}}, doi = {10.1214/20-EJP536}, volume = {25}, year = {2020}, } @article{179, abstract = {An asymptotic formula is established for the number of rational points of bounded anticanonical height which lie on a certain Zariski dense subset of the biprojective hypersurface x1y21+⋯+x4y24=0 in ℙ3×ℙ3. This confirms the modified Manin conjecture for this variety, in which the removal of a thin set of rational points is allowed.}, author = {Browning, Timothy D and Heath Brown, Roger}, issn = {0012-7094}, journal = {Duke Mathematical Journal}, number = {16}, pages = {3099--3165}, publisher = {Duke University Press}, title = {{Density of rational points on a quadric bundle in ℙ3×ℙ3}}, doi = {10.1215/00127094-2020-0031}, volume = {169}, year = {2020}, } @misc{9814, abstract = {Data and mathematica notebooks for plotting figures from Language learning with communication between learners}, author = {Ibsen-Jensen, Rasmus and Tkadlec, Josef and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Nowak, Martin}, publisher = {Royal Society}, title = {{Data and mathematica notebooks for plotting figures from language learning with communication between learners from language acquisition with communication between learners}}, doi = {10.6084/m9.figshare.5973013.v1}, year = {2020}, } @article{8285, abstract = {We demonstrate the utility of optical cavity generated spin-squeezed states in free space atomic fountain clocks in ensembles of 390 000 87Rb atoms. Fluorescence imaging, correlated to an initial quantum nondemolition measurement, is used for population spectroscopy after the atoms are released from a confining lattice. For a free fall time of 4 milliseconds, we resolve a single-shot phase sensitivity of 814(61) microradians, which is 5.8(0.6) decibels (dB) below the quantum projection limit. We observe that this squeezing is preserved as the cloud expands to a roughly 200  μm radius and falls roughly 300  μm in free space. Ramsey spectroscopy with 240 000 atoms at a 3.6 ms Ramsey time results in a single-shot fractional frequency stability of 8.4(0.2)×10−12, 3.8(0.2) dB below the quantum projection limit. The sensitivity and stability are limited by the technical noise in the fluorescence detection protocol and the microwave system, respectively.}, author = {Malia, Benjamin K. and Martínez-Rincón, Julián and Wu, Yunfan and Hosten, Onur and Kasevich, Mark A.}, issn = {1079-7114}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {4}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Free space Ramsey spectroscopy in rubidium with noise below the quantum projection limit}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.043202}, volume = {125}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{10328, abstract = {We discus noise channels in coherent electro-optic up-conversion between microwave and optical fields, in particular due to optical heating. We also report on a novel configuration, which promises to be flexible and highly efficient.}, author = {Lambert, Nicholas J. and Mobassem, Sonia and Rueda Sanchez, Alfredo R and Schwefel, Harald G.L.}, booktitle = {OSA Quantum 2.0 Conference}, isbn = {9-781-5575-2820-9}, location = {Washington, DC, United States}, publisher = {Optica Publishing Group}, title = {{New designs and noise channels in electro-optic microwave to optical up-conversion}}, doi = {10.1364/QUANTUM.2020.QTu8A.1}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{9633, abstract = {The search for biologically faithful synaptic plasticity rules has resulted in a large body of models. They are usually inspired by – and fitted to – experimental data, but they rarely produce neural dynamics that serve complex functions. These failures suggest that current plasticity models are still under-constrained by existing data. Here, we present an alternative approach that uses meta-learning to discover plausible synaptic plasticity rules. Instead of experimental data, the rules are constrained by the functions they implement and the structure they are meant to produce. Briefly, we parameterize synaptic plasticity rules by a Volterra expansion and then use supervised learning methods (gradient descent or evolutionary strategies) to minimize a problem-dependent loss function that quantifies how effectively a candidate plasticity rule transforms an initially random network into one with the desired function. We first validate our approach by re-discovering previously described plasticity rules, starting at the single-neuron level and “Oja’s rule”, a simple Hebbian plasticity rule that captures the direction of most variability of inputs to a neuron (i.e., the first principal component). We expand the problem to the network level and ask the framework to find Oja’s rule together with an anti-Hebbian rule such that an initially random two-layer firing-rate network will recover several principal components of the input space after learning. Next, we move to networks of integrate-and-fire neurons with plastic inhibitory afferents. We train for rules that achieve a target firing rate by countering tuned excitation. Our algorithm discovers a specific subset of the manifold of rules that can solve this task. Our work is a proof of principle of an automated and unbiased approach to unveil synaptic plasticity rules that obey biological constraints and can solve complex functions.}, author = {Confavreux, Basile J and Zenke, Friedemann and Agnes, Everton J. and Lillicrap, Timothy and Vogels, Tim P}, booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems}, issn = {1049-5258}, location = {Vancouver, Canada}, pages = {16398--16408}, title = {{A meta-learning approach to (re)discover plasticity rules that carve a desired function into a neural network}}, volume = {33}, year = {2020}, } @article{8943, abstract = {The widely used non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are derivatives of the phytohormone salicylic acid (SA). SA is well known to regulate plant immunity and development, whereas there have been few reports focusing on the effects of NSAIDs in plants. Our studies here reveal that NSAIDs exhibit largely overlapping physiological activities to SA in the model plant Arabidopsis. NSAID treatments lead to shorter and agravitropic primary roots and inhibited lateral root organogenesis. Notably, in addition to the SA-like action, which in roots involves binding to the protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), NSAIDs also exhibit PP2A-independent effects. Cell biological and biochemical analyses reveal that many NSAIDs bind directly to and inhibit the chaperone activity of TWISTED DWARF1, thereby regulating actin cytoskeleton dynamics and subsequent endosomal trafficking. Our findings uncover an unexpected bioactivity of human pharmaceuticals in plants and provide insights into the molecular mechanism underlying the cellular action of this class of anti-inflammatory compounds.}, author = {Tan, Shutang and Di Donato, Martin and Glanc, Matous and Zhang, Xixi and Klíma, Petr and Liu, Jie and Bailly, Aurélien and Ferro, Noel and Petrášek, Jan and Geisler, Markus and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {22111247}, journal = {Cell Reports}, number = {9}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs target TWISTED DWARF1-regulated actin dynamics and auxin transport-mediated plant development}}, doi = {10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108463}, volume = {33}, year = {2020}, } @article{7932, abstract = {Pulsating flows through tubular geometries are laminar provided that velocities are moderate. This in particular is also believed to apply to cardiovascular flows where inertial forces are typically too low to sustain turbulence. On the other hand, flow instabilities and fluctuating shear stresses are held responsible for a variety of cardiovascular diseases. Here we report a nonlinear instability mechanism for pulsating pipe flow that gives rise to bursts of turbulence at low flow rates. Geometrical distortions of small, yet finite, amplitude are found to excite a state consisting of helical vortices during flow deceleration. The resulting flow pattern grows rapidly in magnitude, breaks down into turbulence, and eventually returns to laminar when the flow accelerates. This scenario causes shear stress fluctuations and flow reversal during each pulsation cycle. Such unsteady conditions can adversely affect blood vessels and have been shown to promote inflammation and dysfunction of the shear stress-sensitive endothelial cell layer.}, author = {Xu, Duo and Varshney, Atul and Ma, Xingyu and Song, Baofang and Riedl, Michael and Avila, Marc and Hof, Björn}, issn = {10916490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, number = {21}, pages = {11233--11239}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Nonlinear hydrodynamic instability and turbulence in pulsatile flow}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1913716117}, volume = {117}, year = {2020}, } @article{14694, abstract = {We study the unique solution m of the Dyson equation \( -m(z)^{-1} = z\1 - a + S[m(z)] \) on a von Neumann algebra A with the constraint Imm≥0. Here, z lies in the complex upper half-plane, a is a self-adjoint element of A and S is a positivity-preserving linear operator on A. We show that m is the Stieltjes transform of a compactly supported A-valued measure on R. Under suitable assumptions, we establish that this measure has a uniformly 1/3-Hölder continuous density with respect to the Lebesgue measure, which is supported on finitely many intervals, called bands. In fact, the density is analytic inside the bands with a square-root growth at the edges and internal cubic root cusps whenever the gap between two bands vanishes. The shape of these singularities is universal and no other singularity may occur. We give a precise asymptotic description of m near the singular points. These asymptotics generalize the analysis at the regular edges given in the companion paper on the Tracy-Widom universality for the edge eigenvalue statistics for correlated random matrices [the first author et al., Ann. Probab. 48, No. 2, 963--1001 (2020; Zbl 1434.60017)] and they play a key role in the proof of the Pearcey universality at the cusp for Wigner-type matrices [G. Cipolloni et al., Pure Appl. Anal. 1, No. 4, 615--707 (2019; Zbl 07142203); the second author et al., Commun. Math. Phys. 378, No. 2, 1203--1278 (2020; Zbl 07236118)]. We also extend the finite dimensional band mass formula from [the first author et al., loc. cit.] to the von Neumann algebra setting by showing that the spectral mass of the bands is topologically rigid under deformations and we conclude that these masses are quantized in some important cases.}, author = {Alt, Johannes and Erdös, László and Krüger, Torben H}, issn = {1431-0643}, journal = {Documenta Mathematica}, keywords = {General Mathematics}, pages = {1421--1539}, publisher = {EMS Press}, title = {{The Dyson equation with linear self-energy: Spectral bands, edges and cusps}}, doi = {10.4171/dm/780}, volume = {25}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{8156, abstract = {We present solutions to several problems originating from geometry and discrete mathematics: existence of equipartitions, maps without Tverberg multiple points, and inscribing quadrilaterals. Equivariant obstruction theory is the natural topological approach to these type of questions. However, for the specific problems we consider it had yielded only partial or no results. We get our results by complementing equivariant obstruction theory with other techniques from topology and geometry.}, author = {Avvakumov, Sergey}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {119}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Topological methods in geometry and discrete mathematics}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8156}, year = {2020}, }