Search results for "NEURAL NETWORK"

showing 10 items of 1385 documents

Neutrons detect order in glasses

2005

The first glassy material was probably made in ancient Egypt some 4500 years ago, so the fact that the structure of glass is still one of the biggest puzzles in physics may come as a surprise. When a liquid is cooled very quickly, the atoms do not have time to arrange themselves into an ordered crystalline solid. Instead, the super cooled liquid falls out of equilibrium and into a disordered amorphous network, more commonly known as a glass.

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterAncient egyptMaterials scienceCondensed matter physicsOrder (business)General Physics and AstronomyNeutronCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksAmorphous solidPhysics World
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Radiation Effects on Silica-Based Preforms and Optical Fibers - II: Coupling Ab Initio Simulations and Experiments

2008

International audience; Both experimental and theoretical approaches are combined to study the nature of precursor sites and radiation-induced point defects in pure and germanium-doped amorphous silica-based glasses.

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterCondensed Matter::Materials Science[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-OPTICS]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Optics [physics.optics]silica optical fibers radiation effectsCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networks
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Theory of glass transition in spin glasses, orientational glasses and structural glasses

2008

Theoretical concepts about the glass transition are briefly reviewed, and the test of these ideas by Monte Carlo simulations of simple lattice models is described, with an emphasis on isotropic and anisotropic orientational glasses, and the bond fluctuation model of polymer melts. It is suggested that orientational glasses do have an equilibrium phase transition at zero temperature (in d = 3 dimensions!) only, in contrast to the Ising spin glass which orders at nonzero temperature. A diverging glass correlation length is identified that is responsible for the anomalous slowing down. For the Potts glass, the divergence seems to be exponential, implying that the model is at its lower critical…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterMaterials scienceSpin glassCondensed matter physicsLattice (order)Monte Carlo methodIsotropyConfiguration entropyOrder and disorderAnisotropyGlass transitionCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networks
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2017

Computer simulations are used to model the phase change that occurs as glasses transition from a liquid phase to a so-called ``ideal glass phase.''

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterPhase changeEquilibrium phaseMaterials science010304 chemical physics0103 physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyLiquid phaseThermodynamics010306 general physicsCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networks01 natural sciencesPhysical Review X
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Glass transitions and scaling laws within an alternative mode-coupling theory

2015

Idealized glass transitions are discussed within an alternative mode-coupling theory (TMCT) proposed by Tokuyama [Physica A 395, 31 (2014)]. This is done in order to identify common ground with and differences from the conventional mode-coupling theory (MCT). It is proven that both theories imply the same scaling laws for the transition dynamics, which are characterized by two power-law decay functions and two diverging power-law time scales. However, the values for the corresponding anomalous exponents calculated within both theories differ from each other. It is proven that the TMCT, contrary to the MCT, does not describe transitions with continuously vanishing arrested parts of the corre…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterScaling lawTheoretical physicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Mode couplingFOS: Physical sciencesOrder (group theory)Gravitational singularityDisordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)Schematic modelCondensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematics
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Simulation of Models for Isotropic and Anisotropic Orientational Glasses

1992

“Orientational glass” behavior is found when molecular crystals are randomly diluted, and quadrupole moments get frozen by random alignment of the molecules, similar to “spin glass” behavior of randomly diluted magnets. Monte Carlo simulation of lattice models where quadrupole moments interact with nearest neighbor Gaussian coupling is a unique tool to study this behavior. The time-dependent glass order parameter exhibits anomalously slow relaxation, compatible with the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) stretched exponential function. Both isotropic and anisotropic models exhibit in d=2 and d=3 spatial dimensions glass transitions at zero temperature only. While the glass correlation length a…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterStretched exponential functionSpin glassMaterials scienceCondensed matter physicsIsotropyMonte Carlo methodQuadrupoleAnisotropyCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksPower lawOrientational glass
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Recent advances in the development of holey optical fibers based on sulfide glasses

2006

International audience; Microstructured optical fibers as new optical objects have been developed in the recent past years, firstly from silica glass and then from other oxide glasses such as tellurite or different heavy cations oxide glasses. However very few results have been reported concerning non-oxide glasses and more particularly chalcogenide glasses. In a photonic crystal fiber the arrangement of air holes along the transverse section of the fiber around a solid glassy core leads to unique optical properties, such as for example broadband single-mode guidance, adjustable dispersion, nonlinear properties. Since the effective modal area is adjustable thanks to geometrical parameters, …

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matterchalcogenidesulfideoptical fibersmicrostructured fibersphotonic crystal fibersglasses CHALCOGENIDE GLASSESTELECOMMUNICATIONSPhysics::OpticsMULTIPOLE METHODholey fibersCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networks
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SPATIAL MULTIFRACTALITY OF ELECTRONIC STATES AND THE METAL-INSULATOR TRANSITION IN DISORDERED SYSTEMS

1993

For the investigation of the spatial behavior of electronic wave functions in disordered systems, we employ the Anderson model of localization. The eigenstates of the corresponding Hamiltonian are calculated numerically by means of the Lanczos algorithm and are analyzed with respect to their spatial multifractal properties. We find that the wave functions show spatial multifractality for all parameter cases not too far away from the metal-insulator transition (MIT) which separates localized from extended states in this model. Exactly at the MIT, multifractality is expected to exist on all length scales larger than the lattice spacing. It is found that the corresponding singularity spectrum…

Condensed matter physicsApplied MathematicsLanczos algorithmMultifractal systemCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networkssymbols.namesakeModeling and SimulationsymbolsProbability distributionCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated ElectronsGeometry and TopologyStatistical physicsMetal–insulator transitionSingularity spectrumWave functionHamiltonian (quantum mechanics)Anderson impurity modelMathematicsFractals
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Nonexponential 2H spin-lattice relaxation as a signature of the glassy state

1990

Abstract High-precision measurements of 2H spin-lattice relaxation on several molecular glass-forming liquids have been performed. As a general feature the following can be stated: At temperatures more than ten to twenty degrees above the calorimetric glass transition temperature Tg the 2H spin-lattice relaxation is exponential; below that temperature regime the relaxation is nonexponential. This crossover from exponential to nonexponential magnetization recovery implies that no common spin temperature caused by spin diffusion exists in a 2H glass. This contrasts 1H spin-lattice relaxation which is found to be strictly monoexponential throughout. The occurrence of nonexponential 2H relaxati…

Condensed matter physicsChemistrySpin–lattice relaxationGeneral Physics and AstronomyObservableCondensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksExponential functionMagnetizationNuclear magnetic resonanceSpin diffusionRelaxation (physics)Physical and Theoretical ChemistryGlass transitionSpin-½Chemical Physics Letters
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Transferability of Deep Learning Algorithms for Malignancy Detection in Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy Images from Different Anatomical Locations of t…

2019

Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) is the most common cancer type of the epithelium and is often detected at a late stage. Besides invasive diagnosis of SCC by means of biopsy and histo-pathologic assessment, Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (CLE) has emerged as noninvasive method that was successfully used to diagnose SCC in vivo. For interpretation of CLE images, however, extensive training is required, which limits its applicability and use in clinical practice of the method. To aid diagnosis of SCC in a broader scope, automatic detection methods have been proposed. This work compares two methods with regard to their applicability in a transfer learning sense, i.e. training on one tissue type (f…

Confocal laser endomicroscopyComputer sciencebusiness.industryDeep learningTransferabilityPattern recognitionMalignancymedicine.diseaseConvolutional neural network03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesismedicinePreprocessorUpper gastrointestinalArtificial intelligence030223 otorhinolaryngologybusinessTransfer of learning
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