TY - JOUR AB - In pipes, turbulence sets in despite the linear stability of the laminar Hagen–Poiseuille flow. The Reynolds number ( ) for which turbulence first appears in a given experiment – the ‘natural transition point’ – depends on imperfections of the set-up, or, more precisely, on the magnitude of finite amplitude perturbations. At onset, turbulence typically only occupies a certain fraction of the flow, and this fraction equally is found to differ from experiment to experiment. Despite these findings, Reynolds proposed that after sufficiently long times, flows may settle to steady conditions: below a critical velocity, flows should (regardless of initial conditions) always return to laminar, while above this velocity, eddying motion should persist. As will be shown, even in pipes several thousand diameters long, the spatio-temporal intermittent flow patterns observed at the end of the pipe strongly depend on the initial conditions, and there is no indication that different flow patterns would eventually settle to a (statistical) steady state. Exploiting the fact that turbulent puffs do not age (i.e. they are memoryless), we continuously recreate the puff sequence exiting the pipe at the pipe entrance, and in doing so introduce periodic boundary conditions for the puff pattern. This procedure allows us to study the evolution of the flow patterns for arbitrary long times, and we find that after times in excess of advective time units, indeed a statistical steady state is reached. Although the resulting flows remain spatio-temporally intermittent, puff splitting and decay rates eventually reach a balance, so that the turbulent fraction fluctuates around a well-defined level which only depends on . In accordance with Reynolds’ proposition, we find that at lower (here 2020), flows eventually always resume to laminar, while for higher ( ), turbulence persists. The critical point for pipe flow hence falls in the interval of $2020 , which is in very good agreement with the recently proposed value of . The latter estimate was based on single-puff statistics and entirely neglected puff interactions. Unlike in typical contact processes where such interactions strongly affect the percolation threshold, in pipe flow, the critical point is only marginally influenced. Interactions, on the other hand, are responsible for the approach to the statistical steady state. As shown, they strongly affect the resulting flow patterns, where they cause ‘puff clustering’, and these regions of large puff densities are observed to travel across the puff pattern in a wave-like fashion. AU - Vasudevan, Mukund AU - Hof, Björn ID - 5996 JF - Journal of Fluid Mechanics SN - 0022-1120 TI - The critical point of the transition to turbulence in pipe flow VL - 839 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this article, we consider the termination problem of probabilistic programs with real-valued variables. Thequestions concerned are: qualitative ones that ask (i) whether the program terminates with probability 1(almost-sure termination) and (ii) whether the expected termination time is finite (finite termination); andquantitative ones that ask (i) to approximate the expected termination time (expectation problem) and (ii) tocompute a boundBsuch that the probability not to terminate afterBsteps decreases exponentially (con-centration problem). To solve these questions, we utilize the notion of ranking supermartingales, which isa powerful approach for proving termination of probabilistic programs. In detail, we focus on algorithmicsynthesis of linear ranking-supermartingales over affine probabilistic programs (Apps) with both angelic anddemonic non-determinism. An important subclass of Apps is LRApp which is defined as the class of all Appsover which a linear ranking-supermartingale exists.Our main contributions are as follows. Firstly, we show that the membership problem of LRApp (i) canbe decided in polynomial time for Apps with at most demonic non-determinism, and (ii) isNP-hard and inPSPACEfor Apps with angelic non-determinism. Moreover, theNP-hardness result holds already for Appswithout probability and demonic non-determinism. Secondly, we show that the concentration problem overLRApp can be solved in the same complexity as for the membership problem of LRApp. Finally, we show thatthe expectation problem over LRApp can be solved in2EXPTIMEand isPSPACE-hard even for Apps withoutprobability and non-determinism (i.e., deterministic programs). Our experimental results demonstrate theeffectiveness of our approach to answer the qualitative and quantitative questions over Apps with at mostdemonic non-determinism. AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Fu, Hongfei AU - Novotný, Petr AU - Hasheminezhad, Rouzbeh ID - 5993 IS - 2 JF - ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems SN - 0164-0925 TI - Algorithmic analysis of qualitative and quantitative termination problems for affine probabilistic programs VL - 40 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We introduce for each quiver Q and each algebraic oriented cohomology theory A, the cohomological Hall algebra (CoHA) of Q, as the A-homology of the moduli of representations of the preprojective algebra of Q. This generalizes the K-theoretic Hall algebra of commuting varieties defined by Schiffmann-Vasserot. When A is the Morava K-theory, we show evidence that this algebra is a candidate for Lusztig's reformulated conjecture on modular representations of algebraic groups. We construct an action of the preprojective CoHA on the A-homology of Nakajima quiver varieties. We compare this with the action of the Borel subalgebra of Yangian when A is the intersection theory. We also give a shuffle algebra description of this CoHA in terms of the underlying formal group law of A. As applications, we obtain a shuffle description of the Yangian. AU - Yang, Yaping AU - Zhao, Gufang ID - 5999 IS - 5 JF - Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society SN - 0024-6115 TI - The cohomological Hall algebra of a preprojective algebra VL - 116 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Schistosomes are the causative agents of schistosomiasis, a neglected tropical disease affecting over 230 million people worldwide.Additionally to their major impact on human health, they are also models of choice in evolutionary biology. These parasitic flatwormsare unique among the common hermaphroditic trematodes as they have separate sexes. This so-called “evolutionary scandal”displays a female heterogametic genetic sex-determination system (ZZ males and ZW females), as well as a pronounced adult sexualdimorphism. These phenotypic differences are determined by a shared set of genes in both sexes, potentially leading to intralocussexual conflicts. To resolve these conflicts in sexually selected traits, molecular mechanisms such as sex-biased gene expression couldoccur, but parent-of-origin gene expression also provides an alternative. In this work we investigated the latter mechanism, that is,genes expressed preferentially from either the maternal or the paternal allele, inSchistosoma mansonispecies. To this end, tran-scriptomes from male and female hybrid adults obtained by strain crosses were sequenced. Strain-specific single nucleotide poly-morphism (SNP) markers allowed us to discriminate the parental origin, while reciprocal crosses helped to differentiate parentalexpression from strain-specific expression. We identified genes containing SNPs expressed in a parent-of-origin manner consistentwith paternal and maternal imprints. Although the majority of the SNPs was identified in mitochondrial and Z-specific loci, theremaining SNPs found in male and female transcriptomes were situated in genes that have the potential to explain sexual differencesin schistosome parasites. Furthermore, we identified and validated four new Z-specific scaffolds. AU - Kincaid-Smith, Julien AU - Picard, Marion A L AU - Cosseau, Céline AU - Boissier, Jérôme AU - Severac, Dany AU - Grunau, Christoph AU - Toulza, Eve ID - 5989 IS - 3 JF - Genome Biology and Evolution SN - 1759-6653 TI - Parent-of-Origin-Dependent Gene Expression in Male and Female Schistosome Parasites VL - 10 ER - TY - CONF AB - We introduce Clover, a new library for efficient computation using low-precision data, providing mathematical routines required by fundamental methods in optimization and sparse recovery. Our library faithfully implements variants of stochastic quantization that guarantee convergence at low precision, and supports data formats from 4-bit quantized to 32-bit IEEE-754 on current Intel processors. In particular, we show that 4-bit can be implemented efficiently using Intel AVX despite the lack of native support for this data format. Experimental results with dot product, matrix-vector multiplication (MVM), gradient descent (GD), and iterative hard thresholding (IHT) demonstrate that the attainable speedups are in many cases close to linear with respect to the reduction of precision due to reduced data movement. Finally, for GD and IHT, we show examples of absolute speedup achieved by 4-bit versus 32-bit, by iterating until a given target error is achieved. AU - Stojanov, Alen AU - Smith, Tyler Michael AU - Alistarh, Dan-Adrian AU - Puschel, Markus ID - 6031 T2 - 2018 IEEE International Workshop on Signal Processing Systems TI - Fast quantized arithmetic on x86: Trading compute for data movement VL - 2018-October ER - TY - CONF AB - Partially observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs) are the standard models for planning under uncertainty with both finite and infinite horizon. Besides the well-known discounted-sum objective, indefinite-horizon objective (aka Goal-POMDPs) is another classical objective for POMDPs. In this case, given a set of target states and a positive cost for each transition, the optimization objective is to minimize the expected total cost until a target state is reached. In the literature, RTDP-Bel or heuristic search value iteration (HSVI) have been used for solving Goal-POMDPs. Neither of these algorithms has theoretical convergence guarantees, and HSVI may even fail to terminate its trials. We give the following contributions: (1) We discuss the challenges introduced in Goal-POMDPs and illustrate how they prevent the original HSVI from converging. (2) We present a novel algorithm inspired by HSVI, termed Goal-HSVI, and show that our algorithm has convergence guarantees. (3) We show that Goal-HSVI outperforms RTDP-Bel on a set of well-known examples. AU - Horák, Karel AU - Bošanský, Branislav AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu ID - 25 T2 - Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence TI - Goal-HSVI: Heuristic search value iteration for goal-POMDPs VL - 2018-July ER - TY - CONF AB - Partially-observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs) with discounted-sum payoff are a standard framework to model a wide range of problems related to decision making under uncertainty. Traditionally, the goal has been to obtain policies that optimize the expectation of the discounted-sum payoff. A key drawback of the expectation measure is that even low probability events with extreme payoff can significantly affect the expectation, and thus the obtained policies are not necessarily risk-averse. An alternate approach is to optimize the probability that the payoff is above a certain threshold, which allows obtaining risk-averse policies, but ignores optimization of the expectation. We consider the expectation optimization with probabilistic guarantee (EOPG) problem, where the goal is to optimize the expectation ensuring that the payoff is above a given threshold with at least a specified probability. We present several results on the EOPG problem, including the first algorithm to solve it. AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Elgyütt, Adrian AU - Novotny, Petr AU - Rouillé, Owen ID - 24 TI - Expectation optimization with probabilistic guarantees in POMDPs with discounted-sum objectives VL - 2018 ER - TY - CONF AB - Partially observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs) are widely used in probabilistic planning problems in which an agent interacts with an environment using noisy and imprecise sensors. We study a setting in which the sensors are only partially defined and the goal is to synthesize “weakest” additional sensors, such that in the resulting POMDP, there is a small-memory policy for the agent that almost-surely (with probability 1) satisfies a reachability objective. We show that the problem is NP-complete, and present a symbolic algorithm by encoding the problem into SAT instances. We illustrate trade-offs between the amount of memory of the policy and the number of additional sensors on a simple example. We have implemented our approach and consider three classical POMDP examples from the literature, and show that in all the examples the number of sensors can be significantly decreased (as compared to the existing solutions in the literature) without increasing the complexity of the policies. AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Chemlík, Martin AU - Topcu, Ufuk ID - 34 TI - Sensor synthesis for POMDPs with reachability objectives VL - 2018 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An N-superconcentrator is a directed, acyclic graph with N input nodes and N output nodes such that every subset of the inputs and every subset of the outputs of same cardinality can be connected by node-disjoint paths. It is known that linear-size and bounded-degree superconcentrators exist. We prove the existence of such superconcentrators with asymptotic density 25.3 (where the density is the number of edges divided by N). The previously best known densities were 28 [12] and 27.4136 [17]. AU - Kolmogorov, Vladimir AU - Rolinek, Michal ID - 18 IS - 10 JF - Ars Combinatoria SN - 0381-7032 TI - Superconcentrators of density 25.3 VL - 141 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We prove that any cyclic quadrilateral can be inscribed in any closed convex C1-curve. The smoothness condition is not required if the quadrilateral is a rectangle. AU - Akopyan, Arseniy AU - Avvakumov, Sergey ID - 6355 JF - Forum of Mathematics, Sigma SN - 2050-5094 TI - Any cyclic quadrilateral can be inscribed in any closed convex smooth curve VL - 6 ER -