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1308.5471
{'1308.5471-1-0-0': "The duality in Bakry-Emery's gradient estimates and Wasserstein controls for heat distributions is extended to that in refined estimates in a high generality.", '1308.5471-1-0-1': "As a result, we find an equivalent condition to Bakry-Ledoux's refined gradient estimate involving an upper dimension bound.", '1308.5471-1-0-2': 'This new condition is described as a [MATH]-Wasserstein control for heat distributions at different times.', '1308.5471-1-0-3': 'The [MATH]-version of those estimates are studied on Riemannian manifolds via coupling method.', '1308.5471-1-1-0': 'Key words:', '1308.5471-1-2-0': 'gradient estimate, Wasserstein distance, heat distribution, Hopf-Lax semigroup, Ricci curvature', '1308.5471-1-3-0': '# Introduction', '1308.5471-1-4-0': 'Since the pioneering work of Bakry and Emery [CITATION], their ([MATH]-)gradient estimate [EQUATION] for a diffusion semigroup [MATH] has been played a prominent role in geometric analysis of the diffusion generator [MATH] (see [CITATION], for instance).', '1308.5471-1-4-1': 'Among several further developments, the following refined form is studied by Bakry and Ledoux [CITATION] (see [CITATION] also): For a fixed parameter [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-4-2': 'Recently, in [CITATION], it is revealed that [REF] is equivalent to the following estimate concerning a Lipschitz type bound of heat distributions with respect to the [MATH]-Wasserstein distance [MATH], which we call an [MATH]-Wasserstein control, in a fairly general situation: For [MATH] and two probability measures [MATH] and [MATH] on the state space, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-4-3': 'The purpose of this article is to extend such a duality by introducing a new inequality like [REF] which corresponds to [REF].', '1308.5471-1-4-4': 'As we will see in Corollary [REF] as a special case of our result, the estimate [REF] is equivalent to the following space-time [MATH]-Wasserstein control in an abstract framework: For [MATH] and two probability measures [MATH] and [MATH] on the state space, [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] for measurable [MATH] and hence [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-4-5': 'Here the function [MATH] is regarded as [MATH] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-5-0': 'In the Bakry-Ledoux gradient estimate [REF], the parameter [MATH] and [MATH] play the role of lower Ricci curvature bound and upper dimension bound.', '1308.5471-1-6-0': 'Indeed, under the condition [EQUATION] the Bakry-Ledoux gradient estimate', '1308.5471-1-7-0': "is equivalent (at least heuristically) to the following inequality, called Bakry-Emery's curvature-dimension condition or Bochner's inequality: [EQUATION]", '1308.5471-1-7-1': 'Note that [REF] is the definition of squared norm of gradient or carre du champ [MATH] in the theory of gamma calculus, as in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-7-2': "On complete Riemannian manifolds with [MATH], the Bochner formula yields that Bakry-Emery's curvature-dimension condition is equivalent to the combination of [MATH] and [MATH] (when [MATH], the latter condition always holds).", '1308.5471-1-7-3': 'Moreover, even in an abstract framework, [REF] has provided several extensions of results in Riemannian geometry concerning these bounds.', '1308.5471-1-7-4': 'Thus we could say that [REF] or [REF] is placed in the intersection of geometry and analysis.', '1308.5471-1-7-5': 'While [REF] can be applied in a broader framework such as analysis on infinite dimensional spaces, [REF] provides qualitatively sharper results and hence obtaining [REF] or [REF] for [MATH] would be important (see [CITATION] for instance).', '1308.5471-1-8-0': 'The Wasserstein control conditions [REF] or [REF] serves us a new approach to [REF] or [REF] especially on non-smooth spaces.', '1308.5471-1-9-0': 'Since the Bochner formula is not available in such a case, it was completely unclear when [REF] holds.', '1308.5471-1-9-1': 'As an approach to this problem, the relation with an alternative formulation of "[MATH] and [MATH]" by optimal transportation [CITATION] has been investigated recently.', '1308.5471-1-9-2': 'Since those new conditions are stable under geometric operations such as the measured Gromov-Hausdorff limit, the same stability holds for [REF] once we prove the equivalence between them.', '1308.5471-1-9-3': 'This equivalence is finally established by Ambrosio, Gigli, Savare, Mondino and Rajala [CITATION] when [MATH] and by Erbar, Sturm and the author [CITATION] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-9-4': 'For connecting gamma calculus approach based on [REF] with optimal transport approach, the estimate [REF] or [REF] works as a bridge, though what we actually used when [MATH] is [REF].', '1308.5471-1-10-0': 'The emphasis of the result of this paper is put on the fact that the equivalence between [REF] and [REF] can be extended to more general situation where any kind of known curvature-dimension conditions corresponding to "[MATH] and [MATH]" may not hold (see Theorem [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-10-1': 'For instance, previous results can be applied to obtain an estimate like [REF] from an estimate like [REF] for sub-elliptic diffusions [CITATION] (see [CITATION] also for other examples).', '1308.5471-1-10-2': 'We can expect a similar result also in the present case as a future application.', '1308.5471-1-10-3': 'As another kind of generality, we can obtain [MATH]-duality, as we did in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-10-4': 'Actually, an [MATH]-type estimate of [REF] (see [REF]) holds on complete Riemannian manifolds, and we can obtain the [MATH]-analog of [REF] by our result.', '1308.5471-1-10-5': 'It is not yet known whether we can obtain the same estimate on metric measure spaces satisfying the Riemannian curvature-dimension condition in [CITATION], where the [MATH]-estimate holds.', '1308.5471-1-10-6': 'Note that, in the case [MATH], the [MATH]-version of [REF] follows from [REF] (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-10-7': 'Such a precision has various applications in that case and hence it would be interesting to obtain an [MATH]-estimate associated with the curvature-dimension condition as well as to investigate applications of it.', '1308.5471-1-11-0': 'For related results, when [MATH], the implication from [REF] to [REF] is obtained by Bakry, Gentil and Ledoux in [CITATION] by a different method.', '1308.5471-1-11-1': 'Bolley, Gentil and Guillin [CITATION] recently obtained a sort of contraction bound of [MATH]-Wasserstein distance for two distributions of diffusion at the same time involving the dimension parameter [MATH] from [REF].', '1308.5471-1-12-0': 'The essential idea of the proof of the duality in [REF] and [REF] is inherited from the earlier studies in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-12-1': 'There we regard [REF] as a differentiation of [REF] in space variable with a change of viewpoint from the space of measures to the space of functions.', '1308.5471-1-13-0': 'Then the opposite implication is regarded as an integration in space variable, and it is realized by using the Kantorovich duality and the analysis of the associated Hopf-Lax semigroup.', '1308.5471-1-13-1': 'Thus it was natural in those argument that we used no time-dependency on the constant and the Markov kernel [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-13-2': 'In the present case, the additional term in [REF] involving [MATH] can be regarded as a differentiation in time parameter.', '1308.5471-1-13-3': 'The heuristic reason why the "integrated" estimate [REF] involves distribution of diffusions at different times is based on this fact.', '1308.5471-1-14-0': 'Actually, if we apply [REF] when [MATH] by taking a limit [MATH], it becomes the reduced control [REF], which is in duality with [REF].', '1308.5471-1-14-1': 'In the proof of our main theorem, we will couple a space parameter with a time parameter.', '1308.5471-1-14-2': 'As a result, the argument becomes more complicated compared with the previous one in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-14-3': 'This fact also makes it unclear what is the optimal bound of space-time Wasserstein control of type [REF].', '1308.5471-1-14-4': 'Indeed, we obtain [REF] by choosing a (possibly not optimal but admissible) space-time reparametrizations in a variational problem arising in Proposition [REF] below (see Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-14-5': 'When we are working with the specified estimate [REF], the space-time [MATH]-control [REF] involving comparison functions seems to be optimal (see Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-15-0': 'The organization of the paper is as follows.', '1308.5471-1-15-1': 'In the next section, we give a precise definition of our framework and state the main theorems.', '1308.5471-1-15-2': 'Since we will deal with the time-evolution of the Markov kernel, we discuss it under two different family of assumptions in Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-15-3': 'In those theorems, only a weaker duality is obtained and we add a technical assumption (strong Feller property of [MATH]) in both cases to obtain the full duality result including the relation between [REF] and [REF] (Corollary [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-15-4': 'The proof of main results except Theorem [REF] is given in Section [REF].', '1308.5471-1-15-5': 'In the proof, we will show two key propositions: Proposition [REF] and Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-15-6': 'Though they can be applied to more general situation than in the setting of Theorem [REF], we exclude it from the main theorem for simplicity of presentation since the statements of them look more complicated.', '1308.5471-1-15-7': 'We also prove another space-time [MATH]-control [REF] studied in [CITATION] from [REF] (Theorem [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-15-8': 'In Section [REF], we will prove Theorem [REF], which concerns with [MATH]-estimates, on a complete Riemannian manifold satisfying [REF] for a (possibly non-symmetric) diffusion generator [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-15-9': 'For the proof, we will use a stochastic analytic technique based on a coupling of diffusion processes constructed by approximation.', '1308.5471-1-15-10': 'Since the argument seems to be technical, we give a heuristic discussion in Section [REF] and make it rigorous in Section [REF].', '1308.5471-1-16-0': '# Framework and main results', '1308.5471-1-17-0': 'Let [MATH] be a Polish metric space.', '1308.5471-1-17-1': 'In this paper we always assume that [MATH] is a geodesic metric.', '1308.5471-1-17-2': 'It means that, for each [MATH], there is a curve [MATH] such that [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-3': 'We call such a curve [MATH] minimal geodesic joining [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-4': 'Let [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] be a semigroup of Markov kernels on [MATH], where [MATH] is the space of all Borel probability measures on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-5': 'We denote the action of the Markov kernel [MATH] to [MATH] bounded and measurable by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-6': 'Similarly, the dual action of [MATH] to [MATH] is denoted by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-7': 'We denote the set of (bounded) Lipschitz functions by [MATH] and [MATH] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-17-8': 'Let us denote the local Lipschitz constant of [MATH] at [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-9': 'That is, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-17-10': 'Let [MATH] stand for the (global) Lipschitz constant of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-11': 'Recall that we say a curve [MATH] in a metric space [MATH] is called absolutely continuous if there is a nonnegative integrable function [MATH] on [MATH] such that [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-12': '[MATH] can be chosen to be the metric derivative [MATH] given by [EQUATION] (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-17-13': 'For [MATH], we denote the [MATH]-Wasserstein (pseudo-)distance on [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-14': 'That is, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-17-15': 'For each [MATH], there is a curve [MATH] such that [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH] for any [MATH] (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-17-16': 'Moreover, by [CITATION], there exists a probability measure [MATH] on [MATH], the space of constant speed minimal geodesics parametrized by [MATH], such that [MATH] and [EQUATION] for any [MATH] with [MATH], where [MATH] is the evaluation map given by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-17-17': 'we call such [MATH] a dynamic optimal coupling of [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-18-0': 'We introduce some quantities we will use throughout this paper.', '1308.5471-1-18-1': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be continuous functions.', '1308.5471-1-18-2': 'We define a measure [MATH] on [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-18-3': 'We assume that [MATH] is locally finite, that is, [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-18-4': 'Let [MATH] with [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-18-5': 'For [MATH], we define the Hopf-Lax (or Hamilton-Jacobi) semigroup [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-18-6': 'For the infinitesimal generator [MATH] of [MATH], we suppose either of the following conditions:', '1308.5471-1-19-0': '[(A1)] For any [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], the following limit exists: [EQUATION] [(A2)] There is a locally finite reference measure [MATH] on [MATH] with [MATH] such that we can extend the action of [MATH] to [MATH] as a bounded operator for some [MATH] and the limit [REF] exists in [MATH] for any [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-20-0': 'The condition (A1) seems more restrictive, but the other assumptions can be rather weak and the proof of the main theorem is simpler under this condition.', '1308.5471-1-20-1': 'The condition (A2) requires some additional assumptions for the main theorem, but it naturally occurs when we are following a functional analytic approach.', '1308.5471-1-20-2': 'Such a situation arises in analysis on metric measure spaces where no (usual) differentiable structure is assumed.', '1308.5471-1-20-3': 'Under (A2), for two measurable functions [MATH] and [MATH] which belong to the same equivalence class in [MATH], [MATH] holds [MATH]-a.e. [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-20-4': 'Thus, even under (A2), we always regard [MATH] for [MATH] as the integral by the Markov kernel of a representative of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-21-0': 'We are interested in the following conditions:', '1308.5471-1-22-0': '[(1)] (Space-time [MATH]-Wasserstein control) For [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] [(2)] ([MATH]-Bakry-Ledoux type gradient estimate) For [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] [(2)[MATH]] [REF] holds for [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] of the form [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-22-1': '[(3)] For any absolutely continuous curve [MATH] in [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-22-2': 'Note that (2) implies (2)[MATH] since the function [MATH] in (2)[MATH] belongs to [MATH] (see Section [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-22-3': 'For (2) and (2)[MATH], we consider a slightly modified version under (A2).', '1308.5471-1-22-4': 'When (2) or (2)[MATH] holds for [MATH] and [MATH]-a.e. [MATH] instead of [MATH] and [MATH], we denote those conditions by (2)[MATH] or (2)[MATH] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-22-5': 'We state our first main theorems of this paper as follows:', '1308.5471-1-23-0': 'Assume (A1).', '1308.5471-1-23-1': 'Then the conditions (1), (2)[MATH] and (3) are equivalent.', '1308.5471-1-24-0': 'For considering the corresponding assertion under (A2), we introduce the following additional assumption associated with (A2):', '1308.5471-1-25-0': '[(A3)] With keeping [MATH] and [MATH] introduced in (A2), for any [MATH] with bounded supports and bounded densities with respect to [MATH], there exists a constant speed [MATH]-minimal geodesic [MATH] such that [MATH] and the density [MATH] satisfies [MATH] for each [MATH] and bounded [MATH], where [MATH] is the Holder conjugate of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-26-0': 'Assume (A2).', '1308.5471-1-26-1': 'Then the implication "(1) [MATH]" holds.', '1308.5471-1-26-2': 'In addition, the implication "(2)[MATH] (1)" also holds true when (A3) holds.', '1308.5471-1-27-0': 'Assume that [MATH] is strong Feller, that is, [MATH] for any [MATH] bounded and measurable.', '1308.5471-1-28-0': 'Assume (A1).', '1308.5471-1-28-1': 'Then (3) implies (2).', '1308.5471-1-28-2': 'In particular, (1), (2) and (3) are equivalent.', '1308.5471-1-29-0': 'Assume (A2).', '1308.5471-1-29-1': 'Then (3) implies (2)[MATH].', '1308.5471-1-29-2': 'In particular, (1), (2)[MATH] and (3) are equivalent if (A3) holds additionally.', '1308.5471-1-30-0': 'As a special case of Corollary [REF], we obtain the following:', '1308.5471-1-31-0': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-31-1': 'Assume that [MATH] is strong Feller.', '1308.5471-1-32-0': 'Assume (A1).', '1308.5471-1-32-1': 'Then the following are equivalent:', '1308.5471-1-33-0': '[REF] holds for any [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-33-1': '[REF] holds for any [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-34-0': 'Assume (A2) and (A3).', '1308.5471-1-34-1': 'Then the following are equivalent:', '1308.5471-1-35-0': '[REF] holds for any [MATH] and [MATH] [REF] holds for any [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]-a.e. [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-36-0': 'Indeed, we obtain Corollary [REF] from Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF] with [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-37-0': 'The reader may think that it seems difficult to specify [MATH] and [MATH] in [REF] when we have a bound of [MATH] involving [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-37-1': 'Even in such a case, we can find them by passing through our duality argument.', '1308.5471-1-37-2': 'See Remark [REF].', '1308.5471-1-38-0': 'We next state a equivalence between [REF] and another Wasserstein control involving comparison functions.', '1308.5471-1-38-1': 'It is studied in [CITATION] in connection with the reduced curvature-dimension condition introduced in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-38-2': 'Here we give a more direct proof under a slightly different assumptions.', '1308.5471-1-38-3': 'Let us introduce comparison functions as follows: For [MATH], let [MATH] be a function on [MATH] given by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-38-4': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-39-0': 'Assume (A1) and that [MATH] is strong Feller.', '1308.5471-1-39-1': 'Then [REF] holds for [MATH] and [MATH] if and only if the following holds: For [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-39-2': 'Assume (A2), (A3) and that [MATH] is strong Feller.', '1308.5471-1-39-3': 'Then [REF] holds for [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]-a.e. [MATH] if and only if [REF] holds for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-40-0': 'Our final main theorem deals with the case when [MATH] is a [MATH]-dimensional complete Riemannian manifold.', '1308.5471-1-40-1': 'We consider the diffusion process [MATH] generated by [MATH], where [MATH] is a [MATH]-vector field.', '1308.5471-1-40-2': 'For [MATH] and [MATH], we say that the Bakry-Emery Ricci tensor associated with [MATH] satisfies the [MATH]-curvature-dimension bound if the following holds: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a symmetrization of [MATH] as [MATH]-tensor.', '1308.5471-1-40-3': 'Let [MATH] be given by distributions of the diffusion process [MATH]: [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-40-4': 'In this case, we will obtain the following:', '1308.5471-1-41-0': 'Assume [MATH] and [REF] for some [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-42-0': 'For [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is as defined in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-42-1': 'For [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-42-2': 'This result can be regarded as an [MATH]-version of [REF] and [REF].', '1308.5471-1-42-3': 'Note that a similar argument implies an estimate of transportation cost involving a comparison function (see Theorem [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-43-0': 'The rest of this section consists of a series of remarks concerning with Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF], including a discussion on sufficient conditions of assumptions in these theorems (Remark [REF] and Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-44-0': 'For both [REF] and [REF], the inequality becomes stronger as [MATH] increases (or [MATH] decreases).', '1308.5471-1-44-1': 'For [REF], This is based on the fact that [REF] holds for any [MATH] if it does for any Dirac measures (see Lemma [REF] below).', '1308.5471-1-44-2': 'Then the problem is reduced to an easy applications of the Holder inequality.', '1308.5471-1-44-3': 'As a by-product of this observation, When both [MATH] and [MATH] are Dirac measure, [REF] yields the same estimate even when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-44-4': 'For [REF], this is an easy consequence of the Holder inequality.', '1308.5471-1-44-5': 'Here we do not require the fact [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-44-6': 'Note that these arguments do not require the conclusion of Theorem [REF] or Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-44-7': 'Note also that, in the [MATH]-estimates in Theorem [REF], the constant corresponding to [MATH] does depend on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-44-8': 'Thus it is not clear whether the same implication still holds or not.', '1308.5471-1-45-0': 'The strong Feller property we assumed in Corollary [REF] holds for the heat semigroup associated with the (quadratic) Cheeger energy functional on a metric measure space with a Riemannian lower Ricci curvature bound (see [CITATION] and [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-45-1': 'More generally, when the semigroup is associated with a Dirichlet form, it is known that [REF] or [REF] yields the strong Feller property under some regularity assumptions [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-45-2': 'Since either [REF] or [REF] immediately follows from [REF] or [REF], the strong Feller property is closely related with our conditions.', '1308.5471-1-46-0': 'The assumption (A3) is satisfied for any [MATH] if [MATH] enjoys the curvature-dimension condition [MATH] in the sense of [CITATION] for some [MATH], for instance (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-46-1': 'Note that, even in this framework, our semigroup [MATH] is not necessarily the one studied in [CITATION], which is associated with the (quadratic) Cheeger energy.', '1308.5471-1-47-0': 'In [CITATION], the monotonicity of [MATH]-transportation cost between two heat distributions on a backward Ricci flow is studied.', '1308.5471-1-48-0': "It can be written in the following form: For [MATH]), [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the dimension of the manifold, [MATH] is the heat distribution at time [MATH], [EQUATION] and [MATH] is Perelman's [MATH]-distance.", '1308.5471-1-48-1': 'It looks very similar to [REF] with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-49-0': 'When [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], the inequality [REF] becomes the following form: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-49-1': 'By applying the Holder inequality to bound [MATH] by [MATH], the last inequality formally implies the following estimate by taking a derivative at [MATH]: [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-49-2': 'It corresponds to the Laplacian comparison theorem on complete Riemannian manifolds, but slightly weaker (it was sharp if we could replace [MATH] with [MATH]).', '1308.5471-1-49-3': 'By the same argument based on [REF] instead of [REF], the sharp estimate follows when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-49-4': 'By using an estimate in Theorem [REF] below (with [MATH]), we can recover the sharp estimate for [MATH], but it is shown only on a complete Riemannian manifold (see e.g. [CITATION] for a more direct proof of the Laplacian comparison theorem for [MATH]).', '1308.5471-1-50-0': '# Proof of dualities', '1308.5471-1-51-0': 'Before going into the proof, we review known properties of the Hopf-Lax semigroup.', '1308.5471-1-52-0': '## Reminder of the Hopf-Lax semigroup', '1308.5471-1-53-0': 'Recall that the Hopf-Lax semigroup is defined as in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-53-1': 'It is immediate from the definition that [MATH] is non-increasing in [MATH] and [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-53-2': 'When [MATH] is bounded, we can easily observe [EQUATION] (see e.g. [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-53-3': 'Therefore, if [MATH] is bounded with bounded support, then [MATH] shares the same property.', '1308.5471-1-53-4': 'In addition, by virtue of [REF], [MATH] holds if [MATH] is bounded.', '1308.5471-1-53-5': 'Again by [REF], we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-53-6': 'This estimate together with [REF] yields that [MATH] holds for each fixed [MATH] if [MATH] is lower semi-continuous.', '1308.5471-1-53-7': 'When [MATH], the same argument as in the proof of [CITATION] yields [EQUATION] for each [MATH], [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-53-8': 'As an important property of [MATH], it is a solution to a Hamilton-Jacobi equation in the following sense: [EQUATION] for any [MATH] and [MATH] (see [CITATION] and references therein).', '1308.5471-1-53-9': 'Note that we use the property that [MATH] is a geodesic space to obtain the equality [REF] while an inequality "[MATH]" holds without this assumption.', '1308.5471-1-53-10': 'By [CITATION] and [REF], the function [MATH] is upper semi-continuous.', '1308.5471-1-53-11': 'This fact works as a sort of regularization of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-54-0': '## From Wasserstein control to gradient estimates', '1308.5471-1-55-0': 'In this subsection, we will give the proof of the implication "(1) [MATH]" in Theorem [REF] and the corresponding assertions in Theorem [REF], Corollary [REF] and Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-55-1': 'The argument is separated into Proposition [REF], Proposition [REF] and Lemma [REF].', '1308.5471-1-55-2': 'We will show all these implications at the end of this section.', '1308.5471-1-56-0': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be continuous functions satisfying [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-56-1': 'In addition, we assume [MATH] and [EQUATION] for [MATH], where [MATH] is as introduced in Section [REF].', '1308.5471-1-56-2': 'Suppose the following inequality holds: [EQUATION] for any [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-56-3': 'Then the condition (3) holds.', '1308.5471-1-57-0': 'Note that neither (A1) nor (A2) is required in Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-58-0': 'We first claim that [MATH] is locally Lipschitz for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-58-1': 'Indeed, [REF] yields that [MATH] is locally Lipschitz in [MATH] with respect to [MATH] by the assumption on [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-58-2': 'By the Holder inequality, the same holds for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-58-3': 'Then the claim follows from the Kantorovich-Rubinstein duality (see [CITATION] for instance).', '1308.5471-1-58-4': 'Note that the claim implies that [MATH] is continuous on [MATH] with respect to the topology of weak convergence.', '1308.5471-1-58-5': 'Let [MATH] be an absolutely continuous curve in [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-58-6': 'Then our claim implies that [MATH] is absolutely continuous in [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-58-7': 'Thus it is differentiable a.e. with respect to the Lebesgue measure on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-0': 'Let [MATH] where [MATH] is differentiable and take [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-1': 'Let [MATH] be a minimizer of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-2': 'Then we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-59-3': 'Take [MATH], which is specified later, and set [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-59-4': 'Then we have [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-5': 'Let us choose [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-59-6': 'Applying [REF] after substituting [REF] into [REF], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-59-7': 'Note that [MATH] as [MATH] by [REF].', '1308.5471-1-59-8': 'In particular, [MATH] as [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-9': 'We divide [REF] by [MATH] and let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-59-10': 'Since [MATH], the dominated convergence theorem yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-59-11': 'Thus the assertion holds by integrating the last inequality with respect to [MATH] on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-60-0': 'Assume (3).', '1308.5471-1-60-1': 'Then [MATH] is Lipschitz on [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-60-2': 'In addition, [EQUATION] holds for [MATH] of the form [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] where [MATH] is differentiable at [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-60-3': 'Moreover, the same conclusion holds for any [MATH] if [MATH] is strong Feller.', '1308.5471-1-61-0': 'Let [MATH], [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-61-1': 'Take a constant speed minimal geodesic [MATH] in [MATH] from [MATH] to [MATH] and let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-61-2': 'Then [MATH] is absolutely continuous and therefore [REF] yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-61-3': 'Because [MATH], [REF] implies the claimed Lipschitz continuity.', '1308.5471-1-61-4': 'Note that [MATH] is also continuous on [MATH] with respect to the topology of weak convergence by the Kantorovich-Rubinstein duality.', '1308.5471-1-61-5': 'Let [MATH], define [MATH] by [EQUATION] and set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-61-6': 'Take [MATH] satisfying [MATH] and set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-62-0': 'Now we claim that [MATH] is upper semi-continuous in [MATH] if either [MATH] for some [MATH] and [MATH], or [MATH] is strong Feller.', '1308.5471-1-62-1': 'In the former case, [MATH] is upper semi-continuous as reviewed in Section [REF].', '1308.5471-1-62-2': 'Since [MATH] holds for [MATH], [REF] and [REF] yield [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-62-3': 'In the latter case, [MATH] for sufficiently small [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-62-4': 'Since [MATH] is continuous, [MATH] is continuous in [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-63-0': 'To conclude [REF] from [REF], we consider the left hand side of [REF].', '1308.5471-1-63-1': 'By our choice of [MATH] and [MATH], we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-63-2': 'Thus we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-63-3': 'Then the conclusion follows by optimizing over [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-64-0': 'To deal with the case under (A2), we prepare the following lemma.', '1308.5471-1-65-0': 'Assume (A2) and that [MATH] is Lipschitz on [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-65-1': 'Then, for each [MATH], [MATH] is differentiable at [MATH]-a.e. [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-66-0': 'The proof of this lemma goes in a similar way as the one for the corresponding assertion in the proof of [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-67-0': 'For each [MATH], [MATH] is differentiable for a.e. [MATH] with respect to the Lebesgue measure.', '1308.5471-1-67-1': 'The Fubini theorem yields that the set [MATH] defined by [EQUATION] is of null Lebesgue measure.', '1308.5471-1-67-2': 'The proof will be completed once we prove [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-67-3': 'Let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-67-4': 'Then we have [MATH] with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-67-5': 'Note that (A2) implicitly yields that [MATH] holds for [MATH]-a.e. [MATH] for any measurable [MATH] with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-67-6': 'Since [MATH] is Lipschitz, the dominated convergence theorem implies [EQUATION] [MATH]-a.e. and hence [MATH] is differentiable at [MATH] for [MATH]-a.e. [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-67-7': 'It means [MATH] and hence the assertion holds.', '1308.5471-1-68-0': 'Now we argue the implications "(1) [MATH]" in Theorem [REF], the corresponding implication in Theorem [REF] and Corollary [REF].', '1308.5471-1-68-1': 'In all these cases, the implication "(1) [MATH] (3)" follows immediately from Proposition [REF] by taking [MATH] and [MATH] as follows: for [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-68-2': 'By (A1), the implications "(3) [MATH]" in Theorem [REF] and "(3) [MATH] (2)" in Corollary [REF] (i) is a direct consequence of Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-68-3': 'Under (A2), for [MATH], [MATH] holds [MATH]-a.e. [MATH] if the derivation in the left hand side is defined in the classical sense [MATH]-a.e. Thus Proposition [REF] and Lemma [REF] yields the implications "(3) [MATH]" in Theorem [REF] and "(3) [MATH]" in Corollary [REF] (ii).', '1308.5471-1-69-0': 'Finally, we briefly discuss two implications "[REF] [MATH] [REF]" in Theorem [REF] (i) and (ii).', '1308.5471-1-69-1': 'This can be reduced to similar arguments because [MATH] as [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-70-0': '## From gradient estimate to Wasserstein controls', '1308.5471-1-71-0': 'For the rest of the proof of Theorem [REF], Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF], the estimate of the Wasserstein distance between Markov kernels given in Proposition [REF] and Proposition [REF] below is essential.', '1308.5471-1-71-1': 'We begin with the following auxiliary lemma.', '1308.5471-1-72-0': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-72-1': 'If [EQUATION] holds whenever [MATH] are Dirac measures, then the same holds for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-73-0': 'The proof goes along the same line as [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-73-1': 'Thus we omit some technical details.', '1308.5471-1-73-2': 'For each [MATH], take an optimal coupling [MATH] of [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-73-3': 'Let [MATH] be an optimal coupling of [MATH] and [MATH] and define [MATH] by [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-73-4': 'Then the assumption and the Minkowski inequality for [MATH]-norm yield [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-73-5': 'Hence the conclusion holds.', '1308.5471-1-74-0': 'Let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-74-1': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be [MATH]-increasing surjections.', '1308.5471-1-74-2': 'Assume [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-74-3': 'Then, for [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-74-4': 'By virtue of Lemma [REF], it suffices to show the assertion when [MATH], [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-74-5': 'However, for later use, we argue with general [MATH] for a while.', '1308.5471-1-75-0': 'The Kantorovich duality yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-75-1': 'Let [MATH] be a dynamic optimal coupling associated with a geodesic [MATH] from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-75-2': 'Note that [REF] is available for [MATH] instead of [MATH] for [MATH] since we assume (2)[MATH].', '1308.5471-1-75-3': 'With keeping this fact in mind, for [MATH]), we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-75-4': 'Here we used the fact that local Lipschitz constant is an upper gradient in the first inequality.', '1308.5471-1-75-5': 'The second inequality follows from [REF], [REF] and [REF].', '1308.5471-1-75-6': 'The third inequality follows from [REF] and [REF] again.', '1308.5471-1-75-7': 'Therefore [MATH] is continuous on [MATH] and locally Lipschitz on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-75-8': 'In particular, [MATH] is continuous on [MATH] and locally Lipschitz on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-75-9': 'Hence we can apply [CITATION] twice to obtain [EQUATION] with the aid of [REF].', '1308.5471-1-75-10': 'By the Holder inequality and [REF], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-75-11': 'By combining the last inequality with [REF] and [REF], we obtain [EQUATION] by the Hausdorff-Young inequality.', '1308.5471-1-76-0': 'Then the conclusion follows if both [MATH] and [MATH] are Dirac measures.', '1308.5471-1-76-1': 'As remarked at the beginning of the proof, it is sufficient to conclude.', '1308.5471-1-77-0': 'Assume (A2), (A3) and (2)[MATH].', '1308.5471-1-77-1': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be as in Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-77-2': 'Then, [REF] holds for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-78-0': 'We closely follow the proof of Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-78-1': 'We first show [REF] for [MATH] with bounded supports and bounded densities with respect to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-78-2': 'Let [MATH] be a dynamic optimal coupling associated with a geodesics [MATH] from [MATH] to [MATH] given as in (A3).', '1308.5471-1-78-3': 'In the Kantorovich duality [REF], we may restrict the class of test functions [MATH] to be [MATH] with bounded supports.', '1308.5471-1-78-4': 'For such [MATH], [MATH] belongs to the same class again for any [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-78-5': 'In particular, the local finiteness of [MATH] implies [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-78-6': 'Thus the combination of (A2) and the choice of [MATH] make the computation in [REF] and [REF] valid.', '1308.5471-1-78-7': 'Indeed, though [REF] holds only [MATH]-a.e., it is sufficient in this case since [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-78-8': 'Then the rest of the proof of Proposition [REF] works in exactly the same way to conclude [REF].', '1308.5471-1-79-0': 'Next we take an approximation of Dirac measures.', '1308.5471-1-79-1': 'By applying [REF] with [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-79-2': 'By virtue of this estimate, [REF] for Dirac measures follows by tending [MATH] with respect to [MATH] in [REF] for each [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-80-0': 'Now we will show the implication "(2)[MATH] (1)" in Theorem [REF] and the corresponding implication "(2)[MATH] (1)" in Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-80-1': 'We give the proof only to the former one since the other proof goes in exactly the same way.', '1308.5471-1-80-2': 'We apply Proposition [REF] with specified [MATH] and [MATH] for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-80-3': 'Let us define [MATH] by [MATH], where [MATH] is given in the statement of Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-80-4': 'By using it, we choose [MATH] and [MATH] as follows: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-80-5': 'We can easily verify that [MATH] and [MATH] satisfy all conditions we supposed in Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-80-6': 'Moreover, we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-80-7': 'By substituting them into [REF], we obtain the desired inequality [REF].', '1308.5471-1-81-0': 'By putting our arguments together, we complete the proof of Theorem [REF], Theorem [REF] and Corollary [REF].', '1308.5471-1-82-0': 'The combination of Proposition [REF] and Theorem [REF] (or Theorem [REF]) implies that the inequality [REF] has a self-improvement property.', '1308.5471-1-82-1': 'That is, starting from a less sharp estimate of type [REF], we can obtain a sharper estimate of type [REF] by passing through [REF].', '1308.5471-1-83-0': 'On the other hand, we can easily obtain many weaker inequalities of type [REF] from [REF].', '1308.5471-1-83-1': 'Indeed, since our proof is based on Proposition [REF] and an appropriate choice of space-time reparametrization [MATH] and [MATH], a bad choice of [MATH] and [MATH] produces a weaker estimate.', '1308.5471-1-83-2': 'Nevertheless, Proposition [REF] ensures that such a weaker estimate reproduces [REF] and consequently such a weaker estimate of type [REF] can be equivalent to [REF].', '1308.5471-1-84-0': 'Indeed, our choice of [MATH] and [MATH] in the proof of Theorem [REF] may not be optimal.', '1308.5471-1-84-1': '[MATH] is a minimizer of the right hand side of [REF] when [MATH] and [MATH] is a minimizer of the same quantity for fixed [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-84-2': 'Even in the case of Corollary [REF], the genuine minimizer [MATH] seems to be rather complicated (cf. Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-85-0': 'By using Proposition [REF], or Proposition [REF], we also conclude Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-86-0': 'Theorem [REF] We only give the proof of the implication "[REF] [MATH] [REF]" in (i) since the other implication is already shown at the end of Section [REF] and the corresponding assertion in (ii) can be shown in the same way by using Proposition [REF] instead of Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-87-0': 'Indeed, letting [MATH] and [MATH] and applying the Gronwall lemma to give an estimate of [MATH] yield the conclusion.', '1308.5471-1-87-1': 'In the sequel, we use the abbreviation [MATH] for simplicity of notation.', '1308.5471-1-87-2': 'For [MATH], let us define [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] as follows: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-87-3': 'In what follows, we only consider the case [MATH] and [MATH] for simplicity of presentation.', '1308.5471-1-87-4': 'Indeed, the same argument also works in those cases.', '1308.5471-1-87-5': 'Note that [MATH] is [MATH]-increasing surjection from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-87-6': 'Thus applying Proposition [REF] with [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-87-7': 'Since we have [EQUATION] for [MATH] and the addition formulae [EQUATION] [REF] implies [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-87-8': 'Since [EQUATION] [REF] immediately yields [REF].', '1308.5471-1-88-0': 'The time parametrization [MATH] in the proof of Theorem [REF] is nearly optimal.', '1308.5471-1-88-1': 'Indeed, a minimizer [MATH] of the right hand side of [REF] under the specified choice of [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], as in the proof of Theorem [REF], is a solution to an ordinary differential equation.', '1308.5471-1-88-2': 'It can be expressed in the following simple form: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-88-3': 'However, the solution [MATH] becomes an elliptic function in general.', '1308.5471-1-88-4': 'To avoid technical difficulties, we have considered comparison functions instead by linearizing the equation for [MATH] since we are only interested in the case [MATH] in our argument and then [MATH] must be small also.', '1308.5471-1-88-5': 'As a result, we obtain [MATH] in the proof of Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-89-0': '# A coupling method on Riemannian manifolds', '1308.5471-1-90-0': 'In this section, we are supposed to be in the framework of Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-90-1': 'In particular, [MATH] is an [MATH]-dimensional complete Riemannian manifold and [MATH] is given by the integral operator associated with the distribution of the diffusion process generated by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-90-2': 'Note that [MATH] is conservative under [REF] (see [CITATION] for instance) and hence [MATH] defines a Markov kernel.', '1308.5471-1-90-3': 'Since we are on a smooth space, (A1) is satisfied.', '1308.5471-1-90-4': 'In the sequel, we study a space-time Wasserstein control for [MATH] by a coupling method based on stochastic analytic techniques.', '1308.5471-1-90-5': 'Indeed, a coupling by parallel transport of two diffusion particles is used to show dimension-free [MATH]-control for any [MATH] (see [CITATION] and references therein).', '1308.5471-1-90-6': 'To show space-time [MATH]-control, we will use a coupling by parallel transport again but two particles under consideration moves in different speeds to estimate distributions at different times.', '1308.5471-1-91-0': 'In the following argument, we always assume [MATH] when [MATH] to avoid the singularity when [MATH] (see Remark [REF] below).', '1308.5471-1-92-0': 'When [MATH], it is known that [REF] yields [MATH] (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-92-1': 'Thus the above assumption only exclude the case [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-92-2': 'Even when it is the case, we can prove the same conclusion for [MATH] in [REF] instead of [MATH] and finally let [MATH] to obtain the full statement from the one involving [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-92-3': 'As a matter of fact, [MATH] happens only when [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is isometric to the sphere of the constant sectional curvature [MATH] (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-1-93-0': '## The case under the absence of the cut locus', '1308.5471-1-94-0': 'In what follows, we explain how our coupling method works.', '1308.5471-1-94-1': 'For this purpose, we assume that the cut locus of [MATH] is empty and [MATH] in this section to avoid technical difficulties.', '1308.5471-1-94-2': 'In this case, we can construct a coupling of Brownian motions on [MATH] directly by solving a coupled SDE.', '1308.5471-1-94-3': 'We refer to [CITATION] for basic notions in this section.', '1308.5471-1-95-0': 'Let [MATH] be the orthonormal frame bundle of [MATH] and [MATH] a canonical projection [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-1': 'Fix [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH] for a while.', '1308.5471-1-95-2': 'Let us consider a coupling of (time-scaled) horizontal diffusion processes [MATH] by parallel transport.', '1308.5471-1-95-3': 'To define them, we first prepare some notations.', '1308.5471-1-95-4': 'For [MATH], let [MATH] be a canonical horizontal vector field on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-5': 'That is, [MATH] is the horizontal lift (associated with the Levi-Civita connection) of [MATH], where [MATH] is the canonical basis of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-6': 'Let [MATH] be a horizontal vector field coupled with [MATH] as follows: For [MATH], [MATH] is the horizontal lift of [MATH], where [MATH] is the parallel transport of tangent vectors from [MATH] to [MATH] along a minimal geodesic joining [MATH] and [MATH] (such a geodesic is unique under the absence of the cut locus).', '1308.5471-1-95-7': 'Let [MATH] be a Brownian motion on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-8': 'Take [MATH] so that [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-9': 'Now we are ready to define [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-10': 'They are defined as a solution to the following system of stochastic differential equations: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-95-11': 'Let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-95-12': 'Then [MATH] is a coupling by parallel transport of two (time-scaled) Brownian motions.', '1308.5471-1-96-0': 'Intuitively, infinitesimal motions [MATH] and [MATH], which can be regarded as a random element in [MATH] and [MATH] respectively, are given by scaled "white noises" [MATH] and [MATH] respectively, and the second noise is given by the parallel transport of the first noise: [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-97-0': 'Let us turn to the proof.', '1308.5471-1-97-1': 'Let [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-97-2': 'By the Ito formula, we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-97-3': 'We take an expectation of the integral form of [REF].', '1308.5471-1-97-4': 'To be precise, we must take care on the integrability, but we always assume it in this section for simpler explanation.', '1308.5471-1-97-5': 'The expectation of the first term in the right hand side is zero since it is stochastic integral.', '1308.5471-1-97-6': 'For the third term, by the first variation formula of arclength, we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-97-7': 'For the second term, the second variation formula of arclength, we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the index form along a constant speed minimal geodesic from [MATH] to [MATH] and [MATH] is the Jacobi field along the same minimal geodesic whose the boundary values are [MATH] and [MATH] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-97-8': 'For an upper bound of the index form, we introduce some notations.', '1308.5471-1-97-9': 'Set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-97-10': 'We define [MATH] as follows: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-97-11': 'Suppose [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-97-12': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] an orthonormal basis of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-97-13': 'Then we have [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the Jacobi field along the minimal geodesic joining [MATH] and [MATH] whose boundary values are [MATH] and [MATH] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-98-0': 'In the proof, we denote [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-98-1': 'Note that the condition [REF] is reduced to [MATH] in the present case.', '1308.5471-1-98-2': 'Let us define [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-98-3': 'Let us denote the vector field along [MATH] given by the parallel transport of [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-98-4': 'Then [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-98-5': 'Thus the index lemma together with [REF] yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-98-6': 'This is nothing but the claim.', '1308.5471-1-99-0': 'For [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-99-1': 'By an easy rearrangement, we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-99-2': 'When [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-99-3': 'By plugging them in [REF], we obtain the first inequality.', '1308.5471-1-99-4': 'Similarly, by a rearrangement, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-99-5': 'When [MATH], [EQUATION] and the second inequality follows by plugging them in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-100-0': 'Let us define [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-100-1': 'By using [REF], [REF], Lemma [REF] and Lemma [REF] to give an estimate of the expectation of the integral of [REF] in time from [MATH] to [MATH], when [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-100-2': 'Obviously, the same is also true even when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-100-3': 'It yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-100-4': 'Thus, by the Gronwall lemma for [MATH] as a function of [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-100-5': 'By the choice of the initial condition, [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-100-6': 'Moreover, since the law of [MATH] is a coupling of [MATH] and [MATH], the definition of [MATH]-Wasserstein distance implies that [EQUATION] [REF] for each [MATH] and [MATH] implies [REF] and [REF].', '1308.5471-1-101-0': 'Given [MATH], let [MATH] and take a scaling functions [MATH] and [MATH] which are [MATH]-increasing surjections.', '1308.5471-1-101-1': 'Given [MATH], let [MATH] be a constant speed minimal geodesic from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-2': 'Let [MATH] for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-3': 'By substituting [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] in [REF], we can show that [MATH] is an absolutely continuous on [MATH] as a curve in [MATH], and [EQUATION] where the left hand side is the metric derivative given in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-101-4': 'Now we specify [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-5': 'Let [MATH] be a function on [MATH] solving the following differential equation: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-101-6': 'We can easily verify that [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-7': 'Thus there exists [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-8': 'Then we define [MATH] by affine transform of [MATH], that is, [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-101-9': 'Note that [MATH] holds.', '1308.5471-1-101-10': 'By a property of the metric derivative reviewed in Section [REF], the estimate [REF] yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-101-11': 'Then we obtain [REF] by applying Proposition [REF] and Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-101-12': 'Indeed, [REF] yields the strong Feller property (see [CITATION] for instance).', '1308.5471-1-101-13': 'Then [REF] follows from Theorem [REF].', '1308.5471-1-102-0': 'The estimate [REF] itself is not sharp when [MATH] is very small and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-102-1': 'Indeed, the right hand side diverges as [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-102-2': 'On the other hand, we can take [MATH] and [MATH] in [REF] similarly as in the proof of Theorem [REF] (cf. Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-1-102-3': 'Then we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-102-4': 'While this bound does not diverge as [MATH], what we will obtain by applying Proposition [REF] to this estimate is slightly weaker than [REF].', '1308.5471-1-103-0': 'We close this section with noting that three lemmas in this section (Lemma [REF], Lemma [REF] and Lemma [REF]) is valid without the absence of the cut locus.', '1308.5471-1-103-1': 'Indeed, we will use them again in the next section.', '1308.5471-1-104-0': '## Coupling method via discrete approximation', '1308.5471-1-105-0': 'To make the argument in the last section rigorous even in the presence of the cut locus, we will construct a coupling by parallel transport of time-scaled diffusion processes via approximation of the diffusion process by geodesic random walks as in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-106-0': 'Let [MATH] be a family of unit-speed minimal geodesics defined on [MATH] such that [MATH] goes from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-1': 'By using the measurable selection theorem, we will take [MATH] as a measurable function of [MATH] (more precisely, we will take a measurable choice of constant speed geodesics parametrized on [MATH] and we take [MATH] as their reparametrization).', '1308.5471-1-106-2': 'Without loss of generality, we may assume that [MATH] is symmetric, that is, [MATH] holds.', '1308.5471-1-106-3': 'Similarly as in the last section, we denote the parallel transport along [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-4': 'We use the same symbol for parallel transport of orthonormal frames.', '1308.5471-1-106-5': 'Set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-6': 'Let [MATH] be a measurable section of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-7': 'Let us define two measurable maps [MATH] for [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-106-8': 'Let [MATH] be independent and identically distributed random variables whose distribution is uniform on the unit disk on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-9': 'Take [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-10': 'Set [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-11': 'By using [MATH], we define a coupled geodesic random walk [MATH] with a discretization parameter [MATH] by [MATH] and, for [MATH], [EQUATION] for [MATH], where [MATH] is the exponential map at [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-12': 'By [CITATION] (see references therein also), [MATH] converges in law in [MATH] to an time-scaled [MATH]-diffusion process with scale parameter [MATH] starting from [MATH] for [MATH] respectively.', '1308.5471-1-106-13': 'Thus [MATH] is tight and hence a subsequential limit [MATH] in law in [MATH] exists.', '1308.5471-1-106-14': 'Here "time-scaled by [MATH]" means that the law of [MATH] is the same as [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-15': 'We fix such a subsequence [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-106-16': 'In the rest of this paper, we use the same symbol [MATH] for the subsequence [MATH] and the term "[MATH]" always means the subsequential limit "[MATH]".', '1308.5471-1-107-0': 'Set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-1': 'We first show a difference inequality for [MATH], which corresponds to the Ito formula (Lemma [REF] below).', '1308.5471-1-107-2': 'To state it, we further introduce some notations.', '1308.5471-1-107-3': 'Let [MATH] be the orthogonal projection of [MATH] to the hyperplane being perpendicular to [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-4': 'We denote a vector field along [MATH] given by parallel transport of [MATH] by [MATH] and we define [MATH], where [MATH] was defined in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-107-5': 'Take [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-6': 'Let us define [MATH] and [MATH] by [EQUATION] where [MATH] stands for the index form associated with [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-7': 'Fix a reference point [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-8': 'For [MATH], let us define [MATH] by [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-107-9': 'By [CITATION], we have the following: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-107-10': 'We denote the discretization of [MATH] by [MATH], that is, [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-108-0': 'Let [MATH] be non-decreasing with [MATH] and [MATH] sufficiently large.', '1308.5471-1-108-1': 'Then there exists [MATH] such that, for any [MATH], [EQUATION] holds whenever [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-109-0': 'By assumption, [MATH] holds since the same is true for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-109-1': 'In particular, it is not singular at the diagonal [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-109-2': 'When [MATH], the assertion is an immediate consequence of the Taylor expansion, the first and second variational formulae and the index lemma.', '1308.5471-1-109-3': 'To take singularity at the cut locus into account, we will develop a more detailed argument based on the idea in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-1-110-0': 'Let us define [MATH] and [MATH] by [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-110-1': 'If [MATH], then [MATH] since [MATH] is on a midpoint of a minimal geodesic joining [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-2': 'Since [MATH] is compact, [MATH] and [MATH] are also compact.', '1308.5471-1-110-3': 'Hence both [MATH] and [MATH] are uniformly away from [MATH] since the cut locus is closed.', '1308.5471-1-110-4': 'Set [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-110-5': 'By the triangle inequality, we have [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-110-6': 'Let us denote the difference of the segmented distances by [MATH] and [MATH], that is, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-110-7': 'Suppose [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-8': 'Since [MATH] is non-decreasing, we obtain [EQUATION] for sufficiently large [MATH], uniformly in the position of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-9': 'Note that [MATH] is uniformly away from the cut locus since [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-10': 'Thus the first and second variational formulae yield that, by denoting the index form along the restriction of [MATH] to the geodesic from [MATH] to [MATH] by [MATH], [EQUATION] for sufficiently large [MATH] uniformly in the position of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-11': 'In the same way, the corresponding estimate also holds true for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-110-12': 'Then the assertion follows by plugging these estimates into [REF].', '1308.5471-1-111-0': 'The next lemma estimates the expectation of the second variation term in Lemma [REF].', '1308.5471-1-111-1': 'We will use the convention [MATH] for any sequence [MATH] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-112-0': 'Let [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] sufficiently large.', '1308.5471-1-113-0': 'For each [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-114-0': 'Let [MATH] be non-decreasing and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-1': 'Then there exists [MATH] being independent of [MATH] such that, for any [MATH], [EQUATION] [REF] Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-2': 'Then we have [EQUATION] since [MATH] is an [MATH]-martingale.', '1308.5471-1-114-3': 'Let [MATH] be an orthonormal basis of [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] a vector field along [MATH] given by parallel transport of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-4': 'We also define a vector field [MATH] along [MATH] by [MATH] for [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-5': 'For components of [MATH], we have [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-6': 'It yields [EQUATION] on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-7': 'Then, based on [REF], a similar argument as [CITATION] yields [EQUATION] on [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-114-8': 'Thus the conclusion holds in a similar way as in Lemma [REF].', '1308.5471-1-115-0': '[REF] Note that [MATH] and [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-115-1': 'Thus the conclusion is an immediate consequence of the first assertion and Lemma [REF].', '1308.5471-1-116-0': 'The third lemma deals with the limit [MATH] and a Gronwall type bound for expectations for truncated functions.', '1308.5471-1-117-0': 'where the last inequality follows from the fact that [MATH] is conservative.', '1308.5471-1-117-1': 'On the other hand, for any [MATH], [REF] yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-117-2': 'A similar argument also works for the first term in the right hand side of [REF].', '1308.5471-1-117-3': 'By applying these estimates to [REF], when we take the limit [MATH] and [MATH] after it, we obtain the conclusion.', '1308.5471-1-118-0': 'We are now ready to show the key assertion [REF] in the last section.', '1308.5471-1-119-0': '[REF] holds.', '1308.5471-1-120-0': 'Let [MATH] be as in Lemma [REF].', '1308.5471-1-120-1': 'Note first that we have [MATH] and [MATH] for each [MATH] since [MATH] is concave.', '1308.5471-1-120-2': 'In addition, [MATH] and [MATH] is non-decreasing in [MATH] and we have [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-120-3': 'By applying Lemma [REF] with [MATH] together with Lemma [REF], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-120-4': 'By neglecting non-positive terms, trivial bounds [MATH] and [MATH], properties of [MATH] stated at the beginning and the Holder inequality yields [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-120-5': 'Set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-120-6': 'Then the last inequality implies that, for [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-120-7': 'Thus the Gronwall lemma yields that there is a constant [MATH] being independent of [MATH] and [MATH] such that [MATH] holds.', '1308.5471-1-121-0': 'Therefore the monotone limit [MATH] exists in [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-121-1': 'In addition, the monotone convergence theorem yields [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-122-0': 'With the aid of the monotone convergence theorem and the dominated convergence theorem, by letting [MATH] in [REF] and by applying the Holder inequality, we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-122-1': 'Then we argue as in [REF] with this inequality to apply the Gronwall inequality.', '1308.5471-1-122-2': 'Consequently, we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-122-3': 'Since [MATH] and the definition of the Wasserstein distance and [MATH] implies [MATH], the conclusion holds by letting [MATH] in the last inequality.', '1308.5471-1-123-0': 'Theorem [REF] The combination of Proposition [REF] and Lemma [REF] immediately completes the proof.', '1308.5471-1-124-0': 'For [MATH] measurable and bounded from below, and [MATH], we define the optimal transportation cost [MATH] between [MATH] and [MATH] associated with the cost function [MATH] as follows: [EQUATION].', '1308.5471-1-124-1': 'As a variant of Proposition [REF], we obtain the following:', '1308.5471-1-125-0': 'For [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH], and [MATH] as in the definition of [MATH] in [REF].', '1308.5471-1-126-0': 'Before entering the proof, we recall the following elementary relations for comparison functions: [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-126-1': 'The same argument as in Lemma [REF] works for the transportation cost [MATH] instead of [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-126-2': 'Hence it suffices to show the assertion only when both [MATH] and [MATH] are Dirac measures.', '1308.5471-1-126-3': 'We consider only the case [MATH] since the assertion is reduced to [REF] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-126-4': 'We begin with the integrability of [MATH] as in the proof of Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-126-5': 'Since it is obvious when [MATH], we assume [MATH] for a while.', '1308.5471-1-126-6': 'By applying Lemma [REF] with [MATH] and [REF] yield [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-126-7': 'Note that there exists [MATH] with [MATH] such that [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-126-8': 'Set [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-126-9': 'By a similar argument as in the proof of Proposition [REF], from [REF], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-1-126-10': 'Thus, as we discussed in [REF], we can show that there exists [MATH] being independent of [MATH] and [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-126-11': 'It ensures [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-127-0': 'Now we turn to the general situation [MATH].', '1308.5471-1-127-1': '[REF] is still valid in this case.', '1308.5471-1-127-2': 'Then, by taking the limit [MATH], the conclusion follows in the same way as in the proof of Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-1-128-0': 'to3em MR', '1308.5471-1-129-0': '[2] http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=#1#2', '1308.5471-1-130-0': '[2]#2'}
{'1308.5471-2-0-0': "The duality in Bakry-Emery's gradient estimates and Wasserstein controls for heat distributions is extended to that in refined estimates in a high generality.", '1308.5471-2-0-1': "As a result, we find an equivalent condition to Bakry-Ledoux's refined gradient estimate involving an upper dimension bound.", '1308.5471-2-0-2': 'This new condition is described as a [MATH]-Wasserstein control for heat distributions at different times.', '1308.5471-2-0-3': 'The [MATH]-version of those estimates are studied on Riemannian manifolds via coupling method.', '1308.5471-2-1-0': 'Key words:', '1308.5471-2-2-0': 'gradient estimate, Wasserstein distance, heat distribution, Hopf-Lax semigroup, Ricci curvature', '1308.5471-2-3-0': '# Introduction', '1308.5471-2-4-0': 'Since the pioneering work of Bakry and Emery [CITATION], their ([MATH]-)gradient estimate [EQUATION] for a diffusion semigroup [MATH] has been played a prominent role in geometric analysis of the diffusion generator [MATH] (see [CITATION], for instance).', '1308.5471-2-4-1': 'Among several further developments, the following refined form is studied by Bakry and Ledoux [CITATION] (see [CITATION] also): For fixed parameters [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-2-4-2': 'Recently, in [CITATION], it is revealed that [REF] is equivalent to the following estimate concerning a Lipschitz type bound of heat distributions with respect to the [MATH]-Wasserstein distance [MATH], which we call an [MATH]-Wasserstein control, in a fairly general situation: For [MATH] and two probability measures [MATH] and [MATH] on the state space, [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-2-4-3': 'The purpose of this article is to extend such a duality by introducing a new inequality like [REF] which corresponds to [REF].', '1308.5471-2-4-4': 'As we will see in Corollary [REF] as a special case of our result, the estimate [REF] is equivalent to the following space-time [MATH]-Wasserstein control in an abstract framework: For [MATH] and two probability measures [MATH] and [MATH] on the state space, [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] for measurable [MATH] and hence [EQUATION]', '1308.5471-2-4-5': 'Here the function [MATH] is regarded as [MATH] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-2-5-0': 'In the Bakry-Ledoux gradient estimate [REF], the parameters [MATH] and [MATH] play the role of lower Ricci curvature bound and upper dimension bound.', '1308.5471-2-6-0': 'Indeed, under the condition [EQUATION] the Bakry-Ledoux gradient estimate', '1308.5471-2-7-0': "is equivalent (at least formally) to the following inequality, called Bakry-Emery's curvature-dimension condition or Bochner's inequality [EQUATION]", '1308.5471-2-7-1': 'Note that [REF] is the definition of squared norm of gradient or carre du champ [MATH] in Bakry-Emery theory, as in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-7-2': "On complete Riemannian manifolds with [MATH], the Bochner-Weitzenbock formula implies that Bakry-Emery's curvature-dimension condition is equivalent to the combination of [MATH] and [MATH] (when [MATH], the latter condition always holds).", '1308.5471-2-7-3': 'Moreover, even in an abstract framework, [REF] has provided several extensions of results in Riemannian geometry concerning these bounds.', '1308.5471-2-7-4': 'Thus we could say that [REF] or [REF] is placed at the intersection of geometry and analysis.', '1308.5471-2-7-5': 'While [REF] can be applied in a broader situation such as analysis on infinite dimensional spaces, [REF] provides qualitatively sharper results and hence obtaining [REF] or [REF] for [MATH] would be important (see [CITATION] for instance).', '1308.5471-2-8-0': 'The Wasserstein control condition [REF] or [REF] serves us a new approach to [REF] or [REF] especially on non-smooth spaces.', '1308.5471-2-9-0': 'Since the Bochner-Weitzenbock formula is not available in such a case, it was completely unclear when [REF] holds.', '1308.5471-2-9-1': 'For this problem, a connection with an alternative formulation of "[MATH] and [MATH]" by optimal transportation [CITATION] has been investigated recently.', '1308.5471-2-9-2': 'Since those new conditions are stable under geometric operations such as the measured Gromov-Hausdorff limit, the same stability holds for [REF] once we prove the equivalence between them.', '1308.5471-2-9-3': 'This equivalence is finally established by Ambrosio, Gigli, Savare, Mondino and Rajala [CITATION] when [MATH] and by Erbar, Sturm and the author [CITATION] when [MATH].', '1308.5471-2-9-4': 'For connecting Bakry-Emery theory based on [REF] with optimal transport approach, the estimate [REF] or [REF] works as a bridge, though what we actually used when [MATH] is [REF] below.', '1308.5471-2-10-0': 'The emphasis of the result of this paper is put on the fact that the equivalence between [REF] and [REF] can be extended to more general situation where any kind of known curvature-dimension conditions corresponding to "[MATH] and [MATH]" may not hold (see Theorem [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-10-1': 'For instance, previous results can be applied to obtain an estimate like [REF] from an estimate like [REF] for sub-elliptic diffusions [CITATION] (see [CITATION] also for other examples).', '1308.5471-2-10-2': 'We can expect a similar result also in the present case as a future application.', '1308.5471-2-10-3': 'As another kind of generality, we can obtain [MATH]-duality, as we did in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-10-4': 'Actually, an [MATH]-type estimate of [REF] (see [REF]) holds on complete Riemannian manifolds, and we can obtain the [MATH]-analog of [REF] by our result.', '1308.5471-2-10-5': 'It is not yet known whether we can obtain the same estimate on metric measure spaces satisfying the Riemannian curvature-dimension condition in [CITATION], where the [MATH]-estimate holds.', '1308.5471-2-10-6': 'Note that, in the case [MATH], the [MATH]-version of [REF] follows from [REF] itself (see [CITATION]).', '1308.5471-2-10-7': 'Such a precision has various applications in that case and hence it would be interesting to obtain an [MATH]-estimate associated with the curvature-dimension condition as well as to investigate applications of it.', '1308.5471-2-11-0': 'The essential idea of the proof of the duality in [REF] and [REF] is inherited from the earlier studies in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-11-1': 'There we regard [REF] as a differentiation of [REF] in space variable with a change of viewpoint from the space of measures to the space of functions.', '1308.5471-2-12-0': 'Then the opposite implication is regarded as an integration in space variable, and it is realized by using the Kantorovich duality and the analysis of the associated Hopf-Lax semigroup.', '1308.5471-2-12-1': 'Thus it was natural in those argument that we used no time-dependency on the constant and the Markov kernel [MATH].', '1308.5471-2-12-2': 'In the present case, the additional term in [REF] involving [MATH] can be regarded as a differentiation in time parameter.', '1308.5471-2-12-3': 'The reason why the "integrated" estimate [REF] deals with distribution of diffusions at different times is based on this fact.', '1308.5471-2-13-0': 'Actually, if we apply [REF] when [MATH] by taking a limit [MATH], it becomes the reduced control [REF], which is in duality with [REF].', '1308.5471-2-13-1': 'In the proof of our main theorem, we will couple a space parameter with a time parameter.', '1308.5471-2-13-2': 'As a result, the argument becomes more complicated compared with previous ones in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-13-3': 'This fact also makes it unclear what is the optimal bound of space-time Wasserstein control of type [REF].', '1308.5471-2-13-4': 'Indeed, we obtain [REF] by choosing a (possibly not optimal but admissible) space-time reparametrizations in a variational problem arising in Proposition [REF] below (see Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-13-5': 'When we are working with the specified estimate [REF], the space-time [MATH]-control [REF] involving comparison functions seems to be optimal (see Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-14-0': '[MATH]-type estimates on Riemannian manifolds are obtained by stochastic analytic techniques.', '1308.5471-2-14-1': 'We construct a variant of coupling by parallel transport of diffusion processes with different time scales for deriving Wasserstein controls.', '1308.5471-2-14-2': 'For the construction, we must avoid technical difficulties arising from the presence of the cut locus.', '1308.5471-2-14-3': 'To overcome it, we employ the approximation of the diffusion process by geodesic random walks developed in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-14-4': 'The Wasserstein control we will obtain directly from our coupling method is slightly weaker than expected and we establish an [MATH]-variant of Bakry-Emery theory (Proposition [REF]) in order to derive a sharper result.', '1308.5471-2-14-5': 'Since we consider a possibly non-symmetric diffusion generator, we relies on stochastic analytic techniques again to avoid technical difficulties there.', '1308.5471-2-14-6': 'It might be possible to prove it in a more straightforward way without coupling methods.', '1308.5471-2-14-7': 'See Remark [REF] for an observation.', '1308.5471-2-15-0': 'As a related result, the implication from [REF] to [REF] is obtained by Bakry, Gentil and Ledoux in [CITATION] by a different method when [MATH].', '1308.5471-2-15-1': 'Bolley, Gentil and Guillin [CITATION] recently obtained a sort of contraction bound of [MATH]-Wasserstein distance for two distributions of diffusion at the same time involving the dimension parameter [MATH] from [REF].', '1308.5471-2-15-2': 'Coupling method on Riemannian manifolds is studied first by Kendall [CITATION] and improved by Cranston [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-15-3': 'Since then, it has been extensively studied in the literature.', '1308.5471-2-15-4': 'Feng-Yu Wang is one of the leading persons on this topic and we refer to his books [CITATION] for further developments.', '1308.5471-2-15-5': 'A coupling admitting different time scales is studied also in [CITATION].', '1308.5471-2-15-6': 'The problem studied in [CITATION] seems to be closely related to ours (See Remark [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-15-7': 'Though the purpose of [CITATION] is different from ours, there appears a similar argument.', '1308.5471-2-16-0': 'The organization of the paper is as follows.', '1308.5471-2-16-1': 'In the next section, we give a precise definition of our framework and state the main theorems.', '1308.5471-2-16-2': 'Since we will deal with the time-evolution of the Markov kernel, we discuss it under two different family of assumptions in Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF] respectively.', '1308.5471-2-16-3': 'In those theorems, only a weaker duality is obtained and we add a technical assumption (strong Feller property of [MATH]) in both cases to obtain the full duality result including the relation between [REF] and [REF] (Corollary [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-16-4': 'The proof of main results except Theorem [REF] is given in Section [REF].', '1308.5471-2-16-5': 'In the proof, we will show two key propositions: Proposition [REF] and Proposition [REF].', '1308.5471-2-16-6': 'Though they can be applied to more general situation than in the setting of Theorem [REF], we exclude it from the main theorem for simplicity of presentation since the statements of them look more complicated.', '1308.5471-2-16-7': 'We also prove another space-time [MATH]-control [REF] studied in [CITATION] directly from [REF] (Theorem [REF]).', '1308.5471-2-16-8': 'In Section [REF], we will prove Theorem [REF], which concerns with [MATH]-estimates, on a complete Riemannian manifold satisfying [REF] for a (possibly non-symmetric) diffusion generator [MATH].', '1308.5471-2-17-0': 'Since the argument seems to be technical, we give a heuristic discussion in Section [REF] and make it rigorous in Section [REF] with a partial use of arguments in Section [REF] which hold in a sufficient generality.'}
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[]
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[['1308.5471-1-15-10', '1308.5471-2-17-0']]
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{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1308.5471
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null
null
null
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1810.08769
{'1810.08769-1-0-0': 'Trapped atoms near nanophotonics form an exciting new platform for bottom-up synthesis of strongly interacting quantum matters [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-0-1': 'The ability to induce tunable long-range atom-atom interactions with photons presents a novel opportunity to explore many-body physics [CITATION] and quantum optics [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-0-2': 'Integrating cold atoms with nanophotonic platforms has so far been restricted to discrete, suspended structures of quasi-linear geometry [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-0-3': 'Single atom manipulation and direct imaging on nanostructures also remains elusive.', '1810.08769-1-0-4': 'Migrating cold atoms to a planar photonic geometry may offer a wide variety of quantum functionalities with engineered photonic transport and scalability.', '1810.08769-1-0-5': 'Here, by implementing a configurable optical tweezer array over a photonic circuit tailored for cold atom integration and control, we report trapping and high-fidelity imaging of single atoms directly on a planar photonic circuit.', '1810.08769-1-0-6': 'Using an optical conveyor belt [CITATION] formed by a moving optical lattice within a tweezer potential, we show that single atoms can be transported from a reservoir into close proximity of a photonic interface, potentially allowing for the synthesis of a defect-free atom-nanophotonic hybrid lattice.', '1810.08769-1-0-7': 'Our experimental platform can be integrated with generic planar photonic waveguides and resonators, promising a pathway towards on-chip many-body quantum optics [CITATION] and new applications in quantum technology.', '1810.08769-1-1-0': 'Coupling an array of trapped atoms to an engineered photonic environment opens up new regimes in quantum optics and many-body physics [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-1-1': 'Planar photonic structures, such as two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystals [CITATION] or coupled resonator optical waveguides [CITATION], can induce coupling between atoms and photons with engineered transport and non-isotropic interactions, making it possible to explore novel topological physics [CITATION] or vacuum induced quantum phase transitions [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-1-2': 'Realizing these remarkable possibilities requires a robust experimental scheme and an enabling photonic platform for efficient loading and interfacing with cold atoms.', '1810.08769-1-2-0': 'Recent development of optical tweezer cold atom assemblers [CITATION] provides invaluable toolbox for synthesizing atom-nanophotonics hybrid quantum matters.', '1810.08769-1-2-1': 'While guided modes in nanophotonics can be utilized for global evanescent-wave trapping [CITATION] and inducing cooperative atom-photon coupling [CITATION], implementing independent control using optical tweezer trapping [CITATION], manipulation, and single atom imaging techniques offers a complementary toolkit for arbitrary state preparation, local addressing, and site-resolved final state detection.', '1810.08769-1-3-0': 'As illustrated in Fig. 1, we have designed and fabricated a transparent, optically flat photonic membrane, consisting of a 2 [MATH]m thick SiO[MATH] layer and a 550 nm thick nitrite (Si[MATH]N[MATH]) bottom-layer with high tensile stress after releasing from a silicon substrate within a 2 mm [MATH] 8 mm transparent window [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-3-1': 'Discrete or coupled arrays of photonic structures, such as ring/racetrack resonators or coupled resonator optical waveguides [CITATION], among general planar structures, can be patterned in an additional nitrite top-layer on the membrane for designer quantum functionalities [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-4-0': 'We project an array of tweezer beams on top of the membrane through the control of a pair of acousto-optic deflectors (AODs).', '1810.08769-1-4-1': 'A stationary lattice of micro-traps (Fig. [REF]a) forms within individual tweezer potentials.', '1810.08769-1-4-2': 'The closest site is [MATH]nm above the surface, well within the evanescent-wave range of a guided mode at the atomic resonance ([MATH]nm), and is stable against atom-surface Casimir-Polder interactions [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-4-3': 'To fill the tweezer lattices, a magneto-optical trap first guides a cold cloud of cesium atoms into close proximity of the membrane surface, followed by polarization-gradient cooling (PGC).', '1810.08769-1-4-4': 'Typical atom number density is [MATH]/cm[MATH] near the surface with a temperature [MATH]K.', '1810.08769-1-4-5': 'During PGC, the tweezer beams are ramped on to full power (5 mW) to form deep micro-traps, up to [MATH]mK, near the structure surface (Fig. [REF]).', '1810.08769-1-4-6': 'To achieve uninterrupted laser cooling in these deep traps, we adopt a magic wavelength [MATH]935 nm for the optical tweezers to eliminate differential light shift in the cooling transition [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-4-7': 'Following 10 ms of PGC in tweezers, the cooling beams are extinguished for at least 50 ms, ensuring that unbound atoms can permanently leave the trap region.', '1810.08769-1-4-8': 'We then turn on a pair of linearly-polarized, near-resonant beams for 30 ms to record atomic fluorescence on an electron multiplying charged-coupled device (CCD).', '1810.08769-1-5-0': 'Figure [REF]d shows the single-shot fluorescence image of two loaded tweezer traps, which manifest as localized bright spots with high fluorescence counts.', '1810.08769-1-5-1': 'In this example, both tweezer beams are aligned to a linear structure (an optical waveguide) of 870 nm width, and are separated in-plane by [MATH]m.', '1810.08769-1-5-2': 'The image focus is on the structure, which is nearly dark due to polarization filtering [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-5-3': 'The measured atomic fluorescence spot size ([MATH] radius [MATH]m) indicates that trapped atoms are well within the depth of field ([MATH]m ) from the structure surface.', '1810.08769-1-6-0': 'Fluorescence counts collected within a single tweezer trap are analyzed for loading statistics.', '1810.08769-1-6-1': 'Figure [REF]a shows a histogram of counts from more than 800 experiment repetitions.', '1810.08769-1-6-2': 'Around 60% of the time, we observe atomic fluorescence which is distinct from the background signal (sharp peak in Fig. [REF]a).', '1810.08769-1-6-3': 'However, atom number-resolved peaks cannot be identified.', '1810.08769-1-6-4': 'As suggested by a Monte Carlo simulation [CITATION], around [MATH] deepest sites (within [MATH]m of focus) in the tweezer beam can stably trap atoms.', '1810.08769-1-6-5': 'Away from the focus, loosely bound atoms with reduced fluorescence counts, if present, may smear out otherwise number-resolved signals.', '1810.08769-1-7-0': 'To distinguish tightly trapped atoms, we initiate a second imaging period 40 ms after the first imaging pulse terminates.', '1810.08769-1-7-1': 'In Fig. [REF]b we indeed observe signature of single atom fluorescence from those atoms surviving the first imaging procedure.', '1810.08769-1-7-2': 'We find around 40% probability of trap population [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-7-3': 'The probability distribution is consistent with a Poisson statistics of [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-7-4': 'Using the fitted single atom count from Fig. [REF]b and the histogram in Fig. [REF]a, we estimate that [MATH] atoms are loaded into the trap.', '1810.08769-1-8-0': 'To further improve trap loading efficiency, we introduce a phase coherent, counter-propagating optical beam of a larger beam waist (7 [MATH]m) to increase the trap volume and also form a stronger tweezer lattice (Fig. [REF]c,d).', '1810.08769-1-8-1': 'The beam is sent from the bottom side of the transparent window and is ramped up to a transmitted power of 84 mW simultaneously with the top tweezer beam.', '1810.08769-1-8-2': 'To keep the discussion general, from here forward we discuss loading directly on the membrane without additional nanostructure in the top layer so one can assume the bottom dipole beam profile is smooth above the membrane.', '1810.08769-1-8-3': 'Fluorescence imaging is performed using a pair of beams (IM2) as shown in Fig. [REF] [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-9-0': 'As shown in Fig. [REF]c, trap loading probability increases up to 90 with [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-9-1': 'Single atom counting statistics again manifests in the second imaging period in Fig. [REF]d, where a prominent single atom peak indicates that around 60 of the time an atom is tightly trapped within the tweezer.', '1810.08769-1-9-2': 'The probability distribution is clearly sub-Poissonian, with [MATH], likely due to collisional blockade effect within the dipole trap [CITATION] before the atoms are cooled into individual micro-traps.', '1810.08769-1-9-3': 'The estimated trapped atom number is [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-10-0': 'Introducing a phase-coherent bottom dipole beam also allows the control of atom position within the tweezer.', '1810.08769-1-10-1': 'The stationary tweezer lattice can be overridden by interfering with a counter-propagating beam with stronger intensity than that of the reflected tweezer beam from the membrane.', '1810.08769-1-10-2': 'By controlling the optical phase difference between the two beams, we can transport a trapped atom within a tweezer like a conveyor belt [CITATION], as illustrated in Fig. [REF]a.', '1810.08769-1-11-0': 'Following trap loading and a clean-up procedure [CITATION], the conveyor transport is initiated by introducing a small frequency detuning [MATH] of the bottom beam.', '1810.08769-1-11-1': 'The transport distance [MATH] is controlled by [MATH] and the hold time [MATH] as shown in Fig. [REF]b. Prior to imaging, the bottom dipole beam is quickly ramped off in 2 ms, reverting the tweezer trap back to the stationary lattice configuration.', '1810.08769-1-11-2': 'Figure [REF]c plots the measured mean fluorescence counts averaged over multiple experiment repetitions, which decreases significantly at nonzero [MATH] and at larger [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-11-3': 'These measurements collapse into a single curve when we plot them against final transport distance [MATH], as shown in Fig. [REF]d, suggesting that the count decrease is due to atom transport in the tweezer lattice instead of other loss mechanisms, such as parametric or noise heating, that should separately depend on [MATH] or hold time [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-12-0': 'The count asymmetry in Fig. [REF]d is attributed to the conveyor transport near the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-1-12-1': 'With [MATH], atoms are transported away from the tweezer focus until they approach [MATH]m where the tweezer intensity on the optical axis vanishes.', '1810.08769-1-12-2': 'The count reduction is primarily due to atoms being heated out of the trap during imaging or escaping during transport, and is much more than what would be suggested by a defocused atom image [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-12-3': 'Concerning the distance scale involved, [MATH], the modification of dipole emission rate due to coupling to the membrane guided modes also plays insignificant role.', '1810.08769-1-12-4': 'On the other hand, for conveying downward, mean counts gently reduce until [MATH]m, beyond which no atomic fluorescence can be detected.', '1810.08769-1-12-5': 'This results from multiple trapped atoms, randomly distributed along the tweezer lattice, being pulled closer to the membrane surface where the micro-traps are the strongest.', '1810.08769-1-12-6': 'These atoms can be imaged well until they are too close to or eventually adsorb on the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-1-13-0': 'From Fig. [REF]d, we can infer the trap range and atom number.', '1810.08769-1-13-1': 'Using the data from [MATH] as an empirical model for the fluorescent counts versus trapped atom position, we can fit the data for [MATH] by assuming a Poisson average of [MATH] trapped atoms initially distributed along the lattice with random site positions [MATH] and transport distance [MATH] [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-13-2': 'We obtain a reasonable fit with [MATH] atoms and [MATH]m, consistent with the expected trap range.', '1810.08769-1-13-3': 'We note that this simple model does not take into account the surprising sub-Poissonian distribution near the tweezer focus, as seen in Fig. [REF]d.', '1810.08769-1-14-0': 'Starting with a random initial vertical position, atom transport in the conveyor belt can be feedback-controlled when operating on a nanostructure with a coupled resonant probe.', '1810.08769-1-14-1': 'Through monitoring the guided probe transmission in realtime, the presence of a single atom in the evanescence region ([MATH]) can be inferred by detecting a significant drop in probe transmission due to strong atom-light interactions.', '1810.08769-1-14-2': 'Up to 70 % drop is expected when an atom is coupled to the band edge mode of a photonic crystal waveguide as recently demonstrated in an experiment [CITATION]; similar feedback can also be achieved by coupling to a resonator of high quality factor and moderate mode volume [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-15-0': 'This conveyor belt technique can be scaled up to an array configuration by beginning with a filled tweezer array as shown in Fig. [REF]a, where each trap is controlled by one frequency tone [MATH] in the AOD ([MATH]).', '1810.08769-1-15-1': 'For the tone spacing much greater than the axial trap frequency [MATH], where typically [MATH]kHz [CITATION], one counter-propagating dipole beam that spatially overlaps with all tweezers can transport trapped atoms in individual tweezer lattices, one at a time.', '1810.08769-1-15-2': 'Figure [REF]b schematically illustrates a frequency profile for such an operation.', '1810.08769-1-15-3': 'Within time segment [MATH] marked by a color shaded area, the conveyor transport initiates when [MATH] and can be terminated by feedback from a resonant probe, followed by a rapid change (within a time [MATH]) to the next frequency tone [MATH] to convert the [MATH]-th tweezer lattice into a conveyor belt and revert the [MATH]-th tweezer back to the original stationary tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-1-15-4': 'Following the transport, an atom can be optically pumped to a dark state using the guided mode, awaiting further operations.', '1810.08769-1-15-5': 'We expect transport in each tweezer lattice should finish within [MATH] ms. With our measured tweezer trap lifetime [MATH]ms, tens of trapped atoms may be assembled using an array of tweezer lattices and a bottom dipole beam of a moderate power.', '1810.08769-1-16-0': 'In summary, using a configurable tweezer lattice, we show that single atoms can be loaded, transported, and imaged on a planar photonic circuit.', '1810.08769-1-16-1': 'The functionality of our platform can be readily extended to include light-coupled high-quality resonator waveguides, enabling future studies of many-body quantum optics or even the synthesis of an array of ground state molecules [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-17-0': 'We thank H. J. Kimble and Y. Xuan for discussions.', '1810.08769-1-17-1': 'We acknowledge T.-W. Hsu, B. Edlemen, W. Wang, J. Quirk, and K. Knox for technical assistance.', '1810.08769-1-17-2': 'Funding is provided by the AFOSR YIP (Grant NO.', '1810.08769-1-17-3': 'FA9550-17-1-0298), ONR (Grant NO.', '1810.08769-1-17-4': 'N00014-17-1-2289) and the Kirk Endowment Exploratory Research Recharge Grant from the Birck Nanotechnology Center.', '1810.08769-1-18-0': 'Our optical chip (Figs. [REF] and [REF]) is glued onto a vacuum compatible holder, which is docked on a linear-translation and rotation stage inside the ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) chamber for positioning.', '1810.08769-1-18-1': 'Although not discussed in this study, optical fibers can be glued onto on-chip fiber grooves for coupling light to waveguide buses.', '1810.08769-1-18-2': 'These fibers are guided outside the chamber via vacuum feedthroughs, and are reserved for future studies of atom-light interactions.', '1810.08769-1-19-0': '# Chip fabrication process', '1810.08769-1-20-0': 'Our chip fabrication begins with low pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) followed by high-temperature annealing to first grow a 550 nm thick Si3N4 bottom-layer film and then a 2 [MATH]m thick SiO2 mid-layer film on a 4 inch silicon wafer.', '1810.08769-1-20-1': 'The annealing temperatures are around 1100 and 900 [MATH]C for the Si3N4 and SiO2 layers, respectively.', '1810.08769-1-20-2': 'The chosen SiO2-Si3N4 thickness and the annealing result in a positive tensile stress around 100 MPa after the SiO2-Si3N4 membrane is released from the silicon substrate, keeping the suspended membrane stressed and optically flat (measured flatness [MATH]nm within a 1 mm [MATH] 1 mm area).', '1810.08769-1-20-3': 'Additional film in the top layer, 360 nm thick Si3N4 for this study, is LPCVD grown, followed by dicing the wafer into 12 mm [MATH] 12 mm chips.', '1810.08769-1-21-0': 'To pattern additional nanostructures in the top layer, electron beam lithography (EBL) with MaN 2403 negative tone resist is performed on a 100 KeV EBL system (JEOL JBX-8100FS).', '1810.08769-1-21-1': 'After e-beam exposure and resist development, device pattern is transferred onto the top Si3N4 layer with an inductively-coupled reactive-ion etching (ICP-RIE) tool (Panasonic P610).', '1810.08769-1-21-2': 'In the dry etching process, a gas mixture of CHF3 /O2 /N2 is employed to achieve high selectivity to the SiO2 layer and low sidewall roughness.', '1810.08769-1-22-0': 'To release the membrane from the substrate, a back window is patterned by photo-lithography, and is dry-etched using ICP-RIE (Panasonic P610) and deep RIE (STS-ASE) tools until the remaining silicon substrate is [MATH]m thick.', '1810.08769-1-22-1': 'The final membrane release process is performed using low temperature TMAH wet etching.', '1810.08769-1-22-2': 'On the front side of the chip, a set of U-shape grooves for optical fiber edge coupling, visible in Fig. [REF]b near the edge of the transparent window, can be patterned using similar procedures prior to etching the back window.', '1810.08769-1-22-3': 'Throughout the window-release process, a PMMA resist is applied to coat and protect the front side of the chip.', '1810.08769-1-23-0': 'Figure [REF]b-c show a sample optical chip, with arrays of resonator waveguides coupled to bus waveguides on the membrane, and with fiber U-grooves for guiding light into the circuits.', '1810.08769-1-23-1': 'Detailed optical functionality, characterization and the result of atom-light couplings will be reported elsewhere.', '1810.08769-1-24-0': '# Adjusting the tweezer beam focus and the image plane', '1810.08769-1-25-0': 'There is finite chromatic aberration presenting in our commercial apochromatic objective (corrected for 3 mm thickness of our vacuum glass viewport).', '1810.08769-1-25-1': 'As a result, the tweezer beam focus (at [MATH]nm) and the image plane (at [MATH]nm) need to be independently and carefully adjusted to both coincide on the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-1-25-2': 'We use the photonic structure as shown in Fig. [REF] to assist in the focusing procedure.', '1810.08769-1-25-3': 'At [MATH]nm and at small incidence angles [MATH], the reflectance of the waveguide (870 nm wide and 360 nm thick) is [MATH], which is smaller than the reflectance of the membrane [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-25-4': 'We bring the minimum beam waist of the tweezer beam onto the membrane/nanostructure through minimizing the reflected power.', '1810.08769-1-25-5': 'We then adjust the position of the eyepiece (InfiniTube Standard System) to focus the image of the nanostructure taken at [MATH] on the EMCCD.', '1810.08769-1-25-6': 'The position uncertainty between the tweezer focus and the membrane surface is estimated to be [MATH]m.', '1810.08769-1-26-0': '# On-chip laser cooling and trap loading', '1810.08769-1-27-0': 'Our experiment begins with around [MATH] laser-cooled cesium atoms collected in the vicinity of the optical chip, followed by transporting the atoms onto the membrane using a velocity selective cooling method [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-27-1': 'The atoms are then recaptured in a magneto-optical trap (MOT) formed by three circularly polarized, retro-reflected laser beams of [MATH]2 mm beam waist, which intersect directly above the membrane surface; two nearly horizontal beams intersect the chip surface with a 75 degree incidence angle while the third beam crosses the chip with a [MATH]30 degree incidence angle; see Fig. [REF].', '1810.08769-1-27-2': 'Membrane reflectances at these crossing angles are [MATH] and [MATH], for S-(P-)polarization.', '1810.08769-1-27-3': 'All the cooling beams are launched from the bottom side of the membrane and are re-collimated and retro-reflected to balance the radiation pressure.', '1810.08769-1-27-4': 'Following MOT, the atoms are then polarization-gradient cooled (PGC) in 10 ms to [MATH]K at a detuning -120 MHz from resonance, forming a cold atom reservoir for this study.', '1810.08769-1-27-5': 'The measured [MATH]-lifetime of the PGC atoms on membrane is [MATH]ms. This short life time is partially due to imperfect radiation pressure balancing and also due to atoms adsorbed on the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-1-27-6': 'Figure [REF] (a) shows a density contour plot deduced from a freespace absorption image.', '1810.08769-1-27-7': 'The extrapolated atom number density near the chip surface is [MATH]/cm[MATH].', '1810.08769-1-28-0': 'During the PGC, the tweezer beams (and the bottom dipole beam, if required) are ramped on to full power of 5 mW (84 mW) in 5 ms, followed by additional 10 ms wait time that allows nearby atoms to be cooled into the tweezer trap.', '1810.08769-1-28-1': 'We found that trap loading probability becomes significant only when we use the magic wavelength [MATH]nm to form the tweezer traps.', '1810.08769-1-28-2': 'Trap loading becomes inefficient away from the magic wavelength, even after an exhaustive search for proper detunings and powers of the MOT cooling lasers, repumpers and the imaging beams.', '1810.08769-1-28-3': 'This is in sharp contrast to tweezer loading in freespace, which we have tested to easily achieve [MATH]% single atom loading efficiency in a range of trap wavelengths [MATH]nm (but with different MOT and imaging settings).', '1810.08769-1-28-4': 'This indicates that uninterrupted cooling is very important for cooling atoms into tight traps near a planar dielectric surface.', '1810.08769-1-29-0': 'Following PGC, the cooling light is extinguished for at least 50 ms prior to fluorescence imaging.', '1810.08769-1-29-1': 'During this time, the bottom dipole beam, if present, is turned off for 10 ms as a clean-up procedure to remove trapped atoms beyond the tweezer depth-of-field, followed by ramping back on to induce the conveyor transport.', '1810.08769-1-29-2': 'Right before fluorescence imaging, the bottom dipole beam power is again ramped off in 2 ms while the tweezer beam power is ramped up to [MATH]mW to strengthen the stationary tweezer lattice during imaging.', '1810.08769-1-30-0': '# Fluorescence imaging and filters', '1810.08769-1-31-0': 'While the same set of MOT/PGC cooling beams can be used for fluorescence imaging in freespace, the scattered photons from the membrane/nanostructure surface contributes to significant background counts during fluorescence imaging.', '1810.08769-1-31-1': 'Instead, we adopt additional pairs of linearly polarized beams for imaging, as discussed in the following.', '1810.08769-1-31-2': 'These beams are tuned to -20 MHz below cesium [MATH] resonance and contain a weak mixture of [MATH] repumping component.', '1810.08769-1-31-3': 'Imaging beam peak intensity corresponds to around half of the saturation intensity (total beam power [MATH]W).', '1810.08769-1-32-0': 'To image atomic fluorescence with single atom sensitivity, it is important to reduce the reflection and scattered tweezer light from the dielectric surface, and the scattered imaging beam photons from the dielectric nanostructures lying within the depth of field of our imaging system.', '1810.08769-1-32-1': 'The former can be removed with stacked interference filters.', '1810.08769-1-32-2': 'For the latter, neither frequency nor aperture filtering are possible.', '1810.08769-1-32-3': 'Nevertheless, our dielectric structures, especially the membrane, are fabricated with low impurity and low surface roughness.', '1810.08769-1-32-4': 'As a result, polarization filtering is sufficient to reduce the background counts below single atom fluorescence counts.', '1810.08769-1-32-5': 'We insert a combination of quarter and half waveplates and a polarizing cube in the Fourier space of the imaging system (Fig. [REF]) to filter out scattered imaging beam photons with high extinction.', '1810.08769-1-32-6': 'Atomic fluorescence on the other hand is unpolarized and can still be imaged with [MATH] 50 % reduced counts.', '1810.08769-1-33-0': 'For imaging trapped atoms on the membrane, as shown in Figs. [REF]c,d-[REF] in the main text, atomic fluorescence images are taken with a beam intersecting the membrane with a 35 degree incidence angle from the bottom side of the membrane (Fig. [REF]: IM2).', '1810.08769-1-33-1': 'After passing through the membrane, the beam is re-collimated and retro-reflected back to balance the radiation pressure.', '1810.08769-1-33-2': 'We have adjusted the imaging beam polarization so that its projection on the membrane surface is parallel to the polarization of the tweezer beam for polarization filtering both beams.', '1810.08769-1-34-0': 'Using the same beam path (IM2) to image trapped atoms on a nanostructure, however, will result in higher background fluorescence counts due to photons scattering off the structure.', '1810.08769-1-34-1': 'The background counts are comparable to single atom fluorescence counts.', '1810.08769-1-34-2': 'To further suppress scattering, in Fig. [REF]d we adopt a different imaging beam path that intersects the membrane surface from the top at a shallow 8 degree angle (Fig. [REF]: IM1), allowing us to adjust the beam polarization to be nearly parallel to the optical axis, and thus reducing photon scattering into the objective.', '1810.08769-1-34-3': 'At this shallow angle, around 52% of the beam power is reflected off the membrane.', '1810.08769-1-34-4': 'We pick the reflected beam and retro-reflect it back for radiation pressure balancing.', '1810.08769-1-34-5': 'The background counts in this beam path is reduced to a similar level as those of Figs. [REF]c,d.', '1810.08769-1-35-0': '# Forming the optical conveyor belt The 935 nm light for the tweezer lattice is derived from a Ti:Sapphire laser of a narrow linewidth ([MATH]100 kHz).', '1810.08769-1-35-1': 'The light is split into two parts for the top tweezer beams and the bottom dipole beam, respectively.', '1810.08769-1-35-2': 'The tweezer trap is controlled by two acousto-optical deflectors (Fig. [REF]), marked as AOD-x and AOD-y respectively, while the bottom dipole beam is frequency shifted by passing through an acousto-optical modulator (AOM) twice via retro-reflection.', '1810.08769-1-35-3': 'The radio frequency sources driving the AODs and the AOM are synchronously generated by an arbitrary waveform generator.', '1810.08769-1-35-4': 'The total frequency shift in the tweezer beam of interest is [MATH], where [MATH] are the radio frequency components in AOD-x(-y), respectively.', '1810.08769-1-35-5': 'The AOM is initially driven by a radio frequency [MATH], which is ramped to [MATH] during the conveyor transport.', '1810.08769-1-35-6': 'This leads to a total frequency shift of [MATH] and a differential shift [MATH] between the top tweezer beam and the bottom dipole beam.', '1810.08769-1-35-7': 'The accumulated phase shift [MATH] is used to control the transport distance [MATH] [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-35-8': 'For this study, the optical path difference between the two beams is not interferometrically stabilized.', '1810.08769-1-35-9': 'We have measured a [MATH]200 Hz phase noise between the two beams, which may cause up to [MATH]m uncertainty during the long hold time [MATH] ms for the transport.', '1810.08769-1-36-0': '# Calculations of the tweezer lattice and conveyor belt potentials Tweezer potentials on arbitrary nanostructures, as presented in Fig. [REF], are calculated using a commercial simulator based on the finite-difference time-domain method [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-36-1': 'Due to the simple planar geometry, the stationary tweezer lattice [Fig. [REF] (c)] and the conveyor belt potentials on the membrane (Fig. [REF]) can be evaluated analytically [CITATION] by considering the angular reflection spectrum from the layered dielectrics, which we compute using the Fresnel equations and a transfer matrix method.', '1810.08769-1-36-2': 'The position of the first site in the stationary lattice is determined by the thickness of the layered membrane, and can be tuned to [MATH]nm.', '1810.08769-1-36-3': 'For a tweezer beam of wavelength [MATH]nm and on a membrane of thickness reported in this study, the first site is at [MATH]nm.', '1810.08769-1-37-0': 'In Fig. [REF]a, we show that the lattice potential in a conveyor belt is strong everywhere except near the depth-of-field [MATH] where the tweezer intensity on the optical axis vanishes [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-37-1': 'To further illustrate trap weakening near this point, in Fig. [REF] we evaluate the trap curvature and therefore the trap frequency in both the axial (along the z-axis) and the radial directions (in the x-y plane) at different site locations in the optical conveyer belt.', '1810.08769-1-37-2': 'We find that not only the trap weakens, the radial trap curvature actually turns negative beyond [MATH]m, violating the condition for stable trapping.', '1810.08769-1-37-3': 'This generic feature manifests in all tweezer lattice potentials, including the stationary lattices on the waveguide, Fig. [REF], and on the membrane, Fig. [REF].', '1810.08769-1-38-0': '# Analysis of single atom fluorescence and loading statistics', '1810.08769-1-39-0': 'To estimate trap loading probability, in the first imaging period, we perform a single Gaussian fit only to the low count region in the histograms (Fig. [REF]) where the background manifest as a single peak.', '1810.08769-1-39-1': 'We then calculate the fitted occurrence for the background with zero atom occupancy to estimate the probability for trapping [MATH] atoms in the tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-1-39-2': 'This estimation includes contributions from loosely trapped atoms, likely localized away from the tweezer focus, that do not appear in the second imaging period.', '1810.08769-1-40-0': 'We analyze the loading statistics in the second imaging period for atoms stably trapped within the tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-1-40-1': 'We find that the number-resolved occurrence [MATH] of CCD counts [MATH] can be empirically fitted by a composite Gaussian model [EQUATION] up to [MATH], where [MATH] is the occurrence for occupancy of [MATH] atoms, [MATH] is the average background count, [MATH] is the background noise, [MATH] is the average single atom fluorescence count, and [MATH] is an excess noise factor beyond shot-noise.', '1810.08769-1-40-2': 'For imaging on the waveguide structure shown in Fig. [REF]b, [MATH]; for imaging on the membrane as shown in Fig. [REF]d, we obtain [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-40-3': 'From the composite Gaussian fit, we then estimate the trap loading probability from the fitted occurrence at each occupancy [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-40-4': 'The results are plotted in insets of Fig. [REF].', '1810.08769-1-41-0': 'For imaging on the waveguide and the membrane, respectively, we note that their background and single atom fluorescence counts differ due to different imaging conditions such as intensity and polarization orientation.', '1810.08769-1-41-1': 'Imaging on the membrane has better signal-to-background ratio ([MATH]).', '1810.08769-1-41-2': 'In both cases, the CCD count noise (width of each Gaussian peak) is much higher than the shot noise due to excess noise from the CCD and the spatial variation of the imaging beam intensity which forms an unstabilized standing-wave pattern scanning across the tweezer trap during imaging.', '1810.08769-1-42-0': '# Heating during fluorescence imaging', '1810.08769-1-43-0': 'The fluorescence imaging is taken with only a pair of counter propagating beams (either IM1 or IM2 in Fig. [REF]).', '1810.08769-1-43-1': 'As a result, we expect transverse heating due to photon scattering.', '1810.08769-1-43-2': 'In the study, we determine that [MATH]1000 averaged CCD counts are recorded for single atom fluorescence.', '1810.08769-1-43-3': 'Using this number, we estimate that each atom scatters [MATH]45,000 photons during the 30 ms imaging time, after taking into account the CCD electronic settings such as A/D converter efficiency ([MATH]count), electron-multiplier gain ([MATH]), and quantum efficiency ([MATH]), as well as the total transmittance [MATH]% of the optical system and finally the [MATH]% objective collection efficiency.', '1810.08769-1-43-4': 'Without further cooling assisted by trap mixing or trap suppression in transverse heating, an atom may be heated up by [MATH]mK, gaining enough kinetic energy to leave the trap.', '1810.08769-1-43-5': 'Here [MATH] is the photon recoil energy, [MATH] is the Planck constant, and [MATH] is the cesium atomic mass.', '1810.08769-1-44-0': 'Tight confinement in the tweezer lattice provides significant suppression of trap excitation during imaging.', '1810.08769-1-44-1': 'We evaluate the Lamb-Dicke parameters [MATH] for the stationary tweezer lattice [Figs. [REF] (e)], which should provide an estimate of the suppression factor of recoil heating (near the trap ground state) during imaging.', '1810.08769-1-44-2': 'It is clear that losing radial confinement becomes the major limiting factor for those trapped away from the tweezer focus.', '1810.08769-1-44-3': 'In Fig. [REF] (e), [MATH] rises up quickly approaching [MATH]m.', '1810.08769-1-44-4': 'This could qualitatively explain why a quick reduction of fluorescence counts is observed for [MATH] in Fig. [REF]d.', '1810.08769-1-44-5': 'It is also suggestive that all atoms observed during the second imaging period in Fig. [REF] should be trapped and imaged well within [MATH]m.', '1810.08769-1-45-0': '# Monte Carlo simulation of tweezer lattice loading', '1810.08769-1-46-0': 'To estimate trap loading efficiency and probability distribution within a tweezer lattice, we perform Monte Carlo simulations of Doppler cooling in a [MATH]m[MATH]m (L[MATH]W[MATH]H) region with corresponding lattice potentials above the photonic structures as shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1810.08769-1-46-1': 'Actual loading efficiency with PGC may differ from this calculation.', '1810.08769-1-46-2': 'We include the effect of atom-surface interactions by approximating the surface Casimir-Polder (CP) potential with [MATH], where [MATH] is the atom-surface distance, [MATH]Hz[MATH]m[MATH] on SiO2 (Si3N4), [MATH] is the Planck constant, and [MATH]nm [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-46-3': 'To estimate loading efficiency in each tweezer lattice, 10[MATH] trajectories are calculated, each beginning with an atom randomly entering from the top or the four sides of the simulation boundaries with a velocity sampled from a thermal ensemble of temperature [MATH]K. Following 1 ms of loading simulation, the number of trajectories remaining in the trap region are counted to estimate the trap efficiency and their final positions are recorded for calculating the trap probability distribution within the tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-1-47-0': 'For a lattice on the waveguide as shown in Fig. [REF], our simulation results indicate that around [MATH] of total trajectories can be loaded into the tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-1-47-1': 'Figure [REF] plots the probability distribution evaluated from those bound trajectories, indicating that trapped atoms are well localized within [MATH] lattice sites or [MATH]m range of the tweezer focus.', '1810.08769-1-48-0': 'For a lattice on the membrane as shown in Fig. [REF], we simulate the condition when the bottom dipole beam is in-phase (out-of-phase) with respect to the surface reflection of the tweezer beam, giving a much larger trap probability [MATH]%(13%) due to larger trap volume offered by the bottom beam and overall deeper lattice depths (Fig. [REF]).', '1810.08769-1-48-1': 'Site loading probability distributions, as shown in Figs. [REF] (b-c), are more or less uniform within the first 20 sites in the simulation region.', '1810.08769-1-49-0': 'In all cases in Fig. [REF], site loading probabilities in the evanescent wave region ([MATH]) of the photonic structures are relatively low.', '1810.08769-1-49-1': 'At most 2% can be found in the first site closest to the dielectric surface.', '1810.08769-1-49-2': 'This inefficiency is predominantly due to atom-surface CP interactions and the presence of other trap sites that reduces the solid angle for entering the first site near the surface.', '1810.08769-1-49-3': 'Other trap ramping strategies may be devised to increase loading probability at the first site.', '1810.08769-1-50-0': 'The total loading efficiency obtained from the MC results is in qualitative agreement with some of our experimental observations.', '1810.08769-1-50-1': 'In [MATH]10 ms experiment loading time, the estimated number of atoms traversing a surface area [MATH]m[MATH]) is [MATH]atoms, where we have used [MATH]cm/s.', '1810.08769-1-50-2': 'The estimated number of trappable atoms is [MATH] for the waveguide (Fig. [REF]) and [MATH] for the tweezer lattice on the membrane.', '1810.08769-1-50-3': 'While the former is close enough to experimental estimate [MATH] for trapped atoms on the structure [Fig. [REF]a], the latter [MATH] for trapping with a bottom dipole beam [Fig. [REF]d].', '1810.08769-1-50-4': 'In fact, [MATH] is already close to the number of populated lattice sites ([MATH]20) enclosed in the region.', '1810.08769-1-50-5': 'This strongly suggests that collisional blockade should manifest during trap loading, which is not included in the MC calculation and will be addressed in future studies.', '1810.08769-1-51-0': '# Fitting the fluorescence data following the conveyor transport', '1810.08769-1-52-0': 'We make a remark that defocusing effect cannot explain the counts in Fig. [REF]d. For the sake of understanding, we first discuss ideal imaging without heating atoms out of the trap.', '1810.08769-1-52-1': 'We model the atomic fluorescence as emission from symmetric point dipole sources.', '1810.08769-1-52-2': 'With our objective [MATH] and assuming diffraction limited imaging, paraxial point-spread function remains a fairly good approximation [CITATION].', '1810.08769-1-52-3': 'In Fig. [REF]c, we count the fluorescence within an area [MATH] CCD pixels.', '1810.08769-1-52-4': 'We calculate the expected total counts from a defocused atom within this area [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-52-5': 'The estimated count reduction in Fig. [REF]d assumes atoms are initially randomly distributed within the tweezer lattice and are being transported out of the tweezer focus.', '1810.08769-1-52-6': "We also consider contributions from defocused 'image atoms' due to membrane reflection.", '1810.08769-1-52-7': 'However, the reflectance [MATH] is small for [MATH] and cannot be fully responsible for the reduced counts.', '1810.08769-1-53-0': 'We justify that, at [MATH], atoms either escape the trap during transport or being heated or pushed out of the trap during imaging.', '1810.08769-1-53-1': 'We thus empirically fit the data with a simple exponential, giving a function [MATH] of single atom fluorescence counts versus distance from the membrane surface; [MATH] for [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-53-2': 'For [MATH], we model fluorescence counts as [MATH] for an atom initially trapped in a lattice site at [MATH] and later being transported by a distance [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-53-3': 'Using this empirical model, we perform least-squared fitting to the downward-conveying data by assuming a Poisson average of [MATH] trapped atoms randomly distributed along the tweezer lattice within [MATH] followed by transport [MATH].', '1810.08769-1-53-4': "Each 'fit' is an average of 100 random trap configurations and the gray regions accounts for the error of the mean.", '1810.08769-1-53-5': 'Figure [REF]d shows the fit result with only two fit parameters, giving [MATH] and [MATH]m, corresponding to a maximum site index [MATH] in reasonable agreement with the MC simulation results shown in Fig. [REF].'}
{'1810.08769-2-0-0': 'Trapped atoms near nanophotonics form an exciting platform for bottom-up synthesis of strongly interacting quantum matter.', '1810.08769-2-0-1': 'The ability to induce tunable long-range atom-atom interactions with photons presents an opportunity to explore many-body physics and quantum optics.', '1810.08769-2-0-2': 'Here, by implementing a configurable optical tweezer array over a planar photonic circuit tailored for cold atom integration and control, we report trapping and high-fidelity imaging of one or more atoms in an array directly on a photonic structure.', '1810.08769-2-0-3': 'Using an optical conveyor belt formed by a moving optical lattice within a tweezer potential, we show that single atoms can be transported from a reservoir into close proximity of a photonic interface, potentially allowing for the synthesis of a defect-free atom-nanophotonic hybrid lattice.', '1810.08769-2-0-4': 'Our experimental platform can be integrated with generic planar photonic waveguides and resonators, promising a pathway towards on-chip many-body quantum optics and applications in quantum technology.', '1810.08769-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1810.08769-2-2-0': 'Coupling an array of trapped atoms to an engineered photonic environment opens up more regimes in quantum optics [CITATION] and many-body physics [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-2-1': 'Integrating cold atoms with nanophotonic platforms has so far been restricted to discrete, suspended structures of quasi-linear geometry [CITATION] due to the requirement of open optical access for laser cooling and loading of cold atoms from freespace.', '1810.08769-2-2-2': 'Single atom manipulation and direct imaging on nanostructures also remains elusive.', '1810.08769-2-2-3': 'Beyond these technical challenges, there is strong motivation to migrate cold atoms to planar photonic platforms, which may offer a wide variety of quantum functionalities with increased dimensionality and scalability.', '1810.08769-2-2-4': 'Planar structures, such as two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystals [CITATION] or coupled resonator optical waveguides [CITATION], can induce coupling between atoms and photons with engineered chiral quantum transport [CITATION] and non-isotropic interactions [CITATION], also making it possible to explore topological physics [CITATION] or vacuum induced quantum phase transitions [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-2-5': 'Realizing these remarkable possibilities requires a robust experimental scheme and an enabling photonic platform for efficient loading and interfacing with cold atoms.', '1810.08769-2-3-0': 'Recent development of optical tweezer cold atom assemblers [CITATION] provides invaluable toolbox for synthesizing atom-nanophotonics hybrid quantum matter.', '1810.08769-2-3-1': 'While guided modes in nanophotonics can be utilized for global evanescent-wave trapping [CITATION] and inducing cooperative atom-photon coupling [CITATION], implementing independent control using optical tweezer trapping [CITATION], manipulation, and single atom imaging techniques offers a complementary toolkit for arbitrary state preparation, local addressing, and site-resolved final state detection.', '1810.08769-2-4-0': 'In this article, we report single atom trapping and direct imaging on a planar photonic circuit in a configurable tweezer array.', '1810.08769-2-4-1': 'We demonstrate that single cesium atoms can be loaded into an optical tweezer that is tightly focused on the surface of a nanostructure.', '1810.08769-2-4-2': 'These trapped atoms can be fluorescence imaged on an electron-multiplied charged coupled device (CCD) camera, through the same objective that is utilized to project the tweezer beam.', '1810.08769-2-4-3': 'A tweezer beam reflected from a planar structure forms an inhomogeneous lattice of micro-traps that can localize multiple cold atoms.', '1810.08769-2-4-4': 'We show that such a tweezer lattice can be converted into an optical conveyor belt, transporting trapped atoms into or out of the tweezer focus for vertical positioning near the planar dielectrics for atom-nanophotonics lattice assembly.', '1810.08769-2-5-0': '# Results', '1810.08769-2-6-0': '## Imaging single atoms on a nanophotonic membrane circuit', '1810.08769-2-7-0': 'As illustrated in Fig. 1, we have designed and fabricated a transparent, optically flat photonic membrane, consisting of a 2 [MATH]m thick SiO[MATH] layer and a 550 nm thick nitride (Si[MATH]N[MATH]) bottom-layer with high tensile stress after releasing from a silicon substrate within a 2 mm [MATH] 8 mm transparent window [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-7-1': 'The transparent membrane allows full optical access for laser cooling and optical control of cold atoms.', '1810.08769-2-7-2': 'Discrete or coupled arrays of photonic structures, such as ring/racetrack resonators [CITATION] or coupled resonator optical waveguides [CITATION], among general planar structures, can be patterned in an additional nitride top-layer on the membrane to induce atom-light interactions for designer quantum functionalities [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-8-0': 'We project an array of tweezer beams on top of the membrane through the control of a pair of acousto-optic deflectors (AODs).', '1810.08769-2-8-1': 'A stationary lattice of micro-traps (Fig. [REF]a) forms within individual tweezer potentials.', '1810.08769-2-8-2': 'The closest site is [MATH]nm above the surface, well within the evanescent-wave range of a guided mode at the atomic resonance ([MATH]nm), and is stable against atom-surface Casimir-Polder interactions [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-8-3': 'To fill the tweezer lattices, a magneto-optical trap first guides a cold cloud of cesium atoms into close proximity of the membrane surface, followed by polarization-gradient cooling (PGC).', '1810.08769-2-8-4': 'Typical atom number density is [MATH] cm[MATH] near the surface with a temperature [MATH]K.', '1810.08769-2-8-5': 'During PGC, the tweezer beams are ramped on to full power (5 mW) to form deep micro-traps, up to [MATH]mK, near the structure surface (Fig. [REF]).', '1810.08769-2-8-6': 'To achieve uninterrupted laser cooling in these deep traps, we adopt a magic wavelength [MATH]935 nm for the optical tweezers to eliminate differential light shift in the cooling transition [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-8-7': 'Following 10 ms of PGC in tweezers, the cooling beams are extinguished for at least 50 ms, ensuring that unbound atoms can permanently leave the trap region.', '1810.08769-2-8-8': 'We then turn on a pair of linearly-polarized, near-resonant beams for 30 ms to record atomic fluorescence on an CCD camera.', '1810.08769-2-9-0': 'Figure [REF]d shows the single-shot fluorescence image of two loaded tweezer traps, which manifest as localized bright spots with high fluorescence counts.', '1810.08769-2-9-1': 'In this example, both tweezer beams are aligned to a linear structure (an optical waveguide) of 870 nm width, and are separated in-plane by [MATH]m.', '1810.08769-2-9-2': 'The image focus is on the structure, which is nearly dark due to polarization filtering [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-9-3': 'The measured atomic fluorescence spot size ([MATH] radius [MATH]m) indicates that trapped atoms are well within the depth of field ([MATH]m ) from the structure surface.', '1810.08769-2-10-0': 'Fluorescence counts collected within a single tweezer trap are analyzed for loading statistics.', '1810.08769-2-10-1': 'Figure [REF]a shows a histogram of counts from more than 800 experiment repetitions.', '1810.08769-2-10-2': 'Around 60% of the time, we observe atomic fluorescence which is distinct from the background signal (sharp peak in Fig. [REF]a).', '1810.08769-2-10-3': 'However, atom number-resolved peaks cannot be identified.', '1810.08769-2-10-4': 'As suggested by a Monte Carlo simulation [CITATION], around [MATH] deepest sites (within [MATH]m of focus) in the tweezer beam can stably trap atoms.', '1810.08769-2-10-5': 'Away from the focus, loosely bound atoms with reduced fluorescence counts, if present, may smear out otherwise number-resolved signals.', '1810.08769-2-11-0': 'To distinguish tightly trapped atoms, we initiate a second imaging period 40 ms after the first imaging pulse terminates.', '1810.08769-2-11-1': 'In Fig. [REF]b we indeed observe signature of single atom fluorescence from those atoms surviving the first imaging procedure.', '1810.08769-2-11-2': 'We find around 40% probability of trap population [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-11-3': 'The probability distribution is consistent with a Poisson statistics of [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-11-4': 'Using the fitted single atom count from Fig. [REF]b and the histogram in Fig. [REF]a, we estimate that [MATH] atoms are loaded into the trap.', '1810.08769-2-11-5': 'From the Monte Carlo simulations performed [CITATION], we expect the first trap site closest to the dielectric surface to be filled [MATH]2% of the time when an atom is localized within the tweezer trap.', '1810.08769-2-12-0': '## Trap loading and transport in an optical tweezer lattice', '1810.08769-2-13-0': 'To further improve trap loading efficiency, we introduce a phase coherent, counter-propagating optical beam of a larger beam waist (7 [MATH]m) to increase the trap volume and also form a stronger tweezer lattice (Fig. [REF]c,d).', '1810.08769-2-13-1': 'The beam is sent from the bottom side of the transparent window and is ramped up to a transmitted power of 84 mW simultaneously with the top tweezer beam.', '1810.08769-2-13-2': 'To keep the discussion general, from here forward we discuss loading directly on the membrane without additional nanostructure in the top layer so one can assume the bottom dipole beam profile is smooth above the membrane.', '1810.08769-2-13-3': 'Fluorescence imaging is performed using a pair of beams (IM2) as shown in Fig. [REF] [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-14-0': 'As shown in Fig. [REF]c, trap loading probability increases up to 90 with [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-14-1': 'Single atom counting statistics again manifests in the second imaging period in Fig. [REF]d, where a prominent single atom peak indicates that around 60 of the time an atom is tightly trapped within the tweezer.', '1810.08769-2-14-2': 'The probability distribution is clearly sub-Poissonian, with [MATH], likely due to collisional blockade effect within the dipole trap [CITATION] before the atoms are cooled into individual micro-traps.', '1810.08769-2-14-3': 'The estimated trapped atom number is [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-15-0': 'Introducing a phase-coherent bottom dipole beam also allows the control of atom position within the tweezer.', '1810.08769-2-15-1': 'The stationary tweezer lattice can be overridden by interfering with a counter-propagating beam with stronger intensity than that of the reflected tweezer beam from the membrane.', '1810.08769-2-15-2': 'By controlling the optical phase difference between the two beams, we can transport a trapped atom within a tweezer like a conveyor belt [CITATION], as illustrated in Fig. [REF]a.', '1810.08769-2-16-0': 'Following trap loading and a clean-up procedure [CITATION], the conveyor transport is initiated by introducing a small frequency detuning [MATH] of the bottom beam.', '1810.08769-2-16-1': 'As shown in Fig. [REF]b, the transport distance [MATH] is controlled by the detuning [MATH] and the hold time [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-16-2': 'Prior to imaging, the bottom dipole beam is quickly ramped off in 2 ms, reverting the tweezer trap back to the stationary lattice configuration.', '1810.08769-2-16-3': 'Figure [REF]c plots the measured mean fluorescence counts averaged over multiple experiment repetitions, which decreases significantly at nonzero [MATH] and at larger [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-16-4': 'These measurements collapse into a single curve when we plot them against final transport distance [MATH], as shown in Fig. [REF]d, suggesting that the count decrease is due to atom transport in the tweezer lattice instead of other loss mechanisms, such as parametric or noise heating, that should separately depend on [MATH] or hold time [MATH].', '1810.08769-2-17-0': 'The count asymmetry in Fig. [REF]d is attributed to the conveyor transport near the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-2-17-1': 'With [MATH], atoms are transported away from the tweezer focus until they approach [MATH]m where the tweezer intensity on the optical axis vanishes.', '1810.08769-2-17-2': 'The count reduction is primarily due to atoms being heated out of the trap during imaging or escaping during transport, and is much more than what would be suggested by a defocused atom image [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-17-3': 'Concerning the distance scale involved, [MATH], the modification of dipole emission rate due to coupling to the membrane guided modes also plays insignificant role.', '1810.08769-2-17-4': 'On the other hand, for conveying downward, mean counts gently reduce until [MATH]m, beyond which no atomic fluorescence can be detected.', '1810.08769-2-17-5': 'This results from multiple trapped atoms, randomly distributed along the tweezer lattice, being pulled closer to the membrane surface where the micro-traps are the strongest.', '1810.08769-2-17-6': 'These atoms can be imaged well until they are too close to or eventually adsorb on the membrane surface.', '1810.08769-2-18-0': 'From Fig. [REF]d, we can infer the trap range and atom number.', '1810.08769-2-18-1': 'Using the data from [MATH] as an empirical model for the fluorescent counts versus trapped atom position, we can fit the data for [MATH] by assuming a Poisson average of [MATH] trapped atoms initially distributed along the lattice with random site positions [MATH] and transport distance [MATH] [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-18-2': 'We obtain a reasonable fit with [MATH] atoms and [MATH]m, consistent with the expected trap range.', '1810.08769-2-18-3': 'We note that this simple model does not take into account the surprising sub-Poissonian distribution near the tweezer focus, as seen in Fig. [REF]d.', '1810.08769-2-19-0': '## Experimental outlook', '1810.08769-2-20-0': 'Conveyor-belt transport of an atom within a tweezer trap can be utilized to improve the loading probability of the trap site closest to the dielectric surface, starting from a random initial vertical position and stopping at the first trap site before the atom hits the surface.', '1810.08769-2-20-1': 'This can be implemented on a nanostructure with a coupled resonant probe to feedback-control the operation.', '1810.08769-2-20-2': 'Through monitoring the guided probe transmission in realtime, the presence of a single atom in the evanescence region ([MATH]) can be inferred by detecting a significant drop in probe transmission due to strong atom-light interactions.', '1810.08769-2-20-3': 'Up to 70 % drop is expected when an atom is coupled to the band edge mode of a photonic crystal waveguide as recently demonstrated in an experiment [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-20-4': 'Recently, a clocked delivery of cold atoms to the same waveguide has been reported in Ref. [CITATION] using an optical conveyor-belt.', '1810.08769-2-20-5': 'Similar feedback can also be achieved by coupling to a resonator of high quality factor and moderate mode volume [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-21-0': 'This conveyor belt technique can be scaled up to an array configuration by beginning with a filled tweezer array as shown in Fig. [REF]a, where each trap is controlled by one frequency tone [MATH] in the AOD ([MATH]).', '1810.08769-2-21-1': 'For the tone spacing much greater than the axial trap frequency [MATH], where typically the axial trap frequency [MATH]kHz [CITATION], one counter-propagating dipole beam that spatially overlaps with all tweezers can transport trapped atoms in individual tweezer lattices, one at a time.', '1810.08769-2-21-2': 'Figure [REF]b schematically illustrates a profile of the frequency [MATH] of the (counter propagating) bottom dipole beam for such an operation.', '1810.08769-2-21-3': 'Within time segment [MATH] marked by a color shaded area, the conveyor transport initiates when [MATH] and can be terminated by feedback from a resonant probe, followed by a rapid change (within a time [MATH]) to the next frequency tone [MATH] to convert the [MATH]-th tweezer lattice into a conveyor belt and revert the [MATH]-th tweezer back to the original stationary tweezer lattice.', '1810.08769-2-21-4': 'Following the transport, an atom can be optically pumped to a dark state using the guided mode, awaiting further operations.', '1810.08769-2-21-5': 'We expect transport in each tweezer lattice should finish within [MATH] ms. With our measured tweezer trap lifetime [MATH]ms, tens of trapped atoms may be assembled using an array of tweezer lattices and a bottom dipole beam of a moderate power.', '1810.08769-2-22-0': '# Discussion', '1810.08769-2-23-0': 'In summary, using a configurable tweezer lattice, we show that a single or an array of atoms can be loaded, transported, and imaged on a planar photonic circuit.', '1810.08769-2-23-1': 'We further propose that conveyor-belt transport can be utilized to assemble an atom array on a nanophotonic waveguide.', '1810.08769-2-23-2': 'Our experimental platform and technique extend beyond existing demonstrations of trapped atoms on suspended, quasi-linear nanophotonics such as nanofibers [CITATION], photonic crystal waveguides [CITATION], and cavities [CITATION], opening up more possibilities of coupling trapped atoms to lithographic planar photonic structures with broad applications and quantum functionality [CITATION].', '1810.08769-2-23-3': 'Our ability to perform single atom fluorescence imaging on a dielectric surface allows for state-sensitive, atom-resolved detection that is complementary to conventional guided mode probing techniques.', '1810.08769-2-23-4': 'Lastly, our photonics membrane platform can be readily extended to include light-coupled high-quality resonator waveguides, enabling future studies of many-body quantum optics or even the synthesis of an array of ground state molecules [CITATION].'}
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[['1810.08769-1-4-4', '1810.08769-2-8-4'], ['1810.08769-1-4-8', '1810.08769-2-8-8'], ['1810.08769-1-3-0', '1810.08769-2-7-0'], ['1810.08769-1-3-1', '1810.08769-2-7-2'], ['1810.08769-1-16-0', '1810.08769-2-23-0'], ['1810.08769-1-16-1', '1810.08769-2-23-4'], ['1810.08769-1-0-0', '1810.08769-2-0-0'], ['1810.08769-1-0-1', '1810.08769-2-0-1'], ['1810.08769-1-0-5', '1810.08769-2-0-2'], ['1810.08769-1-0-6', '1810.08769-2-0-3'], ['1810.08769-1-0-7', '1810.08769-2-0-4'], ['1810.08769-1-2-0', '1810.08769-2-3-0'], ['1810.08769-1-15-1', '1810.08769-2-21-1'], ['1810.08769-1-1-0', '1810.08769-2-2-0'], ['1810.08769-1-1-1', '1810.08769-2-2-4']]
[]
[['1810.08769-1-11-1', '1810.08769-2-16-1'], ['1810.08769-1-15-2', '1810.08769-2-21-2']]
[['1810.08769-1-14-1', '1810.08769-2-20-2'], ['1810.08769-1-14-2', '1810.08769-2-20-3'], ['1810.08769-1-14-2', '1810.08769-2-20-5']]
['1810.08769-1-17-3']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.08769
null
null
null
null
null
1709.04151
{'1709.04151-1-0-0': 'In a celebrated 1990 paper, Aizenman and Wehr proved that the two-dimensional random field Ising model has a unique infinite volume Gibbs state at any temperature.', '1709.04151-1-0-1': 'The proof is ergodic-theoretic in nature and does not provide any quantitative information.', '1709.04151-1-0-2': 'This article proves the first quantitative version of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem.', '1709.04151-1-0-3': 'The proof introduces a new method for proving decay of correlations that may be interesting in its own right.', '1709.04151-1-0-4': 'A fairly detailed sketch of the main ideas behind the proof is also included.', '1709.04151-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1709.04151-1-2-0': 'Let [MATH] be a finite subset of [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-1': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] that are adjacent to some [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-2': 'We will refer to [MATH] as the outer boundary (or simply the boundary) of [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-3': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-4': 'An element of [MATH] will be called a configuration and an element of [MATH] will be called a boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-2-5': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-6': 'Elements of [MATH] will be called external fields.', '1709.04151-1-2-7': 'For [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], define the energy of [MATH] as [EQUATION] where [MATH] means that [MATH] and [MATH] are neighbors.', '1709.04151-1-2-8': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-9': 'The Ising model on [MATH] with boundary condition [MATH], inverse temperature [MATH], and external field [MATH], is the probability measure on [MATH] with probability mass function proportional to [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-2-10': 'When [MATH], this is simply the uniform probability measure on the configurations that minimize the energy (the ground states).', '1709.04151-1-3-0': 'Let us now suppose that [MATH] are i.i.d. random variables instead of fixed constants.', '1709.04151-1-3-1': 'Then the probability measure defined above becomes a random probability measure.', '1709.04151-1-3-2': 'This is known as the random field Ising model (sometimes abbreviated as RFIM).', '1709.04151-1-3-3': 'We will refer to the law of [MATH] as the random field distribution.', '1709.04151-1-4-0': 'The random field Ising model was introduced by [CITATION] as a simple example of a disordered system.', '1709.04151-1-4-1': 'Imry and Ma predicted that the model does not have an ordered phase in dimensions one and two, but does exhibit a phase transition in dimensions three and higher.', '1709.04151-1-4-2': 'Under some conditions on the random field distribution, [CITATION] settled the Imry-Ma conjecture in [MATH], and [CITATION] settled it in [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-4-3': 'For a readable account of these proofs and an up-to-date survey of the literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-1-5-0': 'An important consequence of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem is that the 2D RFIM exhibits decay of correlations at any temperature.', '1709.04151-1-5-1': 'One way to state this precisely is the following.', '1709.04151-1-5-2': 'Let all notation be as in the beginning of this section, and take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-5-3': 'Choose any random field distribution, and consider the RFIM on [MATH] at some inverse temperature [MATH] and some boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-5-4': 'Let [MATH] denote the quenched expected value of [MATH] in this model.', '1709.04151-1-5-5': 'Decay of correlations means that [EQUATION] in probability as [MATH], with [MATH] and [MATH] remaining fixed.', '1709.04151-1-5-6': 'In other words, the effect of the boundary condition on the law of the spin at some interior point becomes negligible as the distance of the point from the boundary becomes large.', '1709.04151-1-5-7': 'Under mild conditions on the random field distribution, this result follows from the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, and is in fact equivalent to it.', '1709.04151-1-5-8': 'The proof of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, however, uses ergodic theory in a crucial way and provides no quantitative information.', '1709.04151-1-5-9': 'The question of establishing a rate for the decay of correlations in the 2D RFIM has remained open, except at sufficiently small [MATH] where standard techniques can be used to prove exponential decay.', '1709.04151-1-5-10': 'The following theorem gives the first rate of decay at arbitrary [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-6-0': 'Consider the random field Ising model on a set [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH], as defined in the beginning of this section.', '1709.04151-1-6-1': 'Let the random field distribution be Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-6-2': 'Take any [MATH] such that [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] distance of [MATH] from [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-6-3': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a universal constant.', '1709.04151-1-6-4': 'In particular, the bound has no dependence on [MATH] and holds even if [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-7-0': 'The above theorem gives quantitative information on how the quenched law of the spin at a single site depends on the boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-7-1': 'There remains, of course, the possibility that the rate can be improved.', '1709.04151-1-7-2': 'There is a folklore conjecture that the true rate of decay is exponentially fast in [MATH] at any [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-7-3': 'There is also a competing belief that the rate may be polynomial in [MATH] at large [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-8-0': '# Sketch of the proof', '1709.04151-1-9-0': 'Since the proof of Theorem [REF] does not follow any of the standard techniques for proving correlation decay, and is also quite different than the approach of [CITATION], it may be worthwhile to explain the main ideas here, before embarking on the details.', '1709.04151-1-9-1': 'The ideas may be applicable to any disordered system having the FKG property, or even beyond that.', '1709.04151-1-9-2': 'Unfortunately, I have found it hard to encapsulate the scheme in a few paragraphs, so the sketch itself is a few pages long.', '1709.04151-1-10-0': 'Throughout, [MATH] will denote any universal constant.', '1709.04151-1-10-1': 'By the well-known FKG property of the RFIM, [MATH] is a monotone increasing function of the boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-2': 'Therefore, it suffices to show that [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the boundary conditions in which all boundary spins are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1709.04151-1-10-3': 'It turns out that by a simple translation invariance argument, one can boil down this problem to the problem of showing that [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is an [MATH] square.', '1709.04151-1-10-4': 'We will show this by proving that there exists some [MATH] (depending on [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]) such that [MATH] and [MATH] are both bounded by [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-10-5': 'Let [MATH] be a number, to be chosen later.', '1709.04151-1-10-6': 'Assuming for simplicity that [MATH] is a divisor of [MATH], partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares.', '1709.04151-1-10-7': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-10-8': 'It suffices to show that there is some [MATH] such that for all but a small fraction of [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] are both bounded by [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-10-9': 'Showing the existence of such an [MATH] and [MATH] is the main difficult part of the proof.', '1709.04151-1-10-10': 'In this sketch, let us assume for notational simplicity that [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-11': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition, at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-12': 'By standard Gaussian concentration techniques, it follows that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-10-13': 'On the other hand, by Fourier expansion with respect to the Hermite polynomial basis of Gaussian [MATH] space (to be explained later), [EQUATION] where [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-10-14': 'A similar formula can be written for [MATH] using [MATH], for the model with minus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-10-15': 'Combining these formulas with the upper bounds on the variances, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-10-16': 'For each [MATH] and each [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-17': 'Using [REF], we will argue that there is some [MATH] such that [MATH] and [EQUATION] (To see this, just sum the left side over all [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-18': 'By [REF], this sum is bounded by [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-19': 'On the other hand, the number of such [MATH] is of order [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-10-20': 'Thus, there must exist at least one [MATH] with the above property.)', '1709.04151-1-11-0': 'Fix such an [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-1': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-2': 'Let [MATH] be a partition of [MATH] into [MATH] square, assuming for simplicity that [MATH] divides [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-3': 'The above inequality implies that if [MATH] is a large number, then for most [MATH], [EQUATION] (Specifically, we will take [MATH].)', '1709.04151-1-11-4': 'Take any such [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-5': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-6': 'Using the above inequality and the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, we will argue that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-11-7': 'Next, we will define a variant of the model with plus boundary condition, by replacing the random field [MATH] with the shifted field [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-8': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of this new model.', '1709.04151-1-11-9': 'Then we will note four things about [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-10': 'First, a simple calculation gives [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the derivative of [MATH] with respect to [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-11': 'Next, we will rigorously justify the Taylor series expansion [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the [MATH] derivative of [MATH] with respect to [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-12': 'Third, we will make the crucial but straightforward observation that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-11-13': 'Finally, we will define another new model by erasing all the links between [MATH] and [MATH], and will compare this model with the existing one to conclude that there is some number [MATH] such that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-11-14': 'Combining all of the observations, and using the inequality [REF], it will follow that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-11-15': 'Putting [MATH] and making the specific choices [MATH] and [MATH] (and [MATH] as before), we will get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-11-16': 'Finally, we will observe that [REF] continues to hold if we replace [MATH] by [MATH] (with the same [MATH]), and hence the above inequality continues to hold if we replace [MATH] by [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-11-17': 'The proof is completed by combining this over all [MATH] as in the beginning of the sketch.', '1709.04151-1-12-0': '# Proof details', '1709.04151-1-13-0': 'This section contains the detailed proof of Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-1-13-1': 'A key ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following formula for the variance of a function of independent standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-1-13-2': '[[CITATION]] Let [MATH] be a vector of i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables, and let [MATH] be a [MATH] function of [MATH] with bounded derivatives of all orders.', '1709.04151-1-13-3': 'The convergence of the infinite series is part of the conclusion.', '1709.04151-1-14-0': 'Although the above version of this identity first appeared in [CITATION], slightly different but equivalent versions were already present in the earlier papers [CITATION].', '1709.04151-1-14-1': 'The identity has been used recently in [CITATION].', '1709.04151-1-14-2': 'The proof is quite simple, and goes as follows.', '1709.04151-1-14-3': 'Let [MATH] denote the standard Gaussian measure on [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-14-4': 'It is a well-known fact that the [MATH]-variable Hermite polynomials form an orthonormal basis of [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-14-5': 'Using integration by parts, it is not difficult to prove that the Fourier coefficients of [MATH] with respect to this orthonormal basis can be expressed as the expectations of mixed partial derivatives of [MATH] occurring on the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-1-14-6': 'The identity [REF] is simply the Parseval identity for this Fourier expansion.', '1709.04151-1-15-0': 'A second ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the Gaussian Poincare inequality, stated below.', '1709.04151-1-15-1': '[Gaussian Poincare inequality] Let [MATH] and [MATH] be as in Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-1-15-2': 'A simple proof of the Gaussian Poincare inequality can be given using Theorem [REF], by applying [REF] to each [MATH] and then adding up the results to get an expansion for the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-1-15-3': 'Comparing this expansion with the expansion for [MATH] easily shows that one dominates the other.', '1709.04151-1-15-4': 'For more on the Gaussian Poincare inequality and the related literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-1-16-0': "In the remainder of this section, the term 'plus boundary condition' will mean, as usual, the boundary condition [MATH] where each [MATH].", '1709.04151-1-16-1': 'The quenched expectation of the spin at site [MATH] under plus boundary condition will be denoted by [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-16-2': 'If the domain [MATH] needs to be emphasized, we will write [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-16-3': 'Minus boundary condition and related notations are defined similarly.', '1709.04151-1-16-4': 'An important consequence of the FKG property is that for any boundary condition [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-16-5': 'Another important consequence of the FKG property and the Markovian nature of the RFIM is that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-16-6': 'Throughout, we will assume that the random field distribution is Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-16-7': 'Instead of [MATH], the external field at a vertex [MATH] will be denoted by [MATH], where [MATH] are i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-1-16-8': 'Lastly, [MATH] will denote any universal constant, whose value may change from line to line.', '1709.04151-1-17-0': 'The main step in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following lemma.', '1709.04151-1-18-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square, for some [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-18-1': 'Consider the RFIM on [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-18-2': 'Then there exists [MATH] such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-19-0': 'Fix [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-19-1': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of the model with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-19-2': 'For [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-19-3': 'By Theorem [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-19-4': 'On the other hand, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the expected value of [MATH] under plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-19-5': 'By Theorem [REF], this shows that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-19-6': 'Combining the above observations, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-19-7': 'Let [MATH] be defined analogously, for the RFIM on [MATH] with minus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-19-8': 'Retracing the above steps, it is clear that [REF] holds for [MATH] as well.', '1709.04151-1-20-0': 'Let [MATH] and let [MATH] for [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-1': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-2': 'For any [MATH] and any [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of a vector [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-3': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-20-4': 'Then by [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-20-5': 'Let [MATH] be the smallest integer for which [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-6': 'By the above inequality, there exists [MATH] such that [MATH] and [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-20-7': 'Fix such an [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-8': 'Let [MATH] be the largest integer that is strictly less than [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-9': 'Since [MATH], it follows that [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-10': 'Let [MATH] be a sub-square of [MATH] with side-length [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-20-11': 'Note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-20-12': 'Partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares in the natural way.', '1709.04151-1-20-13': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION] and let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-0': 'Notice that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-1': 'Thus, by [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-2': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-3': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] such that [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-4': "Then by Markov's inequality, [EQUATION]", '1709.04151-1-21-5': 'Now fix some [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-6': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-7': 'Consider the model obtained by replacing [MATH] with [MATH] for each [MATH] in the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-21-8': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of this new model.', '1709.04151-1-21-9': 'As a function of [MATH], it is easy to check that [MATH] is infinitely differentiable.', '1709.04151-1-21-10': 'Let [MATH] denote the [MATH] derivative of this function.', '1709.04151-1-21-11': 'For [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-12': 'Proceeding exactly as in the proof of [REF], we get that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-13': 'But note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-14': 'Therefore by Cauchy-Schwarz inequality and [REF], for any nonnegative [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a finite real number that depends only on [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-15': 'Thus, for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-16': 'This shows, in particular, that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-17': 'But Taylor expansion gives [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-18': 'By [REF], the expectation of the remainder term goes to zero.', '1709.04151-1-21-19': 'Thus, we get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-20': 'In particular, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-21': 'By [REF] and the fact that [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-22': 'Now let [MATH], where [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-23': 'The number of ways of choosing [MATH] is [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-24': 'Therefore by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-25': 'On the other hand, the number of ways of choosing [MATH] such that [MATH] is bounded above by [MATH], since [MATH] can be chosen in [MATH] ways, and given [MATH], the constraint [MATH] implies that [MATH] have to be within a square of side-length [MATH] centered at [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-26': 'Since [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-27': 'Thus, by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-28': 'Combining the above steps, we get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-29': 'Now consider the model where the links between [MATH] and [MATH] are removed.', '1709.04151-1-21-30': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy of this model.', '1709.04151-1-21-31': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] with zero boundary condition and [MATH] replaced with [MATH] in the Hamiltonian, and [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] which has plus boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that lies outside [MATH], and zero boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that belongs to [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-32': 'Note that [MATH] does not depend on [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-33': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-34': 'On the other hand, it is easy to see that [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-35': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-36': 'Lastly, observe that [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the quenched expectation of [MATH] in our original RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-21-37': 'Combining all of the above steps, and choosing [MATH] as before, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-38': 'Let [MATH] be the union of all [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-39': 'Let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-40': 'Then the above inequality implies that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-41': 'By [REF] and [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-42': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-43': 'By our choice of [MATH], this gives [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-21-44': 'Proceeding exactly as above but with minus boundary condition, we get the same inequality for [MATH], with the same [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-21-45': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-1-21-46': 'By [REF], this completes the proof.', '1709.04151-1-22-0': 'We are now ready to prove Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-1-22-1': '[Proof of Theorem [REF]] It suffices to prove the theorem assuming that [MATH], because the case [MATH] is trivial, and the inequality for [MATH] can be deduced by taking a limit after we have proved the theorem for finite [MATH], since the upper bound does not depend on [MATH] and [MATH] is a finite set (which implies that [MATH] is a continuous function of [MATH] as [MATH] varies in [MATH]).', '1709.04151-1-23-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square containing [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-23-1': 'Then [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-23-2': 'Let [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] under plus boundary condition on [MATH].', '1709.04151-1-23-3': 'Similarly, [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] in the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-1-23-4': 'Lemma [REF] implies that there exists some [MATH] as above, for which [EQUATION] where [MATH] is some universal constant.', '1709.04151-1-23-5': 'By [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-1-23-6': 'This completes the proof.'}
{'1709.04151-2-0-0': 'In a celebrated 1990 paper, Aizenman and Wehr proved that the two-dimensional random field Ising model has a unique infinite volume Gibbs state at any temperature.', '1709.04151-2-0-1': 'The proof is ergodic-theoretic in nature and does not provide any quantitative information.', '1709.04151-2-0-2': 'This article proves the first quantitative version of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem.', '1709.04151-2-0-3': 'The proof introduces a new method for proving decay of correlations that may be interesting in its own right.', '1709.04151-2-0-4': 'A fairly detailed sketch of the main ideas behind the proof is also included.', '1709.04151-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1709.04151-2-2-0': 'Let [MATH] be a finite subset of [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-1': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] that are adjacent to some [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-2': 'We will refer to [MATH] as the outer boundary (or simply the boundary) of [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-3': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-4': 'An element of [MATH] will be called a configuration and an element of [MATH] will be called a boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-2-5': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-6': 'Elements of [MATH] will be called external fields.', '1709.04151-2-2-7': 'For [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], define the energy of [MATH] as [EQUATION] where [MATH] means that [MATH] and [MATH] are neighbors.', '1709.04151-2-2-8': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-9': 'The Ising model on [MATH] with boundary condition [MATH], inverse temperature [MATH], and external field [MATH], is the probability measure on [MATH] with probability mass function proportional to [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-2-10': 'When [MATH], this is simply the uniform probability measure on the configurations that minimize the energy (the ground states).', '1709.04151-2-3-0': 'Let us now suppose that [MATH] are i.i.d. random variables instead of fixed constants.', '1709.04151-2-3-1': 'Then the probability measure defined above becomes a random probability measure.', '1709.04151-2-3-2': 'This is known as the random field Ising model (sometimes abbreviated as RFIM).', '1709.04151-2-3-3': 'We will refer to the law of [MATH] as the random field distribution.', '1709.04151-2-4-0': 'The random field Ising model was introduced by [CITATION] as a simple example of a disordered system.', '1709.04151-2-4-1': 'Imry and Ma predicted that the model does not have an ordered phase in dimensions one and two, but does exhibit a phase transition in dimensions three and higher.', '1709.04151-2-4-2': 'Under some conditions on the random field distribution, [CITATION] settled the Imry-Ma conjecture in [MATH], and [CITATION] settled it in [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-4-3': 'For a readable account of these proofs and an up-to-date survey of the literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-2-5-0': 'An important consequence of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem is that the 2D RFIM exhibits decay of correlations at any temperature.', '1709.04151-2-5-1': 'One way to state this precisely is the following.', '1709.04151-2-5-2': 'Let all notation be as in the beginning of this section, and take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-5-3': 'Choose any random field distribution, and consider the RFIM on [MATH] at some inverse temperature [MATH] and some boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-5-4': 'Let [MATH] denote the quenched expected value of [MATH] in this model.', '1709.04151-2-5-5': 'Decay of correlations means that [EQUATION] in probability as [MATH], with [MATH] and [MATH] remaining fixed.', '1709.04151-2-5-6': 'In other words, the effect of the boundary condition on the law of the spin at some interior point becomes negligible as the distance of the point from the boundary becomes large.', '1709.04151-2-5-7': 'Under mild conditions on the random field distribution, this result follows from the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, and is in fact equivalent to it.', '1709.04151-2-5-8': 'The proof of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, however, uses ergodic theory in a crucial way and provides no quantitative information.', '1709.04151-2-5-9': 'The question of establishing a rate for the decay of correlations in the 2D RFIM has remained open, except at sufficiently small [MATH] where standard techniques can be used to prove exponential decay.', '1709.04151-2-5-10': 'The following theorem gives the first rate of decay at arbitrary [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-6-0': 'Consider the random field Ising model on a set [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH], as defined in the beginning of this section.', '1709.04151-2-6-1': 'Let the random field distribution be Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-6-2': 'Take any [MATH] such that [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] distance of [MATH] from [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-6-3': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a universal constant.', '1709.04151-2-6-4': 'In particular, the bound has no dependence on [MATH] and holds even if [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-7-0': 'The above theorem gives quantitative information on how the quenched law of the spin at a single site depends on the boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-7-1': 'There remains, of course, the possibility that the rate can be improved.', '1709.04151-2-7-2': 'There is a folklore conjecture that the true rate of decay is exponentially fast in [MATH] at any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-7-3': 'There is also a competing belief that the rate may be polynomial in [MATH] at large [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-8-0': '# Sketch of the proof', '1709.04151-2-9-0': 'Since the proof of Theorem [REF] does not follow any of the standard techniques for proving correlation decay, and is also quite different than the approach of [CITATION], it may be worthwhile to explain the main ideas here, before embarking on the details.', '1709.04151-2-9-1': 'The ideas may be applicable to any disordered system having the FKG property, or even beyond that.', '1709.04151-2-9-2': 'Unfortunately, I have found it hard to encapsulate the scheme in a few paragraphs, so the sketch itself is a few pages long.', '1709.04151-2-10-0': 'Throughout, [MATH] will denote any universal constant.', '1709.04151-2-10-1': 'By the well-known FKG property of the RFIM, [MATH] is a monotone increasing function of the boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-2': 'Therefore, it suffices to show that [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the boundary conditions in which all boundary spins are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1709.04151-2-10-3': 'It turns out that by a simple translation invariance argument, one can boil down this problem to the problem of showing that [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is an [MATH] square.', '1709.04151-2-10-4': 'We will show this by proving that there exists some [MATH] (depending on [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]) such that [MATH] and [MATH] are both bounded by [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-10-5': 'Let [MATH] be a number, to be chosen later.', '1709.04151-2-10-6': 'Assuming for simplicity that [MATH] is a divisor of [MATH], partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares.', '1709.04151-2-10-7': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-10-8': 'It suffices to show that there is some [MATH] such that for all but a small fraction of [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] are both bounded by [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-10-9': 'Showing the existence of such an [MATH] and [MATH] is the main difficult part of the proof.', '1709.04151-2-10-10': 'In this sketch, let us assume for notational simplicity that [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-11': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition, at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-12': 'By standard Gaussian concentration techniques, it follows that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-10-13': 'On the other hand, by Fourier expansion with respect to the Hermite polynomial basis of Gaussian [MATH] space (to be explained later), [EQUATION] where [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-10-14': 'A similar formula can be written for [MATH] using [MATH], for the model with minus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-10-15': 'Combining these formulas with the upper bounds on the variances, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-10-16': 'For each [MATH] and each [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-17': 'Using [REF], we will argue that there is some [MATH] such that [MATH] and [EQUATION] (To see this, just sum the left side over all [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-18': 'By [REF], this sum is bounded by [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-19': 'On the other hand, the number of such [MATH] is of order [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-10-20': 'Thus, there must exist at least one [MATH] with the above property.)', '1709.04151-2-11-0': 'Fix such an [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-1': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-2': 'Let [MATH] be a partition of [MATH] into [MATH] square, assuming for simplicity that [MATH] divides [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-3': 'The above inequality implies that if [MATH] is a large number, then for most [MATH], [EQUATION] (Specifically, we will take [MATH].)', '1709.04151-2-11-4': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all such [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-5': 'Take any [MATH] and any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-6': 'Using [REF] and the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, we will obtain, for later use, a suitable bound on the infinite sum [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-11-7': 'Next, given [MATH], we will define a variant of the model with plus boundary condition by replacing the random field [MATH] with the shifted field [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-8': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of this new model.', '1709.04151-2-11-9': 'Then we will note four things about [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-10': 'First, a simple calculation gives [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the derivative of [MATH] with respect to [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-11': 'Next, we will rigorously justify the infinite Taylor series expansion [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the [MATH] derivative of [MATH] with respect to [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-12': 'Third, we will make the crucial but straightforward observation that [EQUATION] which implies the key identity [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-11-13': 'Finally, we will define another new model by erasing all the links between [MATH] and [MATH], and will compare this model with the above one to conclude that there is some number [MATH] depending only on [MATH] such that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-11-14': 'Combining all of the above observations, making appropriate choices of [MATH] and [MATH], and using the bound on [REF] obtained earlier, it will follow that there is some [MATH] such that for every [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-11-15': 'Finally, we will observe that [REF] continues to hold if we replace [MATH] by [MATH], with the same [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-16': 'Hence the above inequality continues to hold if we replace [MATH] by [MATH], but with the same [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-11-17': 'The proof is completed by combining this over all [MATH] as in the beginning of the sketch, and throwing in a small additional error term for [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-12-0': '# Proof details', '1709.04151-2-13-0': 'This section contains the detailed proof of Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-2-13-1': 'A key ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following formula for the variance of a function of independent standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-2-13-2': '[[CITATION]] Let [MATH] be a vector of i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables, and let [MATH] be a [MATH] function of [MATH] with bounded derivatives of all orders.', '1709.04151-2-13-3': 'The convergence of the infinite series is part of the conclusion.', '1709.04151-2-14-0': 'Although the above version of this identity first appeared in [CITATION], slightly different but equivalent versions were already present in the earlier papers [CITATION].', '1709.04151-2-14-1': 'The identity has been used recently in [CITATION].', '1709.04151-2-14-2': 'The proof is quite simple, and goes as follows.', '1709.04151-2-14-3': 'Let [MATH] denote the standard Gaussian measure on [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-14-4': 'It is a well-known fact that the [MATH]-variable Hermite polynomials form an orthonormal basis of [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-14-5': 'Using integration by parts, it is not difficult to prove that the Fourier coefficients of [MATH] with respect to this orthonormal basis can be expressed as the expectations of mixed partial derivatives of [MATH] occurring on the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-2-14-6': 'The identity [REF] is simply the Parseval identity for this Fourier expansion.', '1709.04151-2-15-0': 'A second ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the Gaussian Poincare inequality, stated below.', '1709.04151-2-15-1': '[Gaussian Poincare inequality] Let [MATH] and [MATH] be as in Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-2-15-2': 'A simple proof of the Gaussian Poincare inequality can be given using Theorem [REF], by applying [REF] to each [MATH] and then adding up the results to get an expansion for the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-2-15-3': 'Comparing this expansion with the expansion for [MATH] easily shows that one dominates the other.', '1709.04151-2-15-4': 'For more on the Gaussian Poincare inequality and the related literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-2-16-0': "In the remainder of this section, the term 'plus boundary condition' will mean, as usual, the boundary condition [MATH] where each [MATH].", '1709.04151-2-16-1': 'The quenched expectation of the spin at site [MATH] under plus boundary condition will be denoted by [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-16-2': 'If the domain [MATH] needs to be emphasized, we will write [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-16-3': 'Minus boundary condition and related notations are defined similarly.', '1709.04151-2-16-4': 'An important consequence of the FKG property is that for any boundary condition [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-16-5': 'Another important consequence of the FKG property and the Markovian nature of the RFIM is that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-16-6': 'Throughout, we will assume that the random field distribution is Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-16-7': 'Instead of [MATH], the external field at a vertex [MATH] will be denoted by [MATH], where [MATH] are i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-2-16-8': 'Lastly, [MATH] will denote any universal constant, whose value may change from line to line.', '1709.04151-2-17-0': 'The main step in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following lemma.', '1709.04151-2-18-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square, for some [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-18-1': 'Consider the RFIM on [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-18-2': 'Then there exists [MATH] such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-19-0': 'Fix [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-19-1': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of the model with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-19-2': 'For [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-19-3': 'By Theorem [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-19-4': 'On the other hand, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the expected value of [MATH] under plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-19-5': 'By Theorem [REF], this shows that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-19-6': 'Combining the above observations, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-19-7': 'Let [MATH] be defined analogously, for the RFIM on [MATH] with minus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-19-8': 'Retracing the above steps, it is clear that [REF] holds for [MATH] as well.', '1709.04151-2-20-0': 'Let [MATH] and let [MATH] for [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-1': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-2': 'For any [MATH] and any [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of a vector [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-3': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-20-4': 'Then by [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-20-5': 'Let [MATH] be the smallest integer for which [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-6': 'By the above inequality, there exists [MATH] such that [MATH] and [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-20-7': 'Fix such an [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-8': 'Let [MATH] be the largest integer that is strictly less than [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-9': 'Since [MATH], it follows that [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-10': 'Let [MATH] be a sub-square of [MATH] with side-length [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-20-11': 'Note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-20-12': 'Partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares in the natural way.', '1709.04151-2-20-13': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION] and let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-0': 'Notice that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-1': 'Thus, by [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-2': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-3': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] such that [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-4': "Then by Markov's inequality, [EQUATION]", '1709.04151-2-21-5': 'Now fix some [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-6': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-7': 'Consider the model obtained by replacing [MATH] with [MATH] for each [MATH] in the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-21-8': 'Let [MATH] be the logarithm of the partition function of this new model.', '1709.04151-2-21-9': 'As a function of [MATH], it is easy to check that [MATH] is infinitely differentiable.', '1709.04151-2-21-10': 'Let [MATH] denote the [MATH] derivative of this function.', '1709.04151-2-21-11': 'For [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-12': 'Proceeding exactly as in the proof of [REF], we get that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-13': 'But note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-14': 'Therefore by Cauchy-Schwarz inequality and [REF], for any nonnegative [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a finite real number that depends only on [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-15': 'Thus, for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-16': 'This shows, in particular, that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-17': 'But Taylor expansion gives [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-18': 'By [REF], the expectation of the remainder term goes to zero.', '1709.04151-2-21-19': 'Thus, we get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-20': 'In particular, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-21': 'By [REF] and the fact that [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-22': 'Now let [MATH], where [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-23': 'The number of ways of choosing [MATH] is [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-24': 'Therefore by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-25': 'On the other hand, the number of ways of choosing [MATH] such that [MATH] is bounded above by [MATH], since [MATH] can be chosen in [MATH] ways, and given [MATH], the constraint [MATH] implies that [MATH] have to be within a square of side-length [MATH] centered at [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-26': 'Since [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-27': 'Thus, by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-28': 'Combining the above steps, we get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-29': 'Now consider the model where the links between [MATH] and [MATH] are removed.', '1709.04151-2-21-30': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy of this model.', '1709.04151-2-21-31': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] with zero boundary condition and [MATH] replaced by [MATH] in the Hamiltonian, and [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] which has plus boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that lies outside [MATH], and zero boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that belongs to [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-32': 'Note that [MATH] does not depend on [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-33': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-34': 'On the other hand, it is easy to see that [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-35': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-36': 'Lastly, observe that [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the quenched expectation of [MATH] in our original RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-21-37': 'Combining all of the above steps, and choosing [MATH] as before, we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-38': 'Let [MATH] be the union of all [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-39': 'Let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-40': 'Then the above inequality implies that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-41': 'By [REF] and [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-42': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-43': 'By our choice of [MATH], this gives [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-21-44': 'Proceeding exactly as above but with minus boundary condition, we get the same inequality for [MATH], with the same [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-21-45': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-2-21-46': 'By [REF], this completes the proof.', '1709.04151-2-22-0': 'We are now ready to prove Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-2-22-1': '[Proof of Theorem [REF]] It suffices to prove the theorem assuming that [MATH], because the case [MATH] is trivial, and the inequality for [MATH] can be deduced by taking a limit after we have proved the theorem for finite [MATH], since the upper bound does not depend on [MATH] and [MATH] is a finite set (which implies that [MATH] is a continuous function of [MATH] as [MATH] varies in [MATH]).', '1709.04151-2-23-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square containing [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-23-1': 'Then [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-23-2': 'Let [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] under plus boundary condition on [MATH].', '1709.04151-2-23-3': 'Similarly, [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] in the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-2-23-4': 'Lemma [REF] implies that there exists some [MATH] as above, for which [EQUATION] where [MATH] is some universal constant.', '1709.04151-2-23-5': 'By [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-2-23-6': 'This completes the proof.'}
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[]
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[]
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{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.04151
{'1709.04151-3-0-0': 'In a celebrated 1990 paper, Aizenman and Wehr proved that the two-dimensional random field Ising model has a unique infinite volume Gibbs state at any temperature.', '1709.04151-3-0-1': 'The proof is ergodic-theoretic in nature and does not provide any quantitative information.', '1709.04151-3-0-2': 'This article proves the first quantitative version of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem.', '1709.04151-3-0-3': 'The proof introduces a new method for proving decay of correlations that may be interesting in its own right.', '1709.04151-3-0-4': 'A fairly detailed sketch of the main ideas behind the proof is also included.', '1709.04151-3-1-0': '# Introduction', '1709.04151-3-2-0': 'Let [MATH] be a finite subset of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-1': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] that are adjacent to some [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-2': 'We will refer to [MATH] as the outer boundary (or simply the boundary) of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-3': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-4': 'An element of [MATH] will be called a configuration and an element of [MATH] will be called a boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-2-5': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-6': 'Elements of [MATH] will be called external fields.', '1709.04151-3-2-7': 'For [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], define the energy of [MATH] as [EQUATION] where [MATH] means that [MATH] and [MATH] are neighbors.', '1709.04151-3-2-8': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-9': 'The Ising model on [MATH] with boundary condition [MATH], inverse temperature [MATH], and external field [MATH], is the probability measure on [MATH] with probability mass function proportional to [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-2-10': 'When [MATH], this is simply the uniform probability measure on the configurations that minimize the energy (the ground states).', '1709.04151-3-3-0': 'Let us now suppose that [MATH] are i.i.d. random variables instead of fixed constants.', '1709.04151-3-3-1': 'Then the probability measure defined above becomes a random probability measure.', '1709.04151-3-3-2': 'This is known as the random field Ising model (sometimes abbreviated as RFIM).', '1709.04151-3-3-3': 'We will refer to the law of [MATH] as the random field distribution.', '1709.04151-3-4-0': 'The random field Ising model was introduced by [CITATION] as a simple example of a disordered system.', '1709.04151-3-4-1': 'Imry and Ma predicted that the model does not have an ordered phase in dimensions one and two, but does exhibit a phase transition in dimensions three and higher.', '1709.04151-3-4-2': 'Under some conditions on the random field distribution, [CITATION] settled the Imry-Ma conjecture in [MATH], and [CITATION] settled it in [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-4-3': 'For a readable account of these proofs and an up-to-date survey of the literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-3-5-0': 'An important consequence of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem is that the 2D RFIM exhibits decay of correlations at any temperature.', '1709.04151-3-5-1': 'One way to state this precisely is the following.', '1709.04151-3-5-2': 'Let all notation be as in the beginning of this section, and take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-5-3': 'Choose any random field distribution, and consider the RFIM on [MATH] at some inverse temperature [MATH] and some boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-5-4': 'Let [MATH] denote the quenched expected value of [MATH] in this model.', '1709.04151-3-5-5': 'Decay of correlations means that [EQUATION] in probability as [MATH], with [MATH] and [MATH] remaining fixed.', '1709.04151-3-5-6': 'In other words, the effect of the boundary condition on the law of the spin at some interior point becomes negligible as the distance of the point from the boundary becomes large.', '1709.04151-3-5-7': 'Under mild conditions on the random field distribution, this result follows from the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, and is in fact equivalent to it.', '1709.04151-3-5-8': 'The proof of the Aizenman-Wehr theorem, however, uses ergodic theory in a crucial way and provides no quantitative information.', '1709.04151-3-5-9': 'The question of establishing a rate for the decay of correlations in the 2D RFIM has remained open, except at sufficiently small [MATH] where standard techniques can be used to prove exponential decay.', '1709.04151-3-5-10': 'The following theorem gives the first rate of decay at arbitrary [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-6-0': 'Consider the random field Ising model on a set [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH], as defined in the beginning of this section.', '1709.04151-3-6-1': 'Let the random field distribution be Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-6-2': 'Take any [MATH] such that [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] distance of [MATH] from [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-6-3': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a universal constant.', '1709.04151-3-6-4': 'In particular, the bound has no dependence on [MATH] and holds even if [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-7-0': 'The above theorem gives quantitative information on how the quenched law of the spin at a single site depends on the boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-7-1': 'There remains, of course, the possibility that the rate can be improved.', '1709.04151-3-7-2': 'There is a folklore conjecture that the true rate of decay is exponentially fast in [MATH] at any [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-7-3': 'There is also a competing belief that the rate may be polynomial in [MATH] at large [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-7-4': 'Proving either of these conjectures would be a substantial improvement of Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-3-7-5': 'Using the approach of this paper, however, I do not see any way of getting a better rate than the one given in Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-3-7-6': 'Any improvement will need a new idea.', '1709.04151-3-8-0': 'Another way to improve Theorem [REF] is by extending it to non-Gaussian random field distributions.', '1709.04151-3-8-1': 'Again, the proof in this paper uses the Gaussianity quite heavily, to the extent that I do not see any obvious way to adapt it to a non-Gaussian setting.', '1709.04151-3-9-0': '# Sketch of the proof', '1709.04151-3-10-0': 'Since the proof of Theorem [REF] does not follow any of the standard techniques for proving correlation decay, and is also quite different than the approach of [CITATION], it may be worthwhile to explain the main ideas here, before embarking on the details.', '1709.04151-3-10-1': 'The ideas may be applicable to other disordered systems.', '1709.04151-3-10-2': 'Unfortunately, I have found it hard to encapsulate the scheme in a few paragraphs, so the sketch itself is a few pages long.', '1709.04151-3-11-0': 'Throughout, [MATH] will denote any universal constant.', '1709.04151-3-11-1': 'For simplicity, we will assume that [MATH] is an [MATH] square, [MATH] is the center of the square, and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-11-2': 'By the well-known FKG property of the RFIM, [MATH] is a monotone increasing function of the boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-11-3': 'Therefore, it suffices to show that [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the boundary conditions in which all boundary spins are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1709.04151-3-11-4': 'It turns out that by a simple translation invariance argument, it suffices to show that [EQUATION] where [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-11-5': 'Let [MATH] be a number, to be chosen later.', '1709.04151-3-11-6': 'Partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares.', '1709.04151-3-11-7': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-11-8': 'We will show that for most [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-11-9': 'Summing over [MATH] (assuming that the set of exceptional [MATH] is small enough), this proves [REF].', '1709.04151-3-12-0': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy ([MATH] logarithm of the partition function) of the model under boundary condition [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-12-1': 'Fix an [MATH] square [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-12-2': 'Modify the model by replacing [MATH] with [MATH] for all [MATH], but keeping all other [MATH] the same.', '1709.04151-3-12-3': 'Let [MATH] be the new free energy.', '1709.04151-3-12-4': 'This quantity is useful because [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-12-5': 'So, to prove [REF], we need to show that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-12-6': 'We will show this by approximating [MATH] with [MATH] for some suitable small [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-13-0': 'Take any boundary condition [MATH] and any [MATH], and consider the modified model defined above.', '1709.04151-3-13-1': 'Slightly tweak this model by decoupling the links between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-13-2': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy of the new model.', '1709.04151-3-13-3': 'Due to the decoupling, [MATH] decomposes as a sum of contributions from inside and outside [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-13-4': 'The contribution from outside [MATH] does not depend on [MATH], and the contribution from inside [MATH] does not depend on [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-13-5': 'Thus, there is some [MATH] depending only on [MATH] and not on [MATH], such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-13-6': 'We will show that for any [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] (Briefly, this holds because [MATH] and [MATH].)', '1709.04151-3-13-7': 'Combining, we get that for any [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-13-8': 'Consequently, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-13-9': 'It only remains to get a bound for [EQUATION] in terms of [MATH] and [MATH], and then show that [MATH] and [MATH] can be chosen so that the quantities in both of the above displays are bounded by [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-13-10': 'By [REF], this will complete the proof of [REF].', '1709.04151-3-13-11': 'We will now sketch this step for the plus boundary condition, the argument being similar for minus boundary.', '1709.04151-3-14-0': 'We will start by rigorously justifying the Taylor expansion [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-14-1': 'Suppose that this has been justified.', '1709.04151-3-14-2': 'It is not hard to see that [EQUATION] where the [MATH] on the right denotes the free energy of the original model under plus boundary.', '1709.04151-3-14-3': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-14-4': 'We will now sketch how to bound this remainder term.', '1709.04151-3-14-5': 'Since [MATH] is a function of standard Gaussian random variables, we can write its [MATH] norm using the Fourier expansion of [MATH] in the multivariate Hermite polynomial basis of Gaussian [MATH] space.', '1709.04151-3-14-6': 'It turns out that the quantities [EQUATION] as [MATH] range over [MATH], are its Fourier coefficients.', '1709.04151-3-14-7': 'In particular, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-14-8': 'Using the Gaussian Poincare inequality, we will show that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-14-9': 'Combining the above two displays gives [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-14-10': "From this and Markov's inequality, it follows that if [MATH] is large, then for most [MATH], [EQUATION].", '1709.04151-3-14-11': 'Suppose that our chosen [MATH] is one such square.', '1709.04151-3-14-12': 'Then it is natural to think about bounding the right side of [REF] using the above bound and the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality.', '1709.04151-3-14-13': 'A straightforward application of Cauchy-Schwarz gives [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-14-14': 'Using this as an upper bound in [REF] and combining with [REF] and [REF], we get [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-14-15': 'We would like to choose a small [MATH] and a large [MATH] so that this bound is better than the trivial bound [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-14-16': 'Unfortunately, there is no way to choose such [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-14-17': 'The best we can do with the above bound is, in fact, [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-15-0': 'Note that until now, we have used no special property of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-15-1': 'Indeed, [MATH] could as well have been equal to [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-15-2': 'To complete the proof, we will show that [MATH] can be chosen in a clever way that allows a suitable improvement of our Cauchy-Schwarz step.', '1709.04151-3-15-3': 'The rest of this section sketches this step.', '1709.04151-3-16-0': 'For any [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-16-1': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-16-2': 'Then [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-16-3': 'Thus, for any [MATH], there exists [MATH] such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-16-4': 'In particular, there exists [EQUATION] such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-16-5': 'As before, this can be used to show that if [MATH] is large, then for most [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-16-6': 'Let [MATH] be the integer part of [MATH], so that [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-16-7': 'Then [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-16-8': 'Separately apply Cauchy-Schwarz to the two parts, and then apply [REF] to the second part.', '1709.04151-3-16-9': 'This gives [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-16-10': 'This is an improvement of [REF], since it allows choices of [MATH] and [MATH] such that the right side is [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-16-11': 'The proof of [REF] is now easily completed by choosing [MATH] and [MATH] to be a small power of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-17-0': '# Proof details', '1709.04151-3-18-0': 'This section contains the detailed proof of Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-3-18-1': 'A key ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following formula for the variance of a function of independent standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-3-18-2': '[[CITATION]] Let [MATH] be a vector of i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables, and let [MATH] be a [MATH] function of [MATH] with bounded derivatives of all orders.', '1709.04151-3-18-3': 'The convergence of the infinite series is part of the conclusion.', '1709.04151-3-19-0': 'Although the above version of this identity first appeared in [CITATION], slightly different but equivalent versions were already present in the earlier papers [CITATION].', '1709.04151-3-19-1': 'The identity has been used recently in [CITATION].', '1709.04151-3-19-2': 'The proof is quite simple, and goes as follows.', '1709.04151-3-19-3': 'Let [MATH] denote the standard Gaussian measure on [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-19-4': 'It is a well-known fact that the [MATH]-variable Hermite polynomials form an orthonormal basis of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-19-5': 'Using integration by parts, it is not difficult to prove that the Fourier coefficients of [MATH] with respect to this orthonormal basis can be expressed as the expectations of mixed partial derivatives of [MATH] occurring on the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-3-19-6': 'The identity [REF] is simply the Parseval identity for this Fourier expansion.', '1709.04151-3-20-0': 'A second ingredient in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the Gaussian Poincare inequality, stated below.', '1709.04151-3-20-1': '[Gaussian Poincare inequality] Let [MATH] and [MATH] be as in Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-3-20-2': 'A simple proof of the Gaussian Poincare inequality can be given using Theorem [REF], by applying [REF] to each [MATH] and then adding up the results to get an expansion for the right side of [REF].', '1709.04151-3-20-3': 'Comparing this expansion with the expansion for [MATH] easily shows that one dominates the other.', '1709.04151-3-20-4': 'For more on the Gaussian Poincare inequality and the related literature, see [CITATION].', '1709.04151-3-21-0': "In the remainder of this section, the term 'plus boundary condition' will mean, as usual, the boundary condition [MATH] where each [MATH].", '1709.04151-3-21-1': 'The quenched expectation of the spin at site [MATH] under plus boundary condition will be denoted by [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-21-2': 'If the domain [MATH] needs to be emphasized, we will write [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-21-3': 'Minus boundary condition and related notations are defined similarly.', '1709.04151-3-21-4': 'An important consequence of the FKG property is that for any boundary condition [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-21-5': 'From [REF] and the Markovian nature of the RFIM, it follows that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-21-6': 'Throughout, we will assume that the random field distribution is Gaussian with mean zero and variance [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-21-7': 'Instead of [MATH], the external field at a vertex [MATH] will be denoted by [MATH], where [MATH] are i.i.d. standard Gaussian random variables.', '1709.04151-3-21-8': 'Lastly, [MATH] will denote any universal constant, whose value may change from line to line.', '1709.04151-3-22-0': 'The main step in the proof of Theorem [REF] is the following lemma.', '1709.04151-3-23-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square, for some [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-23-1': 'Consider the RFIM on [MATH] at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-23-2': 'Then there exists [MATH] such that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-24-0': 'The proof of Lemma [REF] is somewhat long and complicated, and is therefore divided into several steps.', '1709.04151-3-24-1': 'Throughout, fix [MATH] and an [MATH] square [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-24-2': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy ([MATH] the logarithm of the partition function) of the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition, at inverse temperature [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-24-3': 'For any [MATH] and any [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-24-4': 'Let [MATH] be defined analogously, for the RFIM on [MATH] with minus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-24-5': 'The following lemma is the first step in the proof of Lemma [REF].', '1709.04151-3-25-0': 'Let [MATH] be defined as above.', '1709.04151-3-25-1': 'Then [EQUATION] and the same inequality holds for [MATH] as well.', '1709.04151-3-26-0': 'By Theorem [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-26-1': 'On the other hand, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-26-2': 'By Theorem [REF], this shows that [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-26-3': 'Combining the above observations, we get the desired inequality.', '1709.04151-3-26-4': 'Retracing the above steps, it is clear that the inequality holds for [MATH] as well.', '1709.04151-3-27-0': 'Let [MATH] be a sub-square of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-27-1': 'Take any [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-27-2': 'Consider the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition, and slightly tweak this model to obtain a new model by replacing [MATH] with [MATH] for each [MATH], keeping all other [MATH] the same.', '1709.04151-3-27-3': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy of this new model, so that [MATH] is the free energy of the original model.', '1709.04151-3-27-4': 'As a function of [MATH], it is easy to check that [MATH] is infinitely differentiable.', '1709.04151-3-27-5': 'Let [MATH] denote the [MATH] derivative of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-27-6': 'The following Taylor series expansion for the expected value of [MATH] is the second step in the proof of Lemma [REF].', '1709.04151-3-27-7': 'The convergence of the series in this lemma is a nontrivial claim, because a direct computation of the [MATH] derivative yields an expression with a super-exponentially growing number of terms.', '1709.04151-3-28-0': 'Let [MATH] be defined as above.', '1709.04151-3-28-1': 'Then for any [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-29-0': 'In the following, [MATH] will denote the width of [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-29-1': 'For [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-29-2': 'Proceeding exactly as in the proof of Lemma [REF], we get that for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-29-3': 'But note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-29-4': 'Therefore by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality and [REF], for any nonnegative [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a finite real number that depends only on [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-29-5': 'Note that the bound has no dependence on [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-29-6': 'Thus, for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-29-7': 'This shows, in particular, that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-29-8': 'But Taylor expansion gives [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-29-9': 'By [REF], the expectation of the remainder term goes to zero as [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-29-10': 'This gives the desired result.', '1709.04151-3-30-0': 'The sub-square [MATH] in Lemma [REF] is arbitrary.', '1709.04151-3-30-1': 'We will now choose a specific sub-square [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-2': 'Let [MATH] and let [MATH] for [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-3': 'Let [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-4': 'For any [MATH] and any [MATH], let [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the [MATH] norm of a vector [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-5': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-30-6': 'Then by Lemma [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-30-7': 'Let [MATH] be the smallest integer for which [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-8': 'By the above inequality, there exists [MATH] such that [MATH] and [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-30-9': 'Fix such an [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-10': 'Let [MATH] be the largest integer that is strictly less than [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-11': 'Since [MATH], it follows that [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-12': 'Let [MATH] be a sub-square of [MATH] with side-length [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-30-13': 'Note that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-30-14': 'Partition [MATH] into a collection [MATH] of [MATH] sub-squares in the natural way.', '1709.04151-3-30-15': 'For each [MATH], let [EQUATION] and let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-31-0': 'Notice that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-31-1': 'Thus, by [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-31-2': 'Let us now define [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-31-3': 'The value of [MATH] will remain fixed throughout the rest of the proof.', '1709.04151-3-31-4': 'Let [MATH] be the set of all [MATH] such that [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-31-5': "Then by Markov's inequality, [EQUATION]", '1709.04151-3-31-6': 'The third step in the proof of Lemma [REF] is the following estimate for [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-32-0': 'Let [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] be as above.', '1709.04151-3-32-1': 'Fixing a choice of [MATH], define [MATH] as in the paragraph preceding the statement of Lemma [REF].', '1709.04151-3-32-2': 'Let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-32-3': 'Then [EQUATION] and the same bound holds for [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-33-0': 'By Lemma [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-33-1': 'By [REF] and the fact that [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-33-2': 'The number of ways of choosing [MATH] is [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-33-3': 'Therefore by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-33-4': 'If [MATH], then there is no [MATH] such that [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-33-5': 'Therefore, in this case, the first sum on the right side in [REF] is zero.', '1709.04151-3-33-6': 'Suppose that [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-33-7': 'Then the number of ways of choosing [MATH] such that [MATH] is bounded above by [MATH], since [MATH] can be chosen in [MATH] ways, and given [MATH], the constraint [MATH] implies that [MATH] have to be within a square of side-length [MATH] centered at [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-33-8': 'Since [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-33-9': 'Thus, by the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, the fact that [MATH], and the bound [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-33-10': 'Combining the above steps, we get the claimed inequality.', '1709.04151-3-33-11': 'Retracing the steps, we get the same bound for [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-0': 'We are now ready to prove Lemma [REF].', '1709.04151-3-34-1': '[Proof of Lemma [REF]] Let [MATH] and [MATH] be as in Lemma [REF].', '1709.04151-3-34-2': 'Consider the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-34-3': 'Modify the model as in the paragraph preceding Lemma [REF], by adding [MATH] to [MATH] for all [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-4': 'Then, further modify the model by removing the links between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-5': 'Let [MATH] be the free energy of the resulting model after these two modifications.', '1709.04151-3-34-6': 'Then [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] with zero boundary condition and [MATH] replaced by [MATH] in the Hamiltonian, and [MATH] is the free energy of the RFIM on [MATH] which has plus boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that lies outside [MATH], and zero boundary condition on the part of [MATH] that belongs to [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-7': 'Note that [MATH] does not depend on [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-8': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-34-9': 'On the other hand, by the straightforward inequality [EQUATION] that holds for any two Hamiltonians [MATH] and [MATH], and the fact that we are deleting at most [MATH] links, it follows that [MATH] for any [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-10': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-34-11': 'Lastly, observe that [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the quenched expectation of [MATH] in our original RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-34-12': 'Combining the above steps and applying Lemma [REF], we get [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-34-13': 'Let [MATH] be the union of all [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-14': 'Let [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-34-15': 'Then the above inequality implies that [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-34-16': 'By [REF] and [REF], [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-34-17': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-34-18': 'Proceeding exactly as above but with minus boundary condition, we get the same inequality for [MATH], with the same [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-34-19': 'Thus, [EQUATION].', '1709.04151-3-34-20': 'This completes the proof.', '1709.04151-3-35-0': 'Finally, we are ready to prove Theorem [REF].', '1709.04151-3-35-1': 'We will now revert back to the setting of Theorem [REF], where [MATH] is an arbitrary finite subset of [MATH] instead of a square.', '1709.04151-3-35-2': '[Proof of Theorem [REF]] It suffices to prove the theorem assuming that [MATH], because the case [MATH] is trivial, and the inequality for [MATH] can be deduced by taking a limit after we have proved the theorem for finite [MATH], since the upper bound does not depend on [MATH] and [MATH] is a finite set (which implies that [MATH] is a continuous function of [MATH] as [MATH] varies in [MATH]).', '1709.04151-3-36-0': 'Let [MATH] be an [MATH] square containing [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-36-1': 'Then [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-36-2': 'Let [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] under plus boundary condition on [MATH].', '1709.04151-3-36-3': 'Similarly, [MATH] be the quenched expectation of [MATH] in the RFIM on [MATH] with plus boundary condition.', '1709.04151-3-36-4': 'The point [MATH] can be made to take any position within the square [MATH] by choosing [MATH] suitably.', '1709.04151-3-36-5': 'Thus, Lemma [REF] implies that there exists some [MATH] as above, for which [EQUATION] where [MATH] is some universal constant.', '1709.04151-3-36-6': 'By [REF], [EQUATION] and by [REF], for any [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1709.04151-3-36-7': 'This completes the proof.'}
null
null
null
null
1111.1010
{'1111.1010-1-0-0': 'We study the spaces of stability conditions (in the sense of Bridgeland) for the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra (a.k.a. [MATH]-preprojective algebra) associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-0-1': 'We prove such spaces are simply connected.', '1111.1010-1-0-2': 'In the Calabi-Yau case, we provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects.', '1111.1010-1-0-3': 'Moreover, we give a combinatorial proof of the existence of Donanldson-Thomas invariants for Dynkin quivers.', '1111.1010-1-1-0': '=0pt Key words: stability space, [MATH]-preprojective algebra, higher cluster category, HN-stratum, Donaldson-Thomas invariant, quantum dilogarithm identity', '1111.1010-1-2-0': '# Introduction', '1111.1010-1-3-0': '## Overall', '1111.1010-1-4-0': 'The notion of a stability condition on a triangulated category was defined by Bridgeland [CITATION] (c.f. Section [REF]).', '1111.1010-1-4-1': 'The idea was inspired from physics by studying D-branes in string theory.', '1111.1010-1-4-2': 'Nevertheless, the notion itself is interesting purely mathematically.', '1111.1010-1-4-3': 'A stability condition on a triangulated category [MATH] consists of a collection of full additive subcategories of [MATH], known as the slicing, and a group homomorphism from the Grothendieck group [MATH] to the complex plane, known as the central charge.', '1111.1010-1-4-4': 'Bridgeland [CITATION] showed a key result that the space [MATH] of all stability conditions on [MATH] is a finite dimensional complex manifold.', '1111.1010-1-4-5': 'Moreover, these spaces carry interesting geometric/topological structure which shades light on the property of the original triangulated categories.', '1111.1010-1-4-6': 'Most interesting examples of triangulated categories are derived categories.', '1111.1010-1-4-7': 'They are weak homological invariants arising in both algebraic geometry and representation theory, and indeed different manifolds and quivers (usual with relation) might share the same derived category (say complex projective line and Kronecker quiver).', '1111.1010-1-4-8': "Also note that the stability spaces are closely related to the mirror categories of these derived categories, in the sense of Kontsevich's homological mirror symmetry, i.e. the Fukaya categories of Lagrangian submanifolds of certain symplectic manifolds.", '1111.1010-1-4-9': 'Usually, because of physical motivation, people (c.f. [CITATION]) are primarily interested in the stability spaces of the derived categories of coherent sheaves on Calabi-Yau [MATH]-folds (and [MATH]-folds).', '1111.1010-1-4-10': 'However we will study the stability space of the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-5-0': 'In understanding stability conditions and triangulated categories, t-structures play an important role.', '1111.1010-1-5-1': "In fact, we can view a t-structure as a 'discrete' (integer) structure while a stability condition (resp. a slicing) is its 'complex' (resp. 'real') refinement.", '1111.1010-1-5-2': 'Every t-structure carries an abelian category sitting inside it, known as its heart.', '1111.1010-1-5-3': 'Note that an abelian category is a canonical heart in its derived category, e.g. [MATH] is the canonical heart of [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-5-4': 'The classical way to understand relations between different hearts is via HRS-tilting (c.f. Section [REF]), in the sense of Happel-Reiten-Smal.', '1111.1010-1-5-5': 'Note that to give a stability condition is equivalent to giving a t-structure and a stability function on its heart with the Harder-Narashimhan (HN) property.', '1111.1010-1-5-6': 'This implies that a finite heart (i.e. has [MATH] simples and has finite length) corresponds to a (complex) [MATH]-cell in the stability space.', '1111.1010-1-5-7': 'Moreover, Woolf [CITATION] shows that the tilting between finite hearts corresponds to the tiling of these [MATH]-cells.', '1111.1010-1-5-8': 'More precisely, two [MATH]-cells meet if and only if the corresponding hearts differ by a HRS-tilting; and they meet in codimension one if and only if the hearts differ by a simple tilting.', '1111.1010-1-5-9': "Thus, our main method to study a stability space of a triangulated category [MATH] is via its 'skeleton' - the exchange graph [MATH], that is, the oriented graphs whose vertices are hearts in [MATH] and whose edges correspond to simple (forward) tiltings between them (c.f. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-1-5-10': 'Figure [REF] (taken from [CITATION]) demonstrates the duality between the exchange graph and the tiling of the stability space by many cells like the shaded area, so that each vertex in the exchange graph corresponds to a cell and each edge corresponds to a common edge (codimension one face) of two neighboring cells.', '1111.1010-1-5-11': 'We will prove certain simply connectedness of stability spaces via exchange graph.', '1111.1010-1-6-0': 'Stability conditions naturally link to Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants, which was originally defined as the weighted Euler characteristics (By Behrend function) of moduli spaces for Calabi-Yau 3-folds (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-1-6-1': "Reineke [CITATION] (c.f. Section [REF]) realized that the DT-invariant for a Dynkin quiver can be calculated as a product of quantum dilogarithms, indexing by any HN-stratum of [MATH], which is a 'maximal refined version' of torsion pairs on an abelian category.", '1111.1010-1-6-2': 'His approach was integrating certain identities in Hall algebras to show the stratum-independence of the product.', '1111.1010-1-6-3': 'We will apply exchange graphs to give a combinatorial proof of such quantum dilogarithm identities.', '1111.1010-1-7-0': '## Contents', '1111.1010-1-8-0': 'We will collect related background in Section [REF].', '1111.1010-1-9-0': 'In Section [REF] and Section [REF], we first make a key observation (Proposition [REF]) that the fundamental group of the exchange graphs generates by squares and pentagons.', '1111.1010-1-9-1': 'Then we prove (Theorem [REF] and Theorem [REF]) the simply connectedness of the stability space [MATH] and the principal component [MATH] of [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-9-2': "Moreover, the quotient space of [MATH] by the Seidel-Thomas braid group [MATH] is the 'right' stability space for the higher cluster category [MATH] (see Remark [REF]).", '1111.1010-1-9-3': 'In fact, the generators of its fundamental group provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects in [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-10-0': 'In Section [REF], we present (Theorem [REF]) a limit formula of stability spaces [EQUATION] which reflects a philosophical point of view that, in a suitable sense,', '1111.1010-1-11-0': 'Q = _N_NQ.', '1111.1010-1-12-0': 'In Section [REF], we study directed paths in exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-1-12-1': 'We will first show (Theorem [REF]) that HN-strata of [MATH] can be naturally interpreted as directed paths connecting [MATH] and [MATH] in [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-12-2': 'Then we discuss total stability of stability functions (c.f. Conjecture [REF]) and the path-inducing problem.', '1111.1010-1-12-3': 'We will provide explicit (counter-/)examples and a conjecture.', '1111.1010-1-13-0': 'In Section [REF], we observe that the existence of DT-invariant of [MATH] is equivalent to the path-independence of the quantum dilogarithm product over certain directed paths.', '1111.1010-1-13-1': 'Then we give a slight generalization (Theorem [REF]) of this path-independence, to all paths (not necessarily directed) whose vertices lie between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1111.1010-1-13-2': 'The point is that this path-independence reduces to the cases of squares and pentagons in Proposition [REF]; therefore such type of quantum dilogarithm identities are just compositions of the classical Pentagon Identities.', '1111.1010-1-13-3': 'We will also discuss the wall-crossing formula for APR-tilting (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-1-13-4': 'Note that Keller [CITATION] also spotted this phenomenon and proved a more remarkable quantum dilogarithm identities via mutation of quivers with potential.', '1111.1010-1-14-0': 'In Appendix [REF], we give another proof of connectedness of the exchange graph [MATH] (a result proved earlier by Keller-Vossieck [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-1-14-1': 'In Appendix [REF], we calculate the stability space of an [MATH] quiver, which was due to J. Chuang and A. King [CITATION].', '1111.1010-1-14-2': 'In Appendix [REF], we calculate the stability spaces of Calabi-Yau [MATH]-type, which illustrate the limit formula in Section [REF].'}
{'1111.1010-2-0-0': 'We study fundamental group of the exchange graphs for the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-0-1': 'In the case of [MATH], we prove that its space of stability conditions (in the sense of Bridgeland) is simply connected; as applications, we show that its Donanldson-Thomas invariants can be calculated via a quantum dilogarithm function on exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-2-0-2': 'In the case of [MATH], we show that faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of its space of stability conditions; moreover we provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects.', '1111.1010-2-1-0': '=0pt Key words: space of stability conditions, Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra, higher cluster category, Donaldson-Thomas invariant, quantum dilogarithm identity', '1111.1010-2-2-0': '# Introduction', '1111.1010-2-3-0': '## Overall', '1111.1010-2-4-0': 'The notion of a stability condition on a triangulated category was defined by Bridgeland [CITATION] (c.f. Section [REF]).', '1111.1010-2-4-1': 'The idea was inspired from physics by studying D-branes in string theory.', '1111.1010-2-4-2': 'Nevertheless, the notion itself is interesting purely mathematically.', '1111.1010-2-4-3': 'A stability condition on a triangulated category [MATH] consists of a collection of full additive subcategories of [MATH], known as the slicing, and a group homomorphism from the Grothendieck group [MATH] to the complex plane, known as the central charge.', '1111.1010-2-4-4': 'Bridgeland [CITATION] showed a key result that the space [MATH] of stability conditions on [MATH] is a finite dimensional complex manifold.', '1111.1010-2-4-5': 'Moreover, these spaces carry interesting geometric/topological structure which shade light on the properties of the original triangulated categories.', '1111.1010-2-4-6': 'Most interesting examples of triangulated categories are derived categories.', '1111.1010-2-4-7': 'They are weak homological invariants arising in both algebraic geometry and representation theory, and indeed different manifolds and quivers (usually with relation) might share the same derived category (say complex projective line and Kronecker quiver).', '1111.1010-2-4-8': "Also note that the space of stability conditions are related to Kontsevich's homological mirror symmetry, that the (quotient) space of stability conditions of the Fukaya categories of Lagrangian submanifolds of certain symplectic manifolds are supposed to be some Kahler moduli space.", '1111.1010-2-4-9': 'We will study the spaces of stability conditions of the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-4-10': 'Noticing that when [MATH] is of Dynkin type, [MATH] was studied by Khovanov-Seidel-Thomas [CITATION]/[CITATION] via the derived Fukaya category of Lagrangian submanifolds of the Milnor fibres of the singularities of type [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-5-0': 'In understanding stability conditions and triangulated categories,', '1111.1010-2-6-0': 't-structures play an important role.', '1111.1010-2-6-1': "In fact, we can view a t-structure as a 'discrete' (integer) structure while a stability condition (resp. a slicing) is its 'complex' (resp. 'real') refinement.", '1111.1010-2-6-2': 'Every t-structure carries an abelian category sitting inside it, known as its heart.', '1111.1010-2-6-3': 'Note that an abelian category is a canonical heart in its derived category, e.g. [MATH] is the canonical heart of [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-6-4': 'The classical way to understand relations between different hearts is via HRS-tilting (c.f. Section [REF]), in the sense of Happel-Reiten-Smal.', '1111.1010-2-6-5': 'To give a stability condition is equivalent to giving a t-structure and a stability function on its heart with the Harder-Narashimhan (HN) property.', '1111.1010-2-6-6': 'This implies that a finite heart (i.e. has [MATH] simples and has finite length) corresponds to a (complex) [MATH]-cell in the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-2-6-7': 'Moreover, Woolf [CITATION] shows that the tilting between finite hearts corresponds to the tiling of these [MATH]-cells.', '1111.1010-2-6-8': 'More precisely, two [MATH]-cells meet if and only if the corresponding hearts differ by a HRS-tilting; and they meet in codimension one if and only if the hearts differ by a simple tilting.', '1111.1010-2-6-9': "Thus, our main method to study a space of stability conditions of a triangulated category [MATH] is via its 'skeleton' - the exchange graph [MATH], that is, the oriented graphs whose vertices are hearts in [MATH] and whose edges correspond to simple (forward) tiltings between them (c.f. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-2-6-10': 'Figure [REF] (taken from [CITATION], which in fact, the quotient graph of [MATH] and [MATH]) demonstrates the duality between the exchange graph and the tiling of the space of stability conditions by many cells like the shaded area, so that each vertex in the exchange graph corresponds to a cell and each edge corresponds to a common edge (codimension one face) of two neighboring cells.', '1111.1010-2-6-11': 'We will prove certain simply connectedness of spaces of stability conditions via exchange graph.', '1111.1010-2-7-0': 'Stability conditions naturally link to Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants, which was originally defined as the weighted Euler characteristics (By Behrend function) of moduli spaces for Calabi-Yau 3-folds (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-2-7-1': "Reineke [CITATION] (c.f. Section [REF]) realized that the DT-invariant for a Dynkin quiver can be calculated as a product of quantum dilogarithms, indexing by any HN-stratum of [MATH], which is a 'maximal refined version' of torsion pairs on an abelian category.", '1111.1010-2-7-2': 'His approach was integrating certain identities in Hall algebras to show the stratum-independence of the product.', '1111.1010-2-7-3': 'We will apply exchange graphs to give a combinatorial proof of such quantum dilogarithm identities.', '1111.1010-2-8-0': '## Contents', '1111.1010-2-9-0': 'We will collect related background in Section [REF].', '1111.1010-2-10-0': 'In Section [REF] and Section [REF], we first make a key observation (Proposition [REF]) that the fundamental group of the exchange graphs generates by squares and pentagons.', '1111.1010-2-10-1': 'Then we prove (Theorem [REF]) the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions [MATH] and show that (Corollary [REF]) the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of its space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-2-10-2': "Moreover, the quotient space of [MATH] by the Seidel-Thomas braid group [MATH] is the 'right' space of stability conditions for the higher cluster category [MATH] (see Remark [REF]).", '1111.1010-2-10-3': 'In fact, the generators of its fundamental group provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects in [MATH] (Theorem [REF]).', '1111.1010-2-11-0': 'In Section [REF], we present (Theorem [REF]) a limit formula of spaces of stability conditions [EQUATION] which reflects a philosophical point of view that, in a suitable sense,', '1111.1010-2-12-0': 'Q = _N_NQ.', '1111.1010-2-13-0': 'In Section [REF], we study directed paths in exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-2-13-1': 'We will first show (Theorem [REF]) that HN-strata of [MATH] can be naturally interpreted as directed paths connecting [MATH] and [MATH] in [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-13-2': 'Then we discuss total stability of stability functions (c.f. Conjecture [REF]) and the path-inducing problem.', '1111.1010-2-13-3': 'We will provide explicit examples and a conjecture.', '1111.1010-2-14-0': 'In Section [REF], we observe that the existence of DT-invariant of [MATH] is equivalent to the path-independence of the quantum dilogarithm product over certain directed paths.', '1111.1010-2-14-1': 'Then we give a slight generalization (Theorem [REF]) of this path-independence, to all paths (not necessarily directed) whose vertices lie between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1111.1010-2-14-2': 'The point is that this path-independence reduces to the cases of squares and pentagons in Proposition [REF]; therefore such type of quantum dilogarithm identities are just compositions of the classical Pentagon Identities.', '1111.1010-2-14-3': 'We will also discuss the wall-crossing formula for APR-tilting (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-2-14-4': 'Note that Keller [CITATION] also spotted this phenomenon and proved a more remarkable quantum dilogarithm identities via mutation of quivers with potential.', '1111.1010-2-14-5': 'In fact, his formula can also be rephrased as quantum dilogarithm product over paths in the exchange graph of the corresponding Calabi-Yau-[MATH] categories.'}
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'1111.1010-5-5-6'], ['1111.1010-4-6-6', '1111.1010-5-5-7'], ['1111.1010-4-6-7', '1111.1010-5-5-8'], ['1111.1010-4-6-8', '1111.1010-5-5-9'], ['1111.1010-4-6-9', '1111.1010-5-5-10'], ['1111.1010-4-6-10', '1111.1010-5-5-11'], ['1111.1010-4-6-11', '1111.1010-5-5-12'], ['1111.1010-4-16-1', '1111.1010-5-15-1'], ['1111.1010-4-16-2', '1111.1010-5-15-2'], ['1111.1010-4-16-3', '1111.1010-5-15-3'], ['1111.1010-4-16-4', '1111.1010-5-15-4'], ['1111.1010-4-16-6', '1111.1010-5-15-6'], ['1111.1010-4-4-1', '1111.1010-5-4-1'], ['1111.1010-4-4-2', '1111.1010-5-4-2'], ['1111.1010-4-4-3', '1111.1010-5-4-3'], ['1111.1010-4-4-6', '1111.1010-5-4-6'], ['1111.1010-4-4-9', '1111.1010-5-4-10'], ['1111.1010-4-4-10', '1111.1010-5-4-11'], ['1111.1010-4-7-2', '1111.1010-5-6-2'], ['1111.1010-4-12-1', '1111.1010-5-11-1'], ['1111.1010-4-12-2', '1111.1010-5-11-2'], ['1111.1010-4-11-1', '1111.1010-5-10-1'], ['1111.1010-4-0-0', '1111.1010-5-0-0'], ['1111.1010-4-0-2', '1111.1010-5-0-3'], ['1111.1010-4-15-1', '1111.1010-5-14-1'], ['1111.1010-4-15-2', '1111.1010-5-14-2'], ['1111.1010-4-15-3', '1111.1010-5-14-3'], ['1111.1010-2-10-3', '1111.1010-3-12-2']]
[['1111.1010-1-4-4', '1111.1010-2-4-4'], ['1111.1010-1-4-5', '1111.1010-2-4-5'], ['1111.1010-1-4-7', '1111.1010-2-4-7'], ['1111.1010-1-4-10', '1111.1010-2-4-9'], ['1111.1010-1-9-2', '1111.1010-2-10-2'], ['1111.1010-1-9-3', '1111.1010-2-10-3'], ['1111.1010-1-5-5', '1111.1010-2-6-5'], ['1111.1010-1-5-6', '1111.1010-2-6-6'], ['1111.1010-1-5-9', '1111.1010-2-6-9'], ['1111.1010-1-5-10', '1111.1010-2-6-10'], ['1111.1010-1-5-11', '1111.1010-2-6-11'], ['1111.1010-2-14-0', '1111.1010-3-16-0'], ['1111.1010-2-14-3', '1111.1010-3-16-4'], ['1111.1010-2-14-4', '1111.1010-3-16-5'], ['1111.1010-2-4-0', '1111.1010-3-4-0'], ['1111.1010-2-4-5', '1111.1010-3-4-5'], ['1111.1010-2-4-7', '1111.1010-3-4-7'], ['1111.1010-2-4-10', '1111.1010-3-4-10'], ['1111.1010-2-6-4', '1111.1010-3-6-4'], ['1111.1010-2-6-9', '1111.1010-3-6-9'], ['1111.1010-2-6-10', '1111.1010-3-6-10'], ['1111.1010-2-0-0', '1111.1010-3-0-0'], ['1111.1010-2-0-1', '1111.1010-3-0-1'], ['1111.1010-2-7-0', '1111.1010-3-7-0'], ['1111.1010-2-7-1', '1111.1010-3-7-1'], ['1111.1010-2-13-2', '1111.1010-3-15-2'], ['1111.1010-4-6-4', '1111.1010-5-5-5'], ['1111.1010-4-16-0', '1111.1010-5-15-0'], ['1111.1010-4-16-5', '1111.1010-5-15-5'], ['1111.1010-4-4-0', '1111.1010-5-4-0'], ['1111.1010-4-4-4', '1111.1010-5-4-4'], ['1111.1010-4-4-5', '1111.1010-5-4-5'], ['1111.1010-4-4-7', '1111.1010-5-4-7'], ['1111.1010-4-10-0', '1111.1010-5-9-0'], ['1111.1010-4-7-0', '1111.1010-5-6-0'], ['1111.1010-4-7-1', '1111.1010-5-6-1'], ['1111.1010-4-7-3', '1111.1010-5-6-3'], ['1111.1010-4-12-0', '1111.1010-5-11-0'], ['1111.1010-4-11-0', '1111.1010-5-10-0'], ['1111.1010-4-15-0', '1111.1010-5-14-0'], ['1111.1010-2-10-0', '1111.1010-3-11-0']]
[]
[['1111.1010-1-4-8', '1111.1010-2-4-8'], ['1111.1010-1-9-1', '1111.1010-2-10-1'], ['1111.1010-1-0-0', '1111.1010-2-0-0'], ['1111.1010-1-12-3', '1111.1010-2-13-3'], ['1111.1010-1-5-0', '1111.1010-2-6-0'], ['1111.1010-1-1-0', '1111.1010-2-1-0'], ['1111.1010-2-14-2', '1111.1010-3-16-2'], ['1111.1010-2-14-2', '1111.1010-3-16-3'], ['1111.1010-2-6-11', '1111.1010-3-6-11'], ['1111.1010-2-0-2', '1111.1010-3-0-2'], ['1111.1010-2-7-3', '1111.1010-3-7-3'], ['1111.1010-2-13-0', '1111.1010-3-15-0'], ['1111.1010-4-6-0', '1111.1010-5-5-0'], ['1111.1010-4-4-8', '1111.1010-5-4-8'], ['1111.1010-4-1-0', '1111.1010-5-1-0'], ['1111.1010-4-0-1', '1111.1010-5-0-1'], ['1111.1010-4-0-1', '1111.1010-5-0-2'], ['1111.1010-2-10-1', '1111.1010-3-11-1'], ['1111.1010-2-10-1', '1111.1010-3-12-0'], ['1111.1010-2-10-2', '1111.1010-3-12-1']]
[]
['1111.1010-1-8-0', '1111.1010-1-10-0', '1111.1010-1-11-0', '1111.1010-2-5-0', '1111.1010-2-9-0', '1111.1010-2-11-0', '1111.1010-2-12-0', '1111.1010-3-5-0', '1111.1010-3-9-0', '1111.1010-3-13-0', '1111.1010-3-14-0', '1111.1010-4-5-0', '1111.1010-4-9-0', '1111.1010-4-13-0', '1111.1010-4-14-0', '1111.1010-5-8-0', '1111.1010-5-12-0', '1111.1010-5-13-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '4': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '5': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1111.1010
{'1111.1010-3-0-0': 'We study the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs for the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-0-1': 'In the case of [MATH], we prove that its space of stability conditions (in the sense of Bridgeland) is simply connected; as applications, we show that its Donanldson-Thomas invariants can be calculated as a quantum dilogarithm function on exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-3-0-2': 'In the case of [MATH], we show that the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-3-0-3': 'Moreover, we provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects.', '1111.1010-3-1-0': '=0pt Key words: space of stability conditions, Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra, higher cluster category, Donaldson-Thomas invariant, quantum dilogarithm identity', '1111.1010-3-2-0': '# Introduction', '1111.1010-3-3-0': '## Overall', '1111.1010-3-4-0': 'The notion of a stability condition on a triangulated category was defined by Bridgeland [CITATION] (cf. Section [REF]).', '1111.1010-3-4-1': 'The idea was inspired from physics by studying D-branes in string theory.', '1111.1010-3-4-2': 'Nevertheless, the notion itself is interesting purely mathematically.', '1111.1010-3-4-3': 'A stability condition on a triangulated category [MATH] consists of a collection of full additive subcategories of [MATH], known as the slicing, and a group homomorphism from the Grothendieck group [MATH] to the complex plane, known as the central charge.', '1111.1010-3-4-4': 'Bridgeland [CITATION] showed a key result that the space [MATH] of stability conditions on [MATH] is a finite dimensional complex manifold.', '1111.1010-3-4-5': 'Moreover, these spaces carry interesting geometric/topological structures which shade light on the properties of the original triangulated categories.', '1111.1010-3-4-6': 'Most interesting examples of triangulated categories are derived categories.', '1111.1010-3-4-7': 'They are weak homological invariants arising in both algebraic geometry and representation theory, and indeed different manifolds and quivers (usually with relations) might share the same derived category (say complex projective plane and Kronecker quiver).', '1111.1010-3-4-8': "Also note that the space of stability conditions are related to Kontsevich's homological mirror symmetry, that the (quotient) space of stability conditions of the Fukaya categories of Lagrangian submanifolds of certain symplectic manifolds are supposed to be some Kahler moduli space.", '1111.1010-3-4-9': 'We will study the spaces of stability conditions of the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-4-10': 'Noticing that when [MATH] is of type A, [MATH] was studied by Khovanov-Seidel-Thomas [CITATION]/[CITATION] via the derived Fukaya category of Lagrangian submanifolds of the Milnor fibres of the singularities of type [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-5-0': 'In understanding stability conditions and triangulated categories,', '1111.1010-3-6-0': 't-structures play an important role.', '1111.1010-3-6-1': "In fact, we can view a t-structure as a 'discrete' (integer) structure while a stability condition (resp. a slicing) is its 'complex' (resp. 'real') refinement.", '1111.1010-3-6-2': 'Every t-structure carries an abelian category sitting inside it, known as its heart.', '1111.1010-3-6-3': 'Note that an abelian category is a canonical heart in its derived category, e.g. [MATH] is the canonical heart of [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-6-4': 'The classical way to understand relations between different hearts is via HRS-tilting (cf. Section [REF]), in the sense of Happel-Reiten-Smal.', '1111.1010-3-6-5': 'To give a stability condition is equivalent to giving a t-structure and a stability function on its heart with the Harder-Narashimhan (HN) property.', '1111.1010-3-6-6': 'This implies that a finite heart (i.e. has [MATH] simples and has finite length) corresponds to a (complex) [MATH]-cell in the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-3-6-7': 'Moreover, Woolf [CITATION] shows that the tilting between finite hearts corresponds to the tiling of these [MATH]-cells.', '1111.1010-3-6-8': 'More precisely, two [MATH]-cells meet if and only if the corresponding hearts differ by a HRS-tilting; and they meet in codimension one if and only if the hearts differ by a simple tilting.', '1111.1010-3-6-9': "Following Woolf, our main method to study a space of stability conditions of a triangulated category [MATH] is via its 'skeleton' - the exchange graph [MATH], that is, the oriented graphs whose vertices are hearts in [MATH] and whose edges correspond to simple (forward) tiltings between them (cf. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-3-6-10': 'Figure [REF] (taken from [CITATION], which in fact, the quotient graph of [MATH] and [MATH], see [CITATION] for more details) demonstrates the duality between the exchange graph and the tiling of the space of stability conditions by many cells like the shaded area, so that each vertex in the exchange graph corresponds to a cell and each edge corresponds to a common edge (codimension one face) of two neighboring cells.', '1111.1010-3-6-11': 'We will prove certain simply connectedness of spaces of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-3-7-0': 'Stability conditions naturally link to Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants, which was originally defined as the weighted Euler characteristics (by Behrend function) of moduli spaces for Calabi-Yau 3-folds (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-3-7-1': "Reineke [CITATION] (cf. Section [REF]) realized that the DT-type invariant for a Dynkin quiver can be calculated as a product of quantum dilogarithms, indexing by any HN-stratum of [MATH], which is a 'maximal refined version' of torsion pairs on an abelian category.", '1111.1010-3-7-2': 'His approach was integrating certain identities in Hall algebras to show the stratum-independence of the product.', '1111.1010-3-7-3': 'We will give a combinatorial proof of such quantum dilogarithm identities via exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-3-8-0': '## Contents', '1111.1010-3-9-0': 'We will collect related background in Section [REF].', '1111.1010-3-10-0': 'In Section [REF], we prove a general result (Theorem [REF]) that, under Assumption [REF], the exchange graph [MATH] can be embedded into the corresponding (connected component of) space [MATH] of stability conditions with a surjection [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-11-0': 'In Section [REF], we first make a key observation (Proposition [REF]) that the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs of [MATH] is generated by squares and pentagons.', '1111.1010-3-11-1': 'Moreover, we prove (Theorem [REF]) that the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions on [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-12-0': 'In Section [REF], we will (Corollary [REF]) identify a principal component [MATH] of [MATH], for any [MATH], and show that (Corollary [REF]) the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-12-1': "Further, the quotient space [MATH] is the 'right' space of stability conditions for the higher cluster category [MATH] (cf. Remark [REF]).", '1111.1010-3-12-2': 'In fact, the generators of its fundamental group provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects in [MATH] (Theorem [REF]).', '1111.1010-3-13-0': 'In Section [REF], we present (Theorem [REF]) a limit formula of spaces of stability conditions [EQUATION] which reflects a philosophical point of view that, in a suitable sense,', '1111.1010-3-14-0': 'Q = _N_NQ.', '1111.1010-3-15-0': "In Section [REF], we study directed paths in exchange graphs, which naturally corresponds to Keller's green mutation (see, e.g. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-3-15-1': 'We will first show (Theorem [REF]) that HN-strata of [MATH] can be naturally interpreted as directed paths connecting [MATH] and [MATH] in [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-15-2': 'Then we discuss total stability of stability functions (cf. Conjecture [REF]) and the path-inducing problem.', '1111.1010-3-15-3': 'We will provide explicit examples and a conjecture.', '1111.1010-3-16-0': 'In Section [REF], we observe that the existence of DT-type invariant of [MATH] is equivalent to the path-independence of the quantum dilogarithm product over certain directed paths.', '1111.1010-3-16-1': 'Then we give a slight generalization (Theorem [REF]) of this path-independence, to all paths (not necessarily directed) whose vertices lie between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1111.1010-3-16-2': 'The point is that this path-independence reduces to the cases of squares and pentagons in Proposition [REF].', '1111.1010-3-16-3': 'Therefore such type of quantum dilogarithm identities is just certain composition of the classical Pentagon Identities.', '1111.1010-3-16-4': 'We will also discuss the wall-crossing formula for APR-tilting (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-3-16-5': 'Note that Keller [CITATION] also spotted this phenomenon and proved a more remarkable quantum dilogarithm identities via mutation of quivers with potential (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-3-16-6': 'In fact, his formula can also be rephrased as quantum dilogarithm product over paths in the exchange graph of the corresponding Calabi-Yau-[MATH] categories.'}
{'1111.1010-4-0-0': 'We study the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs for the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-0-1': 'In the case of [MATH], we prove that its space of stability conditions (in the sense of Bridgeland) is simply connected; as applications, we show that its Donanldson-Thomas invariants can be calculated as a quantum dilogarithm function on exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-4-0-2': 'In the case of [MATH], we show that the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-4-0-3': 'Moreover, we provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects.', '1111.1010-4-1-0': '=0pt Key words: space of stability conditions, Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra, higher cluster category, Donaldson-Thomas invariant, quantum dilogarithm identity', '1111.1010-4-2-0': '# Introduction', '1111.1010-4-3-0': '## Overall', '1111.1010-4-4-0': 'The notion of a stability condition on a triangulated category was defined by Bridgeland [CITATION] (cf. Section [REF]).', '1111.1010-4-4-1': 'The idea was inspired from physics by studying D-branes in string theory.', '1111.1010-4-4-2': 'Nevertheless, the notion itself is interesting purely mathematically.', '1111.1010-4-4-3': 'A stability condition on a triangulated category [MATH] consists of a collection of full additive subcategories of [MATH], known as the slicing, and a group homomorphism from the Grothendieck group [MATH] to the complex plane, known as the central charge.', '1111.1010-4-4-4': 'Bridgeland [CITATION] showed a key result that the space [MATH] of stability conditions on [MATH] is a finite dimensional complex manifold.', '1111.1010-4-4-5': 'Moreover, these spaces carry interesting geometric/topological structures which shade light on the properties of the original triangulated categories.', '1111.1010-4-4-6': 'Most interesting examples of triangulated categories are derived categories.', '1111.1010-4-4-7': 'They are weak homological invariants arising in both algebraic geometry and representation theory, and indeed different manifolds and quivers (usually with relations) might share the same derived category (say complex projective plane and Kronecker quiver).', '1111.1010-4-4-8': "Also note that the space of stability conditions are related to Kontsevich's homological mirror symmetry, that the (quotient) space of stability conditions of the Fukaya categories of Lagrangian submanifolds of certain symplectic manifolds are supposed to be some Kahler moduli space.", '1111.1010-4-4-9': 'We will study the spaces of stability conditions of the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-4-10': 'Noticing that when [MATH] is of type A, [MATH] was studied by Khovanov-Seidel-Thomas [CITATION]/[CITATION] via the derived Fukaya category of Lagrangian submanifolds of the Milnor fibres of the singularities of type [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-5-0': 'In understanding stability conditions and triangulated categories,', '1111.1010-4-6-0': 't-structures play an important role.', '1111.1010-4-6-1': "In fact, we can view a t-structure as a 'discrete' (integer) structure while a stability condition (resp. a slicing) is its 'complex' (resp. 'real') refinement.", '1111.1010-4-6-2': 'Every t-structure carries an abelian category sitting inside it, known as its heart.', '1111.1010-4-6-3': 'Note that an abelian category is a canonical heart in its derived category, e.g. [MATH] is the canonical heart of [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-6-4': 'The classical way to understand relations between different hearts is via HRS-tilting (cf. Section [REF]), in the sense of Happel-Reiten-Smal.', '1111.1010-4-6-5': 'To give a stability condition is equivalent to giving a t-structure and a stability function on its heart with the Harder-Narashimhan (HN) property.', '1111.1010-4-6-6': 'This implies that a finite heart (i.e. has [MATH] simples and has finite length) corresponds to a (complex) [MATH]-cell in the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-4-6-7': 'Moreover, Woolf [CITATION] shows that the tilting between finite hearts corresponds to the tiling of these [MATH]-cells.', '1111.1010-4-6-8': 'More precisely, two [MATH]-cells meet if and only if the corresponding hearts differ by a HRS-tilting; and they meet in codimension one if and only if the hearts differ by a simple tilting.', '1111.1010-4-6-9': "Following Woolf, our main method to study a space of stability conditions of a triangulated category [MATH] is via its 'skeleton' - the exchange graph [MATH], that is, the oriented graphs whose vertices are hearts in [MATH] and whose edges correspond to simple (forward) tiltings between them (cf. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-4-6-10': 'Figure [REF] (taken from [CITATION], which in fact, the quotient graph of [MATH] and [MATH], see [CITATION] for more details) demonstrates the duality between the exchange graph and the tiling of the space of stability conditions by many cells like the shaded area, so that each vertex in the exchange graph corresponds to a cell and each edge corresponds to a common edge (codimension one face) of two neighboring cells.', '1111.1010-4-6-11': 'We will prove certain simply connectedness of spaces of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-4-7-0': 'Stability conditions naturally link to Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants, which was originally defined as the weighted Euler characteristics (by Behrend function) of moduli spaces for Calabi-Yau 3-folds (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-4-7-1': "Reineke [CITATION] (cf. Section [REF]) realized that the DT-type invariant for a Dynkin quiver can be calculated as a product of quantum dilogarithms, indexing by any HN-stratum of [MATH], which is a 'maximal refined version' of torsion pairs on an abelian category.", '1111.1010-4-7-2': 'His approach was integrating certain identities in Hall algebras to show the stratum-independence of the product.', '1111.1010-4-7-3': 'We will give a combinatorial proof of such quantum dilogarithm identities via exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-4-8-0': '## Contents', '1111.1010-4-9-0': 'We will collect related background in Section [REF].', '1111.1010-4-10-0': 'In Section [REF], we prove a general result (Theorem [REF]) that, under Assumption [REF], the exchange graph [MATH] can be embedded into the corresponding (connected component of) space [MATH] of stability conditions with a surjection [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-11-0': 'In Section [REF], we first make a key observation (Proposition [REF]) that the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs of [MATH] is generated by squares and pentagons.', '1111.1010-4-11-1': 'Moreover, we prove (Theorem [REF]) that the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions on [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-12-0': 'In Section [REF], we will (Corollary [REF]) identify a principal component [MATH] of [MATH], for any [MATH], and show that (Corollary [REF]) the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-12-1': "Further, the quotient space [MATH] is the 'right' space of stability conditions for the higher cluster category [MATH] (cf. Remark [REF]).", '1111.1010-4-12-2': 'In fact, the generators of its fundamental group provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects in [MATH] (Theorem [REF]).', '1111.1010-4-13-0': 'In Section [REF], we present (Theorem [REF]) a limit formula of spaces of stability conditions [EQUATION] which reflects a philosophical point of view that, in a suitable sense,', '1111.1010-4-14-0': 'Q = _N_NQ.', '1111.1010-4-15-0': "In Section [REF], we study directed paths in exchange graphs, which naturally corresponds to Keller's green mutation (see, e.g. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-4-15-1': 'We will first show (Theorem [REF]) that HN-strata of [MATH] can be naturally interpreted as directed paths connecting [MATH] and [MATH] in [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-15-2': 'Then we discuss total stability of stability functions (cf. Conjecture [REF]) and the path-inducing problem.', '1111.1010-4-15-3': 'We will provide explicit examples and a conjecture.', '1111.1010-4-16-0': 'In Section [REF], we observe that the existence of DT-type invariant of [MATH] is equivalent to the path-independence of the quantum dilogarithm product over certain directed paths.', '1111.1010-4-16-1': 'Then we give a slight generalization (Theorem [REF]) of this path-independence, to all paths (not necessarily directed) whose vertices lie between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1111.1010-4-16-2': 'The point is that this path-independence reduces to the cases of squares and pentagons in Proposition [REF].', '1111.1010-4-16-3': 'Therefore such type of quantum dilogarithm identities is just certain composition of the classical Pentagon Identities.', '1111.1010-4-16-4': 'We will also discuss the wall-crossing formula for APR-tilting (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-4-16-5': 'Note that Keller [CITATION] also spotted this phenomenon and proved a more remarkable quantum dilogarithm identities via mutation of quivers with potential (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-4-16-6': 'In fact, his formula can also be rephrased as quantum dilogarithm product over paths in the exchange graph of the corresponding Calabi-Yau-[MATH] categories.'}
{'1111.1010-5-0-0': 'We study the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs for the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-0-1': 'In the case of [MATH], we prove that its space of stability conditions (in the sense of Bridgeland) is simply connected.', '1111.1010-5-0-2': 'As an application, we show that the Donanldson-Thomas type invariant associated to [MATH] can be calculated as a quantum dilogarithm function on its exchange graph.', '1111.1010-5-0-3': 'In the case of [MATH], we show that the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-5-1-0': '=0pt Key words: space of stability conditions, Calabi-Yau categories, higher cluster categories, Donaldson-Thomas invariants, quantum dilogarithm identities', '1111.1010-5-2-0': '# Introduction', '1111.1010-5-3-0': '## Overall', '1111.1010-5-4-0': 'The notion of a stability condition on a triangulated category was defined by Bridgeland [CITATION] (cf. [REF]).', '1111.1010-5-4-1': 'The idea was inspired from physics by studying D-branes in string theory.', '1111.1010-5-4-2': 'Nevertheless, the notion itself is interesting purely mathematically.', '1111.1010-5-4-3': 'A stability condition on a triangulated category [MATH] consists of a collection of full additive subcategories of [MATH], known as the slicing, and a group homomorphism from the Grothendieck group [MATH] to the complex plane, known as the central charge.', '1111.1010-5-4-4': 'Bridgeland [CITATION] showed a key result that the space [MATH] of stability conditions on [MATH] is a finite dimensional complex manifold, provided that the rank of [MATH] is finite.', '1111.1010-5-4-5': 'Moreover, these spaces carry interesting geometric/topological structures which shed light on the properties of the original triangulated categories.', '1111.1010-5-4-6': 'Most interesting examples of triangulated categories are derived categories.', '1111.1010-5-4-7': 'They are weak homological invariants arising in both algebraic geometry and representation theory, and indeed different manifolds and quivers with relations might share the same derived category (say complex projective plane and Kronecker quiver).', '1111.1010-5-4-8': "Also note that the space of stability conditions are related to Kontsevich's homological mirror symmetry.", '1111.1010-5-4-9': 'More precisely, a quotient of the space of stability conditions of the Fukaya category (of Lagrangian submanifolds) of a symplectic manifold should be (conjectural) the Kahler moduli space of the mirror variety.', '1111.1010-5-4-10': 'We will study the spaces of stability conditions of the bounded derived category [MATH] of a Dynkin quiver [MATH] and the finite-dimensional derived category [MATH] of the Calabi-Yau-[MATH] Ginzburg algebra associated to [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-4-11': 'Noticing that when [MATH] is of type A, [MATH] was studied by Khovanov-Seidel-Thomas [CITATION]/[CITATION] via the derived Fukaya category of Lagrangian submanifolds of the Milnor fibres of the singularities of type [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-5-0': 'In understanding stability conditions and triangulated categories, t-structures play an important role.', '1111.1010-5-5-1': 'We will always assume a t-structure is bounded.', '1111.1010-5-5-2': "In fact, we can view a t-structure as a 'discrete' (integer) structure while a stability condition (resp. a slicing) is its 'complex' (resp. 'real') refinement.", '1111.1010-5-5-3': 'Every t-structure carries an abelian category sitting inside it, known as its heart.', '1111.1010-5-5-4': 'Note that an abelian category is a canonical heart in its derived category, e.g. [MATH] is the canonical heart of [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-5-5': 'The classical way to understand relations between different hearts is via HRS-tilting (cf. [REF]), in the sense of Happel-Reiten-Smal.', '1111.1010-5-5-6': 'To give a stability condition is equivalent to giving a t-structure and a stability function on its heart with the Harder-Narashimhan (HN) property.', '1111.1010-5-5-7': 'This implies that a finite heart (i.e. has [MATH] simples and has finite length) corresponds to a (complex) [MATH]-cell in the space of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-5-5-8': 'Moreover, Woolf [CITATION] shows that the tilting between finite hearts corresponds to the tiling of these [MATH]-cells.', '1111.1010-5-5-9': 'More precisely, two [MATH]-cells meet if and only if the corresponding hearts differ by a HRS-tilting; and they meet in codimension one if and only if the hearts differ by a simple tilting.', '1111.1010-5-5-10': "Following Woolf, our main method to study a space of stability conditions of a triangulated category [MATH] is via its 'skeleton' - the exchange graph [MATH], that is, the oriented graphs whose vertices are hearts in [MATH] and whose edges correspond to simple (forward) tiltings between them (cf. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-5-5-11': 'Figure [REF] (taken from [CITATION], which in fact, the quotient graph of [MATH] and [MATH], see [CITATION] for more details) demonstrates the duality between the exchange graph and the tiling of the space of stability conditions by many cells like the shaded area, so that each vertex in the exchange graph corresponds to a cell and each edge corresponds to a common edge (codimension one face) of two neighboring cells.', '1111.1010-5-5-12': 'We will prove certain simply connectedness of spaces of stability conditions.', '1111.1010-5-6-0': 'Stability conditions naturally link to Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants, which were originally defined as the weighted Euler characteristics (by Behrend function) of moduli spaces for Calabi-Yau 3-folds (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-5-6-1': "Reineke [CITATION] (cf. [REF]) realized that the DT-type invariant for a Dynkin quiver can be calculated as a product of quantum dilogarithms, indexing by any HN-stratum of [MATH], which is a 'maximal refined version' of torsion pairs on an abelian category.", '1111.1010-5-6-2': 'His approach was integrating certain identities in Hall algebras to show the stratum-independence of the product.', '1111.1010-5-6-3': 'We will give a combinatorial proof of these type of quantum dilogarithm identities via exchange graphs.', '1111.1010-5-7-0': '## Contents', '1111.1010-5-8-0': 'We will collect related background in [REF].', '1111.1010-5-9-0': 'In [REF], we prove a general result (Theorem [REF]) that, under Assumption [REF], the exchange graph [MATH] can be embedded into the corresponding (connected component of) the space [MATH] of stability conditions with a surjection [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-10-0': 'In [REF], we first make a key observation (Proposition [REF]) that the fundamental groups of the exchange graphs of [MATH] is generated by squares and pentagons.', '1111.1010-5-10-1': 'Moreover, we prove (Theorem [REF]) that the simply connectedness of the space of stability conditions on [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-11-0': 'In [REF], we will (Corollary [REF]) identify a principal component [MATH] of [MATH], for any [MATH], and show that (Corollary [REF]) the faithfulness of the Seidel-Thomas braid group action (which is known for [MATH] of type [MATH] or [MATH]) implies the simply connectedness of [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-11-1': "Further, the quotient space [MATH] is the 'right' space of stability conditions for the higher cluster category [MATH] (cf. Remark [REF]).", '1111.1010-5-11-2': 'In fact, the generators of its fundamental group provide a topological realization of almost completed cluster tilting objects in [MATH] (Theorem [REF]).', '1111.1010-5-12-0': 'In [REF], we present (Theorem [REF]) a limit formula of spaces of stability conditions [EQUATION] which reflects a philosophical point of view that, in a suitable sense,', '1111.1010-5-13-0': 'Q = _N_NQ.', '1111.1010-5-14-0': "In [REF], we study directed paths in exchange graphs, which naturally corresponds to Keller's green mutation (see, e.g. [CITATION]).", '1111.1010-5-14-1': 'We will first show (Theorem [REF]) that HN-strata of [MATH] can be naturally interpreted as directed paths connecting [MATH] and [MATH] in [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-14-2': 'Then we discuss total stability of stability functions (cf. Conjecture [REF]) and the path-inducing problem.', '1111.1010-5-14-3': 'We will provide explicit examples and a conjecture.', '1111.1010-5-15-0': 'In [REF], we observe that the existence of DT-type invariant of [MATH] is equivalent to the path-independence of the quantum dilogarithm product over certain directed paths.', '1111.1010-5-15-1': 'Then we give a slight generalization (Theorem [REF]) of this path-independence, to all paths (not necessarily directed) whose vertices lie between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1111.1010-5-15-2': 'The point is that this path-independence reduces to the cases of squares and pentagons in Proposition [REF].', '1111.1010-5-15-3': 'Therefore such type of quantum dilogarithm identities is just certain composition of the classical Pentagon Identities.', '1111.1010-5-15-4': 'We will also discuss the wall-crossing formula for APR-tilting (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-5-15-5': 'Note that Keller [CITATION] also spotted this phenomenon and proved some more remarkable quantum dilogarithm identities via mutation of quivers with potential (cf. [CITATION]).', '1111.1010-5-15-6': 'In fact, his formula can also be rephrased as quantum dilogarithm product over paths in the exchange graph of the corresponding Calabi-Yau-[MATH] categories.'}
null
null
1803.00172
{'1803.00172-1-0-0': '# Introduction', '1803.00172-1-1-0': 'Entanglement entropy (EE) has emerged as a useful tool in a variety of research areas, including condensed matter physics [CITATION], quantum information [CITATION], quantum field theory (QFT) [CITATION] and quantum gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-1-1': 'In the context of quantum field theory, we define the EE for a spatial region [MATH] as: [MATH], where [MATH] is the reduced density matrix computed by integrating out the degrees of freedom in the complementary region [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-1-2': 'The focus of the discussion in this paper comes from considering the EE for a three-dimensional conformal field theory (CFT), which will have an expansion of the form [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] are, respectively, the perimeter of the entangling surface, some macroscopic length characteristic of the geometry (e.g., we could choose [MATH]) and a short-distance cut-off needed to regulate the calculation.', '1803.00172-1-1-3': "Of course, the first term in this expansion is the celebrated 'area law' contribution to the EE [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-1-4': 'However, the dimensionless coefficient [MATH] of this linear divergence depends on the details of the regulator and so cannot be used to characterize the underlying CFT.', '1803.00172-1-1-5': 'In contrast, in the absence of the logarithmic term (see below), the constant [MATH] is a universal constant intrinsic to the CFT and also the geometry of the smooth entangling surface (the boundary of the region [MATH]).', '1803.00172-1-1-6': "For example, when the latter is a circle, [MATH] plays the role of a 'central charge' in the [MATH]-theorem [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-2-0': 'Another universal contribution in eq. ([REF]) is the one proportional to [MATH], which arises when the entangling surface contains corners [CITATION][MATH] - see figure [REF].', '1803.00172-1-2-1': 'Hence the dimensionless coefficient [MATH] is a function of the opening angle, i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-2-2': 'In our discussion, we focus on the contribution of a single corner in the entangling surface.', '1803.00172-1-2-3': "If several corners were present, the coefficient of logarithmic contribution to the EE would simply involve the sum of independent contributions [MATH] where [MATH] is the opening angle of the [MATH]'th corner.", '1803.00172-1-2-4': 'The form of the function [MATH] is constrained by various properties of entanglement entropy [CITATION]: for pure states, the fact that [MATH] requires that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-2-5': 'Further, strong subadditivity and Lorentz invariance impose [EQUATION] i.e., [MATH] is a positive convex function on the range [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-3-0': 'In fact, the functional form of [MATH] is precisely constrained in particular limits.', '1803.00172-1-3-1': 'For small opening angles, the function has a pole with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-3-2': 'As we will review in appendix [REF], this form for small angles can be fixed by using a conformal mapping to relate the universal corner contribution to the universal contribution for a narrow strip.', '1803.00172-1-3-3': 'Of course, [MATH] vanishes when the entangling surface becomes smooth, i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-3-4': 'Further, we can expect that [MATH] is smooth in the vicinity of [MATH] and hence the constraint [MATH] (for pure states) requires that to leading order, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-3-5': 'In fact, this constraint requires that [MATH] can be represented in a Taylor series with only even powers of [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-3-6': 'Hence we may use [MATH] in the limits [MATH] and [MATH] to define two interesting coefficients, [MATH] and [MATH], which characterize the underlying CFT.', '1803.00172-1-4-0': 'The corner contribution to the entanglement entropy has been studied in a variety of systems: free scalar and fermion field theories [CITATION], calculations at a quantum critical point [CITATION], numerical simulations in interacting lattice models [CITATION], interacting scalar field theories [CITATION] and also holographic calculations with Einstein gravity in the bulk [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-4-1': 'The results obtained in the literature suggest that [MATH] contains interesting and unambiguous information about the underlying quantum field theory.', '1803.00172-1-4-2': 'In particular, it appears to be an interesting measure of the number of degrees of freedom - see, e.g., [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-4-3': 'By the latter proposition, we would expect that the coefficients, [MATH] and [MATH], will themselves characterize the number of degrees of freedom in the underlying CFT.', '1803.00172-1-4-4': "Motivated by this idea, we will take the liberty to refer to these coefficients as 'central charges,' in a certain abuse of notation.", '1803.00172-1-5-0': 'In this paper, we will study the universal term arising from the presence of corners in the entangling surface for three-dimensional holographic conformal field theories.', '1803.00172-1-5-1': 'One of our objectives is to study if the corner charges above have any simple relation to any other known constants, which provide a similar counting of degrees of freedom and might be accessed with more conventional probes of the theory, or if [MATH] and [MATH] are really distinct quantities.', '1803.00172-1-5-2': 'As we will discuss below, we can not make a meaningful comparison if the bulk theory corresponds to Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-5-3': 'Hence our approach will be to study the corner contributions for a family of extended holographic models which include higher curvature interactions in the bulk gravity theory.', '1803.00172-1-5-4': 'Generally, any quantities in the corresponding dual boundary theories, e.g., the corner term, will now depend on the new (dimensionless) gravitational couplings for these higher order terms.', '1803.00172-1-5-5': "This additional dependence on the new couplings allows us to make a nontrivial comparison of [MATH] and [MATH] with various other constants in the boundary CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-5-6': 'In particular, we will compare with the coefficients appearing in the universal terms in the EE of a strip and of a disk, in the thermal entropy density, and in the two-point function of the holographic stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-6-0': 'In fact, beyond the corner charges, the entire functional form of [MATH] is characteristic of the underlying CFT.', '1803.00172-1-6-1': 'Hence another interesting question to consider is how this function changes with the inclusion of higher curvature interactions in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-6-2': 'In this case, we find that for all of the holographic models studied here, [MATH] is only modified by an overall factor but the functional dependence on [MATH] is not modified by the new gravitational interactions.', '1803.00172-1-6-3': 'However, as discussed in section [REF], we do not believe that this behaviour is universal and that the functional form of [MATH] will be modified with sufficiently general higher curvature theories in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-6-4': 'One simple consequence of [MATH] not being changed here is that the two corner charges are simply related in all of our holographic models, i.e., we will see that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-6-5': 'Hence we focus most of our discussions on the small angle charge [MATH] in the following.', '1803.00172-1-7-0': "A final question, which we consider below, is whether our holographic analysis can reveal any features of the corner contribution which are universal to all three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-7-1': 'This question, which we examine in section [REF], was originally addressed in our previous letter [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-7-2': "Here we compare our holographic results with the corner terms in the free CFT's consisting of a conformally coupled massless scalar and of a massless fermion, as were calculated in [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-8-0': 'Let us now summarize our key results:', '1803.00172-1-9-0': 'The results for the ratios of the corner charge [MATH] with other various coefficients in the dual boundary theory are given in Table [REF].', '1803.00172-1-9-1': 'The most interesting ratio is [MATH], the corner charge over the central charge appearing in two-point function of the stress tensor ([REF]), which is independent of all of the gravitational couplings.', '1803.00172-1-9-2': "Hence this ratio is universal for the broad class of holographic CFT's studied here.", '1803.00172-1-10-0': 'In fact, as we noted above, the functional form of [MATH] is not modified by any of the higher curvature interactions, except for an overall factor.', '1803.00172-1-10-1': "Given the above result, the entire function [MATH] is universal for the broad class of holographic CFT's studied here.", '1803.00172-1-10-2': "This holographic result suggests that this normalization provides an interesting way to compare the corner contribution between any general three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-10-3': 'Comparing our holographic result with the corresponding free field results, we see that the free field curves agree with the holographic result remarkably well - see figure [REF].', '1803.00172-1-10-4': 'The free fermion and scalar curves deviate from the holographic result by less than [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1803.00172-1-10-5': "Hence we suggest that the holographic expression for [MATH], which is easily evaluated across the full range of [MATH] to [MATH], provides a good benchmark with which to compare the analogous results for general three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-11-0': 'The maximum discrepancy between the holographic and free field results for [MATH] occurs as [MATH] but somewhat surprisingly they agree perfectly in the limit [MATH], as first stated in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-11-1': "That is, the holographic CFT's and the two free field theories exhibit the same ratio [EQUATION]", '1803.00172-1-11-2': 'This remarkable result leads us to conjecture that this ratio is in fact a universal constant for general conformal field theories in three dimensions.', '1803.00172-1-12-0': 'The remainder of the paper is organized as follows: In section [REF], we first review the holographic calculation of the entanglement entropy for a corner in the boundary of AdS[MATH] with Einstein gravity in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-12-1': 'Then in section [REF], we study the effects of adding various higher curvature interactions to the bulk gravity theory on the universal corner term.', '1803.00172-1-12-2': 'In doing so, we show that the functional form of [MATH] is universal to all of the theories considered here and evaluate the small angle charge [MATH] appearing in each case.', '1803.00172-1-12-3': 'In section [REF], we compare this corner charge in the higher curvature theories with similar quantities appearing in other physical observables, i.e., the coefficients appearing in the universal contribution in the entanglement entropy of a strip and of a disk, in the thermal entropy density and in the two-point correlator of the stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-12-4': 'In section [REF], we summarize our results.', '1803.00172-1-12-5': 'We also discuss the possibility of modifying the shape of the extremal surface in the holographic entanglement entropy in more general higher curvature theories of gravity, and hence modifying the functional form of [MATH] in the dual boundary theories.', '1803.00172-1-12-6': 'We also comment on the relation between our holographic results and the analogous results obtained for free field theories.', '1803.00172-1-12-7': 'In appendix [REF], we explain our conventions and notation in the calculations in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-12-8': 'In appendix [REF], we explain the conformal mapping which relates the corner charge [MATH] with the coefficient of the universal term in the entanglement entropy of a strip.', '1803.00172-1-12-9': 'In appendix [REF], we compute the corner contribution for a general [MATH] theory and explain in some detail the linearized equations of motion used to compute the two-point function of the stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-12-10': 'Finally in appendix [REF], we present the integrals used in [CITATION] to evaluate the coefficient [MATH] for the free massless scalar and fermion theories and show that when evaluated with sufficient precision that they yield the simple rational values predicted by our conjecture ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-13-0': '# Corner term in holographic entanglement entropy', '1803.00172-1-14-0': "In this section we study the corner contribution to the entanglement entropy for holographic CFT's dual to higher curvature theories of gravity.", '1803.00172-1-14-1': 'In particular, we will consider bulk actions which contain general curvature-squared interactions and which are functions of Lovelock densities [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-14-2': 'However, we begin by reviewing the calculation of the corner contribution to holographic entanglement entropy with just Einstein gravity in the bulk, which was originally performed in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-15-0': 'The bulk geometry will be four-dimensional Euclidean anti-de Sitter space in Poincare coordinates [EQUATION] which is a solution for Einstein gravity coupled to a negative cosmological constant [EQUATION] as long as we set [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-15-1': 'The dual boundary theory then lives in the flat three-dimensional geometry with metric [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-15-2': 'The region for which we calculate the entanglement entropy will be defined as [MATH], as illustrated in figure [REF].', '1803.00172-1-15-3': 'Hence the entangling surface [MATH] has a corner with opening angle [MATH] at the origin.', '1803.00172-1-15-4': 'Note that in the following, at as well as the usual short-distance cut-off [MATH], we will also introduce an infrared regulator scale, i.e., [MATH], to ensure that the entanglement entropy does not diverge.', '1803.00172-1-16-0': 'Now, the corresponding holographic entanglement entropy (HEE) is computed using the Ryu-Takayanagi prescription for the entanglement entropy of conformal field theories dual to Einstein gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-16-1': 'According to this, the entanglement entropy of a certain region [MATH] in our four-dimensional boundary theory is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] are codimension-[MATH] bulk surfaces which are homologous to [MATH] in the boundary (and in particular [MATH]), and [MATH] denotes the area of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-16-2': 'Figure [REF] illustrates the extremal bulk surface for the region [MATH] defined above.', '1803.00172-1-17-0': 'Now following [CITATION], we parametrize the bulk surfaces [MATH] as [MATH] for the present case of corner region [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-1': 'Further, the scaling symmetry of AdS, along with the fact that there is no other scale in the problem, allow us to limit the ansatz for the extremal surface to [MATH], where [MATH] is a function satisfying [MATH] as [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-2': 'With this ansatz, the induced metric on the surface becomes [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-3': 'The entanglement entropy functional becomes then [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the determinant of the induced metric ([REF]), we have introduced a UV cut-off at [MATH] and [MATH], which will be the maximum value of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-4': 'As we already mentioned above, the [MATH] integral is also cut-off as some large distance [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-5': 'Finally, the angular cut-off [MATH] is defined in such that at [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-6': 'Extremizing the above expression yields the equation of motion for [MATH], which reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-17-7': "However, the corresponding 'Hamiltonian' is a conserved quantity, since there is no explicit [MATH] dependence in eq. ([REF]).", '1803.00172-1-17-8': 'Therefore we find the following first integral [EQUATION] where we used [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-9': 'We can use eq. ([REF]) to replace [MATH] in terms of [MATH] and trade the integral over [MATH] for one over [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-10': 'After some algebra, eq. ([REF]) becomes [EQUATION] where we have also substituted [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-11': 'Near the boundary ([MATH]), the integrand behaves as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-17-12': 'Therefore, the [MATH] integration diverges in the limit that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-17-13': 'However, we can isolate this divergence by adding and subtracting one to the integrand.', '1803.00172-1-17-14': 'Hence we recast eq. ([REF]) as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-17-15': 'In the limit that [MATH], this expression can be further simplified to produce the final result [EQUATION] where the function [MATH] is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-17-16': 'The result in eq. ([REF]) has precisely the expected form given in eq. ([REF]), i.e., the first term in eq. ([REF]) is, of course, the area law contribution, whereas the second is the universal contribution associated with the corner.', '1803.00172-1-17-17': 'The last one is the constant term, which does not have a universal character in the present situation.', '1803.00172-1-18-0': "In eq. ([REF]), we have added a subscript '[MATH]' to denote this function as the corner contribution with Einstein gravity in the bulk.", '1803.00172-1-18-1': 'The dependence of [MATH] on the opening angle is implicit on the right-hand side of eq. ([REF]) through the dependence of [MATH] on [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-18-2': 'The latter can be determined by evaluating [EQUATION] and the result is shown in figure [REF](a).', '1803.00172-1-18-3': 'The coefficient of the corner term is then plotted in figure [REF](b) and we can see that [MATH] does indeed satisfy all the various constraints explained in the introduction, e.g., see eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-18-4': 'For small values of the opening angle, i.e., [MATH], we find [EQUATION] which is shown as the dashed red line in figure [REF](b).', '1803.00172-1-18-5': "Comparing the latter with eq. ([REF]), we see that in this holographic model, the universal 'central charge' associated with the small angle limit of the corner contribution is [EQUATION]", '1803.00172-1-18-6': 'Considering the limit of a smooth entangling surface, i.e., [MATH], we have [EQUATION] which is shown as the dashed orange line in figure [REF](b).', '1803.00172-1-18-7': "Comparing this result with eq. ([REF]), we see that the universal 'central charge' associated with the limit of a nearly smooth entangling surface in this holographic model is [EQUATION]", '1803.00172-1-18-8': 'Another interesting case to consider is a right-angled corner, i.e., [MATH], for which we find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-18-9': 'This case naturally arises in numerical calculations of entanglement entropy, e.g., [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-19-0': '## Higher curvature gravity', '1803.00172-1-20-0': 'Having reviewed the calculation for Einstein gravity in the bulk, we now turn to considering the effect of higher curvature interactions in the bulk theory.', '1803.00172-1-20-1': 'For such cases, the Ryu-Takayanagi prescription must be generalized, as was first considered in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-20-2': 'In particular, the Bekenstein-Hawking formula on the right-hand side of eq. ([REF]) must be replaced by a new entropy functional which accounts for the new gravitational interactions.', '1803.00172-1-20-3': 'Hence eq. ([REF]) is replaced by [EQUATION] where the entropy functional [MATH] depends on the details of the gravitational theory.', '1803.00172-1-20-4': 'This is a familiar idea in the context of black hole entropy where the Wald entropy formula [CITATION] extends [MATH] with higher curvature corrections.', '1803.00172-1-20-5': 'A natural suggestion would be that the HEE should be calculated by extremizing the Wald entropy evaluated on the bulk surfaces [MATH], however, it was shown that this approach would be incorrect since it fails to produce the proper universal contributions to the entanglement entropy [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-20-6': 'The latter universal terms are properly reproduced in the special case of Lovelock gravity [CITATION] using an alternative entropy functional [CITATION] - see below.', '1803.00172-1-20-7': 'More generally the appropriate entropy functional is the Wald entropy plus additional terms involving the extrinsic curvature, which would vanish if evaluated on the Killing horizon of a stationary black hole [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-20-8': 'There has been an effort to extend the derivation [CITATION] of the Ryu-Takayanagi prescription to higher curvature theories of gravity [CITATION] and a general formula was proposed for theories involving interactions with contractions of arbitrary powers of the Riemann tensor (but no derivatives of the curvature).', '1803.00172-1-20-9': 'While this general expression was shown to satisfy several consistency checks [CITATION], it seems that it must still be further refined for general theories involving cubic and higher powers of the curvature [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-20-10': 'In any event, the correct entropy functional is known for general curvature-squared gravity in the bulk and we will use this to determine the modifications to the corner contribution in HEE for these theories in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-21-0': 'To go beyond curvature squared gravity, we turn to the generalized Lovelock theories considered by [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-21-1': "In these theories, the Lagrangian is given by an arbitrary functional of extended 'topological' densities, i.e., scalars constructed from the curvature tensor which if integrated over a manifold of the appropriate dimension would yield the Euler characteristic.", '1803.00172-1-21-2': 'Hence Lovelock gravity [CITATION] would be the simplest example in which the Lagrangian is a linear functional of these topological densities.', '1803.00172-1-21-3': 'Another well-known class of theories which take this form would be [MATH] gravity [CITATION] since the Ricci scalar corresponds to the Euler density for two-dimensional manifolds.', '1803.00172-1-21-4': 'In studying these generalized Lovelock theories, [CITATION] proposed a formula for the gravitational entropy which satisfied a classical increase theorem for linearized perturbations of Killing horizons.', '1803.00172-1-21-5': 'We interpret the fact that their definition applies for at least small deviations away from a Killing horizon, as evidence that it will yield the correct gravitational entropy in the more general context of evaluating HEE.', '1803.00172-1-21-6': 'Then applying this prescription allows us to evaluate the modifications to the corner contribution in HEE for a certain class of theories involving cubic and higher powers of the curvature in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-22-0': 'Before proceeding with explicit calculations, let us comment that higher curvature interactions appear generically in string theoretic models, e.g., as [MATH] corrections in the low-energy effective action [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-22-1': 'However, rather than constructing explicit top-down holographic models, our approach here is to examine simple toy holographic models involving higher curvature interactions in the bulk gravity theory.', '1803.00172-1-22-2': 'Our perspective is that if there are interesting universal properties which hold for all CFTs, then they should also appear in the holographic CFTs defined by these toy models as well.', '1803.00172-1-22-3': 'This approach has been successfully applied before, e.g., in the discovery of the F-theorem [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-22-4': 'We also stress that for the most part we will be working perturbatively in the gravitational couplings for the higher curvature interactions and only carry our calculations to first order in these couplings.', '1803.00172-1-22-5': 'The results for the curvature-squared theories are an exception, as most of these expressions are valid for generic values of the couplings.', '1803.00172-1-23-0': '### Curvature-squared gravity', '1803.00172-1-24-0': 'The bulk action of the most general curvature-squared gravity can be written as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] is the Gauss-Bonnet term, i.e., the Euler density for four-dimensional manifolds.', '1803.00172-1-24-1': 'Hence the last interaction does not effect the gravitational equations of motion since we are working with four bulk dimensions.', '1803.00172-1-24-2': 'However, as we will see, this term still contributes a topological term to the entropy functional.', '1803.00172-1-24-3': 'The AdS[MATH] metric in eq. ([REF]) is still a solution of the full equations of motion for any value of [MATH] and [MATH] provided [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-25-0': 'The expression for the entanglement entropy in this family of theories is given by eq. ([REF]) where [MATH] takes the form [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] are, respectively, the induced metric, the second fundamental form and the intrinsic Ricci scalar of the bulk surface [MATH] - see appendix [REF] for a complete description of our conventions.', '1803.00172-1-25-1': 'Before proceeding with detailed calculations of HEE, let us make some general observations about the expected results.', '1803.00172-1-26-0': 'First, it is worthwhile to note that the gravitational action ([REF]) would also include various boundary terms, e.g., see [CITATION], and that similar boundary terms should be expected to appear in the entropy functional ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-26-1': 'However, while the addition of such boundary terms may effect the coefficient in the area law contribution to the entanglement entropy ([REF]) in the boundary theory, one can infer from the local geometric form of these boundary terms that they will not modify the logarithmic contribution to [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-26-2': 'Again, the robustness of the logarithmic term here is a reflection of the fact that it is a universal contribution whose value is independent of the precise details of the UV regulator.', '1803.00172-1-26-3': 'Of course, since our interest lies in determining the universal corner term [MATH], we will ignore any boundary terms that might be added to eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-27-0': 'Next, let us examine the form of the entropy functional in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-27-1': 'The [MATH] and [MATH] terms both contain contributions involving the curvature of the background spacetime geometry.', '1803.00172-1-27-2': 'However, since we are evaluating the HEE in empty AdS[MATH], the latter terms are just constants, e.g., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-27-3': 'Hence the entropy functional is not modified by these terms except for a shift in the overall factor multiplying the area of bulk surface.', '1803.00172-1-28-0': 'We also note that any surface which extremizes the area, as in eq. ([REF]), will satisfy [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-28-1': 'Now looking at eq. ([REF]), we see that the [MATH] contribution includes a term that is quadratic in [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-28-2': 'Hence an extremal area surface will also be a saddle point of this term.', '1803.00172-1-28-3': 'That is, if we deform away from the extremal area surface by some deformation parameterized by a small parameter [MATH], then we will have [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-28-4': 'Therefore extremal area surfaces will also extremize the new contribution (or any other contribution) to the HEE functional that is quadratic in the trace of the extrinsic curvature.', '1803.00172-1-29-0': 'Lastly since we are working with a four-dimensional bulk spacetime, [MATH] will be a two-dimensional manifold and hence [MATH], appearing as [MATH] contribution in eq. ([REF]), will be proportional to a topological invariant (namely, the Euler characteristic) of [MATH], up to boundary terms.', '1803.00172-1-29-1': 'Therefore just as the corresponding interaction in the bulk action ([REF]) does not modify the gravitational equations of motion, this term in the HEE functional will not contribute to the equations determining the bulk surface which extremizes eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-30-0': 'Given the above discussion, we conclude that the extremal area surface for any given entangling region in the boundary of pure AdS[MATH] will also extremize the HEE functional ([REF]) for the same calculation of entanglement entropy in the boundary theory dual to curvature-squared gravity.', '1803.00172-1-30-1': "The only effect of the 'higher curvature' corrections in eq. ([REF]) will be to change the final entanglement entropy by an overall factor depending on the new couplings, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].", '1803.00172-1-30-2': 'In the problem of interest, this indicates that the corner coefficient [MATH] will only be changed by this same overall factor.', '1803.00172-1-30-3': 'Hence the expressions for the corner charges in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are also multiplied by an overall factor but the functional dependence of [MATH] on the opening angle is precisely the same as compared to Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-30-4': 'We note that the above observations actually have broader applicability and that this result will apply to a wide class of theories beyond the special case of curvature-squared gravity - we return to a discussion of this point in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-30-5': 'Let us now turn to the detailed calculations to see how the different contributions in eq. ([REF]) affect the universal corner term in HEE.', '1803.00172-1-31-0': '### [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-32-0': 'If we focus on the simplest case of [MATH] gravity, i.e., set [MATH], the gravitational entropy functional reduces to [EQUATION] where we substituted [MATH] to produce the last expression.', '1803.00172-1-32-1': 'Therefore, as discussed above, the corresponding corner coefficient is simply multiplied by an overall factor relative to the Einstein gravity [EQUATION] and the corresponding small angle charge becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-33-0': '### [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-34-0': 'In the case of [MATH] gravity, the HEE functional becomes [EQUATION] where the expression in the second line was produced by first substituting [MATH] and by evaluating [MATH] for the bulk surface defined by [MATH] - see appendix [REF] for details.', '1803.00172-1-34-1': 'Varying the above expression will produce a nonlinear differential equation for [MATH] which, because of the last term, involves third and fourth order derivatives, as well as first and second order derivatives.', '1803.00172-1-34-2': 'However, as we explained above, the solution should still be the same extremal area surface which we found with Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-34-3': 'The latter occurs because the geometric form of the equation determining the extremal area surface is precisely [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-34-4': 'Indeed comparing with eq. ([REF]), we see that the factor in the numerator of the last term above is precisely the equation determining the profile [MATH] with Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-34-5': 'Because this factor is squared, the profile satisfying eq. ([REF]) will also satisfy the full equation of motion coming from eq. ([REF]) and further, in evaluating the HEE, the last term will not contribute because this factor simply vanishes.', '1803.00172-1-34-6': 'Hence the HEE and in particular, the corner coefficient, is determined by the Bekenstein-Hawking term, as with Einstein gravity but now multiplied by an additional factor.', '1803.00172-1-34-7': 'Therefore the charge defined by the corner term as in eq. ([REF]) becomes simply [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-35-0': '### Gauss-Bonnet gravity', '1803.00172-1-36-0': 'For pure Gauss-Bonnet gravity, eq. ([REF]) reduces to [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-36-1': 'Above, we argued that the second term would not affect the profile of the bulk surface nor contribute to the universal corner contribution.', '1803.00172-1-36-2': 'With the bulk profile [MATH], it is not difficult to show that the combination [MATH] can be written as a total derivative (see appendix [REF] for details) [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-36-3': 'In fact, this is sufficient to conclude that the universal corner contribution will be identical to that in eq. ([REF]), as expected.', '1803.00172-1-37-0': 'However, let us examine the contribution of the Gauss-Bonnet term to the HEE in more detail.', '1803.00172-1-37-1': 'Using eq. ([REF]), this contribution can be written now as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-37-2': 'We can make use of eq. ([REF]) to replace [MATH] in terms of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-37-3': 'By doing so, and recalling that [MATH] and [MATH], the above expression reduces to [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-37-4': 'Hence, including the Einstein gravity, the final result for the HEE in this case becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-37-5': 'Hence the (nonuniversal) coefficient of the area law term has be modified here but the corner contribution is precisely the same as with just Einstein gravity in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-38-0': 'It was commented above that the entropy functional ([REF]) might be supplemented by boundary terms but that the logarithmic term in the HEE, i.e., the corner contribution, is unaffected by such terms [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-38-1': 'Gauss-Bonnet gravity provides an illustrative example since there is a natural boundary term to be added to the gravitational entropy functional [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the one-dimensional boundary of [MATH] at the cut-off surface [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-38-2': 'Further [MATH] and [MATH] denote the determinant of the induced metric and the trace of the extrinsic curvature, respectively, on this boundary.', '1803.00172-1-38-3': 'It is straightforward to evaluate these quantities and to produce the result [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-38-4': 'Adding this contribution to eq. ([REF]) leaves [EQUATION] and we see that with the additional boundary term in eq. ([REF]), there is no [MATH] dependence in either the area law term or the logarithmic contribution in the entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-1-38-5': 'The latter reflects the fact that with the additional boundary term, the Gauss-Bonnet contribution in eq. ([REF]) is a purely topological contribution.', '1803.00172-1-38-6': 'In any event, as expected, the universal corner contribution remains unaffected by the addition of this boundary term, which implicitly represents a modification of the regulator used to define the entanglement entropy in the dual QFT.', '1803.00172-1-39-0': 'To summarize our results for curvature-squared gravity ([REF]) in the bulk, we found that the functional form of [MATH] is not modified.', '1803.00172-1-39-1': 'Rather the holographic expression only differs from that in the Einstein gravity by some overall factor.', '1803.00172-1-39-2': 'Hence the charge defined by the small [MATH] limit, as in eq. ([REF]), becomes [EQUATION] where the Einstein charge [MATH] is given eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-40-0': '### Generalized Lovelock gravity', '1803.00172-1-41-0': 'Recall that Lovelock gravities [CITATION] are the most general higher curvature gravity theories with second-order equations of motion.', '1803.00172-1-41-1': 'The corresponding action can be written as [EQUATION] where [MATH] are dimensionless couplings and [MATH] correspond to the dimensionally extended [MATH]-dimensional Euler densities [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-41-2': 'Here [MATH] denotes a totally antisymmetric product of [MATH] Kronecker deltas.', '1803.00172-1-41-3': 'Hence when [MATH], [MATH] is topological and when [MATH], [MATH] simply vanishes.', '1803.00172-1-41-4': 'Of course, the cosmological constant and Einstein terms in eq. ([REF]) could be incorporated into the sum as [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1803.00172-1-41-5': "Recently, there has been renewed interest in these theories in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence where these theories provide toy models of holographic CFT's in which the central charges differ from one another, e.g., see [CITATION] and the references therein.", '1803.00172-1-41-6': 'For this class of theories ([REF]), HEE is evaluated with eq. ([REF]) using the following entropy functional [CITATION] [EQUATION] where now [MATH] is constructed with the intrinsic curvature tensor of the induced metric on [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-42-0': 'Recently, Sarkar and Wall proposed a generalization of the Lovelock theories with an action of the form [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is some general function of the extended Euler densities up to [MATH] - we will assume that [MATH] is a polynomial.', '1803.00172-1-42-1': 'Hence these new generalized Lovelock theories might also be seen as an extension of [MATH] gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-42-2': 'In general, the gravitational equations of motion will involve fourth order derivatives of the metric in these new theories.', '1803.00172-1-42-3': 'However, the motivation to considering these theories is to examine the second law of black hole thermodynamics in higher curvature theories.', '1803.00172-1-42-4': 'In fact, [CITATION] found an expression for the gravitational entropy which satisfies a classical increase theorem for linearized perturbations of Killing horizons [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-42-5': 'Certainly, this expression also reduces to that in eq. ([REF]) when [MATH] is linear and the action ([REF]) is simply the Lovelock action ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-42-6': 'We take these facts, in particular, that eq. ([REF]) applies for (at least small) deviations away from a Killing horizon, as evidence that it will yield the correct gravitational entropy in the more general context of using eq. ([REF]) to evaluate HEE.', '1803.00172-1-42-7': 'Further work in this direction recently appeared in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-43-0': 'Hence we will use the generalized Lovelock theories ([REF]) as framework to examine the corner contribution in HEE.', '1803.00172-1-43-1': 'Since we are working in a four-dimensional bulk spacetime, all of the [MATH] with [MATH] will vanish identically.', '1803.00172-1-43-2': 'Therefore, we can only construct the new gravity action with powers of the Ricci scalar [MATH] and the four-dimensional Euler density [MATH], given in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-43-3': 'Hence we consider supplementing the standard cosmological constant and Einstein terms in eq. ([REF]) with higher curvature interactions of the form [EQUATION] with integers [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-43-4': 'Then using eq. ([REF]), the corresponding entropy functional becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-43-5': 'Now we are evaluating this expression in a pure AdS[MATH] background ([REF]) and so it may be simplified by substituting [MATH] and [MATH] to yield [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-43-6': 'Note the power of [MATH] appearing in the integrand above.', '1803.00172-1-43-7': 'We have kept this factor here to indicate that in general after solving the gravitational equations, one finds that the curvature scale [MATH] no longer coincides with the scale [MATH] set by the cosmological constant.', '1803.00172-1-43-8': 'In particular, we find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-43-9': 'However, note that if we are working perturbatively in the coupling, we have [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-43-10': 'With the simplifications produced by working in AdS[MATH], the modifications to the entropy functional have reduced to a term proportional to the area of the bulk surface and another involving an integral of the intrinsic Ricci scalar over [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-43-11': 'Hence at this point, we can turn to our results from the previous subsection where both terms were encountered before.', '1803.00172-1-43-12': 'In particular, neither term modifies the profile of the extremal surface in the bulk and further the area term only changes the corner contribution by an overall factor while the term involving [MATH] does not contribute to this universal term at all.', '1803.00172-1-43-13': 'More precisely, given the precise results in eq. ([REF]), we find that the small angle charge associated with the corner term becomes [EQUATION] where the result is expressed to leading order in the perturbative expansion in the coupling.', '1803.00172-1-43-14': 'Note that we have expressed [MATH] in terms of the AdS scale [MATH], which differs here from the scale [MATH] in the action by terms of [MATH], as shown in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-43-15': 'If we expressed the above equation in terms of [MATH] instead, the [MATH] coefficient would change.', '1803.00172-1-43-16': 'However, our convention here and throughout the following will be to write all of our perturbative expressions in terms of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-43-17': 'Of course, all length scales will disappear from the ratios of the different charges and so once our results are expressed in this way, they will not depend on this convention.', '1803.00172-1-43-18': 'Further, having fixed our approach, the comparison with the calculations for Einstein gravity is unambiguous in all cases.', '1803.00172-1-44-0': 'To make our analysis more concrete, let us extend the general curvature-squared theory ([REF]) with the generalized Lovelock interactions which are third- and fourth-order in the curvature [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-44-1': 'Then the final expression of the corner coefficient and the corresponding charge take the simple form [EQUATION] where to leading order in the dimensionless couplings, the overall coefficient is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-44-2': 'Of course, [MATH] and [MATH] are the corresponding quantities evaluated for Einstein gravity, as given in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), respectively.', '1803.00172-1-44-3': 'The fact that the functional form of [MATH] is unchanged results because the higher curvature contributions to the entropy functional studied here do not modify the profile of the extremal surface in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-44-4': 'We do not expect that this behaviour is completely universal and it may be modified in theories with even more general higher curvature interactions.', '1803.00172-1-44-5': 'We will come back to this point in the discussion section.', '1803.00172-1-45-0': '# Comparison with other charges', '1803.00172-1-46-0': "By considering the limit of a small opening angle in eq. ([REF]), we identified two 'central charges' which appear in the entanglement entropy of regions where boundary has corners.", '1803.00172-1-46-1': "When evaluated for holographic CFT's dual to Einstein gravity, the result ([REF]) is proportional to the ratio [MATH].", '1803.00172-1-46-2': 'The latter ratio is well known to be indicative of the number of degrees of freedom in the boundary theory.', '1803.00172-1-46-3': 'However, for Einstein gravity, the same ratio is ubiquitous for physical quantities involving a similar count of degrees of freedom, e.g., the entropy density of a thermal bath.', '1803.00172-1-46-4': 'The pervasiveness of [MATH] arises since this is the only dimensionless parameter that is intrinsic to the bulk theory with Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-46-5': 'By considering higher curvature theories for the bulk gravity, as in the previous section, we are introducing more dimensionless couplings and we can begin to distinguish the various charges in the boundary theory, e.g., see [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-46-6': 'Our objective here is to use our holographic results to determine if the corner charge [MATH] should be considered a new and distinct charge or if it is proportional to charges already appearing in other physical quantities.', '1803.00172-1-46-7': 'In particular, in the following, we compare [MATH] to the analogous charges appearing in: 1) the entanglement entropy of an infinite strip; 2) the entanglement entropy of a disk; 3) the entropy density of a thermal bath and 4) the two-point function of the stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-46-8': 'Again, with Einstein gravity in the bulk, all of these quantities are proportional to [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-46-9': 'While the same is true (with our conventions) with the higher curvature theories, the additional dimensionless couplings also give each a unique signature, as we will see in the following.', '1803.00172-1-47-0': '## Entanglement entropy for a strip', '1803.00172-1-48-0': 'We begin with the entanglement entropy of an infinite strip.', '1803.00172-1-48-1': 'For a general three-dimensional CFT, the result will take the form [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the width of the strip and [MATH] is a long distance scale introduced to regulate the length of the strip, i.e., the area of the entangling surface is [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-48-2': 'The universal coefficient [MATH] can be isolated with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-48-3': 'We will find that [MATH] in our HEE calculations below.', '1803.00172-1-48-4': "In fact, this result holds for general three-dimensional CFT's and has a simple explanation since there is a conformal transformation that (essentially) relates the corresponding entanglement geometries - see appendix [REF].", '1803.00172-1-49-0': 'Holographic calculations of the entanglement entropy of a strip were first carried out in [CITATION] with Einstein gravity in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-49-1': 'To start, we write AdS[MATH] metric as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-49-2': 'Let us parameterize the strip in the boundary as the region B[MATH].', '1803.00172-1-49-3': 'As noted above, we also introduce an IR regulator by, e.g., making the [MATH] direction periodic with period [MATH] and with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-49-4': 'The translational symmetry along [MATH] allows us to parametrize the entangling surface [MATH] as [MATH], so the induced metric on the surface becomes [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-49-5': 'Focusing on Einstein gravity [CITATION], we look for surfaces [MATH] extremizing the area functional, which in this case is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-49-6': 'Since the integrand does not depend on [MATH] explicitly, there is conserved first integral which can be used to write [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the maximal value of [MATH] reached by the extremal surface.', '1803.00172-1-49-7': 'The latter can be identified in terms of [MATH] through [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-49-8': 'The final result for the entanglement entropy with Einstein gravity in the bulk is [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-49-9': 'Hence the corresponding universal coefficient is [EQUATION] which exhibits the expected factor of [MATH], and further comparing with eq. ([REF]), we see that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-50-0': 'This calculation of HEE is easily extended to the higher curvature theories considered in section [REF], taking into account the general remarks made there.', '1803.00172-1-50-1': 'We use the prescription ([REF]) with the generalized entropy functionals for those theories given in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-50-2': 'However, as we found before, the terms involving the trace of the extrinsic curvature do not contribute, those with the intrinsic Ricci scalar only contribute boundary terms and those involving bulk curvatures only modify the Einstein result by an overall factor.', '1803.00172-1-50-3': 'It is straightforward to verify these expectations with explicit calculations and the final result is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is precisely the same factor given in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-50-4': 'The coefficient [MATH] appearing in the area law term is another function of the couplings [MATH], which is not needed here but does not coincide with [MATH] in general.', '1803.00172-1-50-5': 'Hence the final result for the universal coefficient is [EQUATION] and so we find that [MATH] in all of these examples.', '1803.00172-1-50-6': "As noted above, this is in fact a general result for three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-51-0': '## Entanglement entropy for a disk', '1803.00172-1-52-0': 'For a general three-dimensional CFT, the entanglement entropy of a disk will take the form [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the radius of the disk.', '1803.00172-1-52-1': 'The universal coefficient [MATH] can be isolated here by evaluating [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-52-2': 'Of course, in this case, the universal constant [MATH] plays the an important role as the central charge in the [MATH]-theorem, i.e., it decreases monotonically in renormalization group flows [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-53-0': 'The HEE for a disk was first calculated for Einstein gravity using eq. ([REF]) in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-53-1': 'However, this calculation was later extended to general higher curvature theories of gravity in the bulk [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-53-2': 'Making use of a conformal transformation in the boundary CFT, the problem of calculating the entanglement entropy for a disk can be mapped to the question of evaluating the thermal entropy of the CFT in a particular curved background.', '1803.00172-1-53-3': 'The latter can then be evaluated as the Wald entropy of the corresponding horizon in bulk spacetime with a general gravitational theory in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-53-4': "The horizon actually appears as an 'observer' horizon upon transforming the bulk AdS geometry to AdS-Rindler coordinates and the extremal area surface in the standard calculation coincides with the bifurcation surface of this horizon, e.g., see [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-54-0': 'Our calculations of HEE for the disk followed the prescription outlined in section [REF], using eq. ([REF]) with the entropy functionals in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-54-1': 'Using the AdS[MATH] metric in eq. ([REF]), let us parameterize the disk in the boundary as the region [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-54-2': 'We write the profile of the bulk surface [MATH] as [MATH] with no dependence on [MATH] because of the rotational symmetry of the disk.', '1803.00172-1-54-3': 'The induced metric on [MATH] then becomes [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-54-4': 'The extremal area surface becomes the hemisphere [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-54-5': 'Now in general, the entropy functional for higher curvature theories can be written as the Wald entropy plus terms which are at least quadratic in the extrinsic curvature [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-54-6': 'However, one can readily verify that the extrinsic curvature of the above bulk surface ([REF]) vanishes and hence any extrinsic curvature terms will vanish to first order if we make variations of this surface.', '1803.00172-1-54-7': 'Since the Wald entropy only involves bulk curvatures, this entropy reduces to the area functional multiplied by an extra overall factor, as in the previous section.', '1803.00172-1-54-8': 'Hence eq. ([REF]) still remains the extremal surface when calculating the HEE of a disk for any general higher curvature theory in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-54-9': 'Hence with eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) for the theories in section [REF], evaluating the HEE yields [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-54-10': "Hence the universal charge for the corresponding holographic CFT's becomes [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the result for Einstein gravity, i.e., [MATH].", '1803.00172-1-54-11': 'Note that with Einstein gravity, the ratio of the universal charges for the corner and the disk is relatively simple, i.e., [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-54-12': 'However, comparing eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), as well as eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we see that there is no simple relation between [MATH] and [MATH] in the general theories.', '1803.00172-1-54-13': 'In particular, we have [EQUATION] and so this ratio depends on the precise value of the gravitational couplings in the higher curvature theories.', '1803.00172-1-55-0': '## Thermal entropy', '1803.00172-1-56-0': 'Another quantity which might be used to characterize the number of degrees of freedom in a system is the thermal entropy.', '1803.00172-1-56-1': 'For a three-dimensional CFT, the thermal entropy density takes the form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-56-2': "The coefficient [MATH] is another interesting 'central charge' which is readily calculable in a holographic setting.", '1803.00172-1-56-3': 'Of course, the thermal bath in the boundary theory is dual to a planar AdS[MATH] black hole and we need only calculate the entropy density of the event horizon.', '1803.00172-1-56-4': 'For Einstein gravity, the black hole solution can be written as [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the position of the event horizon.', '1803.00172-1-56-5': 'The Hawking temperature is given by [MATH] and the horizon entropy is given by the Bekenstein-Hawking formula, which yields [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-56-6': 'Now dividing by the spatial volume [MATH] yields the entropy density and substituting the temperature for [MATH] produces an expression of the expected form given in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-56-7': 'The corresponding central charge is [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-56-8': 'Here again, we see the ubiquitous factor of [MATH] and hence the ratio with the corner charge yields a fixed numerical factor, i.e., [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-57-0': '### Curvature-squared gravity', '1803.00172-1-58-0': 'Just as with empty AdS[MATH], the black hole metric ([REF]) is also a solution of the general curvature-squared gravity for any value of the parameters [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] provided [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-58-1': 'Hence the only difference from the above calculations is that the horizon entropy is now given by the Wald entropy formula [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-58-2': 'Alternatively, we can use the generalized entropy functional in eq. ([REF]) since the two expressions only differ by terms involving the extrinsic curvature and the latter vanishes on the event horizon of the AdS[MATH] black hole.', '1803.00172-1-58-3': 'We find, in agreement with [CITATION] [EQUATION] and therefore the corresponding central charge becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-58-4': 'Comparing to eq. ([REF]), we see that for curvature-squared gravity, the thermal entropy charge is modified by the same overall factor that appears in the corresponding corner charge.', '1803.00172-1-58-5': 'Hence for this family of holographic theories, the ratio of these two charges remains unchanged from the numerical factor ([REF]) that appears with Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-59-0': '### Generalized Lovelock gravity', '1803.00172-1-60-0': 'The black hole metric in eq. ([REF]) is no longer a solution of the equations of motion for general theories of the form ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-60-1': 'Hence in order to explore how the thermal entropy gets modified here, we must first correct the black hole solution to linear order in the coupling [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-60-2': 'We parametrize the modified solution as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are two nonsingular functions to be determined.', '1803.00172-1-60-3': 'This ansatz was chosen so that the position of the horizon remains at [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-60-4': 'In order to obtain [MATH] and [MATH], we substitute the above metric into the Einstein action ([REF]) modified by the addition of a higher curvature interaction as in eq. ([REF]) and expand to second order in the coupling [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-60-5': 'From the second order action, we determine the linearized equations of motion for [MATH] and [MATH] and then solve them with the boundary conditions that both functions decay as [MATH] and remain nonsingular at [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-60-6': 'Below we describe the solution and the results for the thermal entropy for each of the generalized Lovelock interactions up to quartic order in the curvatures, shown in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-61-0': 'In general, the Hawking temperature of the solution will be given by [EQUATION] as one can easily check.', '1803.00172-1-62-0': '### a) [MATH] and [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-63-0': 'For these two particular theories, as well as any theory with only [MATH] interactions (i.e., [MATH]), the original AdS[MATH] black hole solution ([REF]) does not get corrected at any order in the couplings [MATH], i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-63-1': 'The uncorrected black hole solves the equations of motion of these theories provided the curvature scale satisfies eq. ([REF]), which was also required for the pure AdS[MATH] metric ([REF]) to be a solution in the new theory.', '1803.00172-1-63-2': 'Note that for [MATH] and 4, we find the constraints [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1803.00172-1-64-0': 'The horizon entropy is computed using the expression in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-64-1': 'However, since the Ricci scalar of the Schwarzschild-AdS[MATH] background equals that of the pure AdS[MATH] solution, the corrected thermal entropy for these theories differs from the Einstein gravity result by just a overall constant factor which is precisely the same as the [MATH] and [MATH] contributions to [MATH] in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-64-2': 'That is, we find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-65-0': '### b) [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-66-0': 'For this theory, the AdS curvature is given by [MATH] - recall that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-66-1': 'The planar black hole ([REF]) no longer solves the equations of motion and so we proceed as described above to find the corrected solution to first order in the coupling.', '1803.00172-1-66-2': 'The two functions [MATH] and [MATH] are [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-66-3': 'With the new metric, the Hawking temperature becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-66-4': 'Using eq. ([REF]), the thermal entropy then becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-66-5': 'We note that [MATH] again agrees with the analogous factor appearing in the corner coefficient ([REF]) for [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-67-0': 'We stress that, as opposed to the theories with [MATH], the on-shell Gauss-Bonnet term [MATH] is no longer the same in the black hole background as in the pure AdS[MATH] solution (hence eq. ([REF]) no longer reduces down to eq. ([REF])).', '1803.00172-1-67-1': 'Computing the horizon entropy as a function of the horizon position yields [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-67-2': 'It is only when we express the entropy density as a function of the physical temperature ([REF]) that we cover the factor [MATH] in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-67-3': 'Actually, it is possible to show that different parametrizations of the corrected solution give rise to different expressions for [MATH] and [MATH], which nevertheless conspire to produce the same physical result when the entropy density is written in terms of the temperature.', '1803.00172-1-68-0': '### c) [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-69-0': 'In this case, the curvature scale is determined by [MATH], and the functions parameterizing the corrected black hole ([REF]) are [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-69-1': 'Further, the Hawking temperature becomes [EQUATION] while the entropy density is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-69-2': 'Here again, [MATH] agrees with the analogous factor appearing in the corner coefficient ([REF]) for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-70-0': '### d) [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-71-0': 'The last nontrivial interaction at fourth order in curvature corresponds to the square of the Gauss-Bonnet density, [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-71-1': 'To begin, let us note that interactions of the form [MATH] with [MATH] are not topological and do modify the gravitational equations of motion in four dimensions.', '1803.00172-1-71-2': 'It is only the linear term, i.e., [MATH] (and [MATH]), which leaves the equations of motion unchanged.', '1803.00172-1-72-0': 'Now in this case, we have [MATH] and [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-72-1': 'The Hawking temperature is given by [EQUATION] and the thermal entropy density becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-72-2': 'Here, the factor [MATH] receives a correction which is first order in [MATH] while the corresponding factor in the corner coefficient does not, e.g., see eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-72-3': 'Hence, we have found the first example for which the agreement is broken between the charges defined by the thermal entropy density and by the corner contribution of the entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-1-73-0': 'Gathering together all of the first order contributions from the new interactions appearing in the fourth-order action ([REF]), we have that the thermal entropy density in the dual boundary theory takes the expected form ([REF]) where the corresponding charge takes the form [EQUATION] where the Einstein result [MATH] is given in eq. ([REF]) and [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-73-1': 'Comparing with eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) for the corner contribution of the entanglement entropy in the same theories, we see [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-73-2': 'That is, the ratio [MATH] is independent of most of the additional dimensionless couplings in eq. ([REF]) and it would still be given by the same numerical factor found for Einstein gravity in eq. ([REF]) for the class of theories with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-74-0': '## Stress tensor two-point function', '1803.00172-1-75-0': "Let us now turn to the two-point function for the stress tensor, which is particularly interesting since it defines a central charge for CFT's in any spacetime dimension.", '1803.00172-1-75-1': 'Evaluated in the vacuum, the functional form of this two-point correlator is completely fixed by conformal symmetry and energy conservation, and for a [MATH]-dimensional CFT, it takes the form [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-75-2': "Below we will focus on [MATH] but as remarked above, the above expressions provide a definition of [MATH] for CFT's in any spacetime dimension.", '1803.00172-1-75-3': "In particular, eq. ([REF]) is the standard definition of the central charge [MATH] in two-dimensional CFT's, i.e., [MATH], while for four dimensions, [MATH] where [MATH] is the coefficient of the Weyl-squared term in the trace anomaly.", '1803.00172-1-76-0': 'Of course, in a holographic framework, the stress tensor is dual to the normalizable mode of the metric [CITATION] and so evaluating eq. ([REF]) requires determining the two-point boundary correlator of the gravitons in the AdS vacuum.', '1803.00172-1-76-1': 'This is a standard calculation in the context of Einstein gravity [CITATION] and one finds for three boundary dimensions [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-76-2': 'Once again, we see the ubiquitous factor of [MATH] and comparing with the corner coefficient ([REF]), we have [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-76-3': 'In order to investigate how the two-point function (or equivalently the graviton propagator) is modified by the introduction of higher curvature terms in the bulk, let us first recall that generically these new interactions will result in the appearance of higher-order derivatives in the gravitiational equations of motion.', '1803.00172-1-76-4': 'Hence the metric will contain additional propagating degrees of freedom beyond the usual massless spin-two graviton.', '1803.00172-1-76-5': 'Therefore in a holographic context, the metric will also couple both to the stress tensor and some new tensor operator, which is generically nonunitary.', '1803.00172-1-76-6': 'We can understand the latter, i.e., that generically the new operator generates negative norm states in the boundary CFT, with the following analogy from [CITATION]: Consider a massless scalar field in flat space whose equation of motion has been corrected with a fourth-order term, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is some high energy scale and [MATH], the dimensionless coupling of the higher derivative interaction in the action.', '1803.00172-1-76-7': 'Then, the propagator for this field will read [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-76-8': 'Here the [MATH] pole will correspond to the usual massless mode, whereas that at [MATH] is related to a new massive degree of freedom.', '1803.00172-1-76-9': 'Regardless of the sign of [MATH], the sign of the second term in the propagator above will be negative and so the extra mode is a ghost.', '1803.00172-1-76-10': 'Of course, if we are working perturbatively in [MATH], these new degrees of freedom appear at very high energy scales.', '1803.00172-1-76-11': 'Hence if we should restrict our attention to energies much less than [MATH], the new scalar ghost will not go on-shell.', '1803.00172-1-76-12': 'In the holographic context, the additional ghost modes create negative norm states in the bulk theory and so they must be dual to new nonunitary operators in the boundary theory.', '1803.00172-1-76-13': 'Further, let us note that the curvature scale plays the role of the mass above, i.e., [MATH], and so we can expect that the conformal dimension of these operators to be set by the inverse of the gravitational couplings, i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-76-14': 'Hence if we consider the CFT on the background [MATH], the new operator would again be associated with high energy states.', '1803.00172-1-77-0': 'The above example also highlights that in a perturbative framework, the extra degrees of freedom are highly suppressed in the vicinity of the physical pole.', '1803.00172-1-77-1': 'Hence our strategy in studying the graviton propagator will be to organize the linearized gravitational equations of motion which make this suppression manifest and allow us to easily identify the proper kinetic term of the physical modes.', '1803.00172-1-77-2': 'In general, writing out the linearized equations of motion for the graviton would be a very complex task but it can simplified here in two ways, as discussed in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-77-3': 'First, we are interested in the holographic version of eq. ([REF]) which is evaluated in the vacuum and so we need only study the metric fluctuations in the AdS[MATH] background.', '1803.00172-1-77-4': 'That is, we consider a perturbed metric: [MATH], where [MATH] is the AdS[MATH] metric (and [MATH] for all [MATH]).', '1803.00172-1-77-5': 'In particular then, the background curvature tensor takes the form [MATH], which greatly simplifies the form of the linearized equations of motion.', '1803.00172-1-77-6': 'That is, they can be expressed entirely in terms of covariant derivatives acting on [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-77-7': 'In order to further simplify the resulting expressions, which are still rather involved in general, we can use diffeomorphism invariance to choose a convenient gauge.', '1803.00172-1-77-8': 'In the following, we restrict ourselves to a transverse traceless gauge, i.e., [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-78-0': 'With these choices, the linearized Einstein equations become [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the linearized Einstein tensor.', '1803.00172-1-78-1': "We have included the stress tensor [MATH] for some additional matter fields to the right-hand side because in the following, it will be important to establish the normalization of Newton's constant, or alternatively of the graviton kinetic term.", '1803.00172-1-78-2': 'The linearized equation which results from our complete fourth-order gravity ([REF]) turns out to read [EQUATION] where [MATH] is precisely the constant given by eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-78-3': 'Interestingly, none of the higher-order terms considered, except for the [MATH] interaction, produce fourth-order derivatives contributions to the linearized equation for the physical graviton [MATH] in the AdS[MATH] background in this gauge, which is a rather striking phenomenom.', '1803.00172-1-78-4': 'It would be certainly interesting to classify the families of higher-order gravities for which this behaviour is encountered at each order in curvature.', '1803.00172-1-78-5': 'We will not pursue such a goal here.', '1803.00172-1-79-0': 'The left-hand side of eq. ([REF]) is organized in a way which makes obvious the suppression of the second term in the vicinity of the physical pole, i.e., for [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-79-1': 'However, the higher curvature terms still make their presence felt through the appearance of [MATH] which modifies the coefficient of the leading Einstein-like term.', '1803.00172-1-79-2': "As commented above, one can interpret this new coefficient as modifying the normalization of Newton's constant, i.e., [MATH] or as having modified the normalization of the graviton kinetic term.", '1803.00172-1-79-3': 'In any event, the net effect is to modify the previous holographic calculation of the two-point correlator for Einstein gravity by an overall factor of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-79-4': 'Hence in the higher curvature theory ([REF]), we reproduce the desired expression in eq. ([REF]) where the central charge is now given by [EQUATION] where again, [MATH] is precisely the same constant given by eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-79-5': 'Of course, we could also write this expression as [MATH], i.e., the general result has the same form as that for the Einstein theory except that [MATH] is replaced by [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-79-6': 'Therefore, the correction to the central charge appearing in the two-point correlator of the stress tensor ([REF]) matches that appearing in the universal corner term.', '1803.00172-1-79-7': 'Hence all of the higher curvature theories considered here yield the same ratio as in the Einstein theory [EQUATION] and in particular, the ratio of charges ([REF]) is unchanged, i.e., [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-79-8': 'One might hope that these are universal results extending beyond holography.', '1803.00172-1-79-9': 'However, in the discussion section below, we will test this idea by comparing to free field theories.', '1803.00172-1-79-10': "Unfortunately, we find that neither of the above ratios is quite universal but the comparison does show that dividing by [MATH] is an interesting way to normalize the corner contribution when comparing different three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-80-0': '# Discussion', '1803.00172-1-81-0': 'In this paper, we have studied the universal term arising from the presence of corners in the entangling surface for three-dimensional holographic conformal field theories.', '1803.00172-1-81-1': 'In general, this coefficient of the logarithmic term in eq. ([REF]) is a function of the opening angle at the corner [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-81-2': 'As we will discuss below, the precise form of this function depends on the details of the underlying CFT, however, as explained in the introduction, this function is constrained to behave as [MATH] in the limit of small opening angles and as [MATH] in the limit of a nearly smooth entangling surface.', '1803.00172-1-81-3': "Hence, eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) define two coefficients, [MATH] and [MATH], which can be used to characterize different CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-81-4': "Motivated by the idea that the corner contribution provides a useful measure of the number of degrees of freedom in the underlying theory, we referred to these constants as 'central charges.'", '1803.00172-1-81-5': 'In our holographic calculations, we found that the overall form of [MATH] did not change and so the two charges were simply related in all of holographic models, i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-81-6': 'Hence we focus on the small angle charge [MATH] in the following discussion.', '1803.00172-1-81-7': "In particular, one goal was to see if this corner charge had a simple relation to any other known 'charges,' which provide a similar counting of degrees of freedom and might be accessed with more conventional probes of the theory, or if [MATH] is really a distinct quantity.", '1803.00172-1-82-0': 'Our approach was to study [MATH] for an extended holographic model involving higher curvature interactions in the bulk gravity theory, as described in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-82-1': 'In particular, we evaluated the corner term for an entangling surface with a sharp corner on the boundary of AdS[MATH], using holographic entanglement entropy ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-82-2': 'The final result, [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] gives [MATH] for the broad class of gravitational theories described by the action ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-82-3': "Our general result is proportional to [MATH] (i.e., the AdS scale squared over Newton's constant) but it is also a function of the eight dimensionless couplings appearing in the action ([REF]).", '1803.00172-1-82-4': 'Next, in section [REF], we evaluated several charges appearing in different physical quantities within the same holographic framework.', '1803.00172-1-82-5': 'In particular, we studied the analogous charges appearing in the universal terms in the EE of a strip and of a disk, in the thermal entropy density, and in the two-point function of the holographic stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-82-6': "All of these measures of degrees of freedom, as well as [MATH], are simply proportional to [MATH] with Einstein gravity in the bulk and so they can not be distinguished from one another in the corresponding holographic CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-82-7': 'However, each of these charges also acquires a distinct dependence on the additional gravitational couplings with higher curvature gravity in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-82-8': 'Our calculations were perturbative in the [MATH] and hence the results are only linear in these couplings.', '1803.00172-1-82-9': 'However, this still allowed us to distinguish the various different charges in the boundary CFT.', '1803.00172-1-82-10': 'Hence, this extended holographic model provides an interesting framework to investigate our goal stated above, namely, to determine if the corner charge can be considered distinct or if it has a simple relation to another known central charge.', '1803.00172-1-83-0': 'Of course, we do not have a top-down construction where the action ([REF]) emerges as the low energy effective action for, e.g., some string theory compactification.', '1803.00172-1-83-1': "Rather our perspective is that such extended holographic models provide an interesting framework to test general properties of CFT's, i.e., if there are certain properties common to all CFT's then they should be satisfied by the holographic CFT's defined by these models.", '1803.00172-1-83-2': 'This approach has found success in a number of interesting contexts, such as the discovery of the F-theorem [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-83-3': 'Below, we also look to test a simple conjecture, motivated by our holographic results, with calculations for free massless quantum field theories.', '1803.00172-1-84-0': 'Another caveat in our analysis is that for the generalized Lovelock theories ([REF]), the appropriate gravitational entropy functional to use in evaluating the HEE ([REF]) is given by eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-84-1': 'Recall that present evidence [CITATION] suggests that the general formula for the entropy functional proposed in [CITATION] must be further refined for higher curvature theories involving cubic and higher powers of the curvature.', '1803.00172-1-84-2': 'However, we argued that the use of eq. ([REF]) is well motivated by the somewhat complementary analysis of [CITATION] examining the second law of black hole thermodynamics in these higher curvature theories - see also [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-84-3': 'However, it would be useful to verify this more directly when a fuller understanding of HEE in higher curvature theories emerges.', '1803.00172-1-85-0': 'A summary of the ratios corresponding to the different charges computed in this paper with respect to [MATH] can be found in Table [REF].', '1803.00172-1-86-0': 'We have seen that our holographic calculations yield [MATH], where the latter is the coefficient of the universal term in the EE of a strip, as defined in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-86-1': 'However, this is a universal result that is expected to hold for any CFT on the basis of a conformal mapping which relates the two entanglement entropy calculations - see appendix [REF].', '1803.00172-1-86-2': 'Hence this result can be considered a check of our holographic calculations.', '1803.00172-1-87-0': 'On the other hand, the charge [MATH] corresponding to the universal constant in the EE of a disk is a distinct charge.', '1803.00172-1-87-1': 'Of course, the latter is the central charge which decreases monotonically in RG flows, according to the [MATH]-theorem [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-87-2': 'The independence of [MATH] and [MATH] is illustrated by eq. ([REF]), which shows that the ratio [MATH] depends on [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-87-3': 'Hence these two charges depend on the details of the corresponding boundary theories in different ways.', '1803.00172-1-87-4': 'Alternatively, the ratio is independent of the remaining four gravitational couplings, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-87-5': "Hence there are also broad classes of theories with the same ratio [MATH] but it is not a universal feature common to all CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-88-0': 'The thermal entropy density for the holographic theories was calculated as the entropy density of the corresponding AdS[MATH] planar black hole.', '1803.00172-1-88-1': 'In this case, eq. ([REF]) shows that [MATH] is not universal but only depends on [MATH], the coupling for the [MATH] interaction in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-88-2': 'However, the fact that this particular example produces a mismatch suggests that this ratio will also depend on other new couplings for more general higher curvature theories.', '1803.00172-1-88-3': 'In fact, our findings seem to suggest that the generalized Lovelock theories with [MATH] or 1 and arbitrary [MATH] will respect the agreement between the charges, whereas those with [MATH] will not.', '1803.00172-1-88-4': 'We have explicitly verified that this is the case for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-89-0': 'Eq. ([REF]) shows that the ratio [MATH] is the same for all of the holographic theories which we studied, where [MATH] is the central charge appearing in the two-point function ([REF]) of the stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-89-1': 'Hence eq. ([REF]) matches the result ([REF]) for Einstein gravity with [MATH], at least to first order in the gravitational couplings.', '1803.00172-1-89-2': "It is natural to conjecture that this ratio is a universal quantity for all CFT's, even beyond holography.", '1803.00172-1-89-3': 'Some further suggestive results can be found in [CITATION], which studied singular entangling surfaces in holographic models in higher dimensions.', '1803.00172-1-89-4': 'In particular, the holographic model examined there had Gauss-Bonnet gravity in the bulk and it was found that for an entangling surface with a conical singularity, [MATH] controls the coefficient for the universal contribution in the limit of a small opening angle.', '1803.00172-1-89-5': 'We will test this simple conjecture below with massless free field theories finding that this ratio is not quite the same in those simple field theories.', '1803.00172-1-89-6': "However, this comparison does support the idea that [MATH] provides an interesting normalization of the corner contribution when comparing different CFT's in three dimensions.", '1803.00172-1-90-0': "To close let us observe that a consequence of our results is that [MATH] and [MATH] are found to disagree in general for holographic CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-90-1': 'Supporting evidence of this disagreement for general holographic theories can be found in [CITATION], where it was shown that these two charges are not the same for quasi-topological gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-91-0': '## Shape of the extremal surface', '1803.00172-1-92-0': 'In our holographic investigation of the corner contribution, we found that none of the higher curvature interactions which we studied led to any modification in the functional form of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-92-1': 'Rather it remained exactly the same as in Einstein gravity, i.e., [MATH] where the constant [MATH] is given in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-92-2': 'This result is related to the fact that all of the corresponding entropy functionals were extremized by extremal area surfaces in the AdS[MATH] background, just as in Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-1-92-3': 'Further our discussion in section [REF] suggests that this result is not simply a consequence of working to first order in a perturbative treatment of the gravitational couplings.', '1803.00172-1-92-4': 'Hence one may wonder whether this is a general feature of HEE in the AdS[MATH] vacuum for any higher curvature theory of gravity in the bulk.', '1803.00172-1-92-5': 'However, we argue that the latter is, in fact, not a universal result.', '1803.00172-1-93-0': 'First we observe that the curvature tensor takes the simple form [EQUATION] in the AdS[MATH] background.', '1803.00172-1-93-1': 'Hence as in the examples in section [REF], the terms in the entropy functional constructed with background curvatures will reduce to an integral of some constant over the bulk surface [MATH], i.e., they multiply the Bekenstein-Hawking contribution by some constant factor.', '1803.00172-1-93-2': 'Similarly, any terms involving a mixture of background curvatures and extrinsic curvatures will reduce to an integral of some scalar constructed purely from extrinsic curvatures (and possibly derivatives of the extrinsic curvatures).', '1803.00172-1-93-3': 'Therefore, we should consider whether in general such extrinsic curvature terms can lead to modifications in the shape of [MATH] - and functional corrections to [MATH], as a consequence.', '1803.00172-1-93-4': 'Of course, the intuitive answer, which we confirm below, is that a sufficiently complicated contraction of extrinsic curvatures will have a nontrivial effect on the shape of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-94-0': 'Following the discussion in section [REF], we first observe that any term which contains two or more factors of the trace of the extrinsic curvature, e.g., [MATH], will always leave the extremal area surface unchanged.', '1803.00172-1-94-1': 'The reason is simply that [MATH] is the equation of motion determining the profile on an extremal area surface.', '1803.00172-1-94-2': 'Hence, the variation of a term with two or more factors of [MATH] will produce terms which still contain this factor and so will vanish on any extremal area surface.', '1803.00172-1-94-3': 'On the other hand, one might guess that if the term [MATH] appears in the entropy functional that it will modify the shape of the bulk surface, but we argue that in fact it also leaves the extremal area surface unchanged.', '1803.00172-1-94-4': 'This term is actually produced by a curvature squared interaction of the form [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-94-5': 'However, this term can be easily rewritten as a linear combination of [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] interactions, i.e., see eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-94-6': 'For a pure AdS[MATH] background, we have argued in section [REF] that extremal area surfaces always extremize the entropy functionals corresponding to each of these three interactions, so the same must be true with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-94-7': 'However, we find that terms of the form [MATH] with [MATH] are not extremized by the extremal area surface and so we expect contributions of this kind (if they appear in the HEE formula) will modify the functional form of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-94-8': 'Similarly, cyclic contractions of extrinsic curvatures, e.g., [MATH], would also modify the profile of the bulk surface so they would also change the functional form of the corner function.', '1803.00172-1-95-0': 'Hence it is relatively simple to find terms which, if they appear in the gravitational entropy functional, would modify the profile of the bulk surface in the calculation of HEE.', '1803.00172-1-95-1': 'Hence the general expression for the universal corner term for arbitrary high curvature theories might be expected to take the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] would be a new function of the opening angle which would depend on some gravitational couplings.', '1803.00172-1-95-2': 'If we consider the higher curvature terms as small corrections to Einstein gravity, as for the perturbative calculations in this paper, it should be clear that [MATH] would be highly suppressed with respect to the [MATH] contribution, since it would only start appearing with interactions that are cubic or higher-order in the curvature.', '1803.00172-1-95-3': 'On the other hand, as explained in appendix [REF], even if such functions correct the functional form of [MATH] for certain higher-order gravities, the small angle behavior of [MATH] is still constrained to take the form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-95-4': 'Further, as explained in the introduction, we will have [EQUATION] in the limit of a nearly smooth entangling curve.', '1803.00172-1-95-5': 'That is, eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) will still define the universal corner charges, [MATH] and [MATH], for any holographic theory irrespective of the details of the entropy functional.', '1803.00172-1-95-6': 'However, let us note that for Einstein gravity and for all of the holographic theories studied here, these charges are simply related by [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-95-7': 'In general high curvature theories where the corner term is modified as in eq. ([REF]), there will be no reason to expect that this simple relation still holds for these two charges.', '1803.00172-1-96-0': "Of course, we are not at present able to provide an explicit example of a higher curvature interaction which contributes such an 'interesting' extrinsic curvature term to the graviational entropy functional.", '1803.00172-1-96-1': 'However, in this regard, we are simply restricted by the current limitations in understanding how to construct the entropy functional given a particular interaction in the bulk action [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-96-2': 'Still we do see no reason why these more complicated extrinsic curvature terms can not be produced by sufficiently complicated higher curvature interactions.', '1803.00172-1-97-0': '## Comparison with QFT calculations', '1803.00172-1-98-0': "The holographic calculations performed here are expected to produce [MATH] for certain strongly coupled three-dimensional CFT's dual to our bulk gravity theories.", '1803.00172-1-98-1': 'On the other hand, similar field theory results are also available for a wide range values of [MATH] in the case of a free massless scalar and a free massless fermion [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-98-2': 'Further, it was argued [CITATION] that the holographic result for the corner contribution [MATH] with Einstein gravity qualitatively agrees with these free field results.', '1803.00172-1-98-3': 'Given how dissimilar the underlying field theories are in this comparison, even a qualitative agreement may seem somewhat surprising.', '1803.00172-1-98-4': 'However, recall that the behaviour of [MATH] is fixed on general grounds both for small angles and for [MATH], i.e., see eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), respectively.', '1803.00172-1-98-5': 'Further, given the universal form of [MATH] at least for the broad range of holographic theories considered in this paper, we find it interesting here to make a quantitative comparison of [MATH] for the holographic and free field theories.', '1803.00172-1-98-6': 'In order to make such a comparison, we must start by normalizing [MATH] for the various theories.', '1803.00172-1-98-7': 'A convenient choice is to consider [MATH] which will then approach [MATH] for small angles for any field theory.', '1803.00172-1-98-8': 'For all of the holographic theories which we studied, we will have [MATH] since the common factor of [MATH] in eq. ([REF]) cancels in the ratio.', '1803.00172-1-98-9': 'Of course, [MATH] is determined numerically by evaluating the integrals in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), while [MATH] is given by eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-98-10': 'The corresponding charges for the free field theories were determined in [CITATION] as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-98-11': 'Now the free field results shown in figures [REF] and [REF] represent Taylor expansions of [MATH] around [MATH] to fourteenth order, which were obtained in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-98-12': 'These expansions give a reliable enough approximation for values of the opening angle which are not too small.', '1803.00172-1-98-13': 'In particular, the figures also show the lattice results obtained for [MATH] at [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] in [CITATION] using the numerical method developed in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-99-0': 'In figures [REF] and [REF] we see, first of all, how the Taylor expansions for the free theories are in good agreement with the corresponding lattice results.', '1803.00172-1-99-1': 'Hence the red and blue lines in these figures can be reasonably trusted at least for angles larger than [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-99-2': 'As we see in figure [REF], the holographic function [MATH] turns out to agree with the corresponding free fermion result within a [MATH] over this whole range where the results are reliable.', '1803.00172-1-99-3': 'Similarly, the function for the free scalar deviates from the holographic result by no more than [MATH] in this range.', '1803.00172-1-99-4': 'In the small angle region, the three corner contributions normalized by [MATH] in figure [REF] will all approach [MATH] (shown as the black dashed line).', '1803.00172-1-99-5': 'Of course, we only see the latter behaviour is realized for the holographic result, for which we have the exact function over the whole range of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-99-6': 'The exact curves for the free scalar (fermion) would lie somewhere in between the black and the blue (red) curves in the intermediate region and so these curves will tend to lie slightly above those obtained with the Taylor series expansion around [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-99-7': 'Hence the exact results for the free fields would be in even better agreement with the holographic curve than we have estimated above.', '1803.00172-1-99-8': 'Figure [REF] is also useful to determine a better estimate of where the Taylor expansions stop being reliable.', '1803.00172-1-99-9': 'Focusing on the lattice results in this figure, one might expect that the ratios [MATH] for both the scalar and the fermion will decrease monotonically for increasing [MATH] over the full range from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-99-10': 'This would indicate that the expansions are starting to fail in the vicinity where their slopes become zero, i.e., around [MATH] for the fermion and [MATH] in the case of the scalar.', '1803.00172-1-100-0': 'As we have seen, the ratio [MATH] equals the Einstein gravity result ([REF]) for all the higher curvature theories considered here - at least, for perturbative calculations to linear order in the additional gravitational couplings.', '1803.00172-1-100-1': 'However, we might ask if this result applies quite generally for any three-dimensional CFT.', '1803.00172-1-100-2': 'Given that for the free field theories, we have at our disposal the values of [MATH] in eq. ([REF]), it is interesting to compare these corner charges to the corresponding values of [MATH], which can be found in [CITATION]: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-100-3': 'Hence the ratios become: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-100-4': 'All of these ratios are rather close to each other but we do not have precise agreement.', '1803.00172-1-100-5': 'In particular, the fermion result differs from the holographic one by approximately [MATH] whereas the scalar ratio is off by approximately [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-100-6': 'Of course, an open question which remains is whether this ratio is a universal quantity for all holographic theories, however, we can only begin to address this question when a better understanding is established for holographic entanglement entropy in general higher curvature theories.', '1803.00172-1-101-0': 'In fact, it was not only the ratio [MATH] but rather the entire function [MATH] which was universal for all our higher curvature theories.', '1803.00172-1-101-1': "Hence, even though we found that the universality of [MATH] did not extend beyond holographic CFT's, we may ask more broadly if there are any features of the corner contribution which are universal for general three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-101-2': 'Hence in figure [REF], we plot [MATH] for the free scalar (blue) and the free fermion (red).', '1803.00172-1-101-3': 'The figure also includes the corresponding lattice points as well as the points at [MATH], which correspond to [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-101-4': 'As can be expected from figures [REF] and [REF], we see that in general the corner contribution evolves slightly differently for the three cases as [MATH] runs from 0 to [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-101-5': 'The ratios plotted in figure [REF] are essentially the same in figure [REF] except that we have changed the normalization by considering [MATH] rather than [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-101-6': 'Hence again, the both ratios in the new figure seem to be monotionically decreasing starting from [MATH] at [MATH] - see eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-101-7': 'The remarkable feature in figure [REF] is that both curves seem to reach precisely 1 at [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-101-8': 'That is, it appears that the ratio [MATH] is equal for the two field theories and for our holographic theories!', '1803.00172-1-102-0': "Recall that we argued the behavior of [MATH] was constrained for general CFT's near [MATH] and eq. ([REF]) defined the charge [MATH] with [MATH].", '1803.00172-1-102-1': 'In particular, we found in eq. ([REF]) that for Einstein gravity [EQUATION] and so given the universal form of [MATH] for all our holographic theories in eq. ([REF]), we have [EQUATION] with [MATH] given again by eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-102-2': 'Further in all of our holographic theories, we also have a fixed ratio: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-102-3': 'We can easily compare this result with the ratio [MATH] for the free conformal scalar and the massless fermion, since [MATH] is simply the first nonvanishing coefficient in the Taylor expansions presented in [CITATION], and the corresponding values are [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-102-4': 'Hence using the values of [MATH] given in eq. ([REF]), the desired ratios become [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-102-5': 'Hence as expected from figure [REF], the free field ratios show a striking agreement with the holographic result, i.e., they agree with a precision of better than [MATH]!', '1803.00172-1-102-6': 'We might keep in mind that while the free field values for [MATH] in eq. ([REF]) are exact, the corresponding values of [MATH] in eq. ([REF]) are only the approximate results of a numerical computation [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-102-7': 'Hence the precision of the agreement between eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) is as good as could be expected.', '1803.00172-1-103-0': "These observations, originally made in [CITATION], led us to conjecture there that the ratio [MATH] is in fact a universal constant for all three-dimensional CFT's, i.e., [EQUATION] for general conformal field theories in three dimensions.", '1803.00172-1-103-1': 'This conjecture can be used to predict the exact values of [MATH] and [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-103-2': 'Of course, these values match the results shown in eq. ([REF]) within the accuracy limits set by the calculations in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-103-3': 'However, we can improve these results by going back to the original free field computations and evaluating the required integrals with an improved accuracy.', '1803.00172-1-103-4': 'The required calculations are described in appendix [REF] and we find that the agreement between our prediction for [MATH] and [MATH], given by eq. ([REF]), and the previous calculations for the free field results can be extended to an accuracy of one part in [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-103-5': 'We emphasize the required integrals ([REF]) and ([REF]) are extremely complicated and they are not even similar.', '1803.00172-1-103-6': 'Yet they seem to conspire to produce the simple rational numbers ([REF]) predicted by holography.', '1803.00172-1-103-7': 'As discussed in [CITATION], we feel this is striking evidence in favour of our new conjecture above!', '1803.00172-1-104-0': "While we have found that eq. ([REF]) applies both for the holographic theories and for free CFT's, it would of course be interesting to extend these calculations to other three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-104-1': 'For example, one might consider the [MATH] critical Wess-Zumino model.', '1803.00172-1-104-2': 'For this theory, [MATH] has been computed exactly using localization in [CITATION], finding [EQUATION] which yields [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-104-3': 'This same numerical value was also recently reproduced using the conformal bootstrap [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-104-4': 'Our conjecture ([REF]) would predict the corresponding value of [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-104-5': "Computing this quantity (or the analogous ones in other CFT's for which [MATH] is known, such as the [MATH] models) would provide a strong test for this conjecture [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-105-0': 'Let us also observe that the higher order coefficients in the Taylor expansions around [MATH] [CITATION] for the free scalar and the free fermion do not seem to exhibit any similar universal behaviour.', '1803.00172-1-105-1': 'In particular, these coefficients do not seem to be related in any simple way between the two theories, in contrast to the simple relation [MATH] above.', '1803.00172-1-105-2': 'We might mention that it was already observed in [CITATION] that their numerical results for these coefficients only seemed to differ by a factor of two, but no explanation was given.', '1803.00172-1-105-3': 'According to the conjecture ([REF]), the reason comes simply from the well-known result that [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-106-0': "More generally, the comparison shown in figure [REF] illustrates that [MATH] provides a useful normalization of the corner contribution when comparing results for different CFT's in three dimensions.", '1803.00172-1-106-1': 'In [CITATION], we also considered the Wilson-Fisher fixed points of the [MATH] models with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-106-2': 'In this case, numerical results [MATH] were available from state of the art numerical simulations of lattice Hamiltonians with the corresponding quantum critical points [CITATION], while conformal bootstrap methods were recently used to determine [MATH] with great accuracy for these theories [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-106-3': 'The agreement with the holographic value for [MATH] was better than [MATH] in all three cases [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-107-0': "Beyond pointing out a useful normalization by which the corner term for different CFT's can be compared, the holographic expression for [MATH] seems to provide a good benchmark with which to compare the analogous results for general three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-107-1': "As discussed above, we found a surprising agreement between the holographic results and those for both free and strongly interacting CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-107-2': "Of course, it would be interesting to extend these comparisons to other three-dimensional CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-107-3': 'For example, one might consider the [MATH] critical Wess-Zumino model discussed above.', '1803.00172-1-108-0': 'A further suggestive observation is the holographic result provides the smallest values of [MATH], e.g., in figure [REF].', '1803.00172-1-108-1': 'Hence it would be natural to investigate if the holographic result is a universal lower bound for any three-dimensional CFT.', '1803.00172-1-108-2': 'This conjecture would be similar to the celebrated KSS conjecture that [MATH] represents an absolute lower bound for any relativistic quantum field theory [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-108-3': "Of course, this bound was found by investigating holographic CFT's dual to Einstein gravity, but the appearance of higher curvature interactions in the bulk could produce violations of the conjectured bound [CITATION].", '1803.00172-1-108-4': 'In contrast, our holographic analysis here shows that [MATH] remains unaffected by a broad class of higher curvature terms.', '1803.00172-1-108-5': 'This provides a good motivation for further study of the issues surrounding the shape of the extremal surface appearing in the holographic calculation of [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-108-6': 'Certainly, if the corresponding bulk surface is no longer the same as in Einstein gravity, this would modify the functional form of [MATH] and hence the lower bound might be violated for some values of the bulk couplings.', '1803.00172-1-109-0': 'We note that the conjectured universality of [MATH] is a rather striking result since [MATH] characterizes the EE, which can generally be regarded as a nonlocal quantity, while [MATH] is defined by a local correlation function ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-109-1': 'However, we expect [CITATION] that the universal ratio in eq. ([REF]) can be derived using the techniques developed in [CITATION], which examine changes in the EE induced by small perturbations of the geometry and couplings.', '1803.00172-1-109-2': 'In this situation, it is clear that these small variations of the EE are indeed controlled by local correlators.', '1803.00172-1-109-3': 'To conclude, let us add that holographic calculations suggest that similar universal behaviour also arises in higher dimensions [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-109-4': 'In particular, we can use the holographic results for the quadratic correction to the universal term arising from deformations of spherical entangling surfaces obtained in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-110-0': 'We wish to thank Horacio Casini for providing us with the free field results and lattice data points for [MATH], which were used in figures [REF], [REF] and [REF] as well as the explicit integrals for [MATH] and [MATH] in appendix [REF].', '1803.00172-1-110-1': 'We are also thankful to Nikolay Bobev, Horacio Casini, Ana Cueto, Damian Galante, Tarun Grover, Kris Jensen, Ann B. Kallin, Oscar Lasso, Patrick Meessen, Roger Melko, Mark Mezei, Tomas Ortin, Pedro F. Ramirez, Misha Smolkin, Antony Speranza, Marika Taylor and especially William Witczak-Krempa for useful discussions and comments.', '1803.00172-1-110-2': "PB thanks Perimeter's Visiting Graduate Fellows Program and Perimeter Institute, where most of the project was carried out, for its kind hospitality.", '1803.00172-1-110-3': 'Research at Perimeter Institute is supported by the Government of Canada through Industry Canada and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research Innovation.', '1803.00172-1-110-4': "Research at IFT is supported by the Spanish MINECO's Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa Programme under grant SEV-2012-0249.", '1803.00172-1-110-5': 'The work of PB has also been supported by the JAE-predoc grant JAEPre 2011 00452 and partially by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Education grant FPA2012-35043-C02-01, the Comunidad de Madrid grant HEPHACOS S2009ESP-1473, and the Spanish Consolider-Ingenio 2010 program CPAN CSD2007-00042.', '1803.00172-1-110-6': 'RCM acknowledges support from an NSERC Discovery grant and funding from the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.', '1803.00172-1-111-0': '# Conventions and notation', '1803.00172-1-112-0': 'Here we outline our conventions and notation for the calculations in sections [REF] and [REF].', '1803.00172-1-112-1': 'Greek indices run over the entire AdS[MATH] background, whereas Latin letters from the second half of the alphabet [MATH] represent directions along the extremal surface [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-112-2': 'Here [MATH] is a (co)dimension-two bulk surface with a pair of independent orthonormal vectors orthogonal to it [MATH]), where the hatted indices from the beginning of the Latin alphabet denote tangent indices in the transverse space, so that [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-112-3': 'Tangent vectors to [MATH] are defined in the usual way as [MATH], being [MATH] and [MATH] coordinates in the full AdS[MATH] background and along the surface, respectively.', '1803.00172-1-112-4': 'The corresponding induced metric on the surface is thus given by [MATH] (and its determinant [MATH]).', '1803.00172-1-112-5': 'The extrinsic curvatures associated to the two normal vectors [MATH] are given by [MATH], where [MATH] is the covariant derivative compatible with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-112-6': 'Also, we use [MATH] to denote the trace of each extrinsic curvature defined through [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-112-7': 'Finally, with [MATH], we mean the sum of the squares of the two extrinsic curvatures: [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-112-8': 'The transverse metric can be defined as [MATH], and allows us to project bulk tensors in the transverse directions, e.g., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-113-0': 'In the calculations of the corner contribution in section [REF], we write Euclidean AdS[MATH] in Poincare coordinates as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-1': 'The induced metric on surfaces [MATH] parametrized as [MATH], [MATH], such as those suitable for the entangling surface with a corner, reads [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-113-2': 'From the above, one finds [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-3': 'The resulting orthonormal vectors orthogonal to the surface read [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-4': 'For our pure AdS[MATH] background, we find the following expression for the projection of the Ricci tensor appearing in eq. ([REF]) [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-5': 'The extrinsic curvature associated to [MATH] vanishes, whereas that corresponding to [MATH] turns out to be [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-6': 'From this we can easily obtain the contraction appearing in eq. ([REF]) [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-7': 'Finally, the intrinsic Ricci scalar evaluated with the metric [MATH] on the bulk surface reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-113-8': 'From the above expression and eq. ([REF]), it is straightforward to verify that the product [MATH] is a total derivative.', '1803.00172-1-113-9': 'Indeed, we find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-114-0': '# From the corner to the strip', '1803.00172-1-115-0': "As we used in the main text, the small angle limit of [MATH] defines a universal charge [MATH], which can be used to distinguish different CFT's.", '1803.00172-1-115-1': 'The form of eq. ([REF]) is fixed for general theories due to the existence of a conformal map relating the corner geometry to a strip.', '1803.00172-1-115-2': 'This mapping is discussed in detail in Appendix A of [CITATION] and we only review the salient points here.', '1803.00172-1-115-3': 'As a consequence of this mapping, the expressions for the universal terms in the entanglement entropy match for both geometries, at least in the limit of small [MATH] or a narrow strip width.', '1803.00172-1-115-4': 'However, as we will see below, this mapping does not fix the form of [MATH] over the entire range of the opening angle.', '1803.00172-1-116-0': 'Let us now describe the conformal mapping: Let the CFT be defined in the background geometry which is simply [MATH], with the coordinates used in section [REF], [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-116-1': 'If we make the coordinate transformation, [MATH] and [MATH], the line element above becomes [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-116-2': 'Next we make the coordinate change [MATH] and remove the overall factor [MATH] with a Weyl transformation, to find the geometry [EQUATION] with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-116-3': 'Of course, this conformal transformation is the usual exponential map which takes [MATH] to [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-0': 'The corner region for which we calculated the entanglement entropy in section [REF] was defined in the original coordinates ([REF]) as [MATH] and so in terms of the polar coordinates ([REF]), this region becomes [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-1': 'Finally in the cylindrical background ([REF]), the corner region is mapped to an infinite strip: [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-2': 'In this geometry, the density matrix would be represented by a path integral of the CFT over the cylinder with open boundary conditions imposed along the strip, i.e., on surfaces just above and below [MATH], along the entire length of [MATH] and in the range [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-3': 'Hence the entire entanglement entropy ([REF]), including both the universal and nonuniversal contributions, for the corner geometry in [MATH] is readily related to that for the strip in the cylinder geometry [MATH], as discussed in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-117-4': 'However, we would like instead to relate the entanglement entropy of the corner region to that of a strip in flat space [MATH], as was discussed in section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-117-5': 'This is where the limit of small opening angle becomes important.', '1803.00172-1-117-6': 'When [MATH], the separation between both sides of the strip is much smaller than the size of the sphere and the local radius of curvature, i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-7': 'Hence the latter scale is negligible and to leading order the entanglement entropy resembles that for a strip in flat space, i.e., [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are regulator scales introduced to cut-off the length of the strip in the positive and negative [MATH] directions [CITATION] - compare to eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-117-8': 'Given the preceding transformations, we see that the universal contribution (proportional to [MATH]) is mapped to [EQUATION] where we have made the natural substitutions: [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-117-9': 'We emphasize that this expression only applies for [MATH] and hence we have recovered eq. ([REF]) for the corner contribution with [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-118-0': 'Let us add that the coordinate transformation in the bulk geometry implementing the conformal mapping between the two boundary metrics ([REF]) and ([REF]) can be found as follows: The AdS[MATH] geometry can be described as a hyperbola embedded in the five-dimensional Minkowski space [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-118-1': 'AdS[MATH] is defined now as the subspace [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-118-2': 'This constraint can be solved writing [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and the induced metric on the hyperbola reduces to the Poincare coordinates on AdS[MATH], given in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-118-3': 'On the other hand, the constraint ([REF]) is also satisfied by [MATH], [MATH], in which case the induced metric becomes [EQUATION] which is the AdS[MATH] geometry in global coordinates.', '1803.00172-1-118-4': 'Stripping off a scale factor of [MATH] at large radius, the resulting boundary metric matches that in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-118-5': 'These bulk coordinates can be used to compute the HEE for the kink in essentially the same way as the calculation of section [REF].', '1803.00172-1-119-0': '# [MATH] gravity', '1803.00172-1-120-0': 'We parmeterize our general [MATH] gravity action [CITATION] as [EQUATION] where we have made the cosmological constant and the Einstein term explict.', '1803.00172-1-120-1': 'We have also introduced a dimensionless coupling [MATH] as a useful device to indicate the combined strength of the higher curvature contributions in the following.', '1803.00172-1-120-2': 'The function [MATH] can be a general function of the Ricci scalar, which has a Taylor series expansion beginning at order [MATH] or higher.', '1803.00172-1-120-3': 'Our perspective is that [MATH] is parameterized by various dimensionless couplings and the necessary dimensions are provided by the cosmological constant scale [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-120-4': 'For example, we would incorporate the three Ricci scalar terms in the action ([REF]) as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-120-5': 'In this simple class of theories, the gravitational entropy functional is simply given by the Wald entropy [CITATION], i.e., [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-120-6': 'For our pure AdS[MATH] background, [MATH] will be just a constant, with [MATH] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-120-7': 'Hence determining the HEE will amount to finding the extremal area surface and evaluating eq. ([REF]) with an additional overall coefficient of [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-120-8': 'Hence with a corner in the boundary entangling surface, the expression for the HEE will be a trivial generalization of eq. ([REF]) with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-120-9': 'However, we emphasize that the same overall factor ([REF]) will appear in front of the entanglement entropy for any entangling surface and, in particular, for the circle.', '1803.00172-1-120-10': 'Further, it can be shown that the planar black hole solution ([REF]) to the (four-dimensional) Einstein equations will also be a solution of the [MATH] Lagrangian.', '1803.00172-1-120-11': 'Hence the thermal entropy, which is computed by evaluating the horizon entropy using the same Wald formula ([REF]), will produce the Einstein gravity result ([REF]), again up to an overall factor given precisely by [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-120-12': 'Hence for this class of theories, the ratios [MATH] and [MATH] will match those in Einstein gravity, as given in eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), respectively.', '1803.00172-1-120-13': 'Note that these results apply even when the strength of the gravitational couplings is large, i.e., the fact that these ratios do not change is not restricted to linear order in perturbative calculations.', '1803.00172-1-121-0': 'In order to see what happens with the two-point function ([REF]) of the stress tensor, we can follow the steps of section ([REF]) in order to find the linearized equations of motion for the massless spin-two graviton in the AdS[MATH] background.', '1803.00172-1-121-1': 'A remarkable fact about our previous linearized equations ([REF]) was that none of the theories considered except that with an [MATH] interaction produced terms involving higher-order derivatives acting on [MATH] after we imposed the transverse traceless gauge.', '1803.00172-1-121-2': 'That is, in general, these theories do produce fourth-order derivatives of [MATH] in the linearized equations, but nevertheless these contributions all vanish in the AdS[MATH] background, with the exception of the [MATH] term, after we set [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-121-3': 'As an illustrative exercise, we explicitly demonstrate how this works in the case of [MATH] gravity, where the same behavior is encountered.', '1803.00172-1-121-4': 'The full linearized equations arising from eq. ([REF]) read [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and where the linearized Ricci tensor and Ricci scalar can be written as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-121-5': 'As we can see, these equations involve fourth-order derivatives of the perturbation and its trace.', '1803.00172-1-121-6': 'However, in the transverse traceless gauge, it is straightforward to see that [MATH] vanishes and hence the fourth-order terms, which all appear in [MATH], also vanish.', '1803.00172-1-121-7': 'The equations ([REF]) are then notably simpler and after some massaging, they yield the result: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is again the linearized Einstein tensor in this gauge, as in eq. ([REF]), and [MATH] is defined in eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-121-8': 'Hence with this exercise, we see all the fourth-order terms explicitly disappear from the linearized equations.', '1803.00172-1-121-9': 'Further, we can see the same overall constant ([REF]) will appear here in [MATH], as appeared in the corner contribution above.', '1803.00172-1-121-10': "Therefore the ratio [MATH] is again unchanged from the Einstein value ([REF]) in the holographic CFT's dual to [MATH] gravity.", '1803.00172-1-122-0': 'When we impose the transverse traceless gauge, we are implicitly eliminating any new degrees of freedom and focusing entirely on the physical spin-two graviton.', '1803.00172-1-122-1': 'However, we know that [MATH] gravity introduces an additional scalar degree of freedom [CITATION] - in particular, the trace of the metric perturbation becomes a propagating massive scalar field.', '1803.00172-1-122-2': 'Hence it is interesting exercise to relax the transverse traceless condition to see the extra scalar emerge.', '1803.00172-1-122-3': 'In order to find its equation, we can take the trace of the full linearized equations ([REF]) without any gauge fixing.', '1803.00172-1-122-4': 'The result is [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-122-5': 'At this point, it is convenient to choose the gauge condition, [EQUATION] because this choice actually eliminates the fourth-order derivatives in the previous equation.', '1803.00172-1-122-6': 'The remaining second-order equation then simplifies to [EQUATION] which corresponds to the equation of motion for a massive scalar field, as long as [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-122-7': 'That is, the trace [MATH] has become a dynamical degree of freedom in this case.', '1803.00172-1-122-8': 'On the other hand, if [MATH] (e.g., as in Einstein gravity), the above equation is not dynamical and would simply impose the tracelessness condition [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-122-9': 'Hence the spin-two graviton would be the only propagating degree of freedome in this case.', '1803.00172-1-123-0': 'We should also consider the traceless part of the metric perturbation, i.e., [EQUATION] with the gauge condition ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-123-1': 'Combining this choice of gauge with eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we find [EQUATION] which is almost the expected equation for the massless spin-2 field [MATH], i.e., eq. ([REF]), except that it includes a source term that is linear in the trace [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-123-2': 'We can nevertheless define a new traceless tensor satisfying an equation with the same form as eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-123-3': 'This is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-123-4': 'Indeed, using ([REF]) and ([REF]), it can be shown that this tensor satisfies [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-123-5': 'Hence [MATH] represents the physical massless spin-2 graviton coupling to the holographic stress tensor.', '1803.00172-1-123-6': 'Note that the redefinition in eq. ([REF]) is trivial whenever [MATH] (as in Einstein gravity), so in that case, the traceless perturbation [MATH] already corresponds to the massless spin-two mode.', '1803.00172-1-124-0': 'It is interesting to consider the scalar degree of freedom more explicitly.', '1803.00172-1-124-1': 'Hence let us consider the case of [MATH] gravity, for which we write [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-124-2': 'Hence we have [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-124-3': 'Further, as noted in section [REF], the solution of eq. ([REF]) is simply [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-124-4': 'Combining these expressions in eq. ([REF]) then yields [EQUATION] and hence [MATH] obeys the standard equation of motion for a free scalar with mass: [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-124-5': 'Using the standard holographic dictionary [CITATION], [MATH] is dual to a scalar operator in the three-dimensional boundary CFT with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-124-6': 'Hence if [MATH] is small and positive, [MATH] corresponds to a highly irrelevant operator with [MATH] and with positive norm.', '1803.00172-1-124-7': 'If [MATH] is small and negative, [MATH] becomes imaginary indicating that the standard AdS/CFT dictionary is breaking down.', '1803.00172-1-124-8': 'In this limit, [MATH] is a ghost-like scalar with a tachyonic mass which exceeds the Breitenloner-Freedman bound [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-124-9': 'Hence the bulk theory would be inherently unstable if we tried to interpret the corresponding [MATH] gravity as a complete theory rather than as an effective low energy theory.', '1803.00172-1-124-10': 'Further, for [MATH] gravity, eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) reduce to [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] which is in agreement with the results obtained in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-125-0': '# Free field results for [MATH]', '1803.00172-1-126-0': 'In [CITATION], the first fourteen coefficients in Taylor expansion of [MATH] around [MATH] were computed for a free scalar and a free Dirac fermion using quantum field theory techniques.', '1803.00172-1-126-1': 'Of course, in eq. ([REF]), we identified the first coefficient in this expansion as the charge [MATH], i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-126-2': 'In the discussion section, we saw that the ratio of [MATH] with the central charge [MATH] in the two-point function of the stress tensor ([REF]) appears to satisfy a universal relation of the form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-126-3': 'This analytic result was obtained using holographic techniques in the previous sections, and holds for all the higher-order gravity theories which were considered in this paper.', '1803.00172-1-126-4': 'In addition, the same ratio was obtained for the free scalar and the free fermion with an accuracy better than [MATH] using the results for [MATH] in [CITATION] and for [MATH] in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-1-126-5': 'The values for [MATH] and [MATH] are exact - see eq. ([REF]).', '1803.00172-1-126-6': 'However, the values of [MATH] and [MATH] can only be computed numerically.', '1803.00172-1-126-7': 'In particular, they can be obtained by evaluation of the following (monstruous) integrals [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] denotes the usual digamma function i.e., [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-126-8': 'Notice that eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) look very different and without further insight, there is no reason to believe that these integrals should produce simple fractions or that the results should agree up to a factor [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-127-0': 'We can compute these integrals ([REF]) and ([REF]) numerically with arbitrary precision (although, of course, the computation time increases considerably as we increase the precision).', '1803.00172-1-127-1': 'Our results indicate that both eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) exactly produce the results predicted assuming that [MATH] is given by the universal constant in eq. ([REF]), i.e., [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-1-127-2': 'We have verified this result to a precision of approximately one part in [MATH].', '1803.00172-1-127-3': 'In particular, we find [EQUATION] where the numbers in brackets are out of the range of accuracy of our computation.'}
{'1803.00172-2-0-0': '# Introduction', '1803.00172-2-1-0': 'It has been known for a very long time that the gravitational action needs to be supplemented with boundary terms in order for it to define a well-posed variational problem [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-1': 'Well-posedness means that the solution of the equations of motion with some fixed boundary conditions must be the only extremum of the action when we perform variations that keep fixed the boundary data [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-2': 'Although the surface terms do not modify the equations of motion, they play a crucial role in the Hamiltonian formalism [CITATION] or if we want to define a partition function for gravity [CITATION], something which is particularly relevant, for example, in the context of holography [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-3': 'In the case of Einstein gravity, the appropriate surface contribution for spacelike and timelike boundaries is the well-known Gibbons-Hawking-York (GHY) term [CITATION], which involves the integral over the boundary of the trace of its extrinsic curvature.', '1803.00172-2-1-4': 'However, situations more general than spacelike or timelike boundaries may appear.', '1803.00172-2-1-5': 'For example, the GHY term ensures the well-posedness of the variational principle when the boundary is smooth, but in certain cases the boundary may contain corners - joints between different segments of the boundary where there is a discontinuity in the normal vector.', '1803.00172-2-1-6': 'In such cases, additional terms have to be added to the action in order to account for the nonsmoothness of the boundary [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-7': 'These joints appear naturally in some situations, e.g. when computing the Euclidean action of certain configurations [CITATION] or when defining a quasi-local energy of the gravitational field in a spatially bounded region [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-8': 'A more recent motivation comes from the "complexity=action" proposal [CITATION] in the context of holography, which involves the computation of the gravitational action in the so-called Wheeler-DeWitt (WDW) patch of asymptotically Anti-de Sitter spaces [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-1-9': 'Besides containing joints, the WDW patch is delimited by null boundaries, where the standard GHY surface term is not applicable.', '1803.00172-2-1-10': 'Fortunately, the null boundary terms for Einstein gravity were recently described [CITATION], but it was found that these terms present ambiguities associated to the freedom to choose the parametrization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-2-1-11': 'The definitive step came in [CITATION], where the complete gravitational action with all kind of boundaries and joints was studied and also a prescription to cure the ambiguities of the null boundaries - by demanding additivity of the action - was introduced.', '1803.00172-2-2-0': 'Much less is known about surface terms in the case of higher-derivative gravity.', '1803.00172-2-2-1': 'Several generalizations of the GHY term exist for some theories, e.g. [CITATION], but the variational problem is not fully understood in general because these theories usually contain additional degrees of freedom, e.g. [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-2-2': 'As a consequence, it is unclear which variables one should keep fixed on the boundary.', '1803.00172-2-2-3': 'An exception to this is Lovelock gravity [CITATION], which is the most general higher-curvature theory of gravity whose equations of motion are of second-order.', '1803.00172-2-2-4': 'This crucial property ensures that it is possible to obtain a well-posed variational principle for Lovelock gravity upon the addition of some appropriate boundary terms.', '1803.00172-2-2-5': 'In the case of spacelike and timelike boundaries, the surface terms were independently constructed by Myers [CITATION] and Teitelboim and Zanelli [CITATION] - we will review them in section [REF].', '1803.00172-2-2-6': 'However, there is still work to be done in order to understand Lovelock variational principle in the most general region: the surface terms for null boundaries are not yet known, and the contribution from joints is also unknown for any kind of boundary.', '1803.00172-2-3-0': "As a step forward into comprehending Lovelock's action in the most general case, in this work we compute the joint terms when the boundary contains spacelike and timelike segments.", '1803.00172-2-3-1': 'However, we will see that an important part of the result is clearly generalizable to the case of joints involving null segments.', '1803.00172-2-4-0': 'The paper is organized as follows.', '1803.00172-2-4-1': 'Next we summarize how to compute the action in Lovelock gravity in the presence of joints, while the detailed derivation of this result is addressed in section [REF].', '1803.00172-2-4-2': 'In subsection [REF] we review the surface terms in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-2-4-3': 'In subsections [REF] and [REF] we compute the contribution of timelike joints and of spacelike joints of a special type by using the smoothing method of [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-4-4': 'In subsection [REF] we show how to generalize these contributions to all kind of joints, and even to joints involving null boundaries.', '1803.00172-2-4-5': 'In section [REF] we explore the consequences of this result for holographic complexity of global AdS in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-2-4-6': 'We compute the contribution to the complexity from the joints and from the bulk of the WDW patch and we identify universal terms in the cutoff expansion.', '1803.00172-2-4-7': 'Although the null surface terms are not yet known, we argue that probably they will not change this result.', '1803.00172-2-4-8': 'We discuss the results obtained in section [REF].', '1803.00172-2-5-0': '## The complete Lovelock action', '1803.00172-2-6-0': 'Let [MATH] be a pseudo-Riemannian manifold whose boundary is composed of nonsmoothly glued segments [MATH] which we allow to be spacelike or timelike, but not null.', '1803.00172-2-6-1': 'The intersection of two of these segments is a codimension 2 surface that we denote by [MATH] and where there is a discontinuity in the normal vector.', '1803.00172-2-6-2': 'Alternatively, we can think of [MATH] as the common boundary of these segments [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-6-3': 'In [MATH] dimensions there are [MATH] independent terms that can be added to the Lovelock action, which in general will be a linear combination of the form [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-6-4': 'Then, the variational problem is well-posed if the [MATH]-th action [MATH] is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-6-5': 'Let us explain every term in this expression', '1803.00172-2-7-0': 'For example, for Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity the action (including only spacelike joints) reads explicitly [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-7-1': 'Note that the contribution from the joint contains the Jacobson-Myers entropy density [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-8-0': '### Conventions', '1803.00172-2-9-0': 'The metric has mostly [MATH] signature: [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-9-1': 'The space-time dimension is [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-9-2': 'We use Greek letters to denote spacetime indices [MATH], Latin letters [MATH] to denote boundary indices and capital letters [MATH] to denote indices on the joints [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-9-3': 'The covariant derivative is defined by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-9-4': 'The curvature is defined by [EQUATION] and similarly for the different intrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-2-9-5': 'In terms of the Christoffel symbols it reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-10-0': '# Contribution of joints in the Lovelock action', '1803.00172-2-11-0': 'In this section we derive the gravitational action ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-11-1': 'In [REF] we review the surface terms for timelike and spacelike boundaries in Lovelock gravity and in [REF] and [REF] we compute the contribution from the joints by taking an appropriate limit in the surface term.', '1803.00172-2-11-2': 'This method is only applicable to some kinds of spacelike joints - those that we will call of type I -, so in [REF] we generalize the result to all kinds of joints.', '1803.00172-2-11-3': 'The method that we use to obtain the general result also gives us relevant information when the boundaries are null, so that we are able to derive the joint term ([REF]) in that case as well.', '1803.00172-2-12-0': '## Variational problem in Lovelock gravity', '1803.00172-2-13-0': 'Lovelock gravity in [MATH] dimensions is given by the bulk action [EQUATION] where [MATH] are arbitrary constants and the dimensionally extended Euler densities (ED) [MATH] are defined as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-13-1': 'The first cases are [MATH], [MATH], this is, the Ricci scalar and Gauss-Bonnet (GB) terms respectively.', '1803.00172-2-13-2': 'Note that [MATH] vanishes identically for [MATH], and it is topological for [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-14-0': 'Let us compute the variation of the [MATH]-th Lovelock action [MATH] with respect to the metric.', '1803.00172-2-14-1': "Assuming that the space-time manifold [MATH] has spacelike or timelike boundaries, we find [EQUATION] where we have used Stokes' theorem in the second term.", '1803.00172-2-14-2': 'Here, the volume element of the boundary is [MATH], where [MATH] is the outward-directed normal 1-form to the boundary [MATH] with [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-14-3': 'Note that this implies that for spacelike boundaries the normal vector [MATH] is inward-directed: it points to the future when the boundary is in the past of [MATH] and vice versa [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-14-4': 'Also, the induced metric on [MATH] is given by [MATH], and we have introduced the tensors [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-14-5': 'Note that the equations of motion for Lovelock gravity are [EQUATION] which are of second order in derivatives of the metric.', '1803.00172-2-14-6': 'In order to work with the surface terms it is useful to introduce a basis of tangent vectors [MATH] in the boundary [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-14-7': 'These satisfy [MATH] and we can write the induced metric on the boundary as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-14-8': 'Now, in order to have a well-posed variational problem we must demand that the action is stationary around solutions of the equations of motion for variations satisfying [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-14-9': 'Note that this does not imply [MATH], nor [MATH], so the variational problem ([REF]) is not well-posed.', '1803.00172-2-14-10': 'It is known that for spacelike or timelike boundaries the Lovelock action becomes well-posed if one adds to it the following boundary contribution [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and where [MATH] is the curvature of the induced metric [MATH] and [MATH] is the extrinsic curvature of the boundary, defined as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-14-11': 'Different derivations of this result can be found in the literature [CITATION], but for the sake of completeness, in appendix A we show with a direct computation that when this boundary term is added to the action, the total variation reads [EQUATION] for certain [MATH] that we do not worry about, and the expression for [MATH] can be found in the appendix.', '1803.00172-2-14-12': 'The boundary as a whole is a closed hypersurface, so when it is smooth the total derivative terms vanish and the variational problem is well-posed.', '1803.00172-2-14-13': 'However, if the boundary is composed of several pieces nonsmoothly glued, these terms play a role, as they contribute differently in every segment.', '1803.00172-2-14-14': "By using Stokes' theorem again we may rewrite [MATH] as an integral over the boundary of every segment - a joint -, and the task would then be to express this contribution as the variation of a quantity defined on the joint.", '1803.00172-2-14-15': 'Then, we must subtract this quantity in the action in order to obtain a well-posed variational problem.', '1803.00172-2-14-16': 'However, this process is considerably non-straightforward, and in order to obtain these corner or joint contributions we may use a different method.', '1803.00172-2-14-17': 'A possible approach, first used by Hayward [CITATION], consists in considering a smoothed version of the boundary, in which no corner terms are necessary, and at the end take the limit in which the boundary becomes sharp.', '1803.00172-2-14-18': 'In the case of Euclidean signature this method works for any joint, but in Lorentzian signature it has the disadvantage that it can only be applied to certain kinds of joints.', '1803.00172-2-14-19': 'We distinguish between type I joints, which can be replaced by an smooth boundary in which the normal vector interpolates continuously between one side and the other of the joint, and type II joints for which this is not possible, because the normal would become null at certain point.', '1803.00172-2-14-20': 'Hence, the smoothing procedure only works for those of type I and we should use the variational method for type II joints.', '1803.00172-2-14-21': 'In the two next sections we are going to use the smoothing method in order to determine the contribution from type I joints, but afterwards, in section [REF], we will see that the result can be straightforwardly generalized for type II joints as well.', '1803.00172-2-15-0': '## Timelike joints', '1803.00172-2-16-0': 'Let us consider the case in which the joint has two spacelike normals.', '1803.00172-2-16-1': 'This is always the case for Euclidean signature, while for Lorentzian signature we say that the joint is a timelike codimension 2 surface, since it contains a timelike tangent vector.', '1803.00172-2-16-2': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be the segments of boundary that intersect at the joint [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-3': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be the normal 1-forms in each segment and let us define [MATH] as the angle in which the normal changes at the joint.', '1803.00172-2-16-4': 'It will be useful to introduce as well the vectors [MATH] and [MATH] which are tangent to [MATH] and [MATH] respectively and which are normal to [MATH] pointing outwards their respective segment - see Figure [REF] (a).', '1803.00172-2-16-5': 'Hence, the orthonormal systems at the joint will be related according to [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-6': 'Then, following [CITATION] we are going to replace the joint by a cap of certain size [MATH], apply the boundary term ([REF]) to this smoothed boundary and then take the limit in which the cap becomes a sharp corner, this is, [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-7': 'The smoothed boundary can be split in two parts: [MATH], so that [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-8': 'The first integral involves an smooth surface when we take the size of the cap to zero.', '1803.00172-2-16-9': 'Let us then evaluate the second integral.', '1803.00172-2-16-10': 'The easiest way to proceed is to consider a locally Gaussian coordinate frame, in which we can always choose the metric to have the form [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-11': 'Here [MATH] represents a polar "radial" coordinate from certain axis and [MATH] represents rotation around this axis -see Figure [REF] (b).', '1803.00172-2-16-12': 'Note that [MATH] is the normal to [MATH], while [MATH] is the induced metric.', '1803.00172-2-16-13': 'A set of constraints is obtained by demanding regularity of the metric at the axis [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-14': 'The first two conditions imply that [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-15': 'In addition, in order to avoid a conical singularity we must have [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-16': 'Now, in this coordinate frame the extrinsic curvature of the cap takes the particularly simple form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-17': 'Raising one index with [MATH], the non-vanishing components are, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-18': 'Note that [MATH] is actually the extrinsic curvature of the joint [MATH] associated to the normal [MATH]: [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-19': 'On the other hand, the component [MATH] diverges as [MATH] in the limit [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-20': 'However, the volume element reads [MATH], so that it goes to zero in that limit.', '1803.00172-2-16-21': 'Therefore, only the terms linear in [MATH] will give a non-vanishing contribution.', '1803.00172-2-16-22': 'Terms with more than one [MATH] would be divergent, but there are not such terms due to the antisymmetric character of the boundary contribution ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-16-23': 'Before taking the limit [MATH] in ([REF]), let us rewrite the intrinsic curvature in terms of the spacetime curvature and of the extrinsic curvature, so that ([REF]) takes the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the projection of the [MATH]-dimensional curvature onto the boundary.', '1803.00172-2-16-24': 'Since we assume the curvature to be regular, the only divergences come now from the extrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-2-16-25': 'If we expand this expression we get [EQUATION] where the coefficients are [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-26': 'Then, taking into account the previous observations we get the following result: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the volume element on [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-27': 'Now, we may express the integrand using only intrinsic indices [MATH] of the joint [MATH], so that [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-28': 'On the other hand, since [MATH] is a local gaussian coordinate, the integral can only be performed within the local coordinate patch.', '1803.00172-2-16-29': 'However, we may just add up all the contributions from different patches in order to obtain the global integration along the cap, so that [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-30': 'Let us also introduce the schematic notation [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-31': 'In this way, we can write [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-32': 'Now, in the limit [MATH] the extrinsic curvatures are ill-defined since they depend on the angle [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-33': 'However, the integration can be actually performed by noting the following.', '1803.00172-2-16-34': 'The normal [MATH] to the cap can be spanned by a linear combination of two different normals living in the [MATH]-plane: in particular we may use [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-35': 'Since [MATH], we must have [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-36': 'Also, the normal has unit norm [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-37': 'In addition, the angle theta is defined by [EQUATION] but [MATH] and [MATH], so that we conclude [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-38': 'Let us choose the [MATH] sign, which corresponds to positive orientation, so that we can write the normal [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-39': 'In this way, [MATH] is interpolating between [MATH] and [MATH] when [MATH] goes from [MATH] to [MATH] - see Figure [REF] (b).', '1803.00172-2-16-40': 'Also, this implies that the extrinsic curvature of [MATH] associated to [MATH] can be decomposed in terms of those of [MATH] and [MATH]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is a basis of tangent vectors of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-41': 'Since [MATH] and [MATH] are two extrinsic curvatures of [MATH] associated to two orthogonal directions, the Gauss-Codazzi equations read [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the intrinsic curvature of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-42': 'Now we are ready to compute the integral along the angle: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-43': 'In order to proceed, it is convenient to write the trigonometric functions in terms of complex exponentials and then expand the product by using the binomial coefficients.', '1803.00172-2-16-44': 'We obtain a polynomial in powers of [MATH] which includes a constant term which is special as we are going to see.', '1803.00172-2-16-45': 'Then, the integration is straightforward and it yields [EQUATION] where in the first line we have the special term which is proportional to the total angle [MATH], while the other terms depend on trigonometric functions of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-46': 'Now, by using the expression of the coefficients [MATH] ([REF]), we see that [EQUATION] and we can perform explicitly the summation appearing in the first line, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-47': 'Then, according to ([REF]), we see that the combination between parenthesis is precisely the intrinsic curvature [MATH] of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-48': 'Therefore, this quantity is nothing but the [MATH] Euler density of the induced metric on the joint [MATH] [EQUATION] in terms of which we can write the result as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-49': 'We still have to understand the role of the rest of the terms.', '1803.00172-2-16-50': 'For example, one may worry about the additivity of the action, since at first sight these terms do not seem to be additive.', '1803.00172-2-16-51': 'However, a closer inspection reveals that they actually are.', '1803.00172-2-16-52': 'We are expressing the result in terms of the extrinsic curvatures associated to the two normals adapted to the segment [MATH], but there is a more natural way to express it if we also make use of the orthonormal system associated to [MATH], [MATH], related to [MATH] according to ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-16-53': 'The same relation will hold between the extrinsic curvatures, [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-16-54': 'Then, let us note the following: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-55': 'This allows us to write these terms in a more symmetric way: [EQUATION] where, after some simplifications [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-56': 'Therefore, these contributions do not actually depend on the angle of the joint, but they are related to the boundary of every segment.', '1803.00172-2-16-57': 'Expressed in this way, the contribution from the joints is explicitly additive.', '1803.00172-2-16-58': 'As we can see, the structure of the terms [MATH] is in general very complicated and it depends on both extrinsic and intrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-2-16-59': 'However, for Gauss-Bonnet gravity, this result takes a quite simple form: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-60': 'A remarkable property of the [MATH]-th Lovelock action is that, according to the Gauss-Bonnet-Chern theorem [CITATION], in [MATH] dimensions it is the Euler characteristic of the manifold, the precise relation being [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-16-61': 'If the manifold has boundaries, one needs to include the boundary term [MATH] in order to really obtain the Euler characteristic, and if further the boundary is nonsmooth one would need to include the terms that we have just derived.', '1803.00172-2-16-62': 'In appendix B we check that the Gauss-Bonnet action in [MATH] with the joint terms ([REF]) gives the right result for the Euler characteristic of a 4-dimensional cylinder deformed by an arbitrary function.', '1803.00172-2-17-0': '## Spacelike joints of type I', '1803.00172-2-18-0': 'Let us consider now the case of spacelike joints as the ones illustrated in Figure [REF].', '1803.00172-2-18-1': 'Here, either the normal (cases (a) and (b)) or the tangent (case (c)) vectors are timelike.', '1803.00172-2-18-2': 'At the joint, the orthonormal frames adapted to the boundaries [MATH] and [MATH] are related by a Lorentz boost.', '1803.00172-2-18-3': 'Let [MATH] be the normal and tangent 1-forms in the first boundary that are normal to the joint, and let [MATH] be those in the second boundary.', '1803.00172-2-18-4': 'We choose the normal 1-forms [MATH] to point outside of the region of interest, and the tangent vectors [MATH] also point outside of the boundary at the joint.', '1803.00172-2-18-5': 'Then, at the joint, both basis are related by a boost of the form [EQUATION] with certain rapidity parameter [MATH] and where [MATH] is a sign so that when we increase [MATH] the basis rotates with positive orientation.', '1803.00172-2-18-6': 'In order to determine it, let us consider 2-dimensional Minkowski space with metric [MATH] and volume element [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-18-7': 'The change of variables [MATH], [MATH] has positive orientation and for fixed [MATH] it describes a surface whose normal is [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-18-8': 'This is the situation considered in Figure [REF] (a) identifying [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-18-9': 'Thus, we get [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-18-10': 'In the case (c) the result is the same, since the difference is an overall sign in the change of coordinates.', '1803.00172-2-18-11': 'When the normal is spacelike, the appropriate parametrization is instead [MATH], [MATH] and the surfaces of constant [MATH] have a normal 1-form [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-18-12': 'Thus, in Figure [REF] (b) we identify [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] and the sign is [MATH] instead.', '1803.00172-2-18-13': 'The conclusion is that we have to choose the sign equal to the signature of the normal [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-19-0': 'Then, the idea is again to replace this sharp corner by a smooth cap, in which the orthonormal frame interpolates from [MATH] to [MATH] and at the end take the limit in which the cap reduces to a point.', '1803.00172-2-19-1': 'The metric of such smoothed boundary can be written locally as [EQUATION] where the normal vector is [MATH], whose signature is [MATH] for timelike boundaries and [MATH] for spacelike ones.', '1803.00172-2-19-2': 'Regularity at [MATH] imposes similar conditions as before, in particular [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-19-3': 'The extrinsic curvature is [EQUATION] and the component [MATH] diverges when [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-19-4': 'The computation is very similar to the one performed in the previous subsection and we get in this case [EQUATION] where, as before, [MATH] and [MATH] are the extrinsic curvatures associated to the normal and to the tangent in the first segment.', '1803.00172-2-19-5': 'In order to perform the integration, we express the hyperbolic trigonometric functions in terms of exponentials and expand the product.', '1803.00172-2-19-6': 'The result reads [EQUATION] where we used the Gauss-Codazzi equation [EQUATION] in order to write the result in terms of the Euler density [MATH] of the induced metric.', '1803.00172-2-19-7': 'Finally, if we take into account the relation between the orthogonal systems ([REF]), [EQUATION] we can write the contribution from the joint as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-19-8': 'Had we considered a spacelike boundary segment placed at the past of the region of interest - see Figure [REF] (c) -, the result would have been the same, as long as the 1-form normals [MATH] point outside of the region (this is, to the past).', '1803.00172-2-20-0': '## General case', '1803.00172-2-21-0': 'In the previous two sections we have computed the contribution from timelike and type I spacelike joints by using the smoothing method employed by Hayward [CITATION], but it would be important to check that these terms actually make the variational problem well-posed.', '1803.00172-2-21-1': 'Fortunately, it was shown in [CITATION] that both methods are equivalent, so we can rely on the joint terms we have found.', '1803.00172-2-21-2': 'The problem is that the smoothing method is not directly applicable to type II joints, e.g. where the normal goes from spacelike to timelike, since it is not possible to describe a boundary interpolating smoothly in that case.', '1803.00172-2-21-3': 'We would be forced to examine the variational problem in the presence of corners and identify which terms must be added.', '1803.00172-2-21-4': 'However, with the results we have accumulated so far it is possible to derive the general form of the contribution for all types of joints without making an explicit use of the variational method.', '1803.00172-2-21-5': 'As we have seen, for type I spacelike joints, the contribution to the action has the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are certain quantities which depend on the intrinsic and extrinsic curvatures of the joint adapted to the frames of each side of the joint.', '1803.00172-2-21-6': 'Let us note that these terms do not really depend on the change in the normal, but they are associated to the boundary of each segment and they actually only depend on the kind of segment.', '1803.00172-2-21-7': 'In this sense, it seems natural to re-arrange the boundary and joint terms in the action as [EQUATION] so that every segment contains also a contribution coming from its boundary.', '1803.00172-2-21-8': 'Of course, this is equivalent to ([REF]) since the joints are intersections of two segments, each one contributing with its own [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-21-9': 'Since [MATH] only depends on geometric quantities defined on [MATH] and its boundary, it is clear that when we consider variations of the action these terms are independent for every segment [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-21-10': 'We can interpret this fact from the point of view variational principle if we recall the total derivative [MATH] in ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-21-11': "For every segment of boundary [MATH], this term can be integrated by using Stokes' theorem, yielding the integral of [MATH] over [MATH].", '1803.00172-2-21-12': 'Then, it seems clear that some part of this term can be arranged as a total variation on its own, and this will give rise to [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-21-13': 'The other part of this term will produce a total variation only when it is combined with the contribution coming from the other boundary at the joint, and the resulting term is then [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-21-14': 'The conclusion of this observation is that the expressions for [MATH] are really independent of the kind of joint, and therefore the results that we have obtained are actually valid in general.', '1803.00172-2-22-0': 'Then, we only need to determine the correct generalization of the term [MATH] in ([REF]) for type II joints.', '1803.00172-2-22-1': 'It seems natural that the form of this term will be actually the same, with the parameter [MATH] being the same one that appears in the Einstein gravity case [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-22-2': 'We can actually prove this point by taking into account the following observation.', '1803.00172-2-22-3': 'In [MATH] dimensions, the Lovelock action [MATH] is, up to a constant factor, the Euler characteristic of the manifold [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-22-4': "A property of Euler's characteristic is its factorization rule for product spaces: we have [MATH].", '1803.00172-2-22-5': 'At the level of the Lovelock action, this means that in [MATH] dimensions it should factorize as [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-22-6': 'Since the form of the boundary and joint terms is the same in any dimension, we can use this fact to relate them between different Lovelock gravities - in particular, we can relate them to the Einstein gravity ones.', '1803.00172-2-22-7': 'Therefore, let us consider the complete Lovelock action [EQUATION] where we are assuming that the joint term contains the Euler density [MATH] weighted by some unknown quantities [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-22-8': 'Then, let us evaluate [MATH] on a product manifold [MATH], where the first factor is assumed to be compact while the second one is allowed to have a nonsmooth boundary.', '1803.00172-2-22-9': 'The Euler density decomposes as [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-22-10': 'On the other hand, the extrinsic curvature on the boundary has rank 1, and therefore, only the term in [MATH] containing one extrinsic curvature survives.', '1803.00172-2-22-11': 'Thus, we obtain [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-22-12': 'Finally, the extrinsic curvatures of the joints vanish and therefore [MATH] and we get [EQUATION] hence the reduction of the [MATH]-dimensional Lovelock action gives us the 2-dimensional Einstein action, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-22-13': 'We obtain the Gibbons-Hawking boundary term and the contributions [MATH] coming from the corners.', '1803.00172-2-22-14': 'Then, consistency demands that the quantities [MATH] in the Lovelock joint term are the same as in Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-2-22-15': 'Since these contributions are already known for Einstein gravity for all kind of joints [CITATION], we have determined the action in the most general case for spacelike and timelike boundaries.', '1803.00172-2-22-16': 'The result is actually stronger, since it can be applied as well to null boundaries.', '1803.00172-2-22-17': 'In that case, it tells us that the value of [MATH] for intersections of a null boundary and any other kind of boundary is [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] are the respective normals.', '1803.00172-2-22-18': 'For more details about how to find this parameter in all cases, we refer to the original work [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-22-19': 'Putting it all together, we obtain the result for the Lovelock action explained in [REF].', '1803.00172-2-23-0': 'Let us mention that the method of reduction of the action can also be used to to obtain some information about the boundary terms in the null case.', '1803.00172-2-23-1': 'We learn that, when evaluated on the product geometry [MATH], the surface term in the null case should reduce to [EQUATION] where [MATH] is defined by the relation [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-23-2': 'However, this result does not characterize completely the null boundary term.', '1803.00172-2-24-0': '# Complexity of global AdS', '1803.00172-2-25-0': 'As we remarked in the introduction, one of the situations where one needs to compute the gravitational action in a nonsmooth region appears in the context of holographic complexity.', '1803.00172-2-25-1': 'Complexity is a quantity that has its origin in quantum information science, but in recent years a growing interest has been focused in extending this concept to QFTs, and in particular to holographic CFTs.', '1803.00172-2-25-2': 'The main property that has been noted is the correspondence between the growth of the AdS-Einstein-Rosen bridge at late times and the growth of complexity in a quantum theory.', '1803.00172-2-25-3': 'This has motivated two different proposals for holographic duals of the complexity in the frame of the AdS/CFT correspondence.', '1803.00172-2-25-4': 'The "complexity=volume" proposal [CITATION] states the equivalence between complexity in the CFT and certain extremal volume in the bulk, while according to the "complexity = action" proposal [CITATION] the complexity is given by the gravitational action in the Wheeler-DeWitt patch of AdS - see the references above and e.g. [CITATION] for more details.', '1803.00172-2-25-5': 'The latter has the advantage of being also applicable to the case of higher-curvature gravity, while the former will probably need of a non-trivial modification if we decide to include these corrections in the bulk- see [CITATION] for a possible generalization.', '1803.00172-2-25-6': 'Then, let us focus on the "complexity = action" proposal.', '1803.00172-2-25-7': 'More precisely, it states that the complexity in a fixed time slice [MATH] of a holographic CFT is equal to [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the gravitational action in the Wheeler-DeWitt patch: the causal diamond attached to the constant time slice [MATH] in the boundary of AdS.', '1803.00172-2-25-8': 'The structure of the divergences of the complexity was studied in [CITATION], where it was found that there is a double series expansion due to the presence of a logarithmic term: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is an arbitrary length scale, associated to the freedom to choose the normalization of the null boundary generators.', '1803.00172-2-25-9': 'In general the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] involve integrals in [MATH] of intrinsic and extrinsic geometric quantities but particularizing to global AdS they are just numerical factors.', '1803.00172-2-25-10': 'It was observed that the coefficients [MATH] in the first series are actually dependent on the regularization scheme and they can also be modified if we for example rescale the length [MATH] in the logarithmic expansion.', '1803.00172-2-25-11': 'On the other hand, the expansion containing the logarithm seems to be regulator-independent.', '1803.00172-2-25-12': 'Therefore, it would be interesting to search for universal terms in this series, this is, terms which are unaffected by rescalings of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-13': 'A prototypical example is the case of holographic entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-2-25-14': 'When studying the structure of the divergences of the EE across an [MATH] one finds that there is a universal piece that reads [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-25-15': 'The constant [MATH] can be read from the gravitational Lagrangian according to the relation [EQUATION] valid at least for even [MATH] [CITATION], and probably also for odd [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-25-16': 'In the case of Einstein gravity holography, this constant is just proportional to [MATH], and so is any other "central charge".', '1803.00172-2-25-17': 'The introduction of higher-curvature terms with arbitrary couplings breaks this degeneracy and allows to search for relations between CFT quantities.', '1803.00172-2-25-18': 'For example, [MATH] coincides with the [MATH]-type trace-anomaly charge in even dimensional theories [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-25-19': 'Hence, it would be interesting to explore if there are any other universal constants playing a similar role in the case of holographic complexity, and what kind of information about the underlying CFT they contain.', '1803.00172-2-25-20': 'In order to do so, let us consider Lovelock gravity with action [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-25-21': 'Let us denote by [MATH] the length scale of the AdS vacua of this theory, which is determined by [MATH] and by the couplings according to [MATH], where [MATH] is the solution of the equation [EQUATION] such that [MATH] when [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-22': 'Then, the metric of global AdS is [EQUATION] with [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-23': 'We would like to evaluate the gravitational action on a regularized Wheeler-DeWitt patch, so that there is a cutoff distance [MATH] from the boundary.', '1803.00172-2-25-24': 'There are several ways to regularize the WDW patch, which gives rise to some ambiguities in the complexity.', '1803.00172-2-25-25': 'We can consider the same regularizations as in [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-25-26': 'In the first case, the boundary consists of three pieces: the null boundaries [MATH] given by [MATH], [MATH] and the timelike boundary [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-27': 'There are joints at [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-28': 'In the second region we only have the null boundaries [MATH] and their joint at [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-29': 'The complete action then has three contributions [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-30': 'While we already can determine [MATH] and [MATH], the problem is of course that we do not know the surface terms for null boundaries.', '1803.00172-2-25-31': 'In the case of Einstein gravity, the null surface terms vanish as long as we choose the null generators to be affinely parametrized.', '1803.00172-2-25-32': 'However, it is unclear that the same behavior will happen in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-2-25-33': 'We will remain agnostic about the null boundary terms, but a great deal of information can be obtained already from the bulk and joint contributions.', '1803.00172-2-25-34': 'In particular, as observed in [CITATION], the logarithmic part of the series ([REF]) comes only from [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-35': 'On general ground, we can expect the same thing to happen here, i.e., we do not expect that the (unknown) boundary term contributes to the logarithmic series, which means that we can already determine it by using our results.', '1803.00172-2-25-36': 'The contribution from the joints reads [EQUATION] where [MATH] is determined in the same way as in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-25-37': 'In particular, in the joint between two null boundaries we have [MATH], where [MATH] are the outwards-directed null 1-forms normal to the boundaries and the sign depends on the case.', '1803.00172-2-25-38': 'In the joint between a null boundary and a timelike surface with normal [MATH] we have instead [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-39': 'Then, let us parametrize the null normals as [MATH], [MATH], and we also have, in the regularization [MATH]: [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-40': 'Therefore, in the first regularization we obtain two joints whose parameters [MATH] read [MATH], so that when we add them up we get [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-41': 'The same result is obtained in the other regularization, where we only have one joint, but its contribution is [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-42': 'Then, the corner contribution is independent from the scheme.', '1803.00172-2-25-43': 'The induced metric on [MATH] is [EQUATION] so it is an sphere of radius [MATH], which implies that the reduced Euler densities take the values [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-44': 'Hence, the contribution from the joint is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the volume of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-45': 'Now, as in [CITATION], let us make the change of variables [MATH], which takes the metric ([REF]) to a standard Fefferman-Graham form [EQUATION] where we also introduced [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-46': 'Then, we rewrite the short-distance regulator [MATH] of global AdS in terms of the regulator for the previous metric [MATH], which implies [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-25-47': 'In this way, we can write the exact result as [EQUATION] where we have introduced the [MATH] in the sum, with the convention that [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-48': 'Now we expand this expression when [MATH] and we obtain the following logarithmic series in the complexity [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the non-logarithmic [MATH] series expansion.', '1803.00172-2-25-49': 'Note that the higher-order Lovelock terms do not modify the leading order Einstein gravity behavior.', '1803.00172-2-25-50': 'The reason is that the joint term involves intrinsic curvatures, which are vanishing for [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-51': 'However, the subleading terms are modified: the [MATH]-th Lovelock density starts appearing in the coefficient of [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-52': 'In particular, when [MATH] is odd the previous series contains a constant term that possibly will be universal, and all Lovelock densities contribute to this term.', '1803.00172-2-25-53': 'The universal term is in general given by [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and we leave open the possibility of having additional terms in [MATH] coming from the bulk or boundary contributions.', '1803.00172-2-25-54': 'Some of the first values of this constant are [MATH] for [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] respectively.', '1803.00172-2-25-55': 'We may compare this constant to some known central charges, such as [MATH] ([REF]), the constant [MATH] controlling the stress-energy tensor two-point function or the thermal entropy charge [MATH], defined by the relation between entropy and temperature in a thermal plasma [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-25-56': 'For a holographic CFT dual to Lovelock gravity, these charges read [EQUATION] where we recall that [MATH] corresponds to the Einstein gravity contribution.', '1803.00172-2-25-57': 'We see that there is no simple way to express [MATH] as a combination of these charges - the dependence on the curvature order [MATH] is very different - so we conclude that this constant could be a new central charge characterizing the CFT.', '1803.00172-2-26-0': 'For the sake of completeness we may also search for universal terms coming from the bulk part of the action, whose general form is [EQUATION] where we are using ([REF]) in order to relate the on-shell Lagrangian to [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-26-1': 'Then, we observe that when [MATH] is odd the [MATH] expansion contains the term [EQUATION] and therefore we should also include this logarithm in ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-26-2': 'Note that this term appears equally in both regularizations.', '1803.00172-2-26-3': 'On the other hand, when [MATH] is even the bulk action contains a constant term: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-26-4': 'Note that on general grounds when [MATH] is even the [MATH] expansion of the complexity contains odd powers of the regulator like [MATH] and [MATH], so in principle no constants terms are expected to appear.', '1803.00172-2-26-5': 'The one in the bulk action is probably the only exception to this and therefore it could be universal.', '1803.00172-2-26-6': 'Putting it all together, we have found the following possible universal contributions to the complexity [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-26-7': 'In the case of odd boundary dimensions we are keeping the two logarithmic terms separated because they actually have different properties.', '1803.00172-2-26-8': 'This becomes evident if we allow the boundary of AdS to contain a [MATH]-sphere of arbitrary radius [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-26-9': 'In the metric ([REF]) this radius is fixed to be equal to the AdS scale [MATH], but we may perform the change of variables [MATH], [MATH], so that asymptotically the metric takes the form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-26-10': 'The short-distance cutoff in this metric, [MATH], is related to the cutoff of the metric ([REF]) according to [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-26-11': 'Then, the result for the complexity in this metric could be obtained by replacing [MATH] everywhere in the previous expressions.', '1803.00172-2-26-12': 'However, there is a difference, because the natural choice of the null generators in this coordinate system now is [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-26-13': 'The product of these vectors evaluated at the joints yields [MATH], which is the argument of the logarithm appearing in the joint contribution.', '1803.00172-2-26-14': 'Hence, this logarithm is not changed at all and the universal contribution to the complexity reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-26-15': 'This shows that the first logarithm actually depends on the boundary geometry, while the scale in the second one really corresponds to the AdS curvature scale.', '1803.00172-2-26-16': 'The first one is controlled by the charge [MATH] that appears in the holographic EE, while the second one depends on a different, probably previously unknown constant [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-26-17': 'It has been argued that the combination [MATH] would correspond to a new scale that appears in the microscopic rules defining the complexity in the CFT [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-26-18': 'This could give us a hint about the role of the constant [MATH] in the CFT.', '1803.00172-2-27-0': 'We have tried to argue that the boundary contributions will not affect this result, but of course a more rigorous computation taking into account the null boundaries is necessary.', '1803.00172-2-27-1': 'In addition, it is not clear what relevance one can asses to the universal terms that we have obtained due to the ambiguities present in the computation of the complexity.', '1803.00172-2-27-2': 'We have shown that these terms are at least independent of the regularization scheme, but we still have the ambiguity in the parameters [MATH] which fix the normalization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-2-28-0': '# Discussion', '1803.00172-2-29-0': 'In this work we have obtained the general form of the Lovelock action when the spacetime domain contains nonsmooth joints between spacelike or timelike segments - the details are explained in section [REF].', '1803.00172-2-29-1': 'The results here were obtained by making use of the smoothing method for type I joints and afterwards we showed that they can be extended to type II joints as well.', '1803.00172-2-29-2': 'It would be interesting to try a direct proof by using the variational method.', '1803.00172-2-29-3': 'This is probably more challenging, but now that we know the general structure of these terms we have a very useful hint on how to tackle this computation.', '1803.00172-2-29-4': 'With these boundary and joint terms the action is additive, in the same sense as in Einstein gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-30-0': 'Let us also point out that we have only considered intersections of segments producing codimension 2 joints, but in general the boundary could contain higher-order joints - vertices - and in general they will also yield a contribution.', '1803.00172-2-30-1': 'If we denote by [MATH]-vertex a codimension [MATH] defect in the boundary - the usual joints would be 2-vertices - then we expect that they will contribute to the [MATH]-th Lovelock action if [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-30-2': 'For example, a 3-vertex does not have any effect in the Einstein-Hilbert action, but it does contribute to the Gauss-Bonnet one.', '1803.00172-2-30-3': 'These additional vertex terms could be computed by using similar techniques to those presented here.', '1803.00172-2-31-0': 'As we have seen, there are two kind of contributions that appear when the boundary contains nonsmooth joints.', '1803.00172-2-31-1': 'The first one - the term [MATH] in ([REF]) - is related to the presence of a boundary in each segment of the boundary.', '1803.00172-2-31-2': 'This contribution is independent of the joint, and we can actually think of it as adding a certain total derivative to the usual boundary term ([REF]).', '1803.00172-2-31-3': 'The form of this total derivative seems to depend on the decomposition used to describe the boundary of every segment though.', '1803.00172-2-31-4': 'The second piece is the actual corner contribution, since it depends on the angle [MATH] of the corner in the Euclidean case, or in the local Lorentz boost parameter [MATH] in the Lorentzian one.', '1803.00172-2-31-5': 'This term has a very appealing form, since it involves the integral along the joint of the Jacobson-Myers entropy density [CITATION] weighted by the aforementioned parameter [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-31-6': 'If we write the Lagrangian density as [MATH] then the contribution of the joints reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-31-7': 'This remarkable result could have relevant consequences.', '1803.00172-2-31-8': 'For example, in situations where [MATH] is constant, this term is actually picking an entropy in the action.', '1803.00172-2-31-9': 'In particular, if [MATH] is the bifurcation surface of a black hole horizon, then the Jacobson-Myers entropy equals the Wald entropy [CITATION], and the joint contributes with a quantity proportional to the black hole entropy.', '1803.00172-2-31-10': 'A similar result -though with an slightly different point of view- was obtained in [CITATION], where it was observed that the Jacobson-Myers entropy appears in the "imaginary part" of the action.', '1803.00172-2-31-11': 'In that context, the imaginary part of the action is precisely interpreted as the black hole entropy, but in our case this term contributes to the variational problem.', '1803.00172-2-31-12': 'Also, the Jacobson-Myers entropy coincides with the functional for the holographic entanglement entropy in higher-derivative gravity [CITATION], so again in certain situations this term may yield something related to an entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-2-32-0': 'In addition, we have shown that [MATH] can be straightforwardly extended to the case of intersections of null boundaries just by using the same value for [MATH] as in Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-2-32-1': 'Although the appropriate surface terms for null boundaries are still unknown for Lovelock gravity (including the contributions [MATH]), we have used this result in order to compute the "logarithmic part" of the holographic complexity of AdS, since the logarithmic contribution was argued to come only from the joints.', '1803.00172-2-32-2': 'We found that the higher-curvature corrections do not modify the leading divergence in this series, but they do contribute to the subleading terms.', '1803.00172-2-32-3': 'In particular, when [MATH] is odd the series contains a "universal term" of the form [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-32-4': 'All of the Lovelock densities contribute to the constant [MATH] - see ([REF]) - which could be a new universal quantity characterizing the dual CFT, analogous to [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-32-5': 'If that were the case, the dependence of this "charge" on the Lovelock couplings could be relevant in order to identify a possible complexity model producing this constant from the CFT side.', '1803.00172-2-32-6': 'By computing the bulk action, we have seen that [MATH] also plays a role in the complexity ([REF]) - a possible appearance of [MATH] in the complexity in general theories was also anticipated in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-32-7': 'However, a careful inspection of the null boundary terms is still necessary in order to assess the validity of this result.', '1803.00172-2-32-8': 'In addition, we should be careful regarding the interpretation of possible universal terms, since there are some ambiguities in the complexity.', '1803.00172-2-32-9': 'In particular, it depends on the free parameters [MATH], [MATH] of the null generators.', '1803.00172-2-32-10': 'It has been argued that these parameters may be chosen in a way such that [MATH] is a new length scale which would appear in the UV physics of the CFT [CITATION].', '1803.00172-2-32-11': 'It could happen that this new scale is actually cutoff dependent, [MATH], and such property would actually spoil the universal character of the logarithmic term proportional to [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-32-12': 'In any event, it seems clear that exploring the dependence of the complexity on the higher-curvature couplings could give us relevant information about this quantity.', '1803.00172-2-33-0': 'Although we have focused on computing the complexity of global AdS, it would also be interesting to estimate the subregion complexity [CITATION] in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-2-33-1': 'With the results at hands one could also try to re-compute the action growth for Lovelock black holes [CITATION] by using the methods of [CITATION], or the complexity of formation [CITATION], which has the advantage of being finite and independent of the normalization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-2-33-2': 'In particular, it would be interesting to explore if the full time dependence of the complexity in Lovelock black holes shares the same properties found in Einstein gravity [CITATION], where the asymptotic behavior of the complexity at late times is [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-33-3': 'In the case of Einstein gravity the null surface terms vanish when we choose the null generators to be affinely parametrized [CITATION], so that all the contributions to the complexity come from the bulk action and the joints, which we also know for Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-2-33-4': 'However, it is unclear that the null surface terms will also vanish in this case.', '1803.00172-2-33-5': 'A more rigorous computation would require the analysis of the null boundary terms for Lovelock gravity, which are still unknown.', '1803.00172-2-34-0': 'I would like to thank Rob Myers for guidance and advice during this project and Pablo Bueno, Dean Carmi, Robie Hennigar, Hugo Marrochio, Tomas Ortin and Shan-Ming Ruan for useful discussions and comments.', '1803.00172-2-34-1': 'The work of the author is funded by Fundacion la Caixa through a "la Caixa - Severo Ochoa" international pre-doctoral grant.', '1803.00172-2-34-2': 'This work was also supported by Perimeter Institute through the "Visiting Graduate Fellows" program, by the MINECO/FEDER, UE grant FPA2015-66793-P and by the Spanish Research Agency (Agencia Estatal de Investigacion) through the grant IFT Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa SEV-2016- 0597.', '1803.00172-2-34-3': 'Research at Perimeter Institute is supported by the Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science.', '1803.00172-2-35-0': '# Variation of the Lovelock action', '1803.00172-2-36-0': 'First, after some algebra in ([REF]), we are able to express the boundary term as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-1': 'Now, we can write these expressions in terms of intrinsic quantities by using the Gauss-Codazzi equations: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the covariant derivative on the boundary.', '1803.00172-2-36-2': 'Then, we can write [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-3': 'Now let us compute [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-4': 'For simplicity, we will not keep trace of terms proportional to [MATH], since eventually we will set [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-5': 'Hence: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-6': 'The variation of [MATH] can be separated in two components: variations through the extrinsic curvature and variations through the intrinsic one.', '1803.00172-2-36-7': 'The former reads: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-8': 'Note the funny effect of "canceling" the integration.', '1803.00172-2-36-9': 'On the other hand we have to consider variations with respect to the intrinsic curvature.', '1803.00172-2-36-10': 'In this case, we know that [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the Levi-Civita connection of the induced metric [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-11': 'Hence, whenever [MATH] appear we can integrate by parts, and by using the Bianchi identity [MATH] we obtain the following result: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-12': 'The total variation of [MATH] is then [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-13': 'It remains to compute [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-14': 'We can use the results in [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-36-15': 'Then, if we add up all the results we obtain: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-16': 'Now, in the first term we integrate by parts, and after using the Bianchi identity we get [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-36-17': 'Finally, using that [MATH] it is possible to show that [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-37-0': 'Hence, we have the following result: [EQUATION] for certain [MATH] that we do not worry about and where [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-38-0': '# Example: Gauss-Bonnet theorem in [MATH]', '1803.00172-2-39-0': 'According to our results, the Euler characteristic of a 4-dimensional manifold with (non-smooth) boundary must be given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-1': 'Let us check this result by evaluating it in the following deformed 4-dimensional cylinder embedded on flat space [EQUATION] where [MATH] is an arbitrary function.', '1803.00172-2-39-2': 'Since this manifold is topologically [MATH], the Euler characteristic is [MATH], and ([REF]) should give us this result for any function [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-3': 'The bulk piece vanishes because we are working in flat space.', '1803.00172-2-39-4': 'In the boundary term it is useful to apply the Gauss-Codazzi equations, so that we get [EQUATION] where we again use that the curvature [MATH] vanishes.', '1803.00172-2-39-5': 'Then, the boundary contribution only contains the combination [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-6': 'Therefore, the extrinsic curvature only contributes when it has rank 3.', '1803.00172-2-39-7': 'To determine [MATH] for the different pieces of the boundary, let us write the Euclidean space in cylindrical coordinates [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-8': 'Then there are three pieces: the top [MATH], the bottom [MATH] and the side [MATH] of the cylinder [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-9': 'The normal to [MATH] is [MATH] and the extrinsic curvature is vanishing.', '1803.00172-2-39-10': 'In [MATH] we have [MATH] and [MATH] has rank 2, so the contribution is zero.', '1803.00172-2-39-11': 'Finally, in the top [MATH] the normal is [MATH] and its extrinsic curvature has rank 1, so it does not contribute either.', '1803.00172-2-39-12': 'Therefore, all the contribution comes from the joints.', '1803.00172-2-39-13': 'Let us start with the joint [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-14': 'This joint is defined by the intersection of the surfaces [MATH] and [MATH] and therefore it is a 2-sphere, which implies that the induced curvature takes the value [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-15': 'We have the following system of adapted normals in each piece of boundary: the normals adapted to [MATH] are [MATH] while those coming from [MATH] are [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-16': 'Obviously, the change in the normal is [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-17': 'On the other hand, the extrinsic curvatures are [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-18': 'Therefore, the contribution from this joint is [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-19': 'Then, let us finally consider the joint [MATH] between the surfaces [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-20': 'We have the following normals in each boundary [EQUATION] where we are writing in short [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-21': 'From these normals to the boundaries we construct [MATH] and [MATH] such that they unitary and tangent to their respective boundary and pointing outwards.', '1803.00172-2-39-22': 'This is, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-23': 'We find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-24': 'These expressions have to be evaluated at [MATH] but it is useful to keep trace of all the coordinates in order to compute the extrinsic curvatures [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-25': 'They read [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-26': 'We also find the angle [MATH] in which the normal changes: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-27': 'On the other hand, the induced metric reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-28': 'Then we get the Ricci scalar and the combinations of extrinsic curvatures [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-2-39-29': 'Putting it all together, the Euler characteristic reads [EQUATION] where we introduced [MATH], and [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-30': 'The integrand is a total derivative, and thus can be integrated and we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-31': 'But now, [MATH].', '1803.00172-2-39-32': 'Therefore, we have shown that [MATH] and the Gauss-Bonnet theorem works when we include the joint terms.', '1803.00172-2-39-33': 'In particular note that the terms involving the extrinsic curvatures are necessary in order to obtain a topological result.'}
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['1803.00172-2-16-47', '1803.00172-3-16-46'], ['1803.00172-2-16-48', '1803.00172-3-16-47'], ['1803.00172-2-16-49', '1803.00172-3-16-48'], ['1803.00172-2-16-50', '1803.00172-3-16-49'], ['1803.00172-2-16-51', '1803.00172-3-16-50'], ['1803.00172-2-16-52', '1803.00172-3-16-51'], ['1803.00172-2-16-53', '1803.00172-3-16-52'], ['1803.00172-2-16-54', '1803.00172-3-16-53'], ['1803.00172-2-16-55', '1803.00172-3-16-54'], ['1803.00172-2-16-56', '1803.00172-3-16-55'], ['1803.00172-2-16-57', '1803.00172-3-16-56'], ['1803.00172-2-16-58', '1803.00172-3-16-57'], ['1803.00172-2-16-59', '1803.00172-3-16-58'], ['1803.00172-2-16-60', '1803.00172-3-16-59'], ['1803.00172-2-16-62', '1803.00172-3-16-61'], ['1803.00172-2-22-0', '1803.00172-3-22-0'], ['1803.00172-2-22-1', '1803.00172-3-22-1'], ['1803.00172-2-22-2', '1803.00172-3-22-2'], ['1803.00172-2-22-3', '1803.00172-3-22-3'], ['1803.00172-2-22-4', '1803.00172-3-22-4'], ['1803.00172-2-22-5', '1803.00172-3-22-5'], ['1803.00172-2-22-6', '1803.00172-3-22-6'], ['1803.00172-2-22-7', '1803.00172-3-22-7'], ['1803.00172-2-22-8', '1803.00172-3-22-8'], ['1803.00172-2-22-9', '1803.00172-3-22-9'], ['1803.00172-2-22-10', '1803.00172-3-22-10'], ['1803.00172-2-22-11', '1803.00172-3-22-11'], ['1803.00172-2-22-12', '1803.00172-3-22-12'], ['1803.00172-2-22-14', '1803.00172-3-22-14'], ['1803.00172-2-22-15', '1803.00172-3-22-15'], ['1803.00172-2-22-16', '1803.00172-3-22-16'], ['1803.00172-2-22-17', '1803.00172-3-22-17'], ['1803.00172-2-22-18', '1803.00172-3-22-18'], ['1803.00172-2-22-19', '1803.00172-3-22-19'], ['1803.00172-2-37-0', '1803.00172-3-37-0'], ['1803.00172-2-29-0', '1803.00172-3-29-0'], ['1803.00172-2-29-1', '1803.00172-3-29-1'], ['1803.00172-2-29-2', '1803.00172-3-29-2'], ['1803.00172-2-29-3', '1803.00172-3-29-3'], ['1803.00172-2-29-4', '1803.00172-3-29-4'], ['1803.00172-2-31-0', '1803.00172-3-31-0'], ['1803.00172-2-31-1', '1803.00172-3-31-1'], ['1803.00172-2-31-2', '1803.00172-3-31-2'], ['1803.00172-2-31-3', '1803.00172-3-31-3'], ['1803.00172-2-31-4', '1803.00172-3-31-4'], ['1803.00172-2-31-5', '1803.00172-3-31-5'], ['1803.00172-2-31-6', '1803.00172-3-31-6'], ['1803.00172-2-31-7', '1803.00172-3-31-7'], ['1803.00172-2-31-8', '1803.00172-3-31-8'], ['1803.00172-2-31-9', '1803.00172-3-31-9'], ['1803.00172-2-31-10', '1803.00172-3-31-10'], ['1803.00172-2-31-11', '1803.00172-3-31-11'], ['1803.00172-2-31-12', '1803.00172-3-31-12'], ['1803.00172-2-9-0', '1803.00172-3-9-0'], ['1803.00172-2-9-1', '1803.00172-3-9-1'], ['1803.00172-2-9-2', '1803.00172-3-9-2'], ['1803.00172-2-9-3', '1803.00172-3-9-3'], ['1803.00172-2-9-4', '1803.00172-3-9-4'], ['1803.00172-2-9-5', '1803.00172-3-9-5'], ['1803.00172-2-14-0', '1803.00172-3-14-0'], ['1803.00172-2-14-1', '1803.00172-3-14-1'], ['1803.00172-2-14-2', '1803.00172-3-14-2'], ['1803.00172-2-14-3', '1803.00172-3-14-3'], ['1803.00172-2-14-4', '1803.00172-3-14-4'], ['1803.00172-2-14-5', '1803.00172-3-14-5'], ['1803.00172-2-14-6', '1803.00172-3-14-6'], ['1803.00172-2-14-7', 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'1803.00172-3-7-1'], ['1803.00172-2-6-0', '1803.00172-3-6-0'], ['1803.00172-2-6-1', '1803.00172-3-6-1'], ['1803.00172-2-6-2', '1803.00172-3-6-2'], ['1803.00172-2-6-3', '1803.00172-3-6-3'], ['1803.00172-2-6-4', '1803.00172-3-6-4'], ['1803.00172-2-6-5', '1803.00172-3-6-5']]
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[]
[['1803.00172-1-110-3', '1803.00172-2-34-3']]
[['1803.00172-1-41-0', '1803.00172-2-2-3'], ['1803.00172-1-17-12', '1803.00172-2-16-19']]
['1803.00172-1-8-0', '1803.00172-2-36-5', '1803.00172-2-39-22', '1803.00172-2-39-23', '1803.00172-2-39-25', '1803.00172-2-39-31', '1803.00172-3-36-5', '1803.00172-3-39-22', '1803.00172-3-39-23', '1803.00172-3-39-25', '1803.00172-3-39-31']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.00172
{'1803.00172-3-0-0': '# Introduction', '1803.00172-3-1-0': 'It has been known for a very long time that the gravitational action needs to be supplemented with boundary terms in order for it to define a well-posed variational problem [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-1': 'Well-posedness means that the solution of the equations of motion with some fixed boundary conditions must be the only extremum of the action when we perform variations that keep fixed the boundary data [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-2': 'Although the surface terms do not modify the equations of motion, they play a crucial role in the Hamiltonian formalism [CITATION] or if we want to define a partition function for gravity [CITATION], something which is particularly relevant, for example, in the context of holography [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-3': 'In the case of Einstein gravity, the appropriate surface contribution for spacelike and timelike boundaries is the well-known York-Gibbons-Hawking (YGH) term [CITATION], which involves the integral over the boundary of the trace of its extrinsic curvature.', '1803.00172-3-1-4': 'However, situations more general than spacelike or timelike boundaries may appear.', '1803.00172-3-1-5': 'For example, the YGH term ensures the well-posedness of the variational principle when the boundary is smooth, but in certain cases the boundary may contain corners - joints between different segments of the boundary where there is a discontinuity in the normal vector.', '1803.00172-3-1-6': 'In such cases, additional terms have to be added to the action in order to account for the nonsmoothness of the boundary [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-7': 'These joints appear naturally in some situations, e.g. when computing the Euclidean action of certain configurations [CITATION] or when defining a quasi-local energy of the gravitational field in a spatially bounded region [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-8': 'A more recent motivation comes from the "complexity=action" proposal [CITATION] in the context of holography, which involves the computation of the gravitational action in the so-called Wheeler-DeWitt (WDW) patch of asymptotically Anti-de Sitter spaces [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-1-9': 'Besides containing joints, the WDW patch is delimited by null boundaries, where the standard YGH surface term is not applicable.', '1803.00172-3-1-10': 'Fortunately, the null boundary terms for Einstein gravity were recently described [CITATION], but it was found that these terms present ambiguities associated to the freedom to choose the parametrization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-3-1-11': 'The definitive step came in [CITATION], where the complete gravitational action with all kind of boundaries and joints was studied and also a prescription to cure the ambiguities of the null boundaries - by demanding additivity of the action - was introduced.', '1803.00172-3-2-0': 'Much less is known about surface terms in the case of higher-derivative gravity.', '1803.00172-3-2-1': 'Several generalizations of the YGH term exist for some theories, e.g. [CITATION], but the variational problem is not fully understood in general because these theories usually contain additional degrees of freedom, e.g. [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-2-2': 'As a consequence, it is unclear which variables one should keep fixed on the boundary.', '1803.00172-3-2-3': 'An exception to this is Lovelock gravity [CITATION], which is the most general higher-curvature theory of gravity whose equations of motion are of second-order.', '1803.00172-3-2-4': 'This crucial property ensures that it is possible to obtain a well-posed variational principle for Lovelock gravity upon the addition of some appropriate boundary terms.', '1803.00172-3-2-5': 'In the case of spacelike and timelike boundaries, the surface terms were independently constructed by Myers [CITATION] and Teitelboim and Zanelli [CITATION] - we will review them in section [REF].', '1803.00172-3-2-6': 'However, there is still work to be done in order to understand Lovelock variational principle in the most general region: the surface terms for null boundaries are not yet known, and the contribution from joints is also unknown for any kind of boundary.', '1803.00172-3-3-0': "As a step forward into comprehending Lovelock's action in the most general case, in this work we compute the joint terms when the boundary contains spacelike and timelike segments.", '1803.00172-3-3-1': 'However, we will see that an important part of the result is clearly generalizable to the case of joints involving null segments.', '1803.00172-3-4-0': 'The paper is organized as follows.', '1803.00172-3-4-1': 'Next we summarize how to compute the action in Lovelock gravity in the presence of joints, while the detailed derivation of this result is addressed in section [REF].', '1803.00172-3-4-2': 'In subsection [REF] we review the surface terms in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-3-4-3': 'In subsections [REF] and [REF] we compute the contribution of timelike joints and of spacelike joints of a special type by using the smoothing method of [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-4-4': 'In subsection [REF] we show how to generalize these contributions to all kind of joints, and even to joints involving null boundaries.', '1803.00172-3-4-5': 'In section [REF] we explore the consequences of this result for holographic complexity of global AdS in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-3-4-6': 'We compute the contribution to the complexity from the joints and from the bulk of the WDW patch and we identify universal terms in the cutoff expansion.', '1803.00172-3-4-7': 'Although the null surface terms are not yet known, we argue that probably they will not change this result.', '1803.00172-3-4-8': 'We discuss the results obtained in section [REF].', '1803.00172-3-5-0': '## The complete Lovelock action', '1803.00172-3-6-0': 'Let [MATH] be a pseudo-Riemannian manifold whose boundary is composed of nonsmoothly glued segments [MATH] which we allow to be spacelike or timelike, but not null.', '1803.00172-3-6-1': 'The intersection of two of these segments is a codimension 2 surface that we denote by [MATH] and where there is a discontinuity in the normal vector.', '1803.00172-3-6-2': 'Alternatively, we can think of [MATH] as the common boundary of these segments [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-6-3': 'In [MATH] dimensions there are [MATH] independent terms that can be added to the Lovelock action, which in general will be a linear combination of the form [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-6-4': 'Then, the variational problem is well-posed if the [MATH]-th action [MATH] is given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-6-5': 'Let us explain every term in this expression', '1803.00172-3-7-0': 'For example, for Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity the action (including only spacelike joints) reads explicitly [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-7-1': 'Note that the contribution from the joint contains the Jacobson-Myers entropy density [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-8-0': '### Conventions', '1803.00172-3-9-0': 'The metric has mostly [MATH] signature: [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-9-1': 'The space-time dimension is [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-9-2': 'We use Greek letters to denote spacetime indices [MATH], Latin letters [MATH] to denote boundary indices and capital letters [MATH] to denote indices on the joints [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-9-3': 'The covariant derivative is defined by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-9-4': 'The curvature is defined by [EQUATION] and similarly for the different intrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-3-9-5': 'In terms of the Christoffel symbols it reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-10-0': '# Contribution of joints in the Lovelock action', '1803.00172-3-11-0': 'In this section we derive the gravitational action ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-11-1': 'In [REF] we review the surface terms for timelike and spacelike boundaries in Lovelock gravity and in [REF] and [REF] we compute the contribution from the joints by taking an appropriate limit in the surface term.', '1803.00172-3-11-2': 'This method is only applicable to some kinds of spacelike joints - those that we will call of type I -, so in [REF] we generalize the result to all kinds of joints.', '1803.00172-3-11-3': 'The method that we use to obtain the general result also gives us relevant information when the boundaries are null, so that we are able to derive the joint term ([REF]) in that case as well.', '1803.00172-3-12-0': '## Variational problem in Lovelock gravity', '1803.00172-3-13-0': 'Lovelock gravity in [MATH] dimensions is given by the bulk action [EQUATION] where [MATH] are arbitrary constants and the dimensionally extended Euler densities (ED) [MATH] are defined as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-13-1': 'The first cases are [MATH], [MATH], this is, the Ricci scalar and Gauss-Bonnet (GB) terms respectively.', '1803.00172-3-13-2': 'Note that [MATH] vanishes identically for [MATH], and it is topological for [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-14-0': 'Let us compute the variation of the [MATH]-th Lovelock action [MATH] with respect to the metric.', '1803.00172-3-14-1': "Assuming that the space-time manifold [MATH] has spacelike or timelike boundaries, we find [EQUATION] where we have used Stokes' theorem in the second term.", '1803.00172-3-14-2': 'Here, the volume element of the boundary is [MATH], where [MATH] is the outward-directed normal 1-form to the boundary [MATH] with [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-14-3': 'Note that this implies that for spacelike boundaries the normal vector [MATH] is inward-directed: it points to the future when the boundary is in the past of [MATH] and vice versa [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-14-4': 'Also, the induced metric on [MATH] is given by [MATH], and we have introduced the tensors [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-14-5': 'Note that the equations of motion for Lovelock gravity are [EQUATION] which are of second order in derivatives of the metric.', '1803.00172-3-14-6': 'In order to work with the surface terms it is useful to introduce a basis of tangent vectors [MATH] in the boundary [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-14-7': 'These satisfy [MATH] and we can write the induced metric on the boundary as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-14-8': 'Now, in order to have a well-posed variational problem we must demand that the action is stationary around solutions of the equations of motion for variations satisfying [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-14-9': 'Note that this does not imply [MATH], nor [MATH], so the variational problem ([REF]) is not well-posed.', '1803.00172-3-14-10': 'It is known that for spacelike or timelike boundaries the Lovelock action becomes well-posed if one adds to it the following boundary contribution [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and where [MATH] is the curvature of the induced metric [MATH] and [MATH] is the extrinsic curvature of the boundary, defined as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-14-11': 'Different derivations of this result can be found in the literature [CITATION], but for the sake of completeness, in appendix A we show with a direct computation that when this boundary term is added to the action, the total variation reads [EQUATION] for certain [MATH] that we do not worry about, and the expression for [MATH] can be found in the appendix.', '1803.00172-3-14-12': 'The boundary as a whole is a closed hypersurface, so when it is smooth the total derivative terms vanish and the variational problem is well-posed.', '1803.00172-3-14-13': 'However, if the boundary is composed of several pieces nonsmoothly glued, these terms play a role, as they contribute differently in every segment.', '1803.00172-3-14-14': "By using Stokes' theorem again we may rewrite [MATH] as an integral over the boundary of every segment - a joint -, and the task would then be to express this contribution as the variation of a quantity defined on the joint.", '1803.00172-3-14-15': 'Then, we must subtract this quantity in the action in order to obtain a well-posed variational problem.', '1803.00172-3-14-16': 'However, this process is considerably non-straightforward, and in order to obtain these corner or joint contributions we may use a different method.', '1803.00172-3-14-17': 'A possible approach, first used by Hayward [CITATION], consists in considering a smoothed version of the boundary, in which no corner terms are necessary, and at the end take the limit in which the boundary becomes sharp.', '1803.00172-3-14-18': 'In the case of Euclidean signature this method works for any joint, but in Lorentzian signature it has the disadvantage that it can only be applied to certain kinds of joints.', '1803.00172-3-14-19': 'We distinguish between type I joints, which can be replaced by an smooth boundary in which the normal vector interpolates continuously between one side and the other of the joint, and type II joints for which this is not possible, because the normal would become null at certain point.', '1803.00172-3-14-20': 'Hence, the smoothing procedure only works for those of type I and we should use the variational method for type II joints.', '1803.00172-3-14-21': 'In the two next sections we are going to use the smoothing method in order to determine the contribution from type I joints, but afterwards, in section [REF], we will see that the result can be straightforwardly generalized for type II joints as well.', '1803.00172-3-15-0': '## Timelike joints', '1803.00172-3-16-0': 'Let us consider the case in which the joint has two spacelike normals.', '1803.00172-3-16-1': 'This is always the case for Euclidean signature, while for Lorentzian signature we say that the joint is a timelike codimension 2 surface, since it contains a timelike tangent vector.', '1803.00172-3-16-2': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be the segments of boundary that intersect at the joint [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-3': 'Let [MATH] and [MATH] be the normal 1-forms in each segment and let us define [MATH] as the angle in which the normal changes at the joint.', '1803.00172-3-16-4': 'It will be useful to introduce as well the vectors [MATH] and [MATH] which are tangent to [MATH] and [MATH] respectively and which are normal to [MATH] pointing outwards their respective segment - see Figure [REF] (a).', '1803.00172-3-16-5': 'Hence, the orthonormal systems at the joint will be related according to [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-6': 'Then, following [CITATION] we are going to replace the joint by a cap of certain size [MATH], apply the boundary term ([REF]) to this smoothed boundary and then take the limit in which the cap becomes a sharp corner, this is, [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-7': 'The smoothed boundary can be split in two parts: [MATH], so that [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-8': 'The first integral involves an smooth surface when we take the size of the cap to zero.', '1803.00172-3-16-9': 'Let us then evaluate the second integral.', '1803.00172-3-16-10': 'The easiest way to proceed is to consider a locally Gaussian coordinate frame, in which we can always choose the metric to have the form [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-11': 'Here [MATH] represents a polar "radial" coordinate from certain axis and [MATH] represents rotation around this axis -see Figure [REF] (b).', '1803.00172-3-16-12': 'Note that [MATH] is the normal to [MATH], while [MATH] is the induced metric.', '1803.00172-3-16-13': 'A set of constraints is obtained by demanding regularity of the metric at the axis [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-14': 'In addition, in order to avoid a conical singularity we must have [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-15': 'Now, in this coordinate frame the extrinsic curvature of the cap takes the particularly simple form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-16': 'Raising one index with [MATH], the non-vanishing components are, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-17': 'Note that [MATH] is actually the extrinsic curvature of the joint [MATH] associated to the normal [MATH]: [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-18': 'On the other hand, the component [MATH] diverges as [MATH] in the limit [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-19': 'However, the volume element reads [MATH], so that it goes to zero in that limit.', '1803.00172-3-16-20': 'Therefore, only the terms linear in [MATH] will give a non-vanishing contribution.', '1803.00172-3-16-21': 'Terms with more than one [MATH] would be divergent, but there are not such terms due to the antisymmetric character of the boundary contribution ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-16-22': 'Before taking the limit [MATH] in ([REF]), let us rewrite the intrinsic curvature in terms of the spacetime curvature and of the extrinsic curvature, so that ([REF]) takes the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the projection of the [MATH]-dimensional curvature onto the boundary.', '1803.00172-3-16-23': 'Since we assume the curvature to be regular, the only divergences come now from the extrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-3-16-24': 'If we expand this expression we get [EQUATION] where the coefficients are [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-25': 'Then, taking into account the previous observations we get the following result: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the volume element on [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-26': 'Now, we may express the integrand using only intrinsic indices [MATH] of the joint [MATH], so that [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-27': 'On the other hand, since [MATH] is a local gaussian coordinate, the integral can only be performed within the local coordinate patch.', '1803.00172-3-16-28': 'However, we may just add up all the contributions from different patches in order to obtain the global integration along the cap, so that [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-29': 'Let us also introduce the schematic notation [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-30': 'In this way, we can write [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-31': 'Now, in the limit [MATH] the extrinsic curvatures are ill-defined since they depend on the angle [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-32': 'However, the integration can be actually performed by noting the following.', '1803.00172-3-16-33': 'The normal [MATH] to the cap can be spanned by a linear combination of two different normals living in the [MATH]-plane: in particular we may use [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-34': 'Since [MATH], we must have [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-35': 'Also, the normal has unit norm [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-36': 'In addition, the angle theta is defined by [EQUATION] but [MATH] and [MATH], so that we conclude [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-37': 'Let us choose the [MATH] sign, which corresponds to positive orientation, so that we can write the normal [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-38': 'In this way, [MATH] is interpolating between [MATH] and [MATH] when [MATH] goes from [MATH] to [MATH] - see Figure [REF] (b).', '1803.00172-3-16-39': 'Also, this implies that the extrinsic curvature of [MATH] associated to [MATH] can be decomposed in terms of those of [MATH] and [MATH]: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is a basis of tangent vectors of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-40': 'Since [MATH] and [MATH] are two extrinsic curvatures of [MATH] associated to two orthogonal directions, the Gauss-Codazzi equations read [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the intrinsic curvature of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-41': 'Now we are ready to compute the integral along the angle: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-42': 'In order to proceed, it is convenient to write the trigonometric functions in terms of complex exponentials and then expand the product by using the binomial coefficients.', '1803.00172-3-16-43': 'We obtain a polynomial in powers of [MATH] which includes a constant term which is special as we are going to see.', '1803.00172-3-16-44': 'Then, the integration is straightforward and it yields [EQUATION] where in the first line we have the special term which is proportional to the total angle [MATH], while the other terms depend on trigonometric functions of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-45': 'Now, by using the expression of the coefficients [MATH] ([REF]), we see that [EQUATION] and we can perform explicitly the summation appearing in the first line, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-46': 'Then, according to ([REF]), we see that the combination between parenthesis is precisely the intrinsic curvature [MATH] of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-47': 'Therefore, this quantity is nothing but the [MATH] Euler density of the induced metric on the joint [MATH] [EQUATION] in terms of which we can write the result as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-48': 'We still have to understand the role of the rest of the terms.', '1803.00172-3-16-49': 'For example, one may worry about the additivity of the action, since at first sight these terms do not seem to be additive.', '1803.00172-3-16-50': 'However, a closer inspection reveals that they actually are.', '1803.00172-3-16-51': 'We are expressing the result in terms of the extrinsic curvatures associated to the two normals adapted to the segment [MATH], but there is a more natural way to express it if we also make use of the orthonormal system associated to [MATH], [MATH], related to [MATH] according to ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-16-52': 'The same relation will hold between the extrinsic curvatures, [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-16-53': 'Then, let us note the following: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-54': 'This allows us to write these terms in a more symmetric way: [EQUATION] where, after some simplifications [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-55': 'Therefore, these contributions do not actually depend on the angle of the joint, but they are related to the boundary of every segment.', '1803.00172-3-16-56': 'Expressed in this way, the contribution from the joints is explicitly additive.', '1803.00172-3-16-57': 'As we can see, the structure of the terms [MATH] is in general very complicated and it depends on both extrinsic and intrinsic curvatures.', '1803.00172-3-16-58': 'However, for Gauss-Bonnet gravity, this result takes a quite simple form: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-59': 'A remarkable property of the [MATH]-th Lovelock action is that, according to the Gauss-Bonnet-Chern theorem [CITATION], in [MATH] dimensions it is the Euler characteristic of the manifold, the precise relation being [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-16-60': 'If the manifold has boundaries, one needs to include the boundary term [MATH] in order to really obtain the Euler characteristic [CITATION], and if further the boundary is nonsmooth one would need to include the terms that we have just derived.', '1803.00172-3-16-61': 'In appendix B we check that the Gauss-Bonnet action in [MATH] with the joint terms ([REF]) gives the right result for the Euler characteristic of a 4-dimensional cylinder deformed by an arbitrary function.', '1803.00172-3-17-0': '## Spacelike joints of type I', '1803.00172-3-18-0': 'Let us consider now the case of spacelike joints as the ones illustrated in Figure [REF].', '1803.00172-3-18-1': 'Here, either the normal (cases (a) and (c)) or the tangent (case (b)) vectors are timelike.', '1803.00172-3-18-2': 'At the joint, the orthonormal frames adapted to the boundaries [MATH] and [MATH] are related by a Lorentz boost.', '1803.00172-3-18-3': 'Let [MATH] be the normal and tangent 1-forms in the first boundary that are normal to the joint, and let [MATH] be those in the second boundary.', '1803.00172-3-18-4': 'We choose the normal 1-forms [MATH] to point outside of the region of interest, and the tangent vectors [MATH] also point outside of the boundary at the joint.', '1803.00172-3-18-5': 'Then, at the joint, both basis are related by a boost of the form [EQUATION] with certain rapidity parameter [MATH] and where [MATH] is a sign so that when we increase [MATH] the basis rotates with positive orientation.', '1803.00172-3-18-6': 'In order to determine it, let us consider 2-dimensional Minkowski space with metric [MATH] and volume element [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-18-7': 'The change of variables [MATH], [MATH] has positive orientation and for fixed [MATH] it describes a surface whose normal is [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-18-8': 'This is the situation considered in Figure [REF] (a) identifying [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-18-9': 'Thus, we get [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-18-10': 'In the case (c) the result is the same, since the difference is an overall sign in the change of coordinates.', '1803.00172-3-18-11': 'When the normal is spacelike, the appropriate parametrization is instead [MATH], [MATH] and the surfaces of constant [MATH] have a normal 1-form [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-18-12': 'Thus, in Figure [REF] (b) we identify [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] and the sign is [MATH] instead.', '1803.00172-3-18-13': 'The conclusion is that we have to choose the sign equal to the signature of the normal [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-19-0': 'Then, the idea is again to replace this sharp corner by a smooth cap, in which the orthonormal frame interpolates from [MATH] to [MATH] and at the end take the limit in which the cap reduces to a point.', '1803.00172-3-19-1': 'The metric of such smoothed boundary can be written locally as [EQUATION] where the normal vector is [MATH], whose signature is [MATH] for timelike boundaries and [MATH] for spacelike ones.', '1803.00172-3-19-2': 'Regularity at [MATH] imposes similar conditions as before, in particular [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-19-3': 'The extrinsic curvature is [EQUATION] and the component [MATH] diverges when [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-19-4': 'The computation is very similar to the one performed in the previous subsection and we get in this case [EQUATION] where, as before, [MATH] and [MATH] are the extrinsic curvatures associated to the normal and to the tangent in the first segment.', '1803.00172-3-19-5': 'In order to perform the integration, we express the hyperbolic trigonometric functions in terms of exponentials and expand the product.', '1803.00172-3-19-6': 'The result reads [EQUATION] where we used the Gauss-Codazzi equation [EQUATION] in order to write the result in terms of the Euler density [MATH] of the induced metric.', '1803.00172-3-19-7': 'Finally, if we take into account the relation between the orthogonal systems ([REF]), [EQUATION] we can write the contribution from the joint as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-19-8': 'Had we considered a spacelike boundary segment placed at the past of the region of interest - see Figure [REF] (c) -, the result would have been the same, as long as the 1-form normals [MATH] point outside of the region (this is, to the past).', '1803.00172-3-20-0': '## General case', '1803.00172-3-21-0': 'In the previous two sections we have computed the contribution from timelike and type I spacelike joints by using the smoothing method employed by Hayward [CITATION], but it would be important to check that these terms actually make the variational problem well-posed.', '1803.00172-3-21-1': 'Fortunately, it was shown in [CITATION] that the two methods are equivalent, so we can rely on the joint terms we have found.', '1803.00172-3-21-2': 'The problem is that the smoothing method is not directly applicable to type II joints, e.g. where the normal goes from spacelike to timelike, since it is not possible to describe a boundary interpolating smoothly in that case.', '1803.00172-3-21-3': 'We would be forced to examine the variational problem in the presence of corners and identify which terms must be added.', '1803.00172-3-21-4': 'However, with the results we have accumulated so far it is possible to derive the general form of the contribution for all types of joints without making an explicit use of the variational method.', '1803.00172-3-21-5': 'As we have seen, for type I spacelike joints, the contribution to the action has the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are certain quantities which depend on the intrinsic and extrinsic curvatures of the joint adapted to the frames of each side of the joint.', '1803.00172-3-21-6': 'Let us note that these terms do not really depend on the change in the normal, but they are associated to the boundary of each segment and they actually only depend on the kind of segment.', '1803.00172-3-21-7': 'In this sense, it seems natural to re-arrange the boundary and joint terms in the action as [EQUATION] so that every segment contains also a contribution coming from its boundary.', '1803.00172-3-21-8': 'Of course, this is equivalent to ([REF]) since the joints are intersections of two segments, each one contributing with its own [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-21-9': 'Since [MATH] only depends on geometric quantities defined on [MATH] and its boundary, it is clear that when we consider variations of the action these terms are independent for every segment [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-21-10': 'We can interpret this fact from the point of view variational principle if we recall the total derivative [MATH] in ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-21-11': "For every segment of boundary [MATH], this term can be integrated by using Stokes' theorem, yielding the integral of [MATH] over [MATH].", '1803.00172-3-21-12': 'Then, it seems clear that some part of this term can be arranged as a total variation on its own, and this will give rise to [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-21-13': 'The other part of this term will produce a total variation only when it is combined with the contribution coming from the other boundary at the joint, and the resulting term is then [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-21-14': 'The conclusion of this observation is that the expressions for [MATH] are really independent of the kind of joint, and therefore the results that we have obtained are actually valid in general.', '1803.00172-3-22-0': 'Then, we only need to determine the correct generalization of the term [MATH] in ([REF]) for type II joints.', '1803.00172-3-22-1': 'It seems natural that the form of this term will be actually the same, with the parameter [MATH] being the same one that appears in the Einstein gravity case [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-22-2': 'We can actually prove this point by taking into account the following observation.', '1803.00172-3-22-3': 'In [MATH] dimensions, the Lovelock action [MATH] is, up to a constant factor, the Euler characteristic of the manifold [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-22-4': "A property of Euler's characteristic is its factorization rule for product spaces: we have [MATH].", '1803.00172-3-22-5': 'At the level of the Lovelock action, this means that in [MATH] dimensions it should factorize as [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-22-6': 'Since the form of the boundary and joint terms is the same in any dimension, we can use this fact to relate them between different Lovelock gravities - in particular, we can relate them to the Einstein gravity ones.', '1803.00172-3-22-7': 'Therefore, let us consider the complete Lovelock action [EQUATION] where we are assuming that the joint term contains the Euler density [MATH] weighted by some unknown quantities [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-22-8': 'Then, let us evaluate [MATH] on a product manifold [MATH], where the first factor is assumed to be compact while the second one is allowed to have a nonsmooth boundary.', '1803.00172-3-22-9': 'The Euler density decomposes as [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-22-10': 'On the other hand, the extrinsic curvature on the boundary has rank 1, and therefore, only the term in [MATH] containing one extrinsic curvature survives.', '1803.00172-3-22-11': 'Thus, we obtain [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-22-12': 'Finally, the extrinsic curvatures of the joints vanish and therefore [MATH] and we get [EQUATION] hence the reduction of the [MATH]-dimensional Lovelock action gives us the 2-dimensional Einstein action, [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-22-13': 'We obtain the York-Gibbons-Hawking boundary term and the contributions [MATH] coming from the corners.', '1803.00172-3-22-14': 'Then, consistency demands that the quantities [MATH] in the Lovelock joint term are the same as in Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-3-22-15': 'Since these contributions are already known for Einstein gravity for all kind of joints [CITATION], we have determined the action in the most general case for spacelike and timelike boundaries.', '1803.00172-3-22-16': 'The result is actually stronger, since it can be applied as well to null boundaries.', '1803.00172-3-22-17': 'In that case, it tells us that the value of [MATH] for intersections of a null boundary and any other kind of boundary is [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] are the respective normals.', '1803.00172-3-22-18': 'For more details about how to find this parameter in all cases, we refer to the original work [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-22-19': 'Putting it all together, we obtain the result for the Lovelock action explained in [REF].', '1803.00172-3-23-0': 'Let us mention that the method of reduction of the action can also be used to to obtain some information about the boundary terms in the null case.', '1803.00172-3-23-1': 'We learn that, when evaluated on the product geometry [MATH], the surface term in the null case should reduce to [EQUATION] where [MATH] is defined by the relation [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-23-2': 'However, this result does not characterize completely the null boundary term.', '1803.00172-3-24-0': '# Complexity of global AdS', '1803.00172-3-25-0': 'As we remarked in the introduction, one of the situations where one needs to compute the gravitational action in a nonsmooth region appears in the context of holographic complexity.', '1803.00172-3-25-1': 'Complexity is a quantity that has its origin in quantum information science, but in recent years a growing interest has been focused in extending this concept to QFTs, and in particular to holographic CFTs.', '1803.00172-3-25-2': 'The main property that has been noted is the correspondence between the growth of the AdS-Einstein-Rosen bridge at late times and the growth of complexity in a quantum theory.', '1803.00172-3-25-3': 'This has motivated two different proposals for holographic duals of the complexity in the frame of the AdS/CFT correspondence.', '1803.00172-3-25-4': 'The "complexity=volume" proposal [CITATION] states the equivalence between complexity in the CFT and certain extremal volume in the bulk, while according to the "complexity = action" proposal [CITATION] the complexity is given by the gravitational action in the Wheeler-DeWitt patch of AdS - see the references above and e.g. [CITATION] for more details.', '1803.00172-3-25-5': 'The latter has the advantage of being also applicable to the case of higher-curvature gravity, while the former will probably need of a non-trivial modification if we decide to include these corrections in the bulk- see [CITATION] for a possible generalization.', '1803.00172-3-25-6': 'Then, let us focus on the "complexity = action" proposal.', '1803.00172-3-25-7': 'More precisely, it states that the complexity in a fixed time slice [MATH] of a holographic CFT is equal to [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the gravitational action in the Wheeler-DeWitt patch: the causal diamond attached to the constant time slice [MATH] in the boundary of AdS.', '1803.00172-3-25-8': 'The structure of the divergences of the complexity was studied in [CITATION], where it was found that there is a double series expansion due to the presence of a logarithmic term: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is an arbitrary length scale, associated to the freedom to choose the normalization of the null boundary generators.', '1803.00172-3-25-9': 'In general the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] involve integrals in [MATH] of intrinsic and extrinsic geometric quantities but particularizing to global AdS they are just numerical factors.', '1803.00172-3-25-10': 'It was observed that the coefficients [MATH] in the first series are actually dependent on the regularization scheme and they can also be modified if we for example rescale the length [MATH] in the logarithmic expansion.', '1803.00172-3-25-11': 'On the other hand, the expansion containing the logarithm seems to be regulator-independent.', '1803.00172-3-25-12': 'Therefore, it would be interesting to search for universal terms in this series, this is, terms which are unaffected by rescalings of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-13': 'A prototypical example is the case of holographic entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-3-25-14': 'When studying the structure of the divergences of the EE across an [MATH] one finds that there is a universal piece that reads [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-25-15': 'The constant [MATH] can be read from the gravitational Lagrangian according to the relation [EQUATION] valid at least for even [MATH] [CITATION], and probably also for odd [MATH] [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-25-16': 'In the case of Einstein gravity holography, this constant is just proportional to [MATH], and so is any other "central charge".', '1803.00172-3-25-17': 'The introduction of higher-curvature terms with arbitrary couplings breaks this degeneracy and allows to search for relations between CFT quantities.', '1803.00172-3-25-18': 'For example, [MATH] coincides with the [MATH]-type trace-anomaly charge in even dimensional theories [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-25-19': 'Hence, it would be interesting to explore if there are any other universal constants playing a similar role in the case of holographic complexity, and what kind of information about the underlying CFT they contain.', '1803.00172-3-25-20': 'In order to do so, let us consider Lovelock gravity with action [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-25-21': 'Let us denote by [MATH] the length scale of the AdS vacua of this theory, which is determined by [MATH] and by the couplings according to [MATH], where [MATH] is the solution of the equation [EQUATION] such that [MATH] when [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-22': 'Then, the metric of global AdS is [EQUATION] with [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-23': 'We would like to evaluate the gravitational action on a regularized Wheeler-DeWitt patch, so that there is a cutoff distance [MATH] from the boundary.', '1803.00172-3-25-24': 'There are several ways to regularize the WDW patch, which gives rise to some ambiguities in the complexity.', '1803.00172-3-25-25': 'We can consider the same regularizations as in [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-25-26': 'In the first case, the boundary consists of three pieces: the null boundaries [MATH] given by [MATH], [MATH] and the timelike boundary [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-27': 'There are joints at [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-28': 'In the second region we only have the null boundaries [MATH] and their joint at [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-29': 'The complete action then has three contributions [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-30': 'While we already can determine [MATH] and [MATH], the problem is of course that we do not know the surface terms for null boundaries.', '1803.00172-3-25-31': 'In the case of Einstein gravity, the null surface terms vanish as long as we choose the null generators to be affinely parametrized.', '1803.00172-3-25-32': 'However, it is unclear that the same behavior will happen in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-3-25-33': 'We will remain agnostic about the null boundary terms, but a great deal of information can be obtained already from the bulk and joint contributions.', '1803.00172-3-25-34': 'In particular, as observed in [CITATION], the logarithmic part of the series ([REF]) comes only from [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-35': 'On general ground, we can expect the same thing to happen here, i.e., we do not expect that the (unknown) boundary term contributes to the logarithmic series, which means that we can already determine it by using our results.', '1803.00172-3-25-36': 'The contribution from the joints reads [EQUATION] where [MATH] is determined in the same way as in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-25-37': 'In particular, in the joint between two null boundaries we have [MATH], where [MATH] are the outwards-directed null 1-forms normal to the boundaries and the sign depends on the case.', '1803.00172-3-25-38': 'In the joint between a null boundary and a timelike surface with normal [MATH] we have instead [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-39': 'Then, let us parametrize the null normals as [MATH], [MATH], and we also have, in the regularization [MATH]: [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-40': 'Therefore, in the first regularization we obtain two joints whose parameters [MATH] read [MATH], so that when we add them up we get [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-41': 'The same result is obtained in the other regularization, where we only have one joint, but its contribution is [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-42': 'Then, the corner contribution is independent from the scheme.', '1803.00172-3-25-43': 'The induced metric on [MATH] is [EQUATION] so it is an sphere of radius [MATH], which implies that the reduced Euler densities take the values [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-44': 'Hence, the contribution from the joint is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the volume of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-45': 'Now, as in [CITATION], let us make the change of variables [MATH], which takes the metric ([REF]) to a standard Fefferman-Graham form [EQUATION] where we also introduced [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-46': 'Then, we rewrite the short-distance regulator [MATH] of global AdS in terms of the regulator for the previous metric [MATH], which implies [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-25-47': 'In this way, we can write the exact result as [EQUATION] where we have introduced the [MATH] in the sum, with the convention that [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-48': 'Now we expand this expression when [MATH] and we obtain the following logarithmic series in the complexity [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the non-logarithmic [MATH] series expansion.', '1803.00172-3-25-49': 'Note that the higher-order Lovelock terms do not modify the leading order Einstein gravity behavior.', '1803.00172-3-25-50': 'The reason is that the joint term involves intrinsic curvatures, which are vanishing for [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-51': 'However, the subleading terms are modified: the [MATH]-th Lovelock density starts appearing in the coefficient of [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-52': 'In particular, when [MATH] is odd the previous series contains a constant term that possibly will be universal, and all Lovelock densities contribute to this term.', '1803.00172-3-25-53': 'The universal term is in general given by [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and we leave open the possibility of having additional terms in [MATH] coming from the bulk or boundary contributions.', '1803.00172-3-25-54': 'Some of the first values of this constant are [MATH] for [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] respectively.', '1803.00172-3-25-55': 'We may compare this constant to some known central charges, such as [MATH] ([REF]), the constant [MATH] controlling the stress-energy tensor two-point function or the thermal entropy charge [MATH], defined by the relation between entropy and temperature in a thermal plasma [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-25-56': 'For a holographic CFT dual to Lovelock gravity, these charges read [EQUATION] where we recall that [MATH] corresponds to the Einstein gravity contribution.', '1803.00172-3-25-57': 'We see that there is no simple way to express [MATH] as a combination of these charges - the dependence on the curvature order [MATH] is very different - so we conclude that this constant could be a new central charge characterizing the CFT.', '1803.00172-3-26-0': 'For the sake of completeness we may also search for universal terms coming from the bulk part of the action, whose general form is [EQUATION] where we are using ([REF]) in order to relate the on-shell Lagrangian to [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-26-1': 'Then, we observe that when [MATH] is odd the [MATH] expansion contains the term [EQUATION] and therefore we should also include this logarithm in ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-26-2': 'Note that this term appears equally in both regularizations.', '1803.00172-3-26-3': 'On the other hand, when [MATH] is even the bulk action contains a constant term: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-26-4': 'Note that on general grounds when [MATH] is even the [MATH] expansion of the complexity contains odd powers of the regulator like [MATH] and [MATH], so in principle no constants terms are expected to appear.', '1803.00172-3-26-5': 'The one in the bulk action is probably the only exception to this and therefore it could be universal.', '1803.00172-3-26-6': 'Putting it all together, we have found the following possible universal contributions to the complexity [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-26-7': 'In the case of odd boundary dimensions we are keeping the two logarithmic terms separated because they actually have different properties.', '1803.00172-3-26-8': 'This becomes evident if we allow the boundary of AdS to contain a [MATH]-sphere of arbitrary radius [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-26-9': 'In the metric ([REF]) this radius is fixed to be equal to the AdS scale [MATH], but we may perform the change of variables [MATH], [MATH], so that asymptotically the metric takes the form [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-26-10': 'The short-distance cutoff in this metric, [MATH], is related to the cutoff of the metric ([REF]) according to [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-26-11': 'Then, the result for the complexity in this metric could be obtained by replacing [MATH] everywhere in the previous expressions.', '1803.00172-3-26-12': 'However, there is a difference, because the natural choice of the null generators in this coordinate system now is [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-26-13': 'The product of these vectors evaluated at the joints yields [MATH], which is the argument of the logarithm appearing in the joint contribution.', '1803.00172-3-26-14': 'Hence, this logarithm is not changed at all and the universal contribution to the complexity reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-26-15': 'This shows that the first logarithm actually depends on the boundary geometry, while the scale in the second one really corresponds to the AdS curvature scale.', '1803.00172-3-26-16': 'The first one is controlled by the charge [MATH] that appears in the holographic EE, while the second one depends on a different, probably previously unknown constant [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-26-17': 'It has been argued that the combination [MATH] would correspond to a new scale that appears in the microscopic rules defining the complexity in the CFT [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-26-18': 'This could give us a hint about the role of the constant [MATH] in the CFT.', '1803.00172-3-27-0': 'We have tried to argue that the boundary contributions will not affect this result, but of course a more rigorous computation taking into account the null boundaries is necessary.', '1803.00172-3-27-1': 'In addition, it is not clear what relevance one can asses to the universal terms that we have obtained due to the ambiguities present in the computation of the complexity.', '1803.00172-3-27-2': 'We have shown that these terms are at least independent of the regularization scheme, but we still have the ambiguity in the parameters [MATH] which fix the normalization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-3-28-0': '# Discussion', '1803.00172-3-29-0': 'In this work we have obtained the general form of the Lovelock action when the spacetime domain contains nonsmooth joints between spacelike or timelike segments - the details are explained in section [REF].', '1803.00172-3-29-1': 'The results here were obtained by making use of the smoothing method for type I joints and afterwards we showed that they can be extended to type II joints as well.', '1803.00172-3-29-2': 'It would be interesting to try a direct proof by using the variational method.', '1803.00172-3-29-3': 'This is probably more challenging, but now that we know the general structure of these terms we have a very useful hint on how to tackle this computation.', '1803.00172-3-29-4': 'With these boundary and joint terms the action is additive, in the same sense as in Einstein gravity [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-30-0': 'Let us also point out that we have only considered intersections of segments producing codimension 2 joints, but in general the boundary could contain higher-order joints - vertices - and in general they will also yield a contribution.', '1803.00172-3-30-1': 'If we denote by [MATH]-vertex a codimension [MATH] defect in the boundary - the usual joints would be 2-vertices - then we expect that they will contribute to the [MATH]-th Lovelock action if [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-30-2': 'For example, a 3-vertex does not have any effect in the Einstein-Hilbert action, but it does contribute to the Gauss-Bonnet one.', '1803.00172-3-30-3': 'These additional vertex terms could be computed by using similar techniques to those presented here.', '1803.00172-3-31-0': 'As we have seen, there are two kind of contributions that appear when the boundary contains nonsmooth joints.', '1803.00172-3-31-1': 'The first one - the term [MATH] in ([REF]) - is related to the presence of a boundary in each segment of the boundary.', '1803.00172-3-31-2': 'This contribution is independent of the joint, and we can actually think of it as adding a certain total derivative to the usual boundary term ([REF]).', '1803.00172-3-31-3': 'The form of this total derivative seems to depend on the decomposition used to describe the boundary of every segment though.', '1803.00172-3-31-4': 'The second piece is the actual corner contribution, since it depends on the angle [MATH] of the corner in the Euclidean case, or in the local Lorentz boost parameter [MATH] in the Lorentzian one.', '1803.00172-3-31-5': 'This term has a very appealing form, since it involves the integral along the joint of the Jacobson-Myers entropy density [CITATION] weighted by the aforementioned parameter [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-31-6': 'If we write the Lagrangian density as [MATH] then the contribution of the joints reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-31-7': 'This remarkable result could have relevant consequences.', '1803.00172-3-31-8': 'For example, in situations where [MATH] is constant, this term is actually picking an entropy in the action.', '1803.00172-3-31-9': 'In particular, if [MATH] is the bifurcation surface of a black hole horizon, then the Jacobson-Myers entropy equals the Wald entropy [CITATION], and the joint contributes with a quantity proportional to the black hole entropy.', '1803.00172-3-31-10': 'A similar result -though with an slightly different point of view- was obtained in [CITATION], where it was observed that the Jacobson-Myers entropy appears in the "imaginary part" of the action.', '1803.00172-3-31-11': 'In that context, the imaginary part of the action is precisely interpreted as the black hole entropy, but in our case this term contributes to the variational problem.', '1803.00172-3-31-12': 'Also, the Jacobson-Myers entropy coincides with the functional for the holographic entanglement entropy in higher-derivative gravity [CITATION], so again in certain situations this term may yield something related to an entanglement entropy.', '1803.00172-3-32-0': 'In addition, we have shown that [MATH] can be straightforwardly extended to the case of intersections of null boundaries just by using the same value for [MATH] as in Einstein gravity.', '1803.00172-3-32-1': 'Although the appropriate surface terms for null boundaries are still unknown for Lovelock gravity (including the contributions [MATH]), we have used this result in order to compute the "logarithmic part" of the holographic complexity of AdS, since the logarithmic contribution was argued to come only from the joints.', '1803.00172-3-32-2': 'We found that the higher-curvature corrections do not modify the leading divergence in this series, but they do contribute to the subleading terms.', '1803.00172-3-32-3': 'In particular, when [MATH] is odd the series contains a "universal term" of the form [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-32-4': 'All of the Lovelock densities contribute to the constant [MATH] - see ([REF]) - which could be a new universal quantity characterizing the dual CFT, analogous to [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-32-5': 'If that were the case, the dependence of this "charge" on the Lovelock couplings could be relevant in order to identify a possible complexity model producing this constant from the CFT side.', '1803.00172-3-32-6': 'By computing the bulk action, we have seen that [MATH] also plays a role in the complexity ([REF]) - a possible appearance of [MATH] in the complexity in general theories was also anticipated in [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-32-7': 'However, a careful inspection of the null boundary terms is still necessary in order to assess the validity of this result.', '1803.00172-3-32-8': 'In addition, we should be careful regarding the interpretation of possible universal terms, since there are some ambiguities in the complexity.', '1803.00172-3-32-9': 'In particular, it depends on the free parameters [MATH], [MATH] of the null generators.', '1803.00172-3-32-10': 'It has been argued that these parameters may be chosen in a way such that [MATH] is a new length scale which would appear in the UV physics of the CFT [CITATION].', '1803.00172-3-32-11': 'It could happen that this new scale is actually cutoff dependent, [MATH], and such property would actually spoil the universal character of the logarithmic term proportional to [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-32-12': 'In any event, it seems clear that exploring the dependence of the complexity on the higher-curvature couplings could give us relevant information about this quantity.', '1803.00172-3-33-0': 'Although we have focused on computing the complexity of global AdS, it would also be interesting to estimate the subregion complexity [CITATION] in Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-3-33-1': 'With the results at hands one could also try to re-compute the action growth for Lovelock black holes [CITATION] by using the methods of [CITATION], or the complexity of formation [CITATION], which has the advantage of being finite and independent of the normalization of the null generators.', '1803.00172-3-33-2': 'In particular, it would be interesting to explore if the full time dependence of the complexity in Lovelock black holes shares the same properties found in Einstein gravity [CITATION], where the asymptotic behavior of the complexity at late times is [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-33-3': 'In the case of Einstein gravity the null surface terms vanish when we choose the null generators to be affinely parametrized [CITATION], so that all the contributions to the complexity come from the bulk action and the joints, which we also know for Lovelock gravity.', '1803.00172-3-33-4': 'However, it is unclear that the null surface terms will also vanish in this case.', '1803.00172-3-33-5': 'A more rigorous computation would require the analysis of the null boundary terms for Lovelock gravity, which are still unknown.', '1803.00172-3-34-0': 'I would like to thank Rob Myers for guidance and advice during this project and Pablo Bueno, Dean Carmi, Robie Hennigar, Hugo Marrochio, Tomas Ortin and Shan-Ming Ruan for useful discussions and comments.', '1803.00172-3-34-1': 'The work of the author is funded by Fundacion la Caixa through a "la Caixa - Severo Ochoa" international pre-doctoral grant.', '1803.00172-3-34-2': 'This work was also supported by Perimeter Institute through the "Visiting Graduate Fellows" program, by the MINECO/FEDER, UE grant FPA2015-66793-P and by the Spanish Research Agency (Agencia Estatal de Investigacion) through the grant IFT Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa SEV-2016- 0597.', '1803.00172-3-34-3': 'Research at Perimeter Institute is supported by the Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science.', '1803.00172-3-35-0': '# Variation of the Lovelock action', '1803.00172-3-36-0': 'First, after some algebra in ([REF]), we are able to express the boundary term as [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-1': 'Now, we can write these expressions in terms of intrinsic quantities by using the Gauss-Codazzi equations: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the covariant derivative on the boundary.', '1803.00172-3-36-2': 'Then, we can write [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-3': 'Now let us compute [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-4': 'For simplicity, we will not keep trace of terms proportional to [MATH], since eventually we will set [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-5': 'Hence: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-6': 'The variation of [MATH] can be separated in two components: variations through the extrinsic curvature and variations through the intrinsic one.', '1803.00172-3-36-7': 'The former reads: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-8': 'Note the funny effect of "canceling" the integration.', '1803.00172-3-36-9': 'On the other hand we have to consider variations with respect to the intrinsic curvature.', '1803.00172-3-36-10': 'In this case, we know that [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the Levi-Civita connection of the induced metric [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-11': 'Hence, whenever [MATH] appear we can integrate by parts, and by using the Bianchi identity [MATH] we obtain the following result: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-12': 'The total variation of [MATH] is then [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-13': 'It remains to compute [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-14': 'We can use the results in [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-36-15': 'Then, if we add up all the results we obtain: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-16': 'Now, in the first term we integrate by parts, and after using the Bianchi identity we get [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-36-17': 'Finally, using that [MATH] it is possible to show that [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-37-0': 'Hence, we have the following result: [EQUATION] for certain [MATH] that we do not worry about and where [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-38-0': '# Example: Gauss-Bonnet theorem in [MATH]', '1803.00172-3-39-0': 'According to our results, the Euler characteristic of a 4-dimensional manifold with (non-smooth) boundary must be given by [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-1': 'Let us check this result by evaluating it in the following deformed 4-dimensional cylinder embedded on flat space [EQUATION] where [MATH] is an arbitrary positive, differentiable function.', '1803.00172-3-39-2': 'Since this manifold is topologically [MATH], the Euler characteristic is [MATH], and ([REF]) should give us this result for any function [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-3': 'The bulk piece vanishes because we are working in flat space.', '1803.00172-3-39-4': 'In the boundary term it is useful to apply the Gauss-Codazzi equations, so that we get [EQUATION] where we again use that the curvature [MATH] vanishes.', '1803.00172-3-39-5': 'Then, the boundary contribution only contains the combination [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-6': 'Therefore, the extrinsic curvature only contributes when it has rank 3.', '1803.00172-3-39-7': 'To determine [MATH] for the different pieces of the boundary, let us write the Euclidean space in cylindrical coordinates [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-8': 'Then there are three pieces: the top [MATH], the bottom [MATH] and the side [MATH] of the cylinder [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-9': 'The normal to [MATH] is [MATH] and the extrinsic curvature is vanishing.', '1803.00172-3-39-10': 'In [MATH] we have [MATH] and [MATH] has rank 2, so the contribution is zero.', '1803.00172-3-39-11': 'Finally, in the top [MATH] the normal is [MATH] and its extrinsic curvature has rank 1, so it does not contribute either.', '1803.00172-3-39-12': 'Therefore, all the contribution comes from the joints.', '1803.00172-3-39-13': 'Let us start with the joint [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-14': 'This joint is defined by the intersection of the surfaces [MATH] and [MATH] and therefore it is a 2-sphere, which implies that the induced curvature takes the value [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-15': 'We have the following system of adapted normals in each piece of boundary: the normals adapted to [MATH] are [MATH] while those coming from [MATH] are [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-16': 'Obviously, the change in the normal is [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-17': 'On the other hand, the extrinsic curvatures are [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-18': 'Therefore, the contribution from this joint is [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-19': 'Then, let us finally consider the joint [MATH] between the surfaces [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-20': 'We have the following normals in each boundary [EQUATION] where we are writing in short [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-21': 'From these normals to the boundaries we construct [MATH] and [MATH] such that they unitary and tangent to their respective boundary and pointing outwards.', '1803.00172-3-39-22': 'This is, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-23': 'We find [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-24': 'These expressions have to be evaluated at [MATH] but it is useful to keep trace of all the coordinates in order to compute the extrinsic curvatures [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-25': 'They read [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-26': 'We also find the angle [MATH] in which the normal changes: [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-27': 'On the other hand, the induced metric reads [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-28': 'Then we get the Ricci scalar and the combinations of extrinsic curvatures [EQUATION]', '1803.00172-3-39-29': 'Putting it all together, the Euler characteristic reads [EQUATION] where we introduced [MATH], and [MATH], [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-30': 'The integrand is a total derivative, and thus can be integrated and we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-31': 'But now, [MATH].', '1803.00172-3-39-32': 'Therefore, we have shown that [MATH] and the Gauss-Bonnet theorem works when we include the joint terms.', '1803.00172-3-39-33': 'In particular note that the terms involving the extrinsic curvatures are necessary in order to obtain a topological result.'}
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math-0612372
{'math-0612372-1-0-0': 'We define and study an extended hyperbolic space which contains the hyperbolic space and de Sitter space as subspaces and which is obtained as an analytic continuation of the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-1-0-1': 'The construction of the extended space gives rise to a complex valued geometry consistent with both the hyperbolic and de Sitter space.', 'math-0612372-1-0-2': 'Such a construction shed a light and inspires a new insight for the study of the hyperbolic geometry and Lorentzian geometry.', 'math-0612372-1-0-3': 'We discuss the advantages of this new geometric model as well as some of its applications.', 'math-0612372-1-1-0': '# Introduction', 'math-0612372-1-2-0': 'The hyperbolic space is an independent geometric entity with an infinite diameter and infinite volume which is already complete in its own right.', 'math-0612372-1-2-1': 'But if we look at the hyperbolic space as a unit disk in the Kleinian model, then using the same metric formula we have a Lorentzian space with constant curvature outside the unit disk.', 'math-0612372-1-2-2': 'Furthermore we can even draw a geometric figure lying across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-1-2-3': 'We naturally expect on this space the generalization of the basic geometric notions such as angle, length, volumes, ..., etc. and the similar relation between them to those on the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-1-2-4': 'But we immediately have difficulties in defining and deriving those due to the Lorentzian nature of the metric and multi-valuedness of the analytic functions representing various geometric formulas.', 'math-0612372-1-3-0': 'In this paper we show there is a natural way of extending the geometry of hyperbolic space to Lorentzian part and set a foundation of a geometry which connects and unifies these two different geometries by an analytic continuation method on the Kleinian model.', 'math-0612372-1-3-1': 'We call such a unified space an extended hyperbolic space since we start from the hyperbolic space and then continue analytically to the Lorentzian part.', 'math-0612372-1-3-2': 'The purpose of studying an extended hyperbolic space is not only to give a proper geometry on the Lorentzian space as a continuation of hyperbolic geometry but also to give a new insight to the hyperbolic geometry itself by studying a geometric object lying across the ideal boundary - the proper study of such object would be impossible otherwise.', 'math-0612372-1-4-0': 'Some of the basic notions such as angle, length and geodesic triangle on the extended hyperbolic plane has been considered and studied so far through cross ratio and a rather ad hoc combinatorial method.', 'math-0612372-1-4-1': 'In this paper we study the extended hyperbolic space in a more systematic way and discuss some of its applications.', 'math-0612372-1-4-2': 'In Section 2, we set up the geometry as an analytic continuation going over the singularity of the hyperbolic metric at the ideal boundary, we view the hyperbolic metric as a limit of complex perturbation called an [MATH]-metric which is a complex regular metric.', 'math-0612372-1-4-3': 'And we define and study distance, angle, length and k-dimensional volumes on the extended space in Section 4.', 'math-0612372-1-4-4': 'Then such geometric quantities are given rather naturally with complex numbers - they of course coincide with the usual real values for the quantities inside the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-1-4-5': 'If we consider a nice region lying across the ideal boundary, then the volume of the region is of a finite complex value while the volume of the hyperbolic part and the Lorentzian part of the region are both infinite.', 'math-0612372-1-4-6': 'In fact the measure defined on the extended hyperbolic space which extends the usual hyperbolic volume (and Lorentz volume) is a finitely (but not countably) additive complex measure and we study some of its delicate and strange properties in Section 3.', 'math-0612372-1-5-0': 'We would like to describe some of the advantages and expectations of using the extended hyperbolic model.', 'math-0612372-1-5-1': 'When we study hyperbolic geometry we naturally want to extend the geometric objects and notions over and beyond the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-1-5-2': 'But when we try to compute geometric quantities, we come across with a confusion of choosing an appropriate value among infinite possibilities of multi-values even for a distance or an angle.', 'math-0612372-1-5-3': 'The extended model provide us a fulfilling consistency without such confusion once we choose an analytic continuation which follows naturally after fixing an [MATH]-approximation of the metric.', 'math-0612372-1-5-4': 'For instance the understanding of 1-dimensional extended model quickly leads us to be able to define an angle as a complex numbers on the general semi-Riemannian manifolds.', 'math-0612372-1-5-5': 'Generalizing an earlier work of Kellerhals[CITATION], Ushijima studied the volume of a hyperbolic polyhedron obtained by truncating with the dual plane of an ultra ideal vertex of a tetrahedron which is lying across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-1-5-6': 'He showed in [CITATION] that the volume of the truncated tetrahedron is the real part of the value obtained after formal application of the known volume formula of a hyperbolic tetrahedron to this tetrahedron.', 'math-0612372-1-5-7': 'But for the imaginary part it is multi-valued and there remains a problem of choice and interpretation of its geometric meaning.', 'math-0612372-1-5-8': 'The extended model determines the unique value of the imaginary part and explains its geometric meaning as the volume of the truncated portion or as the area of the truncated face.', 'math-0612372-1-5-9': 'See Example 5.11.', 'math-0612372-1-6-0': 'As we work more with the extended model, we found that the model is a natural and fundamental geometric setting as it works beautifully in every aspect.', 'math-0612372-1-6-1': 'The n-dimensional extended hyperbolic space [MATH] is simply the standard sphere [MATH] topologically but with the geometry coming from the unit sphere of the Minkowski space.', 'math-0612372-1-6-2': 'Its geometry has many resemblance with the spherical geometry and we can obtain various results through this conceptual but concrete analogy.', 'math-0612372-1-6-3': 'For instance we can derive the Gauss-Bonnet formula on the extended space (this was first shown in [CITATION]) combinatorially using Euler method as we did for the 2-sphere [MATH] without computing integrals and then of course can be generalized to the higher dimensions.', 'math-0612372-1-6-4': '(See Proposition [REF].)', 'math-0612372-1-6-5': 'Furthermore we can extend the hyperbolic trigonometry to the extended space, which of course implies that we have the same trigonometry on the de Sitter space (the Lorentzian part) and even for an object sitting across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-1-6-6': 'In principle we can apply the same method used for the standard sphere to obtain the corresponding results on the extended hyperbolic space, which in turn give rise to the results for the hyperbolic space as well as de Sitter space.', 'math-0612372-1-6-7': 'It would be interesting to observe that the volume of [MATH] differs from that of [MATH] by [MATH].', 'math-0612372-1-6-8': '(See Theorem 2.3.)', 'math-0612372-1-7-0': "As another illustration, let us consider Santalo's formula [CITATION] giving the relation between the volume of a simplex and its dual in [MATH] or [MATH], Milnor's relation [CITATION] between a convex polyhedron [MATH] and its dual [MATH] in [MATH], and Suarez-Peiro's result [CITATION] for a simplex and its dual in [MATH].", 'math-0612372-1-7-1': 'Then we see that there is a slight discrepancy between [MATH] and [MATH]: [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are edge lenghts and dihedral angles of [MATH].', 'math-0612372-1-7-2': 'Here if we use the extended model [MATH] instead of [MATH], the proof is essentially identical with the case for [MATH] and the formula can be written for both cases in a unified way as follows.', 'math-0612372-1-7-3': '[EQUATION]', 'math-0612372-1-7-4': 'For this expression, the volume of simplices of type III lying across the boundary play the crucial role which is also interpreted as mean curvature integral in [MATH].', 'math-0612372-1-7-5': "And Suarez-Peiro's result is then also expected to be generalized for both cases in a single identity as [EQUATION]", 'math-0612372-1-7-6': 'Conceptually things are getting tremendously easier giving us inspirations and this is one of the real merits using the extended model.', 'math-0612372-1-8-0': 'Lastly here are some speculations and the directions for possible further developments and applications.', 'math-0612372-1-8-1': 'If we use the extended model, all the geometric quantities become complex valued and we can ask whether this is related to complex invariants of hyperbolic manifolds such as volume and Chern-Simon invariant pair in dimension 3.', 'math-0612372-1-8-2': 'Using the extended model we can derive all the trigonometry and precise elementary geometric formulas for the Lorentzian spherical space (or de Sitter space) and this will be useful to study the discrete group actions on the Lorentzian space.', 'math-0612372-1-8-3': 'Since the hyperbolic space and the Lorentzian space are dual each other, it is obviously advantageous to study the both subjects simultaneously in a unified geometric setting.', 'math-0612372-1-8-4': 'Similar constructions for other semi-Riemannian cases, complex hyperbolic and quarternionic hyperbolic cases would also be very interesting.'}
{'math-0612372-2-0-0': 'We define and study an extended hyperbolic space which contains the hyperbolic space and de Sitter space as subspaces and which is obtained as an analytic continuation of the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-2-0-1': 'The construction of the extended space gives rise to a complex valued geometry consistent with both the hyperbolic and de Sitter space.', 'math-0612372-2-0-2': 'Such a construction shed a light and inspires a new insight for the study of the hyperbolic geometry and Lorentzian geometry.', 'math-0612372-2-0-3': 'We discuss the advantages of this new geometric model as well as some of its applications.', 'math-0612372-2-1-0': '# Introduction', 'math-0612372-2-2-0': 'The hyperbolic space is an independent geometric entity with an infinite diameter and infinite volume which is already complete in its own right.', 'math-0612372-2-2-1': 'But if we look at the hyperbolic space as a unit disk in the Kleinian model, then using the same metric formula we have a Lorentzian space with constant curvature outside the unit disk.', 'math-0612372-2-2-2': 'Furthermore we can even draw a geometric figure lying across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-2-2-3': 'We naturally expect on this space the generalization of the basic geometric notions such as angle, length, volumes, ..., etc, and the similar relation between them to those on the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-2-2-4': 'But we immediately have difficulties in defining and deriving those due to the Lorentzian nature of the metric and multi-valuedness of the analytic functions representing various geometric formulas.', 'math-0612372-2-3-0': 'In this paper we show there is a natural way of extending the geometry of hyperbolic space to Lorentzian part and set a foundation of a geometry which connects and unifies these two different geometries by an analytic continuation method on the Kleinian model.', 'math-0612372-2-3-1': 'We call such a unified space an extended hyperbolic space since we start from the hyperbolic space and then continue analytically to the Lorentzian part.', 'math-0612372-2-3-2': 'The purpose of studying an extended hyperbolic space is not only to give a proper geometry on the Lorentzian space as a continuation of hyperbolic geometry but also to give a new insight to the hyperbolic geometry itself by studying a geometric object lying across the ideal boundary - the proper study of such object would be impossible otherwise.', 'math-0612372-2-4-0': 'Some of the basic notions such as angle, length and geodesic triangle on the extended hyperbolic plane has been considered and studied so far through cross ratio (see [CITATION]) and a rather ad hoc combinatorial method (see [CITATION]).', 'math-0612372-2-4-1': 'In this paper we study the extended hyperbolic space in a more systematic way and discuss some of its applications.', 'math-0612372-2-4-2': 'In Section 2, we set up the geometry as an analytic continuation going over the singularity of the hyperbolic metric at the ideal boundary, we view the hyperbolic metric as a limit of complex perturbation called an [MATH]-metric which is a complex regular metric.', 'math-0612372-2-4-3': 'And we define and study distance, angle, length and k-dimensional volumes on the extended space in Section 4.', 'math-0612372-2-4-4': 'Then such geometric quantities are given rather naturally with complex numbers - they of course coincide with the usual real values for the quantities inside the hyperbolic space.', 'math-0612372-2-4-5': 'If we consider a nice region lying across the ideal boundary, then the volume of the region is of a finite complex value while the volume of the hyperbolic part and the Lorentzian part of the region are both infinite.', 'math-0612372-2-4-6': 'In fact the measure defined on the extended hyperbolic space which extends the usual hyperbolic volume (and Lorentz volume) is a finitely (but not countably) additive complex measure and we study some of its delicate and strange properties in Section 3.', 'math-0612372-2-5-0': 'We would like to describe some of the advantages and expectations of using the extended hyperbolic model.', 'math-0612372-2-5-1': 'When we study hyperbolic geometry we naturally want to extend the geometric objects and notions over and beyond the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-2-5-2': 'But when we try to compute geometric quantities, we come across with a confusion of choosing an appropriate value among infinite possibilities of multi-values even for a distance or an angle.', 'math-0612372-2-5-3': 'The extended model provide us a fulfilling consistency without such confusion once we choose an analytic continuation which follows naturally after fixing an [MATH]-approximation of the metric.', 'math-0612372-2-5-4': 'For instance the understanding of 1-dimensional extended model quickly leads us to be able to define an angle as a complex numbers on the general semi-Riemannian manifolds.', 'math-0612372-2-5-5': 'Generalizing an earlier work of Kellerhals[CITATION], Ushijima studied the volume of a hyperbolic polyhedron obtained by truncating with the dual plane of an ultra ideal vertex of a tetrahedron which is lying across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-2-5-6': 'He showed in [CITATION] that the volume of the truncated tetrahedron is the real part of the value obtained after formal application of the known volume formula of a hyperbolic tetrahedron to this tetrahedron.', 'math-0612372-2-5-7': 'But for the imaginary part it is multi-valued and there remains a problem of choice and interpretation of its geometric meaning.', 'math-0612372-2-5-8': 'The extended model determines the unique value of the imaginary part and explains its geometric meaning as the volume of the truncated portion or as the area of the truncated face.', 'math-0612372-2-5-9': 'See Example 5.11.', 'math-0612372-2-6-0': 'As we work more with the extended model, we found that the model is a natural and fundamental geometric setting as it works beautifully in every aspect.', 'math-0612372-2-6-1': 'The n-dimensional extended hyperbolic space [MATH] is simply the standard sphere [MATH] topologically but with the geometry coming from the unit sphere of the Minkowski space.', 'math-0612372-2-6-2': 'Its geometry has many resemblance with the spherical geometry and we can obtain various results through this conceptual but concrete analogy.', 'math-0612372-2-6-3': 'For instance we can derive the Gauss-Bonnet formula on the extended space (this was first shown in [CITATION]) combinatorially using Euler method as we did for the 2-sphere [MATH] without computing integrals and then of course can be generalized to the higher dimensions.', 'math-0612372-2-6-4': '(See Proposition [REF].)', 'math-0612372-2-6-5': 'Furthermore we can extend the hyperbolic trigonometry to the extended space, which of course implies that we have the same trigonometry on the de Sitter space (the Lorentzian part) and even for an object sitting across the ideal boundary.', 'math-0612372-2-6-6': 'In principle we can apply the same method used for the standard sphere to obtain the corresponding results on the extended hyperbolic space, which in turn give rise to the results for the hyperbolic space as well as de Sitter space.', 'math-0612372-2-6-7': 'It would be interesting to observe that the volume of [MATH] differs from that of [MATH] by [MATH].', 'math-0612372-2-6-8': '(See Theorem 2.3.)', 'math-0612372-2-7-0': "As another illustration, let us consider Santalo's formula [CITATION] giving the relation between the volume of a simplex and its dual in [MATH] or [MATH], Milnor's relation [CITATION] between a convex polyhedron [MATH] and its dual [MATH] in [MATH], and Suarez-Peiro's result [CITATION] for a simplex and its dual in [MATH].", 'math-0612372-2-7-1': 'Then we see that there is a slight discrepancy between [MATH] and [MATH]: [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are edge lenghts and dihedral angles of [MATH].', 'math-0612372-2-7-2': 'Here if we use the extended model [MATH] instead of [MATH], the proof is essentially identical with the case for [MATH] and the formula can be written for both cases in a unified way as follows.', 'math-0612372-2-7-3': '[EQUATION]', 'math-0612372-2-7-4': 'For this expression, the volume of simplices of type III lying across the boundary play the crucial role which is also interpreted as mean curvature integral in [MATH] and [MATH].', 'math-0612372-2-7-5': "And Suarez-Peiro's result is then also expected to be generalized for both cases in a single identity as [EQUATION]", 'math-0612372-2-7-6': 'Conceptually things are getting tremendously easier giving us inspirations and this is one of the real merits using the extended model.', 'math-0612372-2-8-0': 'Lastly here are some speculations and the directions for possible further developments and applications.', 'math-0612372-2-8-1': 'If we use the extended model, all the geometric quantities become complex valued and we can ask whether this is related to complex invariants of hyperbolic manifolds such as volume and Chern-Simon invariant pair in dimension 3.', 'math-0612372-2-8-2': 'Using the extended model we can derive all the trigonometry and precise elementary geometric formulas for the Lorentzian spherical space (or de Sitter space) and this will be useful to study the discrete group actions on the Lorentzian space.', 'math-0612372-2-8-3': 'Since the hyperbolic space and the Lorentzian space are dual each other, it is obviously advantageous to study the both subjects simultaneously in a unified geometric setting.', 'math-0612372-2-8-4': 'Similar constructions for other semi-Riemannian cases, complex hyperbolic and quarternionic hyperbolic cases would also be very interesting.'}
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[]
[]
[]
['math-0612372-1-5-9', 'math-0612372-1-6-4', 'math-0612372-1-6-8', 'math-0612372-1-7-3', 'math-0612372-2-5-9', 'math-0612372-2-6-4', 'math-0612372-2-6-8', 'math-0612372-2-7-3']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0612372
null
null
null
null
null
1504.07995
{'1504.07995-1-0-0': 'We report constraints on the three-dimensional orbital architecture for all four planets known to orbit the nearby M dwarf Gliese 876 (=GJ 876) based solely on Doppler measurements and demanding long-term orbital stability.', '1504.07995-1-0-1': 'Our dataset incorporates publicly available radial velocities taken with the ELODIE and CORALIE spectrographs, HARPS, and Keck HIRES as well as previously unpublished HIRES RVs.', '1504.07995-1-0-2': 'We first quantitatively assess the validity of the planets thought to orbit GJ 876 by computing the Bayes factors for a variety of different coplanar models using an importance sampling algorithm.', '1504.07995-1-0-3': 'We confirm that a four-planet model is indeed preferred over a three-planet model.', '1504.07995-1-0-4': 'Next, we apply a Newtonian MCMC algorithm (RUNDMC, [CITATION]) to perform a Bayesian analysis of the planet masses and orbits using an n-body model that allows each planet to take on its own orbit in three-dimensional space.', '1504.07995-1-0-5': 'Based on the radial velocities alone, the mutual inclinations for the outer three resonant planets are constrained to [MATH] degrees for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair and [MATH] degrees for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair.', '1504.07995-1-0-6': 'We integrate the equations of motion of a sample of initial conditions drawn from our posterior for [MATH] years.', '1504.07995-1-0-7': 'We identify dynamically unstable models and find that the GJ 876 planets must be roughly coplanar ([MATH] degrees and [MATH] degrees), indicating the amount of planet-planet scattering in the system has been low.', '1504.07995-1-0-8': 'We investigate the distribution of the respective resonant arguments of each planet pair and find that at least one resonant argument for each planet pair and the Laplace argument librate.', '1504.07995-1-0-9': 'The libration amplitudes in our three-dimensional orbital model supports the idea of the outer-three planets having undergone significant past disk migration.', '1504.07995-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1504.07995-1-2-0': 'GJ 876 is a 0.37 [MATH]M4V star hosting four known planets.', '1504.07995-1-2-1': 'This remarkable system represents several milestones: the first detection of a planet around an M-dwarf (GJ 876 b) , the first example of multi-planet system orbiting in a mean-motion resonance (MMR) , the first example of an MMR chain amongst three planets , and the closest multi-planet exosystem to date (4.689 pc, [CITATION]).', '1504.07995-1-3-0': 'The star has a lengthy Doppler (or radial velocity, RV) history spanning two decades and multiple observing sites.', '1504.07995-1-3-1': 'Planet bwas detected contemporaneously by [CITATION] using the Lick Hamilton Spectrograph and Keck HIRES and [CITATION] using the ELODIE and CORALIE spectrographs.', '1504.07995-1-3-2': 'Both estimated a moderate eccentricity for b([MATH]0.3) and an orbital period of 61 days for this gas giant from their radial velocity model.', '1504.07995-1-3-3': 'With more RV observations, [CITATION] uncovered a second gas giant, c, orbiting near 30 days.', '1504.07995-1-3-4': "This planet's RV signature previously masqueraded as a larger eccentricity for planet bdue to the near 2:1 period commensurability of their orbits .", '1504.07995-1-3-5': 'As the Keck RV dataset grew, [CITATION] revealed a third planet dorbiting near 1.9 days and was the lowest mass exoplanet around a main-sequence star at the time ([MATH]=5.89[MATH]).', '1504.07995-1-3-6': 'Photometric measurements showed planet ddid not transit .', '1504.07995-1-3-7': '[CITATION] published new HARPS RVs which by themselves could constrain the mutual inclination between planets cand b. Around the same time, [CITATION] published new Keck RVs which showed an additional RV signal around 124 days, dubbed planet e. Numerically integrating their solutions beyond the last observation, the outer three planets (c, b, and e) appear to be in a Laplace resonance, much like the three closest Galilean moons orbiting Jupiter.', '1504.07995-1-3-8': 'Other studies have placed limits on the existence of additional planets and massive companions in the system through observations and considerations of long-term dynamical stability .', '1504.07995-1-4-0': 'For RV systems, we only observe the component of the planetary induced stellar wobble projected onto our line-of-sight.', '1504.07995-1-4-1': "Most of the time, there is a degeneracy between the true mass ([MATH]) and on-sky inclination ([MATH]), where an edge-on system is [MATH], so we can only place a lower limit on the orbiting companion's mass.", '1504.07995-1-4-2': 'However, if the self-interactions in a multiple planet system are strong, the RV model becomes sensitive to the true masses of the planets, thereby breaking the [MATH] degeneracy.', '1504.07995-1-4-3': 'There are many RV systems where the true masses can be meaningfully constrained, including HD 200964, 24 Sextantis , HD 82943 , and other dynamically active systems .', '1504.07995-1-5-0': 'For GJ 876 [MATH]and [MATH], [CITATION] and [CITATION] performed self-consistent Newtonian fits and constrain the planetary masses and their on-sky coplanar inclination.', '1504.07995-1-5-1': '[CITATION] found an on-sky inclination for the three-planet system ([MATH]), assuming coplanarity.', '1504.07995-1-5-2': '[CITATION] combined the RVs from [CITATION] and Hubble Space Telescope astrometry from [CITATION] and measured the mutual inclination [MATH] between [MATH]and [MATH], where [EQUATION] [MATH] is the longitude of ascending node, and [MATH]and [MATH]denote the two planets considered.', '1504.07995-1-5-3': 'They find [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-5-4': 'Based on the HARPS RVs alone, [CITATION] find a lower value ([MATH]).', '1504.07995-1-5-5': 'With their four-planet model, [CITATION] finds a best fit value [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-5-6': 'All of the above values are generally consistent with a nearly coplanar system.', '1504.07995-1-5-7': 'When incorporating the effects of correlated noise, [CITATION] finds a larger and wider range of mutual inclination ([MATH]).', '1504.07995-1-6-0': 'Arguably the most studied exoplanet system displaying a MMR, the GJ 876 system has been a prime testbed for dynamical and planet formation theory for the past decade.', '1504.07995-1-6-1': "The 2:1 MMR of the [MATH]and [MATH]pair is of particular interest, since the libration amplitude of the resonant arguments are a valuable indicator of the system's long-term dynamical stability .", '1504.07995-1-6-2': "The most likely mechanism for the planets' current orbital periods and eccentricities is through a combination of planet-planet interactions and disk migration, while most studies have focused on migration through a gas disk .", '1504.07995-1-6-3': '(Semi)-analytic models describing the secular evolution of the system have also been developed .', '1504.07995-1-7-0': 'Other studies of the GJ 876 system include the search for debris disks, thermal properties of [MATH], and interior structure models of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-7-1': "More recent analyses include how the star's UV radiation field affects habitability and the detectability of additional hypothesized planets in the system .", '1504.07995-1-7-2': "Although the system's orbital architecture appears atypical, GJ 876 does fit into a larger portrait of exoplanet systems around M dwarfs, including population statistics of giant planets and the coplanarity of multi-planet systems .", '1504.07995-1-8-0': 'RV surveys have discovered a couple dozen strongly-interacting multi-planet systems, motivating the need for analysis procedures to incorporate a self-consistent Newtonian model.', '1504.07995-1-8-1': '[CITATION] developed a Newtonian MCMC algorithm which has been successful in analyzing systems that require a large number of model parameters .', '1504.07995-1-8-2': 'The GJ 876 observations have a similar observing baseline and require almost as many model parameters, making it compatible with such an algorithm.', '1504.07995-1-9-0': 'In this work, we present a detailed characterization of the orbits and masses of the GJ 876 planets employing a full three-dimensional orbital model used to fit the Doppler observations.', '1504.07995-1-9-1': 'In [REF], we describe the RV observations made with multiple spectrographs (ELODIE, CORALIE, HARPS, and HIRES), including a new set of HIRES measurements.', '1504.07995-1-9-2': 'In [REF], we describe our orbital and observational model and investigate the effects of correlated noise in the observations.', '1504.07995-1-9-3': 'In [REF], we report our results for a coplanar orbital model.', '1504.07995-1-9-4': 'Before advancing to a more complex orbital model, we evaluate the evidence for planets [MATH]and [MATH]by computing Bayes factors as described in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-9-5': 'In [REF], we report the results of the fitting and n-body simulations for a three-dimensional orbital model.', '1504.07995-1-9-6': 'In [REF], we investigate the evolution of the resonant angles and statistics regarding their libration amplitude.', '1504.07995-1-9-7': 'In Appendix [REF], we test for possible observational biases in these results.', '1504.07995-1-9-8': 'We conclude with a discussion of the key results and the applications of our posterior samples in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-10-0': '# Observations', '1504.07995-1-11-0': 'Our dataset includes publicly-available RVs from four different instruments.', '1504.07995-1-11-1': 'We include 46 ELODIE, 40 CORALIE, and 52 HARPS observations .', '1504.07995-1-11-2': 'The inclusion of these data extends our observing baseline to roughly 580 days before the first Keck HIRES observation.', '1504.07995-1-11-3': 'The 162 Keck observations are reduced by the Carnegie Planet Search group .', '1504.07995-1-11-4': 'These will be referred to as the Carnegie RVs henceforth.', '1504.07995-1-12-0': 'Our analysis also includes 67 additional Doppler measurements from HIRES reduced by the California Planet Search group (Table [REF]).', '1504.07995-1-12-1': 'These will be referred to as the California RVs henceforth.', '1504.07995-1-12-2': 'We measured relative RVs of GJ 876 with the HIRES echelle spectrometer on the 10-m Keck I telescope using standard procedures.', '1504.07995-1-12-3': 'Most observations were made with the B5 decker (3.5 [MATH] 0.86 arcseconds).', '1504.07995-1-12-4': 'Light from the telescope passed through a glass cell of molecular iodine cell heated to 50C.', '1504.07995-1-12-5': 'The dense set of molecular absorption lines imprinted on the stellar spectra between 5000-6200 [MATH] provide a robust wavelength scale against which Doppler shifts are measured, as well as strong constraints on the instrumental profile at the time of each observation .', '1504.07995-1-12-6': 'We also obtained five iodine-free "template" spectra using the B1 decker (3.5 [MATH] 0.57 arcseconds).', '1504.07995-1-12-7': 'These spectra were de-convolved using the instrumental profile measured from spectra of rapidly rotating B stars observed immediately before and after through the iodine cell.', '1504.07995-1-12-8': 'We measured high-precision relative RVs using a forward model where the de-convolved stellar spectrum is Doppler shifted, multiplied by the normalized high-resolution iodine transmission spectrum, convolved with an instrumental profile, and matched to the observed spectra using a Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm that minimizes the [MATH] statistic .', '1504.07995-1-12-9': 'In this algorithm, the RV is varied (along with nuisance parameters describing the wavelength scale and instrumental profile) until the [MATH] minimum is reached.', '1504.07995-1-12-10': 'Each RV uncertainty is the weighted error on the mean RV of [MATH]700 spectral chunks that are separately Doppler analyzed.', '1504.07995-1-12-11': 'These uncertainty estimates do not account for potential systematic Doppler shifts from instrumental or stellar effects.', '1504.07995-1-13-0': '# Methods', '1504.07995-1-14-0': 'We characterize the masses and orbits of the GJ 876 planets using the GPU version of the Radial velocity Using N-body Differential evolution Markov Chain Monte Carlo code, RUNDMC, which incorporates the Swarm-NGframework to integrate planetary systems on graphics cards .', '1504.07995-1-14-1': 'RUNDMChas analyzed the 55 Cancri planetary system, which required a high-dimensional ([MATH]40) model.', '1504.07995-1-14-2': 'Compared with 55 Cancri, the problem of GJ 876 seems to be similarly challenging but more computationally tractable due to having fewer observations, a shorter observing baseline, a larger integration timestep, and a lower dimensional model (e.g. one less planet to account for).', '1504.07995-1-14-3': 'On the other hand, the presence of extremely strong planet-planet interactions can result in a challenging posterior distribution that could be more difficult to sample from.', '1504.07995-1-15-0': 'Considering the lessons from [CITATION] regarding how to explore parameter space efficiently, we set the following algorithmic parameters for RUNDMC: [MATH], [MATH], and MassScaleFactor=1.0.', '1504.07995-1-15-1': "To accommodate the inner-most planet's 1.9 day orbital period, we set our integration timestep to roughly 17 minutes and use the time-symmetrized Hermite integrator .", '1504.07995-1-16-0': 'We begin by applying RUNDMCto the Carnegie RVs from [CITATION] for a four-planet model.', '1504.07995-1-16-1': 'We sampled from the Markov chains after they had burned-in sufficiently.', '1504.07995-1-16-2': 'In RUNDMC, we specify the orbital parameters at the epoch of the first observation in our dataset.', '1504.07995-1-16-3': 'For the full RV dataset, this happens to be an ELODIE observation.', '1504.07995-1-16-4': "To generate the initial states of Markov chains for analyzing the full dataset, we start from a posterior sample based on the Carnegie RVs and rewind each planet's argument of periastron ([MATH]) and mean anomaly ([MATH]) according to the precession rate ([MATH]), orbital periods, and time difference between the first ELODIE and HIRES observations.", '1504.07995-1-16-5': '[CITATION] find the joint line of apses for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair to be precessing at an average rate of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-16-6': 'After burning-in, we randomly sample from our Markov chains to use as our set of initial conditions for long-term stability simulations using the MERCURYhybrid integrator .', '1504.07995-1-16-7': 'The solutions vetted for stability are used as initial conditions for more restricted RUNDMCruns to be explained in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-17-0': '## Model Parameters', '1504.07995-1-18-0': "We characterize the system model with a fixed star mass ([MATH][CITATION]), plus each planet's mass ([MATH]), semi-major axis ([MATH]), eccentricity ([MATH]), inclination ([MATH]), argument of periastron ([MATH]), longitude of ascending node ([MATH]), and mean anomaly ([MATH]) at our chosen epoch (first ELODIE observation) for each planet, plus the RV zero-point offsets ([MATH]) and jitters (i.e. unmodeled instrumental and astrophysical noise, [MATH]) for each observatory.", '1504.07995-1-18-1': "We report the orbital periods ([MATH]) based on Kepler's Third Law and each body's [MATH] and [MATH] based in a Jacobi coordinate system.", '1504.07995-1-18-2': 'Planet masses and semi-major axes can be readily rescaled to account for any updates to the stellar mass.', '1504.07995-1-19-0': 'The GJ 876 planets are well approximated by a coplanar system, i.e. [MATH] and [MATH] is the same for all planets.', '1504.07995-1-19-1': 'Due to the symmetrical nature of a radial velocity system on the sky, a planetary system at [MATH] is indistinguishable from one at an inclination of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-19-2': 'So in [REF], we restrict the planets to a coplanar system that can take on any value of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-19-3': 'Similarly, the entire system can be rotated about the line-of-sight.', '1504.07995-1-19-4': 'In [REF], the individual [MATH] and [MATH] for each planet become free parameters in our model that are fit to the observations.', '1504.07995-1-19-5': 'We set [MATH] to ground our coordinate system.', '1504.07995-1-20-0': '## Model of Observations', '1504.07995-1-21-0': 'RUNDMCallows for fitting multiple zero-point offsets and magnitudes of jitter (e.g. combined astrophysical and/or instrumental noise).', '1504.07995-1-21-1': 'HIRES received a CCD upgrade and new Doppler reduction process in August 2004 (JD 2453241.5).', '1504.07995-1-21-2': 'The Carnegie time series was split based on this pre- and post-upgrade era, which was modeled by two zero-point offsets, but the entire dataset is still modeled with one jitter term.', '1504.07995-1-21-3': 'The California RVs also have a separate offset and one jitter term.', '1504.07995-1-21-4': 'The other instruments (ELODIE, CORALIE, HARPS) were each modeled by one RV zero-point offset and jitter term.', '1504.07995-1-21-5': 'In total, we account for six offsets and five jitter parameters.', '1504.07995-1-22-0': 'Our dataset does not include the HST astrometry from [CITATION] or any informative priors regarding the inclinations of the GJ 876 planets.', '1504.07995-1-23-0': '## Magnitude and Timescale for Correlated Noise', '1504.07995-1-24-0': 'Our likelihood function described in Equations 4 and 5 of [CITATION] assumes that the observational errors are uncorrelated, which may not be a sufficient approximation for high precision RV measurements of stars with significant stellar activity.', '1504.07995-1-24-1': '[CITATION] showed that correlated (=red) noise in the RV data could lead to bias or misestimated uncertainty in some of the orbital parameters (e.g., [MATH]).', '1504.07995-1-24-2': 'Recently, some discoveries of planets orbiting M dwarfs have been shown to be more likely mere artifacts resulting from stellar activity .', '1504.07995-1-24-3': 'Therefore, we take a closer look at the role of stellar activity in contributing astrophysical noise to RV observations of GJ 876.', '1504.07995-1-24-4': 'In [REF], we perform a complementary analysis by computing Bayes factors for a finite set of models.', '1504.07995-1-25-0': 'High-precision photometry of GJ 876 revealed a rotation period of [MATH] days.', '1504.07995-1-25-1': 'Examining the variability of the activity-sensitive H[MATH] and Na I D absorption lines in the publicly-available HARPS spectra of the star, we confirm the rotation period, finding an H[MATH] periodicity of [MATH] days (Figure [REF], top panel).', '1504.07995-1-25-2': 'The appearance of the rotation period in the photometry suggests the presence of starspots, which can affect the measured RVs .', '1504.07995-1-25-3': 'The results from [CITATION], [CITATION], and our own examination of the spectral activity tracers suggest a complete treatment of activity will yield only marginal improvements in the accuracy of the RV model, and is not necessary to achieve the goals of this study.', '1504.07995-1-26-0': '[CITATION] showed that rotating starspots will induce RV periodicities at the stellar rotation period [MATH] and its integer fractions ([MATH], [MATH], etc.).', '1504.07995-1-26-1': 'Given that none of the planets in the GJ 876 system have periods near the rotation period or its integer fractions, we conclude that rotating starspots have not produced large-amplitude periodic RV signals such as might be misinterpreted as planet candidates.', '1504.07995-1-26-2': 'Although the RV amplitude of the outermost planet e([MATH]) is closest to the amplitudes expected for activity signals produced by a chromospherically quiet star such as GJ 876, we are unaware of any physical mechanism that would create an RV signal on this timescale.', '1504.07995-1-27-0': 'Our computed stellar rotation period of [MATH] days beating with one Earth year produces an alias of around 128 days, which is worryingly close to the orbital period of planet e([MATH]124 days).', '1504.07995-1-27-1': 'However, subtracting the rotation signal causes the 128-day peak to disappear as well, leading us to suspect that this signal is an alias (Figure [REF], bottom panel).', '1504.07995-1-27-2': 'If the 124-day signal is an 1-year alias of the rotation period, then we would also see the 95 day signal in the RV data.', '1504.07995-1-27-3': '[CITATION] and [CITATION] did not find the stellar rotation signal in the RV datasets they analyzed.', '1504.07995-1-28-0': '## Computing Bayes Factors for Model Selection', '1504.07995-1-29-0': 'When Doppler observations of a system with multiple strongly-interacting planets, the shape of the posterior distribution is often challenging to sample from efficiently.', '1504.07995-1-29-1': 'A general Bayesian approach of performing model comparison is to compute the fully marginalized likelihood, sometimes called the evidence, for each model.', '1504.07995-1-29-2': 'Formally, the evidence is the probability of generating the observed radial velocity dataset [MATH] assuming some underlying model [MATH] that is parameterized by [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the likelihood function and [MATH] is the prior probability distribution.', '1504.07995-1-29-3': 'While the value of [MATH] is not useful by itself, the ratio of two evidences for two competing models [MATH] and [MATH], yields the Bayes factor [EQUATION] that provides a quantitative measure of which model is preferred and to what degree.', '1504.07995-1-30-0': 'Marginal likelihoods are notoriously difficult to compute.', '1504.07995-1-30-1': 'Integrating Equation [REF] analytically may be possible for some idealized problems with one to a few dimensions, but the model required to describe a 3+ planet system needs roughly 20 or more parameters.', '1504.07995-1-30-2': 'Numerical integration techniques such as Monte Carlo integration become vastly inefficient with increasing dimensionality.', '1504.07995-1-31-0': 'Therefore, we use importance sampling, a more general form of Monte Carlo integration, to calculate the integral in Equation [REF] and make this problem computationally tractable.', '1504.07995-1-31-1': 'Following [CITATION], we sample from a distribution [MATH] with a known normalization.', '1504.07995-1-31-2': 'We multiply the numerator and denominator of the integrand in Equation [REF] by [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1504.07995-1-31-3': 'While the value of [MATH] has not changed, Equation [REF] can be estimated by drawing [MATH] samples from [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1504.07995-1-31-4': 'The key aspect of having importance sampling work efficiently is to pick an appropriate [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-31-5': 'Assuming our parameter space contains one dominant posterior mode, we choose a multivariate normal with mean vector [MATH] and covariance matrix [MATH] for [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-31-6': 'For each model considered, we will estimate [MATH] and [MATH] from the coplanar MCMC runs described in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-31-7': "Our parameterization for [MATH] is [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] for each planet, the system's orbital inclination [MATH], and one [MATH]for each observatory.", '1504.07995-1-31-8': 'Since we are only interested in computing ratios of [MATH], the priors in zero-point offsets in the calculation will cancel out.', '1504.07995-1-32-0': 'One good strategy with importance sampling is to pick a [MATH] that is heavier in the tails than [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-32-1': 'This makes it easier to sample from low probability parts of the posterior distribution and prevents any samples from resulting in extremely large weights.', '1504.07995-1-32-2': 'However, the chance of sampling from the posterior mode will decrease with increasing dimensionality, which could ultimately lead to an estimate of [MATH] that is not efficient.', '1504.07995-1-33-0': 'One way around this is to sample from [MATH] within some truncated subspace, [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-33-1': 'This new distribution [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] inside [MATH] and renormalized to be a proper probability density.', '1504.07995-1-33-2': 'Equation [REF] can be rewritten as [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a factor that specifies what fraction of [MATH] lies within [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-33-3': 'We can estimate [MATH] with an MCMC sample.', '1504.07995-1-33-4': 'By counting what fraction of our posterior samples fell within [MATH], [MATH], we can rearrange Equation [REF] to give us [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-33-5': '[EQUATION] [CITATION] and [CITATION] provide more detailed prescriptions and investigations of this method.', '1504.07995-1-34-0': 'There are two competing effects when choosing the size of our subspace [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-34-1': 'If [MATH] is large (i.e. occupies nearly all of the posterior distribution), then [MATH] approaches 1 and we return to our basic importance sampling algorithm.', '1504.07995-1-34-2': 'If [MATH] occupies a much smaller region, then we are more likely to sample from near the posterior mode, but [MATH] approaches 0, making it difficult to accurately estimate [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-34-3': 'We must carefully choose a [MATH] that will provide a robust estimate of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-34-4': '[CITATION] found that for a three- and four-planet system, truncating the posterior distribution from [MATH] to [MATH] was roughly optimal, where [MATH] is the standard deviation of each respective model parameter.', '1504.07995-1-34-5': 'We tested several subspace sizes and found [MATH] worked well for our problem.', '1504.07995-1-35-0': 'To draw from this distribution, we create a vector [MATH] whose components are independent draws from a standard normal [MATH] truncated at [MATH] and [MATH] for each of our vector components.', '1504.07995-1-35-1': 'Each [MATH] is generated as [MATH], where [MATH] is the Cholesky decomposition of [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-35-2': 'We generate [MATH] samples from [MATH], which provided a robust estimate of [MATH] for each of our five competing models described in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-36-0': '# Coplanar Models', '1504.07995-1-37-0': 'Before attempting to relax the coplanarity constraint, we wish to assess the evidence for all the GJ 876 planets, [MATH]in particular.', '1504.07995-1-38-0': 'We apply RUNDMCto our cumulative set of 367 RV observations using a coplanar model but allowing for a systematic orbital inclination.', '1504.07995-1-38-1': 'In particular, we consider five different models: one with just the outer-most three planets ([MATH]), one with just the inner-most three planets ([MATH]), one with the inner-most three planets plus a [MATH]124-day sinusoid to mimic either a fourth planet on a circular orbit or a stellar activity signal ([MATH]), one with all four planets ([MATH]), and one with a putative fifth planet ([MATH]).', '1504.07995-1-39-0': 'We calculate five fully marginalized likelihoods (four Bayes factors) and summarize the results in Table [REF].', '1504.07995-1-39-1': 'Our methodology for computing these probabilities are described in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-40-0': 'The Bayes factor for M_3in/M_3outis [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-40-1': 'Despite the increased parameterization of M_3in+, this model with four signals is decisively favored over M_3in.', '1504.07995-1-40-2': 'The Bayes factor for M_4/M_3in+is [MATH] years, ensuring that they were in an undamped equilibrium state.', '1504.07995-1-41-0': 'We performed a number of these simulations and selected a system from these with final (i.e. after turning off orbital damping) libration amplitude of [MATH]20.', '1504.07995-1-41-1': 'Most simulations resulted in a Laplace argument with very small libration amplitude ([MATH]1) during the damping phase and rose to several tens of degrees after the damping was removed.', '1504.07995-1-41-2': 'This particular system had a libration amplitude significantly smaller than the best-fit from [REF], allowing us to test whether our fitting procedure artificially increases the libration amplitude.', '1504.07995-1-41-3': 'This synthetic system will be referred to as S_Reg:20henceforth (Figure [REF] left).', '1504.07995-1-42-0': 'We generate an RV dataset for both S_Chaos:80and S_Reg:20using the same RV time series with their associated offsets and jitters described in [REF].', '1504.07995-1-42-1': 'We include the inner-most, non-resonant planet with the following orbital properties and coplanar with the migrated planets: [MATH] days, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-42-2': 'For each synthetic measurement ([MATH]), we compute the RV value at that time ([MATH]), then add two noise terms: one drawn from a standard normal scaled by the measurement uncertainty [MATH] and a similar term but scaled by the jitter value corresponding of that observation, i.e. [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-43-0': 'These datasets were then used as simulated input observations for RUNDMC, and a full differential evolution MCMC was performed on each synthetic data set (in the same manner as was performed on the real data, and described in [REF] and [REF]).', '1504.07995-1-43-1': 'We performed three realizations of the RV time series for both [MATH]and [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-44-0': '## Results for Synthetic Planetary Systems', '1504.07995-1-45-0': 'In right panel of Figure [REF], we show the _Laplacelibration amplitude distribution for the three realizations of the RV time series based on S_Chaos:80.', '1504.07995-1-45-1': 'The chaotic nature of S_Chaos:80is shown in Figure [REF] left where the periodicity and peak-to-peak variation are not constant in time.', '1504.07995-1-45-2': 'There is a rough variation of [MATH]160corresponding to an amplitude of [MATH]80.', '1504.07995-1-45-3': 'For each realization, we find libration amplitudes of [MATH] (blue dash-dotted), [MATH] (red dashed), and [MATH] (green solid) degrees based on 1,000 solutions each.', '1504.07995-1-45-4': 'Only a few solutions from each of these realizations were unstable over the short integration baseline (1 kyr).', '1504.07995-1-45-5': 'These estimates are qualitatively consistent with the input amplitude.', '1504.07995-1-46-0': 'In right panel of Figure [REF], we show the [MATH]libration amplitude distribution for the three realizations of the RV time series based on [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-46-1': 'A significant fraction of our posterior sample for each realization was not dynamically stable.', '1504.07995-1-46-2': 'Specifically, only 548, 496, and 673 systems remained after the 1 kyr integration.', '1504.07995-1-46-3': "We find that the RV analysis of the synthetic data overestimated the outer-most planet's mass by [MATH]20%, which could be reason for such a large fraction of unstable systems.", '1504.07995-1-46-4': 'We find libration amplitudes of [MATH] (blue dash-dotted), [MATH], (red dashed) and [MATH] (green solid) degrees based on the remaining short-term stable systems.', '1504.07995-1-46-5': 'Again, these values are qualitatively consistent with the input amplitude of [MATH]20.', '1504.07995-1-47-0': 'It is clear from these results that our RUNDMCalgorithm does not significantly bias the recovered libration amplitudes for the 4:2:1 resonance of the outer three planets in the GJ 876 system.', '1504.07995-1-47-1': 'Thus, we believe that our best-fit libration amplitude for the real data ([REF]) is accurate and the GJ 876 system is in a chaotically librating state, with a high-amplitude libration.', '1504.07995-1-48-0': '## Estimation of Lyapunov times for GJ 876 Orbital Solutions', '1504.07995-1-49-0': '[CITATION] suggests that the GJ 876 system is chaotic, with a characteristic timescale (or Lyapunov time, defined below) for the chaos of roughly 14 years.', '1504.07995-1-49-1': 'This theoretical study ignored the innermost planet and treated the system as coplanar.', '1504.07995-1-49-2': 'An estimate of the Lyapunov time for the 4-planet, coplanar radial velocity orbital solution of [CITATION] was consistent with the analytic estimate.', '1504.07995-1-50-0': 'Here we study the nature of three sets of solutions: first, the 1,000 long-term stable, 3-d orbital models described in [REF]; 1,000 coplanar models described in [REF]; and 1,000 coplanar models based on the [MATH].', '1504.07995-1-50-1': 'We determine whether or not the orbits are chaotic by evolving simultaneously the standard gravitational equations of motion and the variational equations of motion, which yields an estimate of the Lyapunov time of a trajectory (e.g. [CITATION]).', '1504.07995-1-50-2': 'The variational equations govern the behavior of small perturbations to an orbit and therefore can be used to study how perturbations evolve in time.', '1504.07995-1-50-3': 'For chaotic orbits, small perturbations of length [MATH] grow exponentially as [MATH] with a characteristic time [MATH], which in the limit as [MATH] is defined as the (minimum) Lyapunov time.', '1504.07995-1-50-4': 'Our finite time integrations are used to estimate this Lyapunov time as [MATH], where [MATH] is the total integration time, [MATH], and [MATH] is the total length of the "perturbation" at the end of the integration.', '1504.07995-1-50-5': 'Note that [MATH] in principle can become very large, but since the variational equations are linear in the components of [MATH], the absolute length of [MATH] need not be small for the variational equations to apply.', '1504.07995-1-50-6': 'If an orbit is regular, the reported Lyapunov time will be comparable to the integration time, though integrations cannot prove an orbit is regular.', '1504.07995-1-50-7': 'These integrations must therefore be carried out for long enough such that the chaotic and regular orbits have markedly different reported Lyapunov times.', '1504.07995-1-51-0': 'We employed a Wisdom-Holman mapping in canonical astrocentric coordinates to integrate both the equations of motion and the variational equations .', '1504.07995-1-51-1': 'A third-order symplectic corrector was implemented to improve the accuracy of these integrations .', '1504.07995-1-51-2': 'We used a simple prescription for the effects of general relativity which leads to precession of the orbits with the correct timescale .', '1504.07995-1-51-3': 'As we will show, the Lyapunov times of the orbits were significantly shorter than the timescale of precession due to general relativity, and so this approximate version of general relativity is sufficient for a good estimate of the Lyapunov times for the orbits studied.', '1504.07995-1-52-0': 'The Wisdom-Holman integrator can be used with a time step as small as a tenth or twentieth of the shortest orbital timescale in the system .', '1504.07995-1-52-1': 'For GJ 876, this corresponds to the time needed to resolve the pericenter passage of the innermost planet.', '1504.07995-1-52-2': 'We estimate this using the orbital period of the innermost planet as if its semimajor axis was equal to the pericenter distance, [MATH] days, where [MATH] and [MATH] days.', '1504.07995-1-52-3': 'We used a time step of either 0.14 or 0.014 days when integrating the set of 3-d solutions, and, as discussed below, these yield similar estimates of the Lyapunov times.', '1504.07995-1-52-4': 'For both coplanar set of solutions, we used a time step of 0.14 days.', '1504.07995-1-52-5': 'The maximum fractional energy error [MATH] was [MATH] for the 3-d set of orbits with a time step of 0.14 days, [MATH] for the same set with a time step of 0.014 days, and [MATH] for the coplanar set of orbits.', '1504.07995-1-52-6': 'These integrations lasted [MATH] years.', '1504.07995-1-53-0': 'In Figure [REF], we show the distribution of Lyapunov times for the 3-d set of solutions resulting from the integrations employing both timesteps, and the distribution of Lyapunov times for the coplanar set of solutions.', '1504.07995-1-53-1': 'These integrations all agree that the motion of these orbits is chaotic with a Lyapunov time of roughly 10 years, consistent with the analytic estimate of [CITATION].', '1504.07995-1-53-2': 'The small peak at [MATH] years in the distribution of Lyapunov times for the coplanar orbital solutions to the data corresponds to orbits which might be regular.', '1504.07995-1-53-3': 'However, the vast majority of coplanar orbits studied were chaotic.', '1504.07995-1-53-4': 'The close agreement between Lyapunov times estimated for the 3-d and coplanar sets is also consistent with the analysis of [CITATION] and [CITATION] in that the chaotic motion is captured by a coplanar approximation of the true system.', '1504.07995-1-54-0': 'During the integrations with a time step of 0.14 days, [MATH]10 orbits in each set (3-d vs. coplanar) were flagged as unstable.', '1504.07995-1-54-1': 'With the smaller time step of 0.014 days, no orbit in the set of 3-d orbits was flagged as unstable.', '1504.07995-1-54-2': 'This suggests that the smaller time step might be necessary for studying the long-term stability of these orbits using a Wisdom-Holman integrator.', '1504.07995-1-54-3': 'However, since the two time steps agree on the distribution of Lyapunov times, we believe these results are robust.', '1504.07995-1-54-4': 'Lastly, we do not show the results of the coplanar set of solutions fit to synthetic data, since our integrations suggested that nearly all of these orbits where not only chaotic but also showed instability on short ([MATH] year) timescales.', '1504.07995-1-54-5': 'We defer any further analysis of the stability of these synthetic solutions to future work.'}
{'1504.07995-2-0-0': 'We report constraints on the three-dimensional orbital architecture for all four planets known to orbit the nearby M dwarf Gliese 876 based solely on Doppler measurements and demanding long-term orbital stability.', '1504.07995-2-0-1': 'Our dataset incorporates publicly available radial velocities taken with the ELODIE and CORALIE spectrographs, HARPS, and Keck HIRES as well as previously unpublished HIRES velocities.', '1504.07995-2-0-2': 'We first quantitatively assess the validity of the planets thought to orbit GJ 876 by computing the Bayes factors for a variety of different coplanar models using an importance sampling algorithm.', '1504.07995-2-0-3': 'We find that a four-planet model is preferred over a three-planet model.', '1504.07995-2-0-4': 'Next, we apply a Newtonian MCMC algorithm to perform a Bayesian analysis of the planet masses and orbits using an n-body model in three-dimensional space.', '1504.07995-2-0-5': 'Based on the radial velocities alone, we find that a 99% credible interval provides upper limits on the mutual inclinations for the three resonant planets ([MATH] for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair and [MATH] for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair).', '1504.07995-2-0-6': 'Subsequent dynamical integrations of our posterior sample find that the GJ 876 planets must be roughly coplanar ([MATH] and [MATH]), indicating the amount of planet-planet scattering in the system has been low.', '1504.07995-2-0-7': 'We investigate the distribution of the respective resonant arguments of each planet pair and find that at least one argument for each planet pair and the Laplace argument librate.', '1504.07995-2-0-8': 'The libration amplitudes in our three-dimensional orbital model supports the idea of the outer-three planets having undergone significant past disk migration.', '1504.07995-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1504.07995-2-2-0': 'Gliese 876 (=GJ 876) is a 0.37 [MATH]M4V star hosting four known planets.', '1504.07995-2-2-1': 'This remarkable system represents several milestones: the first detection of a planet around an M-dwarf (GJ 876 b) , the first example of multi-planet system orbiting in a mean-motion resonance (MMR) , the first example of an MMR chain amongst three planets , and the closest multi-planet exosystem to date (4.689 pc, [CITATION]).', '1504.07995-2-3-0': 'The star has a lengthy Doppler (or radial velocity, RV) history spanning two decades and multiple observing sites.', '1504.07995-2-3-1': 'Planet bwas detected contemporaneously by [CITATION] using the Lick Hamilton Spectrograph and Keck HIRES and [CITATION] using the ELODIE and CORALIE spectrographs.', '1504.07995-2-3-2': 'Both estimated a moderately eccentricity for b([MATH]0.3) and an orbital period of 61 days for this gas giant from their radial velocity model.', '1504.07995-2-3-3': 'With more RV observations, [CITATION] uncovered a second gas giant, c, orbiting near 30 days.', '1504.07995-2-3-4': "This planet's RV signature previously masqueraded as a larger eccentricity for planet bdue to the near 2:1 period commensurability of their orbits .", '1504.07995-2-3-5': 'As the Keck RV dataset grew, [CITATION] revealed a third planet dorbiting near 1.9 days and was the lowest mass exoplanet around a main-sequence star at the time ([MATH]=5.89[MATH]).', '1504.07995-2-3-6': 'Photometric measurements showed planet ddid not transit .', '1504.07995-2-3-7': '[CITATION] published new HARPS RVs which by themselves could constrain the mutual inclination between planets cand b. Around the same time, [CITATION] published new Keck RVs which showed an additional RV signal around 124 days, dubbed planet e. Numerically integrating their solutions beyond the last observation, the outer three planets (c, b, and e) appear to be in a Laplace resonance, much like the three closest Galilean moons orbiting Jupiter.', '1504.07995-2-3-8': 'Other studies have placed limits on the existence of additional planets and massive companions in the system through observations and considerations of long-term dynamical stability .', '1504.07995-2-4-0': 'For RV systems, we only observe the component of the planetary induced stellar wobble projected onto our line-of-sight.', '1504.07995-2-4-1': "Most of the time, there is a degeneracy between the true mass ([MATH]) and on-sky inclination ([MATH]), where an edge-on system is [MATH], so we can only place a lower limit on the orbiting companion's mass.", '1504.07995-2-4-2': 'However, if the self-interactions in a multiple planet system are strong, the RV model becomes sensitive to the true masses of the planets, thereby breaking the [MATH] degeneracy.', '1504.07995-2-4-3': 'There are many RV systems where the true masses can be meaningfully constrained, including HD 200964, 24 Sextantis , HD 82943 , and other dynamically active systems .', '1504.07995-2-5-0': 'For GJ 876 [MATH]and [MATH], [CITATION] and [CITATION] performed self-consistent Newtonian fits and constrain the planetary masses and their on-sky coplanar inclination.', '1504.07995-2-5-1': '[CITATION] found an on-sky inclination for the three-planet system ([MATH]), assuming coplanarity.', '1504.07995-2-5-2': '[CITATION] combined the RVs from [CITATION] and Hubble Space Telescope astrometry from [CITATION] and measured the mutual inclination [MATH] between [MATH]and [MATH], where [EQUATION] [MATH] is the longitude of ascending node, and [MATH]and [MATH]denote the two planets considered.', '1504.07995-2-5-3': 'They find [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-5-4': 'Based on the HARPS RVs alone, [CITATION] find a lower value ([MATH]).', '1504.07995-2-5-5': 'With their four-planet model, [CITATION] finds a best fit value [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-5-6': 'All of the above values are generally consistent with a nearly coplanar system.', '1504.07995-2-5-7': 'When incorporating the effects of correlated noise, [CITATION] places an upper limit of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-6-0': 'Arguably the most studied exoplanet system displaying a MMR, the GJ 876 system has been a prime testbed for dynamical and planet formation theory for the past decade.', '1504.07995-2-6-1': "The 2:1 MMR of the [MATH]and [MATH]pair is of particular interest, since the libration amplitude of the resonant arguments are a valuable indicator of the system's long-term dynamical stability .", '1504.07995-2-6-2': "The most likely mechanism for the planets' current orbital periods and eccentricities is through a combination of planet-planet interactions and disk migration, while most studies have focused on migration through a gas disk .", '1504.07995-2-6-3': '(Semi)-analytic models describing the secular evolution of the system have also been developed .', '1504.07995-2-7-0': 'Other studies of the GJ 876 system include the search for debris disks, thermal properties of [MATH], and interior structure models of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-7-1': "More recent analyses include how the star's UV radiation field affects habitability and the detectability of additional hypothesized planets in the system .", '1504.07995-2-7-2': "Although the system's orbital architecture appears atypical, GJ 876 does fit into a larger portrait of exoplanet systems around M dwarfs, including population statistics of giant planets and the coplanarity of multi-planet systems .", '1504.07995-2-8-0': 'RV surveys have discovered a couple dozen strongly-interacting multi-planet systems, motivating the need for analysis procedures to incorporate a self-consistent Newtonian model.', '1504.07995-2-8-1': '[CITATION] developed a Newtonian MCMC algorithm which has been successful in analyzing systems that require a large number of model parameters .', '1504.07995-2-8-2': 'The GJ 876 observations have a similar observing baseline and require almost as many model parameters, making it compatible with such an algorithm.', '1504.07995-2-9-0': 'In this work, we present a detailed characterization of the orbits and masses of the GJ 876 planets employing a full three-dimensional orbital model used to fit the Doppler observations.', '1504.07995-2-9-1': 'In [REF], we describe the RV observations made with multiple spectrographs (ELODIE, CORALIE, HARPS, and HIRES), including a new set of HIRES measurements.', '1504.07995-2-9-2': 'In [REF], we describe our orbital and observational model and investigate the effects of correlated noise in the observations.', '1504.07995-2-9-3': 'In [REF], we report our results for a coplanar orbital model.', '1504.07995-2-9-4': 'Before advancing to a more complex orbital model, we evaluate the evidence for planets [MATH]and [MATH]by computing Bayes factors as described in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-9-5': 'In [REF], we report the results of the fitting and n-body simulations for a three-dimensional orbital model.', '1504.07995-2-9-6': 'In [REF], we investigate the evolution of the resonant angles and statistics regarding their libration amplitude.', '1504.07995-2-9-7': 'In Appendix [REF], we test for possible observational biases in these results.', '1504.07995-2-9-8': 'We conclude with a discussion of the key results and the applications of our posterior samples in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-10-0': '# Observations', '1504.07995-2-11-0': 'Our dataset includes publicly-available RVs from four different instruments.', '1504.07995-2-11-1': 'We include 46 ELODIE, 40 CORALIE, and 52 HARPS observations .', '1504.07995-2-11-2': 'The inclusion of these data extends our observing baseline to roughly 580 days before the first Keck HIRES observation.', '1504.07995-2-11-3': 'The 162 Keck observations are reduced by the Carnegie Planet Search group .', '1504.07995-2-11-4': 'These will be referred to as the Carnegie RVs henceforth.', '1504.07995-2-12-0': 'Our analysis also includes 67 additional Doppler measurements from HIRES reduced by the California Planet Search group (Table [REF]).', '1504.07995-2-12-1': 'These will be referred to as the California RVs henceforth.', '1504.07995-2-12-2': 'We measured relative RVs of GJ 876 with the HIRES echelle spectrometer on the 10-m Keck I telescope using standard procedures.', '1504.07995-2-12-3': 'Most observations were made with the B5 decker (3.5 [MATH] 0.86 arcseconds).', '1504.07995-2-12-4': 'Light from the telescope passed through a glass cell of molecular iodine cell heated to 50C.', '1504.07995-2-12-5': 'The dense set of molecular absorption lines imprinted on the stellar spectra between 5000-6200 [MATH] provide a robust wavelength scale against which Doppler shifts are measured, as well as strong constraints on the instrumental profile at the time of each observation .', '1504.07995-2-12-6': 'We also obtained five iodine-free "template" spectra using the B1 decker (3.5 [MATH] 0.57 arcseconds).', '1504.07995-2-12-7': 'These spectra were de-convolved using the instrumental profile measured from spectra of rapidly rotating B stars observed immediately before and after through the iodine cell.', '1504.07995-2-12-8': 'We measured high-precision relative RVs using a forward model where the de-convolved stellar spectrum is Doppler shifted, multiplied by the normalized high-resolution iodine transmission spectrum, convolved with an instrumental profile, and matched to the observed spectra using a Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm that minimizes the [MATH] statistic .', '1504.07995-2-12-9': 'In this algorithm, the RV is varied (along with nuisance parameters describing the wavelength scale and instrumental profile) until the [MATH] minimum is reached.', '1504.07995-2-12-10': 'Each RV uncertainty is the weighted error on the mean RV of [MATH]700 spectral chunks that are separately Doppler analyzed.', '1504.07995-2-12-11': 'These uncertainty estimates do not account for potential systematic Doppler shifts from instrumental or stellar effects.', '1504.07995-2-13-0': '# Methods', '1504.07995-2-14-0': 'We characterize the masses and orbits of the GJ 876 planets using the GPU version of the Radial velocity Using N-body Differential evolution Markov Chain Monte Carlo code, RUNDMC, which incorporates the Swarm-NGframework to integrate planetary systems on graphics cards .', '1504.07995-2-14-1': 'RUNDMChas analyzed the 55 Cancri planetary system, which required a high-dimensional ([MATH]40) model.', '1504.07995-2-14-2': 'Compared with 55 Cancri, the problem of GJ 876 seems to be similarly challenging but more computationally tractable due to having fewer observations, a shorter observing baseline, a larger integration timestep, and a lower dimensional model (e.g. one less planet to account for).', '1504.07995-2-14-3': 'On the other hand, the presence of extremely strong planet-planet interactions can result in a challenging posterior distribution that could be more difficult to sample from.', '1504.07995-2-15-0': 'Considering the lessons from [CITATION] regarding how to explore parameter space efficiently, we set the following algorithmic parameters for RUNDMC: [MATH], [MATH], and MassScaleFactor=1.0.', '1504.07995-2-15-1': "To accommodate the inner-most planet's 1.9 day orbital period, we set our integration timestep to roughly 17 minutes and use the time-symmetrized Hermite integrator .", '1504.07995-2-16-0': 'We begin by applying RUNDMCto the Carnegie RVs from [CITATION] for a four-planet model.', '1504.07995-2-16-1': 'We sampled from the Markov chains after they had burned-in sufficiently.', '1504.07995-2-16-2': 'In RUNDMC, we specify the orbital parameters at the epoch of the first observation in our dataset.', '1504.07995-2-16-3': 'For the full RV dataset, this happens to be an ELODIE observation.', '1504.07995-2-16-4': "To generate the initial states of Markov chains for analyzing the full dataset, we start from a posterior sample based on the Carnegie RVs and rewind each planet's argument of periastron ([MATH]) and mean anomaly ([MATH]) according to the precession rate ([MATH]), orbital periods, and time difference between the first ELODIE and HIRES observations.", '1504.07995-2-16-5': '[CITATION] find the joint line of apses for the [MATH]and [MATH]pair to be precessing at an average rate of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-16-6': 'After burning-in, we randomly sample from our Markov chains to use as our set of initial conditions for long-term stability simulations using the MERCURYhybrid integrator .', '1504.07995-2-16-7': 'The solutions vetted for stability are used as initial conditions for more restricted RUNDMCruns to be explained in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-17-0': '## Model Parameters', '1504.07995-2-18-0': "We characterize the system model with a fixed star mass ([MATH][CITATION]), plus each planet's mass ([MATH]), semi-major axis ([MATH]), eccentricity ([MATH]), inclination ([MATH]), argument of periastron ([MATH]), longitude of ascending node ([MATH]), and mean anomaly ([MATH]) at our chosen epoch (first ELODIE observation) for each planet, plus the RV zero-point offsets ([MATH]) and jitters (i.e. unmodeled instrumental and astrophysical noise, [MATH]) for each observatory.", '1504.07995-2-18-1': "We report the orbital periods ([MATH]) based on Kepler's Third Law and each body's [MATH] and [MATH] based in a Jacobi coordinate system.", '1504.07995-2-18-2': 'Planet masses and semi-major axes can be readily rescaled to account for any updates to the stellar mass.', '1504.07995-2-19-0': 'The GJ 876 planets are well approximated by a coplanar system, i.e. [MATH] and [MATH] is the same for all planets.', '1504.07995-2-19-1': 'Due to the symmetrical nature of a radial velocity system on the sky, a planetary system at [MATH] is indistinguishable from one at an inclination of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-19-2': 'So in [REF], we restrict the planets to a coplanar system that can take on any value of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-19-3': 'Similarly, the entire system can be rotated about the line-of-sight.', '1504.07995-2-19-4': 'In [REF], the individual [MATH] and [MATH] for each planet become free parameters in our model that are fit to the observations.', '1504.07995-2-19-5': 'We set [MATH] to ground our coordinate system.', '1504.07995-2-20-0': '## Model of Observations', '1504.07995-2-21-0': 'RUNDMCallows for fitting multiple zero-point offsets and magnitudes of jitter (e.g. combined astrophysical and/or instrumental noise).', '1504.07995-2-21-1': 'HIRES received a CCD upgrade and new Doppler reduction process in August 2004 (JD 2453241.5).', '1504.07995-2-21-2': 'The Carnegie time series was split based on this pre- and post-upgrade era, which was modeled by two zero-point offsets, but the entire dataset is still modeled with one jitter term.', '1504.07995-2-21-3': 'The California RVs also have a separate offset and one jitter term.', '1504.07995-2-21-4': 'The other instruments (ELODIE, CORALIE, HARPS) were each modeled by one RV zero-point offset and jitter term.', '1504.07995-2-21-5': 'In total, we account for six offsets and five jitter parameters.', '1504.07995-2-22-0': 'Our dataset does not include the HST astrometry from [CITATION] or any informative priors regarding the inclinations of the GJ 876 planets.', '1504.07995-2-23-0': '## Magnitude and Timescale for Correlated Noise', '1504.07995-2-24-0': 'Our likelihood function described in Equations 4 and 5 of [CITATION] assumes that the observational errors are uncorrelated, which may not be a sufficient approximation for high precision RV measurements of stars with significant stellar activity.', '1504.07995-2-24-1': '[CITATION] showed that correlated (=red) noise in the RV data could lead to bias or misestimated uncertainty in some of the orbital parameters (e.g., [MATH]).', '1504.07995-2-24-2': 'Recently, some discoveries of planets orbiting M dwarfs have been shown to be more likely mere artifacts resulting from stellar activity .', '1504.07995-2-24-3': 'Therefore, we take a closer look at the role of stellar activity in contributing astrophysical noise to RV observations of GJ 876.', '1504.07995-2-24-4': 'In [REF], we perform a complementary analysis by computing Bayes factors for a finite set of models.', '1504.07995-2-25-0': 'High-precision photometry of GJ 876 revealed a rotation period of [MATH] days.', '1504.07995-2-25-1': 'Examining the variability of the activity-sensitive H[MATH] and Na I D absorption lines in the publicly-available HARPS spectra of the star, we confirm the rotation period, finding an H[MATH] periodicity of [MATH] days (Figure [REF], top panel).', '1504.07995-2-25-2': 'The appearance of the rotation period in the photometry suggests the presence of starspots, which can affect the measured RVs .', '1504.07995-2-25-3': 'The results from [CITATION], [CITATION], and our own examination of the spectral activity tracers suggest a complete treatment of activity will yield only marginal improvements in the accuracy of the RV model, and is not necessary to achieve the goals of this study.', '1504.07995-2-26-0': '[CITATION] showed that rotating starspots will induce RV periodicities at the stellar rotation period [MATH] and its integer fractions ([MATH], [MATH], etc.).', '1504.07995-2-26-1': 'Given that none of the planets in the GJ 876 system have periods near the rotation period or its integer fractions, we conclude that rotating starspots have not produced large-amplitude periodic RV signals such as might be misinterpreted as planet candidates.', '1504.07995-2-26-2': 'Although the RV amplitude of the outermost planet e([MATH]) is closest to the amplitudes expected for activity signals produced by a chromospherically quiet star such as GJ 876, we are unaware of any physical mechanism that would create an RV signal on this timescale.', '1504.07995-2-27-0': 'Our computed stellar rotation period of [MATH] days beating with one Earth year produces an alias of around 128 days, which is worryingly close to the orbital period of planet e([MATH]124 days).', '1504.07995-2-27-1': 'However, subtracting the rotation signal causes the 128-day peak to disappear as well, leading us to suspect that this signal is an alias (Figure [REF], bottom panel).', '1504.07995-2-27-2': 'If the 124-day signal is an 1-year alias of the rotation period, then we would also see the 95 day signal in the RV data.', '1504.07995-2-27-3': '[CITATION] and [CITATION] did not find the stellar rotation signal in the RV datasets they analyzed.', '1504.07995-2-28-0': '## Computing Bayes Factors for Model Selection', '1504.07995-2-29-0': 'When Doppler observations of a system with multiple strongly-interacting planets, the shape of the posterior distribution is often challenging to sample from efficiently.', '1504.07995-2-29-1': 'A general Bayesian approach of performing model comparison is to compute the fully marginalized likelihood, sometimes called the evidence, for each model.', '1504.07995-2-29-2': 'Formally, the evidence is the probability of generating the observed radial velocity dataset [MATH] assuming some underlying model [MATH] that is parameterized by [MATH], [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the likelihood function and [MATH] is the prior probability distribution.', '1504.07995-2-29-3': 'While the value of [MATH] is not useful by itself, the ratio of two evidences for two competing models [MATH] and [MATH], yields the Bayes factor [EQUATION] that provides a quantitative measure of which model is preferred and to what degree.', '1504.07995-2-30-0': 'Marginal likelihoods are notoriously difficult to compute.', '1504.07995-2-30-1': 'Integrating Equation [REF] analytically may be possible for some idealized problems with one to a few dimensions, but the model required to describe a 3+ planet system needs roughly 20 or more parameters.', '1504.07995-2-30-2': 'Numerical integration techniques such as Monte Carlo integration become vastly inefficient with increasing dimensionality.', '1504.07995-2-31-0': 'Therefore, we use importance sampling, a more general form of Monte Carlo integration, to calculate the integral in Equation [REF] and make this problem computationally tractable.', '1504.07995-2-31-1': 'Following [CITATION], we sample from a distribution [MATH] with a known normalization.', '1504.07995-2-31-2': 'We multiply the numerator and denominator of the integrand in Equation [REF] by [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1504.07995-2-31-3': 'While the value of [MATH] has not changed, Equation [REF] can be estimated by drawing [MATH] samples from [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1504.07995-2-31-4': 'The key aspect of having importance sampling work efficiently is to pick an appropriate [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-31-5': 'Assuming our parameter space contains one dominant posterior mode, we choose a multivariate normal with mean vector [MATH] and covariance matrix [MATH] for [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-31-6': 'For each model considered, we will estimate [MATH] and [MATH] from the coplanar MCMC runs described in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-31-7': "Our parameterization for [MATH] is [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] for each planet, the system's orbital inclination [MATH], and one [MATH]for each observatory.", '1504.07995-2-31-8': 'Since we are only interested in computing ratios of [MATH], the priors in zero-point offsets in the calculation will cancel out.', '1504.07995-2-32-0': 'One good strategy with importance sampling is to pick a [MATH] that is heavier in the tails than [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-32-1': 'This makes it easier to sample from low probability parts of the posterior distribution and prevents any samples from resulting in extremely large weights.', '1504.07995-2-32-2': 'However, the chance of sampling from the posterior mode will decrease with increasing dimensionality, which could ultimately lead to an estimate of [MATH] that is not efficient.', '1504.07995-2-33-0': 'One way around this is to sample from [MATH] within some truncated subspace, [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-33-1': 'This new distribution [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] inside [MATH] and renormalized to be a proper probability density.', '1504.07995-2-33-2': 'Equation [REF] can be rewritten as [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a factor that specifies what fraction of [MATH] lies within [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-33-3': 'We can estimate [MATH] with an MCMC sample.', '1504.07995-2-33-4': 'By counting what fraction of our posterior samples fell within [MATH], [MATH], we can rearrange Equation [REF] to give us [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-33-5': '[EQUATION] [CITATION] and [CITATION] provide more detailed prescriptions and investigations of this method.', '1504.07995-2-34-0': 'There are two competing effects when choosing the size of our subspace [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-34-1': 'If [MATH] is large (i.e. occupies nearly all of the posterior distribution), then [MATH] approaches 1 and we return to our basic importance sampling algorithm.', '1504.07995-2-34-2': 'If [MATH] occupies a much smaller region, then we are more likely to sample from near the posterior mode, but [MATH] approaches 0, making it difficult to accurately estimate [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-34-3': 'We must carefully choose a [MATH] that will provide a robust estimate of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-34-4': '[CITATION] found that for a three- and four-planet system, truncating the posterior distribution from [MATH] to [MATH] was roughly optimal, where [MATH] is the standard deviation of each respective model parameter.', '1504.07995-2-34-5': 'We tested several subspace sizes and found [MATH] worked well for our problem.', '1504.07995-2-35-0': 'To draw from this distribution, we create a vector [MATH] whose components are independent draws from a standard normal [MATH] truncated at [MATH] and [MATH] for each of our vector components.', '1504.07995-2-35-1': 'Each [MATH] is generated as [MATH], where [MATH] is the Cholesky decomposition of [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-35-2': 'We generate [MATH] samples from [MATH], which provided a robust estimate of [MATH] for each of our five competing models described in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-35-3': 'Figure [REF] shows how well the importance sampling algorithm converged for each model.', '1504.07995-2-36-0': '# Coplanar Models', '1504.07995-2-37-0': 'Before attempting to relax the coplanarity constraint, we wish to assess the evidence for all the GJ 876 planets, [MATH]in particular.', '1504.07995-2-38-0': 'We apply RUNDMCto our cumulative set of 367 RV observations using a coplanar model but allowing for a systematic orbital inclination.', '1504.07995-2-38-1': 'In particular, we consider five different models: one with just the outer-most three planets ([MATH]), one with just the inner-most three planets ([MATH]), one with the inner-most three planets plus a [MATH]124-day sinusoid to mimic either a fourth planet on a circular orbit or a naive model for a stellar activity signal ([MATH]), one with all four planets ([MATH]), and one with a putative fifth planet ([MATH]).', '1504.07995-2-39-0': 'We calculate five fully marginalized likelihoods (four Bayes factors) and summarize the results in Table [REF].', '1504.07995-2-39-1': 'Our methodology for computing these probabilities are described in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-40-0': 'The Bayes factor for M_3in/M_3outis [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-40-1': 'Despite the increased parameterization of M_3in+, this model with four signals is decisively favored over M_3in.', '1504.07995-2-40-2': 'The Bayes factor for M_4/M_3in+is [MATH] years, ensuring that they were in an undamped equilibrium state.', '1504.07995-2-41-0': 'We performed a number of these simulations and selected a system from these with final (i.e. after turning off orbital damping) libration amplitude of [MATH]20.', '1504.07995-2-41-1': 'Most simulations resulted in a Laplace argument with very small libration amplitude ([MATH]1) during the damping phase and rose to several tens of degrees after the damping was removed.', '1504.07995-2-41-2': 'This particular system had a libration amplitude significantly smaller than the best-fit from [REF], allowing us to test whether our fitting procedure artificially increases the libration amplitude.', '1504.07995-2-41-3': 'This synthetic system will be referred to as S_Reg:20henceforth (Figure [REF] left).', '1504.07995-2-42-0': 'We generate an RV dataset for both S_Chaos:80and S_Reg:20using the same RV time series with their associated offsets and jitters described in [REF].', '1504.07995-2-42-1': 'We include the inner-most, non-resonant planet with the following orbital properties and coplanar with the migrated planets: [MATH] days, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-42-2': 'For each synthetic measurement ([MATH]), we compute the RV value at that time ([MATH]), then add two noise terms: one drawn from a standard normal scaled by the measurement uncertainty [MATH] and a similar term but scaled by the jitter value corresponding of that observation, i.e. [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-43-0': 'These datasets were then used as simulated input observations for RUNDMC, and a full differential evolution MCMC was performed on each synthetic data set (in the same manner as was performed on the real data, and described in [REF] and [REF]).', '1504.07995-2-43-1': 'We performed three realizations of the RV time series for both [MATH]and [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-44-0': '## Results for Synthetic Planetary Systems', '1504.07995-2-45-0': 'In right panel of Figure [REF], we show the _Laplacelibration amplitude distribution for the three realizations of the RV time series based on S_Chaos:80.', '1504.07995-2-45-1': 'The chaotic nature of S_Chaos:80is shown in Figure [REF] left where the periodicity and peak-to-peak variation are not constant in time.', '1504.07995-2-45-2': 'There is a rough variation of [MATH]160corresponding to an amplitude of [MATH]80.', '1504.07995-2-45-3': 'For each realization, we find libration amplitudes of [MATH] (blue dash-dotted), [MATH] (red dashed), and [MATH] (green solid) degrees based on 1,000 solutions each.', '1504.07995-2-45-4': 'Only a few solutions from each of these realizations were unstable over the short integration baseline (1 kyr).', '1504.07995-2-45-5': 'These estimates are qualitatively consistent with the input amplitude.', '1504.07995-2-46-0': 'In right panel of Figure [REF], we show the [MATH]libration amplitude distribution for the three realizations of the RV time series based on [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-46-1': 'A significant fraction of our posterior sample for each realization was not dynamically stable.', '1504.07995-2-46-2': 'Specifically, only 548, 496, and 673 systems remained after the 1 kyr integration.', '1504.07995-2-46-3': "We find that the RV analysis of the synthetic data overestimated the outer-most planet's mass by [MATH]20%, which could be reason for such a large fraction of unstable systems.", '1504.07995-2-46-4': 'We find libration amplitudes of [MATH] (blue dash-dotted), [MATH], (red dashed) and [MATH] (green solid) degrees based on the remaining short-term stable systems.', '1504.07995-2-46-5': 'Again, these values are qualitatively consistent with the input amplitude of [MATH]20.', '1504.07995-2-47-0': 'It is clear from these results that our RUNDMCalgorithm does not significantly bias the recovered libration amplitudes for the 4:2:1 resonance of the outer three planets in the GJ 876 system.', '1504.07995-2-47-1': 'Thus, we believe that our best-fit libration amplitude for the real data ([REF]) is accurate and the GJ 876 system is in a chaotically librating state, with a high-amplitude libration.', '1504.07995-2-48-0': '## Estimation of Lyapunov times for GJ 876 Orbital Solutions', '1504.07995-2-49-0': '[CITATION] suggests that the GJ 876 system is chaotic, with a characteristic timescale (or Lyapunov time, defined below) for the chaos of roughly 14 years.', '1504.07995-2-49-1': 'This theoretical study ignored the innermost planet and treated the system as coplanar.', '1504.07995-2-49-2': 'An estimate of the Lyapunov time for the 4-planet, coplanar radial velocity orbital solution of [CITATION] was consistent with the analytic estimate.', '1504.07995-2-49-3': '[CITATION] suggests that mutually inclined systems in or near a MMR can also exhibit chaotic evolution.', '1504.07995-2-50-0': 'Here we study the nature of three sets of solutions: first, the 1,000 long-term stable, 3-d orbital models described in [REF]; 1,000 coplanar models described in [REF]; and 1,000 coplanar models based on the [MATH].', '1504.07995-2-50-1': 'We determine whether or not the orbits are chaotic by evolving simultaneously the standard gravitational equations of motion and the variational equations of motion, which yields an estimate of the Lyapunov time of a trajectory (e.g. [CITATION]).', '1504.07995-2-50-2': 'The variational equations govern the behavior of small perturbations to an orbit and therefore can be used to study how perturbations evolve in time.', '1504.07995-2-50-3': 'For chaotic orbits, small perturbations of length [MATH] grow exponentially as [MATH] with a characteristic time [MATH], which in the limit as [MATH] is defined as the (minimum) Lyapunov time.', '1504.07995-2-50-4': 'Our finite time integrations are used to estimate this Lyapunov time as [MATH], where [MATH] is the total integration time, [MATH], and [MATH] is the total length of the "perturbation" at the end of the integration.', '1504.07995-2-50-5': 'Note that [MATH] in principle can become very large, but since the variational equations are linear in the components of [MATH], the absolute length of [MATH] need not be small for the variational equations to apply.', '1504.07995-2-50-6': 'If an orbit is regular, the reported Lyapunov time will be comparable to the integration time, though integrations cannot prove an orbit is regular.', '1504.07995-2-50-7': 'These integrations must therefore be carried out for long enough such that the chaotic and regular orbits have markedly different reported Lyapunov times.', '1504.07995-2-51-0': 'We employed a Wisdom-Holman mapping in canonical astrocentric coordinates to integrate both the equations of motion and the variational equations .', '1504.07995-2-51-1': 'A third-order symplectic corrector was implemented to improve the accuracy of these integrations .', '1504.07995-2-51-2': 'We used a simple prescription for the effects of general relativity which leads to precession of the orbits with the correct timescale .', '1504.07995-2-51-3': 'As we will show, the Lyapunov times of the orbits were significantly shorter than the timescale of precession due to general relativity, and so this approximate version of general relativity is sufficient for a good estimate of the Lyapunov times for the orbits studied.', '1504.07995-2-52-0': 'The Wisdom-Holman integrator can be used with a time step as large as a tenth or twentieth of the shortest orbital timescale in the system .', '1504.07995-2-52-1': 'For GJ 876, this corresponds to the time needed to resolve the pericenter passage of the innermost planet.', '1504.07995-2-52-2': 'We estimate this using the orbital period of the innermost planet as if its semimajor axis was equal to the pericenter distance, [MATH] days, where [MATH] and [MATH] days.', '1504.07995-2-52-3': 'We used a time step of either 0.14 or 0.014 days when integrating the set of 3-d solutions, and, as discussed below, these yield similar estimates of the Lyapunov times.', '1504.07995-2-52-4': 'For both coplanar set of solutions, we used a time step of 0.14 days.', '1504.07995-2-52-5': 'The maximum fractional energy error [MATH] was [MATH] for the 3-d set of orbits with a time step of 0.14 days, [MATH] for the same set with a time step of 0.014 days, and [MATH] for the coplanar set of orbits.', '1504.07995-2-52-6': 'These integrations lasted [MATH] years.', '1504.07995-2-53-0': 'In Figure [REF], we show the distribution of Lyapunov times for the 3-d set of solutions resulting from the integrations employing both timesteps, and the distribution of Lyapunov times for the coplanar set of solutions.', '1504.07995-2-53-1': 'These integrations all agree that the motion of these orbits is chaotic with a Lyapunov time of roughly 10 years, consistent with the analytic estimate of [CITATION].', '1504.07995-2-53-2': 'The small peak at [MATH] years in the distribution of Lyapunov times for the coplanar orbital solutions to the data corresponds to orbits which might be regular.', '1504.07995-2-53-3': 'However, the vast majority of coplanar orbits studied were chaotic.', '1504.07995-2-53-4': 'The close agreement between Lyapunov times estimated for the 3-d and coplanar sets is also consistent with the analysis of [CITATION] and [CITATION] in that the chaotic motion is captured by a coplanar approximation of the true system.', '1504.07995-2-54-0': 'During the integrations with a time step of 0.14 days, [MATH]10 orbits in each set (3-d vs. coplanar) were flagged as unstable.', '1504.07995-2-54-1': 'With the smaller time step of 0.014 days, no orbit in the set of 3-d orbits was flagged as unstable.', '1504.07995-2-54-2': 'This suggests that the smaller time step might be necessary for studying the long-term stability of these orbits using a Wisdom-Holman integrator.', '1504.07995-2-54-3': 'However, since the two time steps agree on the distribution of Lyapunov times, we believe these results are robust.', '1504.07995-2-54-4': 'Lastly, we do not show the results of the coplanar set of solutions fit to synthetic data, since our integrations suggested that nearly all of these orbits where not only chaotic but also showed instability on short ([MATH] year) timescales.', '1504.07995-2-54-5': 'We defer any further analysis of the stability of these synthetic solutions to future work.'}
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['1504.07995-1-15-0', '1504.07995-2-15-0'], ['1504.07995-1-15-1', '1504.07995-2-15-1'], ['1504.07995-1-21-0', '1504.07995-2-21-0'], ['1504.07995-1-21-1', '1504.07995-2-21-1'], ['1504.07995-1-21-2', '1504.07995-2-21-2'], ['1504.07995-1-21-3', '1504.07995-2-21-3'], ['1504.07995-1-21-4', '1504.07995-2-21-4'], ['1504.07995-1-21-5', '1504.07995-2-21-5'], ['1504.07995-1-45-0', '1504.07995-2-45-0'], ['1504.07995-1-45-1', '1504.07995-2-45-1'], ['1504.07995-1-45-2', '1504.07995-2-45-2'], ['1504.07995-1-45-3', '1504.07995-2-45-3'], ['1504.07995-1-45-4', '1504.07995-2-45-4'], ['1504.07995-1-45-5', '1504.07995-2-45-5'], ['1504.07995-1-35-0', '1504.07995-2-35-0'], ['1504.07995-1-35-1', '1504.07995-2-35-1'], ['1504.07995-1-35-2', '1504.07995-2-35-2'], ['1504.07995-1-19-0', '1504.07995-2-19-0'], ['1504.07995-1-19-1', '1504.07995-2-19-1'], ['1504.07995-1-19-2', '1504.07995-2-19-2'], ['1504.07995-1-19-3', '1504.07995-2-19-3'], ['1504.07995-1-19-4', '1504.07995-2-19-4'], ['1504.07995-1-19-5', '1504.07995-2-19-5'], ['1504.07995-1-2-1', '1504.07995-2-2-1'], ['1504.07995-1-0-2', '1504.07995-2-0-2'], ['1504.07995-1-0-9', '1504.07995-2-0-8'], ['1504.07995-1-12-0', '1504.07995-2-12-0'], ['1504.07995-1-12-1', '1504.07995-2-12-1'], ['1504.07995-1-12-2', '1504.07995-2-12-2'], ['1504.07995-1-12-3', '1504.07995-2-12-3'], ['1504.07995-1-12-4', '1504.07995-2-12-4'], ['1504.07995-1-12-5', '1504.07995-2-12-5'], ['1504.07995-1-12-6', '1504.07995-2-12-6'], ['1504.07995-1-12-7', '1504.07995-2-12-7'], ['1504.07995-1-12-8', '1504.07995-2-12-8'], ['1504.07995-1-12-9', '1504.07995-2-12-9'], ['1504.07995-1-12-10', '1504.07995-2-12-10'], ['1504.07995-1-12-11', '1504.07995-2-12-11'], ['1504.07995-1-7-0', '1504.07995-2-7-0'], ['1504.07995-1-7-1', '1504.07995-2-7-1'], ['1504.07995-1-7-2', '1504.07995-2-7-2'], ['1504.07995-1-33-0', '1504.07995-2-33-0'], ['1504.07995-1-33-1', '1504.07995-2-33-1'], ['1504.07995-1-33-2', '1504.07995-2-33-2'], ['1504.07995-1-33-3', '1504.07995-2-33-3'], 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'1504.07995-2-16-6'], ['1504.07995-1-16-7', '1504.07995-2-16-7'], ['1504.07995-1-29-0', '1504.07995-2-29-0'], ['1504.07995-1-29-1', '1504.07995-2-29-1'], ['1504.07995-1-29-2', '1504.07995-2-29-2'], ['1504.07995-1-29-3', '1504.07995-2-29-3'], ['1504.07995-1-53-0', '1504.07995-2-53-0'], ['1504.07995-1-53-1', '1504.07995-2-53-1'], ['1504.07995-1-53-2', '1504.07995-2-53-2'], ['1504.07995-1-53-3', '1504.07995-2-53-3'], ['1504.07995-1-53-4', '1504.07995-2-53-4'], ['1504.07995-1-3-0', '1504.07995-2-3-0'], ['1504.07995-1-3-1', '1504.07995-2-3-1'], ['1504.07995-1-3-3', '1504.07995-2-3-3'], ['1504.07995-1-3-4', '1504.07995-2-3-4'], ['1504.07995-1-3-5', '1504.07995-2-3-5'], ['1504.07995-1-3-6', '1504.07995-2-3-6'], ['1504.07995-1-3-7', '1504.07995-2-3-7'], ['1504.07995-1-3-8', '1504.07995-2-3-8'], ['1504.07995-1-31-0', '1504.07995-2-31-0'], ['1504.07995-1-31-1', '1504.07995-2-31-1'], ['1504.07995-1-31-2', '1504.07995-2-31-2'], ['1504.07995-1-31-3', '1504.07995-2-31-3'], ['1504.07995-1-31-4', '1504.07995-2-31-4'], ['1504.07995-1-31-5', '1504.07995-2-31-5'], ['1504.07995-1-31-6', '1504.07995-2-31-6'], ['1504.07995-1-31-7', '1504.07995-2-31-7'], ['1504.07995-1-31-8', '1504.07995-2-31-8'], ['1504.07995-1-5-0', '1504.07995-2-5-0'], ['1504.07995-1-5-1', '1504.07995-2-5-1'], ['1504.07995-1-5-2', '1504.07995-2-5-2'], ['1504.07995-1-5-4', '1504.07995-2-5-4'], ['1504.07995-1-5-5', '1504.07995-2-5-5'], ['1504.07995-1-5-6', '1504.07995-2-5-6'], ['1504.07995-1-18-0', '1504.07995-2-18-0'], ['1504.07995-1-18-1', '1504.07995-2-18-1'], ['1504.07995-1-18-2', '1504.07995-2-18-2'], ['1504.07995-1-27-0', '1504.07995-2-27-0'], ['1504.07995-1-27-1', '1504.07995-2-27-1'], ['1504.07995-1-27-2', '1504.07995-2-27-2'], ['1504.07995-1-27-3', '1504.07995-2-27-3'], ['1504.07995-1-38-1', '1504.07995-2-38-1'], ['1504.07995-1-52-0', '1504.07995-2-52-0'], ['1504.07995-1-2-0', '1504.07995-2-2-0'], ['1504.07995-1-0-0', '1504.07995-2-0-0'], ['1504.07995-1-0-1', '1504.07995-2-0-1'], ['1504.07995-1-0-3', 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'1504.07995-2-19-5'], ['1504.07995-1-2-1', '1504.07995-2-2-1'], ['1504.07995-1-0-2', '1504.07995-2-0-2'], ['1504.07995-1-0-9', '1504.07995-2-0-8'], ['1504.07995-1-12-0', '1504.07995-2-12-0'], ['1504.07995-1-12-1', '1504.07995-2-12-1'], ['1504.07995-1-12-2', '1504.07995-2-12-2'], ['1504.07995-1-12-3', '1504.07995-2-12-3'], ['1504.07995-1-12-4', '1504.07995-2-12-4'], ['1504.07995-1-12-5', '1504.07995-2-12-5'], ['1504.07995-1-12-6', '1504.07995-2-12-6'], ['1504.07995-1-12-7', '1504.07995-2-12-7'], ['1504.07995-1-12-8', '1504.07995-2-12-8'], ['1504.07995-1-12-9', '1504.07995-2-12-9'], ['1504.07995-1-12-10', '1504.07995-2-12-10'], ['1504.07995-1-12-11', '1504.07995-2-12-11'], ['1504.07995-1-7-0', '1504.07995-2-7-0'], ['1504.07995-1-7-1', '1504.07995-2-7-1'], ['1504.07995-1-7-2', '1504.07995-2-7-2'], ['1504.07995-1-33-0', '1504.07995-2-33-0'], ['1504.07995-1-33-1', '1504.07995-2-33-1'], ['1504.07995-1-33-2', '1504.07995-2-33-2'], ['1504.07995-1-33-3', '1504.07995-2-33-3'], ['1504.07995-1-33-4', '1504.07995-2-33-4'], ['1504.07995-1-33-5', '1504.07995-2-33-5'], ['1504.07995-1-24-0', '1504.07995-2-24-0'], ['1504.07995-1-24-1', '1504.07995-2-24-1'], ['1504.07995-1-24-2', '1504.07995-2-24-2'], ['1504.07995-1-24-3', '1504.07995-2-24-3'], ['1504.07995-1-24-4', '1504.07995-2-24-4'], ['1504.07995-1-30-0', '1504.07995-2-30-0'], ['1504.07995-1-30-1', '1504.07995-2-30-1'], ['1504.07995-1-30-2', '1504.07995-2-30-2'], ['1504.07995-1-34-0', '1504.07995-2-34-0'], ['1504.07995-1-34-1', '1504.07995-2-34-1'], ['1504.07995-1-34-2', '1504.07995-2-34-2'], ['1504.07995-1-34-3', '1504.07995-2-34-3'], ['1504.07995-1-34-4', '1504.07995-2-34-4'], ['1504.07995-1-34-5', '1504.07995-2-34-5'], ['1504.07995-1-16-0', '1504.07995-2-16-0'], ['1504.07995-1-16-1', '1504.07995-2-16-1'], ['1504.07995-1-16-2', '1504.07995-2-16-2'], ['1504.07995-1-16-3', '1504.07995-2-16-3'], ['1504.07995-1-16-4', '1504.07995-2-16-4'], ['1504.07995-1-16-5', '1504.07995-2-16-5'], ['1504.07995-1-16-6', '1504.07995-2-16-6'], ['1504.07995-1-16-7', '1504.07995-2-16-7'], ['1504.07995-1-29-0', '1504.07995-2-29-0'], ['1504.07995-1-29-1', '1504.07995-2-29-1'], ['1504.07995-1-29-2', '1504.07995-2-29-2'], ['1504.07995-1-29-3', '1504.07995-2-29-3'], ['1504.07995-1-53-0', '1504.07995-2-53-0'], ['1504.07995-1-53-1', '1504.07995-2-53-1'], ['1504.07995-1-53-2', '1504.07995-2-53-2'], ['1504.07995-1-53-3', '1504.07995-2-53-3'], ['1504.07995-1-53-4', '1504.07995-2-53-4'], ['1504.07995-1-3-0', '1504.07995-2-3-0'], ['1504.07995-1-3-1', '1504.07995-2-3-1'], ['1504.07995-1-3-3', '1504.07995-2-3-3'], ['1504.07995-1-3-4', '1504.07995-2-3-4'], ['1504.07995-1-3-5', '1504.07995-2-3-5'], ['1504.07995-1-3-6', '1504.07995-2-3-6'], ['1504.07995-1-3-7', '1504.07995-2-3-7'], ['1504.07995-1-3-8', '1504.07995-2-3-8'], ['1504.07995-1-31-0', '1504.07995-2-31-0'], ['1504.07995-1-31-1', '1504.07995-2-31-1'], ['1504.07995-1-31-2', '1504.07995-2-31-2'], ['1504.07995-1-31-3', '1504.07995-2-31-3'], ['1504.07995-1-31-4', '1504.07995-2-31-4'], ['1504.07995-1-31-5', '1504.07995-2-31-5'], ['1504.07995-1-31-6', '1504.07995-2-31-6'], ['1504.07995-1-31-7', '1504.07995-2-31-7'], ['1504.07995-1-31-8', '1504.07995-2-31-8'], ['1504.07995-1-5-0', '1504.07995-2-5-0'], ['1504.07995-1-5-1', '1504.07995-2-5-1'], ['1504.07995-1-5-2', '1504.07995-2-5-2'], ['1504.07995-1-5-4', '1504.07995-2-5-4'], ['1504.07995-1-5-5', '1504.07995-2-5-5'], ['1504.07995-1-5-6', '1504.07995-2-5-6'], ['1504.07995-1-18-0', '1504.07995-2-18-0'], ['1504.07995-1-18-1', '1504.07995-2-18-1'], ['1504.07995-1-18-2', '1504.07995-2-18-2'], ['1504.07995-1-27-0', '1504.07995-2-27-0'], ['1504.07995-1-27-1', '1504.07995-2-27-1'], ['1504.07995-1-27-2', '1504.07995-2-27-2'], ['1504.07995-1-27-3', '1504.07995-2-27-3']]
[['1504.07995-1-38-1', '1504.07995-2-38-1'], ['1504.07995-1-52-0', '1504.07995-2-52-0'], ['1504.07995-1-2-0', '1504.07995-2-2-0'], ['1504.07995-1-0-0', '1504.07995-2-0-0'], ['1504.07995-1-0-1', '1504.07995-2-0-1'], ['1504.07995-1-0-3', '1504.07995-2-0-3'], ['1504.07995-1-0-4', '1504.07995-2-0-4'], ['1504.07995-1-0-8', '1504.07995-2-0-7'], ['1504.07995-1-3-2', '1504.07995-2-3-2']]
[]
[['1504.07995-1-0-5', '1504.07995-2-0-5'], ['1504.07995-1-0-7', '1504.07995-2-0-6'], ['1504.07995-1-5-7', '1504.07995-2-5-7']]
[]
['1504.07995-1-5-3', '1504.07995-2-5-3']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1504.07995
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cond-mat-0107248
{'cond-mat-0107248-1-0-0': 'The dynamics of collapsing and exploding trapped Bose-Einstein condensates triggered by switching the sign of the interaction from repulsive to attractive are studied by numerically integrating the Gross-Pitaevskii equation with atomic loss.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-0-1': 'We compare our results with those of the experiments recently performed at JILA [E. A. Donley et al., cond-mat/0105019 (2001)].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-1-0': '# Introduction', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-2-0': 'Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of trapped atomic gases have been realized in several atomic species [CITATION], and numerous investigations into this new state of matter have been made.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-2-1': 'Both static and dynamic properties of BEC depend crucially on the interactions between atoms.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-2-2': 'A remarkable feature of these systems is that the interaction can be controlled in both strength [CITATION] and sign [CITATION] using the technique of the Feshbach resonance [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-0': "A trapped BEC with an attractive interaction can be metastable [CITATION] when the quantum pressure arising from Heisenberg's uncertain principle counterbalances the attractive force.", 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-1': 'The condition for the metastability is that the parameter defined by [MATH] is below some critical value [MATH], where [MATH] is the number of atoms in BEC, [MATH] is the s-wave scattering length, and [MATH] is the size of the ground-state wave function of the trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-2': 'When the parameter [MATH] exceeds [MATH], the attractive force dominates the quantum pressure, and BEC collapses.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-3': 'In the Rice experiments [CITATION], BEC atoms are supplied by the supercooled thermal gas until [MATH] exceeds [MATH], and the collapse and growth cycles occur [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-4': 'In the JILA experiments [CITATION], on the other hand, [MATH] is fixed and [MATH] is decreased by using the Feshbach resonance so that the condition [MATH] is met.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-5': 'In the latter method, almost pure condensates with large number of atoms can be obtained, since they are prepared in the repulsive regime.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-3-6': 'This technique enabled us to measure the precise value of [MATH] [CITATION], and to observe the explosive atomic ejection from collapsing BEC [CITATION], a phenomenon called "Bosenova", the origin of which is controversial [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-4-0': 'In the mean-field or Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) approximation, all atoms are assumed to occupy the same single-particle state [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-4-1': 'This approximation has widely been applied to study the properties of gaseous BEC, and it appears to give a rather good quantitative description of a large variety of experiments of repulsive BEC, such as the excitation spectrum [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-4-2': 'In the case of the attractive interaction, however, it is by no means obvious that the mean-field approximation can be applicable, since the attractive interaction might enhance the many-body quantum correlations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-4-3': 'In fact, the experimental value of [MATH] [CITATION] is significantly smaller than the value predicted by the mean-field approximation [CITATION], the reason for which is not yet understood.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-5-0': 'Recent quantitative measurement of the collapse and explosion of BEC reported in Ref. [CITATION] motivated us to investigate the extent to which the mean-field theory explains the experimental observations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-5-1': 'This is the main objective of this paper.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-5-2': 'By numerically integrating the Gross-Pitaevskii equation with atomic loss, we show that some of the data reported in Ref. [CITATION], such as the collapse time, at least qualitatively agree with our numerical simulations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-6-0': 'This paper is organized as follows.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-6-1': 'Section [REF] reviews the GP equation with atomic loss due to inelastic collisions.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-6-2': 'Section [REF] numerically analyzes the GP equation, and compares our results with the experimental data.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-6-3': 'Section [REF] provides the summary of this paper.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-7-0': '# The Gross-Pitaevskii equation with atomic loss', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-8-0': 'The usual GP equation describes the unitary evolution of the macroscopic wave function [MATH], and the number of atoms [MATH] is conserved.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-8-1': 'In reality, atoms are lost from the trap due to the inelastic collisions, and we may include these effects by introducing in the GP equation the imaginary terms describing the inelastic processes as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the trap potential, and [MATH] and [MATH] denote the two-body dipolar and three-body recombination loss-rate coefficients, respectively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-8-2': 'The loss terms in Eq. ([REF]) are phenomenologically introduced based on the fact that the two-body and three-body losses are proportional to square and cube of the density as [EQUATION]', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-8-3': 'We assumed that the atoms and molecules produced by inelastic collisions escape from the trap without affecting the condensate.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-8-4': 'The constant [MATH] includes the Bose statistical factor [MATH] [CITATION], and describes the loss rate per atom, which is [MATH] of the rate per collision [CITATION] since two (three) atoms are lost in each collision.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-9-0': 'We can show that three-body recombination is more important than two-body dipolar decay in the present case as follows.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-9-1': 'The two-body and three-body loss rates are [MATH] and [MATH], and their ratio is [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-9-2': 'They have the relation [MATH], which is always [MATH] for [MATH] [CITATION] and [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-9-3': 'In the low density, where the two-body loss is comparable with the three-body loss, i.e., [MATH], the total loss rate is [MATH], and can be ignored since we consider the time scale of [MATH] ms. In the higher density, the three-body loss dominates the two-body loss, and thus the two-body loss is unimportant in the present situation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-9-4': 'In fact, all results shown below are almost unchanged if we neglect [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-10-0': 'On the other hand, [MATH] is important in collapsing dynamics.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-10-1': 'When the implosion occurs, the atomic density becomes extremely high, and so does the three-body recombination rate, which stops the rise of the density.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-10-2': 'Hence the maximum density in the process of implosion is determined by [MATH] and [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-10-3': 'The values of [MATH] far from the Feshbach resonance are measured for [MATH] [CITATION], [MATH] [CITATION], and [MATH] [CITATION], and they agree with the theoretical predictions [CITATION] within a factor of ten.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-10-4': 'However, just near the Feshbach resonance, behavior of [MATH] is not well understood, and no precise values are available [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-11-0': '# Numerical analysis of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-12-0': 'We performed numerical integration of the GP equation ([REF]) using the finite-difference method with the Crank-Nicholson scheme [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-12-1': 'Since the peak density changes very rapidly during the violent implosion, we carefully controlled the time step to avoid error propagation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-12-2': 'Initially we prepared the ground-state wave function for [MATH] using the method in Ref. [CITATION], or [MATH] (Gaussian).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-12-3': 'At [MATH] the interaction is suddenly switched to attractive [MATH], and the condensate begins to collapse.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-13-0': '## Collapse time', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-14-0': 'We first consider the phenomena observed in Ref. [CITATION], that is, after the interaction is switched to attractive the number of atoms in the condensate remains constant for some time [MATH], and then atomic loss suddenly begins.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-14-1': 'This observation is in consistent with what we numerically found in Refs. [CITATION]: first a BEC contracts slowly, and then the implosion occurs suddenly.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-14-2': 'When the implosion occurs, the Gaussian approximation breaks down since the local spike in the atomic density appears at the center of the trap (see Fig. 4 of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-14-3': 'The density in the local spike grows extremely, inducing the inelastic losses due to three-body recombination.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-14-4': 'This is the reason why the atomic loss suddenly begins at [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-15-0': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] versus [MATH] obtained by numerically solving Eq. ([REF]), where we define [MATH] as time at which the peak density suddenly rises, and [MATH] is the Bohr radius.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-0': 'The initial number of atoms in [MATH] BEC is [MATH], and the trap is axi-symmetric with the radial frequency [MATH] Hz and the axial frequency [MATH] Hz.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-1': 'Since the collapse time is almost determined by slow accumulation of atoms before sudden rise of the peak density, collisional losses are unimportant, and we set [MATH] in obtaining Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-2': 'The plots in Fig. [REF] are in good agreement with the experimental ones (Fig. 2 of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-3': 'The similar results are obtained in Ref. [CITATION] for a spherically symmetric trap and the different parameters.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-4': 'When we set [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [MATH] ms, and when [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], we obtain [MATH] ms, which are consistent with the experimental values of [MATH] ms and [MATH] ms, respectively [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-16-5': 'For larger [MATH] the collapse time increases, since the initial density decreases and it takes longer time to reach density for onset of implosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-17-0': '## Intermittent implosion', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-18-0': 'In Ref. [CITATION], we found that the implosion occurs not once but several times as a rapid sequence of intermittent implosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-18-1': 'Each implosion turns to explosion, which ejects burst atoms with energy of [MATH] nK [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-18-2': 'Such violent implosion and explosion require a minute discretization of space and time in numerical calculation, and we had to limit ourselves to a spherically symmetric trap because of the limitation of our computational ability.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-18-3': 'Henceforth, unless explicitly stated otherwise, we use the trap potential [MATH] with the geometric mean frequency [MATH] Hz, and the characteristic size of the trap is [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-18-4': 'We set [MATH] in the following calculation, since the dipolar decay is unimportant in the present situation as discussed in Sec. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-19-0': 'Figure [REF] shows time evolution of the peak height of the wave function, the total number of atoms in the trap [MATH], and the number of atoms around the center of the trap [MATH], where [EQUATION]', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-19-1': 'The initial number of BEC atoms is [MATH], and at [MATH] the s-wave scattering length of [MATH] atoms is switched from [MATH] to [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-19-2': 'We assume the three-body recombination rate to be [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-19-3': 'The striking feature in Fig. [REF] is that the sequence of local implosions occurs over [MATH] ms intermittently.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-19-4': 'This nonlinear phenomenon is attributed to the competition between the accumulation of atoms due to the attractive interaction and the loss of atoms due to the three-body recombination [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-0': 'The sequence of local implosions gives rise to decay of the number of atoms as shown in Fig. [REF], and we note that this behavior is very similar to the experimental result (Fig. 1b of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-1': 'Several tens of atoms are lost from the trap in each spike due to three-body recombination, where [MATH] shows the number of lost atoms.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-2': 'The decrease of [MATH] in time is due to both three-body recombination and atomic burst, where the number of the burst atoms is roughly given by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-3': 'If we again switch to [MATH] [CITATION], the decay of atoms immediately stops (data not shown) because the intermittent local implosion stops.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-4': 'The frequency of implosions and the decay rate of atoms gradually decrease, since inward flow of atoms decreases.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-5': 'After the implosion stops at [MATH] ms, it revives at [MATH] due to the refocus of the burst.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-6': 'Such refocus is observed in the experiments [CITATION], but no revival of implosion as numerically found here seems to have occurred in the experiments; we infer this to be due to the mismatch of the radial and axial refocus in the cigar-shape trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-20-7': 'In the spherically symmetric system, all ejected atoms refocus at the center of the trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-21-0': '## Atomic burst and jets', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-22-0': 'We believe that the origin of the atomic burst is release of kinetic energy of local spikes in the atomic density [CITATION]; The three-body recombination loss stops the growth of the spike, and turns implosion to explosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-22-1': 'The burst energy comes from the loss of negative interaction energy [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-23-0': 'In the experiments [CITATION], the burst atoms are observed as a stripe along the radial or axial direction by utilizing the refocus.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-23-1': 'We therefore investigate the one-dimensional density distribution [MATH] to compare our results with those in the experiment.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-23-2': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] (solid curve) and [MATH] (dotted curve) at [MATH] ms in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-24-0': 'The curve of [MATH] is very similar to Fig. 3c of Ref. [CITATION], in that there is a distinction between the burst and remnant atoms, and the burst part is well fitted by the Gaussian (dashed curve).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-24-1': 'The latter observation indicates that the burst energy can be described by "temperature", since the thermal distribution is given by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-24-2': 'In the case of Fig. [REF], the temperature of the burst atoms is estimated to be [MATH] nK.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-24-3': 'There are shoulders in the remnant part of [MATH] and [MATH] in Fig. [REF]), which also seem to appear in Fig. 3c of Ref. [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-24-4': 'These shoulders originate from the fringe in the radial density as shown in the dotted curve in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-25-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the relation between the burst "temperature" and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-0': 'The initial numbers of atoms are [MATH] and [MATH], and the three-body recombination rates are [MATH] and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-1': 'In Ref. [CITATION], we numerically obtained the expression of the burst energy just above [MATH] as [MATH] [CITATION], which is shown as the dashed line in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-2': 'The burst energy is roughly proportional to [MATH], and weakly depends on [MATH] when [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-3': 'This [MATH] dependence seems to be a complex function of [MATH] and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-4': 'In the experiments [CITATION], the burst energy increases with [MATH], and has complex dependence on [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-5': 'Since not only [MATH] but also [MATH] varies near the Feshbach resonance and its behavior is unknown, we cannot conclude whether the experimental data (Fig. 4 of Ref. [CITATION]) contradict our prediction.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-6': 'However, as regards [MATH] dependence, our result seems to fail to explain the experimental one.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-26-7': 'The high anisotropy of the burst energy and its parameter dependence found in the experiment might be explained by performing simulations for an axi-symmetric trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-0': 'When the collapse is interrupted by jumping to [MATH] during the period of the atom loss, streams of atoms emerging from the collapsing condensates are observed, which are called "jets" [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-1': 'These jets are considered to be release of kinetic energy of local spikes in the atomic density by switching off the attractive interaction, and should be distinguished from the burst.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-2': 'We think that the large fluctuations in the spike density (Fig. 6b of Ref. [CITATION]) are a piece of evidence of the rapid sequence of implosions as in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-3': 'The implosions occur too fast to be captured in the experiment, and the observed density will correspond to the steep-walled valleys of the solid curve in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-4': 'The steeper the wall around the bottom is, the larger the observed fluctuations become.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-27-5': 'The steepness and the height of the valleys gradually decrease in Fig. [REF], which might explain the fact that the fluctuations and heights gradually decrease in time in the experiment.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-28-0': '## Decay time and final fraction', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-29-0': 'Figure [REF] shows time evolution of the fraction of BEC around the center of the trap [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-30-0': 'The number of atoms in the central BEC [MATH] is obtained by drawing [MATH], fitting the Gaussian function [MATH] to the burst part of [MATH], and subtracting it from [MATH] as [MATH]; the same procedure was taken in the experiments [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-30-1': 'As in the experiments, the decay of [MATH] is well fitted by the exponential function [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the asymptotic value of [MATH] before the revival of implosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-30-2': 'The decay time [MATH] weakly depends on [MATH] and [MATH] within the parameter range in Fig. [REF], where we assumed [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-30-3': 'The decay times are estimated to be [MATH] ms for [MATH], and [MATH] ms for [MATH] and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-30-4': 'These decay times are somewhat larger than those obtained in the experiments ([MATH] ms).', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-31-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the fractions of missing (circles), burst (triangles), and remnant (squares) atoms.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-0': 'These fractions depend weakly on [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-1': 'The fraction of missing atoms increases with [MATH] and [MATH], and on the contrary, the fraction of burst atoms decreases with increase of [MATH] and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-2': 'The number of remnant atoms [MATH] is around the critical number of atoms [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-3': 'In the experiments [CITATION], the fraction of missing atoms, burst atoms, and remnant atoms are independent of [MATH]; our simulations show that they do depend on [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-4': 'However, the observation that the number of burst atoms is constant versus [MATH] agrees with our result.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-5': 'The missing fraction increases with [MATH] in the experiments, which might be related to our result that the missing fraction increases with [MATH] since [MATH] increases with [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-6': 'Remarkably the experimentally observed [MATH] is not limited by [MATH], but varies between much less and much more than [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-7': 'Our simulation shows that [MATH] is always roughly given by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-8': 'The discrepancy between the experimental results and our simulations might be due to the fact that we assumed the isotropic trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-9': 'In the Rice experiments [CITATION], the anisotropy of the trap is much less than that of the JILA, and the number of atoms in the remnant condensate is consistent with our spherically symmetric calculation [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-32-10': 'More work (both theoretical and experimental) needs to be done in order to clarify the situation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-33-0': '## Nonlinear pattern formation', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-34-0': 'We found in Ref. [CITATION] that various patterns in the atomic density are formed in the collapse due to the switch of the interaction from repulsive to attractive, where we used [MATH] as an example.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-34-1': 'Here we show that the pattern formation occurs also in [MATH] within the current experimental parameters and by larger [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-34-2': 'Figure [REF] shows time evolution of the column density of [MATH] BEC, where [MATH], and the s-wave scattering length is switched from [MATH] to [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-35-0': 'The three-body recombination rate is [MATH] [CITATION] at this [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-35-1': 'The density fluctuations grow to the shell structure due to the self-focusing effect of the attractive interaction [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-35-2': 'The four concentric spherical shells in the atomic density are formed at [MATH] ms in Fig. [REF], which move inwards and collapse one by one, and then another shell is formed at [MATH] ms. We note that such shell structure should be distinguished from the density oscillation as shown in Fig. [REF], and no pattern formation occurred in the simulations in Sec. [REF]A-D.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-36-0': 'Figure [REF] shows pattern formation in axi-symmetric traps, where [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are the same as in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-37-0': 'The cigar-shape trap is the same as that used in Fig. [REF], and in the pancake-shape trap [MATH] with the same geometric mean frequency as the cigar-shape trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-37-1': 'In the cigar-shape trap the cylindrical shell structure is formed, and in the pancake-shape trap the layered structure is formed.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-37-2': 'These patterns are obtained before violent implosion and explosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-38-0': 'Once the implosion occurs, various patterns are formed in axi-symmetric systems.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-38-1': 'Such simulation can be performed even in an axi-symmetric trap, if we lower the implosion energy by using large [MATH] and small [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-38-2': 'Complicated patterns were seen in the dynamics, and we found that atoms frequently split into a few clusters, which align along the trap axis in the case of a cigar-shape trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-38-3': 'Each cluster would undergo violent implosion if we could use the experimental parameters, which suggests the occurrence of the multiple implosions.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-38-4': 'This might be related with the experimentally observed multiple jets (Fig. 5 in Ref. [CITATION]), which are manifestations of local spikes in the atomic density formed along the trap axis.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-39-0': 'The resolution limit of the imaging system in Ref. [CITATION] (7 [MATH] FWHM) is somewhat inadequate for observing the patterns in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-39-1': 'Expansion of BEC before imaging will blur out the pattern.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-39-2': 'In order to observe the pattern formation, therefore, we need to improve the in situ imaging method, or to use larger [MATH] and [MATH] to enlarge the pattern.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-40-0': '# Conclusions', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-0': 'We numerically solved a phenomenological mean-field equation ([REF]), and compared our results with those in the experiment performed at JILA [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-1': 'We were able to reproduce the following experimental findings: (i) It takes the system a certain time [MATH] to undergo a sudden decrease in the number of atoms after the jump of [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-2': '(ii) There is a distinction between the remnant and burst parts.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-3': '(iii) The burst atoms obey the thermal distribution.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-4': '(iv) The number of BEC atoms left at the center of the trap decays exponentially.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-5': 'We found that these phenomena are attributed to the rapid sequence of the local implosions.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-6': 'However, the dependences of the burst energy and the numbers of missing, burst, and remnant atoms on [MATH] and [MATH] in our simulations quantitatively disagree with the experimental results.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-41-7': 'This might be owing to the fact that the behavior of [MATH] is unknown just near the Feshbach resonance, or to the fact that we had to resort to spherically symmetric calculation in studying the violent implosion and explosion.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-42-0': 'The validity of the mean-field approximation is determined by the gas parameter [MATH], and the depletion is given by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-42-1': 'When the implosion occurs, [MATH] becomes [MATH] at the peak density in our simulations, which indicates that the mean-field approximation is valid at least qualitatively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-42-2': 'However, the validity is marginal, and it is likely that quantum corrections to mean-field results become more significant than the case of repulsive interactions.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-43-0': 'Thus what we can assert is that the mean-field approximation can be used to describe the collapsing and exploding dynamics qualitatively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-43-1': 'The quantitative description of the violent implosion and explosion is uncertain at this stage.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-43-2': 'We are currently trying to improve the numerical algorithm to extend our calculation to an axi-symmetric system, which, we hope, clarifies whether the discrepancy between our theory and the experiments arises from symmetry of the trap or requires us to go beyond the mean-field approximation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-44-0': '# ACKNOWLEDGMENTS', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-45-0': 'This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant No. 11216204) by the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture of Japan, and by the Toray Science Foundation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-46-0': 'Davis K. 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Verhaar, and H. T. C. Stoof, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-53-0': 'Ruprecht P. A. Ruprecht, M. J. Holland, K. Burnett, and M. Edwards, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-54-0': 'Sackett C. A. Sackett, C. C. Bradley, M. Welling, and R. G. Hulet, Appl.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-55-0': 'Sackett99 C. A. Sackett, J. M. Gerton, M. Welling, and R. G. Hulet, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-56-0': 'Jin D. S. Jin, J. R. Ensher, M. R. Matthews, C. E. Wieman, and E. A. Cornell, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-57-0': 'Mewes, M. R. Andrews, N. J. van Druten, D. M. Kurn, D. S. Durfee, C. G. Townsend, and W. Ketterle, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-58-0': 'Gerton J. M. Gerton, C. A. Sackett, B. J. Frew, and R. G. Hulet, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-59-0': 'Roberts00 J. L. Roberts, N. R. Claussen, S. L. Cornish, and C. E. Wieman, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-60-0': 'Burt E. A. Burt, R. W. Ghrist, C. J. Myatt, M. J. Holland, E. A. Cornell, and C. E. Wieman, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-61-0': 'Kurn D. M. Stamper-Kurn, M. R. Andrews, A. P. Chikkatur, S. Inouye, H. -J. Miesner, J. Stenger, and W. Ketterle, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-62-0': 'Moer A. J. Moerdijk, H. M. J. M. Boesten, and B. J. Verhaar, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-63-0': 'Fedichev P. O. Fedichev, M. W. Reynolds, and G. V. Shlyapnikov, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-64-0': 'Esry B. D. Esry, C. H. Greene, and J. P. Burke, Jr., Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-65-0': 'Stenger J. Stenger, S. Inouye, M. R. Andrews, H. -J. Miesner, D. M. Stamper-Kurn, and W. Ketterle, Phys.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-66-0': 'Edwards M. Edwards, R. J. Dodd, C. W. Clark, and K. Burnett, J. Res.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-67-0': 'note In Ref. [CITATION], we defined the burst energy as [MATH] half trap period after the explosion, which corresponds to [MATH] in the present paper.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-68-0': 'note2 In Ref. [CITATION], we used the absolute squared overlap of the wave function with the initial one to estimate the remnant fraction of the condensate.', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-68-1': 'However, it will be more suitable to use [MATH] in Eq. ([REF]) with an appropriate [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-1-68-2': 'We verified that this value is also in agreement with the number of BEC atoms immediately after the collapse in the experiment [CITATION].'}
{'cond-mat-0107248-2-0-0': 'The dynamics of collapsing and exploding trapped Bose-Einstein condensates caused by a sudden switch of interactions from repulsive to attractive are studied by numerically integrating the Gross-Pitaevskii equation with atomic loss for an axially symmetric trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-0-1': 'We investigate the decay rate of condensates and the phenomena of bursts and jets of atoms, and compare our results with those of the experiments performed by E. A. Donley et al. [Nature 412, 295 (2001)].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-0-2': 'Our study suggests that the condensate decay and the burst production is due to local intermittent implosions in the condensate, and that atomic clouds of bursts and jets are coherent.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-0-3': 'We also predict nonlinear pattern formation caused by the density instability of attractive condensates.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-1-0': '# Introduction', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-2-0': 'Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of trapped atomic vapor have been realized in several atomic species [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-2-1': 'One of the remarkable features of these systems is that both strength [CITATION] and sign [CITATION] of interactions between atoms can be tuned by adjusting an external magnetic field near a Feshbach resonance [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-2-2': 'This has opened up the possibility to study collapsing and exploding BECs in a controllable manner, thereby offering a stringent test of the Gross-Pitaevskii mean-field theory [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-0': "A trapped BEC with attractive interactions may be formed [CITATION] when quantum pressure arising from Heisenberg's uncertain principle counterbalances the attractive force between atoms.", 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-1': 'This is possible when the parameter defined by [MATH] is below a critical value [MATH], where [MATH] is the number of BEC atoms, [MATH] the s-wave scattering length, and [MATH] the size of the ground-state wave function of a harmonic trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-2': 'When the parameter [MATH] exceeds [MATH], attractive force dominates quantum pressure, causing BEC to collapse.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-3': 'In the experiments performed by a Rice group [CITATION], BEC atoms are continuously supplied from a supercooled thermal gas, and collapse and growth cycles of BEC have been observed [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-4': 'In the experiments performed at JILA [CITATION], in contrast, [MATH] is fixed and [MATH] is decreased by using the Feshbach resonance so as to meet the condition [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-3-5': 'This technique enabled them to determine the value of [MATH] [CITATION], and to observe exploding atomic ejection from collapsing BEC [CITATION], a phenomenon called "Bosenova" whose origin is currently under controversy [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-4-0': 'The Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) equation [CITATION] has widely been used to study mean-field properties of BECs, offering fairly good quantitative account of a rich variety of experiments for repulsive BECs [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-4-1': 'In the case of the attractive BECs, however, it is by no means clear to what extent mean-field theory is valid, for the attractive interaction might enhance many-body quantum correlations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-4-2': 'In fact, a measured value of [MATH] [CITATION] is significantly smaller than that predicted by a mean-field theory [CITATION], the origin of the discrepancy being not yet understood.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-5-0': 'The recent quantitative measurements on collapsing and exploding BEC reported in Ref. [CITATION] have motivated us to investigate to what extent mean-field theory can explain the experimental observations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-5-1': 'This is the main purpose of this paper.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-5-2': 'By numerically integrating the GP equation with atomic loss, we show that the phenomena reported in Ref. [CITATION], such as decay of condensates, ejection and refocus of atomic bursts, and jet formation, are reproduced by our numerical simulations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-5-3': 'In addition, we predict that various patterns in atomic density are formed in the course of collapse.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-6-0': 'This paper is organized as follows.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-6-1': 'Section [REF] briefly reviews the GP equation with atomic loss due to inelastic collisions and describes the method of analysis of our simulations.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-6-2': 'Section [REF] reports our results of numerical simulations using the GP equation, and compares them with the experimental data of Ref. [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-6-3': 'Section [REF] provides the summary of this paper.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-7-0': '# The Gross-Pitaevskii equation with atomic loss and methods of analysis', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-0': 'The GP equation describes unitary time evolution of a macroscopic "wave function" [MATH], and conserves the total number of atoms [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-1': 'In reality, however, atoms are lost from the trap due to the two-body dipolar and three-body recombination losses.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-2': 'These effects may be taken into account by incorporating in the GP equation the imaginary terms describing these inelastic processes [CITATION]: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the trapping potential, and [MATH] and [MATH] denote two-body dipolar and three-body recombination loss-rate coefficients, respectively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-3': 'The imaginary terms in Eq. ([REF]) are phenomenologically introduced in order to take account of the fact that the two-body and three-body losses are proportional to the square and cube of the atomic density: [EQUATION]', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-4': 'We assume that the atoms and molecules produced by inelastic collisions escape from the trap without affecting the condensate.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-8-5': 'The constants [MATH] and [MATH] include Bose statistical factors [MATH] and [MATH], respectively, which are needed for BEC [CITATION], and describe the loss rate per atom.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-0': 'In the situations we consider the two-body loss can be ignored.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-1': 'The two-body and three-body loss rates are given by [MATH] and [MATH], and their ratio by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-2': 'They have the relation [MATH], which is always [MATH] for [MATH] [CITATION] and [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-3': 'When the density is low and [MATH], [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-4': 'Then both two-body and three-body losses can be ignored since we shall consider the time scale of [MATH] ms. When the density is high, the three-body loss dominates the two-body loss, and thus the two-body loss becomes unimportant.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-5': 'In our numerical simulations we shall therefore ignore the two-body loss term in Eq. ([REF]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-9-6': 'All results presented below are not affected if the two-body loss is taken into account.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-10-0': 'The three-body loss, in contrast, plays a crucial role in determining the collapsing dynamics of BEC.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-10-1': 'When implosion occurs, the atomic density becomes extremely high, and so does the three-body recombination rate, until it stops the growth of the density.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-10-2': 'The maximum density in the process of implosion is determined by [MATH] and [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-10-3': 'The values of [MATH] far from the Feshbach resonance have been measured for [MATH] [CITATION], [MATH] [CITATION], and [MATH] [CITATION], and they agree with theoretical predictions [CITATION] within a factor of ten.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-10-4': 'Near the Feshbach resonance, however, complicated behaviors of [MATH] are predicted [CITATION], with no precise experimental data available [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-11-0': 'We performed numerical integration of the GP equation ([REF]) using a finite-difference method with the Crank-Nicholson scheme [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-11-1': 'Since the peak density changes drastically during implosion [CITATION], we very carefully controlled the time step to avoid error propagation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-11-2': 'Initially we prepared the ground-state wave function by the method in Ref. [CITATION] for an initial s-wave scattering length [MATH] and an initial number of BEC atoms [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-11-3': 'At [MATH] the interaction is suddenly switched from [MATH] to [MATH], inducing collapse of the condensate.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-11-4': 'We use the parameters of [MATH] and assume the same trap geometry (i.e. radial frequency [MATH] Hz and axial frequency [MATH] Hz) as that used in Ref. [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-0': 'In Ref. [CITATION], atoms after the collapse are classified into three parts: remnant, burst, and missing atoms.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-1': 'The remnant BEC is a dense atomic cloud peaking around the center of the trap, and the burst is a dilute one that spreads broadly around the remnant BEC.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-2': 'In our simulations, we identify the remnant, burst, and missing atoms as follows.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-3': 'The one-dimensional density distributions defined by [MATH] and [MATH] show bimodal structures, one peaking at the center and the other spreading around it (an example is shown in Fig. [REF]b).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-4': 'We identify the former as the remnant and the latter as the burst, and determine the axial and radial coordinates, [MATH] and [MATH], of the boundaries between the remnant BEC and the burst.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-5': 'We then calculate the number of atoms in the remnant BEC as [EQUATION]', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-6': 'The burst atoms are defined by the ones outside the boundary.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-7': 'Because of ambiguities in defining the coordinates of the boundaries, [MATH] and [MATH] defined this way have uncertainties of about [MATH], while the total number of atoms in the trap [MATH] is well defined.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-12-8': 'We define the number of missing atoms as [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-13-0': '# Results of numerical simulations', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-14-0': '## Decay of the condensate and local intermittent implosions', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-15-0': 'We first study the situation in which the scattering length is switched from [MATH] to [MATH] at [MATH], where [MATH] is the Bohr radius.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-15-1': 'Figure [REF] shows time evolutions of the peak height [MATH] of the wave function, the total number of atoms in the trap [MATH], and the number of remnant BEC atoms [MATH], where we assume [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-0': 'Our numerical simulations show that the condensate first contracts slowly with its peak height [MATH] gradually increasing.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-1': 'The total number of atoms remains constant during this process, since the recombination loss is negligible at such low densities.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-2': 'At [MATH] ms, implosion suddenly occurs in a very localized region (the size of the density spike is [MATH] while the size of the BEC cloud is several micrometers) for a very short period of time ([MATH] ms).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-3': 'Furthermore the implosion occurs not just once but many times intermittently for about 10 ms [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-4': 'The three-body recombination loss prominently occurs during the implosion, since the atomic density becomes extremely high.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-5': 'Several tens of atoms are lost in each intermittent implosion, resulting in a step-wise decrease of [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-6': 'The decay of [MATH] is due to both three-body recombination and atomic burst ejection.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-16-7': 'We note that the behavior of [MATH], shown as the plots in Fig. [REF], is very similar to the experimental result (Fig. 1b of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-17-0': 'The implosions occur not only at the center of the trap but also at other locations on the trap axis, and more than one density spike is often seen simultaneously.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-17-1': 'A snapshot of the imploding process with [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] is displayed in Fig. [REF], where the image is taken 2.5 ms after the switch of interactions.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-18-0': 'Two large spikes are seen on the trap axis.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-18-1': 'In an isotropic trap, on the other hand, implosions always occur one by one at the center of the trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-19-0': '## Collapse and decay times', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-20-0': 'The total number of atoms of the system remains constant for some time after the switch of interactions, and suddenly it begins to decay.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-20-1': "We call the time at which the sudden decay begins 'collapse time' [MATH] (see Fig. [REF]).", 'cond-mat-0107248-2-20-2': 'Since the collapse time is determined mainly by slow accumulation of atoms towards the center of the trap, [MATH] only weakly depends on the value of [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-20-3': 'In Fig. [REF], [MATH] ms, which agrees with the experimental result of 3.7 ms [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-20-4': 'Figure [REF] shows the dependence of [MATH] on [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-21-0': 'The plots are in good agreement with the experimental ones (Fig. 2 of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-21-1': 'For another set of parameters [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [MATH] ms, which is also consistent with the experimental finding [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-21-2': 'The collapse time increases for larger values of [MATH], since the atomic cloud spreads more widely and therefore it takes longer time for the cloud to get to the center of the trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-22-0': 'Fitting [EQUATION] to the plots in Fig. [REF] (dotted curve), we obtain the decay time constant [MATH] ms. For [MATH], and [MATH] and [MATH], [MATH] is almost the same as the above one, and for [MATH] it becomes [MATH] ms which agrees reasonably well with the experimental finding of 2.8 ms [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-23-0': '## Remnant, burst, and missing atoms', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-24-0': 'Figure [REF]a shows the fractions of remnant, burst, and missing atoms after the implosion has finished for [MATH] and [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-25-0': 'We note that [MATH] is much larger than [MATH] when [MATH] is large, as observed experimentally [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-25-1': 'To put it differently, once the condensate expands following the collapse, the critical density will not be reached even when [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-25-2': 'This is because the ratio [MATH] is irrational and therefore the axial and radial refocuses of the burst atoms do not occur simultaneously, with no further implosions occurring.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-0': 'This result presents a sharp contrast with that for an isotropic case shown in Fig. [REF]b, where the trap frequency is chosen to be the geometric mean [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-1': 'The numbers of remnant atoms [MATH] are always below [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-2': 'This is because all collapsing atoms go to the center of the trap simultaneously, and therefore more implosions occur in an isotropic trap, which increases [MATH] and decreases [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-3': 'Moreover, the implosions occur also when the burst atoms refocus, since they concentrate at the center of the trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-4': 'The data in Fig. [REF]b are taken before the first refocus.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-26-5': 'Nevertheless, we note that [MATH] is already below [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-27-0': 'We also note that in the axi-symmetric trap the fractions [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are almost independent of [MATH], particularly for [MATH], which is consistent with the experiments [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-27-1': 'This is a consequence of the fact that the number of implosions occurring in the collapse is roughly proportional to [MATH] and that the numbers of the burst and missing atoms in each implosion are almost constant.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-28-0': '## Atomic bursts and "jets"', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-29-0': 'A burst atom cloud is usually too broadly spread and hence too dilute to be seen.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-29-1': 'However, at every [MATH] (or [MATH]) the cloud refocuses along the axial (or radial) direction and can be observed.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-29-2': 'Figure [REF]a shows the column density seen from the direction perpendicular to the trap axis and Fig. [REF]b shows the one-dimensional distribution [MATH], when the burst atoms focus along the trap axis (corresponding to Fig. 3 of Ref. [CITATION]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-30-0': 'The s-wave scattering length is switched from [MATH] to [MATH] at [MATH] and the image is taken at [MATH] ms [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-30-1': 'There are small peaks in the ridge of focus, which appear to correspond to the shoulders of the central peak in Fig. 3c of Ref. [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-30-2': 'According to our theory the origin of the atomic burst is a release of kinetic energy of local spikes in the atomic density [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-31-0': 'As regards the burst energy, it is at present difficult to compare our results with the experimental ones.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-31-1': 'One reason is that although the burst energy depends not only on [MATH] but also on [MATH] [CITATION], experimental values of [MATH] as a function of [MATH] are not available.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-31-2': 'The uncertainty in the boundaries between the remnant BEC and the burst and that in Gaussian fitting of the burst profile (see Fig. [REF]b) give rise to large errors in numerically determining the burst "temperature", which also make quantitative comparison between theory and experiment difficult.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-31-3': 'More work (both theoretical and experimental) needs to be done in order to clarify the situation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-32-0': 'In the experiments [CITATION], prolonged atomic clouds called "jets" are observed in the radial direction when the collapse is interrupted by switching the interaction from attractive to repulsive.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-32-1': 'The jets are distinguished from the bursts in that the energy of the former is much lower than the latter and that the direction of the jets is purely radial.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-32-2': 'In Ref. [CITATION], the origin of the jets is considered to be the highly anisotropic spikes in the atomic density.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-33-0': 'We performed numerical simulations under situations similar to the experimental ones.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-33-1': 'The s-wave scattering length is switched from [MATH] to [MATH] at [MATH], and changed to [MATH] at [MATH] ms (a snapshot before expansion is shown in Fig. [REF]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-33-2': 'Figure [REF] shows the gray-scale images of the integrated column density [MATH] after a [MATH] ms expansion in (a) and (b), and [MATH] ms in (c).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-0': 'In the image (a), prolonged atomic clouds similar to the jets reported in Fig. 5 of Ref. [CITATION] appear in the radial direction (the main jet at the center and two tiny jets on either side of it).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-1': 'The images (b) and (c), where the sensitivity of the imaging is increased, show that the jets are interference fringes.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-2': 'The parallel fringe pattern is characteristic of the interference between waves emanating from two point sources [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-3': 'In fact, there are two spikes in the atomic density that play the role of two point sources of matter waves in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-4': 'We find that the spacing between the fringes is proportional to [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-5': 'This supports our interpretation, since the spacing between the fringes from two point sources is known to be given by [MATH] [CITATION], where [MATH] is the distance between two point sources.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-6': 'In the experimental images in Ref. [CITATION] (particularly in Figs. 5d-f), the jets seem to be ejected from the edge of the remnant condensate, where the density is too low to form the spikes, which also supports our interpretation that the jets are the consequence of interference.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-34-7': 'Thus, the experimental observations of jets indicate that atoms expanding from spikes are coherent, suggesting that the burst atoms are also coherent.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-35-0': '## Pattern formation', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-36-0': 'We found in Ref. [CITATION] that various patterns in the atomic density are formed in the collapse processes caused by a sudden switch of interactions from repulsive to attractive, the origin of the pattern formation being attributed to the self-focusing effect of the attractive systems.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-37-0': 'Here we predict that a similar pattern formation does occur in [MATH] BEC for experimentally available parameters.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-38-0': 'Figure [REF] shows pattern formation in axi-symmetric traps, where [MATH], and the s-wave scattering length is switched from [MATH] to [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-38-1': 'The pancake-shape trap has the ratio [MATH] with the same geometric mean frequencies as the cigar-shape trap.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-38-2': 'In the cigar-shape trap the cylindrical shell structure is formed, and in the pancake-shape trap the layered structure is formed.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-39-0': 'Figure [REF] shows time evolution of the integrated column density [MATH] for an isotropic trap, where [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are the same as in Fig. [REF].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-40-0': 'We see that the density fluctuations grow to form four concentric spherical shells at [MATH] ms, which move inwards and collapse one by one; then at [MATH] ms we see that a new shell is being formed', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-41-0': 'The resolution of the imaging system in Ref. [CITATION] (7 [MATH] FWHM) is inadequate for observing the patterns in Figs. [REF] and [REF] (the spacing between the shells is [MATH]).', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-41-1': 'Expansion of BEC before imaging will blur out the pattern.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-41-2': 'In order to observe the pattern formation, therefore, we need to improve the in situ imaging method, or to use larger [MATH] and [MATH] to enlarge the pattern.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-42-0': '# Summary', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-0': 'We have studied the dynamics of collapsing and exploding BECs by numerically solving the time-dependent GP equation with atomic loss ([REF]), and compared our results with those of the experiments of Ref. [CITATION].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-1': 'We find that mean-field theory with atomic loss can account for the following experimental findings: (i) It takes the system a certain time [MATH] to undergo a sudden decrease in the number of atoms after the jump of [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-2': '(ii) The number of atoms in the condensate decays exponentially with a decay time constant of a few milliseconds.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-3': '(iii) The burst atoms are ejected in the collapse process, and refocus after every half trap period.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-4': '(iv) The fractions of remnant, burst, and missing atoms are almost independent of [MATH], and the number of remnant atoms is much larger than the critical number [MATH] for large [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-43-5': '(v) The jets are observed when the collapse is interrupted by jumping [MATH] to a positive value.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-44-0': 'We have found that these phenomena are attributed to a rapid sequence of local intermittent implosions, and provided a new interpretation of the jets, i.e., the highly anisotropy of the jets is due to the interference fringes.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-44-1': 'This suggests that the burst atom cloud is coherent.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-45-0': 'The validity of the mean-field GP equation is determined by the gas parameter [MATH], and the depletion is given by [MATH].', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-45-1': 'When the implosion occurs, [MATH] becomes [MATH] at the peak density in our simulations, which indicates that the mean-field approximation is still valid at least qualitatively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-46-0': 'Our results presented here suggest that the mean-field approximation can be used to describe the collapsing and exploding dynamics at least qualitatively.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-46-1': 'A more quantitative comparison between experiments and numerical simulations might reveal effects beyond mean-field approximation.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-46-2': 'This possibility merits further experimental and theoretical study.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-47-0': '# ACKNOWLEDGMENTS', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-48-0': 'We thank E. A. Donley for valuable comments.', 'cond-mat-0107248-2-48-1': 'This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant No. 11216204) by the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture of Japan, and by the Toray Science Foundation.'}
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[]
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[]
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0107248
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null
null
null
null
1104.1856
{'1104.1856-1-0-0': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-1-0-1': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-1-0-2': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-1-0-3': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-1-1-0': 'Introduction.', '1104.1856-1-1-1': 'Exploring unstable nuclei is one of the most important subjects in nuclear physics.', '1104.1856-1-1-2': 'Actually, it was reported that unstable nuclei have exotic properties such as the halo structure [CITATION] and the loss of magicity for nuclei in the so-called "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-1-1-3': 'The term "Island of inversion" was first introduced by Warburton [CITATION] to the region of unstable nuclei from [MATH]Ne to [MATH]Mg.', '1104.1856-1-1-4': 'In the region, the low excitation energies and the large [MATH] values of the first excited states suggest strong deformations [CITATION], which indicates that the [MATH] magic number is no longer valid.', '1104.1856-1-1-5': 'These novel quantum properties have inspired extensive experimental and theoretical studies.', '1104.1856-1-2-0': 'Important experimental tools for exploring unstable nuclei are the reaction cross section [MATH] or the interaction cross section [MATH] and the nucleon-removal cross section [MATH] with radioactive beams [CITATION]; for the scattering of unstable nuclei, [MATH] agrees with [MATH] in general, since projectile excitations to its discrete excited states do not exist.', '1104.1856-1-2-1': 'Very recently, [MATH] was measured by Takechi et al. [CITATION] for [MATH]Ne located near or in "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-1-2-2': 'Furthermore, a halo structure of [MATH]Ne was reported by the experiment on the one-neutron removal reaction [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-2-3': 'This is the heaviest halo nucleus in the present stage suggested experimentally and also reside within the region of "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-1-3-0': 'As a useful theoretical tool of analyzing [MATH], we can consider the microscopic optical potential constructed by the double-folding model (DFM) with the [MATH]-matrix effctive nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction [CITATION], when the projectile breakup is weak.', '1104.1856-1-3-1': 'For the nucleon-nucleus scattering, DFM with the [MATH]-matrix well reproduce the data on [MATH] and the elastic-scattering cross section systematically [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-3-2': 'For the [MATH]Ne scattering from [MATH]C at 240 MeV/nucleon, the breakup cross section is only 1.5% of [MATH] [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-3-3': 'Hence, DFM is also applicable for analyses of measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in the scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-4-0': 'In DFM, the [MATH]-matrix is folded with the projectile and target densities.', '1104.1856-1-4-1': 'If the projectile deforms, the density profile changes; the surface diffuseness increases because of the elongation.', '1104.1856-1-4-2': 'This gives rise to the effective growth of the root-mean-square (RMS) radius and eventually the increase of [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-4-3': 'Therefore, the amount of deformation is important.', '1104.1856-1-4-4': 'Nuclei in the island of inversion are spherical or only weakly deformed in the Skyrme and/or Gogny HF (HFB) calculations; see, e.g., Refs. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-4-5': 'It is even pointed out that the observed large [MATH] values can be understood as a large amplitude vibration around the spherical shape [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-4-6': 'In such a situation, the additional correlations by the angular momentum projection (AMP) often leads to possible deformed shapes; see Ref. [CITATION] for Ne isotopes.', '1104.1856-1-5-0': 'Recently a systematic investigation employing the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD) with the Gogny D1S interaction has been performed for both even and odd [MATH] nuclei in the island of inversion [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-5-1': 'The AMD (with AMP performed) gives rather large deformations, which is consistent with the AMP-HFB calculations [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-5-2': 'A consistent picture of even and odd isotopes has been obtained, where the [MATH]-particle [MATH]-hole excitations of the Nilsson orbits play important roles to determine deformed configurations.', '1104.1856-1-5-3': 'Although it is difficult to distinguish the dynamic shape-fluctuation and static deformation in these light mass nuclei, one may use the deformed shape suggested by the AMD calculation to see its effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-6-0': 'In this paper, we analyze the measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon, using DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix [CITATION] and the deformed projectile density suggested by the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-1-7-0': 'Theoretical framework.', '1104.1856-1-7-1': 'A microscopic optical potential [MATH] between a projectile (P) and a target (T) is constructed with DFM.', '1104.1856-1-7-2': 'The direct and exchange parts, [MATH] and [MATH], are obtained by [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] for a position vector [MATH] of P from T.', '1104.1856-1-7-3': 'The original form of [MATH] is a non-local function of [MATH], but it has been localized in Eq. [REF] with the local semi-classical approximation [CITATION], where [MATH] is the local momentum of the scattering considered and [MATH] is the reduced mass between P and T.', '1104.1856-1-7-4': 'The validity of this localization is shown in Ref. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-7-5': 'Here, the effective NN interactions, [MATH] and [MATH], are assumed to depend on the local density [EQUATION] at the midpoint of the interacting nucleon pair.', '1104.1856-1-7-6': 'The microscopic potential [MATH] is not spherical, if one or both of the densities [MATH] and [MATH] are non-spherical.', '1104.1856-1-7-7': 'As shown in Ref. [CITATION], however, the effect is found to be negligible for heavy-ion elastic scattering.', '1104.1856-1-7-8': 'Consequently, we consider here the spherical part of the densities and hence spherical [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-8-0': 'As for [MATH], we use the phenomenological [MATH]C-density determined from the electron scattering [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-8-1': 'Meanwhile, [MATH] is calculated by the mean-field model with a given average potential or with the selfconsistently determined potential by the Hartree-Fock (HF) method.', '1104.1856-1-8-2': 'No effect of pairing is included for simplicity.', '1104.1856-1-8-3': 'The Ne isotopes (projectiles) under discussions are supposed to be in the island of inversion (or at its boundary), and expected to be strongly deformed.', '1104.1856-1-8-4': 'In order to investigate the effect of deformation, we take a deformed Woods-Saxon (WS) potential [CITATION], in which the axially deformed surface [MATH] is specified by the radius, [EQUATION] with the deformation parameters [MATH] and a volume conserving factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-8-5': 'The potential value is determined by replacing the quantity [MATH] in a spherical potential to the distance from the surface [MATH] (with minus sign if the point is inside it).', '1104.1856-1-8-6': 'The Coulomb potential created by charge [MATH] distributed uniformly inside the surface [MATH] in Eq. [REF] is included for protons.', '1104.1856-1-8-7': 'The single-particle eigenstates are calculated by the (cylindrical) harmonic oscillator basis expansion.', '1104.1856-1-8-8': 'More than twenty oscillator shells are included and the convergence of the result is carefully checked to obtain reliable density distributions.', '1104.1856-1-8-9': 'The nucleon density is obtained by summing up the contributions of occupied Nilsson levels.', '1104.1856-1-8-10': 'The density distribution thus calculated [MATH] is the one in the intrinsic (body-fixed) frame, and depends on the polar angle [MATH] from the symmetry axis.', '1104.1856-1-8-11': 'As mentioned above, the density in the laboratory frame used in DFM (Eqs. [REF] and [REF]) depends only on modulus of coordinate and is obtained by the angle average, [EQUATION]', '1104.1856-1-8-12': 'This procedure is well justified: We have checked that the angle-averaged density agrees with high accuracy with the density calculated by the angular momentum projection from the Slater determinantial wave function composed of the occupied WS orbits.', '1104.1856-1-9-0': 'No center of mass (CM) correction is included for the calculation of the density.', '1104.1856-1-9-1': 'We have checked by the spherical Gogny HF calculation that the CM correction (including the two-body contributions) to the RMS radius is about 1% reduction for all the isotopes, which is much smaller than the enhancement caused by the deformation effect; see the results below.', '1104.1856-1-10-0': 'Results.', '1104.1856-1-10-1': 'We test the accuracy of DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix for [MATH]C+[MATH]C scattering at 250.8 MeV/nucleon.', '1104.1856-1-10-2': 'As shown in Table [REF], [MATH] calculated with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix is almost consistent with the experimental data; more precisely, the latter is smaller than the former by the factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-10-3': 'The table also shows the result of the Love-Franey [MATH]-matrix nucleon-nucleon interaction in which the nuclear medium effect is not included.', '1104.1856-1-10-4': 'The difference between the two theoretical results is about 136 mb corresponding to 17% of the experimental data.', '1104.1856-1-10-5': 'Thus, the medium effect is important at this incident energy.', '1104.1856-1-10-6': 'For the [MATH]Ne +[MATH]C scattering at 240 MeV/nucleon, [MATH] calculated with the phenomenological [MATH]Ne density [CITATION] and the normalization factor [MATH] is 1075.6 mb, while [MATH] extracted from the experimental value at 950 MeV/nucleon [CITATION] with the Glauber model is [MATH] mb [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-10-7': 'The normalization procedure thus justified is applied for the [MATH]Ne +[MATH]C scattering at 240 MeV/nucleon analyzed below.', '1104.1856-1-11-0': 'As for the parameter set of the WS potential, i.e., the depth, radius and the diffuseness of the central as well as the spin-orbit potentials, we employ the one provided recently by R. Wyss [CITATION]; see Table I of Ref. [CITATION] for the actual values of parameters.', '1104.1856-1-11-1': 'This set is intended to reproduce the spectroscopic properties of high-spin states from light to heavy deformed nuclei, e.g., the quadrupole moments and the moments of inertia, and at the same time the RMS radii crucial for the present analysis.', '1104.1856-1-11-2': 'In order to check that the present WS potential gives reasonable results, we compare in Fig. [REF] the reaction cross sections calculated by using two densities; one obtained by the Gogny D1S HF calculation and another with the WS potential: The spherical shape is imposed with the filling approximation in this calculation.', '1104.1856-1-11-3': 'A good agreement shown in the figure indicates that the density distributions in the two models are similar, which is also confirmed by the calculated RMS radii (see Fig. [REF]).', '1104.1856-1-12-0': 'The reaction cross section is sensitive to the amount of deformation.', '1104.1856-1-12-1': 'We then employ the deformed shapes suggested by the AMD calculation to see the effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-12-2': 'As a simple estimate we only include the [MATH] deformation in Eq. [REF] and the deformation parameter [MATH] in each isotope is determined to reproduce the calculated ratio of RMS radii along the long and short axes by AMD; the resultant values used in the following analyses are given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-1-12-3': 'With these [MATH] values, the Nilsson orbits of the last odd neutron in [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively, in accordance with the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-1-12-4': 'Note that the nucleus [MATH]Ne is at the boundary of the "Island of inversion", and AMD predicts strong mixing between the states with oblate and prolate deformation.', '1104.1856-1-12-5': 'In the present calculation, we have employed the [MATH] value of the oblate minimum, which is the main component.', '1104.1856-1-13-0': 'The results of [MATH] including the effect of quadrupole deformation (see Table [REF]) are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-1-13-1': 'Compared to the results with the density of the spherical cases, the effect of deformation increases the cross section considerably.', '1104.1856-1-13-2': 'As a consequence of the enhancement, the calculated cross sections become consistent with the measured cross sections for [MATH]Ne, but still underestimate them for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-1-13-3': 'Some extra effects may be necessary to account for this underestimation, which will be discussed later.', '1104.1856-1-14-0': 'The increase of [MATH] caused by the deformation can be rather nicely understood if one looks into the (matter) RMS radii [MATH] shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-1-14-1': 'They are calculated by using the projectile density [MATH] based on the deformed WS potential.', '1104.1856-1-14-2': 'The increase of [MATH] in Fig. [REF] nicely corresponds to that of [MATH] in Fig. [REF], which is reasonable because of a simple estimate, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the RMS radius for target.', '1104.1856-1-14-3': 'Note that the amount of increase of the RMS radii from the spherical shape , which is roughly proportional to [MATH], is only [MATH]%: It is surprising that such a small effect is detectable in experimental data.', '1104.1856-1-14-4': 'The present analysis clearly tells us that [MATH] reflects very precise information, and its measurement is extremely useful to study the nuclear structure of unstable nuclei.', '1104.1856-1-14-5': 'The radial dependence of the matter density is plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-1-14-6': 'The deformed WS density (solid curve) is enhanced by the deformation effect from the spherical WS density (dashed curve) at [MATH] fm.', '1104.1856-1-14-7': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross section is caused by that of the density in this tail region.', '1104.1856-1-14-8': 'This is the main reason why we do not directly use the calculated AMD density, which decreases more rapidly in the tail region because of the usage of one-range gaussian wave functions.', '1104.1856-1-15-0': 'Discussions.', '1104.1856-1-15-1': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross sections caused by the deformation effect is conspicuous as shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-1-15-2': 'However, it is not enough to account the data for [MATH]Ne, especially for [MATH]Ne, in which one neutron halo is suggested [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-15-3': 'The single-particle energies of the last neutron are about [MATH] MeV in the present deformed WS potential with [MATH] values given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-1-15-4': 'The underestimation of the present results for [MATH]Ne may mean that the depth of the present WS potential is too deep.', '1104.1856-1-15-5': 'For example, compared with the WS potential in Ref. [CITATION], the binding energies of relevant Nilsson orbits are about 2 to 3 MeV larger in the present case, though the Nilsson diagrams are very similar to each other.', '1104.1856-1-15-6': 'It turns out that we can obtain good agreements of [MATH] for [MATH]Ne by shallowing the potential depth by about factors [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-15-7': 'In the case of [MATH]Ne, its spin-parity and neutron configuration are still under debate.', '1104.1856-1-15-8': 'Our prediction of the last-odd-neutron orbit is [MATH] with the single-particle energy [MATH] MeV, which increases to [MATH] MeV when the potential is reduced by a factor 0.92 to account for the observed central value of [MATH].', '1104.1856-1-15-9': 'The measured separation energy of [MATH]Ne is 0.29 [MATH] 1.64 MeV [CITATION], which is more consistent with the single-particle energy of the modified potential.', '1104.1856-1-16-0': 'If the shallower potential as well as the deformation in Table [REF] is applied systematically for [MATH]Ne, the reaction cross sections of even-even isotopes [MATH]Ne are overestimated out of the error bars.', '1104.1856-1-16-1': 'The pairing correlation is not included in the present analysis, but its inclusion usually increases the RMS radius.', '1104.1856-1-16-2': 'For weakly bound systems, however, it is speculated that the pairing correlation leads to an extra binding of halo orbit and the nuclear radius shrinks; it is called the "pairing anti-halo" effect [CITATION].', '1104.1856-1-16-3': 'The reduction of [MATH] at [MATH]Ne may indicates this effect, which is quite interesting.', '1104.1856-1-16-4': 'It needs further study from both theoretical and experimental sides to draw a definite conclusion for the inconsistency between the even and odd neutron-rich Ne isotopes.', '1104.1856-1-17-0': 'It should be mentioned that the present calculation of [MATH] is not sensitive to the isovector properties, e.g., the neutron skin.', '1104.1856-1-17-1': 'Although the matter radii calculated with the present WS and with the Gogny D1S HF (imposing the spherical shape) perfectly agree and so do the reaction cross sections (see Fig. [REF]), the skin thicknesses in the two calculations are rather different: e.g., [MATH] and [MATH] fm with the WS and the Gogny HF, respectively, in [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-1-17-2': 'Additional information is necessary to probe the property like the skin thickness.', '1104.1856-1-18-0': 'Summary.', '1104.1856-1-18-1': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-1-18-2': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-1-18-3': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-1-18-4': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-1-18-5': 'The increase of the RMS radii by the deformation is only [MATH]%, but it is quite important that such a small effect is detectable in the experimental data.', '1104.1856-1-18-6': 'Owing to this effect, the calculated reaction cross sections reproduce the data for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-1-18-7': 'For [MATH]Ne, however, the present results still underestimate the measured cross sections.', '1104.1856-1-18-8': 'The underestimation may suggest that the extra weak-binding effect for neutrons plays an important role especially for [MATH]Ne.'}
{'1104.1856-2-0-0': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-2-0-1': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-2-0-2': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-2-0-3': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-2-1-0': 'Introduction.', '1104.1856-2-1-1': 'Exploring unstable nuclei is one of the most important subjects in nuclear physics.', '1104.1856-2-1-2': 'Actually, it was reported that unstable nuclei have exotic properties such as the halo structure [CITATION] and the loss of magicity for nuclei in the so-called "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-2-1-3': 'The term "Island of inversion" was first introduced by Warburton [CITATION] to the region of unstable nuclei from [MATH]Ne to [MATH]Mg.', '1104.1856-2-1-4': 'In the region, the low excitation energies and the large [MATH] values of the first excited states suggest strong deformations [CITATION], which indicates that the [MATH] magic number is no longer valid.', '1104.1856-2-1-5': 'These novel quantum properties have inspired extensive experimental and theoretical studies.', '1104.1856-2-2-0': 'Important experimental tools for exploring unstable nuclei are the reaction cross section [MATH] or the interaction cross section [MATH] and the nucleon-removal cross section [MATH] with radioactive beams [CITATION]; for the scattering of unstable nuclei, [MATH] agrees with [MATH] in general, since projectile excitations to its discrete excited states do not exist.', '1104.1856-2-2-1': 'Very recently, [MATH] was measured by Takechi et al. [CITATION] for [MATH]Ne located near or in "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-2-2-2': 'Furthermore, a halo structure of [MATH]Ne was reported by the experiment on the one-neutron removal reaction [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-2-3': 'This is the heaviest halo nucleus in the present stage suggested experimentally and also reside within the region of "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-2-3-0': 'As a useful theoretical tool of analyzing [MATH], we can consider the microscopic optical potential constructed by the double-folding model (DFM) with the [MATH]-matrix effective nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction [CITATION], when the projectile breakup is weak.', '1104.1856-2-3-1': 'For the nucleon-nucleus scattering, the single-folding model with the [MATH]-matrix well reproduce the data on [MATH] and the elastic-scattering cross section systematically [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-3-2': 'For the [MATH]Ne scattering from [MATH]C at 240 MeV/nucleon, the breakup cross section is at most 1.5% of [MATH] [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-3-3': 'Hence, DFM is applicable also for analyses of measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in the scattering of [MATH]Ne from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-4-0': 'In DFM, the [MATH]-matrix is folded with the projectile and target densities.', '1104.1856-2-4-1': 'If the projectile deforms, the density profile changes; the surface diffuseness increases because of the elongation.', '1104.1856-2-4-2': 'This gives rise to the effective growth of the root-mean-square (RMS) radius and eventually the increase of [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-4-3': 'Therefore, the amount of deformation is important.', '1104.1856-2-4-4': 'Nuclei in the island of inversion are spherical or only weakly deformed in the Skyrme and/or Gogny HF (HFB) calculations; see, e.g., Refs. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-4-5': 'It is even pointed out that the observed large [MATH] values can be understood as a large amplitude vibration around the spherical shape [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-4-6': 'In such a situation, the additional correlations by the angular momentum projection (AMP) often leads to possible deformed shapes; see Ref. [CITATION] for Ne isotopes.', '1104.1856-2-5-0': 'Recently a systematic investigation employing the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD) with the Gogny D1S interaction has been performed for both even and odd [MATH] nuclei in the island of inversion [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-5-1': 'The AMD (with AMP performed) gives rather large deformations, which is consistent with the AMP-HFB calculations [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-5-2': 'A consistent picture of even and odd isotopes has been obtained, where the [MATH]-particle [MATH]-hole excitations of the Nilsson orbits play important roles to determine deformed configurations.', '1104.1856-2-5-3': 'Although it is difficult to distinguish the dynamic shape-fluctuation and static deformation in these light mass nuclei, one may use the deformed shape suggested by the AMD calculation to see its effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-6-0': 'In this paper, we analyze the measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon, using DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix [CITATION] and the deformed projectile density suggested by the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-2-7-0': 'Theoretical framework.', '1104.1856-2-7-1': 'A microscopic optical potential [MATH] between a projectile (P) and a target (T) is constructed with DFM.', '1104.1856-2-7-2': 'The direct and exchange parts, [MATH] and [MATH], are obtained by [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] for a position vector [MATH] of P from T.', '1104.1856-2-7-3': 'The original form of [MATH] is a non-local function of [MATH], but it has been localized in Eq. [REF] with the local semi-classical approximation [CITATION], where [MATH] is the local momentum of the scattering considered and [MATH] for the mass number [MATH]) of P (T).', '1104.1856-2-7-4': 'The validity of this localization is shown in Ref. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-7-5': 'Here, the effective NN interactions, [MATH] and [MATH], are assumed to depend on the local density [EQUATION] at the midpoint of the interacting nucleon pair.', '1104.1856-2-7-6': 'The microscopic potential [MATH] is not spherical, if one or both of the densities [MATH] and [MATH] are non-spherical.', '1104.1856-2-7-7': 'As shown in Ref. [CITATION], however, the effect is found to be negligible for heavy-ion elastic scattering.', '1104.1856-2-7-8': 'Consequently, we consider here the spherical part of the densities and hence spherical [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-8-0': 'As for [MATH], we use the phenomenological [MATH]C-density deduced from the electron scattering [CITATION] by unfolding the finite-size effect of the proton charge in the standard manner [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-8-1': 'Meanwhile, [MATH] is calculated by the mean-field model with a given average potential or with the self-consistently determined potential by the Hartree-Fock (HF) method.', '1104.1856-2-8-2': 'No effect of pairing is included for simplicity.', '1104.1856-2-8-3': 'The Ne isotopes (projectiles) under discussions are supposed to be in the island of inversion (or at its boundary), and expected to be strongly deformed.', '1104.1856-2-8-4': 'In order to investigate the effect of deformation, we take a deformed Woods-Saxon (WS) potential [CITATION], in which the axially deformed surface [MATH] is specified by the radius, [EQUATION] with the deformation parameters [MATH] and a volume conserving factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-8-5': 'The potential value is determined by replacing the quantity [MATH] in a spherical potential to the distance from the surface [MATH] (with minus sign if the point is inside it).', '1104.1856-2-8-6': 'The Coulomb potential created by charge [MATH] distributed uniformly inside the surface [MATH] in Eq. [REF] is included for protons.', '1104.1856-2-8-7': 'The single-particle eigenstates are calculated by the (cylindrical) harmonic oscillator basis expansion.', '1104.1856-2-8-8': 'More than twenty oscillator shells are included and the convergence of the result is carefully checked to obtain reliable density distributions.', '1104.1856-2-8-9': 'The nucleon density is obtained by summing up the contributions of occupied Nilsson levels.', '1104.1856-2-8-10': 'The density distribution thus calculated [MATH] is the one in the intrinsic (body-fixed) frame, and depends on the polar angle [MATH] from the symmetry axis.', '1104.1856-2-8-11': 'As mentioned above, the density in the laboratory frame used in DFM (Eqs. [REF] and [REF]) depends only on modulus of coordinate and is obtained by the angle average, [EQUATION]', '1104.1856-2-8-12': 'This procedure is well justified: We have checked that the angle-averaged density agrees with high accuracy with the density calculated by the angular momentum projection from the Slater determinantial wave function composed of the occupied WS orbits.', '1104.1856-2-9-0': 'No center of mass (CM) correction is included for the calculation of the density.', '1104.1856-2-9-1': 'We have checked by the spherical Gogny HF calculation that the CM correction (including the two-body contributions) to the RMS radius is about 1% reduction for all the isotopes.', '1104.1856-2-9-2': 'The amount of reduction is smaller than the enhancement caused by the deformation effect, but is non negligible; we will return to this point latter.', '1104.1856-2-10-0': 'Results.', '1104.1856-2-10-1': 'We test the accuracy of DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix for [MATH]C+[MATH]C scattering at 250.8 MeV/nucleon.', '1104.1856-2-10-2': 'As shown in Table [REF], [MATH] calculated with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix is consistent with the experimental data; more precisely, the latter is slightly smaller than the former by the factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-10-3': 'The table also shows the result of the Love-Franey [MATH]-matrix nucleon-nucleon interaction in which the nuclear medium effect is not included.', '1104.1856-2-10-4': 'The difference between the two theoretical results is about 122 mb that corresponds to 16% of the experimental data.', '1104.1856-2-10-5': 'Thus, the medium effect is important at this incident energy.', '1104.1856-2-10-6': 'For the [MATH]Al +[MATH]C scattering at 250.7 MeV/nucleon, [MATH] calculated with the phenomenological [MATH]Al density [CITATION] and the normalization factor [MATH] is 1164 mb, while the experimental value is [MATH] mb [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-10-7': 'The normalization procedure thus justified is applied for the [MATH]Ne +[MATH]C scattering at 240 MeV/nucleon analyzed below.', '1104.1856-2-11-0': 'As for the parameter set of the WS potential, i.e., the depth, radius and the diffuseness of the central as well as the spin-orbit potentials, we employ the one provided recently by R. Wyss [CITATION]; see Table I of Ref. [CITATION] for the actual values of parameters.', '1104.1856-2-11-1': 'This set is intended to reproduce the spectroscopic properties of high-spin states from light to heavy deformed nuclei, e.g., the quadrupole moments and the moments of inertia, and at the same time the RMS radii crucial for the present analysis.', '1104.1856-2-11-2': 'In order to check that the present WS potential gives reasonable results, we compare in Fig. [REF] the reaction cross sections calculated by using two densities; one obtained by the Gogny D1S HF calculation and another with the WS potential: The spherical shape is imposed with the filling approximation in this calculation.', '1104.1856-2-11-3': 'A good agreement shown in the figure indicates that the density distributions in the two models are similar, which is also confirmed by the calculated RMS radii (see Fig. [REF]).', '1104.1856-2-12-0': 'The reaction cross section is sensitive to the amount of deformation.', '1104.1856-2-12-1': 'We then employ the deformed shapes suggested by the AMD calculation to see the effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-12-2': 'As a simple estimate we only include the [MATH] deformation in Eq. [REF] and the deformation parameter [MATH] in each isotope is determined to reproduce the calculated ratio of RMS radii along the long and short axes by AMD; the resultant values used in the following analyses are given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-2-12-3': 'With these [MATH] values, the Nilsson orbits of the last-odd-neutron in [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively, in accordance with the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-2-12-4': 'Note that the nucleus [MATH]Ne is at the boundary of the "Island of inversion", and AMD predicts strong mixing between the states with oblate and prolate deformation.', '1104.1856-2-12-5': 'In the present calculation, we have employed the [MATH] value of the oblate minimum, which is the main component.', '1104.1856-2-13-0': 'The results of [MATH] including the effect of quadrupole deformation (see Table [REF]) are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-2-13-1': 'Compared to the results with the density of the spherical cases, the effect of deformation increases the cross section considerably.', '1104.1856-2-13-2': 'The enhancement makes the calculated cross sections almost consistent with the measured cross sections for [MATH]Ne, although the difference of [MATH] between [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne is small in the model calculation compared with the difference deduced from the measured cross sections.', '1104.1856-2-13-3': 'We will return to this point later.', '1104.1856-2-14-0': 'The increase of [MATH] caused by the deformation can be rather nicely understood if one looks into the (matter) RMS radii [MATH] shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-2-14-1': 'They are calculated by using the projectile density [MATH] based on the spherical and deformed WS potentials.', '1104.1856-2-14-2': 'The increase of [MATH] in Fig. [REF] nicely corresponds to that of [MATH] in Fig. [REF], which is reasonable because of a simple estimate, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the RMS radius for target.', '1104.1856-2-14-3': 'Note that the amount of increase of the RMS radii from the spherical shape, which is roughly proportional to [MATH], is only [MATH]%: It is surprising that such a small effect is detectable in experimental data.', '1104.1856-2-14-4': 'The present analysis clearly tells us that [MATH] reflects very precise information, and its measurement is extremely useful to study the nuclear structure of unstable nuclei.', '1104.1856-2-14-5': 'The radial dependence of the matter density is plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-2-14-6': 'The deformed WS density (solid curve) is enhanced by the deformation effect from the spherical WS density (dashed curve) at [MATH] fm.', '1104.1856-2-14-7': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross section is caused by that of the density in this tail region.', '1104.1856-2-14-8': 'This is the main reason why we do not directly use the calculated AMD density, which decreases more rapidly in the tail region because of the usage of one-range gaussian wave functions.', '1104.1856-2-15-0': 'Discussions.', '1104.1856-2-15-1': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross sections caused by the deformation effect is conspicuous as shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-2-15-2': 'The enhancement makes the calculated cross sections almost consistent with the observed ones for [MATH]Ne; more precisely, the calculated cross sections slightly overshoot the data for [MATH]Ne, but slightly undershoot the data for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-2-15-3': 'In the spherical HF calculation, the CM correction to the RMS radii yields 1 reduction.', '1104.1856-2-15-4': 'This leads to 1.1 reduction of [MATH] through relation [REF].', '1104.1856-2-15-5': 'It is very likely that the deformed WS model has almost a same amount of [MATH] reduction.', '1104.1856-2-15-6': 'After this reduction, the calculated cross sections agrees with the data for [MATH]Ne, but underestimates the data by [MATH] mb for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-2-15-7': 'Thus, the theoretical results are consistent with the data for [MATH]Ne but not for [MATH]Ne, because the difference of [MATH] between the two nuclei is smaller in the model calculation than in the data.', '1104.1856-2-16-0': 'The difference of [MATH] between [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne corresponds to the one-neutron removal cross section of [MATH]Ne, if the breakup cross section of [MATH]Ne is negligible [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-16-1': 'The difference between the observed reaction cross sections is 86 mb, while the direct measurement on the one-neutron removal cross section yields 79 mb [CITATION].', '1104.1856-2-16-2': 'Thus, the two experimental data are consistent with each other, indicating that the breakup cross section is small.', '1104.1856-2-16-3': 'Meanwhile, the difference of the calculated reaction cross sections between the two nuclei is 41 mb and smaller than the experimental results.', '1104.1856-2-17-0': 'As for [MATH]Ne, the single-particle energies of the last neutron are about [MATH] MeV in the present deformed WS potential with [MATH] value given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-2-17-1': 'The underestimation of the present value for [MATH]Ne may mean that either the depth of the present WS potential is too deep or [MATH] is too small.', '1104.1856-2-17-2': 'For example, compared with the WS potential in Ref. [CITATION], the binding energies of relevant Nilsson orbits are about 2 MeV larger in the present case, though the Nilsson diagrams are very similar to each other.', '1104.1856-2-17-3': 'It turns out that we can obtain good agreements of [MATH] for [MATH]Ne either by shallowing the potential depth by factor [MATH] or by increasing the deformation up to [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-18-0': 'In the case of [MATH]Ne, its spin-parity and neutron configuration are still under debate.', '1104.1856-2-18-1': 'Our prediction of the last-odd-neutron orbit is [MATH] with the single-particle energy [MATH] MeV.', '1104.1856-2-18-2': 'The energy increases to [MATH] MeV when the potential is reduced by a factor 0.943 to account for the observed central value of [MATH], while the last-odd-neutron orbit changes to [MATH] and the energy decreases to [MATH] MeV when [MATH] is increased to [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-18-3': 'The measured separation energy of [MATH]Ne, 0.29 [MATH] 1.64 MeV [CITATION], is more consistent with the single-particle energy of the shallower potential rather than that of larger [MATH].', '1104.1856-2-19-0': 'It should be mentioned that the present calculation of [MATH] is not sensitive to the isovector properties, e.g., the neutron skin.', '1104.1856-2-19-1': 'Although the matter radii calculated with the present WS and with the Gogny D1S HF (imposing the spherical shape) perfectly agree and so do the reaction cross sections (see Fig. [REF]), the skin thicknesses in the two calculations are rather different: e.g., [MATH] and [MATH] fm with the WS and the Gogny HF, respectively, in [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-2-19-2': 'Additional information is necessary to probe the property like the skin thickness.', '1104.1856-2-20-0': 'Summary.', '1104.1856-2-20-1': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-2-20-2': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-2-20-3': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-2-20-4': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-2-20-5': 'The increase of the RMS radii by the deformation is only [MATH]%, but it is quite important that such a small effect is detectable in the experimental data.', '1104.1856-2-20-6': 'Owing to this effect, the calculated reaction cross sections reproduce the data for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-2-20-7': 'For [MATH]Ne, however, the present results still underestimate the measured cross sections.', '1104.1856-2-20-8': 'The underestimation may suggest that the extra weak-binding effect for neutrons plays an important role particularly for [MATH]Ne.'}
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[]
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[]
['1104.1856-1-1-0', '1104.1856-1-7-0', '1104.1856-1-10-0', '1104.1856-1-15-0', '1104.1856-1-18-0', '1104.1856-2-1-0', '1104.1856-2-7-0', '1104.1856-2-10-0', '1104.1856-2-15-0', '1104.1856-2-20-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1104.1856
{'1104.1856-3-0-0': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-3-0-1': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-3-0-2': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-3-0-3': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-3-1-0': '# Introduction', '1104.1856-3-2-0': 'Exploring unstable nuclei is one of the most important subjects in nuclear physics.', '1104.1856-3-2-1': 'Actually, it was reported that unstable nuclei have exotic properties such as the halo structure [CITATION] and the loss of magicity for nuclei in the so-called "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-3-2-2': 'The term "Island of inversion" was first introduced by Warburton [CITATION] to the region of unstable nuclei from [MATH]Ne to [MATH]Mg.', '1104.1856-3-2-3': 'In the region, the low excitation energies and the large [MATH] values of the first excited states suggest strong deformations [CITATION], which indicates that the [MATH] magic number is no longer valid.', '1104.1856-3-2-4': 'These novel quantum properties have inspired extensive experimental and theoretical studies.', '1104.1856-3-3-0': 'Important experimental tools for exploring unstable nuclei are the reaction cross section [MATH] or the interaction cross section [MATH] and the nucleon-removal cross section [MATH] with radioactive beams [CITATION]; for the scattering of unstable nuclei, [MATH] agrees with [MATH] in general, since projectile excitations to its discrete excited states do not exist.', '1104.1856-3-3-1': 'Very recently, [MATH] was measured by Takechi et al. [CITATION] for [MATH]Ne located near or in "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-3-3-2': 'Furthermore, a halo structure of [MATH]Ne was reported by the experiment on the one-neutron removal reaction [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-3-3': 'This is the heaviest halo nucleus in the present stage suggested experimentally and also reside within the region of "Island of inversion".', '1104.1856-3-4-0': 'As a useful theoretical tool of analyzing [MATH], we can consider the microscopic optical potential constructed by the double-folding model (DFM) with the [MATH]-matrix effective nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction [CITATION], when the projectile breakup is weak.', '1104.1856-3-4-1': 'For the nucleon-nucleus scattering, the single-folding model with the [MATH]-matrix well reproduce the data on [MATH] and the elastic-scattering cross section systematically [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-4-2': 'For the [MATH]Ne scattering from [MATH]C at 240 MeV/nucleon, the breakup cross section is at most 1.5% of [MATH] [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-4-3': 'Hence, DFM is applicable also for analyses of measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in the scattering of [MATH]Ne from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-5-0': 'In DFM, the [MATH]-matrix is folded with the projectile and target densities.', '1104.1856-3-5-1': 'If the projectile deforms, the density profile changes; the surface diffuseness increases because of the elongation.', '1104.1856-3-5-2': 'This gives rise to the effective growth of the root-mean-square (RMS) radius and eventually the increase of [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-5-3': 'Therefore, the amount of deformation is important.', '1104.1856-3-5-4': 'Nuclei in the island of inversion are spherical or only weakly deformed in the Skyrme and/or Gogny HF (HFB) calculations; see, e.g., Refs. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-5-5': 'It is even pointed out that the observed large [MATH] values can be understood as a large amplitude vibration around the spherical shape [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-5-6': 'In such a situation, the additional correlations by the angular momentum projection (AMP) often leads to possible deformed shapes; see Ref. [CITATION] for Ne isotopes.', '1104.1856-3-6-0': 'Recently a systematic investigation employing the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD) with the Gogny D1S interaction has been performed for both even and odd [MATH] nuclei in the island of inversion [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-6-1': 'The AMD (with AMP performed) gives rather large deformations, which is consistent with the AMP-HFB calculations [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-6-2': 'A consistent picture of even and odd isotopes has been obtained, where the [MATH]-particle [MATH]-hole excitations of the Nilsson orbits play important roles to determine deformed configurations.', '1104.1856-3-6-3': 'Although it is difficult to distinguish the dynamic shape-fluctuation and static deformation in these light mass nuclei, one may use the deformed shape suggested by the AMD calculation to see its effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-7-0': 'In this paper, we analyze the measured isotope-dependence of [MATH] in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon, using DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix [CITATION] and the deformed projectile density suggested by the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-3-8-0': '# Theoretical framework', '1104.1856-3-9-0': 'A microscopic optical potential [MATH] between a projectile (P) and a target (T) is constructed with DFM.', '1104.1856-3-9-1': 'The direct and exchange parts, [MATH] and [MATH], are obtained by [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] for a position vector [MATH] of P from T.', '1104.1856-3-9-2': 'The original form of [MATH] is a non-local function of [MATH], but it has been localized in Eq. [REF] with the local semi-classical approximation [CITATION], where [MATH] is the local momentum of the scattering considered and [MATH] for the mass number [MATH]) of P (T).', '1104.1856-3-9-3': 'The validity of this localization is shown in Ref. [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-9-4': 'Here, the effective NN interactions, [MATH] and [MATH], are assumed to depend on the local density [EQUATION] at the midpoint of the interacting nucleon pair.', '1104.1856-3-10-0': 'The microscopic potential [MATH] is not spherical, if one or both of the densities [MATH] and [MATH] are non-spherical.', '1104.1856-3-10-1': 'As shown in Ref. [CITATION], however, the effect is found to be negligible for heavy-ion scattering.', '1104.1856-3-10-2': 'For intermediate incident energies of our interest, this can be understood with reasonable approximations.', '1104.1856-3-10-3': 'For such energies, the rotational motion of deformed P (rotor) is negligible compared with the center-of-mass motion of P. Hence, the adiabatic approximation is applicable for the rotational motion.', '1104.1856-3-10-4': 'Under the approximation, P is scattered by [MATH] depending on not only [MATH] but also [MATH] the direction (Euler angles) of the symmetry axis of rotor in the space-fixed frame.', '1104.1856-3-10-5': 'Using the eikonal approximation for the center-of-mass motion of P, one can obtain [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] for [MATH] and the velocity [MATH] of P. Here, we have assumed that the ground state of P is a [MATH] state for simplicity.', '1104.1856-3-10-6': 'The [MATH]-matrix element [MATH] includes back-coupling effects of the rotational excitations on the elastic scattering.', '1104.1856-3-10-7': 'Separating [MATH] into the spherical and non-spherical parts, [MATH] and [MATH], we can get [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1104.1856-3-10-8': 'The non-spherical correction to the spherical part [MATH] starts with [MATH], since the correction of order [MATH] vanishes because of the angle average.', '1104.1856-3-10-9': 'The leading-order correction is significant only at large [MATH], since [MATH] vanishes at small [MATH] as a result of the strong absorption.', '1104.1856-3-10-10': 'For large [MATH], [MATH] keeps small because [MATH] is large and the range of the [MATH] integration is small.', '1104.1856-3-10-11': 'Actually, we confirmed through numerical calculations that the leading-order correction to [MATH] is 0.01% for the [MATH]Ne+[MATH]C scattering at 240 MeV/nucleon; note that the error of the eikonal approximation is less than 1% for this scattering.', '1104.1856-3-10-12': 'Also for the case that the spin of P in its ground state is non-zero, it is possible to prove that the leading-order correction to [MATH] is of order [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-10-13': 'Thus, the effect of [MATH] on [MATH] is negligible.', '1104.1856-3-10-14': 'Therefore, only the spherical part of the density is taken in this paper.', '1104.1856-3-10-15': 'Detailed discussion on this non-spherical effect will be made in the forthcoming paper.', '1104.1856-3-11-0': 'As for [MATH], we use the phenomenological [MATH]C-density deduced from the electron scattering [CITATION] by unfolding the finite-size effect of the proton charge in the standard manner [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-11-1': 'Meanwhile, [MATH] is calculated by the mean-field model with a given average potential or with the self-consistently determined potential by the Hartree-Fock (HF) method.', '1104.1856-3-11-2': 'No effect of pairing is included for simplicity.', '1104.1856-3-11-3': 'The Ne isotopes (projectiles) under discussions are supposed to be in the island of inversion (or at its boundary), and expected to be strongly deformed.', '1104.1856-3-11-4': 'In order to investigate the effect of deformation, we take a deformed Woods-Saxon (WS) potential [CITATION], in which the axially deformed surface [MATH] is specified by the radius, [EQUATION] with the deformation parameters [MATH] and a volume conserving factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-11-5': 'The potential value is determined by replacing the quantity [MATH] in a spherical potential to the distance from the surface [MATH] (with minus sign if the point is inside it).', '1104.1856-3-11-6': 'The Coulomb potential created by charge [MATH] distributed uniformly inside the surface [MATH] in Eq. [REF] is included for protons.', '1104.1856-3-11-7': 'The single-particle eigenstates are calculated by the (cylindrical) harmonic oscillator basis expansion.', '1104.1856-3-11-8': 'More than twenty oscillator shells are included and the convergence of the result is carefully checked to obtain reliable density distributions.', '1104.1856-3-11-9': 'The nucleon density is obtained by summing up the contributions of occupied Nilsson levels.', '1104.1856-3-11-10': 'The density distribution thus calculated [MATH] is the one in the intrinsic (body-fixed) frame, and depends on the polar angle [MATH] from the symmetry axis.', '1104.1856-3-11-11': 'As mentioned above, the density in the laboratory frame used in DFM (Eqs. [REF] and [REF]) is obtained by the angle average: [EQUATION]', '1104.1856-3-11-12': 'We have checked that the angle-averaged density agrees with high accuracy with the density calculated by the angular momentum projection from the Slater determinantial wave function composed of the occupied WS orbits.', '1104.1856-3-12-0': 'No center of mass (CM) correction is included for the calculation of the density.', '1104.1856-3-12-1': 'We have checked by the spherical Gogny HF calculation that the CM correction (including the two-body contributions) to the RMS radius is about 1% reduction for all the isotopes.', '1104.1856-3-12-2': 'The amount of reduction is smaller than the enhancement caused by the deformation effect, but is non negligible; we will return to this point latter.', '1104.1856-3-13-0': '# Results', '1104.1856-3-14-0': 'We test the accuracy of DFM with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix for [MATH]C+[MATH]C scattering at 250.8 MeV/nucleon.', '1104.1856-3-14-1': 'As shown in Table [REF], [MATH] calculated with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix is consistent with the experimental data; more precisely, the latter is slightly smaller than the former by the factor [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-14-2': 'The table also shows the result of the Love-Franey [MATH]-matrix nucleon-nucleon interaction in which the nuclear medium effect is not included.', '1104.1856-3-14-3': 'The difference between the two theoretical results is about 122 mb that corresponds to 16% of the experimental data.', '1104.1856-3-14-4': 'Thus, the medium effect is important at this incident energy.', '1104.1856-3-14-5': 'For the [MATH]Al +[MATH]C scattering at 250.7 MeV/nucleon, [MATH] calculated with the phenomenological [MATH]Al density [CITATION] and the normalization factor [MATH] is 1164 mb, while the experimental value is [MATH] mb [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-14-6': 'The normalization procedure thus justified is applied for the [MATH]Ne +[MATH]C scattering at 240 MeV/nucleon analyzed below.', '1104.1856-3-15-0': 'As for the parameter set of the WS potential, i.e., the depth, radius and the diffuseness of the central as well as the spin-orbit potentials, we employ the one provided recently by R. Wyss [CITATION]; see Table I of Ref. [CITATION] for the actual values of parameters.', '1104.1856-3-15-1': 'This set is intended to reproduce the spectroscopic properties of high-spin states from light to heavy deformed nuclei, e.g., the quadrupole moments and the moments of inertia, and at the same time the RMS radii crucial for the present analysis.', '1104.1856-3-15-2': 'In order to check that the present WS potential gives reasonable results, we compare in Fig. [REF] the reaction cross sections calculated by using two densities; one obtained by the Gogny D1S HF calculation and another with the WS potential: The spherical shape is imposed with the filling approximation in this calculation.', '1104.1856-3-15-3': 'A good agreement shown in the figure indicates that the density distributions in the two models are similar, which is also confirmed by the calculated RMS radii (see Fig. [REF]).', '1104.1856-3-16-0': 'The reaction cross section is sensitive to the amount of deformation.', '1104.1856-3-16-1': 'We then employ the deformed shapes suggested by the AMD calculation to see the effect on [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-16-2': 'As a simple estimate we only include the [MATH] deformation in Eq. [REF] and the deformation parameter [MATH] in each isotope is determined to reproduce the calculated ratio of RMS radii along the long and short axes by AMD; the resultant values used in the following analyses are given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-3-16-3': 'With these [MATH] values, the Nilsson orbits of the last-odd-neutron in [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne are [MATH] and [MATH], respectively, in accordance with the AMD calculation.', '1104.1856-3-16-4': 'Note that the nucleus [MATH]Ne is at the boundary of the "Island of inversion", and AMD predicts strong mixing between the states with oblate and prolate deformation.', '1104.1856-3-16-5': 'In the present calculation, we have employed the [MATH] value of the oblate minimum, which is the main component.', '1104.1856-3-17-0': 'The results of [MATH] including the effect of quadrupole deformation (see Table [REF]) are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-3-17-1': 'Compared to the results with the density of the spherical cases, the effect of deformation increases the cross section considerably.', '1104.1856-3-17-2': 'The enhancement makes the calculated cross sections almost consistent with the measured cross sections for [MATH]Ne, although the difference of [MATH] between [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne is small in the model calculation compared with the difference deduced from the measured cross sections.', '1104.1856-3-17-3': 'We will return to this point later.', '1104.1856-3-18-0': 'The increase of [MATH] caused by the deformation can be rather nicely understood if one looks into the (matter) RMS radii [MATH] shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-3-18-1': 'They are calculated by using the projectile density [MATH] based on the spherical and deformed WS potentials.', '1104.1856-3-18-2': 'The increase of [MATH] in Fig. [REF] nicely corresponds to that of [MATH] in Fig. [REF], which is reasonable because of a simple estimate, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the RMS radius for target.', '1104.1856-3-18-3': 'Note that the amount of increase of the RMS radii from the spherical shape, which is roughly proportional to [MATH], is only [MATH]%: It is surprising that such a small effect is detectable in experimental data.', '1104.1856-3-18-4': 'The present analysis clearly tells us that [MATH] reflects very precise information, and its measurement is extremely useful to study the nuclear structure of unstable nuclei.', '1104.1856-3-18-5': 'The radial dependence of the matter density is plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-3-18-6': 'The deformed WS density (solid curve) is enhanced by the deformation effect from the spherical WS density (dashed curve) at [MATH] fm.', '1104.1856-3-18-7': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross section is caused by that of the density in this tail region.', '1104.1856-3-18-8': 'This is the main reason why we do not directly use the calculated AMD density, which decreases more rapidly in the tail region because of the usage of one-range gaussian wave functions.', '1104.1856-3-19-0': '# Discussions', '1104.1856-3-20-0': 'The enhancement of the reaction cross sections caused by the deformation effect is conspicuous as shown in Fig. [REF].', '1104.1856-3-20-1': 'The enhancement makes the calculated cross sections almost consistent with the observed ones for [MATH]Ne; more precisely, the calculated cross sections slightly overshoot the data for [MATH]Ne, but slightly undershoot the data for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-3-20-2': 'In the spherical HF calculation, the CM correction to the RMS radii yields 1 reduction.', '1104.1856-3-20-3': 'This leads to 1.1 reduction of [MATH] through relation [REF].', '1104.1856-3-20-4': 'It is very likely that the deformed WS model has almost a same amount of [MATH] reduction.', '1104.1856-3-20-5': 'After this reduction, the calculated cross sections agrees with the data for [MATH]Ne, but underestimates the data by [MATH] mb for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-3-20-6': 'Thus, the theoretical results are consistent with the data for [MATH]Ne but not for [MATH]Ne, because the difference of [MATH] between the two nuclei is smaller in the model calculation than in the data.', '1104.1856-3-21-0': 'The difference of [MATH] between [MATH]Ne and [MATH]Ne corresponds to the one-neutron removal cross section of [MATH]Ne, if the breakup cross section of [MATH]Ne is negligible [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-21-1': 'The difference between the observed reaction cross sections is 86 mb, while the direct measurement on the one-neutron removal cross section yields 79 mb [CITATION].', '1104.1856-3-21-2': 'Thus, the two experimental data are consistent with each other, indicating that the breakup cross section is small.', '1104.1856-3-21-3': 'Meanwhile, the difference of the calculated reaction cross sections between the two nuclei is 41 mb and smaller than the experimental results.', '1104.1856-3-22-0': 'As for [MATH]Ne, the single-particle energies of the last neutron are about [MATH] MeV in the present deformed WS potential with [MATH] value given in Table [REF].', '1104.1856-3-22-1': 'The underestimation of the present value for [MATH]Ne may mean that either the depth of the present WS potential is too deep or [MATH] is too small.', '1104.1856-3-22-2': 'For example, compared with the WS potential in Ref. [CITATION], the binding energies of relevant Nilsson orbits are about 2 MeV larger in the present case, though the Nilsson diagrams are very similar to each other.', '1104.1856-3-22-3': 'It turns out that we can obtain good agreements of [MATH] for [MATH]Ne either by shallowing the potential depth by factor [MATH] or by increasing the deformation up to [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-23-0': 'In the case of [MATH]Ne, its spin-parity and neutron configuration are still under debate.', '1104.1856-3-23-1': 'Our prediction of the last-odd-neutron orbit is [MATH] with the single-particle energy [MATH] MeV.', '1104.1856-3-23-2': 'The energy increases to [MATH] MeV when the potential is reduced by a factor 0.943 to account for the observed central value of [MATH], while the last-odd-neutron orbit changes to [MATH] and the energy decreases to [MATH] MeV when [MATH] is increased to [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-23-3': 'The measured separation energy of [MATH]Ne, 0.29 [MATH] 1.64 MeV [CITATION], is more consistent with the single-particle energy of the shallower potential rather than that of larger [MATH].', '1104.1856-3-24-0': 'It should be mentioned that the present calculation of [MATH] is not sensitive to the isovector properties, e.g., the neutron skin.', '1104.1856-3-24-1': 'Although the matter radii calculated with the present WS and with the Gogny D1S HF (imposing the spherical shape) perfectly agree and so do the reaction cross sections (see Fig. [REF]), the skin thicknesses in the two calculations are rather different: e.g., [MATH] and [MATH] fm with the WS and the Gogny HF, respectively, in [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-3-24-2': 'Additional information is necessary to probe the property like the skin thickness.', '1104.1856-3-25-0': '# Summary', '1104.1856-3-26-0': 'Isotope-dependence of measured reaction cross sections in scattering of [MATH]Ne isotopes from [MATH]C target at 240 MeV/nucleon is analyzed by the double-folding model with the Melbourne [MATH]-matrix.', '1104.1856-3-26-1': 'The density of projectile is calculated by the mean-field model with the deformed Wood-Saxon potential.', '1104.1856-3-26-2': 'The deformation is evaluated by the antisymmetrized molecular dynamics.', '1104.1856-3-26-3': 'The deformation of projectile enhances calculated reaction cross sections to the measured values.', '1104.1856-3-26-4': 'The increase of the RMS radii by the deformation is only [MATH]%, but it is quite important that such a small effect is detectable in the experimental data.', '1104.1856-3-26-5': 'Owing to this effect, the calculated reaction cross sections reproduce the data for [MATH]Ne.', '1104.1856-3-26-6': 'For [MATH]Ne, however, the present results still underestimate the measured cross sections.', '1104.1856-3-26-7': 'The underestimation may suggest that the extra weak-binding effect for neutrons plays an important role particularly for [MATH]Ne.'}
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1401.4608
{'1401.4608-1-0-0': 'We investigate the in-plane oscillations of the relaxed shape graphene due to externally applied tensile edge stress along both the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-1-0-1': 'Thermo-electromechanical effects are treated via pseudomorphic vector potentials to analyze the influence of these coupled effects on the bandstructures of bilayer graphene quantum dots (QDs).', '1401.4608-1-0-2': 'We show that the total elastic energy density is enhanced with temperature for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-1-0-3': 'We report that the level crossing between ground and first excited states in the localized edge states can be achieved with the accessible values of temperature.', '1401.4608-1-0-4': 'In particular, the level crossing point extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of externally applied tensile edge stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-1-0-5': 'Such kind of level crossing is absent in the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-1-1-0': 'Miniaturization is one of the requirements to make electronic devices smaller and smaller.', '1401.4608-1-1-1': 'To fulfill this requirement, graphene based electronic devices might provide an alternative to replace the current state-of-the-art semiconductor industry.', '1401.4608-1-1-2': 'Graphene is a promising material to build electronic devices because of its unusual properties due to the Dirac-like spectrum of the charge carriers.', '1401.4608-1-1-3': '[CITATION] In addition, researchers around the world seek to make next generation electronic devices from graphene because the material possess high charge mobility and hence there is an opportunity to control electronic properties of graphene-based structures by several different techniques such as gate controlled electric fields, magnetic fields and engineering the electromechanical properties via pseudomorphic gauge fields.', '1401.4608-1-1-4': '[CITATION] Recently, spin echo phenomena followed by strong beating patterns due to rapid oscillations of quantum states along a graphene ribbon has been investigated for realization of quantum memory at optical states in the far-infrared region for quantum information processing.', '1401.4608-1-1-5': '[CITATION]', '1401.4608-1-2-0': 'Graphene sheets designed to make next generation electronic devices demonstrate that surfaces of graphene sheet are not perfectly flat.', '1401.4608-1-2-1': 'The surfaces exhibit intrinsic microscopic roughening, the surface normal varies by several degrees and the out-of-plane deformations reach to the nanometer scale.', '1401.4608-1-2-2': '[CITATION] Out-of-plane displacements without a preferred direction induce ripples in the graphene sheet [CITATION] while in-plane displacements induced by applying suitable tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions lead to the relaxed shape graphene.', '1401.4608-1-2-3': '[CITATION] In experiments on graphene suspended on substrate trenches, there appear much longer and taller waves (close to a micron scale) directed parallel to the applied stress.', '1401.4608-1-2-4': '[CITATION] These long wrinkles are thermally induced and can be explained by continuum elasticity.', '1401.4608-1-2-5': 'The mechanical deformation of a free standing graphene sheet can be understood by applying suitable edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-1-2-6': 'The tensile forces, that can be applied on the graphene sheet with a compressed elastic string, is schematically shown in Fig. [REF].', '1401.4608-1-2-7': 'In this paper, we show that intrinsic edge stresses can have a significant influence on the morphology of graphene sheets and substantially modify the bandstructures of graphene quantum dots.', '1401.4608-1-2-8': 'We present a model that couples the Navier equations, accounting for thermo-electromechanical effects, to the electronic properties of graphene quantum dots.', '1401.4608-1-2-9': 'Here we show that the amplitude of the induced waves due to applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions increases with temperature and provides the level crossing in the localized edge states.', '1401.4608-1-2-10': 'Such kind of level crossing is absent for the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry induced by pseudomorphic strain tensor.', '1401.4608-1-3-0': 'The total thermoelastic energy density associated to the strain for the two dimensional graphene sheet can be written as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a tensor of rank four (the elastic modulus tensor), [MATH] (or [MATH]) is the strain tensor and [MATH] are the stress temperature coefficients.', '1401.4608-1-3-1': "Also, [MATH] is the distribution of temperature in the graphene sheet that can be found by solving Laplace's equation [MATH], where [MATH] with [MATH] being the heat induction coefficients of graphene.", '1401.4608-1-3-2': 'We suppose that the graphene sheet at the boundary 4 (see Fig. [REF]) is connected to the heat bath of temperature [MATH] and all other three boundaries 1,2,3 are fixed at zero temperature.', '1401.4608-1-3-3': "Thus, the exact solution of Laplace's equation can be written as [EQUATION] where the constant [MATH] relates to the temperature of the thermal bath [MATH] as: [EQUATION]", '1401.4608-1-3-4': 'Here [MATH], m is an integer, [MATH] is the length and [MATH] is the width of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-1-3-5': "The arbitrary constant [MATH] can be found by performing Fourier's transform of ([REF]): [EQUATION]", '1401.4608-1-3-6': 'In ([REF]), the strain tensor components can be written as [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] are in-plane and out-of-plane displacements, respectively.', '1401.4608-1-3-7': '[CITATION] The out-of-plane displacements usually induce ripples which are much smaller in size than wrinkles in graphene sheets.', '1401.4608-1-3-8': '[CITATION] Through out the paper, we impose wrinkles by applying tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions, while assuming the [MATH].', '1401.4608-1-3-9': '[CITATION] In the continuum limit, elastic deformations of graphene sheets are described by the Navier equations [MATH].', '1401.4608-1-3-10': 'Hence, the coupled Navier-type equations of thermoelasticity for graphene can be written as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-1-3-11': 'We apply tensile edge stress along the armchair direction to induce oscillation in the strain tensor of the graphene sheet (see Fig. [REF]).', '1401.4608-1-3-12': 'The displacement vector can then be written as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the amplitude and [MATH] with [MATH] being the wavelength while the total edge energy per unit length becomes [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the edge stress and the elastic modulus of the edge along the armchair direction of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-1-3-13': 'Thus, we write the total edge energy [MATH] and find the optimum amplitude of the waves along the armchair direction by utilizing the condition [MATH] to be: [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-1-3-14': 'By considering [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] to [MATH], the amplitude ([MATH]) of the waves varies from [MATH] to [MATH] which is in agreement with the experimentally reported values in Ref. [CITATION].', '1401.4608-1-3-15': 'In a similar way, the optimum amplitude ([MATH]) of the waves along the zigzag direction can be found as: [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the tensile edge stress and the elastic modulus of the edge along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-1-4-0': 'Now we turn to the analysis of the influence of strain on the electronic properties of graphene QDs formed in the graphene sheet with the application of parabolic gate potential.', '1401.4608-1-4-1': 'In the continuum limit, by expanding the momentum close to the [MATH] point in the Brillouin zone, the Hamiltonian reads [MATH].', '1401.4608-1-4-2': 'Here [MATH] is written as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH] being the canonical momentum operator and [MATH] is the vector potential induced by pseudomorphic strain tensor.', '1401.4608-1-4-3': '[CITATION] Also, [MATH] is the lattice constant and [MATH] with [MATH] being the nearest neighbor hoping parameters.', '1401.4608-1-4-4': 'We assume a confining potential [MATH] that decays exponentially away from the edges into the bulk with a penetration depths [MATH] or [MATH].', '1401.4608-1-4-5': 'Here we write [MATH] and [MATH] as: [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is a dimensionless constant.', '1401.4608-1-4-6': 'We can vary [MATH] to vary the band gap of graphene induced by gate potential.', '1401.4608-1-5-0': 'The schematic diagram of the two-dimensional graphene sheet in computational domain is shown in Fig. [REF].', '1401.4608-1-5-1': 'We have applied the tensile edge stress along both the armchair and zigzag directions to create oscillations in strain tensor of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-1-5-2': "We have used the multiscale multiphysics simulation and solved the Navier's equations ([REF]) and ([REF]) via Finite Element Method to investigate the influence of thermo-electromechanical effects on the relaxed shape of graphene.", '1401.4608-1-5-3': 'For the waves along the armchair direction, we have used the Neumann boundary conditions at sides 1, 3 and employed Eq. ([REF]) at sides 2,4 and vice versa for the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-1-5-4': 'All reported results (Figs. [REF]-[REF]) have been obtained for a [MATH] graphene sheet that mimics the geometry of experimentally studied structures in Refs. [CITATION].', '1401.4608-1-5-5': 'For bandstructure calculations (Figs. [REF]-[REF]), we have chosen a [MATH] graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-1-6-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the relaxed shape of graphene under applied tensile stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-1-6-1': 'This relaxed shape of graphene due to applied tensile edge stress mimics the theoretically and experimentally reported results in Refs. [CITATION].', '1401.4608-1-6-2': 'In Fig. [REF], we investigate the influence of temperature on the strain tensor under an applied tensile edge stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-1-6-3': 'Again, the oscillations in the strain tensor can be seen due to the fact that the applied tensile stress along the armchair direction induces out-of-plane relaxation of the graphene sheet (see also Ref. shenoy08).', '1401.4608-1-6-4': 'We note that the increasing temperature from [MATH] (upper panel) to room temperature (lower panel) enhances the amplitude of the waves which is in agreement with the experimentally observed results in Ref. bao-lau09.', '1401.4608-1-6-5': 'In Fig. [REF], we investigate the total elastic energy density vs temperature.', '1401.4608-1-6-6': 'Even though the optimum value of the amplitudes of waves along the armchair and zigzag directions are exactly the same ([MATH], see Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])), the variation in the total free elastic energy density is enhanced for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction (dashed-dotted line).', '1401.4608-1-6-7': 'This occurs because the graphene sheet along the boundary 4 is connected to the heat reservoir that enhances the free elastic energy of the waves traveling along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-1-7-0': 'Another important result of the paper is the study of the influence of thermomechanics on the bandstructure of bilayer graphene QDs via pseudomorphic vector potentials.', '1401.4608-1-7-1': 'In Fig. [REF], we have plotted several states wavefunctions of the graphene QDs.', '1401.4608-1-7-2': 'It can be seen that in addition to the localized states formed at the center of the graphene sheet, edge states are also present at the zigzag boundary.', '1401.4608-1-7-3': 'Such edge states are highly sensitive to the applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-1-7-4': 'We observe three fold symmetry in the first excited state wavefunction (see inset plot of Fig. [REF]) of graphene that is in agreement to the experimentally reported results (see Fig. (4) of Ref. [CITATION]).', '1401.4608-1-7-5': 'In Fig. [REF], we find the level crossing at [MATH] due to the fact that the edge energy difference between the ground and first excited states decreases with increasing temperature.', '1401.4608-1-7-6': 'This level crossing point extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of tensile edge stress (see Fig. [REF]).', '1401.4608-1-7-7': 'We have analyzed why the level crossing point can be seen on the edge states, but cannot be seen on the localized states formed at the center of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-1-7-8': 'The reason is that the graphene sheet on boundary 4 is connected to the heat reservoir.', '1401.4608-1-7-9': 'Hence, the energy difference between the ground and first excited states decreases with increasing temperature.', '1401.4608-1-7-10': 'As a result, we find the level crossing in the edge states to be at the zigzag boundary with the accessible values of temperatures.', '1401.4608-1-7-11': 'The energy difference between the ground and first excited states formed at the center of the graphene sheet also decreases with increasing temperature (see Fig. [REF]).', '1401.4608-1-7-12': 'However, such energy states do not meet each other with any practically applicable values of the temperature due to absent of two fold symmetry in graphene.', '1401.4608-1-7-13': 'In fact, the induced pseudomorphic fields by the strain tensor affect the graphene charge carriers and produce a three fold symmetry in the wavefunction of 2-dimensional graphene sheet (see inset plot of [REF]).', '1401.4608-1-7-14': 'The symmetry of the pseudomorphic fields is determined by the corresponding symmetry of the strain field.', '1401.4608-1-7-15': 'For example, a uniform pseudomorphic field requires a special strain field distorted with three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-1-7-16': '[CITATION]', '1401.4608-1-8-0': 'To conclude, we have developed a model which allows us to investigate the influence of temperature on the relaxed shape of the graphene sheet as well as in the QDs that are formed in the two-dimensional graphene sheet with the application of gate potentials.', '1401.4608-1-8-1': 'We have shown that the variation in the total free elastic energy density is enhanced with temperature for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-1-8-2': 'We have treated the strain induced by applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions as a pseudomorphic vector potential and shown that the level crossing point between the ground and first excited edge states at the zigzag boundary extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of the tensile edge stress.', '1401.4608-1-8-3': 'Such kind of level crossing is absent in the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-1-9-0': 'This work has been supported by NSERC and CRC programs (Canada).', '1401.4608-1-9-1': 'The authors acknowledge the Shared Hierarchical Academic Research Computing Network (SHARCNET) community and Dr. P. J. Douglas Roberts for his assistance and technical support.'}
{'1401.4608-2-0-0': 'We investigate the in-plane oscillations of the relaxed shape graphene due to externally applied tensile edge stress along both the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-2-0-1': 'We show that the total elastic energy density is enhanced with temperature for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-2-0-2': 'Thermo-electromechanical effects are treated via pseudomorphic vector potentials to analyze the influence of these coupled effects on the bandstructures of bilayer graphene quantum dots (QDs).', '1401.4608-2-0-3': 'We report that the level crossing between ground and first excited states in the localized edge states can be achieved with the accessible values of temperature.', '1401.4608-2-0-4': 'In particular, the level crossing point extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of externally applied tensile edge stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-2-0-5': 'This kind of level crossings is absent in the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1401.4608-2-2-0': 'Miniaturization is one of the requirements to make electronic devices smaller and smaller.', '1401.4608-2-2-1': 'To fulfill this requirement, graphene based electronic devices might provide a breakthrough alternative for the current state-of-the-art semiconductor industry.', '1401.4608-2-2-2': 'Graphene is a promising material to build electronic devices because of its unusual properties due to the Dirac-like spectrum of the charge carriers.', '1401.4608-2-2-3': '[CITATION] In addition, researchers around the world seek to make next generation electronic devices from graphene because the material possesses high charge mobility.', '1401.4608-2-2-4': 'There is an opportunity to control electronic properties of graphene-based structures by several different techniques such as gate controlled electric fields, magnetic fields, and to engineer the electromechanical properties via pseudomorphic gauge fields.', '1401.4608-2-2-5': '[CITATION] Recently, spin echo phenomena, followed by strong beating patterns due to rapid oscillations of quantum states along a graphene ribbon, have been investigated for realization of quantum memory at optical states in the far-infrared region for quantum information processing.', '1401.4608-2-2-6': '[CITATION]', '1401.4608-2-3-0': 'Graphene sheets designed to make next generation electronic devices consist of surfaces that are not perfectly flat.', '1401.4608-2-3-1': 'The surfaces exhibit intrinsic microscopic roughening, the surface normal varies by several degrees and the out-of-plane deformations reach to the nanometer scale.', '1401.4608-2-3-2': '[CITATION] Out-of-plane displacements without a preferred direction induce ripples in the graphene sheet, [CITATION] while in-plane displacements induced by applying suitable tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions lead to the relaxed shape graphene.', '1401.4608-2-3-3': '[CITATION] In experiments with graphene suspended on substrate trenches, there appear much longer and taller waves (close to a micron scale) directed parallel to the applied stress.', '1401.4608-2-3-4': '[CITATION] These long wrinkles are mechanically induced and we know that theoretically it is possible to corrugate an elastic membrane at absolute zero temperature.', '1401.4608-2-3-5': 'The mechanical deformation of a free standing graphene sheet can be understood by applying suitable edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-2-3-6': 'The tensile forces, that can be applied on the graphene sheet with a compressed elastic string, are schematically shown in Fig. [REF].', '1401.4608-2-3-7': 'In this paper, we show that intrinsic edge stresses can have a significant influence on the morphology of graphene sheets and substantially modify the bandstructures of graphene quantum dots.', '1401.4608-2-3-8': 'We present a model that couples the Navier equations, accounting for thermo-electromechanical effects, to the electronic properties of graphene quantum dots.', '1401.4608-2-3-9': '[CITATION] Here we show that the amplitude of the induced waves due to applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions increases with temperature and provides the level crossing in the localized edge states.', '1401.4608-2-3-10': 'This kind of level crossings is absent for the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry induced by pseudomorphic strain tensor.', '1401.4608-2-4-0': '# Theoretical Model', '1401.4608-2-5-0': 'The total thermoelastic energy density associated to the strain for the two-dimensional graphene sheet can be written as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a tensor of rank four (the elastic modulus tensor), [MATH] (or [MATH]) is the strain tensor and [MATH] are the stress temperature coefficients.', '1401.4608-2-5-1': "Also, [MATH] is the distribution of temperature in the graphene sheet that can be found by solving Laplace's equation [MATH], where [MATH] with [MATH] being the heat induction coefficients of graphene.", '1401.4608-2-5-2': "Thus we write the Laplace's equation as [EQUATION]", '1401.4608-2-5-3': 'We suppose that the graphene sheet at the boundary 4 (see Fig. [REF]) is connected to the heat bath of temperature [MATH] and all other three boundaries 1,2,3 are fixed at zero temperature.', '1401.4608-2-5-4': "Thus, the exact solution of Laplace's equation can be written as [EQUATION] where the constant [MATH] relates to the temperature of the thermal bath [MATH] as: [EQUATION]", '1401.4608-2-5-5': 'Here [MATH], m is an integer, [MATH] is the length and [MATH] is the width of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-5-6': "The arbitrary constant [MATH] can be found by performing Fourier's transform of ([REF]): [EQUATION]", '1401.4608-2-5-7': 'In ([REF]), the strain tensor components can be written as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are in-plane and out-of-plane displacements, respectively.', '1401.4608-2-5-8': '[CITATION] It is believed that the ripples in graphene have two different types of sources (see Figs. 1 and 3 of Ref. [CITATION]).', '1401.4608-2-5-9': 'Both types of ripple waves are considered to be the sinusoidal function of position whose amplitude lies normal to the plane of two-dimensional graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-5-10': 'The origin of first type ripples results in the relaxed shape graphene (i.e., the displacement vector relaxed to the equilibrium position where the total elastic energy density is minimized) due to externally applied in-plane (along x and y-directions only) tensile edge stress.', '1401.4608-2-5-11': '[CITATION] Such kind of ripples that can be seen in the form of relaxed shape graphene occurs in a fashion similar to leaves or torn plastic [CITATION] where buckling mechanism displaces only the carbon atoms near the edge of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-5-12': '[CITATION] While the origin of second type ripples results in the height fluctuations through out the graphene sheet due to adsorbed hydroxide molecules sitting on random sites of hexagon graphene molecules in a two-dimensional graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-5-13': '[CITATION] In this paper, we only consider the ripple waves induced by buckling mechanisms ([MATH]) by applying tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-2-5-14': '[CITATION] Hence the strain tensor components for graphene in 2D displacement vector [MATH] can be written as [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-2-5-15': 'The stress tensor components [MATH] for graphene can be written as [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-2-5-16': 'In the continuum limit, elastic deformations of graphene sheets are described by the Navier equations [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-5-17': 'Hence, the coupled Navier-type equations of thermoelasticity for graphene can be written as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-2-5-18': 'Now we apply the compressive tensile edge stresses through the boundaries of the graphene sheet (see Fig. [REF]) along the lateral directions and seek to establish the relationship between the waves generated due to applied tensile edge stresses and the in-plane displacement vector.', '1401.4608-2-5-19': 'More precisely, the mechanical deformation along the lateral direction of a graphene sheet can be understood by considering the effect of externally applied tensile edge stresses along the lateral direction in the form of compressed elastic string between which the 2-dimensional free standing graphene sheet is clamped.', '1401.4608-2-5-20': '[CITATION] It is natural to expect that the longitudinal waves, generated by compressed elastic forces, travel along the direction of applied tensile edge stresses.', '1401.4608-2-5-21': 'Hence we might think the sinusoidal function in the deformation of in-plane displacement vectors that correlate the geometric features of the longitudinal waves generated in the graphene sheet due to compressed elastic tensile edge stresses which finally turn the flat surface of the graphene sheet into the relaxed shape graphene in the form of torn plastic.', '1401.4608-2-5-22': 'Thus we assume the functional form of [MATH] at the boundary [MATH] of armchair as: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the amplitude and [MATH] with [MATH] being the wavelength while the total edge energy per unit length becomes [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the edge stress and the elastic modulus of the edge along the armchair direction of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-5-23': 'Thus, we write the total edge energy [MATH] and find the optimum amplitude of the waves along the armchair direction by utilizing the condition [MATH] to be: [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-2-5-24': 'By considering [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] to [MATH], the amplitude ([MATH]) of the waves varies from [MATH] to [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-5-25': 'This amplitude decreases exponentially as it moves into the graphene sheet along y-direction.', '1401.4608-2-5-26': 'Thus we assume [MATH], where [MATH] is the penetration depth of the ripple waves and write the total elastic energy of the graphene sheet as [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-5-27': 'By considering [MATH], we found the functional form of the amplitude as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1401.4608-2-5-28': 'At absolute zero temperature (i.e., [MATH]), the amplitude of the ripple waves obtained from Eq. ([REF]) resembles the expression presented in Ref. [CITATION].', '1401.4608-2-5-29': 'Similar type of expression ([REF]) can also be obtained for the optimum amplitude of the longitudinal waves along the zigzag direction by considering non-vanishing [MATH] in ([REF]) and replacing [MATH] by [MATH] in ([REF]).', '1401.4608-2-6-0': 'Now we turn to the analysis of the influence of strain on the electronic properties of graphene QDs formed in the graphene sheet with the application of parabolic gate potential.', '1401.4608-2-6-1': 'In the continuum limit, by expanding the momentum close to the [MATH] point in the Brillouin zone, the Hamiltonian reads [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-6-2': 'Here [MATH] is written as [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH] being the canonical momentum operator and [MATH] is the vector potential induced by pseudomorphic strain tensor.', '1401.4608-2-6-3': '[CITATION] Also, [MATH] is the lattice constant, [MATH] is the Fermi velocity, [MATH] corresponds to the interaction energy between two neighboring atoms A and B placed one under the other (see Ref. [CITATION]) and [MATH] with [MATH] being the nearest neighbor hoping parameters.', '1401.4608-2-6-4': 'We assume a confining potential [MATH] that decays exponentially away from the edges into the bulk with a penetration depths [MATH] or [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-6-5': 'Here we write [MATH] and [MATH] as: [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is a dimensionless constant.', '1401.4608-2-6-6': 'We can vary [MATH] to vary the band gap of graphene induced by gate potential.', '1401.4608-2-7-0': '# Results and Discussions', '1401.4608-2-8-0': 'The schematic diagram of the two-dimensional graphene sheet in computational domain is shown in Fig. [REF].', '1401.4608-2-8-1': 'We have applied the tensile edge stress along both the armchair and zigzag directions to create oscillations in strain tensor of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-8-2': "We have used the multiphysics simulation and solved the Navier's equations ([REF]) and ([REF]) via Finite Element Method to investigate the influence of thermo-electromechanical effects on the relaxed shape of graphene.", '1401.4608-2-8-3': 'For the waves along the armchair direction, we have used the Neumann boundary conditions at sides 1, 3 and employed Eq. ([REF]) at sides 2,4 and vice versa for the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-2-8-4': 'All reported results (Figs. [REF]-[REF]) have been obtained for a [MATH] graphene sheet that mimics the geometry of experimentally studied structures in Refs. [CITATION].', '1401.4608-2-8-5': 'All parameters for our simulations have been taken from Table [REF].', '1401.4608-2-8-6': 'For bandstructure calculations (Figs. [REF]-[REF]), we have chosen a [MATH] graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-9-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the relaxed shape of graphene under applied tensile stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-2-9-1': 'The variation in the amplitude of ripple waves, expressed in nanometer, is shown in the color bar (see Eq. [REF]).', '1401.4608-2-9-2': 'As can be seen in the color bar, the amplitude of the ripple waves in the relaxed shape graphene is enhanced with the increasing values of the wavelength which is also supported analytically by Eq. ([REF]).', '1401.4608-2-9-3': 'In Fig. [REF], we investigate the influence of temperature on the strain tensor under an applied tensile edge stress along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-2-9-4': 'Again, the oscillations in the strain tensor occur due to the applied tensile stress along the armchair direction that induces longitudinal waves and propagate along the armchair direction.', '1401.4608-2-9-5': 'We note that the increasing temperature from [MATH] (upper panel) to room temperature (lower panel) enhances the amplitude of the waves that eventually increase the magnetic field of the pseudomorphic vector potentials and allow us to investigate its influence in the bandstructure calculation of graphene at Dirac points (for details, see Figs. [REF] and [REF]).', '1401.4608-2-9-6': 'In Fig. [REF], we investigate the total elastic energy density vs temperature.', '1401.4608-2-9-7': 'Even though the optimum values of the amplitudes of waves along the armchair and zigzag directions are exactly the same, the variation in the total free elastic energy density is enhanced for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction (dashed-dotted line).', '1401.4608-2-9-8': 'This occurs because the graphene sheet along the boundary 4 is connected to the heat reservoir that enhances the free elastic energy of the waves traveling along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-2-10-0': 'Another important result of the paper is the study of the influence of thermomechanics on the bandstructure of bilayer graphene QDs via pseudomorphic vector potentials.', '1401.4608-2-10-1': 'In Fig. [REF], we have plotted several states wavefunctions of the graphene QDs.', '1401.4608-2-10-2': 'It can be seen that in addition to the localized states formed at the center of the graphene sheet, edge states are also present at the zigzag boundary.', '1401.4608-2-10-3': 'The localized edge states at the zigzag boundary can be seen due to the fact that the pseudomorphic vector potential originating from the thermo-electromechanical effects generates a large magnetic field applied perpendicular to the two-dimensional graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-10-4': 'For example, considering [MATH], we find [MATH], where [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-10-5': 'Further, by assuming sinusoidal functions of strain tensor (see Fig. [REF]) generated by applying tensile edge stress along the armchair direction, for example: [MATH] and [MATH], where [MATH] is the amplitude of the strain tensor, we find [MATH], where [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-10-6': 'By considering [MATH] and [MATH] (see Fig. [REF] (upper panel)), we estimate [MATH].', '1401.4608-2-10-7': 'Hence such a large magnetic field along z-direction originating from electromechanical effects induces a persistent current that flows toward the edge of the graphene.', '1401.4608-2-10-8': 'As a result, a positive (negative) dispersion in the electron (hole) like states is induced at the zigzag edge (also see Fig.4 of Ref. [CITATION]) and the localized electron-hole states wavefunction drift towards and over the edge of graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-10-9': '[CITATION] Hence the wavefunctions that are pressed against the edge finally turn into the localized edge current carrying states.', '1401.4608-2-10-10': '[CITATION] Similar kind of localized edge states are also shown in Fig. 2(d) of Ref. neto06.', '1401.4608-2-10-11': 'Furthermore, by utilizing tight binding and continuum model, the authors in Ref. zarenia11 have shown that the tunneling effect at the interface between the internal and external regions of the dots can be avoided and consequently the charge carriers are confined at the zigzag edge (for example see Eq. (11) and left panel of Fig. 6 of Ref. zarenia11).', '1401.4608-2-10-12': 'Such localized edge states, shown in the lower panel of Fig. [REF] in this paper, are highly sensitive to the applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions.', '1401.4608-2-10-13': 'We observe three fold symmetry in the first excited state wavefunction (see inset plot of Fig. [REF]) of graphene that is in agreement to the experimentally reported results (see Fig. (4) of Ref. [CITATION]) and as well as previously reported theoretical results (see Ref. [CITATION]).', '1401.4608-2-10-14': 'In Fig. [REF], we find the level crossing at [MATH] due to the fact that the edge energy difference between the ground and first excited states decreases with increasing temperature.', '1401.4608-2-10-15': 'This level crossing point extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of tensile edge stress (see Fig. [REF]).', '1401.4608-2-10-16': 'We have analyzed why the level crossing point can be seen on the edge states, but cannot be seen on the localized states formed at the center of the graphene sheet.', '1401.4608-2-10-17': 'The reason is that the graphene sheet on boundary 4 is connected to the heat reservoir.', '1401.4608-2-10-18': 'Hence, the energy difference between the ground and first excited states decreases with increasing temperature.', '1401.4608-2-10-19': 'As a result, we find the level crossing in the edge states to be at the zigzag boundary with the accessible values of temperatures.', '1401.4608-2-10-20': 'The energy difference between the ground and first excited states formed at the center of the graphene sheet also decreases with increasing temperature (see Fig. [REF]).', '1401.4608-2-10-21': 'However, such energy states do not meet each other with any practically applicable values of the temperature due to absence of two fold symmetry in graphene.', '1401.4608-2-10-22': 'In fact, the induced pseudomorphic fields by the strain tensor affect the graphene charge carriers and produce a three fold symmetry in the wavefunction of two-dimensional graphene sheet (see inset plot of [REF]).', '1401.4608-2-10-23': 'The symmetry of the pseudomorphic fields is determined by the corresponding symmetry of the strain field.', '1401.4608-2-10-24': 'For example, a uniform pseudomorphic field requires a special strain field distorted with three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-2-10-25': '[CITATION]', '1401.4608-2-11-0': '# Conclusion', '1401.4608-2-12-0': 'To conclude, we have developed a model which allows us to investigate the influence of temperature on the relaxed shape of the graphene sheet as well as in the QDs that are formed in the two-dimensional graphene sheet with the application of gate potentials.', '1401.4608-2-12-1': 'We have shown that the variation in the total free elastic energy density is enhanced with temperature for the case of applied tensile edge stress along the zigzag direction.', '1401.4608-2-12-2': 'We have treated the strain, induced by an applied tensile edge stress along the armchair and zigzag directions, as a pseudomorphic vector potential and shown that the level crossing point between the ground and first excited edge states at the zigzag boundary extends to higher temperatures with decreasing values of the tensile edge stress.', '1401.4608-2-12-3': 'Such kind of level crossing is absent in the states formed at the center of the graphene sheet due to the presence of three fold symmetry.', '1401.4608-2-13-0': 'This work has been supported by NSERC and CRC programs (Canada).', '1401.4608-2-13-1': 'The authors acknowledge the Shared Hierarchical Academic Research Computing Network (SHARCNET) community and Dr. P. J. Douglas Roberts for his assistance and technical support.'}
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[]
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[]
['1401.4608-1-1-5', '1401.4608-1-7-16', '1401.4608-2-2-6', '1401.4608-2-10-25']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1401.4608
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null
null
null
null
1806.10853
{'1806.10853-1-0-0': 'Caching plays a crucial role in networking systems to reduce the load on the network and has become an ubiquitous functionality available at each router.', '1806.10853-1-0-1': 'One of the commonly used mechanisms, Least Recently Used (LRU), works well for identical file sizes.', '1806.10853-1-0-2': 'However, for asymmetric file sizes, the performance deteriorates.', '1806.10853-1-0-3': 'This paper proposes an adaptation to LRU strategy, called gLRU, where the file is sub-divided into equal-sized chunks.', '1806.10853-1-0-4': 'In this strategy, a chunk of the newly requested file is added in the cache, and a chunk of the least-recently-used file is removed from the cache.', '1806.10853-1-0-5': 'Even though approximate analysis for the hit rate has been studied for LRU, the analysis does not extend to gLRU since the metric of interest is no longer the hit rate as the cache has partial files.', '1806.10853-1-0-6': 'This paper provides a novel approximation analysis for this policy where the cache may have partial file contents.', '1806.10853-1-0-7': 'The approximation approach is validated by simulations.', '1806.10853-1-0-8': 'Further, gLRU outperforms LRU strategy for Zipf file popularity distribution and censored Pareto file size distribution for the file download times.', '1806.10853-1-0-9': 'Video streaming applications can further use the partial cache contents to help the stall durations significantly, and the numerical results indicate significant improvements (29%) in stall durations using the gLRU strategy as compared to the LRU strategy.', '1806.10853-1-1-0': "Caching, Least Recently Used, Video Streaming, Che's approximation", '1806.10853-1-2-0': '# Introduction', '1806.10853-1-3-0': 'In order to improve the performance of web-based services (e.g., cloud-based storage systems, Video-on-Demand (VoD), etc.), content delivery architectures frequently employ a caching system.', '1806.10853-1-3-1': 'A typical system consists of a set of large centralized servers storing a large set of documents (e.g. videos) and a network of distributed servers (caches).', '1806.10853-1-3-2': 'The caches are closer to the user, and thus allow for faster download speeds.', '1806.10853-1-3-3': 'However, since the caches are small relative to the size of the centralized servers, one needs to employ a set of rules governing which files are stored on each cache, referred to as a "Cache Replacement Policy".', '1806.10853-1-4-0': 'One of the most popular policies is the so-called "Least Recently Used" (LRU) replacement policy.', '1806.10853-1-4-1': 'Under the LRU policy, the cache can be thought of as a queue.', '1806.10853-1-4-2': 'When a new file is requested, it is added to the head of the queue (or moved to the head if it is already present in the queue).', '1806.10853-1-4-3': 'If a file reaches the tail of the queue it is "pushed out" (i.e., removed from the cache).', '1806.10853-1-4-4': 'Since the most popular files are the ones which are requested most often, they have a much higher probability of being stored in the cache resulting in faster content delivery.', '1806.10853-1-4-5': 'As a result, the performance and properties (both theoretical and empirical) are a topic of much research (c.f. [CITATION] and references therein).', '1806.10853-1-5-0': 'While the academic literature on caching policies is extensive, it focuses on situations where objects are of the same size.', '1806.10853-1-5-1': 'One of the issues with the LRU policy is that a large file request will evict multiple small files in the cache and thus can hurt the system performance.', '1806.10853-1-5-2': 'In order to avoid this effect, this paper proposes a generalization of the LRU replacement policy (denoted as gLRU).', '1806.10853-1-5-3': 'In general, files can be divided into equally sized pieces or chunks of equal size.', '1806.10853-1-5-4': 'The gLRU replacement policy differs from LRU in that, when a file is requested, only one additional chunk is added to the cache (unless all chunks of the file exist already in the cache).', '1806.10853-1-5-5': 'For example, suppose a document with 100 chunks is requested and 10 chunks are currently cached.', '1806.10853-1-5-6': 'Under gLRU, the 10 chunks will be moved to the head of the cache along with 1 additional chunk.', '1806.10853-1-5-7': 'In the LRU policy, the entire file will be added.', '1806.10853-1-5-8': 'We assert that gLRU results in improved performance (i.e., faster download speeds, fewer delays, etc.) that the original LRU.', '1806.10853-1-6-0': 'Even though gLRU is a general approach and for identical sized files with a single chunk reduces to LRU policy, analysis of gLRU scheme is an important and challenging problem.', '1806.10853-1-6-1': 'The computation of hit rates, probability that a file is in the cache in the steady state, cannot be characterized easily in closed form.', '1806.10853-1-6-2': "There have been multiple approximation methods to characterize the approximate hit rate for LRU, with one of the commonly known approximation known as Che's approximation [CITATION].", '1806.10853-1-6-3': 'With gLRU caching policy, a file is partly in the cache.', '1806.10853-1-6-4': 'Thus, the metric of interest is not the hit rate, but the distribution of the number of chunks of each file in the cache in the steady state.', '1806.10853-1-6-5': 'Thus, the analysis of gLRU brings a new dimension in solving the problem and the previous analysis which adds or removes the entire file in the cache cannot be readily applied.', '1806.10853-1-6-6': 'The main result of the paper is the approximation for the steady state distribution for the gLRU strategy.', '1806.10853-1-6-7': 'The proposed approximation is also validated through simulation.', '1806.10853-1-6-8': 'Even though multiple approximation techniques have been proposed for cache replacement strategies, this is the first work to the best of our knowledge that analyzes the distribution of files in cache, where partial files can exist in the cache and the caching strategies adds/removes a chunk of the file rather than the complete file.', '1806.10853-1-7-0': 'This paper further aims to compare the performance of gLRU with the performance of LRU.', '1806.10853-1-7-1': 'In order to do that, multiple performance metrics are considered, including the proportion of chunks retrieved from the cache (as a generalization to the average hit rate), and the download time of the file.', '1806.10853-1-7-2': 'Further, video specific metrics like the stall duration are also considered.', '1806.10853-1-7-3': 'We observe for Zipf file popularity distribution and censored Pareto file size distribution that the gLRU cache policy outperforms LRU policy in all the metrics.', '1806.10853-1-7-4': 'Thus, the flexibility of adding and removing a chunk of the file in contrast to the entire file improves the system performance.', '1806.10853-1-7-5': 'The proposed scheme borrows the advantages of LRU, including low complexity, ease of implementation, and being adaptive to the change in the arrival distributions.', '1806.10853-1-7-6': 'In addition, gLRU outperforms LRU by not having to displace multiple small files to add a larger file.', '1806.10853-1-7-7': 'In addition, for VoD settings, availability of earlier chunks in the cache can further help since the later chunks have later deadlines.', '1806.10853-1-7-8': 'The proposed scheme will have partial number of chunks of the files in the cache, and that can help the stall durations since only the later chunks must be retrieved.', '1806.10853-1-7-9': 'Numerical results indicate 29 improvement in number of chunks accessed from cache, download time, and video stall duration using the gLRU caching strategy as compared to the LRU caching strategy, on average.', '1806.10853-1-7-10': 'With a negative correlation between the file size and the file popularity, gLRU policy improves the file download and the video stall duration by 82 and 69, respectively, as compared to LRU policy thus depicting the robustness and the efficiency of the proposed algorithm.', '1806.10853-1-8-0': 'This rest of the paper is organized as follows.', '1806.10853-1-8-1': 'Section [REF] reviews some of the related work in the analysis of LRU caching, as well as some proposed variants of LRU to deal with the issue of asymmetric file sizes.', '1806.10853-1-8-2': 'In Section [REF] we describe the model which is the subject of our analysis including a description of our proposed cache replacement policy, gLRU.', '1806.10853-1-8-3': 'Section [REF] then gives the proposed approximation to the gLRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-1-8-4': "In Section [REF], we use both the original Che's approximation and the approximations proposed in Section [REF] to compare LRU with gLRU.", '1806.10853-1-8-5': 'In particular, we show that since gLRU does not need to add entire files to the cache, it is able to store smaller pieces of more files in the cache.', '1806.10853-1-8-6': 'Section [REF] is devoted the results of numerical simulations.', '1806.10853-1-8-7': 'In Section [REF], we demonstrate that the proposed approximation to gLRU is valid and in Section [REF] the improved performance of gLRU, over LRU, is presented for a VoD system.', '1806.10853-1-8-8': 'In Section [REF], we briefly explore the effect that positive and negative correlation between the file sizes and the file popularity has on the performance of these two cache replacement policies.', '1806.10853-1-8-9': 'Finally, Section [REF] concludes this paper.', '1806.10853-1-9-0': '# Related Work', '1806.10853-1-10-0': 'Analysis of LRU Caching: Evaluating the performance of cache networks is hard, considering that the computational cost to exactly analyze just a single LRU (Least Recently Used) cache, grows exponentially with both the cache size and the number of contents [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-10-1': "Multiple approximation approaches have been studied [CITATION] in the literature, with two key types of analysis techniques - Che's approximation [CITATION] and the network calculus approach [CITATION].", '1806.10853-1-10-2': 'One of the key metrics to quantify in caching systems is the hit rate, which describes the probability of finding a file in the cache given a popularity distribution on the set of available content.', '1806.10853-1-10-3': "The authors of [CITATION] presented a method for approximating (called the Che's approximation) the hit rates for such a system assuming that all files are of identical size.", '1806.10853-1-10-4': 'However, in most cases, files are of different sizes.', '1806.10853-1-10-5': "Further work by the authors of [CITATION] provide the theoretical machinery behind the efficacy of Che's approximation and provide a simple extension the case of multiple file sizes (c.f. equation (5) therein).", '1806.10853-1-11-0': 'Adaptations of LRU Caching: One of the key issue in LRU based caching strategy is that a large file arrival can evict multiple small files.', '1806.10853-1-11-1': 'In order to have better performance with realistic file sizes, multiple approaches have been proposed, see [CITATION] and the references therein.', '1806.10853-1-11-2': 'An admission control strategy in [CITATION] is used to decrease the probability that a large file size is added in the cache.', '1806.10853-1-11-3': 'One of the issue with these strategies is that the addition and removal from the cache is still at the file level.', '1806.10853-1-11-4': 'In contrast, this paper provides flexibility of adding/removing files at the chunk level.', '1806.10853-1-11-5': 'The authors of [CITATION] considered the flexibility for adding/removing chunks from the cache, however, the caching strategy is based on knowing the file arrival rates.', '1806.10853-1-11-6': 'Even though a window-based scheme can be used to learn the arrival rate and use such caching policies, the complexity for cache update is higher.', '1806.10853-1-11-7': 'In contrast, this paper uses a generalization of LRU caching strategy that is completely adaptive to the arrival pattern and does not take any such parameters in the strategy, and is easy to implement.', '1806.10853-1-12-0': '# System Model and Problem Formulation', '1806.10853-1-13-0': 'In this section, we outline the system model and describe the caching policy that will be analyzed in this paper.', '1806.10853-1-14-0': '## System Parameters', '1806.10853-1-15-0': 'Consider a single server storing a collection of [MATH] files.', '1806.10853-1-15-1': 'The files may be of different sizes and file [MATH] is comprised of [MATH] equally sized pieces, or chunks.', '1806.10853-1-15-2': 'While the number of chunks which comprise each file may vary, the size of each individual chunk is the same for all files.', '1806.10853-1-15-3': 'In video streaming settings, each chunk typically consists of 1-4 seconds of video [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-15-4': 'Without loss of generality, we assume the chunk as having unit size.', '1806.10853-1-16-0': 'We assume a single user in the system, which may be an aggregate point for multiple users (e.g., edge router).', '1806.10853-1-16-1': 'The user requests the files from the server, where the aggregate arrival process follows a Poisson process with rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-16-2': 'The probability that a given request is for file [MATH] is proportional to its popularity [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-16-3': 'In general, [MATH] is assumed to follow a Zipf law with parameter [MATH] (c.f. [CITATION] and references therein for a more in-depth discussion).', '1806.10853-1-16-4': 'Without loss of generality, we assume that [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-17-0': 'When a file request arrives at the server, all chunks are entered in a first-in-first-out (FIFO) queue which services the requests.', '1806.10853-1-17-1': 'We assume that the service time distribution of a chunk is exponential with a rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-17-2': 'A file [MATH] finishes downloading when all the [MATH] chunks of the file are available to the user.', '1806.10853-1-17-3': 'However, when considering video streaming, a user can begin playing the video before all the chunks are received.', '1806.10853-1-17-4': 'More about this will be discussed in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-1-18-0': 'In order to improve retrieval speed, the system employs a cache of capacity [MATH] in which any file chunk requires one unit of capacity.', '1806.10853-1-18-1': 'One can think about the cache as being "close" to the user and having a service time which is negligible.', '1806.10853-1-18-2': 'In the next subsection, we will describe the cache replacement policy that will be used to decide the contents in the user cache.', '1806.10853-1-19-0': '## Cache Replacement Policy', '1806.10853-1-20-0': 'In order to achieve a better user experience (e.g. higher latency, less buffering, etc.), one can consider several different policies for allocating space within the cache.', '1806.10853-1-20-1': 'One commonly used policy is the Least Recently Used (LRU) replacement policy [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-20-2': 'When employing the LRU replacement policy, all pieces of a requested file are moved to the head of the cache.', '1806.10853-1-20-3': 'If there is not enough capacity to accommodate these new file requests, the files at the tail of the cache (i.e., those which were the least recently requested) are forced out.', '1806.10853-1-20-4': 'One of the key issues with LRU is that different files have different sizes, and a large file-size request can displace multiple files with lower file size.', '1806.10853-1-20-5': 'In this work, we propose a generalization of LRU which we will refer to as gLRU.', '1806.10853-1-20-6': 'In the gLRU replacement policy, instead of adding all file chunks to the head of the cache, only the pieces already in the cache plus one additional chunk (should one exist) are added, thus increasing the number of cached pieces of the requested file by at most one.', '1806.10853-1-20-7': 'The proposed gLRU scheme is easy to implement since the existing chunks of the file are moved to the head with one additional chunk and one chunk at the tail is removed.', '1806.10853-1-20-8': 'Further, this scheme is online and adapts to the changing file arrival distribution.', '1806.10853-1-20-9': 'As we will show in Section [REF], numerical results demonstrate the gLRU has superior performance on many performance metrics of interest, including file download times and video stall durations.', '1806.10853-1-21-0': '## Problem Formulation', '1806.10853-1-22-0': 'Che et al. proposed a simple approach for estimating the hit rates of a cache operating LRU strategy [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-22-1': "We call this approach as Che's approximation approach following other papers in the area [CITATION], even though the paper [CITATION] has multiple co-authors.", '1806.10853-1-22-2': 'In this paper, we aim to estimate the probability distribution of the number of chunks of a file in the cache in the steady state using the gLRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-1-22-3': 'Further, this paper aims to see improvement of the proposed caching strategy as compared to the LRU strategy.', '1806.10853-1-23-0': "# Generalization of Che's Approximation", '1806.10853-1-24-0': 'In this section, we will provide an approximation for the distribution of cache contents using the gLRU caching strategy and discuss the results with a comparison to LRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-1-25-0': "## Che's Approximation for LRU Caching Policy", '1806.10853-1-26-0': "In this subsection, we will describe the key approach in the Che's approximation [CITATION].", '1806.10853-1-26-1': "Che's Approximation gives a simple, efficient, and accurate method of estimating the hit probabilities (i.e., the probability of finding a given file in the cache) for the system employing the LRU replacement policy.", '1806.10853-1-26-2': 'While the approximation was established for a system in which all files had one chunk of equal size, the method can easily be extended to files of multiple sizes (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1806.10853-1-26-3': 'Let [MATH] represent the time of the [MATH]-th request for file [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-26-4': "Che's approximation, applied to files of multiple sizes (c.f. (5) of [CITATION]) relies on defining, for each file [MATH], random variables [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] where [MATH] represents the number of file chunks, other than file [MATH], that will be added to the head of the cache by time [MATH].", '1806.10853-1-26-5': 'It follows that [MATH] represents the amount of time it will take for at least [MATH] chunks to be added to the cache at which point all pieces of file [MATH] will have fallen out of the cache if [MATH] has not been requested.', '1806.10853-1-27-0': 'Ultimately, [MATH] is estimated by setting [MATH] equal to the expected value of [MATH], [EQUATION] however, some assumptions need to made.', '1806.10853-1-27-1': 'The first is that the cache is sufficiently large as to assume that [MATH] is deterministic.', '1806.10853-1-27-2': 'The second is to assume that [MATH] is the same for all [MATH] where [MATH] solves [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-1-27-3': 'Under this assumption it is sufficient to consider, [EQUATION] to estimate [MATH] rather than each [MATH] and thus [REF] becomes [EQUATION] which is the same as [REF].', '1806.10853-1-27-4': 'Such an assumption is valid if the popularity of any individual file is small compared to the total popularity (i.e. [MATH]).', '1806.10853-1-27-5': 'Indeed, this is the case for the Zipf popularity distribution.', '1806.10853-1-27-6': 'An estimate for [MATH] is then obtained by numerically solving [REF].', '1806.10853-1-28-0': '## Challenges for Analysis of gLRU', '1806.10853-1-29-0': 'The key difference in gLRU as compared to LRU is that the cache contains partial files.', '1806.10853-1-29-1': 'For each file request, at most one chunk is added in gLRU as compared to that in LRU where entire file is added.', '1806.10853-1-29-2': 'Similarly, gLRU removes a chunk of the file at a time in contrast to the removal of entire file(s) in LRU.', '1806.10853-1-30-0': "The difficulty in extending Che's approximation to the gLRU caching policy is that the number of files added to the head of the cache is random.", '1806.10853-1-30-1': 'In [CITATION], the state of the cache at time zero is unimportant and thus one can assume that it is empty.', '1806.10853-1-30-2': 'In the case of gLRU, the number of chunks added to the head of the cache due to a file request is dependent on the current state of the cache.', '1806.10853-1-30-3': 'As a result, it is difficult to write down an exact expression equivalent to [REF].', '1806.10853-1-31-0': '## Proposed Approximation for gLRU', '1806.10853-1-32-0': 'In this subsection, we provide an approximation for the probability of [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache when gLRU caching policy is used.', '1806.10853-1-33-0': 'Since an exact expression equivalent to [REF] is hard to write, we write an approximation of [MATH] by replacing [MATH] in the [MATH]-th term in the sum with the expected number of file [MATH] chunks in the cache when the system is in steady state.', '1806.10853-1-33-1': 'This expected value can be computed given [MATH], and we will denote it as [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-34-0': 'Let [MATH] represent the [MATH] inter-arrival time of requests for file [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-34-1': 'Given a [MATH], the probability of finding at least [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache is equal to the probability that the first [MATH] inter-arrival times for file [MATH] are less than [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-34-2': "Assuming that the probability of a file being requested while it is at the end of the cache is small, this can be approximated as follows, [EQUATION] where the last step follows since the [MATH]'s are independent and identically distributed exponential random variables with rate parameter [MATH].", '1806.10853-1-34-3': 'This assumption is reasonable since the rate of requests of file [MATH] is small compared to that overall rate of requests under a Zipf popularity law.', '1806.10853-1-34-4': 'Without this assumption, the expression for [MATH] would need to account for all cases in which the specified file is requested after several chunks of the file had fallen out of the cache and [MATH] were remaining, vastly complicating [REF].', '1806.10853-1-34-5': 'Let [MATH] be random variables such that [MATH] represents the number of cached chunks of file [MATH] when the system in in steady state.', '1806.10853-1-34-6': 'It then follows that [MATH] can be expressed as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-1-34-7': 'The proposed approximation of [MATH] is then given as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-1-34-8': 'As in the derivation of [REF], it is sufficient to consider [EQUATION] and one can then estimate [MATH] by setting the expected value of [MATH] to [MATH] and solving for [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-34-9': 'This amounts to solving the following equation, [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-1-34-10': 'Once an estimate for [MATH] is obtained, one can compute hit probabilities using [REF].', '1806.10853-1-34-11': 'For example, the probability of finding at least one piece of file [MATH] in the cache is simply [MATH], where [MATH] is as in [REF].', '1806.10853-1-34-12': 'This can then be used to find other metrics of interest.', '1806.10853-1-34-13': 'For example, the probability that exactly [MATH] pieces of file [MATH] are cached when the system is in steady state is given as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-1-35-0': '## Discussions', '1806.10853-1-36-0': "One important implication of the assumptions made in Che's approximation is that the popularity of any given file is small relative to total popularity.", '1806.10853-1-36-1': 'Thus, the probability of a file being requested while it is at the end of the cache is extremely small.', '1806.10853-1-36-2': 'We further use this implication when approximating the hit rates via [REF] where the case that a file may be requested after a few (but not all) chunks have fallen out of the cache can be ignored as its contribution is negligible.', '1806.10853-1-36-3': 'Indeed, the simulations in [CITATION] and Section [REF] suggest that this is reasonable.', '1806.10853-1-36-4': 'When contrasting LRU and gLRU, this implies that the LRU replacement policy results in an "all or none" scheme in which files are either entirely in the cache or not at all in the cache while gLRU is able to store portions of a greater number of files.', '1806.10853-1-37-0': "In Figure [REF], we present estimates from Che's and the proposed approximation that the cache contains any chunks of a file of given popularity for LRU and gLRU.", '1806.10853-1-37-1': 'Further Figure [REF] also depicts the probability of finding all chunks of a file (i.e. the entire file) under the gLRU replacement policy.', '1806.10853-1-37-2': 'Since the LRU policy stores either all or no chunks of each file, an analogous line is not needed as it would coincide with the earlier LRU line.', '1806.10853-1-37-3': 'In this particular example [MATH] and all files have five chunks.', '1806.10853-1-37-4': 'Similar results can be obtained by varying [MATH] or the number of chunks.', '1806.10853-1-37-5': 'If we allow the number of chunks to be random, similar patterns are obtained for the probabilities of observing any chunks in the cache, however the probabilities of finding full files in the cache under gLRU becomes dependent on the individual file sizes.', '1806.10853-1-38-0': 'In the Video-on-Demand (VoD) setting, the user can begin watching as soon as a single chunk has been retrieved.', '1806.10853-1-38-1': 'The time it takes to view this chunk (and the other chunks stored in the cache) then provide a head start for the system to retrieve chunks which correspond to portions of the video which occur later.', '1806.10853-1-38-2': 'For this reason, it make sense that gLRU should be superior in the VoD setting.', '1806.10853-1-38-3': 'In Section [REF], we provide numerical results showing that, in addition to this improvement in delay times, total download time is also reduced by using gLRU.', '1806.10853-1-38-4': 'gLRU policy does not remove multiple small files when a large file arrives, thus making the policy changing contents slower as compared to the LRU policy.', '1806.10853-1-38-5': 'The flexibility of having partial file chunks can indeed help getting the number of file chunks in the cache roughly proportional to the arrival rates thus helping in improving the file download times.', '1806.10853-1-39-0': '# Numerical Results', '1806.10853-1-40-0': 'In this section, we present the result of several numerical simulations showing both the validity of the approximations established in Section [REF], as well as the improved performance of the gLRU cache replacement policy in a video streaming setting as compared to the LRU cache replacement policy.', '1806.10853-1-41-0': '## Validation of the Proposed Approximation', '1806.10853-1-42-0': 'We validate the approximations presented in Section [REF] via simulation.', '1806.10853-1-42-1': 'The simulated system contains [MATH] different files with popularity law [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-42-2': 'Each file has a constant number of chunks [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-42-3': 'The reason for this is to separate the performance differences due to file size and popularity.', '1806.10853-1-42-4': 'If one were to consider distributions on popularity and file size then one would need to account for the joint distribution between the two, an interesting question on its own (see Section [REF]).', '1806.10853-1-42-5': 'While not presented here, we did consider Pareto file sizes and the results were equally accurate and were used to compare performance of LRU and gLRU (c.f. Section [REF]).', '1806.10853-1-42-6': 'The arrivals of requests for file [MATH] is a Poisson process with rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-43-0': "The notion of hit rate in this context is slightly different than the hit rate in the original Che's approximation [CITATION] in that we are no longer just concerned with the proportion of requests which find the requested file in the cache.", '1806.10853-1-43-1': 'Since the system can store partial files, we are interested in how many chunks of the requested file are found in the cache.', '1806.10853-1-43-2': 'Consider an arbitrary file [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-43-3': 'We are able to estimate the probability for finding exactly [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache using Equation [REF].', '1806.10853-1-43-4': 'Figure [REF] displays the estimated (solid lines) and simulated (markers) hit rates over a variety of parameters.', '1806.10853-1-43-5': 'Each point represents that probability (y-axis) of finding the number of chunks indicated on the x-axis.', '1806.10853-1-43-6': 'The blue, black, red, and pink represent the 1, 10, 100, 1000, most popular files, respectively.', '1806.10853-1-44-0': 'For example, if we look at the blue line at 5 on the x-axis in Figure [REF], this represents the estimated probability of there being 5 cached chunks of the 1000-th most popular file when it is requested and the star on top indicates the corresponding simulated value.', '1806.10853-1-44-1': 'These figures show near perfect alignment between the estimated hit rate and true hit rates indicating that the approximations establish in Section [REF] are valid.', '1806.10853-1-45-0': '## VoD Latency for LRU and gLRU', '1806.10853-1-46-0': 'We now provide numerical simulations comparing the performance of the LRU and gLRU replacement policies.', '1806.10853-1-46-1': 'All simulated systems consist of [MATH] video files.', '1806.10853-1-46-2': 'The popularity of each video file is distributed according to a Zipf law with parameter [MATH] and the file sizes are distributed according to a censored Pareto distribution [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-46-3': 'In particular, we assume that the file lengths are not heavy tailed and so the video lengths are generated as follows.', '1806.10853-1-46-4': 'The length of each video file is drawn from a Pareto Distribution with shape 2 and scale 300 (corresponding to an average length of 10 minutes) but are redrawn if the length is greater than 1 hour.', '1806.10853-1-46-5': 'Each video file is broken down into chunks of length [MATH] seconds.', '1806.10853-1-46-6': 'When a video file is requested, the chunks are played sequentially, with each chunk consisting of [MATH] seconds of video.', '1806.10853-1-46-7': 'In this section, we assume that the the popularity and file size distributions are independent.', '1806.10853-1-46-8': 'However, the joint distribution is surely important and a topic of further work.', '1806.10853-1-46-9': 'We give some results in this direction in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-1-47-0': 'Chunks retrieved from the cache are available to play immediately, while those not cached must be served by a single server FIFO queue as described in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-1-47-1': 'There is a start-up delay [MATH] during which the video can be buffered before playing.', '1806.10853-1-47-2': 'If the user attempts to view a file chunk which has not yet been served, they must wait for it to be processed and incur a delay.', '1806.10853-1-47-3': 'The storage model is as described in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-1-47-4': 'The system is simulated under both the LRU and gLRU cache replacement policies.', '1806.10853-1-48-0': 'In our simulations, we study five performance metrics of interest,', '1806.10853-1-49-0': '[i)] [MATH] - the proportion of file chunks retrieved from the cache.', '1806.10853-1-49-1': '[ii)] [MATH] - the proportion of requests in which no chunks are found in the cache.', '1806.10853-1-49-2': '[iii)] [MATH] - the average amount of time required for each file to be retrieved, i.e., the download time of the file.', '1806.10853-1-49-3': '[iv)] [MATH] - the average amount of time playback of a video is delayed.', '1806.10853-1-49-4': 'This is the re-buffering or the stall duration of the video and is a key metric in video streaming [CITATION].', '1806.10853-1-49-5': 'This metric calculates the download time of each chunk and plays them in order with the play time of chunk [MATH] being the maximum of the play time of chunk [MATH]+L and the download time of chunk [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-49-6': 'The difference of the play time of the last video chunk and [MATH] gives the stall duration for file [MATH].', '1806.10853-1-49-7': '[v)] [MATH] - the proportion of requested videos which experience a nonzero stall duration.', '1806.10853-1-50-0': 'The input parameters are summarized in Table [REF], which includes all definitions and values, and the system is simulated to convergence under the values described therein.', '1806.10853-1-51-0': 'All combinations of parameters are simulated resulting in 384 separate trials.', '1806.10853-1-51-1': 'The reader should keep in mind that each configuration is only simulated once and thus the effects of the stochasticity in both the popularity distribution and file size distribution are not "averaged out".', '1806.10853-1-51-2': 'However, since there are 1000 files in each simulation, the effects should be minimal.', '1806.10853-1-52-0': 'In Figure [REF], we present the results of the simulations.', '1806.10853-1-52-1': 'A histogram of the relative difference between gLRU and LRU for all performance metrics is presented.', '1806.10853-1-52-2': 'Specifically, the [MATH]-axes correspond to the difference between the specified performance metric under gLRU and LRU divided by the metric for LRU.', '1806.10853-1-53-0': 'Histograms of the gross differences can be found in Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-1-54-0': 'When considering [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], gLRU outperforms LRU in every instance.', '1806.10853-1-54-1': 'For the delay focused metrics, [MATH] and [MATH], gLRU outperforms LRU in 237 and 240 out of 384 configuration, respectively.', '1806.10853-1-54-2': 'In the remaining cases there was no discernible difference in performance.', '1806.10853-1-54-3': 'In Table [REF] we present the best, worst, and mean performance improvements for gLRU over LRU.', '1806.10853-1-54-4': 'Both the relative and gross performance improvement is given where the relative performance is the gross difference divided by the metric for LRU (with 0/0=0).', '1806.10853-1-55-0': 'These results indicate that the gLRU replacement policy is almost always superior to the LRU policy and results in shorter download times, lower stall durations, and more videos with non-zero stalls.', '1806.10853-1-55-1': 'Since videos are watched sequentially (i.e., a user begins at the beginning and proceeds through the file pieces one by one), it make sense that gLRU would result in an improvement in the VoD case since this viewing of earlier video chunks provide time for chunks appearing later in the video to load.', '1806.10853-1-55-2': 'However, our results show that by employing a gLRU policy, a system designer is able to improve the user experience by increasing the number of files which are partially stored in the cache, even is non-VoD settings due to improvement in even the download time.', '1806.10853-1-55-3': 'The ultimate result is a system with fewer and shorter delays and shorter download times.', '1806.10853-1-56-0': '# Joint Popularity and File Size Distribution', '1806.10853-1-57-0': 'We now briefly consider the impact of the joint distribution of the popularity and file size on each of our performance metrics.', '1806.10853-1-57-1': 'Modeling this joint distribution can be quite complicated.', '1806.10853-1-57-2': 'In particular, specifying a probability measure such that the marginal distributions are Zipf for popularity and Pareto for file size while imposing a given correlation structure between the two is a nontrivial problem on its own.', '1806.10853-1-58-0': 'In this section, we consider of the effect of strong positive and negative correlation between popularity and file size through simulation.', '1806.10853-1-58-1': 'The system, as described in Section [REF], is simulated with one major change.', '1806.10853-1-58-2': 'In order to induce strong positive correlation we simply assign the highest popularities to the largest files and vice versa to induce negative correlation.', '1806.10853-1-58-3': 'The system was then simulated for all of the combinations of parameters described in Table [REF] for both cases resulting in 384 cases for each.', '1806.10853-1-59-0': 'Table [REF] presents a comparison of the positive and negative correlation cases for both the gLRU and LRU settings.', '1806.10853-1-59-1': 'For each of the performance metrics described in Section [REF], we present the average relative difference in performance positive vs. negative correlation (i.e. (positive metric - negative metric)/positive metric).', '1806.10853-1-60-0': 'The results show that the case of negative correlation vastly outperforms the case of positive correlation in both when employing either a gLRU or LRU replacement policy.', '1806.10853-1-60-1': 'This is because in the case of negative correlation, most popular files are smaller and thus more of them can be stored in the cache improving all the metrics as compared to when there is positive correlation.', '1806.10853-1-61-0': 'In addition, we note that gLRU outperforms LRU in both the positive and negative correlation case.', '1806.10853-1-61-1': 'In Table [REF], we present the mean relative performance improvement for gLRU vs LRU in all performance metrics of interest in both the correlation settings.', '1806.10853-1-62-0': 'While the results are much more pronounced in the case of negative correlation, it is clear that gLRU outperforms LRU in both correlation cases.', '1806.10853-1-62-1': 'For a more granular look at the data see Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-1-63-0': '# Conclusions', '1806.10853-1-64-0': 'In this work, we present a generalization for the LRU cache replacement policy, called gLRU.', '1806.10853-1-64-1': "We first establish a generalization of Che's approximation to this new policy which can be used to accurately approximate the distribution of number of chunks of a file in the cache in the steady state.", '1806.10853-1-64-2': 'The results of Section [REF] show that the approximation is, indeed, quite accurate.', '1806.10853-1-64-3': 'We then provide numerical results demonstrating that gLRU outperforms gLRU on a variety of performance metrics including download time and stall duration in a VoD setting.', '1806.10853-1-64-4': 'Our results indicate that gLRU outperforms LRU in non-VoD settings as well because of its superior performance on download time.', '1806.10853-1-64-5': 'Finally, we present some results exploring the effect of correlation between popularity and file size distributions.', '1806.10853-1-64-6': 'Our results indicate that negative correlation results in much better performance than positive correlation, and the gLRU outperforms LRU in both cases indicating that gLRU is a robust and effective cache replacement policy which can provide improved performance over a variety of settings.', '1806.10853-1-65-0': 'Evaluating the correlation between the file size and the file popularity, and evaluation of the scheme for realistic datasets is left as a future work.', '1806.10853-1-66-0': '# VoD Gross Difference', '1806.10853-1-67-0': 'In order to supplement the results of Section [REF], we also present the gross improvement of gLRU over LRU.', '1806.10853-1-67-1': 'Figure [REF] presents histograms of the gross improvement of gLRU over LRU for each performance metric of interest.', '1806.10853-1-67-2': 'In each histogram the [MATH]-axes corresponds to the difference between the specified performance metric under gLRU and LRU.', '1806.10853-1-68-0': 'The figures back-up the results of Section [REF] in demonstrating the improved performance of gLRU over LRU for all performance metrics considered.', '1806.10853-1-69-0': '# Correlation Histograms', '1806.10853-1-70-0': 'Histograms for the same performance metrics as considered in [REF] are presented in Figure [REF].', '1806.10853-1-70-1': 'In order to compare the case of positive correlation with the case of negative correlation we simply subtract the performance metric of interest obtained under positive correlation from the respective result under negative correlation.', '1806.10853-1-70-2': 'Each subfigure contains two histograms, one for the system under gLRU (red) and one for the system under LRU (green) and provide a more granular view of the data than that was shown in Section [REF].'}
{'1806.10853-2-0-0': 'Caching plays a crucial role in networking systems to reduce the load on the network and is commonly employed by content delivery networks (CDNs) in order to improve performance.', '1806.10853-2-0-1': 'One of the commonly used mechanisms, Least Recently Used (LRU), works well for identical file sizes.', '1806.10853-2-0-2': 'However, for asymmetric file sizes, the performance deteriorates.', '1806.10853-2-0-3': 'This paper proposes an adaptation to the LRU strategy, called gLRU, where the file is sub-divided into equal-sized chunks.', '1806.10853-2-0-4': 'In this strategy, a chunk of the newly requested file is added in the cache, and a chunk of the least-recently-used file is removed from the cache.', '1806.10853-2-0-5': 'Even though approximate analysis for the hit rate has been studied for LRU, the analysis does not extend to gLRU since the metric of interest is no longer the hit rate as the cache has partial files.', '1806.10853-2-0-6': 'This paper provides a novel approximation analysis for this policy where the cache may have partial file contents.', '1806.10853-2-0-7': 'The approximation approach is validated by simulations.', '1806.10853-2-0-8': 'Further, gLRU outperforms the LRU strategy for a Zipf file popularity distribution and censored Pareto file size distribution for the file download times.', '1806.10853-2-0-9': 'Video streaming applications can further use the partial cache contents to help the stall duration significantly, and the numerical results indicate significant improvements (32%) in stall duration using the gLRU strategy as compared to the LRU strategy.', '1806.10853-2-0-10': 'Furthermore, the gLRU replacement policy compares favorably to two other cache replacement policies when simulated on MSR Cambridge Traces obtained from the SNIA IOTTA repository.', '1806.10853-2-1-0': "Caching, Least Recently Used, Video Streaming, Characteristic Time Approximation, Che's approximation,", '1806.10853-2-2-0': '# Introduction', '1806.10853-2-3-0': 'In order to improve the performance of web-based services (e.g., cloud-based storage systems, Video-on-Demand (VoD), etc.), content delivery architectures frequently employ a caching system.', '1806.10853-2-3-1': 'A typical system consists of a set of large centralized servers storing a large set of documents (e.g. videos) and a network of distributed servers (caches).', '1806.10853-2-3-2': 'The caches are closer to the user, and thus allow for faster download speeds.', '1806.10853-2-3-3': 'However, since the caches are small relative to the size of the centralized servers, one needs to employ a set of rules governing which files are stored on each cache, referred to as a "Cache Replacement Policy".', '1806.10853-2-4-0': 'One of the most popular policies is the so-called "Least Recently Used" (LRU) replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-4-1': 'Under the LRU policy, the cache can be thought of as a queue.', '1806.10853-2-4-2': 'When a new file is requested, it is added to the head of the queue (or moved to the head if it is already present in the queue).', '1806.10853-2-4-3': 'If a file reaches the tail of the queue it is "pushed out" (i.e., removed from the cache).', '1806.10853-2-4-4': 'Since the most popular files are the ones which are requested most often, they have a much higher probability of being stored in the cache resulting in faster content delivery.', '1806.10853-2-4-5': 'As a result, the performance and properties (both theoretical and empirical) are a topic of much research (cf. [CITATION] and references therein).', '1806.10853-2-5-0': 'There are many extensions of the classical LRU policy, including q-LRU and LRU(m) [CITATION], that mainly focus on situations where entire files are cached.', '1806.10853-2-5-1': 'One of the issues with the LRU policy is that a large file request will evict multiple small files in the cache and thus can hurt the system performance.', '1806.10853-2-5-2': 'In order to avoid this effect, this paper proposes a generalization of the LRU replacement policy (denoted as gLRU).', '1806.10853-2-5-3': 'In general, files can be divided into equally sized pieces or chunks of equal size.', '1806.10853-2-5-4': 'The gLRU replacement policy differs from LRU in that, when a file is requested, only one additional chunk is added to the cache (unless all chunks of the file exist already in the cache).', '1806.10853-2-5-5': 'For example, suppose a document with 100 chunks is requested and 10 chunks are currently cached.', '1806.10853-2-5-6': 'Under gLRU, the 10 chunks will be moved to the head of the cache along with 1 additional chunk.', '1806.10853-2-5-7': 'In the LRU policy, the entire file will be added.', '1806.10853-2-5-8': 'We assert that gLRU results in improved performance (i.e., faster download speeds, fewer delays, etc.) than the original LRU.', '1806.10853-2-6-0': 'Even though gLRU is a general approach and for identical sized files with a single chunk reduces to the LRU policy, analysis of the gLRU scheme is an important and challenging problem.', '1806.10853-2-6-1': 'As with LRU, the computation of hit rates, the probability that a file is in the cache in the steady state, cannot be characterized easily in closed form.', '1806.10853-2-6-2': 'There have been multiple approximation methods to characterize the approximate hit rate for LRU, with one of the commonly known approximations called the "characteristic time approximation" [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-6-3': 'With the gLRU caching policy, a file is partly in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-6-4': 'Thus, the metric of interest is not the hit rate, but the distribution of the number of chunks of each file in the cache in the steady state.', '1806.10853-2-6-5': 'Thus, the analysis of gLRU brings a new dimension in solving the problem and the previous analysis which adds or removes the entire file in the cache cannot be readily applied.', '1806.10853-2-6-6': 'The main result of the paper is the approximation for the steady state distribution for the gLRU strategy.', '1806.10853-2-6-7': 'The proposed approximation is also validated through simulation.', '1806.10853-2-6-8': 'Even though multiple approximation techniques have been proposed for cache replacement strategies, this is the first work to the best of our knowledge that analyzes the distribution of files in cache, where partial files can exist in the cache and the caching strategies adds/removes a chunk of the file rather than the complete file.', '1806.10853-2-6-9': 'The method proposed in [CITATION] considers a similar policy targeted toward a video streaming setting in which portions of files can be stored, however no present analytical results characterizing the number of cached files in steady state are given.', '1806.10853-2-7-0': 'This paper further aims to compare the performance of gLRU with LRU and give preliminary comparisons with several other cache replacement policies.', '1806.10853-2-7-1': 'In addition to LRU, we consider two alternative policies.', '1806.10853-2-7-2': 'We now give a brief description of these two policies with a more in-depth description given in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-7-3': 'The first alternative, outlined in [CITATION], aims to improve the performance of video streaming by first grouping the chunks into segments such that the [MATH]-th segment contains [MATH] chunks and we refer to this policy as segLRU.', '1806.10853-2-7-4': 'This segmentation of the chunks means that as a video is requested more frequently, the number of cached chunks increases faster than with a simple LRU policy.', '1806.10853-2-7-5': 'The policy then divides the cache into two sub-caches, the first for segments consisting of chunks occurring early on in the video and the second for later segments.', '1806.10853-2-7-6': 'The two sub-caches operate according to a modified LRU policy.', '1806.10853-2-7-7': 'The performance improvement of this policy lies in the fact that early portions of requested videos are more likely to be stored since there is a cache which is devoted to these segments.', '1806.10853-2-7-8': 'We also consider the AdaptSize method proposed in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-7-9': 'AdaptSize is a probabilistic caching policy in which smaller files are stored with higher probabilities, and these probabilities are dynamically tuned to improve performance.', '1806.10853-2-7-10': 'In order to compare these methods, multiple performance metrics are considered, including the proportion of chunks retrieved from the cache (as a generalization to the average hit rate), and the download time of the file.', '1806.10853-2-7-11': 'Further, video specific metrics like the stall duration are also considered.', '1806.10853-2-8-0': 'We observe for a Zipf file popularity distribution and censored Pareto file size distribution that the gLRU cache policy outperforms the LRU policy in all the metrics.', '1806.10853-2-8-1': 'These results indicate that the flexibility of adding and removing a chunk of the file in contrast to the entire file can improve system performance, at least in a setting with static popularity distribution.', '1806.10853-2-8-2': 'When compared with segLRU and AdaptSize on production traces the results are also promising (cf. Figures [REF] and [REF]).', '1806.10853-2-8-3': 'Specifically, gLRU outperforms segLRU in between 43-46 out of 48 trials (depending on the performance metric considered).', '1806.10853-2-8-4': 'Furthermore, the median improvement in performance ranges from 1.79% to 78.2% (depending on the metric).', '1806.10853-2-8-5': 'When compared to AdaptSize, gLRU performs better in all 48 trials for the cache miss rate [MATH] and download time [MATH] .', '1806.10853-2-8-6': 'In addition it outperforms AdaptSize in 27, 45, and 36 out of 48 trials for the proportion of chunks retrieved from the cache [MATH], the delay time [MATH], and the proportion delayed [MATH], respectively.', '1806.10853-2-8-7': 'The median improvement for each metric ranges from .16% for [MATH] to 96.1% for [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-8-8': 'The proposed scheme borrows the advantages of LRU, including low complexity, ease of implementation, and being adaptive to the change in the arrival distributions.', '1806.10853-2-8-9': 'In addition, gLRU outperforms LRU by not having to displace multiple small files to add a larger file.', '1806.10853-2-8-10': 'For VoD settings, the availability of earlier chunks in the cache can further help since the later chunks have later deadlines.', '1806.10853-2-8-11': 'The proposed scheme will have partial files in the cache, and that can help the stall duration since only the later chunks must be retrieved.', '1806.10853-2-8-12': 'Numerical results indicate a median improvement of 20%, 31%, and 32% in proportion of chunks accessed from cache, download time, and video stall duration, respectively, using the gLRU caching strategy as compared to the LRU caching strategy.', '1806.10853-2-8-13': 'It is important to note that we only consider a static popularity distribution and gLRU may suffer when the popularity distribution is rapidly changing.', '1806.10853-2-8-14': 'To combat this, one can consider extensions of gLRU in which more and more chunks are added each time a file is requested in order to improve the policies reactivity (cf. Section [REF]).', '1806.10853-2-8-15': "However, we leave a more in-depth analysis of gLRU's reactivity to future work.", '1806.10853-2-8-16': 'Another topic of concern is the dependence structure between the file size and popularity distributions.', '1806.10853-2-8-17': 'While the file size and popularity distributions are assumed independent in the synthetic traces, we note that the joint distribution is certainly important for the performance of gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-8-18': 'In Appendices [REF] and [REF], we explore the effect of positive and negative correlation between the the file size and popularity distributions.', '1806.10853-2-8-19': 'In the case of negative correlation, the more popular files are smaller and thus more of them can be stored in the cache leading to improved performance (cf. Table [REF] and Figure [REF]).', '1806.10853-2-8-20': 'Furthermore, gLRU outperforms LRU in both the positive and negative correlation cases but the effects are more pronounced in the case of negative correlation (cf. Table [REF]).', '1806.10853-2-9-0': 'The rest of the paper is organized as follows.', '1806.10853-2-9-1': 'Section [REF] reviews some of the related work in the analysis of LRU caching, as well as some proposed variants of LRU to deal with the issue of asymmetric file sizes.', '1806.10853-2-9-2': 'In Section [REF] we describe the model which is the subject of our analysis including a description of our proposed cache replacement policy, gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-9-3': 'Section [REF] then gives the proposed approximation to the gLRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-2-9-4': 'In Section [REF], we use both the original characteristic time approximation and the approximations proposed in Section [REF] to compare LRU with gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-9-5': 'In particular, we show that since gLRU does not need to add entire files to the cache, it is able to store smaller pieces of more files in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-9-6': 'Sections [REF] and [REF] are devoted to the results of numerical simulations.', '1806.10853-2-9-7': 'In Section [REF], we demonstrate that the proposed approximation to gLRU is valid and in Section [REF], evaluation of gLRU against several alternative policies are given on both synthetic and production trace data.', '1806.10853-2-9-8': 'Finally, Section [REF] concludes this paper.', '1806.10853-2-10-0': '# Related Work', '1806.10853-2-11-0': 'Analysis of LRU Caching: Evaluating the performance of cache networks is hard, considering that the Markov chain associated with a single LRU (Least Recently Used) cache has an exponential number of states [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-11-1': 'Multiple approximation approaches have been studied [CITATION] in the literature, with two key types of analysis techniques - the characteristic time approximation [CITATION] and the network calculus approach [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-11-2': 'One of the key metrics to quantify in caching systems is the hit rate, which describes the probability of finding a file in the cache given a popularity distribution on the set of available content.', '1806.10853-2-11-3': 'The authors of [CITATION] provided an expression for hit rate of identical-sized files, which can be computed using numerical integration approaches.', '1806.10853-2-11-4': 'The authors of [CITATION] presented a method for approximating (called the characteristic time approximation) the hit rates for such a system assuming that all files are of identical size.', '1806.10853-2-11-5': 'However, in most cases files are of different sizes.', '1806.10853-2-11-6': 'Further work by the authors of [CITATION] provide the theoretical machinery behind the efficacy of the characteristic time approximation and provide a simple extension to the case of multiple file sizes (cf. equation (5) therein).', '1806.10853-2-12-0': 'Adaptations of LRU Caching: Several extensions of LRU have been proposed.', '1806.10853-2-12-1': '[CITATION] outlines a variety of these methods, specifically q-LRU, k-LRU, RANDOM, and k-RANDOM.', '1806.10853-2-12-2': 'The q-LRU policy is the same as LRU except that files are only added with probability [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-12-3': 'An extension of q-LRU called [MATH]LRU in which each file has its own probability of being added to the queue is presented in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-12-4': 'This probability is computed based on the content size and time required to retrieve the content from the cache .', '1806.10853-2-12-5': 'In k-LRU, requested files must traverse [MATH] additional virtual LRU caches before it is added to the actual cache.', '1806.10853-2-12-6': 'RANDOM and k-RANDOM are the same as q-LRU and k-LRU except files are evicted from the cache at random.', '1806.10853-2-12-7': 'Another method, called LRU(m), is outlined in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-12-8': 'This policy exploits [MATH] caches of sizes [MATH] in which the first [MATH] caches are virtual and of sizes [MATH] while the remainder are real.', '1806.10853-2-12-9': 'For more details see [CITATION] which gives an analysis of both k-LRU and LRU(m).', '1806.10853-2-12-10': 'Several other probabilistic replacement policies are proposed in [CITATION], where the authors consider files which have non-uniform size and non-uniform access costs.', '1806.10853-2-12-11': 'However, the setting of [CITATION] differs from ours in that it does not consider chunked files.', '1806.10853-2-12-12': 'We note that in future work, it maybe possible to combine the above policies with gLRU by, for example, considering a sequence of caches employing a gLRU replacement policy instead of a pure LRU policy.', '1806.10853-2-13-0': 'One of the key issues in the LRU based caching strategy is that a large file arrival can evict multiple small files.', '1806.10853-2-13-1': 'In order to have better performance with realistic file sizes, multiple approaches have been proposed, see [CITATION] and the references therein.', '1806.10853-2-13-2': 'An admission control strategy in [CITATION] is used to decrease the probability that a large file size is added in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-13-3': 'One of the potential issues with these strategies is that the addition and removal from the cache is still at the file level.', '1806.10853-2-13-4': 'In a VoD setting, one may achieve better performance from simply caching the early portions of each file as in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-13-5': 'The time it takes to watch the early portion of the video provides a buffer during which the later segments of the video can be returned from a centralized server.', '1806.10853-2-13-6': 'In contrast, this paper provides the flexibility of adding/removing files at the chunk level.', '1806.10853-2-13-7': 'The authors of [CITATION] considered the flexibility for adding/removing chunks from the cache, however, the caching strategy is based on knowing the file arrival rates.', '1806.10853-2-13-8': 'Even though a window-based scheme can be used to learn the arrival rate and use such caching policies, the complexity for the cache update is higher.', '1806.10853-2-13-9': 'In contrast, this paper uses a generalization of the LRU caching strategy that is completely adaptive to the arrival pattern, does not take any such parameters in the strategy, and is easy to implement.', '1806.10853-2-13-10': "Similarly, in [CITATION], the author's propose a replacement policy based on the Greedy Dual-Size algorithm which leverages information based on the file popularities which are estimated online.", '1806.10853-2-13-11': 'However, despite considering varying file sizes, the authors do not consider chunked files.', '1806.10853-2-14-0': 'Cache Management for Video Streaming: There is a large amount of literature on the particulars of video caching and, in some cases, its relationship with the LRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-2-14-1': 'Many of these are concerned with the intricacies of how to design hierarchical network architectures to improve system performance.', '1806.10853-2-14-2': 'This differs from the work presented here in that our proposed cache replacement is considered on a more granular level, considering the performance on a single cache.', '1806.10853-2-14-3': 'For example, four different caching algorithms for planet-scale CDNs called xLRU, Cafe Cache, Optimal Cache, and Psychic Cache are outlined in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-14-4': 'These methods are concerned with networking together large sets of servers and a large portion of their work is devoted to evaluating when to redirect traffic between servers versus when to add files to caches at which a requests arrive.', '1806.10853-2-14-5': 'Another paper is [CITATION] in which the authors consider a two-layered architecture tailored to video streaming for chunked files.', '1806.10853-2-14-6': 'In the presented system, the second level caches employ an LRU caching policy and the model exploits correlations between files chunks of the same video in order to prefetch later file chunks in order improve the performance of video streaming.', '1806.10853-2-14-7': 'It is an interesting topic of future work as to whether some of these network architectures can be improved by incorporating gLRU instead of LRU caches.', '1806.10853-2-14-8': 'Another work of interest is [CITATION], in which the authors also consider chunked video files.', '1806.10853-2-14-9': 'In this work, the chunks are divided into segments containing multiple chronologically adjacent chunks.', '1806.10853-2-14-10': 'Chunks from later on in a given video are combined into larger and larger segments.', '1806.10853-2-14-11': 'Furthermore, the cache is divided in two.', '1806.10853-2-14-12': 'The first portion is devoted to smaller, early (i.e., those segments corresponding to the beginning of a video) segments operating under an simple LRU policy.', '1806.10853-2-14-13': 'The second cache handles the larger, later segments and employs a probabilistic LRU policy in which the relative popularity and size of each segment is used to determine its admission probability.', '1806.10853-2-14-14': 'Throughout this work we will refer to this policy as segLRU.', '1806.10853-2-14-15': 'In Sections [REF] and [REF], we compare gLRU with segLRU and the AdaptSize method outlined earlier.', '1806.10853-2-15-0': '# System Model and Problem Formulation', '1806.10853-2-16-0': 'In this section, we outline the system model and describe the caching policy that will be analyzed in this paper.', '1806.10853-2-17-0': '## System Parameters', '1806.10853-2-18-0': 'Consider a single server storing a collection of [MATH] files.', '1806.10853-2-18-1': 'The files may be of different sizes and file [MATH] is comprised of [MATH] equally sized pieces, or chunks.', '1806.10853-2-18-2': 'While the number of chunks which comprise each file may vary, the size of each individual chunk is the same for all files.', '1806.10853-2-18-3': 'In video streaming settings, each chunk typically consists of 1-4 seconds of video [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-18-4': 'Without loss of generality, we assume all chunks have unit size.', '1806.10853-2-19-0': 'We assume a single user in the system, which may be an aggregate point for multiple users (e.g., edge router).', '1806.10853-2-19-1': 'The user requests the files from the server, where the aggregate arrival process follows a Poisson process with rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-19-2': 'The probability that a given request is for file [MATH] is proportional to its popularity [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-19-3': 'In general, [MATH] is assumed to follow a Zipf law with parameter [MATH] (cf. [CITATION] and references therein for a more in-depth discussion).', '1806.10853-2-19-4': 'Without loss of generality, we assume that [MATH] and the arrival rate for file [MATH] is [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-19-5': 'This implies that the probability that a given request is for file [MATH] is [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-20-0': 'When a file request arrives at the server, all chunks are entered in a first-in-first-out (FIFO) queue which services the requests.', '1806.10853-2-20-1': 'We assume that distribution of service times (from the server) for any chunk is exponential with a rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-20-2': 'In order to improve retrieval speed, the system employs a cache of capacity [MATH] in which any file chunk requires one unit of capacity.', '1806.10853-2-20-3': 'For approximating the steady state hit probabilities in Section [REF], we assume that the processing rate [MATH] is infinite.', '1806.10853-2-20-4': 'This assumption is in line with [CITATION] in which it is assumed that files are cached instantaneously upon request.', '1806.10853-2-20-5': 'For the numerical evaluation of the gLRU policy in Section [REF], we assume a finite [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-20-6': 'Furthermore, the steady state hit probabilities can be used to compute performance metrics (e.g. download time) for a system with finite [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-20-7': 'A file [MATH] finishes downloading when all the [MATH] chunks of the file are available to the user.', '1806.10853-2-20-8': 'However, when considering video streaming, a user can begin playing the video before all the chunks are received.', '1806.10853-2-20-9': 'More about this will be discussed in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-20-10': 'One can think about the cache as being "close" to the user and having a service time which is negligible.', '1806.10853-2-20-11': 'In the next subsection, we will describe the cache replacement policy that will be used to decide the contents in the user cache.', '1806.10853-2-21-0': '## Cache Replacement Policy', '1806.10853-2-22-0': 'In order to achieve a better user experience (e.g., higher latency, less buffering, etc.), one can consider several different policies for allocating space within the cache.', '1806.10853-2-22-1': 'One commonly used policy is the Least Recently Used (LRU) replacement policy [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-22-2': 'When employing the LRU replacement policy, all pieces of a requested file are moved to the head of the cache.', '1806.10853-2-22-3': 'If there is not enough capacity to accommodate these new file requests, the files at the tail of the cache (i.e., those which were the least recently requested) are forced out.', '1806.10853-2-22-4': 'One of the key issues with LRU is that different files have different sizes, and a large file-size request can displace multiple files with lower file size.', '1806.10853-2-22-5': 'In this work, we propose a generalization of LRU which we will refer to as gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-22-6': 'In the gLRU replacement policy, instead of adding all file chunks to the head of the cache, only the pieces already in the cache plus one additional chunk (should one exist) are added, thus increasing the number of cached pieces of the requested file by at most one.', '1806.10853-2-22-7': 'The proposed gLRU scheme is easy to implement since the existing chunks of the file are moved to the head with one additional chunk and one chunk at the tail is removed.', '1806.10853-2-22-8': 'We note that the LRU policy can be implemented using concurrent linked hashed maps [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-22-9': 'This can be easily modified to add the counter of chunks in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-22-10': 'The changes for gLRU include decreasing the number of chunks rather than removal of the file index at the end of the doubly linked list (unless there is only one chunk already), and adding a chunk when the file is moved to the head.', '1806.10853-2-22-11': 'Thus, gLRU can be implemented using concurrent linked hashed maps with minor adaptations on the LRU implementation.', '1806.10853-2-22-12': 'Further, this scheme is online and adapts to the changing file arrival distribution.', '1806.10853-2-22-13': 'As we will show in Section [REF], numerical results demonstrate that gLRU has superior performance on many performance metrics of interest, including file download times and video stall duration.', '1806.10853-2-23-0': 'We note that adding chunks one-by-one may be slow in adapting and has the potential to yield poor performance when the popularity distribution is rapidly changing.', '1806.10853-2-23-1': 'In order to improve the reactivity of gLRU, one could consider simple extensions of the algorithm outlined here.', '1806.10853-2-23-2': 'For example, by dividing the chunks into segments as in [CITATION] so that each time the file is requested a larger portion is added.', '1806.10853-2-23-3': 'These extensions fit quite simply within the approximation heuristic framework proposed in Section [REF], and equivalent approximations of hit probabilities can be derived using the same steps as outlined in this work.', '1806.10853-2-24-0': 'With this in mind, we propose a further generalization of LRU which we refer to as gLRU([MATH]) inspired by the transport control protocol (TCP) congestion control algorithm [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-24-1': 'In particular, in TCP CUBIC, the window size is a cubic function of time since the last congestion event [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-24-2': 'Since the window size increases as a cubic function rather than increasing by [MATH] as in TCP Reno, TCP cubic has been shown to produce less bursty traffic [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-24-3': 'In gLRU([MATH]), when a file is requested, instead of adding one additional chunk, an additional [MATH] chunks are added where [MATH] is the number of times that file has been requested since it last dropped out of the cache (To draw a parallel with the TCP congestion control algorithm, the last time it dropped out of cache is equivalent to the last congestion event and the amount of chunks in the cache is equivalent to the window size).', '1806.10853-2-24-4': 'We can tune the reactivity of the replacement policy by changing the value of [MATH] in that increasing [MATH] will increase the reactivity of the algorithm.', '1806.10853-2-24-5': 'As previously mentioned, the approximation heuristic proposed in Section [REF] can easily be extended to gLRU([MATH]).', '1806.10853-2-24-6': 'However, as we have only numerically validated the approximation for gLRU (i.e. gLRU(1)) we present the heuristic in Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-2-24-7': 'We leave a further detailed analysis of the effects on the reactivity and the question of how to optimally choose [MATH] for future work.', '1806.10853-2-25-0': '## Problem Formulation', '1806.10853-2-26-0': 'Fagin first proposed a simple approach for estimating the hit rates of a cache operating under the LRU strategy [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-26-1': 'The method was then rediscovered in [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-26-2': "We call this approach the characteristic time approximation approach and note that other papers in the area [CITATION] use the term Che's approximation, even though the paper [CITATION] has multiple co-authors.", '1806.10853-2-26-3': 'In this paper, we aim to estimate the probability distribution of the number of chunks of a file in the cache in the steady state using the gLRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-2-26-4': 'Further, this paper aims to see improvement of the proposed caching strategy as compared to the LRU strategy.', '1806.10853-2-27-0': '# Generalization of the Characteristic Time Approximation', '1806.10853-2-28-0': 'In this section, we will provide an approximation for the distribution of cache contents using the gLRU caching strategy and discuss the results with a comparison to the LRU caching policy.', '1806.10853-2-29-0': '## Characteristic Time Approximation for LRU Caching Policy', '1806.10853-2-30-0': 'In this subsection, we will describe the key approach in the characteristic time approximation [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-30-1': 'The characteristic time approximation gives a simple, efficient, and accurate method of estimating the hit probabilities (i.e., the probability of finding a given file in the cache) for a system employing the LRU replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-30-2': 'While the approximation was established for a system in which all files had one chunk of equal size, the method can easily be extended to files of multiple sizes (c.f. [CITATION]).', '1806.10853-2-30-3': 'Let [MATH] represent the time of the first request for file [MATH] (the first inter-arrival time).', '1806.10853-2-30-4': 'The characteristic time approximation, applied to files of multiple sizes (c.f. (5) of [CITATION]) relies on defining, for each file [MATH], random variables [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] where [MATH] represents the number of file chunks, other than file [MATH], that will be added to the head of the cache by time [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-30-5': 'Assuming that object [MATH] is inserted into the cache at time 0, it follows that [MATH] represents the amount of time it will take for at least [MATH] chunks to be added to the cache at which point all pieces of file [MATH] will have fallen out of the cache if [MATH] has not been requested.', '1806.10853-2-31-0': 'Ultimately, [MATH] is estimated by setting [MATH] equal to the expected value of [MATH], [EQUATION] however, some assumptions need to made.', '1806.10853-2-31-1': 'The first is that the cache is sufficiently large as to assume that [MATH] is deterministic.', '1806.10853-2-31-2': 'The second is to assume that [MATH] is the same for all [MATH] where [MATH] solves [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-31-3': 'It is also assumed that it is sufficient to consider, [EQUATION] to estimate [MATH] rather than each [MATH] and thus [REF] becomes [EQUATION] which is the same as [REF].', '1806.10853-2-31-4': 'Such an assumption is valid if the popularity of any individual file is small compared to the total popularity (i.e. [MATH]).', '1806.10853-2-31-5': 'Indeed, this is the case for the Zipf popularity distribution.', '1806.10853-2-31-6': 'An estimate for [MATH] is then obtained by numerically solving [REF].', '1806.10853-2-32-0': '## Challenges for Analysis of gLRU', '1806.10853-2-33-0': 'The key difference in gLRU as compared to LRU is that the cache contains partial files.', '1806.10853-2-33-1': 'For each file request, at most one chunk is added in gLRU whereas in LRU where the entire file is added.', '1806.10853-2-33-2': 'Similarly, gLRU removes a chunk of a file at a time in contrast to the removal of entire file(s) in LRU.', '1806.10853-2-34-0': 'The difficulty in extending the characteristic time approximation to the gLRU caching policy is that the number of chunks added to the head of the cache is a random variable dependent on the state of the system, the file size distribution, and the popularity distribution.', '1806.10853-2-34-1': 'In [CITATION], the state of the cache at time zero is unimportant and thus one can assume that it is empty.', '1806.10853-2-34-2': 'In the case of gLRU, the number of chunks added to the head of the cache due to a file request is dependent on the current state of the cache.', '1806.10853-2-34-3': 'As a result, it is difficult to write down an exact expression equivalent to [REF].', '1806.10853-2-35-0': '## Proposed Approximation for gLRU([MATH])', '1806.10853-2-36-0': 'In this subsection, we provide an approximation for the probability of [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache when the gLRU caching policy is used.', '1806.10853-2-37-0': 'Since an exact expression equivalent to [REF] is hard to write, we write an approximation of [MATH] by replacing [MATH] in the [MATH]-th term in the sum with the expected number of file [MATH] chunks in the cache when the system is in steady state.', '1806.10853-2-37-1': 'This expected value can be computed given [MATH], and we will denote it as [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-38-0': 'Let [MATH] represent the [MATH] inter-arrival time of requests for file [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-38-1': 'Given a [MATH], the probability of finding at least [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache is equal to the probability that the last [MATH] inter-arrival times, looking back from the current time, for file [MATH] are less than [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-38-2': "Assuming that the probability of a file being requested while it is at the end of the cache is small, this can be approximated as follows, [EQUATION] which follows since the [MATH]'s are independent and identically distributed exponential random variables with rate parameter [MATH].", '1806.10853-2-38-3': 'We note that this is not really a new assumption but a result of the rate of requests for file [MATH] being small compared to that overall rate of requests under a Zipf popularity law.', '1806.10853-2-38-4': 'Without this assumption, the expression for [MATH] would need to account for all cases in which the specified file is requested after several chunks of the file had fallen out of the cache and [MATH] were remaining, vastly complicating [REF].', '1806.10853-2-38-5': 'Suppose one starts with [MATH] chunks in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-38-6': 'If a file request arrives when [MATH] chunks have fallen out of the end of the cache then [MATH] will be added to the head.', '1806.10853-2-38-7': 'The assumption implies that this event can be ignored.', '1806.10853-2-38-8': 'Let [MATH] be random variables such that [MATH] represents the number of cached chunks of file [MATH] when the system is in steady state.', '1806.10853-2-38-9': 'Recalling that [MATH] denotes the expected number of file [MATH] chunks in the cache when the system is in steady state, it then follows that [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-38-10': 'The proposed approximation of [MATH] is then given as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-38-11': 'As in the derivation of [REF], it is sufficient to consider [EQUATION] and one can then estimate [MATH] by setting the expected value of [MATH] to [MATH] and solving for [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-38-12': 'This amounts to solving the following equation, [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-38-13': 'Once an estimate for [MATH] is obtained, one can compute hit probabilities using [REF].', '1806.10853-2-38-14': 'For example, the probability of finding at least one piece of file [MATH] in the cache is simply [MATH], where [MATH] is as in [REF].', '1806.10853-2-38-15': 'This can then be used to find other metrics of interest.', '1806.10853-2-38-16': 'For example, the probability that exactly [MATH] pieces of file [MATH] are cached when the system is in steady state is given as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-39-0': '## Discussion', '1806.10853-2-40-0': 'One important implication of the assumptions made in the characteristic time approximation is that the popularity of any given file is small relative to the total popularity.', '1806.10853-2-40-1': 'Indeed, the simulations in [CITATION] and Section [REF] suggest that this is reasonable.', '1806.10853-2-40-2': 'In this work, we further use this assumption when approximating the hit rates via [REF] to imply that the amount of time a file spends at the end of the cache is small, and thus, the probability a request arrives while a few (but not all) chunks have fallen out of the cache is negligible.', '1806.10853-2-40-3': 'When contrasting LRU and gLRU, this implies that the LRU replacement policy results in an "all or none" scheme in which files are either entirely in the cache or not at all in the cache while gLRU is able to store portions of a greater number of files.', '1806.10853-2-41-0': 'In Figure [REF], we present estimates from the characteristic time approximation and the proposed approximation that the cache contains any chunks of a file of given popularity for LRU and gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-41-1': 'Further, Figure [REF] also depicts the probability of finding all chunks of a file (i.e. the entire file) under the gLRU replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-41-2': 'Since the LRU policy stores either all or no chunks of each file, an analogous line is not needed as it would coincide with the earlier LRU line.', '1806.10853-2-41-3': 'In this particular example [MATH], all files have 5 chunks, and the cache can hold 10,000 chunks at a time.', '1806.10853-2-41-4': 'Similar results can be obtained by varying [MATH] or the number of chunks.', '1806.10853-2-41-5': 'If we allow the number of chunks to be random, similar patterns are obtained for the probabilities of observing any chunks in the cache, however the probabilities of finding full files in the cache under gLRU becomes dependent on the individual file sizes.', '1806.10853-2-42-0': 'In the Video-on-Demand (VoD) setting, the user can begin watching as soon as a single chunk has been retrieved.', '1806.10853-2-42-1': 'The time it takes to view this chunk (and the other chunks stored in the cache) provides a cushion during which portions of the video which occur later, and are not stored in the cache, can be retrieved from the centralized server.', '1806.10853-2-42-2': 'For this reason, it makes sense that gLRU should be superior in the VoD setting.', '1806.10853-2-42-3': 'In Section [REF], we provide numerical results showing that, in addition to this improvement in delay times, total download time is also reduced by using gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-42-4': 'The flexibility of having partial file chunks can indeed help getting the number of file chunks in the cache roughly proportional to the arrival rates, helping to improve the file download times.', '1806.10853-2-43-0': '# Numerical Validation of the Proposed Approximation', '1806.10853-2-44-0': 'In this section, we present the result of several numerical simulations showing the validity of the approximations established in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-44-1': 'We validate the approximations presented in Section [REF] via simulation.', '1806.10853-2-44-2': 'The simulated system contains [MATH] different files with popularity law [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-44-3': 'Each file has a constant number of chunks [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-44-4': 'The reason for this is to separate the performance differences due to file size and popularity.', '1806.10853-2-44-5': 'If one were to consider distributions on popularity and file size then one would need to account for the joint distribution between the two, an interesting question on its own (see Section [REF]).', '1806.10853-2-44-6': 'While not presented here, we did consider Pareto file sizes and the results were qualitatively similar.', '1806.10853-2-44-7': 'Pareto file sizes have been used in Section [REF] to compare performance of LRU and gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-44-8': 'The arrivals of requests for file [MATH] is a Poisson process with rate [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-45-0': 'The notion of hit rate in this context is slightly different than the hit rate in the characteristic time approximation [CITATION] in that we are no longer just concerned with the proportion of requests which find the requested file in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-45-1': 'Since the system can store partial files, we are interested in how many chunks of the requested file are found in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-45-2': 'Consider an arbitrary file [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-45-3': 'We are able to estimate the probability for finding exactly [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache using Equation [REF].', '1806.10853-2-45-4': 'Figure [REF] displays the estimated (solid lines) and simulated (markers) hit rates over a variety of parameters.', '1806.10853-2-45-5': 'Each point represents that probability (y-axis) of finding the number of chunks indicated on the x-axis.', '1806.10853-2-45-6': 'The blue, red, and pink represent the 1, 100, 1000, most popular files, respectively.', '1806.10853-2-46-0': 'For example, if we look at the blue line at 5 on the x-axis in Figure [REF], this represents the estimated probability of there being 5 cached chunks of the most popular file when it is requested and the star on top indicates the corresponding simulated value.', '1806.10853-2-46-1': 'These figures show near perfect alignment between the estimated hit rates and true hit rates.', '1806.10853-2-46-2': 'In particular, the largest difference between predicted and simulated values is .016 indicating that the approximations establish in Section [REF] are valid.', '1806.10853-2-47-0': '# Numerical Evaluation of g LRU In this section, we compare gLRU with several other replacement policies.', '1806.10853-2-47-1': 'Section [REF] presents a comparison with LRU on a set of synthetic traces.', '1806.10853-2-47-2': 'The results indicate the gLRU outperforms LRU on a variety of performance metrics in a video streaming setting.', '1806.10853-2-47-3': 'In addition, we discuss some preliminary comparisons with two alternative policies, AdaptSize [CITATION] and a segment-based generalization of the LRU replacement policy which we will refer to as segLRU [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-47-4': 'See Section [REF], for an outline of these two alternative policies.', '1806.10853-2-47-5': 'A brief discussion of preliminary comparisons on synthetic trace data is given at the end of Section [REF] and a more developed analysis is given comparing the results on production trace data in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-47-6': 'For the sake of reproducibility the code used to generate all figures and tables can be found at: https://github.com/EricFriedlander/gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-48-0': '## VoD Latency for LRU and gLRU on Synthetic Trace Data We now provide numerical simulations comparing the performance of the LRU and gLRU replacement policies.', '1806.10853-2-48-1': 'All simulated systems consist of [MATH] video files.', '1806.10853-2-48-2': 'The popularity of each video file is distributed according to a Zipf law with parameter [MATH] and the file sizes are distributed according to a censored Pareto distribution [CITATION] with shape 2 and scale 300 (corresponding to an average length of 10 minutes) truncated so that no video is longer than 1 hour.', '1806.10853-2-48-3': 'Each video file is broken down into chunks of length [MATH] seconds.', '1806.10853-2-48-4': 'When a video file is requested, the chunks are played sequentially, with each chunk consisting of [MATH] seconds of video.', '1806.10853-2-48-5': 'In this section, we assume that the the popularity and file size distributions are independent.', '1806.10853-2-48-6': 'However, the joint distribution is surely important and a topic of further work.', '1806.10853-2-48-7': 'We give some results in this direction in Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-2-49-0': 'Chunks retrieved from the cache are available to play immediately, while those not cached must be served by a single server FIFO queue as described in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-49-1': 'There is a start-up delay [MATH] during which the video can be buffered before playing.', '1806.10853-2-49-2': 'If the user attempts to view a file chunk which has not yet been served, they must wait for it to be processed and incur a delay.', '1806.10853-2-49-3': 'The storage model is as described in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-49-4': 'The system is simulated under both the LRU and gLRU cache replacement policies.', '1806.10853-2-50-0': 'In our simulations, we study five performance metrics of interest,', '1806.10853-2-51-0': '[i)] [MATH] - the proportion of file chunks retrieved from the cache.', '1806.10853-2-51-1': '[ii)] [MATH] - the proportion of requests in which no chunks are found in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-51-2': '[iii)] [MATH] - the average amount of time required for each file to be retrieved, i.e., the download time of the file.', '1806.10853-2-51-3': '[iv)] [MATH] - the average amount of time playback of a video is delayed.', '1806.10853-2-51-4': 'This is the re-buffering or the stall duration of the video and is a key metric in video streaming [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-51-5': 'This metric calculates the download time of each chunk and plays them in order with the play time of chunk [MATH] being the maximum of the play time of chunk [MATH] and the download time of chunk [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-51-6': 'The difference of the play time of the last video chunk and [MATH] gives the stall duration for file [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-51-7': '[v)] [MATH] - the proportion of requested videos which experience a nonzero stall duration.', '1806.10853-2-52-0': 'The input parameters are summarized in Table [REF], which includes all definitions and values, and the system is simulated to convergence under the values described therein.', '1806.10853-2-52-1': 'Note that we do not explicitly give a processing rate [MATH] because it is implicitly defined through the traffic parameter [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-53-0': 'All combinations of parameters are simulated resulting in 384 separate trials.', '1806.10853-2-53-1': 'The reader should keep in mind that each configuration is only simulated once and thus the effects of the stochasticity in both the popularity distribution and file size distribution are not "averaged out".', '1806.10853-2-53-2': 'However, since there are 1000 files in each simulation, the effects should be minimal.', '1806.10853-2-54-0': 'In Figure [REF], we present the results of the simulations.', '1806.10853-2-54-1': 'A histogram of the relative difference between gLRU and LRU for all performance metrics is presented.', '1806.10853-2-54-2': 'Specifically, the [MATH]-axes correspond to the difference between the specified performance metric under gLRU and LRU divided by the metric for LRU.', '1806.10853-2-55-0': 'Histograms of the gross differences can be found in Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-2-56-0': 'In Table [REF], we present the results of comparing gLRU with LRU.', '1806.10853-2-56-1': 'The columns "Worse" and "Better" represent the number of trials in which gLRU performs worse and better and "Worst", "Best", and "Median" give the worst, best, and median improvement of gLRU over LRU.', '1806.10853-2-56-2': 'In the tables, positive numbers correspond to gLRU performing better.', '1806.10853-2-56-3': 'The results are given in terms of relative improvement where the magnitude is computed as (gLRU-LRU)/LRU.', '1806.10853-2-56-4': 'When considering [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], gLRU outperforms LRU in every instance.', '1806.10853-2-56-5': 'For the delay focused metrics, [MATH] and [MATH], gLRU outperforms LRU in 237 and 240 out of 384 configuration, respectively.', '1806.10853-2-56-6': 'In the remaining cases there was no discernible difference in performance.', '1806.10853-2-57-0': 'These results indicate that the gLRU replacement policy is almost always superior to the LRU policy and results in shorter download times (30.8% improvement), lower stall duration (32.0% improvement), and more videos with non-zero stalls (19.7% improvement).', '1806.10853-2-57-1': 'Since videos are watched sequentially (i.e., a user begins at the beginning and proceeds through the file pieces one by one), it make sense that gLRU would result in an improvement in the VoD case since this viewing of earlier video chunks provides time for chunks appearing later in the video to load.', '1806.10853-2-57-2': 'Moreover, our results show that by employing a gLRU policy, a system designer is able to improve the user experience by increasing the number of files which are partially stored in the cache even is non-VoD settings due to the improvement in the download time.', '1806.10853-2-57-3': 'The ultimate result is a system with fewer and shorter delays and shorter download times.', '1806.10853-2-58-0': 'In addition, we compared gLRU with segLRU and AdaptSize (cf. Section [REF]) on synthetic traces with the same parameters as discussed above, although with smaller numbers of files and fewer numbers of requests.', '1806.10853-2-58-1': 'These preliminary results show that gLRU outperforms AdaptSize most of the time, while significantly under-performing segLRU.', '1806.10853-2-58-2': 'It is not clear exactly what is causing the difference in performance, as the production trace evaluation in Section [REF] show a significant performance improvement of gLRU over segLRU.', '1806.10853-2-58-3': 'Furthermore, we are not troubled by these results as we believe that gLRU will prove useful when incorporated, instead of LRU, in more complicated replacement policies and content delivery architectures.', '1806.10853-2-59-0': '## Alternative Policies', '1806.10853-2-60-0': 'AdaptSize AdaptSize is a probabilistic admission policy in which a file is admitted into the cache with probability [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-60-1': 'Larger objects are admitted with lower probability and the parameter [MATH] is tuned to maximize the object hit rate (OHR), defined as the probability that a requested file is found in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-60-2': 'In particular, given a [MATH] and estimates on the arrival rate for the requests for each file, one can estimate the probability that a given file will be found in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-60-3': 'One can then use these probabilities to compute the OHR as a function of [MATH] and then optimize.', '1806.10853-2-60-4': 'This process is performed in windows, recomputing [MATH] after a given number of file requests.', '1806.10853-2-60-5': 'We refer the reader to [CITATION] for a more in-depth description.', '1806.10853-2-60-6': 'In all simulations, we take our window size to be 1,000 requests.', '1806.10853-2-61-0': 'segLRU This segment-based caching policy relies on breaking up chunked files into segments with segment [MATH] containing [MATH] chunks.', '1806.10853-2-61-1': 'It follows that chunks which occur early in a video are contained in very small segments while those which occur later are contained in large segments.', '1806.10853-2-61-2': 'The cache is then broken into two stacks.', '1806.10853-2-61-3': 'The first stack is devoted to the first [MATH] segments of each file and the second devoted to the later segments.', '1806.10853-2-61-4': 'The first stack operates under a simple LRU replacement policy while the second uses a thresholding approach.', '1806.10853-2-61-5': 'In particular, each segment receives a score dependent on the time of its last request and position in the video file and is added to the cache only if its score is higher than another segment currently in the cache.', '1806.10853-2-61-6': 'In this case, the lowest ranked segment is evicted to make space for the one with the higher score.', '1806.10853-2-61-7': 'For more information we refer the reader to [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-61-8': 'Throughout this section we take each stack as half the size of the cache in the other policies and set [MATH] so that one quarter of all chunks are directed to the first cache.', '1806.10853-2-62-0': '## VoD Latency for LRU, segLRU, and AdaptSize on Production Trace Data', '1806.10853-2-63-0': 'We now compare gLRU with segLRU and AdaptSize on MSR Cambridge Traces obtained from the SNIA IOTTA repository.', '1806.10853-2-63-1': 'There are 36 I/O traces from 36 different volumes on 13 servers.', '1806.10853-2-63-2': 'For more information see [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-63-3': 'The data includes the timestamp of each request, the file size of each request, and whether the entry is a read or write request.', '1806.10853-2-63-4': 'For the comparisons below we only consider read requests.', '1806.10853-2-63-5': 'No file identifiers are given, so we take each file size as the unique identifier.', '1806.10853-2-63-6': 'We test our policies on two of the 36 traces.', '1806.10853-2-63-7': 'Specifically, we select the first media trace and the first web trace which include 143,973 and 606,487 read requests, respectively.', '1806.10853-2-63-8': 'These were selected both because they were large but also because of the distribution of file requests.', '1806.10853-2-63-9': 'Namely, in the second media trace, over 95 of the files requests were for files of the same size and recall that we take the file size as the unique identified.', '1806.10853-2-63-10': 'In contrast, the first web trace had more than half of the files account for at least 1 of the traffic each.', '1806.10853-2-63-11': 'We assume the same system as in Section [REF] in which files are retrieved immediately from the cache if available, otherwise they are served from a FIFO queue.', '1806.10853-2-63-12': 'Several combinations of parameters are considered.', '1806.10853-2-63-13': 'We consider settings in which the chunk size is chosen so that the average file has 10, 50, and 100 chunks.', '1806.10853-2-63-14': 'Furthermore, we consider a range of eight cache sizes capable of storing between 1% and 50% of the total files in the system.', '1806.10853-2-63-15': 'This range of parameters results in 48 separate simulations per replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-63-16': 'The processing rate and start-up delay are chosen so that the traffic rate on the queue is manageable.', '1806.10853-2-63-17': 'In order to initialize the queue and cache, we run our simulation through each trace once and use the end state of the queue and cache as the initial condition for all future simulations.', '1806.10853-2-64-0': 'Tables [REF] and [REF] present the results of comparing gLRU with segLRU and AdaptSize, respectively.', '1806.10853-2-64-1': 'The columns "Worse" and "Better" represent the number of trials in which gLRU performs worse and better and "Worst", "Best", and "Median" give the worst, best, and median improvement of gLRU over the competing replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-64-2': 'In the tables, positive numbers correspond to gLRU performing better.', '1806.10853-2-64-3': 'The results show that gLRU outperforms segLRU in almost every trial.', '1806.10853-2-64-4': 'In addition, gLRU performs favorably to AdaptSize, having lower delay time in 45 out of 48 trials, and a lower proportion in delayed requests in 36 out of 48 trials.', '1806.10853-2-64-5': 'Furthermore, the gains in performance for the cases in which gLRU performs better seem to be quite large while they are much smaller in cases where AdaptSize outperforms gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-65-0': '# Conclusions and Future Work', '1806.10853-2-66-0': 'In this work, we present a generalization for the LRU cache replacement policy, called gLRU.', '1806.10853-2-66-1': 'We first establish a generalization of the characteristic time approximation to this new policy which can be used to accurately approximate the distribution of the number of chunks of a file in the cache in the steady state.', '1806.10853-2-66-2': 'The results of Section [REF] show that the approximation is, indeed, quite accurate.', '1806.10853-2-66-3': 'We then provide numerical results demonstrating that gLRU outperforms gLRU on a variety of performance metrics including download time and stall duration in a VoD setting.', '1806.10853-2-66-4': 'Our results indicate that gLRU outperforms LRU in non-VoD settings as well because of its superior performance on download time.', '1806.10853-2-66-5': 'Furthermore, preliminary comparisons with alternative replacement policies indicate that gLRU will be a valuable tool in improving the efficiency of content delivery architectures.', '1806.10853-2-67-0': 'Exploring generalizations of gLRU, such as how segment-based additions can be exploited to hone the reactivity of the algorithm present an interesting direction for future research.', '1806.10853-2-67-1': 'Furthermore, it remains to be seen how more complicated architectures can be improved from the addition of gLRU in place of LRU caches.', '1806.10853-2-67-2': 'It is also worth thinking about how this policy can fit into an adaptive streaming framework [CITATION], where each chunk could be fetched at different quality levels.', '1806.10853-2-67-3': 'Exploring a trade-off between the average quality at which adaptive video is streamed and the stall duration with an online caching algorithm is an important direction for the future.', '1806.10853-2-68-0': '# Hueristic Analysis for gLRU([MATH])', '1806.10853-2-69-0': 'In this subsection, we extend the analysis of Section [REF] to gLRU([MATH]).', '1806.10853-2-69-1': 'Take [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] as in Section [REF].', '1806.10853-2-69-2': 'For a given [MATH], define [MATH] such that [MATH] where [MATH] are generalized Harmonic numbers [CITATION].', '1806.10853-2-69-3': 'The probability of finding at least [MATH] chunks of file [MATH] in the cache is equal to the probability that the last [MATH] inter-arrival times, looking back from the current time, for file [MATH] are less than [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-69-4': 'This can be approximated as follows, [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-69-5': 'Let [MATH] be as in Section [REF], the number of cached chunks of file [MATH] when the system is in steady state.', '1806.10853-2-69-6': 'Recalling that [MATH] denotes the expected number of file [MATH] chunks in the cache when the system is in steady state, it then follows that [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-69-7': 'The proposed approximation of [MATH] is then given as [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-69-8': 'As in the derivation of [REF], it is sufficient to consider [EQUATION] and one can then estimate [MATH] by setting the expected value of [MATH] to [MATH] and solving for [MATH].', '1806.10853-2-69-9': 'This amounts to solving the following equation, [EQUATION]', '1806.10853-2-69-10': 'As in Section [REF], and using [MATH] as defined in [REF] this can then be used to find other metrics of interest.', '1806.10853-2-70-0': '# VoD Gross Difference', '1806.10853-2-71-0': 'In order to supplement the results of Section [REF], we also present the gross improvement of gLRU over LRU.', '1806.10853-2-71-1': 'Figure [REF] presents histograms of the gross improvement of gLRU over LRU for each performance metric of interest.', '1806.10853-2-71-2': 'In each histogram the [MATH]-axes corresponds to the difference between the specified performance metric under gLRU and LRU.', '1806.10853-2-72-0': 'The figures back-up the results of Section [REF] in demonstrating the improved performance of gLRU over LRU for all performance metrics considered.', '1806.10853-2-73-0': '# Joint Popularity and File Size Distribution', '1806.10853-2-74-0': 'We now briefly consider the impact of the joint distribution of the popularity and file size on each of our performance metrics.', '1806.10853-2-74-1': 'Modeling this joint distribution can be quite complicated.', '1806.10853-2-74-2': 'In particular, specifying a probability measure such that the marginal distributions are Zipf for popularity and Pareto for file size while imposing a given correlation structure between the two is a nontrivial problem on its own.', '1806.10853-2-75-0': 'In this section, we consider of the effect of strong positive and negative correlation between popularity and file size through simulation.', '1806.10853-2-75-1': 'The system, as described in Section [REF], is simulated with one major change.', '1806.10853-2-75-2': 'In order to induce strong positive correlation we simply assign the highest popularities to the largest files and vice versa to induce negative correlation.', '1806.10853-2-75-3': 'The system was then simulated for all of the combinations of parameters described in Table [REF] for both cases resulting in 384 cases for each.', '1806.10853-2-76-0': 'Table [REF] presents a comparison of the positive and negative correlation cases for both the gLRU and LRU settings.', '1806.10853-2-76-1': 'For each of the performance metrics described in Section [REF], we present the average relative difference in performance positive vs. negative correlation (i.e. (positive metric - negative metric)/positive metric).', '1806.10853-2-77-0': 'The results show that the case of negative correlation vastly outperforms the case of positive correlation in both when employing either a gLRU or LRU replacement policy.', '1806.10853-2-77-1': 'This is because in the case of negative correlation, most popular files are smaller and thus more of them can be stored in the cache improving all the metrics as compared to when there is positive correlation.', '1806.10853-2-78-0': 'In addition, we note that gLRU outperforms LRU in both the positive and negative correlation case.', '1806.10853-2-78-1': 'In Table [REF], we present the mean relative performance improvement for gLRU vs LRU in all performance metrics of interest in both the correlation settings.', '1806.10853-2-79-0': 'While the results are much more pronounced in the case of negative correlation, it is clear that gLRU outperforms LRU in both correlation cases.', '1806.10853-2-79-1': 'For a more granular look at the data see Appendix [REF].', '1806.10853-2-80-0': '# Correlation Histograms', '1806.10853-2-81-0': 'Histograms for the same performance metrics as considered in [REF] are presented in Figure [REF].', '1806.10853-2-81-1': 'In order to compare the case of positive correlation with the case of negative correlation we simply subtract the performance metric of interest obtained under positive correlation from the respective result under negative correlation.', '1806.10853-2-81-2': 'Each subfigure contains two histograms, one for the system under gLRU (red) and one for the system under LRU (green) and provide a more granular view of the data than that was shown in Section [REF].'}
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['1806.10853-1-49-7', '1806.10853-2-51-7'], ['1806.10853-1-55-3', '1806.10853-2-57-3'], ['1806.10853-1-47-0', '1806.10853-2-49-0'], ['1806.10853-1-47-1', '1806.10853-2-49-1'], ['1806.10853-1-47-2', '1806.10853-2-49-2'], ['1806.10853-1-47-3', '1806.10853-2-49-3'], ['1806.10853-1-47-4', '1806.10853-2-49-4'], ['1806.10853-1-34-0', '1806.10853-2-38-0'], ['1806.10853-1-34-4', '1806.10853-2-38-4'], ['1806.10853-1-34-7', '1806.10853-2-38-10'], ['1806.10853-1-34-8', '1806.10853-2-38-11'], ['1806.10853-1-34-9', '1806.10853-2-38-12'], ['1806.10853-1-34-10', '1806.10853-2-38-13'], ['1806.10853-1-34-11', '1806.10853-2-38-14'], ['1806.10853-1-34-12', '1806.10853-2-38-15'], ['1806.10853-1-34-13', '1806.10853-2-38-16'], ['1806.10853-1-53-0', '1806.10853-2-55-0'], ['1806.10853-1-67-0', '1806.10853-2-71-0'], ['1806.10853-1-67-1', '1806.10853-2-71-1'], ['1806.10853-1-67-2', '1806.10853-2-71-2'], ['1806.10853-1-26-2', '1806.10853-2-30-2'], ['1806.10853-1-59-0', '1806.10853-2-76-0'], ['1806.10853-1-59-1', 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['1806.10853-1-5-4', '1806.10853-2-5-4'], ['1806.10853-1-5-5', '1806.10853-2-5-5'], ['1806.10853-1-5-6', '1806.10853-2-5-6'], ['1806.10853-1-5-7', '1806.10853-2-5-7'], ['1806.10853-1-8-1', '1806.10853-2-9-1'], ['1806.10853-1-8-2', '1806.10853-2-9-2'], ['1806.10853-1-8-3', '1806.10853-2-9-3'], ['1806.10853-1-8-5', '1806.10853-2-9-5'], ['1806.10853-1-8-9', '1806.10853-2-9-8'], ['1806.10853-1-50-0', '1806.10853-2-52-0'], ['1806.10853-1-62-0', '1806.10853-2-79-0'], ['1806.10853-1-62-1', '1806.10853-2-79-1'], ['1806.10853-1-70-0', '1806.10853-2-81-0'], ['1806.10853-1-70-1', '1806.10853-2-81-1'], ['1806.10853-1-70-2', '1806.10853-2-81-2'], ['1806.10853-1-29-0', '1806.10853-2-33-0'], ['1806.10853-1-51-0', '1806.10853-2-53-0'], ['1806.10853-1-51-1', '1806.10853-2-53-1'], ['1806.10853-1-51-2', '1806.10853-2-53-2'], ['1806.10853-1-11-1', '1806.10853-2-13-1'], ['1806.10853-1-11-2', '1806.10853-2-13-2'], ['1806.10853-1-11-5', '1806.10853-2-13-7'], ['1806.10853-1-0-1', '1806.10853-2-0-1'], 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['1806.10853-1-16-0', '1806.10853-2-19-0'], ['1806.10853-1-16-1', '1806.10853-2-19-1'], ['1806.10853-1-16-2', '1806.10853-2-19-2'], ['1806.10853-1-3-0', '1806.10853-2-3-0'], ['1806.10853-1-3-1', '1806.10853-2-3-1'], ['1806.10853-1-3-2', '1806.10853-2-3-2'], ['1806.10853-1-3-3', '1806.10853-2-3-3'], ['1806.10853-1-7-2', '1806.10853-2-7-11'], ['1806.10853-1-7-5', '1806.10853-2-8-8'], ['1806.10853-1-7-6', '1806.10853-2-8-9'], ['1806.10853-1-42-0', '1806.10853-2-44-1'], ['1806.10853-1-42-1', '1806.10853-2-44-2'], ['1806.10853-1-42-2', '1806.10853-2-44-3'], ['1806.10853-1-42-3', '1806.10853-2-44-4'], ['1806.10853-1-42-4', '1806.10853-2-44-5'], ['1806.10853-1-42-6', '1806.10853-2-44-8'], ['1806.10853-1-17-0', '1806.10853-2-20-0'], ['1806.10853-1-17-2', '1806.10853-2-20-7'], ['1806.10853-1-17-3', '1806.10853-2-20-8'], ['1806.10853-1-17-4', '1806.10853-2-20-9'], ['1806.10853-1-18-0', '1806.10853-2-20-2'], ['1806.10853-1-18-1', '1806.10853-2-20-10'], ['1806.10853-1-18-2', '1806.10853-2-20-11'], 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'1806.10853-2-20-11']]
[['1806.10853-1-44-0', '1806.10853-2-46-0'], ['1806.10853-1-6-0', '1806.10853-2-6-0'], ['1806.10853-1-6-1', '1806.10853-2-6-1'], ['1806.10853-1-6-2', '1806.10853-2-6-2'], ['1806.10853-1-6-3', '1806.10853-2-6-3'], ['1806.10853-1-37-0', '1806.10853-2-41-0'], ['1806.10853-1-37-1', '1806.10853-2-41-1'], ['1806.10853-1-64-1', '1806.10853-2-66-1'], ['1806.10853-1-43-0', '1806.10853-2-45-0'], ['1806.10853-1-43-6', '1806.10853-2-45-6'], ['1806.10853-1-15-4', '1806.10853-2-18-4'], ['1806.10853-1-10-1', '1806.10853-2-11-1'], ['1806.10853-1-10-3', '1806.10853-2-11-4'], ['1806.10853-1-10-4', '1806.10853-2-11-5'], ['1806.10853-1-10-5', '1806.10853-2-11-6'], ['1806.10853-1-22-0', '1806.10853-2-26-0'], ['1806.10853-1-49-5', '1806.10853-2-51-5'], ['1806.10853-1-55-0', '1806.10853-2-57-0'], ['1806.10853-1-55-1', '1806.10853-2-57-1'], ['1806.10853-1-55-2', '1806.10853-2-57-2'], ['1806.10853-1-34-1', '1806.10853-2-38-1'], ['1806.10853-1-34-2', '1806.10853-2-38-2'], ['1806.10853-1-34-5', '1806.10853-2-38-8'], ['1806.10853-1-26-0', '1806.10853-2-30-0'], ['1806.10853-1-26-1', '1806.10853-2-30-1'], ['1806.10853-1-26-4', '1806.10853-2-30-4'], ['1806.10853-1-26-5', '1806.10853-2-30-5'], ['1806.10853-1-32-0', '1806.10853-2-36-0'], ['1806.10853-1-27-3', '1806.10853-2-31-3'], ['1806.10853-1-46-9', '1806.10853-2-48-7'], ['1806.10853-1-38-2', '1806.10853-2-42-2'], ['1806.10853-1-38-5', '1806.10853-2-42-4'], ['1806.10853-1-5-8', '1806.10853-2-5-8'], ['1806.10853-1-8-0', '1806.10853-2-9-0'], ['1806.10853-1-8-4', '1806.10853-2-9-4'], ['1806.10853-1-8-6', '1806.10853-2-9-6'], ['1806.10853-1-29-1', '1806.10853-2-33-1'], ['1806.10853-1-29-2', '1806.10853-2-33-2'], ['1806.10853-1-11-0', '1806.10853-2-13-0'], ['1806.10853-1-11-3', '1806.10853-2-13-3'], ['1806.10853-1-11-4', '1806.10853-2-13-6'], ['1806.10853-1-11-6', '1806.10853-2-13-8'], ['1806.10853-1-11-7', '1806.10853-2-13-9'], ['1806.10853-1-0-3', '1806.10853-2-0-3'], ['1806.10853-1-0-8', '1806.10853-2-0-8'], ['1806.10853-1-0-9', '1806.10853-2-0-9'], ['1806.10853-1-20-0', '1806.10853-2-22-0'], ['1806.10853-1-20-9', '1806.10853-2-22-13'], ['1806.10853-1-4-5', '1806.10853-2-4-5'], ['1806.10853-1-36-0', '1806.10853-2-40-0'], ['1806.10853-1-16-3', '1806.10853-2-19-3'], ['1806.10853-1-24-0', '1806.10853-2-28-0'], ['1806.10853-1-7-1', '1806.10853-2-7-10'], ['1806.10853-1-7-3', '1806.10853-2-8-0'], ['1806.10853-1-7-7', '1806.10853-2-8-10'], ['1806.10853-1-7-8', '1806.10853-2-8-11'], ['1806.10853-1-17-1', '1806.10853-2-20-1']]
[]
[['1806.10853-1-44-1', '1806.10853-2-46-1'], ['1806.10853-1-30-0', '1806.10853-2-34-0'], ['1806.10853-1-37-3', '1806.10853-2-41-3'], ['1806.10853-1-10-0', '1806.10853-2-11-0'], ['1806.10853-1-54-3', '1806.10853-2-56-0'], ['1806.10853-1-54-3', '1806.10853-2-56-1'], ['1806.10853-1-22-1', '1806.10853-2-26-2'], ['1806.10853-1-34-3', '1806.10853-2-38-3'], ['1806.10853-1-26-3', '1806.10853-2-30-3'], ['1806.10853-1-46-2', '1806.10853-2-48-2'], ['1806.10853-1-46-4', '1806.10853-2-48-2'], ['1806.10853-1-38-1', '1806.10853-2-42-1'], ['1806.10853-1-8-7', '1806.10853-2-9-7'], ['1806.10853-1-0-0', '1806.10853-2-0-0'], ['1806.10853-1-36-2', '1806.10853-2-40-2'], ['1806.10853-1-16-4', '1806.10853-2-19-4'], ['1806.10853-1-7-0', '1806.10853-2-7-0'], ['1806.10853-1-7-4', '1806.10853-2-8-1'], ['1806.10853-1-7-9', '1806.10853-2-8-12'], ['1806.10853-1-40-0', '1806.10853-2-44-0'], ['1806.10853-1-42-5', '1806.10853-2-44-6'], ['1806.10853-1-42-5', '1806.10853-2-44-7']]
[]
['1806.10853-1-1-0', '1806.10853-1-48-0', '1806.10853-2-1-0', '1806.10853-2-50-0', '1806.10853-2-69-1']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1806.10853
null
null
null
null
null
1802.07453
{'1802.07453-1-0-0': 'We describe a variational approach to a notion of Hamiltonian delay equations and discuss examples.', '1802.07453-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1802.07453-1-2-0': 'An ordinary differential equation (ODE) on [MATH] is, in the simplest case, of the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a vector field on [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-2-1': 'A delay differential equation (DDE) on [MATH] is, again in the simplest case, of the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is still a vector field on [MATH] and [MATH] is the time delay.', '1802.07453-1-2-2': 'Delay equations therefore model systems in which the instantaneous velocity [MATH] depends on the state of the curve [MATH] at a past time.', '1802.07453-1-2-3': 'There are very many such systems in science and engineering.', '1802.07453-1-2-4': 'We refer to [CITATION] for a foundational text and to [CITATION] for a wealth of examples.', '1802.07453-1-3-0': 'A Hamiltonian differential equation on [MATH] is an ODE of the form [EQUATION] where the Hamiltonian vector field is of the special form [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-3-1': 'Here [MATH] is a smooth function and [MATH] is the usual complex multiplication on [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-3-2': 'It is now tempting to define a Hamiltonian delay equation to be a DDE of the form [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH] as before.', '1802.07453-1-4-0': 'Such systems where studied by Liu [CITATION], who proved the existence of periodic orbits under natural assumptions on [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-5-0': 'In this paper we take a different approach to Hamiltonian delay equations, or at least to periodic orbits solving what we propose to call a Hamiltonian delay equation.', '1802.07453-1-5-1': 'Our approach is through action functionals.', '1802.07453-1-5-2': 'Let [MATH] be the space of smooth 1-periodic loops in [MATH], and recall from classical mechanics that the 1-periodic solutions of [REF] are exactly the critical points of the action functional [MATH] given by [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-1-5-3': 'This fact, that interesting solutions can be seen as the critical points of a functional, played a key role in the creation of the modern theory of Hamiltonian dynamics and of symplectic topology, see point 2.', '1802.07453-1-5-4': 'below.', '1802.07453-1-6-0': 'We therefore look at "delay action functionals".', '1802.07453-1-6-1': 'If we just take [EQUATION] we get nothing new: The critical point equation is again [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-6-2': 'However, if we take two Hamiltonian functions [MATH] on [MATH] and the functional [EQUATION] then the critical point equation is the honest delay equation [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-1-6-3': 'Notice that the time shift [MATH] looks like "into the future", but this does not matter along periodic orbits, along which the future can be identified with the past.', '1802.07453-1-7-0': 'In our approach a Hamiltonian delay equation is thus a delay equation that can be obtained as critical point equation of an action functional.', '1802.07453-1-8-0': 'In Sections [REF] and [REF] we compute the critical point equations of several classes of delay action functionals on the loop space of [MATH], and more generally of exact symplectic manifolds.', '1802.07453-1-8-1': 'As a special case we shall obtain in Section [REF] one instance of the delayed Lotka-Volterra equations.', '1802.07453-1-8-2': 'In fact, already in his 1928 paper [CITATION] and in his seminal book [CITATION] from 1931 Volterra was interested in periodic solutions of delay equations, and formulated the famous Lotka-Volterra equations with and without delay.', '1802.07453-1-9-0': 'Related works.', '1802.07453-1-10-0': 'General properties of delay action functionals were studied for instance in Chapter VI of [CITATION] and in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-1-11-0': 'The problem when a delay equation on [MATH] is the critical point equation of a functional is analyzed in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-1-12-0': 'A Hamiltonian formalism for certain non-local PDEs on [MATH], that is also based on non-local action functionals, was recently proposed in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-1-13-0': 'Discussion.', '1802.07453-1-13-1': 'In the rest of this introduction we further comment on why we believe that our approach to Hamiltonian delay equations is promising.', '1802.07453-1-14-0': '1.', '1802.07453-1-14-1': 'Extension to manifolds.', '1802.07453-1-15-0': 'Recall that on [MATH] one possible definition of a Hamiltonian delay equation is [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-15-1': 'On a general symplectic manifold [MATH], however, this concept does not make sense, simply because [MATH] and [MATH] reside in different tangent spaces.', '1802.07453-1-16-0': 'On the other hand, our approach through action functionals readily extends to manifolds: Recall that a symplectic manifold is a manifold [MATH] together with a non-degenerate closed 2-form [MATH] on [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-16-1': 'For simplicity we assume that [MATH] is exact, [MATH] for a 1-form [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-16-2': 'The Hamiltonian vector field of a smooth function [MATH] is defined by [MATH], and the 1-periodic solutions of [MATH] are exactly the critical point of the action functional [EQUATION] on the space of smooth 1-periodic loops in [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-16-3': 'Taking [MATH] on [MATH] we recover the case described above.', '1802.07453-1-17-0': 'Replacing the Hamiltonian term [MATH] in [REF] by a delay term such as [MATH] or by any of the terms described in Sections [REF] and [REF], we get as critical point equation a delay equation on [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-18-0': 'Thus, if we start from a delay action functional and compute the critical point equation, then an "accident" as for [REF] cannot happen, and we always get a meaningful equation.', '1802.07453-1-19-0': 'General DDEs can be readily defined on manifolds, see Section 12.1 of [CITATION] and [CITATION], and there are a few results on periodic orbits of such systems, see [CITATION] and the references therein.', '1802.07453-1-20-0': 'In contrast, there seems to be no concept of a Hamiltonian delay equation on manifolds.', '1802.07453-1-20-1': 'Our approach at least provides a natural notion of such an equation and a tool for finding periodic solutions.', '1802.07453-1-21-0': '2.', '1802.07453-1-21-1': 'A calculus of variations for Hamiltonian DDEs.', '1802.07453-1-22-0': 'While the theory of DDEs is meanwhile quite rich [CITATION], it is nonetheless much less developed than the theory of ODEs.', '1802.07453-1-22-1': 'One reason is that for DDEs there is no local flow on the given manifold, and so the whole theory is less geometric and more cumbersome.', '1802.07453-1-23-0': 'In sharp contrast to general ODEs, Hamiltonian ODEs can be studied by variational methods, thanks to the action functional.', '1802.07453-1-23-1': 'For one thing, the action functional (even though neither bounded from below nor above, and strongly indefinite) can be used to do critical point theory on the loop space, as was first demonstrated by Rabinowitz [CITATION].', '1802.07453-1-23-2': 'At least as important, one can see symplectic topology as the geometry of the action functional.', '1802.07453-1-23-3': "(This is almost the title and exactly the content of Viterbo's paper [CITATION], and also in the book [CITATION] the action functional is the main tool.)", '1802.07453-1-23-4': 'For instance, a selection of critical values of the action functional by min-max leads to numerical invariants of Hamiltonian systems and symplectic manifolds, that have many applications.', '1802.07453-1-24-0': 'The climactic impact of the action functional into symplectic dynamics and topology, however, is Floer homology, which is Morse theory for the action functional on the loop space.', '1802.07453-1-25-0': 'Now, incorporating delays into an action functional, we can try to extend all these constructions to delay action functionals, and thereby create a calculus of variations for Hamiltonian delay equations, that should have many applications at least to questions on periodic orbits of such equations.', '1802.07453-1-26-0': 'For instance, a Floer theory in the delay setting should lead to the same lower bounds for the number of periodic orbits of Hamiltonian delay equations as guaranteed in the undelayed case by the solution of the Arnold conjectures.', '1802.07453-1-26-1': 'For a special class of Hamiltonian delay equations, these lower bounds are verified in [CITATION] by means of an iterated graph construction and classical (Lagrangian) Floer homology.', '1802.07453-1-27-0': 'First steps in the construction of a delay Floer homology were taken in [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1802.07453-1-28-0': '# Delay equations from sums and products of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-1-29-0': 'Let [MATH] be a symplectic manifold with exact symplectic form [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-29-1': 'We choose [MATH] autonomous Hamiltonian functions [EQUATION] and define an "action functional" on the free loop space [MATH] by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the time delay.', '1802.07453-1-29-2': 'To find the critical point equation of [MATH] we fix [MATH] and [MATH] and compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-29-3': 'Since [MATH] and [MATH] are 1-periodic, [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-1-29-4': 'Using also the definition [MATH] of the Hamiltonian vector field [MATH], etc., we find [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-29-5': 'The critical point equation is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-29-6': 'We have proved the following lemma.', '1802.07453-1-30-0': 'The critical points of [MATH] satisfy the Hamiltonian delay equation [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-30-1': 'Using that [MATH] we obtain', '1802.07453-1-31-0': 'For the time delay [MATH] the Hamiltonian delay equation becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-32-0': '# The Lotka-Volterra equations, with and without delay', '1802.07453-1-33-0': 'In this section we extend the work of Fernandes-Oliva [CITATION] to positive delays.', '1802.07453-1-34-0': 'Fix a skew-symmetric [MATH]-matrix [MATH], i.e. [MATH], and [MATH] real numbers [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-35-0': 'Take [MATH] with its usual exact symplectic form [MATH],', '1802.07453-1-36-0': 'and set [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-36-1': 'The Hamiltonian vector fields are [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-36-2': 'Fix [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-36-3': 'For [MATH] the Hamiltonian (delay) equation [REF] becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-36-4': 'In other words, [EQUATION] where in the last equation we have used that [MATH] is skew-symmetric.', '1802.07453-1-36-5': 'Using these two equations we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-36-6': 'Now observe that the right hand side only depends on the [MATH], but not on the [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-36-7': 'Setting [MATH] we thus obtain the first order delay system [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-36-8': 'Case [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-36-9': 'Then [REF] becomes [EQUATION] with skew-symmetric [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-36-10': 'This is one instance of the Lotka-Volterra equations without delay.', '1802.07453-1-36-11': 'These equations were proposed by Lotka [CITATION] in his studies of chemical reactions, and independently by Volterra [CITATION] in his studies of predator-prey dynamics.', '1802.07453-1-37-0': 'Case [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-37-1': 'Then the equations [REF] for 1-periodic orbits become [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-37-2': "These Hamiltonian delay equations already appeared in Chapter 4 of Volterra's book [CITATION].", '1802.07453-1-38-0': '# More examples', '1802.07453-1-39-0': 'In this section we give three rather special classes of Hamiltonian delay equations, two involving integrals.', '1802.07453-1-39-1': 'The reader may invent his own examples.', '1802.07453-1-40-0': '## More general products of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-1-41-0': 'In [REF] we may replace the sum by an integral and choose a double time-dependence: Consider functions [MATH], which we write as [MATH] and [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-41-1': 'Then set [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-2': 'For [MATH] and [MATH] we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-3': 'Since [MATH] are 1-periodic and also [MATH] are periodic in [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-1-41-4': 'Therefore, [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-5': 'Hence the critical points of [MATH] are the solutions of the Hamiltonian delay equation [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-6': 'In the special case that [MATH] and [MATH] are autonomous, equation [REF] simplifies to [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-7': 'If we define the functions [MATH] by [EQUATION] the above equation becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-8': 'Specializing further to [MATH] we obtain [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-9': 'In this special case, preservation of energy implies that [MATH] is constant along solutions, and thus we may write [REF] as [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-41-10': 'Of course, this equation can be studied by Floer theory, hence there are (in the Morse-Bott sense) multiplicity results (in terms of cup-length or Betti numbers) for periodic solutions in a certain range of Conley-Zehnder indices.', '1802.07453-1-42-0': 'Clearly, [REF] has many solutions, namely critical points of [MATH].', '1802.07453-1-42-1': 'However, unless [MATH] is [MATH]-small at all critical points, the Morse indices of critical points cannot all agree with their Conley-Zehnder indices, and so Floer theory implies the existence of additional non-constant solutions to [REF].', '1802.07453-1-42-2': 'We expect that also equation [REF] admits a Floer theory.', '1802.07453-1-42-3': 'Note that typically, [REF] does not have any constant solutions, even when [MATH] and [MATH] is independent of [MATH], hence a Floer theory should imply the existence of many interesting periodic solutions.', '1802.07453-1-43-0': '## Exponentials of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-1-44-0': 'We consider yet another incarnation of a Hamiltonian delay equation.', '1802.07453-1-44-1': 'Take [EQUATION] where [MATH] is given.', '1802.07453-1-44-2': 'We compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-44-3': 'Substituting [MATH] by [MATH] and changing the order of integration the second summand becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-44-4': 'The critical point equation is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-45-0': '## Several inputs', '1802.07453-1-46-0': 'We now consider a function [MATH] on the symplectic manifold [MATH], where again [MATH], and denote by [MATH] the derivative of [MATH] with respect to the first variable and correspondingly by [MATH] the Hamiltonian vector field of [MATH] with respect to the first variable: [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-46-1': 'Further, we consider the action functional [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-46-2': 'Concrete examples for the function [MATH] come for instance from interaction potentials (as in the [MATH]-body problem) or from vortex equations with delay.', '1802.07453-1-46-3': 'For [MATH] and [MATH] we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-46-4': 'The second summand is equal to [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-46-5': 'The critical point equation for [MATH] is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-1-46-6': 'We point out that indeed [EQUATION] so that [REF] makes sense.'}
{'1802.07453-2-0-0': 'We describe a variational approach to a notion of Hamiltonian delay equations and discuss examples.', '1802.07453-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1802.07453-2-2-0': 'An ordinary differential equation (ODE) on [MATH] is, in the simplest case, of the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a vector field on [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-2-1': 'A delay differential equation (DDE) on [MATH] is, again in the simplest case, of the form [EQUATION] where [MATH] is still a vector field on [MATH] and [MATH] is the time delay.', '1802.07453-2-2-2': 'Delay equations therefore model systems in which the instantaneous velocity [MATH] depends on the state of the curve [MATH] at a past time.', '1802.07453-2-2-3': 'There are very many such systems in science and engineering.', '1802.07453-2-2-4': 'We refer to [CITATION] for a foundational text and to [CITATION] for a wealth of examples.', '1802.07453-2-3-0': 'A Hamiltonian differential equation on [MATH] is an ODE of the form [EQUATION] where the Hamiltonian vector field is of the special form [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-3-1': 'Here [MATH] is a smooth function and [MATH] is the usual complex multiplication on [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-3-2': 'It is now tempting to define a Hamiltonian delay equation to be a DDE of the form [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH] as before.', '1802.07453-2-4-0': 'Such systems where studied by Liu [CITATION], who proved the existence of periodic orbits under natural assumptions on [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-5-0': 'In this paper we take a different approach to Hamiltonian delay equations, or at least to periodic orbits solving what we propose to call a Hamiltonian delay equation.', '1802.07453-2-5-1': 'Our approach is through action functionals.', '1802.07453-2-5-2': 'Let [MATH] be the space of smooth 1-periodic loops in [MATH], and recall from classical mechanics that the 1-periodic solutions of [REF] are exactly the critical points of the action functional [MATH] given by [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-2-5-3': 'This fact, that interesting solutions can be seen as the critical points of a functional, played a key role in the creation of the modern theory of Hamiltonian dynamics and of symplectic topology, see point 2.', '1802.07453-2-5-4': 'below.', '1802.07453-2-6-0': 'We therefore look at "delay action functionals".', '1802.07453-2-6-1': 'If we just take [EQUATION] we get nothing new: The critical point equation is again [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-6-2': 'However, if we take two Hamiltonian functions [MATH] on [MATH] and the functional [EQUATION] then the critical point equation is the honest delay equation [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-2-6-3': 'Notice that the time shift [MATH] looks like "into the future", but this does not matter along periodic orbits, along which the future can be identified with the past.', '1802.07453-2-7-0': 'In our approach a Hamiltonian delay equation is thus a delay equation that can be obtained as critical point equation of an action functional.', '1802.07453-2-8-0': 'In Sections [REF] and [REF] we compute the critical point equations of several classes of delay action functionals on the loop space of [MATH], and more generally of exact symplectic manifolds.', '1802.07453-2-8-1': 'As a special case we shall obtain in Section [REF] one instance of the delayed Lotka-Volterra equations.', '1802.07453-2-8-2': 'In fact, already in his 1928 paper [CITATION] and in his seminal book [CITATION] from 1931 Volterra was interested in periodic solutions of delay equations, and formulated the famous Lotka-Volterra equations with and without delay.', '1802.07453-2-9-0': 'Related works.', '1802.07453-2-10-0': 'General properties of delay action functionals were studied for instance in Chapter VI of [CITATION] and in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-2-11-0': 'The problem when a delay equation on [MATH] is the critical point equation of a functional is analyzed in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-2-12-0': 'A Hamiltonian formalism for certain non-local PDEs on [MATH], that is also based on non-local action functionals, was recently proposed in [CITATION].', '1802.07453-2-13-0': 'Discussion.', '1802.07453-2-13-1': 'In the rest of this introduction we further comment on why we believe that our approach to Hamiltonian delay equations is promising.', '1802.07453-2-14-0': '1.', '1802.07453-2-14-1': 'Extension to manifolds.', '1802.07453-2-15-0': 'Recall that on [MATH] one possible definition of a Hamiltonian delay equation is [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-15-1': 'On a general symplectic manifold [MATH], however, this concept does not make sense, simply because [MATH] and [MATH] reside in different tangent spaces.', '1802.07453-2-16-0': 'On the other hand, our approach through action functionals readily extends to manifolds: Recall that a symplectic manifold is a manifold [MATH] together with a non-degenerate closed 2-form [MATH] on [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-16-1': 'For simplicity we assume that [MATH] is exact, [MATH] for a 1-form [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-16-2': 'The Hamiltonian vector field of a smooth function [MATH] is defined by [MATH], and the 1-periodic solutions of [MATH] are exactly the critical point of the action functional [EQUATION] on the space of smooth 1-periodic loops in [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-16-3': 'Taking [MATH] on [MATH] we recover the case described above.', '1802.07453-2-17-0': 'Replacing the Hamiltonian term [MATH] in [REF] by a delay term such as [MATH] or by any of the terms described in Sections [REF] and [REF], we get as critical point equation a delay equation on [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-18-0': 'Thus, if we start from a delay action functional and compute the critical point equation, then an "accident" as for [REF] cannot happen, and we always get a meaningful equation.', '1802.07453-2-19-0': 'General DDEs can be readily defined on manifolds, see Section 12.1 of [CITATION] and [CITATION], and there are a few results on periodic orbits of such systems, see [CITATION] and the references therein.', '1802.07453-2-20-0': 'In contrast, there seems to be no concept of a Hamiltonian delay equation on manifolds.', '1802.07453-2-20-1': 'Our approach at least provides a natural notion of such an equation and a tool for finding periodic solutions.', '1802.07453-2-21-0': '2.', '1802.07453-2-21-1': 'A calculus of variations for Hamiltonian DDEs.', '1802.07453-2-22-0': 'While the theory of DDEs is meanwhile quite rich [CITATION], it is nonetheless much less developed than the theory of ODEs.', '1802.07453-2-22-1': 'One reason is that for DDEs there is no local flow on the given manifold, and so the whole theory is less geometric and more cumbersome.', '1802.07453-2-23-0': 'In sharp contrast to general ODEs, Hamiltonian ODEs can be studied by variational methods, thanks to the action functional.', '1802.07453-2-23-1': 'For one thing, the action functional (even though neither bounded from below nor above, and strongly indefinite) can be used to do critical point theory on the loop space, as was first demonstrated by Rabinowitz [CITATION].', '1802.07453-2-23-2': 'At least as important, one can see symplectic topology as the geometry of the action functional.', '1802.07453-2-23-3': "(This is almost the title and exactly the content of Viterbo's paper [CITATION], and also in the book [CITATION] the action functional is the main tool.)", '1802.07453-2-23-4': 'For instance, a selection of critical values of the action functional by min-max leads to numerical invariants of Hamiltonian systems and symplectic manifolds, that have many applications.', '1802.07453-2-24-0': 'The climactic impact of the action functional into symplectic dynamics and topology, however, is Floer homology, which is Morse theory for the action functional on the loop space.', '1802.07453-2-25-0': 'Now, incorporating delays into an action functional, we can try to extend all these constructions to delay action functionals, and thereby create a calculus of variations for Hamiltonian delay equations, that should have many applications at least to questions on periodic orbits of such equations.', '1802.07453-2-26-0': 'For instance, a Floer theory in the delay setting should lead to the same lower bounds for the number of periodic orbits of Hamiltonian delay equations as guaranteed in the undelayed case by the solution of the Arnold conjectures.', '1802.07453-2-26-1': 'For a special class of Hamiltonian delay equations, these lower bounds are verified in [CITATION] by means of an iterated graph construction and classical (Lagrangian) Floer homology.', '1802.07453-2-27-0': 'First steps in the construction of a delay Floer homology were taken in [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1802.07453-2-28-0': '# Delay equations from sums and products of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-2-29-0': 'Let [MATH] be a symplectic manifold with exact symplectic form [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-29-1': 'We choose [MATH] autonomous Hamiltonian functions [EQUATION] and define an "action functional" on the free loop space [MATH] by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the time delay.', '1802.07453-2-29-2': 'To find the critical point equation of [MATH] we fix [MATH] and [MATH] and compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-29-3': 'Since [MATH] and [MATH] are 1-periodic, [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-2-29-4': 'Using also the definition [MATH] of the Hamiltonian vector field [MATH], etc., we find [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-29-5': 'The critical point equation is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-29-6': 'We have proved the following lemma.', '1802.07453-2-30-0': 'The critical points of [MATH] satisfy the Hamiltonian delay equation [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-30-1': 'Using that [MATH] we obtain', '1802.07453-2-31-0': 'For the time delay [MATH] the Hamiltonian delay equation becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-32-0': '# The Lotka-Volterra equations, with and without delay', '1802.07453-2-33-0': 'In this section we extend the work of Fernandes-Oliva [CITATION] to positive delays.', '1802.07453-2-34-0': 'Fix a skew-symmetric [MATH]-matrix [MATH], i.e. [MATH], and [MATH] real numbers [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-35-0': 'Take [MATH] with its usual exact symplectic form [MATH],', '1802.07453-2-36-0': 'and set [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-36-1': 'The Hamiltonian vector fields are [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-36-2': 'Fix [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-36-3': 'For [MATH] the Hamiltonian (delay) equation [REF] becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-36-4': 'In other words, [EQUATION] where in the last equation we have used that [MATH] is skew-symmetric.', '1802.07453-2-36-5': 'Using these two equations we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-36-6': 'Now observe that the right hand side only depends on the [MATH], but not on the [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-36-7': 'Setting [MATH] we thus obtain the first order delay system [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-36-8': 'Case [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-36-9': 'Then [REF] becomes [EQUATION] with skew-symmetric [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-36-10': 'This is one instance of the Lotka-Volterra equations without delay.', '1802.07453-2-36-11': 'These equations were proposed by Lotka [CITATION] in his studies of chemical reactions, and independently by Volterra [CITATION] in his studies of predator-prey dynamics.', '1802.07453-2-37-0': 'Case [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-37-1': 'Then the equations [REF] for 1-periodic orbits become [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-37-2': "These Hamiltonian delay equations already appeared in Chapter 4 of Volterra's book [CITATION].", '1802.07453-2-38-0': '# More examples', '1802.07453-2-39-0': 'In this section we give three rather special classes of Hamiltonian delay equations, two involving integrals.', '1802.07453-2-39-1': 'The reader may invent his own examples.', '1802.07453-2-40-0': '## More general products of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-2-41-0': 'In [REF] we may replace the sum by an integral and choose a double time-dependence: Consider functions [MATH], which we write as [MATH] and [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-41-1': 'Then set [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-2': 'For [MATH] and [MATH] we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-3': 'Since [MATH] are 1-periodic and also [MATH] are periodic in [MATH], [EQUATION].', '1802.07453-2-41-4': 'Therefore, [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-5': 'Hence the critical points of [MATH] are the solutions of the Hamiltonian delay equation [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-6': 'In the special case that [MATH] and [MATH] are autonomous, equation [REF] simplifies to [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-7': 'If we define the functions [MATH] by [EQUATION] the above equation becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-8': 'Specializing further to [MATH] we obtain [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-9': 'In this special case, preservation of energy implies that [MATH] is constant along solutions, and thus we may write [REF] as [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-41-10': 'Of course, this equation can be studied by Floer theory, hence there are (in the Morse-Bott sense) multiplicity results (in terms of cup-length or Betti numbers) for periodic solutions in a certain range of Conley-Zehnder indices.', '1802.07453-2-42-0': 'Clearly, [REF] has many solutions, namely critical points of [MATH].', '1802.07453-2-42-1': 'However, unless [MATH] is [MATH]-small at all critical points, the Morse indices of critical points cannot all agree with their Conley-Zehnder indices, and so Floer theory implies the existence of additional non-constant solutions to [REF].', '1802.07453-2-42-2': 'We expect that also equation [REF] admits a Floer theory.', '1802.07453-2-42-3': 'Note that typically, [REF] does not have any constant solutions, even when [MATH] and [MATH] is independent of [MATH], hence a Floer theory should imply the existence of many interesting periodic solutions.', '1802.07453-2-43-0': '## Exponentials of Hamiltonian functions', '1802.07453-2-44-0': 'We consider yet another incarnation of a Hamiltonian delay equation.', '1802.07453-2-44-1': 'Take [EQUATION] where [MATH] is given.', '1802.07453-2-44-2': 'We compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-44-3': 'Substituting [MATH] by [MATH] and changing the order of integration the second summand becomes [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-44-4': 'The critical point equation is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-45-0': '## Several inputs', '1802.07453-2-46-0': 'We now consider a function [MATH] on the symplectic manifold [MATH], where again [MATH], and denote by [MATH] the derivative of [MATH] with respect to the first variable and correspondingly by [MATH] the Hamiltonian vector field of [MATH] with respect to the first variable: [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-46-1': 'Further, we consider the action functional [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-46-2': 'Concrete examples for the function [MATH] come for instance from interaction potentials (as in the [MATH]-body problem) or from vortex equations with delay.', '1802.07453-2-46-3': 'For [MATH] and [MATH] we compute [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-46-4': 'The second summand is equal to [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-46-5': 'The critical point equation for [MATH] is therefore [EQUATION]', '1802.07453-2-46-6': 'We point out that indeed [EQUATION] so that [REF] makes sense.'}
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[]
[]
[]
[]
['1802.07453-1-5-4', '1802.07453-1-9-0', '1802.07453-1-13-0', '1802.07453-1-14-0', '1802.07453-1-14-1', '1802.07453-1-21-0', '1802.07453-1-21-1', '1802.07453-1-34-0', '1802.07453-1-35-0', '1802.07453-1-36-0', '1802.07453-1-36-2', '1802.07453-1-36-8', '1802.07453-1-37-0', '1802.07453-1-41-1', '1802.07453-1-41-4', '1802.07453-1-44-2', '1802.07453-2-5-4', '1802.07453-2-9-0', '1802.07453-2-13-0', '1802.07453-2-14-0', '1802.07453-2-14-1', '1802.07453-2-21-0', '1802.07453-2-21-1', '1802.07453-2-34-0', '1802.07453-2-35-0', '1802.07453-2-36-0', '1802.07453-2-36-2', '1802.07453-2-36-8', '1802.07453-2-37-0', '1802.07453-2-41-1', '1802.07453-2-41-4', '1802.07453-2-44-2']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.07453
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quant-ph-0605192
{'quant-ph-0605192-1-0-0': 'I describe a procedure for estimating thresholds for quantum computation as a function of error model given the availability of ancillae prepared in logical states with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-0-1': 'The thresholds are determined via a simple counting argument performed on a single qubit of an infinitely large CSS code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-0-2': 'I give concrete examples of thresholds thus achievable for both Steane and Knill style fault tolerant implementations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-1-0': '# Introduction', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-2-0': 'The threshold for fault tolerant quantum computation is defined as the error rate below which, given an unlimited (but sub-exponential) number of qubits, it is possible to compute indefinitely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-2-1': 'Knowledge of thresholds is clearly an important tool for use in the design of quantum computing architectures, but as of yet no simple unified scheme exists for determining them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-2-2': 'The great variance of threshold estimates in the literature is due partly to advances and improvements in the field of fault tolerance, but also partly to differing approximations and assumptions regarding error models and resources.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-2-3': 'This makes direct comparison of fault tolerant procedures difficult and tends to limit error models to some form of the depolarizing channel.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-2-4': 'The work presented herein was motivated by the desire for a method of threshold estimation that could easily be applied to a variety of error models and fault tolerant formulae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-3-0': 'Recent work by Reichardt [CITATION] has indicated that, assuming we are willing to discard suspect states, moderately sized ancillae can be prepared so well that their contribution to the failure probability of an encoded circuit becomes small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-3-1': 'Moreover, my own investigations suggest that the residual error on such ancillae is primarily due to their verification.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-3-2': 'Inspired by this revelation, I sought a method of determining the threshold given the availability of ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors, expecting that the resulting value would not be too different from that which might be achieved through unfettered use of qubits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-4-0': 'In this paper I describe such a method of estimating thresholds for fault tolerant formulae employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-4-1': 'I assume that it is possible to prepare logical states such that errors on the component qubits are independent and all qubits have the same error spectrum.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-4-2': 'Using this assumption as well as the structure of CSS encoded gates and a few error propagation tricks, it is possible to express the failure probability of an encoded operation in terms of the error probabilities of a single strand of the block code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-4-3': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits goes to infinity, the criterion for encoded failure become particularly simple, consequently yielding a threshold in which all error probabilities are free parameters, including the probabilities of different kinds of Pauli errors on a particular gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-0': 'The structure of this paper is as follows.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-1': 'Section [REF] introduces notation and gives a brief exposition of CSS codes, fault tolerance, and thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-2': 'Section [REF] enumerates my assumptions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-3': 'Section [REF] outlines the theory needed to generate thresholds using an infinitely large CSS code and logical ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-4': 'Section [REF] describes in detail how the necessary error probabilities are determined.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-5': 'Section [REF] performs this analysis for a few cases of special interest, including Knill and Steane style fault tolerant quantum computation schemes paired with a selection of error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-6': 'Section [REF] discusses the resource requirements of my approach.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-5-7': 'Finally, section [REF] concludes with a brief review of my results and a discussion of possible directions for future work.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-6-0': '# Background', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-7-0': '## Notation', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-8-0': 'Throughout this paper [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote the Pauli operators while [MATH] denotes the controlled-NOT or XOR gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-8-1': 'I also make use of Hadamard and phase gates, which are given in the standard basis by [EQUATION] respectively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-8-2': 'Together these gates span the Clifford group, an important subset of quantum operations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-8-3': 'The addition of the [MATH] rotation, [EQUATION] completes a universal set for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-9-0': 'I use quantum circuit notation rather extensively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-9-1': "A review of this formalism can be found in Nielsen and Chuang's book [CITATION].", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-9-2': 'I deviate slightly from their standard in that no decoration is added to distinguish encoded circuits from unencoded circuits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-10-0': 'A group of qubits combined via a quantum code into a logical (encoded) state is referred to as a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-10-1': 'Encoded states are identified by a bar over the contents of the ket.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-10-2': 'Operations which do not couple qubits that reside in the same block are called transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-10-3': 'I refer to a single qubit of a block and all qubits that directly or indirectly couple to it as a strand (see figure [REF]).', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-11-0': 'The notation [MATH] represents a quantum code encoding [MATH] logical qubits using [MATH] unencoded qubits and having a minimum distance of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-11-1': 'A code with minimum distance [MATH] can correct any error of weight less than or equal to [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-11-2': 'All codes dealt with in this paper have [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-12-0': '## CSS Codes', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-13-0': 'A generalized Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) code [CITATION] is a quantum code for which [MATH] (bit flip) and [MATH] (sign flip) errors can be corrected independently.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-13-1': 'Canonical CSS codes have the additional property that they are symmetric with respect to [MATH] and [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-13-2': 'This symmetry implies that encoded [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates can be implemented through transversal application of their unencoded equivalents.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-13-3': 'As a result of this useful property, CSS codes pervade the literature on fault tolerance, including this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-14-0': '## Fault Tolerance', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-15-0': 'Fault tolerance is an approach to computation and error correction that takes into account the fact that every component of a quantum computer is likely to be unreliable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-15-1': 'Gates, ancillae, measurements, and memory are all assumed to err with some probability.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-15-2': 'Fault tolerant constructions seek to minimize the effect of these errors by preventing their spread.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-15-3': 'This is achieved through the use of transversal operations, the expenditure of qubits, repetition, and, more recently, teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-16-0': 'The focus on minimizing the spread of errors is crucial.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-16-1': 'To have any hope of recovering our data, whether it be classical or quantum, we need some prior knowledge of the kinds of errors that are likely to occur.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-16-2': 'In the absence of any other information, we assume that errors on different parts of our computer are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-16-3': 'Fault tolerant operations are designed so that the failure of a single component does not result in an error on many different parts of an encoded state, thereby avoiding the creation of correlated errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-17-0': '## Thresholds', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-18-0': 'No matter how skillfully constructed the fault tolerant procedure, there remains for any finite code a finite probability that too many independent errors will occur in a computational step and our data will become irreparably corrupted.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-18-1': 'Consequently, failure is all but guaranteed for computations requiring more than some finite number of steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-18-2': 'To ensure that we can perform a computation of arbitrary length we need a way of making the error probability arbitrarily small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-19-0': 'The most common method of achieving an arbitrarily low error rate is known as concatenated coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-19-1': 'In concatenated coding, the process of encoding is divided into many levels.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-19-2': 'Zeroth level (physical) qubits are used to encode first level qubits, these first level qubits are then in turn used to encode second level qubits, second level qubits are used to encode third level qubits, and so on.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-19-3': 'The basic idea being that if encoding qubits reduces the error rate then encoding the encoding of the qubits should reduce the error rate even more.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-19-4': 'This provides us with a plausible sounding way of achieving an arbitrarily small error rate, we simply add layers of encoding until our error rate is acceptable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-20-0': 'But encoding will not always decrease our error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-20-1': 'It is possible for our gates to be so error prone that the process of applying an encoded gate and error correcting is less likely to succeed than simply applying the unencoded gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-20-2': 'From this observation arises the idea of a threshold error probability for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-20-3': 'The threshold is the error probability below which we can achieve an arbitrarily low error probability through encoding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-20-4': 'Put another way, it is the error probability below which we can compute indefinitely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-21-0': 'Determining the threshold exactly has proven to be a hard problem, but we can get some idea of its value through bounds and estimates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-21-1': 'To my knowledge, no useful upper bounds are known, but a number of lower bounds and estimates have been produced, typically relying on concatenation of explicit fault tolerant constructions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-21-2': 'The techniques for achieving rigorous lower bounds are not especially relevant to this paper, so they will not be discussed further.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-21-3': 'For more information on these techniques the reader is referred to work by Aharonov and Ben-Or, Aliferis et.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-21-4': 'al, and Reichardt [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-0': 'Estimates of the threshold for quantum computation are generally made by analyzing a particular fault tolerant implementation, typically one utilizing a specific finite code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-1': 'Fundamentally, these estimates derive from the idea that encoding is undesirable if [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-2': 'Intuitively, this makes sense; we would not expect error correction to be advantageous when an encoded gate or qubit is more likely to fail than an unencoded one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-3': 'Nonetheless, careful consideration of this justification reveals some difficulties with the argument.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-4': 'There are many sorts of errors, and it might well be the case that the encoded error rate increases for some of them, but not all.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-5': 'Even were there only one kind of error, however, the equation above would not provide us with a lower bound on the threshold, but only an estimate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-6': 'While, in that case, an increase in the error rate at the first level of concatenation implies that subsequent layers of concatenation also increase the error rate, the converse is not true.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-7': 'To see why, assume we have some fault tolerant procedure for which the encoded failure rate is less than the unencoded failure rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-8': 'At the first level our code is constructed of unencoded qubits that are either perfect or have failed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-9': 'At the second level of encoding, however, our code is constructed of singly encoded qubits that may be perfect, insufficiently corrupted to result in failure, or failed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-10': 'In some sense, the qubits that have not failed are now of lower quality than they were at the previous level.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-22-11': 'Thus, the fact that encoding worked at the previous level does not guarantee that it will work at the current one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-23-0': 'Details such as these imply that most threshold results are estimates rather than rigorous lower bounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-23-1': 'The interested reader can find a more thorough discussion of this issue in work by Svore and others [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-24-0': '# Assumptions', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-25-0': 'Some large part of the variance in fault tolerant threshold estimates is due to the variety of assumptions employed by various authors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-25-1': 'In an effort to combat confusion my assumptions are listed below roughly in order of novelty.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-26-0': 'All ancillary qubits have independent, identical error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-26-1': 'There are no memory errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-26-2': '[MATH] is the only two qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-26-3': 'Any two qubits can interact via a two qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-26-4': 'Gate failures are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-27-0': 'Assumptions [REF], [REF], and [REF] are necessary for my analysis.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-27-1': 'The others are convenient but optional.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-28-0': '# Thresholds for Homogeneous Formulae', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-29-0': 'Two important observations from section [REF] provide the foundation for my method of threshold estimation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-29-1': 'The first is that fault tolerant procedures are, to a large degree, transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-29-2': 'The second is that, for the kind of CSS codes typically employed, these transversal operations can be implemented by applying the same gate to every qubit in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-29-3': 'The sum of these observations is that most operations performed in a fault tolerant procedure consist of doing the same thing to each of the qubits in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-29-4': 'If I could arrange for all operations to have this property, which I refer to henceforth as homogeneity, analyzing the behavior of fault tolerant circuits would be greatly simplified.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-30-0': 'Three components of the typical fault tolerant formula stand in way of full homogeneity: ancilla production, syndrome extraction, and recovery.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-30-1': 'Each of these will be dealt with in turn, partly by keeping in mind that the eventual goal is to model errors, not computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-31-0': '## Ancillae', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-32-0': 'The ancillae used in fault tolerant procedures are typically prepared in highly entangled states.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-32-1': 'By definition, entangled states cannot be constructed without the interaction of the constituent parts, so there is no a priori reason to think that the qubits composing an ancilla will have either independent or identical error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-32-2': 'In practice, however, the production of an entangled ancilla is usually followed by a homogeneous verification circuit, and most of the residual error probability arises during this verification step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-32-3': 'With this is mind, I approximate ancillae as having uniform error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-32-4': 'The deviation of my threshold estimates from reality is primarily determined by the accuracy of this approximation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-33-0': '## Error Location', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-0': 'Current techniques for locating errors require performing a complicated and distinctly non-homogeneous function (known as syndrome extraction) on the output of ancillae measurement.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-1': 'But while this classical processing requires knowledge of all the measurements, its result, assuming that not more than the correctable number of errors have occurred, can be described in terms of the individual qubits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-2': 'So long as the total number of errors present at the time of measurement is less than half the minimum distance, the effect of syndrome extraction is to determine whether or not the outcome of measuring a particular qubit was flipped.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-3': 'Thus, the result of syndrome extraction for a particular qubit depends only on the presence or absence of errors on that qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-4': 'While this information is not directly available to a quantum computer, it is quite accessible to a theorist treating errors probabilistically.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-5': 'I can therefore model the effect of syndrome extraction in two steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-34-6': 'First, I determine whether too many errors have occurred on a block to permit proper decoding, and, if this is not the case, I consider the location of bit flips on the measured qubits to be revealed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-35-0': 'I have reduced the process of error location to a non-homogeneous failure check and an arguably homogeneous revelation step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-35-1': 'For a monte-carlo simulation, the failure check would consist of polling all of the other qubits and counting up the number of errors that have occurred to see whether they exceeded half the minimum distance of the code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-35-2': 'If instead we performed a probability flow analysis the expected probability of passing the check would be simply [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the probability that a particular qubit has an [MATH] error at the time of measurement, [MATH] is the number of qubits in the block, and [MATH] is the maximum number of errors that can be corrected with certainty by the code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-36-0': 'Equation [REF] immediately suggests a way of recovering full homogeneity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-36-1': 'Let [MATH], in the limit of large [MATH] equation [REF] becomes [EQUATION] which is again homogeneous from the perspective of a simulation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-36-2': 'As an added benefit, it is no longer necessary to concatenate many layers of coding; instead a vanishing error probability is achieved as the limit of a very large code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-36-3': 'This alternative to concatenation is known as large block coding or, simply, block coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-37-0': 'The preceding paragraphs demonstrate that, for homogeneous (independent, identically distributed) errors, whether or not an encoded state on a large number of qubits fails is determined by the error probability of an individual qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-37-1': 'For this result to be useful, an infinite family of CSS codes with non-vanishing fractional minimum distance must exist.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-37-2': 'Fortunately, it has been shown [CITATION] that CSS codes exist such that [MATH] for asymptotic values of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-37-3': 'It is not known whether a similar claim can be made for CSS codes in which the encoded phase gate can be implemented transversally, but this convenience is not necessary for my construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-38-0': '## Recovery', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-39-0': 'Having diagnosed the location of our errors, the obvious way of dealing with them is to apply to each qubit the gate which reverses its error.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-39-1': 'Such a recovery operation is inherently inhomogeneous since not all qubits will be in error, and thus not all qubits will have recovery gates applied to them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-39-2': 'There are a number of ways to deal with this problem, but I follow the lead of Knill [CITATION] and dispense with recovery altogether.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-39-3': 'I can get away with this because a Pauli string can either be thought of as an error or as an operator shifting us into a different (but equally viable) codespace.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-39-4': 'Put another way, we can ignore any errors that we know about since we know how to determine the effect (see subsection [REF]) they will have later in the circuit and this effect is easily accounted for when analyzing the results of measurements.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-40-0': 'By a similar argument I need never apply any Pauli gates, including those used to implement encoded Pauli gates!', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-41-0': '# Error Counting', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-42-0': 'We saw in the previous section that, when [MATH], the failure probability at any point can be predicted from the error probabilities of an individual strand of the transversal procedure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-42-1': 'Furthermore, we can say for certain whether our procedure fails on any given step since, in the infinite limit, the probability of an encoded failure becomes a step function.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-42-2': 'The threshold is completely determined by the probability of an encoded failure, and the probability of an encoded failure is completely determined by the error probability of a single strand of the blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-42-3': 'Thus, in order to calculate the threshold I need only determine the error probability on a single strand at every point in the fault tolerant circuit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-42-4': 'This can be accomplished through a combination of error propagation and exhaustive bookkeeping which I describe in the following subsections.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-43-0': '## Error Propagation', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-44-0': 'Error propagation relies on the fact that the Pauli group is invariant under conjugation by Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-44-1': 'This implies that any string of Pauli gates followed by a Clifford gate is equivalent to the same Clifford gate followed by some (possibly different) string of Pauli gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-44-2': 'Consequently, it is possible to shuffle Pauli errors to the end of a Clifford circuit, thus yielding a perfect outcome modified by the resultant Pauli operators (see figure [REF]).', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-44-3': 'The issue of non-Pauli type errors is automatically taken care of by measuring in the Pauli basis when performing error correction; the measurements have the effect of projecting the original error into the Pauli basis.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-44-4': '(Mischievous readers may object that the [MATH] rotation is not a Clifford gate; such readers are directed to appendix [REF].)', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-45-0': '## Error Bookkeeping', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-46-0': 'Given a gate, say the Hadamard, and a set of probabilities describing the likelihood of various Pauli errors, say [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] for the errors [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], the post gate state can be written as a probabilistically selected pure state, such that [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-46-1': 'The effect of applying further Clifford gates is to change, via error propagation, which Pauli error corresponds to each probability, and then to add a second layer of probabilistic errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-46-2': 'If, for example, we were to apply another Hadamard gate our state would become [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-46-3': 'By repeated application of this process it is possible to determine the probability of various kinds of errors at any point in a circuit composed of Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-46-4': 'Armed with this knowledge we can determine the likelihood of an encoded failure or, in the infinite limit, whether an encoded failure will happen or not.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-47-0': '## Practicalities', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-48-0': 'Encoded failure rates were determined for a universal set, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates, as well as for an idle step that accounted for the possibility of changing the order of [MATH] and [MATH] error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-48-1': 'No checks were made on the encoded [MATH] gate following its first error correction, since the remainder consists of applying the encoded [MATH] gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-48-2': 'The encoded [MATH] gate was assumed pessimistically to be implemented via a teleportation process akin to that used for [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-0': 'The error probabilities for gates, measurements, and ancillae were left as free parameters.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-1': '[MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote one-qubit, two-qubit, measurement, [MATH]-type ancilla, and [MATH]-type ancilla error probabilities where [MATH] ranges over the single-qubit Pauli errors and [MATH] ranges over the two-qubit Pauli errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-2': 'Note that ancillary error probabilities are labeled irrespective of what the ancilla encodes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-3': '[MATH]-type ancillae are presumed to have been verified in a way that reduces [MATH] errors more than [MATH] errors and contrariwise for [MATH]-type ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-4': 'In the absence of better information, I assume that ancillae are tested, with discard on failure, for both [MATH] and [MATH] errors using a transversal coupling.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-5': 'In this case I approximate the ancillary error distributions as [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-6': 'Though my code retains probabilities up to second order, the results given in the following sections include only first order terms.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-7': 'Second order terms were found to be negligible for any plausible choice of probabilities.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-8': 'To see why, let [MATH] be the expected probability of an error at a specific location due to a single gate failure and [MATH] be the corresponding probability for two gate failures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-9': 'The ratio of these two expectations is bounded by [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-10': 'The first inequality is due to the fact that many secondary errors will be harmless or even beneficial.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-11': 'The second applies to the examples of the next section in which [MATH], the number of relevant gates, is never greater than [MATH] and [MATH], the probability of an individual gate failing, never exceeds [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-12': 'In practice, either [MATH] or [MATH] will be much smaller in any particular procedure, rendering the second order contribution unimportant.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-49-13': 'Readers concerned about these neglected terms should also note that they will typically be negative; neglecting negative terms can only lower the threshold estimates, making my results more conservative.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-50-0': '# Special Cases', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-51-0': 'Having described the operation of my algorithm, I now apply it to three cases of interest.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-51-1': 'Two of these are variants on a fault tolerant formula suggested by Steane [CITATION], while the third case is a fault tolerant telecorrection procedure of the type proposed by Knill [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-51-2': 'Error probabilities are determined separately for each procedure and each encoded gate with the maximum taken over the measurement steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-52-0': 'The unrefined output of this endeavor is rather unwieldy and as such has been relegated to the appendices in the form of a table (see table [REF]) of maximum strand error probabilities.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-52-1': 'Here I restrict my attention to the reduced error models listed in table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-53-0': 'The following subsections provide supplemental information specific to each procedure, including qualitative reviews of the procedures, circuit diagrams for encoded gates, and commentary on the thresholds given in table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-54-0': "## Steane's Formula", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-55-0': "Steane's formula is characterized by the extraction of error information through the coupling of encoded data to ancillae prepared in simple logical states.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-55-1': 'Using an ancilla prepared in the logical state [MATH]) it is possible via a single transversal two-qubit operation to extract information about the location of [MATH]) errors on all qubits in a data block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-0': "Typical instantiations of Steane's formula employ multiple extractions to guard against errors made during the coupling and measurement process.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-1': 'Often [CITATION] the number of extractions performed is conditional their output.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-2': 'I deviate from this rule by demanding a fixed number of couplings.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-3': 'This a sensible choice for my analysis since, up to rearrangement of qubits, the output of an extraction becomes deterministic as the number of qubits in an encoding approaches infinity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-4': 'Moreover, if [MATH] is the probability of an error occurring, requiring the sequential agreement of [MATH] extractions reduces the probability of misdiagnosing an error on a particular line to order [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-56-5': 'Since I ultimately retain only first order terms I need only consider single and double coupling Steane procedures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-57-0': '### Single Coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-58-0': 'Two-qubit gates require a controlled interaction between two otherwise isolated quantum systems.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-58-1': 'Consequently, they are often the most error prone gates in a universal set.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-58-2': 'In such cases, the factor limiting the probability of successful error correction may be the number of times that two-qubit gates must be applied to the data in order to reliably diagnose errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-58-3': "For Steane's formula, this interaction is minimized by coupling to the data once per [MATH] correction and once per [MATH] correction.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-59-0': 'Table [REF] shows that, relative to the other procedures considered, the single coupling Steane procedure performs most strongly for error model 3.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-59-1': 'This is in line with our expectations since model 3 includes only two-qubit gate errors and the resultant ancilla errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-59-2': 'Surprisingly, it also does rather well overall, showing that even moderate single-qubit and measurement error probabilities can be tolerated when high quality ancillae are available.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-60-0': '### Double Coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-61-0': 'When two-qubit gates are relatively reliable, the damage done during the extraction of error information can be limited by preparing ancillae such that they include few errors capable of propagating to the data.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-61-1': 'Under these circumstances, it is often advantageous to verify error diagnoses by coupling to the data more than once.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-62-0': 'For the double coupling Steane procedure, error model 1 is especially interesting because it was chosen in imitation of the error model used by Benjamin Reichardt [CITATION] in his numerical estimation of the threshold for a Steane style procedure on a 49 qubit code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-62-1': 'My threshold of [MATH] is quite close to his value of roughly [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-62-2': 'This correspondence is promising because it suggests that the idealizations underlying my algorithm may be approximately satisfied for practically sized systems.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-62-3': "Implementing Steane's formula with 49 qubit ancillae prepared via a liberal discard policy yields basically the same threshold as implementing it with very large ancillae prepared such that errors due to the two-qubit gates used for verification dominate.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-63-0': 'Error models 3 and 4 demonstrate small gains in the threshold that can result when two-qubit gate errors have some underlying structure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-63-1': 'Model 3 is a pure two-qubit-gate depolarizing error model (which includes the associated ancilla errors) while 4 is a model in which two-qubit gates malfunction by producing either an [MATH] or a [MATH] error on either the control or the target.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-63-2': 'Given the highly restricted form of error model 4 it is discouraging that the threshold increases by only [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-63-3': 'Nonetheless, the possibility of larger gains in a procedure designed to take advantage of some particular error distribution is not ruled out.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-64-0': "## Knill's Formula", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-0': "Knill's formula for fault tolerant quantum computation [CITATION] utilizes telecorrection.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-1': 'Telecorrection, error correction by teleportation, requires the application of even fewer two-qubit gates to the data undergoing correction than a single coupling Steane error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-2': 'The cost of this innovation is a greater reliance on the ability to produce high quality ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-3': "In effect, Knill's formula exchanges the error distribution of an encoded data block for that of one half of an ancilla prepared in a logical Bell state.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-4': 'Failure occurs only when too many errors are present at the time of measurement to correctly identify the encoded Pauli operator needed to complete the teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-65-5': 'Conveniently, encoded single-qubit gates can be accomplished by performing the teleportation using a logical Bell state prepared with the desired gate already applied to one half.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-66-0': "For my implementation of Knill's formula, error model 4 achieves the highest threshold, an impressive [MATH], though physical systems displaying this sort of error seem unlikely.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-66-1': 'Error model 2 provides another check of our algorithm, since its parameters were taken from a paper by Knill [CITATION] on telecorrection.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-66-2': "I find that the threshold for this model is [MATH] compared to Knill's result of [MATH] and his estimate of [MATH]!", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-66-3': 'I believe the discrepancy is largely due to the fact that Knill uses not the asymptotic minimum distance but the asymptotic correctable error fraction [CITATION] to determine his thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-66-4': 'To my knowledge, the asymptotic correctable error fraction for CSS codes is unknown.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-0': 'Of course the most eye-catching aspect of table [REF] is that the Knill procedure results in a higher threshold for every error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-1': 'As with the single coupling Steane case, this partly results from my assumptions regarding ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-2': "In particular, Steane's formula was designed to utilize ancilla for which either correlated [MATH] or correlated [MATH] errors could be minimized, but not both, a situation certain to favor his approach.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-3': "A lesser objection can be made that I set the ancilla error probabilities equal for all gates and all formulae, but this ignores the fact that some formulae, such as Knill's, and some gates, such as the [MATH] gate, will require more complex ancillae, which may in turn be more error prone.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-4': 'Substantially more detailed ancilla information would be needed to evaluate the importance of this effect, but the overall character of my results is unlikely to change since that would entail in excess of a two fold increase in the error probabilities for logical two-qubit ancillae over those for ancillae prepared in a single-qubit logical state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-67-5': "Thus, so long as resource considerations do not limit our ability to discard suspect ancillae, and therefore to make very high quality ancillae, Knill's formula will provide the highest thresholds.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-68-0': '# Resource Usage', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-69-0': 'Superficially, block coding seems more resource intensive, in terms of physical qubits, than concatenated coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-69-1': 'I consider block codes in the limit that the number of encoding qubits goes to infinity, whereas a single level of encoding for a concatenated code requires only a finite number of qubits, commonly seven.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-69-2': 'Recall, however, that the threshold results for concatenation depend on layering one level of encoding upon another, a process that rapidly increases the number of physical qubits employed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-69-3': 'By contrast, block coding can be used to achieve indefinite computation through a single level of encoding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-70-0': 'To get an accurate picture of the relative resource requirements of each approach, it is necessary to consider how the failure probability scales as a function of the number of qubits employed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-70-1': 'Andrew Steane has performed this analysis for large block coding [CITATION] concluding that the dominant term in the encoded failure rate is [MATH] where [MATH] is a constant greater than one and [MATH] is the total number of physical qubits comprising a logical qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-70-2': 'By contrast, John Preskill [CITATION] has shown that the failure rate for encoding via concatenation of an [MATH] quantum code scales according to [MATH] where [MATH] is independent of [MATH] and greater than one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-70-3': 'The number of qubits, [MATH], in a code is always greater than the number of correctable errors plus one, so the power of [MATH] for concatenated codes is less than [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-70-4': 'Thus, in the limit of large [MATH], block coding actually uses fewer unencoded qubits than concatenated coding to achieve the same encoded failure rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-71-0': 'A more serious concern, at least for the examples given in this paper, is the verification of ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-71-1': 'My assumptions in section [REF] regarding residual ancillary errors best approximate that which we would expect for ancillae verified via a procedure that discarded them whenever an error was indicated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-71-2': 'This approach to ancilla preparation is very resource intensive, with the number of discarded qubits scaling exponentially with [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-71-3': 'More efficient procedures are easily formulated, but they typically result in increased ancilla errors, thereby yielding lower threshold estimates than those presented here.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-72-0': 'The greatest difficultly in terms of resources, however, is posed by the construction of states for use in the verification circuit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-72-1': 'A construction routine must have non-vanishing probability of generating an ancilla that has good fidelity with the desired state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-72-2': 'Fault tolerant schemes using concatenated codes provide a method of achieving this for arbitrarily large ancillae, but as a side effect of universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-72-3': 'At present, there is no known method of preparing a logical qubit encoded using a CSS code of arbitrary size that does not depend on the ability to perform universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-73-0': '# Conclusion', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-0': 'I have described a general method for generating thresholds for fault tolerant formulae employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-1': 'My approach relies on the fact that most elements of such a procedure are homogeneous, that is, transversal with identical components.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-2': 'Inhomogeneous elements are either eliminated, as for classical syndrome processing and the application of recovery unitaries, or, as in the case of ancillae, approximated as being homogeneous.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-3': 'This allows me to calculate the probability of failure for encoded gates in terms of the error probabilities associated with a single strand of the encoded blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-4': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits approaches infinity, the criterion for success becomes simply that the probability of finding an error never exceed the fraction of the encoded qubits on which said error can be corrected.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-74-5': 'When this is satisfied, it is possible, in the limit of infinite block size, to compute indefinitely, and our base error rates are, by definition, below threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-75-0': 'The enabling assumption of my analysis is that ancillae can be prepared such that they only suffer from independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-75-1': 'I argue that error detection yields ancillae for which the undetected errors approximate this ideal, a conjecture supported by the success of my algorithm in replicating the threshold results of Reichardt [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-75-2': "For similar assumptions I find a depolarizing threshold of [MATH] compared to Reichardt's [MATH].", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-75-3': "A less satisfying match is achieved for Knill's work [CITATION], where my analysis yields a threshold of [MATH] compared to his value of possibly more than [MATH].", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-75-4': 'The discrepancy is, however, unsurprising in light of the fact that Knill uses the quantum-depolarizing-channel capacity for bounding the acceptable number of errors while I make use of the minimum distance.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-76-0': 'In addition to the results mentioned above, section [REF] includes a number of other thresholds for interesting error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-76-1': 'A [MATH] increase in the threshold is observed for the double coupling Steane procedure when the two-qubit error model is changed to one which is not depolarizing.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-76-2': 'The single coupling Steane procedure is shown to outperform the double coupling procedure when two-qubit depolarizing errors dominate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-76-3': 'The thresholds also provide a direct comparison of the Steane and Knill formulae for fault tolerance.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-76-4': "I find that Knill's approach outperforms that of Steane for all error models considered, a conclusion that is likely to hold so long as correlated ancillary errors are rare and the ancillae needed for Knill's formula are not appreciably more error prone than those employed by Steane.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-0': 'Much further work remains to be done on this subject.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-1': 'The most important extension would be to explicitly define methods of ancilla construction and determine the degree to which they differ from my ideal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-2': 'Constructing ancillae to my specifications is an extremely difficult problem, but one whose solution would have a strong impact on the theory of quantum computing in general and this work in particular.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-3': 'A scalable method for producing ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors would enable the algorithm presented here to be employed for the calculation of rigorous lower bounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-4': 'A second topic of interest is the tailoring of fault tolerant procedures to the error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-5': 'It was my initial hope that restricted error models would greatly improve the tolerable error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-6': 'While this was not observed in existing fault tolerant procedures, the possibility remains that tailored procedures could improve the threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-7': 'Thirdly, for simplicity my analysis neglected memory errors, but the basic idea applies without modification.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-77-8': 'It might worthwhile to extend my results to cover systems in which memory errors play a major role.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-78-0': 'My algorithm simplifies the process of determining fault tolerant thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-78-1': 'I provide table [REF] in the appendix for researchers who wish to estimate the threshold of the Steane or Knill formula given a particular error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-78-2': 'For those interested in analyzing different fault tolerant formulae, my Mathematica code is available at http://info.phys.unm.edu/ beastinhttp://info.phys.unm.edu/beastin .', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-78-3': 'I hope that it will prove a useful tool.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-79-0': 'Suggestions and criticisms regarding this work were provided by Andrew Silberfarb, Steven Flammia, Andrew Landahl, and Jim Harrington.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-79-1': 'John Preskill graciously pointed out the perils of ancilla construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-79-2': 'Carlton Caves and Ivan Deutsch supplied inspiration and guidance in all stages of the project.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-79-3': 'I gratefully acknowledge these contributions as well as funding received from ARO Contract No. W911NF-04-1-0242.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-80-0': '# [MATH] Rotation T Gate', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-0': 'The [MATH] rotation, [MATH], is not a member of the Clifford group.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-1': 'This means that [MATH] does not take Pauli strings to Pauli strings under conjugation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-2': 'A logical [MATH] gate would also have this property, thereby confounding the simple error propagation routine used in this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-3': 'For CSS codes, however, the encoded [MATH] gate is not applied directly; instead, the logical state [EQUATION] is prepared and the data qubit is effectively teleported under the [MATH] gate using the following encoded circuit: [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-4': 'If necessary, [MATH] can be implemented in the same way as [MATH]; otherwise the gates applied are Clifford operations (both in terms of the encoding and its constituent qubits), so error propagation proceeds without a hitch.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-5': 'There is a modest slight of hand here, in that we would not, if we so desired, be able to apply error propagation during the construction of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-81-6': 'For my purposes this is unimportant since I do not model the construction of ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-82-0': '[p]', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-83-0': 'Maximum error probability for a single strand of various encoded gates for a selection of fault tolerant procedures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-83-1': "The subscripted [MATH]'s refer to probabilities of error of various unencoded operations with [MATH], [MATH], [MATH] denoting Pauli errors, [MATH] measurement errors, and [MATH] and [MATH] ancilla errors.", 'quant-ph-0605192-1-83-2': 'Thus [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] denote the probabilities of a single-qubit-gate [MATH] error, a [MATH] error on the target of a [MATH], a [MATH] error on the control of a [MATH], a measurement error, and a [MATH] error on an [MATH] type ancilla.', 'quant-ph-0605192-1-83-3': 'A procedure is below threshold when the maximum error probability for all gates is less than 5.5%.'}
{'quant-ph-0605192-2-0-0': 'I describe a procedure for estimating thresholds for quantum computation as a function of error model given the availability of ancillae prepared in logical states with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-0-1': 'The thresholds are determined via a simple counting argument performed on a single qubit of an infinitely large CSS code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-0-2': 'I give concrete examples of thresholds thus achievable for both Steane and Knill style fault tolerant implementations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-1-0': '# Introduction', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-2-0': 'The threshold for fault tolerant quantum computation is defined as the error rate below which, given an unlimited (but sub-exponential) number of qubits, it is possible to compute indefinitely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-2-1': 'Knowledge of thresholds is clearly an important tool for use in the design of quantum computing architectures, but as of yet no simple unified scheme exists for determining them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-2-2': 'The great variance of threshold estimates in the literature is due partly to advances and improvements in the field of fault tolerance, but also partly to differing approximations and assumptions regarding error models and resources.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-2-3': 'This makes direct comparison of fault tolerant procedures difficult and tends to limit error models to some form of the depolarizing channel.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-2-4': 'The work presented herein was motivated by the desire for a method of threshold estimation that could easily be applied to a variety of error models and fault tolerant methods.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-3-0': 'Recent work by Reichardt [CITATION] has indicated that, assuming we are willing to discard suspect states, moderately sized ancillae can be prepared so well that their contribution to the failure probability of an encoded circuit becomes small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-3-1': 'Moreover, my own investigations suggest that the residual error on such ancillae is primarily due to their verification.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-3-2': 'Inspired by these revelations, I sought a way of determining the threshold given the availability of ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors, expecting that the resulting estimate would not be too different from that which might be achieved through a liberal expenditure of qubits during ancilla production.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-4-0': 'This paper describes such a means of threshold estimation for fault tolerant methods employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-4-1': 'I assume that it is possible to prepare logical states such that errors on the component qubits are independent and all qubits have the same error spectrum.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-4-2': 'Using this assumption as well as the structure of CSS encoded gates and a few error propagation tricks, it is possible to express the failure probability of an encoded operation in terms of the error probabilities of a single strand of the block code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-4-3': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits goes to infinity, the criterion for encoded failure becomes particularly simple, consequently yielding a threshold in which all error probabilities are free parameters, including the probabilities of different kinds of Pauli errors on a particular gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-0': 'The structure of this paper is as follows.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-1': 'Section [REF] introduces notation and gives a brief exposition of CSS codes, fault tolerance, and thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-2': 'Section [REF] enumerates my assumptions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-3': 'Section [REF] outlines the theory needed to generate thresholds using an infinitely large CSS code and logical ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-4': 'Section [REF] describes in detail how the necessary error probabilities are determined.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-5': 'Section [REF] performs this analysis for a few cases of special interest, including Knill and Steane style fault tolerant quantum computation schemes paired with a selection of error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-6': 'Section [REF] discusses the resource requirements of my approach.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-5-7': 'Finally, section [REF] concludes with a brief review of my results and a discussion of possible directions for future work.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-6-0': '# Background', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-7-0': '## Notation', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-8-0': 'Throughout this paper [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote the Pauli operators while [MATH] denotes the controlled-NOT or xor gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-8-1': 'I also make use of Hadamard and phase gates, which are given in the standard basis by [EQUATION] respectively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-8-2': 'Together these gates span the Clifford group, an important subset of quantum operations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-8-3': 'The addition of the [MATH] rotation, [EQUATION] completes a universal set for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-9-0': 'I use quantum circuit notation rather extensively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-9-1': "A review of this formalism can be found in Nielsen and Chuang's book [CITATION].", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-9-2': 'I deviate slightly from their standard in that no decoration is added to distinguish encoded circuits from unencoded circuits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-10-0': 'A group of qubits combined via a quantum code into a logical (encoded) state is referred to as a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-10-1': 'Encoded states are identified by a line over the contents of the ket; encoded gates are similarly decorated when not part of a circuit diagram.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-11-0': 'Operations which do not couple qubits that reside in the same block are called transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-11-1': 'This designation is in contrast to some of the literature, which insists additionally that transversal operations should apply the same component operation to each qubit of a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-11-2': 'In this paper, operations satisfying both properties are called homogeneous.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-12-0': 'I refer to a single qubit of a block and all qubits that directly or indirectly couple to it as a strand.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-12-1': 'Gates between pairs of qubits should be thought of as binding then into the same strand, as illustrated in Fig. [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-13-0': 'The notation [MATH] represents a quantum code encoding [MATH] logical qubits using [MATH] unencoded qubits and having a minimum distance of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-13-1': 'A code with minimum distance [MATH] can correct any error of weight less than or equal to [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-13-2': 'All codes dealt with in this paper have [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-14-0': '## CSS Codes', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-15-0': 'A generalized Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) code [CITATION] is a quantum code for which [MATH] (bit flip) and [MATH] (sign flip) errors can be corrected independently.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-15-1': 'Canonical CSS codes have the additional property that they are symmetric with respect to interchange of [MATH] and [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-15-2': 'This symmetry implies that encoded [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates can be implemented through transversal application of their unencoded equivalents.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-15-3': 'As a result of this useful property, CSS codes pervade the literature on fault tolerance, including this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-16-0': '## Fault Tolerance', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-17-0': 'Fault tolerant design is an approach to computation and error correction that takes into account the fact that every component of a quantum computer is likely to be unreliable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-17-1': 'Gates, ancillae, measurements, and memory are all assumed to err with some probability.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-17-2': 'Fault tolerant constructions seek to minimize the effect of these errors by preventing their spread.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-17-3': 'This is achieved through the use of transversal operations, the expenditure of qubits, repetition, and, more recently, teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-18-0': 'The focus on minimizing the spread of errors is crucial.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-18-1': 'To have any hope of recovering corrupted data, whether it be classical or quantum, we need some prior knowledge of the kinds of errors that are likely to occur.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-18-2': 'In the absence of any other information, it is generally assumed that errors on different parts of a computer are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-18-3': 'Fault tolerant operations are designed so that the failure of a single component does not result in an error on many different parts of an encoded state, thereby avoiding the creation of correlated errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-19-0': '## Thresholds', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-20-0': 'No matter how skillfully constructed the fault tolerant procedure, there remains for any finite code a non-zero probability that too many independent errors will occur in a computational step and our data will become irreparably corrupted.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-20-1': 'Consequently, the probability of failure approaches [MATH] as the length of the computation increases.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-20-2': 'To ensure that we can perform a computation of arbitrary length we need a way of making the error probability arbitrarily small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-21-0': 'The most common method of achieving an arbitrarily low error rate is known as concatenated coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-21-1': 'In concatenated coding, the process of encoding is divided into many levels.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-21-2': 'Zeroth level (physical) qubits are used to encode first level qubits, these first level qubits are then in turn used to encode second level qubits, second level qubits are used to encode third level qubits, and so on.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-21-3': 'The basic idea is the following: "If encoding qubits reduces the error rate then encoding the encoded qubits should reduce the error rate even more."', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-21-4': 'This provides us with a plausible sounding way of achieving an arbitrarily small error rate; we simply add layers of encoding until our error rate is acceptable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-22-0': 'But encoding will not always decrease our error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-22-1': 'It is possible for our hardware to be so error prone that the process of applying an encoded gate and error correcting is less likely to succeed than simply applying the unencoded gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-22-2': 'From this observation arises the idea of a threshold error probability for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-22-3': 'The threshold is the unencoded error probability below which we can achieve an arbitrarily low encoded error probability using a number of qubits that scales polynomially in the size of the problem.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-22-4': 'Put another way, it is the error probability below which we can compute indefinitely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-23-0': 'Determining the threshold exactly for a given set of assumptions has proven to be a hard problem, but we can get some idea of its value through bounds and estimates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-23-1': 'Upper bounds resulting from proofs of classical simulability have pushed the depolarizing threshold below [MATH] [CITATION], while lower bounds on the order of [MATH] [CITATION] have been rigorously proven through concatenation of explicit fault tolerant constructions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-23-2': 'This paper focuses on estimates of the threshold, which have recently settled near the [MATH] mark [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-0': 'Estimates of the threshold for quantum computation are generally made by analyzing a particular fault tolerant implementation using a specific finite code under concatenation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-1': 'Fundamentally, these estimates derive from the idea that encoding is undesirable if [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-2': 'Intuitively, this makes sense; we would not expect error correction to be advantageous when an encoded gate or qubit is more likely to fail than an unencoded one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-3': 'Nonetheless, careful consideration of this justification reveals some difficulties with the argument.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-4': 'There are many sorts of errors, and it might well be the case that the encoded error rate increases for some of them, but not all.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-5': 'Even were there only one kind of error, however, the equation above would not provide us with a lower bound on the threshold, but only an estimate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-6': 'While, in that case, an increase in the error rate at the first level of concatenation implies that subsequent layers of concatenation also increase the error rate, the converse is not true.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-7': 'To see why, assume we have some fault tolerant procedure for which the encoded failure rate is less than the unencoded failure rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-8': 'At the first level our code is constructed of unencoded qubits that are either perfect or have failed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-9': 'At the second level of encoding, however, our code is constructed of singly encoded qubits that may be perfect, insufficiently corrupted to result in failure, or failed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-10': 'In some sense, the qubits that have not failed are now of lower quality than they were at the previous level.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-24-11': 'Thus, the fact that encoding worked at the previous level does not guarantee that it will work at the current one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-25-0': 'Details such as these imply that most threshold results are estimates rather than rigorous lower bounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-25-1': 'The interested reader can find a more thorough discussion of this issue in work by Svore and others [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-26-0': '# Assumptions', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-27-0': 'Some large part of the variance in fault tolerant threshold estimates is due to the variety of assumptions employed by various authors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-27-1': 'In an effort to combat confusion, my assumptions are listed below roughly in order of novelty.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-0': 'All ancillary qubits have independent, identical error distributions described by trace preserving quantum operations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-1': 'There are no memory errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-2': '[MATH] is the only two qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-3': 'Any two qubits can interact via a two qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-4': 'Gate failures are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-28-5': 'Classical computation is fast and cheap.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-29-0': 'Assumptions [REF], [REF], [REF], and [REF] are necessary for my analysis; the others are convenient but optional.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-29-1': 'Assumption [REF] obviates the need to consider questions of parallelism and gate timing, while Assumption [REF] reduces the number of cases that must be considered.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-30-0': '# Thresholds for Homogeneous Methods', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-31-0': 'Two important observations from section [REF] provide the foundation for my method of threshold estimation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-31-1': 'The first is that fault tolerant procedures for CSS codes are, to a large degree, transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-31-2': 'The second is that, for the kind of CSS codes typically employed, these transversal operations can be implemented by applying the same gate to every qubit in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-31-3': 'The sum of these observations is that most operations performed in a fault tolerant procedure consist of doing the same thing to each of the qubits in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-31-4': 'If one could arrange for all operations to have this property, which I refer to henceforth as homogeneity, analyzing the behavior of fault tolerant circuits would be greatly simplified.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-32-0': 'Three components of the typical fault tolerant method stand in way of full homogeneity: ancilla production, syndrome extraction, and recovery.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-32-1': 'Each of these will be dealt with in turn, partly by keeping in mind that the eventual goal is to model errors, not computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-33-0': '## Ancillae', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-34-0': 'The ancillae used in CSS code fault tolerant procedures are typically prepared in highly entangled states, i.e. in logical basis states.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-34-1': 'By definition, entangled states cannot be constructed without the interaction of the constituent parts, so there is no a priori reason to think that the qubits composing an ancilla will have either independent or identical error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-34-2': 'In practice, however, the production of an entangled ancilla is usually followed by a homogeneous verification circuit, and most of the residual error probability arises during this verification step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-34-3': 'With this is mind, I approximate ancillae as having uniform error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-34-4': 'The deviation of my threshold estimates from reality is primarily determined by the accuracy of this approximation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-35-0': '## Error Location', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-0': 'Current techniques for locating errors require performing a complicated and distinctly non-homogeneous function on the output of ancilla measurement.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-1': 'But while this classical processing requires knowledge of all the measurements, its effect, assuming that not more than the correctable number of errors have occurred, can be described in terms of the individual qubits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-2': 'So long as the total number of errors present on a measured ancilla is less than half the minimum distance, the effect of the classical processing is to determine a subset of the measured bits that can be flipped to yield an undamaged codeword on the ancilla.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-3': 'For the purposes of error correction, knowing this string is equivalent to knowing the location of all the errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-4': 'While the second kind of information is not directly available to a quantum computer, it is quite accessible to a theorist treating errors probabilistically.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-5': 'I can therefore model the effect of classical processing in two steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-36-6': 'First, I determine whether too many errors have occurred on a block to permit proper decoding, and, if this is not the case, I consider the location of bit flips on the measured qubits to be revealed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-37-0': 'I have reduced the process of error location to a non-homogeneous failure check and an arguably homogeneous revelation step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-37-1': 'For a Monte-Carlo simulation, the failure check would consist of polling all of the other qubits and counting up the number of errors that have occurred to see whether they exceeded half the minimum distance of the code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-37-2': 'If instead we performed a probability flow analysis, the expected probability of passing the check would be simply [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the probability that a particular qubit has an [MATH] error at the time of measurement, [MATH] is the number of qubits in the block, and [MATH] is the maximum number of errors that can be corrected with certainty by the code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-38-0': 'Equation [REF] suggests a way of recovering full homogeneity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-38-1': 'Letting [MATH], in the limit of large [MATH], Eq. ([REF]) becomes [EQUATION] which is again homogeneous from the perspective of a simulation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-38-2': 'As an added benefit, it is no longer necessary to concatenate many layers of coding; instead a vanishing error probability is achieved as the limit of a very large code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-38-3': 'This alternative to concatenation is known as large block coding or, simply, block coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-39-0': 'The preceding paragraphs demonstrate that, for homogeneous (independent, identically distributed) errors, whether or not an encoded state on a large number of qubits fails is determined by the error probability of an individual qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-39-1': 'For this result to be useful, an infinite family of CSS codes with non-vanishing fractional minimum distance must exist.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-39-2': 'Fortunately, it has been shown [CITATION] that CSS codes exist such that [MATH] for asymptotic values of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-39-3': 'It is not known whether a similar claim can be made for CSS codes in which the encoded phase gate can be implemented transversally, but this convenience is not necessary for my construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-40-0': '## Recovery', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-41-0': 'Having diagnosed the location of our errors, the obvious way of dealing with them is to apply to each qubit the gate which reverses its error.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-41-1': 'Such a recovery operation is inherently inhomogeneous since not all qubits will be in error, and thus not all qubits will have recovery gates applied to them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-41-2': 'There are a number of ways to deal with this problem, but I follow the lead of Knill [CITATION] and dispense with recovery altogether.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-41-3': 'I can get away with this because a Pauli string can either be thought of as an error or as an operator shifting us into a different (but equally viable) codespace.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-41-4': 'Put another way, we can ignore any errors that we know about since we know how to determine the effect (see subsection [REF]) they will have later in the circuit and this effect is easily accounted for when analyzing the results of measurements.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-42-0': 'By a similar argument I need never apply any Pauli gates, including those used to implement encoded Pauli gates!', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-43-0': '# Error Counting', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-44-0': 'We saw in the previous section that, when [MATH], the failure probability at any point can be predicted from the error probabilities of an individual strand of the transversal procedure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-44-1': 'Furthermore, we can say for certain whether our procedure fails on any given step since, in the infinite limit, the probability of an encoded failure becomes a step function.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-44-2': 'The threshold is completely determined by the probability of an encoded failure, and the probability of an encoded failure is completely determined by the error probability of a single strand of the blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-44-3': 'Thus, in order to calculate the threshold I need only determine the error probability on a single strand at every point in the fault tolerant circuit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-44-4': 'This can be accomplished through a combination of error propagation and exhaustive bookkeeping which I describe in the following subsections.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-45-0': '## Error Propagation', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-46-0': 'Error propagation relies on the fact that the Pauli group is invariant under conjugation by Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-46-1': 'This implies that any string of Pauli gates followed by a Clifford gate is equivalent to the same Clifford gate followed by some (possibly different) string of Pauli gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-46-2': 'Consequently, it is possible to shuffle Pauli errors to the end of a Clifford circuit, thus yielding a perfect outcome modified by the resultant Pauli operators (see Fig. [REF]).', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-46-3': 'The issue of non-Pauli type errors is automatically taken care of by measuring in the Pauli basis when performing error correction; the measurements have the effect of projecting the original error into the Pauli basis.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-46-4': '(Some readers may object that the [MATH] rotation is not a Clifford gate; such readers are directed to the appendix.)', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-47-0': '## Error Bookkeeping', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-48-0': 'Given a gate, say the Hadamard, and a set of probabilities describing the likelihood of various Pauli errors, say [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] for the errors [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], the post gate state can be written as a probabilistically selected pure state, such that [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-48-1': 'The effect of applying further Clifford gates is to change, via error propagation, which Pauli error corresponds to each probability, and then to add a second layer of probabilistic errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-48-2': 'If, for example, we were to apply another Hadamard gate our state would become [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-48-3': 'By repeated application of this process it is possible to determine the probability of various kinds of errors at any point in a circuit composed of Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-48-4': 'Armed with this knowledge we can determine the likelihood of an encoded failure or, in the infinite limit, whether an encoded failure will happen or not.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-49-0': '## Practicalities', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-50-0': 'Encoded failure rates were determined for a universal set, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates, as well as for an idle step that accounted for the possibility of changing the order of [MATH] and [MATH] error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-50-1': 'No checks were made on the encoded [MATH] gate following its first error correction, since the remainder consists of applying the encoded [MATH] gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-50-2': 'The encoded [MATH] gate was assumed pessimistically to be implemented via a teleportation process akin to that used for [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-0': 'The error probabilities for gates, measurements, and ancillae were left as free parameters.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-1': '[MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote one-qubit, two-qubit, measurement, [MATH]-type ancilla, and [MATH]-type ancilla error probabilities where [MATH] ranges over the single-qubit Pauli errors and [MATH] ranges over the two-qubit Pauli errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-2': 'Note that ancillae are labeled irrespective of what they encode.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-3': '[MATH]-type ancillae are used in locations where [MATH] errors are more disruptive than [MATH] errors, and contrariwise for [MATH]-type ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-4': 'In the absence of better information, I assume that [MATH]-type ancillae are tested using a homogeneous coupling, with discard on failure, for first [MATH] and then [MATH] errors; the opposite order is used for [MATH]-type ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-51-5': 'In this case I approximate the ancillary error distributions as [EQUATION] which is (to first order) what one would expect if the only errors on a verified ancilla were due to undetectable errors on the [MATH] gates used to check it.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-0': 'Though my code retains probabilities up to second order, the results given in the following sections include only first order terms.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-1': 'Second order terms were found to be negligible for any plausible choice of probabilities.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-2': 'To see why, let [MATH] be the expected probability of an error at a specific location due to a single gate failure and [MATH] be the corresponding probability for two gate failures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-3': 'The ratio of these two expectations is bounded by [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-4': 'The first inequality is due to the fact that many secondary errors will be harmless or even beneficial.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-5': 'The second applies to the examples of the next section in which [MATH], the number of relevant gates, is never greater than [MATH] and [MATH], the probability of an individual gate failing, never exceeds [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-6': 'In practice, either [MATH] or [MATH] will be much smaller in any particular procedure, rendering the second order contribution unimportant.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-52-7': 'Readers concerned about these neglected terms should also note that they will typically be negative; neglecting negative terms can only lower the threshold estimates, making my results more conservative.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-53-0': '# Special Cases', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-54-0': 'Having described the operation of my algorithm, I now apply it to three cases of interest.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-54-1': 'Two of these are variants on a fault tolerant method suggested by Steane [CITATION], while the third case is a fault tolerant telecorrection procedure of the type proposed by Knill [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-54-2': 'Error probabilities are determined separately for each procedure and each encoded gate with the maximum taken over the measurement steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-55-0': 'The unrefined output of this endeavor is rather unwieldy and as such has been relegated to the appendices in the form of a table (see Table [REF]) of maximum strand error probabilities.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-55-1': 'Here I restrict my attention to the reduced error models listed in Table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-56-0': 'The following subsections provide supplemental information specific to each procedure, including qualitative reviews of the procedures, circuit diagrams for encoded gates, and commentary on the thresholds given in Table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-57-0': "## Steane's Method", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-58-0': "Steane's method is characterized by the extraction of error information through the coupling of encoded data to ancillae prepared in simple logical states.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-58-1': 'Using an ancilla prepared in the logical state [MATH]) it is possible via a single transversal two-qubit operation to extract information about the location of [MATH]) errors on all qubits in a data block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-0': "Typical instantiations of Steane's method employ multiple extractions to guard against errors made during the coupling and measurement process.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-1': 'Often [CITATION] the number of extractions performed is conditional on their output.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-2': 'I deviate from this rule by demanding a fixed number of couplings.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-3': 'This a sensible choice for my analysis since, up to rearrangement of qubits, the output of an extraction becomes deterministic as the number of qubits in an encoding approaches infinity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-4': 'Moreover, if [MATH] is the probability of an error occurring, requiring the sequential agreement of [MATH] extractions reduces the probability of misdiagnosing an error on a particular line to order [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-59-5': 'Since I ultimately retain only first order terms I need only consider single and double coupling Steane procedures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-60-0': '### Single Coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-61-0': 'Two-qubit gates require a controlled interaction between two otherwise isolated quantum systems.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-61-1': 'Consequently, they are often the most error prone gates in a universal set.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-61-2': 'In such cases, the factor limiting the probability of successful error correction may be the number of times that two-qubit gates must be applied to the data in order to reliably diagnose errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-61-3': "For Steane's method, this interaction is minimized by coupling to the data once per [MATH] correction and once per [MATH] correction, as shown in Fig. [REF].", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-62-0': 'Table [REF] shows that, relative to the other procedures considered, the single coupling Steane procedure performs most strongly for error model 3.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-62-1': 'This is in line with our expectations since model 3 includes only two-qubit gate errors and the resultant ancilla errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-62-2': 'Surprisingly, it also does rather well overall, showing that even moderate single-qubit and measurement error probabilities can be tolerated when high quality ancillae are available.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-63-0': '### Double Coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-64-0': 'When two-qubit gates are relatively reliable, the damage done during the extraction of error information can be limited by preparing ancillae such that they include few errors capable of propagating to the data.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-64-1': 'Under these circumstances, it is often advantageous to verify error diagnoses by coupling to the data more than once, as shown in Fig. [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-65-0': 'For the double coupling Steane procedure, error model 1 is especially interesting because it was chosen in imitation of the error model used by Reichardt [CITATION] in his numerical estimation of the threshold for a Steane style procedure on a 49 qubit code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-65-1': 'My threshold of [MATH] is quite close to his value of roughly [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-65-2': 'This correspondence is promising because it suggests that the idealizations underlying my algorithm may be approximately satisfied for practically sized systems.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-65-3': "Implementing Steane's method with 49 qubit ancillae prepared via a liberal discard policy yields basically the same threshold as implementing it with very large ancillae prepared such that errors due to the two-qubit gates used for verification dominate.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-66-0': 'Error models 3 and 4 demonstrate small gains in the threshold that can result when two-qubit gate errors have some underlying structure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-66-1': 'Model 3 is a pure two-qubit-gate depolarizing error model (which includes the associated ancilla errors) while 4 is a model in which two-qubit gates malfunction by producing either an [MATH] or a [MATH] error on either the control or the target.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-66-2': 'Given the highly restricted form of error model 4 it is discouraging that the threshold increases by only [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-66-3': 'Nonetheless, the possibility of larger gains in a procedure designed to take advantage of some particular error distribution is not ruled out.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-67-0': "## Knill's Method", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-0': "Knill's method for fault tolerant quantum computation [CITATION] utilizes telecorrection (see Fig. [REF]).", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-1': 'Telecorrection, error correction by teleportation, requires the application of even fewer two-qubit gates to the data undergoing correction than a single coupling Steane error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-2': 'The cost of this innovation is a greater reliance on the ability to produce high quality ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-3': "In effect, Knill's method exchanges the error distribution of an encoded data block for that of one half of an ancilla prepared in a logical Bell state.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-4': 'Failure occurs only when too many errors are present at the time of measurement to correctly identify the encoded Pauli operator needed to complete the teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-68-5': 'Conveniently, encoded single-qubit gates can be accomplished by performing the teleportation using a logical Bell state prepared with the desired gate already applied to one half.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-69-0': "For my implementation of Knill's method, error model 4 achieves the highest threshold, an impressive [MATH], though physical systems displaying this sort of error seem unlikely.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-69-1': 'Error model 2 provides another check of our algorithm, since its parameters were taken from a paper by Knill [CITATION] on telecorrection.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-69-2': "I find that the threshold for this model is [MATH] compared to Knill's result of [MATH] and his estimate of [MATH]!", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-69-3': 'I believe the discrepancy is largely due to the fact that Knill uses not the asymptotic minimum distance but the asymptotic correctable error fraction [CITATION] to determine his thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-69-4': 'To my knowledge, the asymptotic correctable error fraction for CSS codes is unknown.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-0': 'Of course the most eye-catching aspect of Table [REF] is that the Knill procedure results in a higher threshold for every error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-1': 'As with the single coupling Steane case, this partly results from my assumptions regarding ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-2': "In particular, Steane's method was designed to utilize ancilla for which either correlated [MATH] or correlated [MATH] errors could be minimized, but not both, a situation certain to favor his approach.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-3': "A lesser objection can be made that I set the ancilla error probabilities equal for all gates and all methods, but this ignores the fact that some methods, such as Knill's, and some gates, such as the [MATH] gate, will require more complex ancillae, which may in turn be more error prone.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-4': 'Substantially more detailed ancilla information would be needed to evaluate the importance of this effect, but the overall character of my results is unlikely to change since that would entail in excess of a two fold increase in the error probabilities for logical two-qubit ancillae over those for ancillae prepared in a single-qubit logical state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-70-5': "Thus, so long as resource considerations do not limit our ability to discard suspect ancillae, and therefore to make very high quality ancillae, Knill's method will provide the highest thresholds.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-71-0': '# Resource Usage', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-72-0': 'Superficially, block coding seems more resource intensive, in terms of physical qubits, than concatenated coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-72-1': 'I consider block codes in the limit that the number of encoding qubits goes to infinity, whereas a single level of encoding for a concatenated code requires only a finite number of qubits, commonly seven.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-72-2': 'Recall, however, that the threshold results for concatenation depend on layering one level of encoding upon another, a process that rapidly increases the number of physical qubits employed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-72-3': 'By contrast, block coding can be used to achieve indefinite computation through a single level of encoding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-73-0': 'To get an accurate picture of the relative resource requirements of each approach, it is necessary to consider how the failure probability scales as a function of the number of qubits employed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-73-1': 'Steane has performed this analysis for large block coding, [CITATION] concluding that the dominant term in the encoded failure rate is [MATH] where [MATH] is a constant greater than one and [MATH] is the total number of physical qubits comprising a logical qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-73-2': 'By contrast, Preskill [CITATION] has shown that the failure rate for encoding via concatenation of an [MATH] quantum code scales according to [MATH] where [MATH] is independent of [MATH] and greater than one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-73-3': 'The number of qubits, [MATH], in a code is always greater than the number of correctable errors plus one, so the power of [MATH] for concatenated codes is less than [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-73-4': 'Thus, in the limit of large [MATH], block coding actually uses fewer unencoded qubits than concatenated coding to achieve the same encoded failure rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-74-0': 'A more serious concern, at least for the examples given in this paper, is the verification of ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-74-1': 'My assumptions in section [REF] regarding residual ancillary errors best approximate that which we would expect for ancillae verified via a procedure that discarded them whenever an error was indicated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-74-2': 'This approach to ancilla preparation is very resource intensive, with the number of discarded qubits scaling exponentially with [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-74-3': 'More efficient procedures are easily formulated, but they typically result in increased ancilla errors, thereby yielding lower threshold estimates than those presented here.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-75-0': 'The greatest difficulty in terms of resources, however, is posed by the construction of states for use in the verification circuit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-75-1': 'A construction routine must have non-vanishing probability of generating an ancilla that has good fidelity with the desired state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-75-2': 'Fault tolerant schemes using concatenated codes provide a method of achieving this for arbitrarily large ancillae, but as a side effect of universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-75-3': 'At present, there is no known method of preparing a logical qubit encoded using a CSS code of arbitrary size that does not depend on the ability to perform universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-76-0': '# Conclusion', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-0': 'I have described a general method for generating thresholds for fault tolerant methods employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-1': 'My approach relies on the fact that most elements of such a procedure are homogeneous, that is, transversal with identical components.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-2': 'Inhomogeneous elements are either eliminated, as for classical syndrome processing and the application of recovery unitaries, or, as in the case of ancillae, approximated as being homogeneous.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-3': 'This allows me to calculate the probability of failure for encoded gates in terms of the error probabilities associated with a single strand of the encoded blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-4': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits approaches infinity, the criterion for success becomes simply that the probability of finding an error never exceed the fraction of the encoded qubits on which said error can be corrected.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-77-5': 'When this is satisfied, it is possible, in the limit of infinite block size, to compute indefinitely, and our base error rates are, by definition, below threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-78-0': 'The enabling assumption of my analysis is that ancillae can be prepared such that they only suffer from independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-78-1': 'I argue that error detection yields ancillae for which the undetected errors approximate this ideal, a conjecture supported by the success of my algorithm in replicating the threshold results of Reichardt [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-78-2': "For similar assumptions I find a depolarizing threshold of [MATH] compared to Reichardt's [MATH].", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-78-3': "A less satisfying match is achieved for Knill's work [CITATION], where my analysis yields a threshold of [MATH] compared to his value of possibly more than [MATH].", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-78-4': 'The discrepancy is, however, unsurprising in light of the fact that Knill uses the quantum-depolarizing-channel capacity for bounding the acceptable number of errors while I make use of the minimum distance.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-79-0': 'In addition to the results mentioned above, section [REF] includes a number of other thresholds for interesting error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-79-1': 'A [MATH] increase in the threshold is observed for the double coupling Steane procedure when the two-qubit error model is changed to one which is not depolarizing.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-79-2': 'The single coupling Steane procedure is shown to outperform the double coupling procedure when two-qubit depolarizing errors dominate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-79-3': 'The thresholds also provide a direct comparison of the Steane and Knill methods for fault tolerance.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-79-4': "I find that Knill's approach outperforms that of Steane for all error models considered, a conclusion that is likely to hold so long as correlated ancillary errors are rare and the ancillae needed for Knill's method are not appreciably more error prone than those employed by Steane.", 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-0': 'Much further work remains to be done on this subject.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-1': 'The most important extension would be to explicitly define methods of ancilla construction and determine the degree to which they differ from my ideal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-2': 'Constructing ancillae to my specifications is an extremely difficult problem, but one whose solution would have a strong impact on the theory of quantum computing in general and this work in particular.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-3': 'A scalable method for producing ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors would enable the algorithm presented here to be employed for the calculation of rigorous lower bounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-4': 'A second topic of interest is the tailoring of fault tolerant procedures to the error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-5': 'It was my initial hope that restricted error models would greatly improve the tolerable error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-6': 'While this was not observed in existing fault tolerant procedures, the possibility remains that tailored procedures could improve the threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-7': 'Thirdly, for simplicity my analysis neglected memory errors, but the basic idea applies without modification.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-80-8': 'It might be worthwhile to extend my results to cover systems in which memory errors play a major role.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-81-0': 'My algorithm simplifies the process of determining fault tolerant thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-81-1': 'I provide Table [REF] in the appendix for researchers who wish to estimate the threshold of the Steane or Knill method given a particular error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-81-2': 'For those interested in analyzing different fault tolerant methods, my Mathematica code is available at http://info.phys.unm.edu/ beastinhttp://info.phys.unm.edu/beastin .', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-81-3': 'I hope that it will prove a useful tool.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-82-0': 'Suggestions and criticisms regarding this work were provided by Andrew Silberfarb, Steven Flammia, Andrew Landahl, and Jim Harrington.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-82-1': 'John Preskill graciously pointed out the perils of ancilla construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-82-2': 'Carlton Caves and Ivan Deutsch supplied inspiration and guidance in all stages of the project.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-82-3': 'I gratefully acknowledge these contributions as well as funding received from ARO Contract No. W911NF-04-1-0242 and an associated QuaCGR Fellowship.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-83-0': '*', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-84-0': '# [MATH] Rotation T Gate', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-0': 'The [MATH] rotation, [MATH], is not a member of the Clifford group.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-1': 'This means that [MATH] does not take Pauli strings to Pauli strings under conjugation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-2': 'A logical [MATH] gate would also have this property, thereby confounding the simple error propagation routine used in this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-3': 'For CSS codes, however, the encoded [MATH] gate is not applied directly; instead, the logical state [EQUATION] is prepared and the data qubit is effectively teleported under the [MATH] gate using the following encoded circuit: [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-4': 'If necessary, [MATH] can be implemented in the same way as [MATH]; otherwise the gates applied are Clifford operations (both in terms of the encoding and its constituent qubits), so error propagation proceeds without a hitch.', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-5': 'There is a modest sleight of hand here, in that we would not, if we so desired, be able to apply error propagation during the construction of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-2-85-6': 'For my purposes this is unimportant since I do not model the construction of ancillae.'}
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{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0605192
{'quant-ph-0605192-3-0-0': 'I describe a procedure for calculating thresholds for quantum computation as a function of error model given the availability of ancillae prepared in logical states with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-0-1': 'The thresholds are determined via a simple counting argument performed on a single qubit of an infinitely large CSS code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-0-2': 'I give concrete examples of thresholds thus achievable for both Steane and Knill style fault-tolerant implementations and investigate their relation to threshold estimates in the literature.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-1-0': '# Introduction', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-2-0': 'The threshold for quantum computation is defined as the error rate below which, given a number of qubits that scales polynomially in the length of the computation, the problem size, and the desired fidelity, it is possible to implement an arbitrary quantum algorithm.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-2-1': 'Knowledge of thresholds is clearly an important tool for use in the design of quantum computing architectures, but as of yet no simple, unified scheme exists for determining them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-2-2': 'The great variance of threshold values in the literature is due partly to advances and improvements in the field of fault tolerance, i.e. error-conscious design, but also partly to differing approximations and assumptions regarding error models and resources.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-2-3': 'This makes direct comparison of fault-tolerant procedures difficult and tends to limit error models to some form of the depolarizing channel.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-2-4': 'The work presented herein was motivated by the desire for a method of threshold estimation that could easily be applied to a variety of error models and fault-tolerant methods.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-3-0': 'One of the keys to achieving fault tolerance is the construction of low-error encoded states as aids to computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-3-1': 'These ancillary states, henceforth termed ancillae, provide a baseline against which to check for errors and a resource for performing gates that cannot otherwise be implemented in a robust way.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-3-2': 'For the sake of fault tolerance, ancillae are typically prepared in a manner that reduces the frequency of correlated errors at the expense of increased overhead in terms of qubits and applied gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-3-3': 'Accounting for the vast array of possible methods of ancilla construction has proven a major impediment to the design of a generic scheme for threshold estimation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-4-0': 'Recent work by Reichardt [CITATION] has indicated that, by discarding states which show symptoms of error, moderately sized ancillae can be prepared so well that their contribution to the failure probability of an encoded circuit becomes small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-4-1': 'Moreover, my own investigations suggest that the residual error on ancillae that have passed this sort of inspection is primarily due to the verification step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-4-2': 'When the verification circuit is fault tolerant, this implies that the residual error in the inspection basis is uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-4-3': 'Motivated by these indications, I sought a way of determining the threshold given the availability of ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors, expecting that the result would not differ too much from threshold estimates obtained using liberal qubit expenditure during ancilla production.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-5-0': 'This paper describes such a means of threshold calculation for fault-tolerant methods employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-5-1': 'Much of the material presented here can be regarded as an elaboration of work by Knill, particularly Refs. [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-5-2': 'As in Ref. [CITATION], I assume that it is possible to prepare ancillae in logical (encoded) basis states such that errors on the component qubits are independent and all qubits have the same error spectrum.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-5-3': 'Using this assumption as well as the structure of CSS encoded gates and a few error propagation tricks, it is possible to express the failure probability of an encoded operation in terms of the error probabilities of a single strand of the code blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-5-4': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits goes to infinity, the criterion for encoded failure becomes particularly simple, consequently yielding a threshold in which various error probabilities are free parameters, including the probabilities of different kinds of Pauli errors on a particular gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-0': 'It should be stressed that the method described here does not constitute a constructive procedure for fault-tolerant quantum computing.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-1': 'Several details regarding syndrome decoding and the selection of the quantum code are omitted, and, more importantly, no practical prescription is given for preparing the appropriate ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-2': 'These caveats do not invalidate the resulting thresholds, but, presently, the difficulty of obtaining the requisite ancillae limits their applicability.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-3': 'The algorithm I describe is primarily useful either as a metric for comparing the performance of fault-tolerant procedures under diverse conditions or as a replacement for the numerical simulations typically used to generate threshold estimates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-4': 'This second application is a particularly apt use for my threshold results because the simulations become increasingly difficult as the size of the quantum code and the proclivity to discard ancillae increase.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-6-5': 'By contrast, the approximations employed in deriving my algorithm increase in accuracy with the same parameters.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-0': 'The structure of this paper is as follows.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-1': 'Section [REF] introduces notation and gives a brief exposition of CSS codes, fault tolerance, and thresholds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-2': 'Section [REF] enumerates my assumptions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-3': 'Section [REF] outlines the theory needed to generate thresholds using an infinitely large CSS code and logical ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-4': 'Section [REF] describes how single line error probabilities can be determined.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-5': 'In [REF] details regarding the implementation of my algorithm are considered along with the error models to which it applies.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-6': 'Section [REF] performs this analysis for a few cases of special interest, including Knill and Steane style fault-tolerant quantum computation schemes paired with a selection of error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-7': 'Section [REF] presents an alternative algorithm for finite codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-7-8': 'Finally, [REF] concludes with a brief review of my results and a discussion of possible directions for future work.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-8-0': '# Background', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-9-0': '## Notation', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-10-0': 'Throughout this paper [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote the Pauli operators while [MATH] denotes the controlled-NOT or xor gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-10-1': 'I also make use of Hadamard and phase gates, which are given in the standard basis by [EQUATION] respectively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-10-2': 'Together these gates span the Clifford group, an important subset of quantum operations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-10-3': 'The addition of the [MATH] rotation, [EQUATION] completes a universal set for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-11-0': 'I use quantum circuit notation rather extensively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-11-1': "A review of this formalism can be found in Nielsen and Chuang's book [CITATION].", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-11-2': 'I deviate slightly from their standard in that no decoration is added to distinguish encoded circuits from unencoded circuits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-12-0': 'A group of qubits combined via a quantum code into a logical (encoded) state is referred to as a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-12-1': 'Encoded states are identified by a line over the contents of the ket; encoded gates are similarly decorated when not part of a circuit diagram.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-13-0': 'Operations which do not couple qubits that reside in the same block are called transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-13-1': 'This designation is in contrast to some of the literature, which insists additionally that transversal operations should apply the same component operation to each qubit of a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-13-2': 'In this paper, operations satisfying both properties are called homogeneous.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-14-0': 'I refer to a single qubit of a block and all qubits that directly or indirectly couple to it as a strand.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-14-1': 'Gates between pairs of qubits should be thought of as binding then into the same strand, as illustrated in Fig. [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-15-0': 'The notation [MATH] represents a quantum code encoding [MATH] logical qubits using [MATH] unencoded qubits and having a minimum distance of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-15-1': 'A code with minimum distance [MATH] can correct any error of weight less than or equal to [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-15-2': 'All codes dealt with in this paper have [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-16-0': '## CSS Codes', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-17-0': 'A generalized Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) code [CITATION] is a quantum code for which [MATH] (bit flip) and [MATH] (sign flip) errors can be corrected independently.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-17-1': 'Canonical CSS codes have the additional property that they are symmetric with respect to interchange of [MATH] and [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-17-2': 'This symmetry implies that encoded [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates can be implemented through transversal application of their unencoded equivalents.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-17-3': 'As a result of this useful property, CSS codes pervade the literature on fault tolerance, including this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-18-0': '## Fault Tolerance', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-19-0': 'Fault-tolerant design is an approach to computation and error correction that takes into account the fact that every component of a quantum computer is likely to be unreliable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-19-1': 'Gates, ancillae, measurements, and memory are all assumed to err with some probability.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-19-2': 'Fault-tolerant constructions seek to minimize the effect of these errors by preventing their spread.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-19-3': 'This is achieved through the use of transversal operations, the expenditure of qubits, repetition, and teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-20-0': 'The focus on minimizing the spread of errors is crucial.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-20-1': 'To have any hope of recovering corrupted data, whether it be classical or quantum, we need some prior knowledge of the kinds of errors that are likely to occur.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-20-2': 'In the absence of any other information, it is generally assumed that errors on different parts of a computer are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-20-3': 'Fault-tolerant operations are designed so that the failure of a single component does not result in an error on many different parts of an encoded state, thereby avoiding the creation of correlated errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-21-0': '## Thresholds', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-22-0': 'No matter how skillfully constructed the fault-tolerant procedure, there remains for any finite code a nonzero probability that too many independent errors will occur in a computational step and our data will become irreparably corrupted.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-22-1': 'Consequently, the probability of failure approaches one as the length of the computation increases.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-22-2': 'To ensure that we can perform a computation of arbitrary length we need a way of making the probability of an uncorrectable set of unencoded errors, i.e. an encoded error, arbitrarily small.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-23-0': 'The most common method of achieving an arbitrarily low encoded error rate is known as concatenated coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-23-1': 'In concatenated coding, the process of encoding is divided into many levels.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-23-2': 'Zeroth-level (physical) qubits are used to encode first-level qubits, these first-level qubits are then in turn used to encode second-level qubits, second-level qubits are used to encode third-level qubits, and so on.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-23-3': 'The basic idea is the following: "If encoding qubits reduces the effective error rate then encoding the encoded qubits should reduce the error rate even more."', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-23-4': 'This provides us with a plausible sounding way of achieving an arbitrarily small error rate; we simply add layers of encoding until our error rate is acceptable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-24-0': 'But encoding will not always decrease our error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-24-1': 'It is possible for our hardware to be so error prone that the process of applying an encoded gate and error correcting is less likely to succeed than simply applying the unencoded gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-24-2': 'From this observation arises the idea of a threshold error probability [MATH] for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-24-3': 'The threshold is the unencoded error probability below which we can achieve an arbitrarily low encoded error probability using a number of qubits that scales polynomially in the size of the problem.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-24-4': 'Put another way, it is the error probability below which we can compute indefinitely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-25-0': 'Determining the threshold exactly for a given set of assumptions has proven to be a hard problem, but we can get some idea of its value through bounds and estimates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-25-1': 'Upper bounds resulting from proofs of classical simulability have pushed the depolarizing threshold below [MATH] [CITATION], while lower bounds on the order of [MATH] [CITATION] have been rigorously proven through concatenation of explicit fault-tolerant constructions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-25-2': 'This paper focuses on estimates of the threshold, which have recently settled near the [MATH] mark [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-0': 'Estimates of the threshold for quantum computation are generally made by analyzing a particular fault-tolerant implementation using a specific finite code under concatenation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-1': 'Fundamentally, these estimates derive from the idea that encoding is undesirable if [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-2': 'Intuitively, this makes sense; we would not expect error correction to be advantageous when an encoded gate or qubit is more likely to fail than an unencoded one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-3': 'Nonetheless, careful consideration of this justification reveals some difficulties with the argument.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-4': 'There are many sorts of errors, and it might well be the case that the encoded error rate increases for some of them, but not all.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-5': 'Even were there only one kind of error, however, the equation above would not provide us with a lower bound on the threshold, but only an estimate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-6': 'While, in that case, an increase in the error rate at the first level of concatenation implies that subsequent layers of concatenation also increase the error rate, the converse is not true.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-7': 'To see why, assume we have some fault-tolerant procedure for which the encoded failure rate is less than the unencoded failure rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-8': 'At the first level our code is constructed of unencoded qubits that are either perfect or have failed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-9': 'At the second level of encoding, however, our code is constructed of singly encoded qubits that may be perfect, insufficiently corrupted to result in failure, or failed, yet only the last case is considered an encoded error.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-10': 'In some sense, the qubits that have not failed are now of lower quality than they were at the previous level.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-26-11': 'Thus, the fact that encoding worked at the previous level does not guarantee that it will work at the current one.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-27-0': 'Details such as these imply that most threshold results are estimates rather than rigorous lower bounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-27-1': 'The interested reader can find a more thorough discussion of this issue in work by Svore and others [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-28-0': '# Assumptions', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-29-0': 'Some large part of the variance in fault-tolerant threshold calculations is due to the variety of assumptions employed by various authors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-29-1': 'In an effort to combat confusion, my assumptions are listed below in roughly the order of decreasing novelty.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-0': 'All ancillary qubits have independent, identical error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-1': 'There are no memory errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-2': '[MATH] is the only two-qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-3': 'Any pair of qubits can interact via a two-qubit gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-4': 'Error operators are trace preserving and lack systematic coherent terms.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-5': 'Gate failures are uncorrelated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-30-6': 'Classical computation is freely available.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-31-0': 'Assumptions [REF], [REF], [REF], [REF], and [REF] are necessary for my analysis; the others are convenient but optional.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-31-1': 'Assumption [REF] obviates the need to consider questions of parallelism, gate timing, and the speed of classical computation, while Assumption [REF] reduces the number of cases that must be considered.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-32-0': '# Thresholds for Homogeneous Methods', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-33-0': 'Two important observations from [REF] provide the foundation for my method of threshold calculation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-33-1': 'The first is that fault-tolerant procedures for CSS codes are, to a large degree, transversal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-33-2': 'The second is that, for the kind of CSS codes typically employed, these transversal operations can be implemented by applying the same gate to every qubit in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-33-3': 'The sum of these observations is that most operations performed in a fault-tolerant procedure consist of doing the same thing to each of the qubits in a block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-33-4': 'If one could arrange for all operations to have this property, which I refer to henceforth as homogeneity, analyzing the behavior of fault-tolerant circuits would be greatly simplified.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-34-0': 'Three components of the typical fault-tolerant method stand in the way of full homogeneity: ancilla production, syndrome extraction, and recovery.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-34-1': 'Starting from the perspective of threshold estimation, this section addresses each of these aspects, partly by keeping in mind that the eventual goal is to model errors, not computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-34-2': 'Ultimately, the method derived is meaningful both as a form of threshold estimation and as a threshold bound for idealized resources.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-35-0': '## Ancillae', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-36-0': 'The ancillae used in CSS-code fault-tolerant procedures are typically prepared in highly entangled states, i.e. in logical basis states.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-36-1': 'By definition, entangled states cannot be constructed without the interaction of the constituent parts, so there is no a priori reason to think that the qubits composing an ancilla will have either independent or identical error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-36-2': 'For fault-tolerant procedures, however, the production of an entangled ancilla is usually followed by a homogeneous verification circuit, and, in my experience [CITATION], most of the residual error probability (of the kind tested for) arises during this verification step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-36-3': 'With this is mind, I approximate ancillae as having uniform error distributions.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-0': 'It is important to realize that this assumption is far less innocuous than it sounds.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-1': 'Implicitly, I am assuming that ancillae of the desired size can be constructed for use in a verification circuit, but in subsequent sections I take the limit [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-2': 'Thresholds given in this limit are only practically achievable if an efficient procedure exists to prepare logical ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-3': 'To be efficiently scalable, however, a construction routine must have nonvanishing probability of generating an ancilla that has good fidelity with the desired state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-4': 'Fault-tolerant schemes using concatenated codes provide a method of achieving this for arbitrarily large ancillae, but as a side effect of universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-5': 'At present, there is no known method of preparing a logical qubit encoded using a CSS code of arbitrary size that does not depend on the ability to perform universal quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-37-6': 'Thus, absent an explicit recipe for ancillae preparation, the algorithm presented in this paper does not constitute a constructive procedure for achieving any threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-38-0': '## Error Location', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-0': 'Current techniques for locating errors require performing a complicated and distinctly non-homogeneous function on the output of ancilla measurement.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-1': 'But while this classical processing requires knowledge of all the measurements, its effect, assuming that no more than the correctable number of errors has occurred, can be described in terms of the individual qubits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-2': 'So long as the total number of errors present on a measured ancilla is less than half the minimum distance, the effect of the classical processing is to determine a subset of the measured bits that can be flipped to yield an undamaged codeword.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-3': 'For the purposes of error correction, knowing this string is equivalent to knowing the location of all the errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-4': 'While the second kind of information is not directly available to a quantum computer, it is quite accessible to a theorist treating errors probabilistically.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-5': 'I can therefore model the effect of classical processing in two steps.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-39-6': 'First, I determine whether too many errors have occurred on a block to permit proper decoding, and, if this is not the case, I treat the location of bit flips on the measured qubits as revealed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-40-0': 'I have reduced the process of error location to a non-homogeneous failure check and an arguably homogeneous revelation step.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-40-1': 'For a Monte-Carlo simulation, the failure check would consist of polling all of the other qubits and counting up the number of errors that have occurred to see whether they exceeded half the minimum distance of the code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-40-2': 'If instead we performed a probability flow analysis, the expected probability of passing the check would be simply [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the number of qubits in the block, [MATH] is the maximum number of errors that can be corrected with certainty by the code, and [MATH] is the probability that a particular qubit has an [MATH] error at some location (step) [MATH], here chosen to be just after the time of measurement.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-41-0': 'Equation ([REF]) suggests a way of recovering full homogeneity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-41-1': 'Letting [MATH], in the limit of large [MATH], Eq. ([REF]) becomes [EQUATION] which is again homogeneous from the perspective of a simulation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-41-2': 'As an added benefit, it is no longer necessary to concatenate many layers of coding to achieve a rigorous threshold; instead a vanishing error probability is achieved as the limit of a very large code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-41-3': 'This alternative to concatenation is known as large block coding or, simply, block coding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-42-0': 'The preceding paragraphs demonstrate that, for homogeneous (independent, identically distributed) errors, whether or not an encoded state on a large number of qubits fails is determined by the error probability of an individual qubit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-42-1': 'For this result to be useful, an infinite family of CSS codes with nonvanishing fractional minimum distance must exist.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-42-2': 'Fortunately, it has been shown [CITATION] that CSS codes exist such that [MATH] for asymptotic values of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-42-3': 'It is not known whether a similar claim can be made for CSS codes in which the encoded phase gate can be implemented transversally, but this convenience is not necessary for my construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-43-0': 'The analysis of this section assumes minimum distance error correction, but an identical result applies to error correction up to the channel capacity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-43-1': 'Gottesman and Preskill [CITATION] have shown that families of general CSS codes exist that are asymptotically capable of correcting errors up to [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-43-2': 'Hamada [CITATION] has shown that this result applies to CSS codes with [MATH]-[MATH] exchange symmetry as well.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-44-0': 'The appropriate choice for [MATH] depends on the purpose of the calculation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-44-1': 'When the goal is to estimate the threshold that would be obtained by running a Monte-Carlo simulation of a minimum distance decoder, [MATH] should be chosen to be [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-44-2': 'To obtain the largest bound on the threshold for homogeneous ancillae or for comparison to threshold estimates that use the channel capacity, it is best to choose [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-44-3': 'In other cases it may be desirable to choose a value of [MATH] specific to a family of quantum error correcting codes with special properties, such as ease of syndrome decoding or the possession of low weight stabilizer operators.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-45-0': '## Recovery', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-46-0': 'Having diagnosed the location of our errors, the obvious way of dealing with them is to apply to each qubit the gate which reverses its error.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-46-1': 'Such a recovery operation is inherently inhomogeneous since not all qubits will be in error, and thus not all qubits will have recovery gates applied to them.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-46-2': 'There are a number of ways to deal with this problem, but I follow the lead of Knill [CITATION] and dispense with recovery altogether.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-46-3': 'I can get away with this because a string of Pauli errors can either be thought of as an error or as an operator shifting us into a different (but equally viable) code space.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-46-4': 'Put another way, we can ignore any errors that we know about since we know how to determine the effect (see [REF]) they will have later in the circuit and this effect is easily accounted for when analyzing the results of measurements.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-47-0': 'By a similar argument I need never apply any Pauli gates, including those used to implement encoded Pauli gates!', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-48-0': '# Error Counting', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-0': 'In the previous section we saw how to modify fault-tolerant procedures based on CSS codes so that they are fully homogeneous.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-1': 'The advantage of doing this is that the error probabilities of qubits within an encoded block then become independent and identical.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-2': 'Since each strand is functionally identical, it suffices to determine the error spectrum for one of them; the probability of an encoded failure at any point can be predicted from the error probabilities of an individual strand of the transversal procedure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-3': 'As the number of encoding qubits becomes large, the fraction of qubits with a particular error approaches the expectation for that error.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-4': 'In the limit that [MATH], we can say for certain whether our procedure fails on any given step since, in that limit, the probability of an encoded failure becomes a step function.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-5': 'Thus, the threshold is completely determined by the probability of an encoded failure, and the probability of an encoded failure is completely determined by the error probability of a single strand of the blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-6': 'Therefore, in order to calculate the threshold I need only determine the error probability on a single strand at every point in the fault-tolerant circuit.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-49-7': 'This can be accomplished through a combination of error propagation and exhaustive bookkeeping which I describe in the following subsections.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-50-0': '## Pauli Error Propagation', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-51-0': 'Pauli error propagation relies on the fact that the Pauli group is invariant under conjugation by Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-51-1': 'This implies that any string of Pauli gates followed by a Clifford gate is equivalent to the same Clifford gate followed by some (possibly different) string of Pauli gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-51-2': 'Consequently, it is possible to shuffle Pauli errors to the end of a Clifford circuit, thus yielding a perfect outcome modified by the resultant Pauli operators (see Fig. [REF]).', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-52-0': 'Furthermore, as explained in appendix [REF], fault-tolerant procedures based on CSS codes need never apply non-Clifford gates to the data qubits.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-52-1': 'Encoded gates outside of the Clifford group are performed by teleporting the data onto a specially prepared ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-52-2': 'Since only Clifford gates are applied, error propagation can be used to determine the effect of a given Pauli error at any later point in the procedure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-53-0': '## Error Bookkeeping', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-54-0': 'Given a gate, say the Hadamard, and a set of probabilities describing the likelihood of various Pauli errors, say [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] for the errors [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], the post gate state can be written as a probabilistically selected pure state, such that [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-54-1': 'The effect of applying further Clifford gates is to change, via error propagation, which Pauli error corresponds to each probability, and then to add a second layer of probabilistic errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-54-2': 'If, for example, we were to apply another Hadamard gate our state would become [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-54-3': 'By repeated application of this process it is possible to determine the probability of various kinds of errors at any point in a circuit composed of Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-54-4': 'Armed with this knowledge we can determine the likelihood of an encoded failure or, in the infinite limit, whether an encoded failure will happen or not.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-55-0': '# Practicalities', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-56-0': 'While the previous section presented the basic algorithm for determining whether an encoded failure occurs, this section deals with details of the error model and the implementation that must be considered in any actual application of the method.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-56-1': 'Section [REF] identifies the error models which can be adapted approximately to my method, a question which has been considered for fault tolerance in general by several authors [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-56-2': 'Its conclusion, drawn by Preskill in reference [CITATION], is that, roughly speaking, coherent errors with random phases add like stochastic errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-56-3': 'The finer points of how I implement the algorithm are covered in [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-57-0': '## More General Errors', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-0': 'Stochastic Pauli errors are far from the only kind of error that can affect a system, but they are an acceptable substitute for a variety of other error channels.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-1': 'To see why, begin by considering an arbitrary trace-preserving error operator [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-2': 'The action, on a state [MATH], of any such error operator can be written as [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-3': 'By interspersing errors of this form with perfect quantum gates it is possible to model any faulty quantum circuit that does not suffer from leakage.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-4': 'When the error operators are local, it makes sense to approximate them by stochastic Pauli channels.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-5': 'Given a local error operator satisfying Eq. ([REF]), I define the associated stochastic Pauli channel to have error probabilities [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-6': 'By design, this channel correctly reproduces the probability of measuring that a given Pauli error occurred after a single application of the general error operator.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-58-7': 'Its suitability in more varied circumstances is the subject of the remainder of this subsection.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-0': 'In practice, many gates are required (and therefore many error operators act) between each error correction, so it is important to know how errors accumulate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-1': 'As for the case of stochastic errors, general trace-preserving errors can be separated from the associated circuit providing that it is composed exclusively of Clifford gates.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-2': 'The separation is accomplished by applying Pauli propagation to each term in the Pauli-basis decomposition of the elements, e.g. [MATH], of the error operator.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-3': 'If the Clifford circuit is fault tolerant, then error propagation maps single-qubit errors to single-qubit errors (on a given encoded block).', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-4': 'Each of the resultant error operators differs from the actual error by a simple relabeling of the local Pauli basis.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-59-5': 'Thus, the circuit can be disregarded; it is sufficient to consider how the transformed local errors accumulate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-60-0': 'A sequence of [MATH] single-qubit trace-preserving errors acting on a state [MATH] can be written as [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-60-1': 'The probability of measuring, for example, an [MATH] error on the resulting state is [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-60-2': 'By contrast, replacing the error operators with their associated stochastic Pauli errors, as defined in Eq. ([REF]), yields [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-60-3': 'When [MATH] and [MATH] (and the equivalent probabilities for [MATH] and [MATH]) agree, the associated stochastic Pauli channel is a good substitute for the actual error channel.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-60-4': 'To the lowest nontrivial order in [MATH], the condition for equality can be derived as follows.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-61-0': 'Consider each error operator [MATH] as a function of the total single application error probability [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-61-1': 'Taylor expanding the elements of [MATH] in [MATH] yields [EQUATION] where the freedom in the [MATH] has been used to assure that [MATH] contains the only term independent of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-0': 'Inserting expanded error operators of the form given in Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]) and discarding terms of order greater than [MATH] yields [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-1': 'Thus, to first order in [MATH], the difference between [MATH] and [MATH] is [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-2': 'As suggested by Preskill [CITATION], this expression has a simple interpretation in terms of a [MATH]-D walk composed of [MATH] steps of sizes [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-3': 'Equation ([REF]) is equal to the difference between the square of the displacement for such a walk and the expectation of the square of the displacement assuming that the walk is random, that is, that stepping forward and backward are equiprobable.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-4': 'Thus, the expectation of Eq. ([REF]) vanishes if the sign of [MATH] is random.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-5': 'Taking a slightly different approach, we can treat the entire expression as the displacement of a [MATH]-D random walk composed of [MATH] steps of sizes [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-6': 'The expectation is again seen to vanish when the sign of [MATH] is random, but now it becomes clear that the standard deviation will scale like [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-62-7': 'Since [MATH] is also proportional to [MATH], this implies that the associated stochastic Pauli channel is only really a good substitute when the number of qubits being considered is large.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-63-0': 'An identical argument holds for [MATH] and [MATH] errors, showing that, for my purposes, error models for which the sign of the coherent error is random are well approximated by their associated stochastic Pauli channel.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-63-1': 'Conveniently, this restriction is preserved under any local relabeling of the Pauli bases and therefore applies equally well to the original error operators.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-63-2': 'Examples satisfying the restriction include all stochastic errors, which have no coherent component, and unitary rotation errors where under and over rotation are equally likely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-63-3': 'Systematic errors, such as amplitude damping or a bias towards over rotation, are not well modeled, though, in practice, the local relabeling of the Pauli bases imposed by gates will randomize these errors somewhat.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-64-0': '## Implementation', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-65-0': 'In the examples that follow, single-strand error rates were determined for three fault-tolerant procedures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-65-1': 'For each procedure, error rates were calculated for a universal encoded gate set, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] gates, as well as for an idle step that accounted for the possibility of changing the order of [MATH] and [MATH] error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-65-2': 'No checks were made on the encoded [MATH] gate following its first error correction, since the remainder of the gate consists of applying the encoded [MATH] gate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-65-3': 'The encoded [MATH] gate was assumed pessimistically to be implemented via a teleportation process akin to that used for [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-65-4': 'For each encoded gate, the maximum was taken over the strand error probabilities at all measurement steps since in the limit that [MATH] encoded failures are caused exclusively by the largest relevant error probability at a measurement location.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-0': 'The error probabilities for unencoded gates, measurements, and ancillae were left as free parameters.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-1': '[MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] are used to denote one-qubit, two-qubit, measurement, [MATH]-type ancilla, and [MATH]-type ancilla error probabilities where [MATH] ranges over the single-qubit Pauli errors and [MATH] ranges over the two-qubit Pauli errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-2': 'Note that ancillae are labeled irrespective of what they encode.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-3': '[MATH]-type ancillae are used in locations where [MATH] errors are more disruptive than [MATH] errors, and contrariwise for [MATH]-type ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-4': 'In the absence of better information, I assume that [MATH]-type ancillae are tested using a homogeneous coupling, with discard on failure, for first [MATH] and then [MATH] errors; the opposite order is used for [MATH]-type ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-66-5': 'In this case I approximate the ancilla error distributions as [EQUATION] which is (to first order) what one would expect if the only errors on a verified ancilla were due to undetectable errors on the [MATH] gates used to check it.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-67-0': 'It should be emphasized that the ancilla error probabilities given by Eq. ([REF]) are not the only possible choice.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-67-1': 'They were chosen as a good approximation to the residual error following a verification procedure that discards the state whenever a problem is indicated.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-67-2': 'Depending on the purpose of the calculation, it will sometimes be more appropriate to assign, for example, higher error probabilities associated with less resource intensive verification or different probabilities for different kinds of ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-0': 'The Mathematica program that I use to calculate encoded error rates retains terms up to second order in the base error probabilities, but the results given in the following sections include only first-order terms.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-1': 'Second-order terms were found to be negligible for any plausible choice of error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-2': 'To understand why, consider a simplified error model in which gates can fail in only a single way.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-3': 'Let [MATH] be the probability of an individual gate failing, and let [MATH] be the number of gates on which a single failure results in an error at location [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-4': 'Further, let [MATH] be the number of gates that might participate in some pair of failures to yield an error at location [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-5': 'The expected error at location [MATH] is then bounded by [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-6': 'The inequality arises from the fact that not all pairs of failures will necessarily produce an error at [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-7': 'Even ignoring that, however, the second-order terms will be negative unless [MATH]; negative terms may safely be neglected since their omission only lowers the threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-8': 'Among the examples of the following section, the double-coupling Steane procedure, when applied to error model 1, has relatively large second-order terms.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-9': 'Yet the worst location in that procedure corresponds, roughly, to a single-error situation where [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], for which the ratio of second to first-order terms is less than [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-68-10': 'Again, this does not even take into consideration the fact that many second-order errors will be harmless.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-69-0': '# Special Cases', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-70-0': 'Having described the operation of my algorithm for calculating thresholds, I now apply it to three cases of interest.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-70-1': 'Two of these are variants on a fault-tolerant method suggested by Steane [CITATION], while the third case is a fault-tolerant telecorrection procedure of the type proposed by Knill [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-0': 'The unrefined output of this endeavor is the set of maximum strand error probabilities listed in Table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-1': 'This table specifies a kind of high-dimensional threshold surface in the space of generic stochastic error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-2': 'An error channel is below the threshold for a particular procedure whenever the maximal strand error probabilities for that procedure are lower than the fraction of errors that are correctable asymptotically.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-3': 'For the purpose of illustration, however, it is more useful to consider less complicated error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-4': 'Table [REF] defines four reduced error models in terms of the generic stochastic error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-5': 'Since these reduced error models have only a single free parameter, their threshold surfaces are simply numbers.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-71-6': 'Table [REF] lists thresholds for three procedures and four reduced error models in terms of [MATH], the asymptotic correctable error fraction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-72-0': 'The following subsections provide supplemental information specific to each procedure, including qualitative reviews of the procedures, circuit diagrams for encoded gates, and commentary on the thresholds given in Table [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-73-0': "## Steane's Method", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-74-0': "Steane's method is characterized by the extraction of error information through the coupling of encoded data to ancillae prepared in simple logical states.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-74-1': 'Using an ancilla prepared in the logical state [MATH]) it is possible via a single transversal two-qubit operation to extract information about the location of [MATH]) errors on all qubits in a data block.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-0': "Typical instantiations of Steane's method employ multiple extractions to guard against errors made during the coupling and measurement process.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-1': 'Often [CITATION] the number of extractions performed is conditional on their output.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-2': 'I deviate from this rule by demanding a fixed number of couplings.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-3': 'This a sensible choice for my analysis since, up to rearrangement of qubits, the output of an extraction becomes deterministic as the number of qubits in an encoding approaches infinity.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-4': 'Moreover, if [MATH] is the probability of an error occurring, requiring the sequential agreement of [MATH] extractions reduces the probability of misdiagnosing an error on a particular line to order [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-75-5': 'Since I ultimately retain only first-order terms I need only consider single and double-coupling Steane procedures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-76-0': '### Single-coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-77-0': 'Two-qubit gates require a controlled interaction between two otherwise isolated quantum systems.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-77-1': 'Consequently, they are often the most error prone gates in a universal set.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-77-2': 'In such cases, the factor limiting the probability of successful error correction may be the number of times that two-qubit gates must be applied to the data in order to reliably diagnose errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-77-3': "For Steane's method, this interaction is minimized by coupling to the data once per [MATH] correction and once per [MATH] correction, as shown in Fig. [REF].", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-78-0': 'Table [REF] shows that, relative to the other procedures considered, the single-coupling Steane procedure performs most strongly for error model 3.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-78-1': 'This is in line with our expectations since model 3 includes only two-qubit gate errors and the resultant ancilla errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-78-2': 'Surprisingly, it also does rather well overall, suffering in comparison to the double-coupling Steane procedure only for error model 2 where measurement errors dominate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-78-3': 'The single-coupling Steane procedure lacks a means of syndrome verification, so any errors in syndrome measurement are transferred directly to the data.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-78-4': 'Nevertheless, my results demonstrate that moderate single-qubit and measurement error probabilities can be tolerated when high quality ancillae are available.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-79-0': '### Double-coupling Steane Procedure', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-80-0': 'When two-qubit gates are relatively reliable, the damage done during the extraction of error information can be limited by preparing ancillae such that they include few errors capable of propagating to the data.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-80-1': 'Under these circumstances, it is often advantageous to verify error diagnoses by coupling to the data more than once, as shown in Fig. [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-81-0': 'For the double-coupling Steane procedure, error model 1 is especially interesting because it was chosen in imitation of the error model used by Reichardt [CITATION] in his numerical estimation of the threshold for a Steane style procedure on a 49 qubit code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-81-1': 'My threshold of [MATH] for asymptotic minimum distance decoding is quite close to his value of roughly [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-81-2': 'The extraordinary agreement of these two estimates is a coincidence, as can be seen from my discussion of finite codes in [REF], but their rough equivalence illustrates the value of my idealized algorithm for approximating the encoded error rates used in threshold estimation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-81-3': "Implementing Steane's method with 49 qubit ancillae prepared via a liberal discard policy yields roughly the same threshold as implementing it with very large ancillae prepared such that errors due to the two-qubit gates used for verification dominate.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-82-0': 'As expected, relative to the other two procedures, the double-coupling Steane procedure performs most favorably for error model 2.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-82-1': 'Somewhat surprisingly, however, it still underperforms the Knill procedure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-82-2': 'The reason for this is most easily understood by considering the limiting case in which only measurement errors occur.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-82-3': 'In the absence of any other source of error, measurement errors have no effect on either the double-coupling Steane or the Knill procedure until their probability exceeds [MATH]; beyond that point both procedures fail with certainty.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-82-4': 'Thus, the two procedures cope with measurement errors equally well, but the Knill procedure handles other kinds of gate errors more effectively.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-83-0': 'Error models 3 and 4 demonstrate small gains in the threshold that can result when two-qubit gate errors have some underlying structure.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-83-1': 'Model 3 is a pure two-qubit-gate depolarizing error model (which includes the associated ancilla errors) while 4 is a model in which two-qubit gates malfunction by producing either an [MATH] or a [MATH] error on either the control or the target.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-83-2': 'Given the highly restricted form of error model 4 it is discouraging that the threshold increases by less than a factor of two over that of error model 3.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-83-3': 'Nonetheless, the possibility of larger gains in a procedure designed to take advantage of some particular error distribution is not ruled out.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-84-0': "## Knill's Method", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-0': "Knill's method for fault-tolerant quantum computation [CITATION] utilizes telecorrection (see Fig. [REF]).", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-1': 'Telecorrection, error correction by teleportation, requires the application of even fewer two-qubit gates to the data undergoing correction than a single-coupling Steane error correction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-2': 'The cost of this innovation is a greater reliance on the ability to produce high quality ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-3': "In effect, Knill's method exchanges the error distribution of an encoded data block for that of one half of an ancilla prepared in a logical Bell state.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-4': 'Failure occurs only when too many errors are present at the time of measurement to correctly identify the encoded Pauli operator needed to complete the teleportation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-85-5': 'Conveniently, encoded single-qubit gates can be accomplished by performing the teleportation using a logical Bell state prepared with the desired gate already applied to one half.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-86-0': "For my implementation of Knill's method, error model 4 achieves the highest threshold, though physical systems displaying this sort of error seem unlikely.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-86-1': 'Error model 1 provides another check of my algorithm, since its parameters are also roughly those used by Knill [CITATION] in a paper on telecorrection.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-86-2': "Setting [MATH] to [MATH] for the channel capacity for CSS codes, I find that the threshold for this model is [MATH] compared to Knill's estimate of [MATH] and his extrapolation of up to [MATH].", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-86-3': 'The approximate agreement between these values is satisfying, though an exact match is not expected since Knill assumes that errors on up to [MATH] of the qubits can be corrected, an assumption that derives from bounds on the channel capacity for general quantum codes [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-0': 'Of course the most striking aspect of Table [REF] is that the Knill procedure yields a higher threshold for every error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-1': 'As with the single-coupling Steane case, this derives partly from my assumptions regarding ancillae.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-2': "In particular, Steane's method was designed to utilize ancillae for which either correlated [MATH] or correlated [MATH] errors could be minimized, but not both, a situation certain to favor his approach.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-3': "A second but lesser objection can be made that I set the ancilla error probabilities equal for all gates and all methods, ignoring the fact that some methods, such as Knill's, and some gates, such as the [MATH] gate, will require more complex ancillae which may in turn be more error prone.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-4': 'Substantially more detailed ancilla information would be needed to evaluate the importance of this effect, but the overall character of my results is unlikely to change since that would entail in excess of a two-fold increase in the error probabilities for logical two-qubit ancillae over those for ancillae prepared in a single-qubit logical state.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-87-5': "Thus, so long as resource considerations do not limit our ability to discard suspect ancillae, and therefore to make very high quality ancillae, Knill's method will provide the highest thresholds.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-88-0': '# Finite Codes', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-89-0': 'Prior to taking the limit [MATH], the expression for the probability of an encoded error at a location [MATH] was [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the number of correctable errors and [MATH] is the probability of a relevant error on a single qubit at the location in question.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-89-1': 'Using this expression, the programme of [REF] can be implemented for finite [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-89-2': 'In doing so, however, the simplicity of the algorithm suffers somewhat, and its interpretation as an idealized threshold bound is completely lost.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-89-3': 'Fundamentally, the complications that arise are all due to the fact that the success or failure of various portions of an encoded gate are no longer deterministic.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-89-4': 'This section explains how to deal with the associated difficulties and concludes with a brief demonstration of the algorithm for a [MATH] code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-0': 'In the examples of [REF], I establish a background error rate by performing an initial error correction, but for finite [MATH] this initialization is not guaranteed to succeed.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-1': 'Though the failure of the initial error correction is properly assigned to the previous encoded gate, the residual errors will differ dramatically depending on whether it occurred.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-2': 'This presents no problem when only a single level of encoding is employed since any encoded failure is considered a failure of the computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-3': 'In concatenated coding schemes, however, failed encoded qubits are corrected at higher levels of encoding.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-4': 'Their continued use is problematic since an encoded gate failure may be correlated with subsequent encoded failures.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-90-5': 'Nevertheless, I recommend calculating the encoded error rate for finite codes using the assumption that the initialization did not fail, a choice that requires no modification to the case for large [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-91-0': 'Likewise, calculation of the single line error rate [MATH] proceeds without modification.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-91-1': 'For finite codes, however, the maximum tolerable single line error rate becomes a nontrivial function of the encoded error rate that we wish to achieve.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-91-2': 'The probability of an unrecoverable error never goes to zero, so it is necessary to perform the summation in Eq. ([REF]) to determine the portion of the encoded error rate due to any particular location.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-92-0': 'The possibility of failure must be considered at many points in the circuit since statistical fluctuations will produce unrecoverable errors at a variety of locations.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-92-1': 'Typically, encoded failure probabilities at various locations will be strongly correlated, but the exact nature of these correlations is difficult to predict.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-92-2': 'Thus, the best I can do is to bound the encoded failure probability, [EQUATION] where [MATH] ranges over the locations of every post-initialization output, that is, syndrome measurements and the final state of the data with regard to both [MATH] and [MATH] errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-0': 'To clarify the changes outlined above, consider the example of the double-coupling Steane procedure implemented using a [MATH] quantum code and subject to the error channel defined by error model 1.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-1': 'For the encoded [MATH] gate, the set of single line error probabilities corresponding to [MATH] errors at the eight locations of post-initialization syndrome measurement and [MATH] and [MATH] errors at the two output locations of the data is [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-2': 'Solving Eq. ([REF]) subject to the restriction that the encoded error rate is exactly [MATH] yields solutions in the range [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-3': 'Repeating this process for each of the other encoded gates and taking the minimum over the upper and lower bounds produces a threshold of [EQUATION] where, of course, the caveats discussed in [REF] regarding concatenated threshold estimates all apply.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-4': "This example provides a particularly apt comparison to Reichardt's threshold estimate for the [MATH] code [CITATION].", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-5': 'The threshold calculated here is roughly a third of that estimated by Reichardt.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-93-6': 'The difference presumably springs from the superiority of his rule for syndrome extraction when [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-94-0': '# Conclusion', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-0': 'I have described a general algorithm for generating thresholds provided that ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors are available as a resource.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-1': 'My approach applies to most fault-tolerant procedures employing CSS codes.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-2': 'It relies on the fact that nearly all elements of such a procedure are homogeneous, that is, transversal with identical components.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-3': 'Inhomogeneous elements are either eliminated, as for classical syndrome processing and the application of recovery unitaries, or, in the case of ancillae, replaced with homogeneous equivalents.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-4': 'This allows me to calculate the probability of failure for encoded gates in terms of the error probabilities associated with a single strand of the encoded blocks.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-5': 'In the limit that the number of encoding qubits approaches infinity, a criterion for success becomes simply that the probability of finding an error never exceed the fraction of the encoded qubits on which said error can be corrected.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-95-6': 'When this is satisfied, it is possible, in the limit of infinite block size, to compute indefinitely, and our base error rates are, by definition, below threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-0': 'The value of considering thresholds for homogeneous ancillae is that they can easily be calculated for a variety of fault-tolerant procedures and error models, thereby providing a relatively simple metric for comparison.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-1': 'Section [REF] includes thresholds for computation for three fault-tolerant procedures and four error models.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-2': "One of the procedures considered is based on a method of telecorrection used by Knill, while the other two are variations, in that the number of syndrome extractions is fixed, on Steane's approach to achieving fault tolerance.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-3': 'The error models considered are a full depolarizing error model, a depolarizing error model with increased measurement errors, a depolarizing error model for two-qubit gates exclusively, and a restricted two-qubit-gate error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-4': 'Holding the total probability of an error constant, small improvements are observed in the threshold for certain choices of the two-qubit-gate error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-5': 'For the procedures examined, the threshold increases by less than a factor of two, but larger gains may be achievable using fault-tolerant procedures tailored to a specific error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-6': 'With regard to comparisons between procedures, the single-coupling Steane procedure is shown to outperform the double-coupling procedure when two-qubit depolarizing errors dominate, but the double-coupling Steane procedure does substantially better when measurement errors are likely.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-96-7': "I also find that Knill's approach outperforms that of Steane for all error models considered, a conclusion that is likely to hold so long as correlated ancillary errors are rare and the ancillae needed for Knill's method are not appreciably more error prone than those employed by Steane.", 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-0': 'Idealized thresholds aside, my algorithm is useful as a means of approximately computing the logical error rate for a single level of encoding, which is an established method of estimating the threshold for quantum computation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-1': 'The two treatments yield similar outcomes because numerical estimates of the encoded error rate typically prepare ancillae in a way that maximizes their quality at the cost of additional resource overhead.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-2': 'Ancillae prepared in this manner have error distributions approximating my ideal of independent, identically distributed errors.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-3': 'The basic algorithm uses the infinite limit to obtain simple analytic results, but an alternative (and less rigorous) algorithm for finite codes is described in [REF].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-4': 'Both methods were shown to yield results in rough accordance with the depolarizing threshold determined by Reichardt [CITATION] for the [MATH] code.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-97-5': 'For telecorrection, in the limit [MATH], my estimate of the depolarizing threshold was consistent with the range of values determined by Knill [CITATION].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-98-0': 'I provide Table [REF] for researchers who wish to estimate the threshold of the Steane or Knill method given a particular error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-98-1': 'For those interested in analyzing different fault-tolerant methods, my Mathematica program is available at http://info.phys.unm.edu/ beastinhttp://info.phys.unm.edu/beastin .', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-0': 'Much further work remains to be done on this subject.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-1': 'One topic of interest is the tailoring of fault-tolerant procedures to the error model.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-2': 'It was my initial hope that restricted error models would greatly improve the tolerable error rate.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-3': 'While this was not observed in existing fault-tolerant procedures, the possibility remains that tailored procedures could improve the threshold.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-4': 'A second possibility is the extension of my analysis to include memory errors, which promises to be a straightforward, if unbeautiful, endeavor.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-5': 'The most valuable addition, however, would be to explicitly define methods of ancilla construction and determine the degree to which they differ from my ideal.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-6': 'Constructing ancillae to my specifications is an extremely difficult problem, but one whose solution would have a strong impact on the theory of quantum computing in general and this work in particular.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-99-7': 'A scalable method for producing ancillae with independent, identically distributed errors would enable the algorithm presented here to be employed for the calculation of rigorous lower bounds on the threshold without any caveats about idealized resources.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-100-0': 'Suggestions and criticisms regarding this work were provided by Andrew Silberfarb, Steven Flammia, Andrew Landahl, and Jim Harrington.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-100-1': 'John Preskill graciously pointed out the perils of ancilla construction.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-100-2': 'Carlton Caves and Ivan Deutsch supplied inspiration and guidance in all stages of the project.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-100-3': 'I gratefully acknowledge these contributions as well as funding received from ARO Contract No. W911NF-04-1-0242 and an associated QuaCGR Fellowship.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-101-0': '# [MATH] Rotation T Gate', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-102-0': 'The [MATH] rotation, [MATH], is not a member of the Clifford group.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-102-1': 'This means that [MATH] does not take Pauli strings to Pauli strings under conjugation.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-102-2': 'A logical [MATH] gate would also have this property, thereby confounding the simple error propagation routine used in this paper.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-102-3': 'For CSS codes, however, the encoded [MATH] gate is not applied directly; instead, the logical state [EQUATION] is prepared and the data qubit is effectively teleported under the [MATH] gate using the following encoded circuit: [EQUATION]', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-102-4': 'If necessary, [MATH] can be implemented in the same way as [MATH]; otherwise the gates applied are Clifford operations (both in terms of the encoding and its constituent qubits), so error propagation proceeds without a hitch.', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-103-0': 'There is a modest sleight of hand here in that we would not, if we so desired, be able to apply error propagation during the construction of [MATH].', 'quant-ph-0605192-3-103-1': 'For my purposes this is unimportant since I do not model the construction of ancillae.'}
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1604.01825
{'1604.01825-1-0-0': '# Introduction', '1604.01825-1-1-0': 'Despite its success, the Standard Model of particle physics still has many problems.', '1604.01825-1-1-1': 'One such problem, known as the strong CP problem [CITATION], is that the CP-violating term in strong interaction implies that the neutron electric dipole moment has to be an order of [MATH] larger than the experimental upper bound [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-1-2': 'Peccei and Quinn [CITATION] found out an elegant method to solve this problem by introducing a new global chiral symmetry [MATH] which is spontaneously broken at an energy scale [MATH] and which compensates the CP-violating term.', '1604.01825-1-1-3': 'This solution implies the existence of a new pseudoscalar particle called the axion ([MATH]) [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-1-4': 'Since the original axion model assumed [MATH] to be at the electroweak energy scale, it was ruled out by laboratory experiments [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-1-5': 'Currently the invisible axion models with the energy scale [MATH] as a free parameter, allowing up to the Plank mass scale of [MATH] GeV, are not excluded by terrestrial experiments and astrophysics [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-1-6': 'There are two popular models, the KSVZ (hadronic) [CITATION] and DFSZ (non-hadronic) [CITATION] models.', '1604.01825-1-2-0': 'The strengths of axion-photon ([MATH]), axion-electron ([MATH]) and axion-nucleon ([MATH]) couplings are different for both models as described in ref. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-2-1': 'In particular, axion-electron coupling in the DFSZ model occurs at tree level while axion-electron coupling in the KSVZ model is strongly suppressed due to axion-electron coupling at loop level.', '1604.01825-1-2-2': 'Thus, in the DFSZ model, the processes related to axion-electron coupling [CITATION] would prevail over the Primakoff process with axion-photon coupling as an axion production mechanism in stars and the sun: Compton scattering ([MATH]), axio-recombination ([MATH]), axio-deexcitation ([MATH]), axio-bremsstrahlung ([MATH]), and electron-electron collision ([MATH]).', '1604.01825-1-2-3': 'The total axion flux on earth produced from the sun was recently estimated in ref. [CITATION], which includes processes with axion-electron and axion-photon couplings, as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-1-3-0': 'In this paper, we report on a solar axion search using the data sample from the KIMS experiment with CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-1-3-1': 'Since this estimation in ref. [CITATION] does not have corrections for axions heavier than 1 keV/[MATH], our search region for axions is below this value.', '1604.01825-1-4-0': 'Axions would produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect, [MATH] where [MATH] is atom (mainly either Cs or I) in the detector.', '1604.01825-1-4-1': 'We searched for this process as a signal for solar axion detection.', '1604.01825-1-4-2': 'The cross section for the axio-electric effect [CITATION] is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the axion energy, [MATH] is the photoelectric cross section for either Cs or I in ref. [CITATION], [MATH] is the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] is the axion velocity over the speed of light, [MATH] is the fine structure constant, and [MATH] is the electron mass.', '1604.01825-1-4-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the cross sections for the axio-electric effect for Cs and I atoms with [MATH].', '1604.01825-1-5-0': '# KIMS Experiment', '1604.01825-1-6-0': 'The KIMS experiment is designed to directly search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMP) using CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-1-6-1': 'The experiment is housed in the Yangyang Underground Laboratory (Y2L) with an earth overburden of 700 m (2400 m water equivalent) and uses a 12 module array of low-background CsI(Tl) crystals with a total mass of 103.4 kg.', '1604.01825-1-6-2': 'Each detector module is composed of a CsI(Tl) crystal with dimension of 8 cm x 8 cm x 30 cm and with photomultiplier tubes (PMT) mounted at each end.', '1604.01825-1-6-3': 'The amplified signals from the PMTs on each crystal were recorded by a 400 MHz flash analog-to-digital converter for a duration of 32 [MATH]s with the trigger condition requiring at least two photoelectrons (PEs) in both PMTs on each crystal within a 2 [MATH]s window.', '1604.01825-1-6-4': 'The crystal array is completely surrounded from inside to outside by 10 cm of copper, 5 cm of polyethylene, 15 cm of lead, and a buffer consisting of liquid scintillator (LS) of 30-cm thickness.', '1604.01825-1-6-5': "The LS buffer reduces external neutrons and gammas and is equipped with PMT's in order to reject cosmic-ray muon events.", '1604.01825-1-6-6': 'The experiment took stable data with 12 crystal modules in the period from September 2009 to December 2012.', '1604.01825-1-6-7': 'Details of the experiment can be found elsewhere [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-7-0': '# Data Analysis', '1604.01825-1-8-0': 'This analysis is based on one year data corresponding to an exposure of 34,596 [MATH].', '1604.01825-1-8-1': 'We applied event selection criteria that were developed for low-mass WIMPs search studies [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-8-2': 'One of the main sources of background events is PMT noise.', '1604.01825-1-8-3': 'In order to reject these events, a set of event-selection criteria was developed by studying noise signals from a dummy detector module consisting of PMTs mounted on both ends of a transparent and empty acrylic box.', '1604.01825-1-8-4': 'The dummy detector was operated simultaneously with the CsI(Tl) detector array.', '1604.01825-1-8-5': 'These event-selection criteria were applied for the recorded events.', '1604.01825-1-8-6': 'In addition to these criteria, events induced by high-energy cosmic-ray muons were rejected by coincidence with the muon veto detector.', '1604.01825-1-9-0': 'Events that passed the above selection criteria were divided into two independent event sets, single-detector ([MATH]) and multiple-detector ([MATH]) events.', '1604.01825-1-9-1': 'The [MATH] events are defined as those for which multiple detectors each independently satisfied the trigger condition.', '1604.01825-1-9-2': 'Since an axion would give rise to an electron-like signal with a hit in only a single detector-module, only [MATH] events were selected as axion candidate events.', '1604.01825-1-9-3': 'The [MATH] events include surface [MATH] events ([MATH]) and electron recoil events ([MATH]) from Compton scattered [MATH] rays and [MATH] decays in the crystal bulk [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-9-4': 'The [MATH] events come from decays of radioactive isotopes which contaminate the surfaces of the crystals or the surrounding materials.', '1604.01825-1-9-5': 'The energy spectra for [MATH] events in the detector is expected to be a flat distribution in the axion search window.', '1604.01825-1-9-6': 'The MD events mainly originate from Compton-scattered [MATH] rays.', '1604.01825-1-9-7': 'Therefore we expect that the MD energy spectrum is similar to the [MATH] spectrum in the SD sample.', '1604.01825-1-10-0': 'Pulse-shapes of photoelectron distributions in the time domain depend on the type of particle incident on the crystal.', '1604.01825-1-10-1': 'To discriminate [MATH] events from [MATH] events we employed the pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) method described in refs. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-10-2': 'In this method, the mean time ([MATH]) for each event is calculated as follows: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the PE distribution.', '1604.01825-1-10-3': 'The quantity (LMT10) is obtained by taking base 10 logarithm of [MATH].', '1604.01825-1-10-4': 'The LMT10 distribution of each event type is well fitted by an asymmetric gaussian function defined as follows, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the amplitude, [MATH] is the mean value and [MATH]) is the standard deviation of left (right) side.', '1604.01825-1-10-5': 'The parameters, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], for the [MATH] events were first determined from the single-asymmetric-gaussian function fit to the MD sample data.', '1604.01825-1-10-6': 'In order to extract these fit parameters for [MATH] events, we applied fit to the data from a sample of a CsI crystal contaminated by [MATH] progenies.', '1604.01825-1-10-7': 'With these parameters fixed, the contributions of [MATH] and [MATH] events in the SD data were determined by the fit and are shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-1-11-0': 'In our detector, the expected number of axion events is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the differential axion flux on the earth, [MATH] is the detection efficiency, [MATH] and [MATH] are the axio-electric cross section for Cs and I atoms, respectively, [MATH] and [MATH] are the number of Cs and I atoms, respectively, in our detector, [MATH] is the detector live time, and [MATH] is the resolution function of our detector.', '1604.01825-1-12-0': 'The efficiency, [MATH], is estimated from the ratio of the number of MD events satisfying event selection cuts to the total number of MD events in each energy bin.', '1604.01825-1-12-1': 'The event selection efficiency is detector-module dependent and energy-dependant.', '1604.01825-1-12-2': 'The efficiency is varied from 31.0% to 91.2%.', '1604.01825-1-13-0': 'The resolution function, [MATH], is determined from a detector simulation.', '1604.01825-1-13-1': 'For each crytal, the photoelectron yield used in the simulation was estimated using data from the 59.4 keV [MATH] generated from an [MATH] calibration source [CITATION].', '1604.01825-1-14-0': 'To estimate the number of axion events, we used the energy spectrum for the [MATH] events in the SD sample, which contains background events mainly from Compton scattered gamma rays and from [MATH] decays.', '1604.01825-1-14-1': 'The signal yield for axion event is extracted by maximizing a binned maximum likelihood function for the energy spectrum, which is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the number of bins, [MATH] and [MATH] are the expected number of signal and background events, respectively, [MATH] is the number of data events, and [MATH] and [MATH] are the probability density function (PDF) for signal and background in the energy bin [MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-1-14-2': 'The signal PDF, [MATH], is constructed from the energy spectrum from the simulation by generating axion events with an energy distribution of [MATH].', '1604.01825-1-14-3': 'In order to model the background PDF below 12 keV, [MATH], we used the energy spectrum in the MD sample.', '1604.01825-1-14-4': 'This is possible because the spectrum contains only a flat Compton continuum, modified by the low-energy efficiency curve.', '1604.01825-1-14-5': 'Figure [REF] shows the distributions for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1604.01825-1-15-0': 'The signal yields, [MATH], for axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH] are found to be [MATH] to [MATH] events/year, consistent with no axion event.', '1604.01825-1-15-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the energy distributions for [MATH] events in the SD sample, the background events ([MATH] events) in the MD sample estimated by the fit and axion signal events.', '1604.01825-1-16-0': 'A 90 % confidence limit (C.L.) for the signal yield, [MATH], is obtained from [EQUATION]', '1604.01825-1-17-0': 'The resulting values obtained for [MATH] are varied from 58.56 to 60.92 events with axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH].', '1604.01825-1-17-1': 'The upper limit on [MATH] at the 90% C.L. is estimated with eq. [REF], and is found to be [MATH] and [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV/[MATH] and 1 keV/[MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-1-17-2': 'From the upper limit on [MATH], we exclude a QCD axion heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-1-18-0': '# Summary', '1604.01825-1-19-0': 'A search for solar axions from 34,956 [MATH] exposure with the KIMS CsI(Tl) detector array has been performed.', '1604.01825-1-19-1': 'In this search, we used the solar axion flux recently estimated with the DFSZ model assuming that axions produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect.', '1604.01825-1-19-2': 'The number of extracted axion events is consistent with no axion signal in this data sample.', '1604.01825-1-19-3': 'At the 90 C.L., we obtain an upper limit of the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV to 1 keV and exclude QCD axions heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in the DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-1-19-4': 'We exclude a region in the plane of axion mass and the axion-electron coupling at 90 C.L. as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-1-20-0': 'We thank the Korea Midland Power Co. and Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Co. for providing the underground laboratory space at Yangyang.', '1604.01825-1-20-1': 'We acknowledge support from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in Korea under the project code IBS-R016-D1, IBS-R016-D2, the WCU program (R32-10155), and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2011-0031280 and NRF-2011-35B-C00007).'}
{'1604.01825-2-0-0': '# Introduction', '1604.01825-2-1-0': 'Despite its success, the Standard Model of particle physics still has many problems.', '1604.01825-2-1-1': 'One such problem, known as the strong CP problem [CITATION], is that the CP-violating term in strong interaction implies that the neutron electric dipole moment has to be an order of [MATH] larger than the experimental upper bound [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-1-2': 'Peccei and Quinn [CITATION] found out an elegant method to solve this problem by introducing a new global chiral symmetry [MATH] which is spontaneously broken at an energy scale [MATH] and which compensates the CP-violating term.', '1604.01825-2-1-3': 'This solution implies the existence of a new pseudoscalar particle called the axion ([MATH]) [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-1-4': 'Since the original axion model assumed [MATH] to be at the electroweak energy scale, it was ruled out by laboratory experiments [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-1-5': 'Currently the invisible axion models with the energy scale [MATH] as a free parameter, allowing up to the Plank mass scale of [MATH] GeV, are not excluded by terrestrial experiments and astrophysics [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-1-6': 'There are two popular models, the KSVZ (hadronic) [CITATION] and DFSZ (non-hadronic) [CITATION] models.', '1604.01825-2-2-0': 'The strengths of axion-photon ([MATH]), axion-electron ([MATH]) and axion-nucleon ([MATH]) couplings are different for both models as described in ref. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-2-1': 'In particular, axion-electron coupling in the DFSZ model occurs at tree level while axion-electron coupling in the KSVZ model is strongly suppressed due to axion-electron coupling at loop level.', '1604.01825-2-2-2': 'Thus, in the DFSZ model, the processes related to axion-electron coupling [CITATION] would prevail over the Primakoff process with axion-photon coupling as an axion production mechanism in stars and the sun: Compton scattering ([MATH]), axio-recombination ([MATH]), axio-deexcitation ([MATH]), axio-bremsstrahlung ([MATH]), and electron-electron collision ([MATH]), where [MATH] is an atom.', '1604.01825-2-2-3': 'The total axion flux on earth produced from the sun was recently estimated in ref. [CITATION], which includes processes with axion-electron and axion-photon couplings, as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-2-3-0': 'In this paper, we report on a solar axion search using the data sample from the KIMS experiment with CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-2-3-1': 'Since this estimation in ref. [CITATION] does not have corrections for axions heavier than 1 keV/[MATH], our search region for axions is below this value.', '1604.01825-2-4-0': 'Axions would produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect, [MATH] where [MATH] is mainly either Cs or I in the detector.', '1604.01825-2-4-1': 'We searched for this process as a signal for solar axion detection.', '1604.01825-2-4-2': 'The cross section for the axio-electric effect [CITATION] is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the axion energy, [MATH] is the photoelectric cross section for either Cs or I in ref. [CITATION], [MATH] is the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] is the axion velocity over the speed of light, [MATH] is the fine structure constant, and [MATH] is the electron mass.', '1604.01825-2-4-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the cross sections for the axio-electric effect for Cs and I atoms with [MATH].', '1604.01825-2-5-0': '# KIMS Experiment', '1604.01825-2-6-0': 'The KIMS experiment is designed to directly search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMP) using CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-2-6-1': 'The experiment is housed in the Yangyang Underground Laboratory (Y2L) with an earth overburden of 700 m (2400 m water equivalent) and uses a 12 module array of low-background CsI(Tl) crystals with a total mass of 103.4 kg.', '1604.01825-2-6-2': 'Each detector module is composed of a CsI(Tl) crystal with dimension of 8 cm x 8 cm x 30 cm and with photomultiplier tubes (PMT) mounted at each end.', '1604.01825-2-6-3': 'The amplified signals from the PMTs on each crystal were recorded by a 400 MHz flash analog-to-digital converter for a duration of 32 [MATH]s with the trigger condition requiring at least two photoelectrons (PEs) in both PMTs on each crystal within a 2 [MATH]s window.', '1604.01825-2-6-4': 'The number of PEs are 5 to 6 per keV.', '1604.01825-2-6-5': 'The crystal array is completely surrounded from inside to outside by 10 cm of copper, 5 cm of polyethylene, 15 cm of lead, and a buffer consisting of liquid scintillator (LS) of 30-cm thickness.', '1604.01825-2-6-6': "The LS buffer reduces external neutrons and gammas and is equipped with PMT's in order to reject cosmic-ray muon events.", '1604.01825-2-6-7': 'The experiment took stable data with 12 crystal modules in the period from September 2009 to December 2012.', '1604.01825-2-6-8': 'Details of the experiment can be found elsewhere [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-7-0': '# Data Analysis', '1604.01825-2-8-0': 'This analysis is based on one year data corresponding to an exposure of 34,596 [MATH].', '1604.01825-2-8-1': 'We applied event selection criteria that were developed for low-mass WIMPs search studies [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-8-2': 'One of the main sources of background events is PMT noise.', '1604.01825-2-8-3': 'In order to reject these events, a set of event-selection criteria was developed by studying noise signals from a dummy detector module consisting of PMTs mounted on both ends of a transparent and empty acrylic box.', '1604.01825-2-8-4': 'The dummy detector was operated simultaneously with the CsI(Tl) detector array.', '1604.01825-2-8-5': 'These event-selection criteria were applied for the recorded events.', '1604.01825-2-8-6': 'In addition to these criteria, events induced by high-energy cosmic-ray muons were rejected by coincidence with the muon veto detector.', '1604.01825-2-9-0': 'Events that passed the above selection criteria were divided into two independent event sets, single-detector ([MATH]) and multiple-detector ([MATH]) events.', '1604.01825-2-9-1': 'The [MATH] events are defined as those for which multiple detectors each independently satisfied the trigger condition.', '1604.01825-2-9-2': 'Since an axion would give rise to an electron-like signal with a hit in only a single detector-module, only [MATH] events were selected as axion candidate events.', '1604.01825-2-9-3': 'The [MATH] events include surface [MATH] events ([MATH]) and electron recoil events ([MATH]) from Compton scattered [MATH] rays and [MATH] decays in the crystal bulk [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-9-4': 'The [MATH] events come from decays of radioactive isotopes which contaminate the surfaces of the crystals or the surrounding materials.', '1604.01825-2-9-5': 'Major internal backgrounds for [MATH]-decays in our CsI(Tl) crystals are [MATH] (Q=1175.6 keV), [MATH] (Q=2058.7 keV) and [MATH] (Q=282 keV).', '1604.01825-2-9-6': 'The energy spectra from those radioisotopes are flat in our search region, 2 keV to 12 keV, as from Compton-scattered [MATH] rays in the MD events [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-9-7': 'Therefore we expect that the MD energy spectrum is similar to the [MATH] spectrum in the SD sample.', '1604.01825-2-9-8': 'That is, the energy spectra for [MATH] events in the detector is expected to be a flat distribution in the axion search window.', '1604.01825-2-9-9': 'Pulse-shapes of photoelectron distributions in the time domain depend on the type of particle incident on the crystal.', '1604.01825-2-9-10': 'To discriminate [MATH] events from [MATH] events we employed the pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) method described in refs. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-9-11': 'In this method, the mean time ([MATH]) for each event is calculated as follows: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the PE distribution.', '1604.01825-2-9-12': 'The quantity (LMT10) is obtained by taking base 10 logarithm of [MATH].', '1604.01825-2-9-13': 'The LMT10 distribution of each event type is well fitted by an asymmetric gaussian function defined as follows, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the amplitude, [MATH] is the mean value and [MATH]) is the standard deviation of left (right) side.', '1604.01825-2-9-14': 'The parameters, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], for the [MATH] events were first determined from the single-asymmetric-gaussian function fit to the MD sample data.', '1604.01825-2-9-15': 'In order to extract these fit parameters for [MATH] events, we applied fit to the data from a sample of a CsI crystal contaminated by [MATH] progenies.', '1604.01825-2-9-16': 'With these parameters fixed, the contributions of [MATH] and [MATH] events in the SD data were determined by the fit and are shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-2-10-0': 'In our detector, the expected number of axion events is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the differential axion flux on the earth, [MATH] is the detection efficiency, [MATH] and [MATH] are the axio-electric cross section for Cs and I atoms, respectively, [MATH] and [MATH] are the number of Cs and I atoms, respectively, in our detector, [MATH] is the detector live time, and [MATH] is the resolution function of our detector.', '1604.01825-2-11-0': 'The efficiency, [MATH], is estimated from the ratio of the number of MD events satisfying event selection cuts to the total number of MD events in each energy bin.', '1604.01825-2-11-1': 'The event selection efficiency is mainly due to energy-dependent.', '1604.01825-2-11-2': 'The efficiency is varied from 31.0% to 91.2%.', '1604.01825-2-12-0': 'The resolution function, [MATH], is determined from a detector simulation.', '1604.01825-2-12-1': 'For each crystal, the photoelectron yield used in the simulation was estimated using data from the 59.4 keV [MATH] generated from an [MATH] calibration source [CITATION].', '1604.01825-2-13-0': 'To estimate the number of axion events, we used the energy spectrum for the [MATH] events in the SD sample, which contains background events mainly from Compton scattered gamma rays and from [MATH] decays.', '1604.01825-2-13-1': 'The signal yield for axion event is extracted by maximizing a binned maximum likelihood function for the energy spectrum, which is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the number of bins, [MATH] and [MATH] are the expected number of signal and background events, respectively, [MATH] is the number of data events, and [MATH] and [MATH] are the probability density function (PDF) for signal and background in the energy bin [MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-2-13-2': 'The PDF for the energy spectra for the axion signal, [MATH], is constructed from the simulation by generating electron events with an energy distribution of [MATH].', '1604.01825-2-13-3': 'In order to model the background PDF below 12 keV, [MATH], we used the energy spectrum in the MD sample.', '1604.01825-2-13-4': 'This is possible because the spectrum contains only a flat Compton continuum, modified by the low-energy efficiency curve.', '1604.01825-2-13-5': 'Figure [REF] shows the distributions for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1604.01825-2-14-0': 'The signal yields, [MATH], for axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH] are found to be [MATH] to [MATH] events/year, consistent with no axion event.', '1604.01825-2-14-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the energy distributions for [MATH] events in the SD sample, the background events ([MATH] events) in the MD sample estimated by the fit and axion signal events.', '1604.01825-2-15-0': 'A 90 % confidence limit (C.L.) for the signal yield, [MATH], is obtained from [EQUATION]', '1604.01825-2-16-0': 'The resulting values obtained for [MATH] are varied from 58.56 to 60.92 events with axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH].', '1604.01825-2-16-1': 'The upper limit on [MATH] at the 90% C.L. is estimated with eq. [REF], and is found to be [MATH] and [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV/[MATH] and 1 keV/[MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-2-16-2': 'From the upper limit on [MATH], we exclude a QCD axion heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-2-17-0': '# Summary', '1604.01825-2-18-0': 'A search for solar axions from 34,956 [MATH] exposure with the KIMS CsI(Tl) detector array has been performed.', '1604.01825-2-18-1': 'In this search, we used the solar axion flux recently estimated with the DFSZ model assuming that axions produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect.', '1604.01825-2-18-2': 'The number of extracted axion events is consistent with no axion signal in this data sample.', '1604.01825-2-18-3': 'At the 90 C.L., we obtain an upper limit of the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV to 1 keV and exclude QCD axions heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in the DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-2-18-4': 'We exclude a region in the plane of axion mass and the axion-electron coupling at 90 C.L. as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-2-19-0': 'We thank the Korea Midland Power Co. and Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Co. for providing the underground laboratory space at Yangyang.', '1604.01825-2-19-1': 'We acknowledge support from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in Korea under the project code IBS-R016-D1, IBS-R016-D2, the WCU program (R32-10155), and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2011-0031280 and NRF-2011-35B-C00007).'}
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'1604.01825-2-6-5'], ['1604.01825-1-6-5', '1604.01825-2-6-6'], ['1604.01825-1-6-6', '1604.01825-2-6-7'], ['1604.01825-1-6-7', '1604.01825-2-6-8'], ['1604.01825-1-19-0', '1604.01825-2-18-0'], ['1604.01825-1-19-1', '1604.01825-2-18-1'], ['1604.01825-1-19-2', '1604.01825-2-18-2'], ['1604.01825-1-19-3', '1604.01825-2-18-3'], ['1604.01825-1-19-4', '1604.01825-2-18-4'], ['1604.01825-1-3-0', '1604.01825-2-3-0'], ['1604.01825-1-3-1', '1604.01825-2-3-1'], ['1604.01825-1-15-0', '1604.01825-2-14-0'], ['1604.01825-1-15-1', '1604.01825-2-14-1'], ['1604.01825-1-13-0', '1604.01825-2-12-0'], ['1604.01825-1-16-0', '1604.01825-2-15-0'], ['1604.01825-1-14-0', '1604.01825-2-13-0'], ['1604.01825-1-14-1', '1604.01825-2-13-1'], ['1604.01825-1-14-3', '1604.01825-2-13-3'], ['1604.01825-1-14-4', '1604.01825-2-13-4'], ['1604.01825-1-14-5', '1604.01825-2-13-5'], ['1604.01825-1-20-0', '1604.01825-2-19-0'], ['1604.01825-1-20-1', '1604.01825-2-19-1'], ['1604.01825-1-8-0', '1604.01825-2-8-0'], ['1604.01825-1-8-1', '1604.01825-2-8-1'], ['1604.01825-1-8-2', '1604.01825-2-8-2'], ['1604.01825-1-8-3', '1604.01825-2-8-3'], ['1604.01825-1-8-4', '1604.01825-2-8-4'], ['1604.01825-1-8-5', '1604.01825-2-8-5'], ['1604.01825-1-8-6', '1604.01825-2-8-6'], ['1604.01825-2-2-0', '1604.01825-3-2-0'], ['1604.01825-2-2-1', '1604.01825-3-2-1'], ['1604.01825-2-2-2', '1604.01825-3-2-2'], ['1604.01825-2-2-3', '1604.01825-3-2-3'], ['1604.01825-2-4-0', '1604.01825-3-4-0'], ['1604.01825-2-4-1', '1604.01825-3-4-1'], ['1604.01825-2-4-2', '1604.01825-3-4-2'], ['1604.01825-2-4-3', '1604.01825-3-4-3'], ['1604.01825-2-10-0', '1604.01825-3-10-0'], ['1604.01825-2-8-0', '1604.01825-3-8-0'], ['1604.01825-2-8-1', '1604.01825-3-8-1'], ['1604.01825-2-8-2', '1604.01825-3-8-2'], ['1604.01825-2-8-3', '1604.01825-3-8-3'], ['1604.01825-2-8-4', '1604.01825-3-8-4'], ['1604.01825-2-8-5', '1604.01825-3-8-5'], ['1604.01825-2-8-6', '1604.01825-3-8-6'], ['1604.01825-2-18-0', '1604.01825-3-18-0'], ['1604.01825-2-18-1', '1604.01825-3-18-1'], ['1604.01825-2-18-2', '1604.01825-3-18-2'], ['1604.01825-2-18-3', '1604.01825-3-18-3'], ['1604.01825-2-18-4', '1604.01825-3-18-4'], ['1604.01825-2-1-0', '1604.01825-3-1-0'], ['1604.01825-2-1-1', '1604.01825-3-1-1'], ['1604.01825-2-1-2', '1604.01825-3-1-2'], ['1604.01825-2-1-3', '1604.01825-3-1-3'], ['1604.01825-2-1-4', '1604.01825-3-1-4'], ['1604.01825-2-1-5', '1604.01825-3-1-5'], ['1604.01825-2-1-6', '1604.01825-3-1-6'], ['1604.01825-2-11-0', '1604.01825-3-11-0'], ['1604.01825-2-9-0', '1604.01825-3-9-0'], ['1604.01825-2-9-1', '1604.01825-3-9-1'], ['1604.01825-2-9-2', '1604.01825-3-9-2'], ['1604.01825-2-9-3', '1604.01825-3-9-3'], ['1604.01825-2-9-4', '1604.01825-3-9-4'], ['1604.01825-2-9-6', '1604.01825-3-9-6'], ['1604.01825-2-9-7', '1604.01825-3-9-7'], ['1604.01825-2-9-8', '1604.01825-3-9-8'], ['1604.01825-2-9-9', '1604.01825-3-9-9'], ['1604.01825-2-9-10', '1604.01825-3-9-10'], ['1604.01825-2-9-11', '1604.01825-3-9-11'], ['1604.01825-2-9-12', '1604.01825-3-9-12'], ['1604.01825-2-9-13', '1604.01825-3-9-13'], ['1604.01825-2-9-14', '1604.01825-3-9-14'], ['1604.01825-2-9-15', '1604.01825-3-9-15'], ['1604.01825-2-9-16', '1604.01825-3-9-16'], ['1604.01825-2-12-0', '1604.01825-3-12-0'], ['1604.01825-2-12-1', '1604.01825-3-12-1'], ['1604.01825-2-13-0', '1604.01825-3-13-0'], ['1604.01825-2-13-1', '1604.01825-3-13-1'], ['1604.01825-2-13-2', '1604.01825-3-13-2'], ['1604.01825-2-13-3', '1604.01825-3-13-3'], ['1604.01825-2-13-4', '1604.01825-3-13-4'], ['1604.01825-2-13-5', '1604.01825-3-13-5'], ['1604.01825-2-14-0', '1604.01825-3-14-0'], ['1604.01825-2-14-1', '1604.01825-3-14-1'], ['1604.01825-2-16-0', '1604.01825-3-16-0'], ['1604.01825-2-16-1', '1604.01825-3-16-1'], ['1604.01825-2-16-2', '1604.01825-3-16-2'], ['1604.01825-2-19-0', '1604.01825-3-19-0'], ['1604.01825-2-19-1', '1604.01825-3-19-1'], ['1604.01825-2-6-0', '1604.01825-3-6-0'], ['1604.01825-2-6-1', '1604.01825-3-6-1'], ['1604.01825-2-6-2', '1604.01825-3-6-2'], ['1604.01825-2-6-3', '1604.01825-3-6-3'], ['1604.01825-2-6-4', '1604.01825-3-6-4'], ['1604.01825-2-6-5', '1604.01825-3-6-5'], ['1604.01825-2-6-6', '1604.01825-3-6-6'], ['1604.01825-2-6-7', '1604.01825-3-6-7'], ['1604.01825-2-6-8', '1604.01825-3-6-8'], ['1604.01825-2-15-0', '1604.01825-3-15-0'], ['1604.01825-2-3-0', '1604.01825-3-3-0'], ['1604.01825-2-3-1', '1604.01825-3-3-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-0', '1604.01825-2-9-0'], ['1604.01825-1-9-1', '1604.01825-2-9-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-2', '1604.01825-2-9-2'], ['1604.01825-1-9-3', '1604.01825-2-9-3'], ['1604.01825-1-9-4', '1604.01825-2-9-4'], ['1604.01825-1-9-7', '1604.01825-2-9-7'], ['1604.01825-1-10-0', '1604.01825-2-9-9'], ['1604.01825-1-10-1', '1604.01825-2-9-10'], ['1604.01825-1-10-2', '1604.01825-2-9-11'], ['1604.01825-1-10-3', '1604.01825-2-9-12'], ['1604.01825-1-10-4', '1604.01825-2-9-13'], ['1604.01825-1-10-5', '1604.01825-2-9-14'], ['1604.01825-1-10-6', '1604.01825-2-9-15'], ['1604.01825-1-10-7', '1604.01825-2-9-16'], ['1604.01825-1-2-2', '1604.01825-2-2-2'], ['1604.01825-1-4-0', '1604.01825-2-4-0'], ['1604.01825-1-13-1', '1604.01825-2-12-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-5', '1604.01825-2-9-8'], ['1604.01825-1-12-1', '1604.01825-2-11-1'], ['1604.01825-1-14-2', '1604.01825-2-13-2'], ['1604.01825-2-11-1', '1604.01825-3-11-1'], ['1604.01825-2-11-2', '1604.01825-3-11-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-6', '1604.01825-2-9-6']]
[['1604.01825-1-2-0', '1604.01825-2-2-0'], ['1604.01825-1-2-1', '1604.01825-2-2-1'], ['1604.01825-1-2-3', '1604.01825-2-2-3'], ['1604.01825-1-12-0', '1604.01825-2-11-0'], ['1604.01825-1-12-2', '1604.01825-2-11-2'], ['1604.01825-1-17-0', '1604.01825-2-16-0'], ['1604.01825-1-17-1', '1604.01825-2-16-1'], ['1604.01825-1-17-2', '1604.01825-2-16-2'], ['1604.01825-1-11-0', '1604.01825-2-10-0'], ['1604.01825-1-1-0', '1604.01825-2-1-0'], ['1604.01825-1-1-1', '1604.01825-2-1-1'], ['1604.01825-1-1-2', '1604.01825-2-1-2'], ['1604.01825-1-1-3', '1604.01825-2-1-3'], ['1604.01825-1-1-4', '1604.01825-2-1-4'], ['1604.01825-1-1-5', '1604.01825-2-1-5'], ['1604.01825-1-1-6', '1604.01825-2-1-6'], ['1604.01825-1-4-1', '1604.01825-2-4-1'], ['1604.01825-1-4-2', '1604.01825-2-4-2'], ['1604.01825-1-4-3', '1604.01825-2-4-3'], ['1604.01825-1-6-0', '1604.01825-2-6-0'], ['1604.01825-1-6-1', '1604.01825-2-6-1'], ['1604.01825-1-6-2', '1604.01825-2-6-2'], ['1604.01825-1-6-3', '1604.01825-2-6-3'], ['1604.01825-1-6-4', '1604.01825-2-6-5'], ['1604.01825-1-6-5', '1604.01825-2-6-6'], ['1604.01825-1-6-6', '1604.01825-2-6-7'], ['1604.01825-1-6-7', '1604.01825-2-6-8'], ['1604.01825-1-19-0', '1604.01825-2-18-0'], ['1604.01825-1-19-1', '1604.01825-2-18-1'], ['1604.01825-1-19-2', '1604.01825-2-18-2'], ['1604.01825-1-19-3', '1604.01825-2-18-3'], ['1604.01825-1-19-4', '1604.01825-2-18-4'], ['1604.01825-1-3-0', '1604.01825-2-3-0'], ['1604.01825-1-3-1', '1604.01825-2-3-1'], ['1604.01825-1-15-0', '1604.01825-2-14-0'], ['1604.01825-1-15-1', '1604.01825-2-14-1'], ['1604.01825-1-13-0', '1604.01825-2-12-0'], ['1604.01825-1-16-0', '1604.01825-2-15-0'], ['1604.01825-1-14-0', '1604.01825-2-13-0'], ['1604.01825-1-14-1', '1604.01825-2-13-1'], ['1604.01825-1-14-3', '1604.01825-2-13-3'], ['1604.01825-1-14-4', '1604.01825-2-13-4'], ['1604.01825-1-14-5', '1604.01825-2-13-5'], ['1604.01825-1-20-0', '1604.01825-2-19-0'], ['1604.01825-1-20-1', '1604.01825-2-19-1'], ['1604.01825-1-8-0', '1604.01825-2-8-0'], ['1604.01825-1-8-1', '1604.01825-2-8-1'], ['1604.01825-1-8-2', '1604.01825-2-8-2'], ['1604.01825-1-8-3', '1604.01825-2-8-3'], ['1604.01825-1-8-4', '1604.01825-2-8-4'], ['1604.01825-1-8-5', '1604.01825-2-8-5'], ['1604.01825-1-8-6', '1604.01825-2-8-6'], ['1604.01825-2-2-0', '1604.01825-3-2-0'], ['1604.01825-2-2-1', '1604.01825-3-2-1'], ['1604.01825-2-2-2', '1604.01825-3-2-2'], ['1604.01825-2-2-3', '1604.01825-3-2-3'], ['1604.01825-2-4-0', '1604.01825-3-4-0'], ['1604.01825-2-4-1', '1604.01825-3-4-1'], ['1604.01825-2-4-2', '1604.01825-3-4-2'], ['1604.01825-2-4-3', '1604.01825-3-4-3'], ['1604.01825-2-10-0', '1604.01825-3-10-0'], ['1604.01825-2-8-0', '1604.01825-3-8-0'], ['1604.01825-2-8-1', '1604.01825-3-8-1'], ['1604.01825-2-8-2', '1604.01825-3-8-2'], ['1604.01825-2-8-3', '1604.01825-3-8-3'], ['1604.01825-2-8-4', '1604.01825-3-8-4'], ['1604.01825-2-8-5', '1604.01825-3-8-5'], ['1604.01825-2-8-6', '1604.01825-3-8-6'], ['1604.01825-2-18-0', '1604.01825-3-18-0'], ['1604.01825-2-18-1', '1604.01825-3-18-1'], ['1604.01825-2-18-2', '1604.01825-3-18-2'], ['1604.01825-2-18-3', '1604.01825-3-18-3'], ['1604.01825-2-18-4', '1604.01825-3-18-4'], ['1604.01825-2-1-0', '1604.01825-3-1-0'], ['1604.01825-2-1-1', '1604.01825-3-1-1'], ['1604.01825-2-1-2', '1604.01825-3-1-2'], ['1604.01825-2-1-3', '1604.01825-3-1-3'], ['1604.01825-2-1-4', '1604.01825-3-1-4'], ['1604.01825-2-1-5', '1604.01825-3-1-5'], ['1604.01825-2-1-6', '1604.01825-3-1-6'], ['1604.01825-2-11-0', '1604.01825-3-11-0'], ['1604.01825-2-9-0', '1604.01825-3-9-0'], ['1604.01825-2-9-1', '1604.01825-3-9-1'], ['1604.01825-2-9-2', '1604.01825-3-9-2'], ['1604.01825-2-9-3', '1604.01825-3-9-3'], ['1604.01825-2-9-4', '1604.01825-3-9-4'], ['1604.01825-2-9-6', '1604.01825-3-9-6'], ['1604.01825-2-9-7', '1604.01825-3-9-7'], ['1604.01825-2-9-8', '1604.01825-3-9-8'], ['1604.01825-2-9-9', '1604.01825-3-9-9'], ['1604.01825-2-9-10', '1604.01825-3-9-10'], ['1604.01825-2-9-11', '1604.01825-3-9-11'], ['1604.01825-2-9-12', '1604.01825-3-9-12'], ['1604.01825-2-9-13', '1604.01825-3-9-13'], ['1604.01825-2-9-14', '1604.01825-3-9-14'], ['1604.01825-2-9-15', '1604.01825-3-9-15'], ['1604.01825-2-9-16', '1604.01825-3-9-16'], ['1604.01825-2-12-0', '1604.01825-3-12-0'], ['1604.01825-2-12-1', '1604.01825-3-12-1'], ['1604.01825-2-13-0', '1604.01825-3-13-0'], ['1604.01825-2-13-1', '1604.01825-3-13-1'], ['1604.01825-2-13-2', '1604.01825-3-13-2'], ['1604.01825-2-13-3', '1604.01825-3-13-3'], ['1604.01825-2-13-4', '1604.01825-3-13-4'], ['1604.01825-2-13-5', '1604.01825-3-13-5'], ['1604.01825-2-14-0', '1604.01825-3-14-0'], ['1604.01825-2-14-1', '1604.01825-3-14-1'], ['1604.01825-2-16-0', '1604.01825-3-16-0'], ['1604.01825-2-16-1', '1604.01825-3-16-1'], ['1604.01825-2-16-2', '1604.01825-3-16-2'], ['1604.01825-2-19-0', '1604.01825-3-19-0'], ['1604.01825-2-19-1', '1604.01825-3-19-1'], ['1604.01825-2-6-0', '1604.01825-3-6-0'], ['1604.01825-2-6-1', '1604.01825-3-6-1'], ['1604.01825-2-6-2', '1604.01825-3-6-2'], ['1604.01825-2-6-3', '1604.01825-3-6-3'], ['1604.01825-2-6-4', '1604.01825-3-6-4'], ['1604.01825-2-6-5', '1604.01825-3-6-5'], ['1604.01825-2-6-6', '1604.01825-3-6-6'], ['1604.01825-2-6-7', '1604.01825-3-6-7'], ['1604.01825-2-6-8', '1604.01825-3-6-8'], ['1604.01825-2-15-0', '1604.01825-3-15-0'], ['1604.01825-2-3-0', '1604.01825-3-3-0'], ['1604.01825-2-3-1', '1604.01825-3-3-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-0', '1604.01825-2-9-0'], ['1604.01825-1-9-1', '1604.01825-2-9-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-2', '1604.01825-2-9-2'], ['1604.01825-1-9-3', '1604.01825-2-9-3'], ['1604.01825-1-9-4', '1604.01825-2-9-4'], ['1604.01825-1-9-7', '1604.01825-2-9-7'], ['1604.01825-1-10-0', '1604.01825-2-9-9'], ['1604.01825-1-10-1', '1604.01825-2-9-10'], ['1604.01825-1-10-2', '1604.01825-2-9-11'], ['1604.01825-1-10-3', '1604.01825-2-9-12'], ['1604.01825-1-10-4', '1604.01825-2-9-13'], ['1604.01825-1-10-5', '1604.01825-2-9-14'], ['1604.01825-1-10-6', '1604.01825-2-9-15'], ['1604.01825-1-10-7', '1604.01825-2-9-16']]
[['1604.01825-1-2-2', '1604.01825-2-2-2'], ['1604.01825-1-4-0', '1604.01825-2-4-0'], ['1604.01825-1-13-1', '1604.01825-2-12-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-5', '1604.01825-2-9-8']]
[]
[['1604.01825-1-12-1', '1604.01825-2-11-1'], ['1604.01825-1-14-2', '1604.01825-2-13-2'], ['1604.01825-2-11-1', '1604.01825-3-11-1'], ['1604.01825-2-11-2', '1604.01825-3-11-1'], ['1604.01825-1-9-6', '1604.01825-2-9-6']]
[]
['1604.01825-2-9-5', '1604.01825-3-9-5']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1604.01825
{'1604.01825-3-0-0': '# Introduction', '1604.01825-3-1-0': 'Despite its success, the Standard Model of particle physics still has many problems.', '1604.01825-3-1-1': 'One such problem, known as the strong CP problem [CITATION], is that the CP-violating term in strong interaction implies that the neutron electric dipole moment has to be an order of [MATH] larger than the experimental upper bound [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-1-2': 'Peccei and Quinn [CITATION] found out an elegant method to solve this problem by introducing a new global chiral symmetry [MATH] which is spontaneously broken at an energy scale [MATH] and which compensates the CP-violating term.', '1604.01825-3-1-3': 'This solution implies the existence of a new pseudoscalar particle called the axion ([MATH]) [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-1-4': 'Since the original axion model assumed [MATH] to be at the electroweak energy scale, it was ruled out by laboratory experiments [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-1-5': 'Currently the invisible axion models with the energy scale [MATH] as a free parameter, allowing up to the Plank mass scale of [MATH] GeV, are not excluded by terrestrial experiments and astrophysics [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-1-6': 'There are two popular models, the KSVZ (hadronic) [CITATION] and DFSZ (non-hadronic) [CITATION] models.', '1604.01825-3-2-0': 'The strengths of axion-photon ([MATH]), axion-electron ([MATH]) and axion-nucleon ([MATH]) couplings are different for both models as described in ref. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-2-1': 'In particular, axion-electron coupling in the DFSZ model occurs at tree level while axion-electron coupling in the KSVZ model is strongly suppressed due to axion-electron coupling at loop level.', '1604.01825-3-2-2': 'Thus, in the DFSZ model, the processes related to axion-electron coupling [CITATION] would prevail over the Primakoff process with axion-photon coupling as an axion production mechanism in stars and the sun: Compton scattering ([MATH]), axio-recombination ([MATH]), axio-deexcitation ([MATH]), axio-bremsstrahlung ([MATH]), and electron-electron collision ([MATH]), where [MATH] is an atom.', '1604.01825-3-2-3': 'The total axion flux on earth produced from the sun was recently estimated in ref. [CITATION], which includes processes with axion-electron and axion-photon couplings, as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-3-3-0': 'In this paper, we report on a solar axion search using the data sample from the KIMS experiment with CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-3-3-1': 'Since this estimation in ref. [CITATION] does not have corrections for axions heavier than 1 keV/[MATH], our search region for axions is below this value.', '1604.01825-3-4-0': 'Axions would produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect, [MATH] where [MATH] is mainly either Cs or I in the detector.', '1604.01825-3-4-1': 'We searched for this process as a signal for solar axion detection.', '1604.01825-3-4-2': 'The cross section for the axio-electric effect [CITATION] is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the axion energy, [MATH] is the photoelectric cross section for either Cs or I in ref. [CITATION], [MATH] is the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] is the axion velocity over the speed of light, [MATH] is the fine structure constant, and [MATH] is the electron mass.', '1604.01825-3-4-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the cross sections for the axio-electric effect for Cs and I atoms with [MATH].', '1604.01825-3-5-0': '# KIMS Experiment', '1604.01825-3-6-0': 'The KIMS experiment is designed to directly search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMP) using CsI(Tl) crystal detectors.', '1604.01825-3-6-1': 'The experiment is housed in the Yangyang Underground Laboratory (Y2L) with an earth overburden of 700 m (2400 m water equivalent) and uses a 12 module array of low-background CsI(Tl) crystals with a total mass of 103.4 kg.', '1604.01825-3-6-2': 'Each detector module is composed of a CsI(Tl) crystal with dimension of 8 cm x 8 cm x 30 cm and with photomultiplier tubes (PMT) mounted at each end.', '1604.01825-3-6-3': 'The amplified signals from the PMTs on each crystal were recorded by a 400 MHz flash analog-to-digital converter for a duration of 32 [MATH]s with the trigger condition requiring at least two photoelectrons (PEs) in both PMTs on each crystal within a 2 [MATH]s window.', '1604.01825-3-6-4': 'The number of PEs are 5 to 6 per keV.', '1604.01825-3-6-5': 'The crystal array is completely surrounded from inside to outside by 10 cm of copper, 5 cm of polyethylene, 15 cm of lead, and a buffer consisting of liquid scintillator (LS) of 30-cm thickness.', '1604.01825-3-6-6': "The LS buffer reduces external neutrons and gammas and is equipped with PMT's in order to reject cosmic-ray muon events.", '1604.01825-3-6-7': 'The experiment took stable data with 12 crystal modules in the period from September 2009 to December 2012.', '1604.01825-3-6-8': 'Details of the experiment can be found elsewhere [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-7-0': '# Data Analysis', '1604.01825-3-8-0': 'This analysis is based on one year data corresponding to an exposure of 34,596 [MATH].', '1604.01825-3-8-1': 'We applied event selection criteria that were developed for low-mass WIMPs search studies [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-8-2': 'One of the main sources of background events is PMT noise.', '1604.01825-3-8-3': 'In order to reject these events, a set of event-selection criteria was developed by studying noise signals from a dummy detector module consisting of PMTs mounted on both ends of a transparent and empty acrylic box.', '1604.01825-3-8-4': 'The dummy detector was operated simultaneously with the CsI(Tl) detector array.', '1604.01825-3-8-5': 'These event-selection criteria were applied for the recorded events.', '1604.01825-3-8-6': 'In addition to these criteria, events induced by high-energy cosmic-ray muons were rejected by coincidence with the muon veto detector.', '1604.01825-3-9-0': 'Events that passed the above selection criteria were divided into two independent event sets, single-detector ([MATH]) and multiple-detector ([MATH]) events.', '1604.01825-3-9-1': 'The [MATH] events are defined as those for which multiple detectors each independently satisfied the trigger condition.', '1604.01825-3-9-2': 'Since an axion would give rise to an electron-like signal with a hit in only a single detector-module, only [MATH] events were selected as axion candidate events.', '1604.01825-3-9-3': 'The [MATH] events include surface [MATH] events ([MATH]) and electron recoil events ([MATH]) from Compton scattered [MATH] rays and [MATH] decays in the crystal bulk [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-9-4': 'The [MATH] events come from decays of radioactive isotopes which contaminate the surfaces of the crystals or the surrounding materials.', '1604.01825-3-9-5': 'Major internal backgrounds for [MATH]-decays in our CsI(Tl) crystals are [MATH] (Q=1175.6 keV), [MATH] (Q=2058.7 keV) and [MATH] (Q=282 keV).', '1604.01825-3-9-6': 'The energy spectra from those radioisotopes are flat in our search region, 2 keV to 12 keV, as from Compton-scattered [MATH] rays in the MD events [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-9-7': 'Therefore we expect that the MD energy spectrum is similar to the [MATH] spectrum in the SD sample.', '1604.01825-3-9-8': 'That is, the energy spectra for [MATH] events in the detector is expected to be a flat distribution in the axion search window.', '1604.01825-3-9-9': 'Pulse-shapes of photoelectron distributions in the time domain depend on the type of particle incident on the crystal.', '1604.01825-3-9-10': 'To discriminate [MATH] events from [MATH] events we employed the pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) method described in refs. [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-9-11': 'In this method, the mean time ([MATH]) for each event is calculated as follows: [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the PE distribution.', '1604.01825-3-9-12': 'The quantity (LMT10) is obtained by taking base 10 logarithm of [MATH].', '1604.01825-3-9-13': 'The LMT10 distribution of each event type is well fitted by an asymmetric gaussian function defined as follows, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the amplitude, [MATH] is the mean value and [MATH]) is the standard deviation of left (right) side.', '1604.01825-3-9-14': 'The parameters, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], for the [MATH] events were first determined from the single-asymmetric-gaussian function fit to the MD sample data.', '1604.01825-3-9-15': 'In order to extract these fit parameters for [MATH] events, we applied fit to the data from a sample of a CsI crystal contaminated by [MATH] progenies.', '1604.01825-3-9-16': 'With these parameters fixed, the contributions of [MATH] and [MATH] events in the SD data were determined by the fit and are shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-3-10-0': 'In our detector, the expected number of axion events is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the differential axion flux on the earth, [MATH] is the detection efficiency, [MATH] and [MATH] are the axio-electric cross section for Cs and I atoms, respectively, [MATH] and [MATH] are the number of Cs and I atoms, respectively, in our detector, [MATH] is the detector live time, and [MATH] is the resolution function of our detector.', '1604.01825-3-11-0': 'The efficiency, [MATH], is estimated from the ratio of the number of MD events satisfying event selection cuts to the total number of MD events in each energy bin.', '1604.01825-3-11-1': 'The event selection efficiency is energy dependent and varies from 31.0% to 91.2%.', '1604.01825-3-12-0': 'The resolution function, [MATH], is determined from a detector simulation.', '1604.01825-3-12-1': 'For each crystal, the photoelectron yield used in the simulation was estimated using data from the 59.4 keV [MATH] generated from an [MATH] calibration source [CITATION].', '1604.01825-3-13-0': 'To estimate the number of axion events, we used the energy spectrum for the [MATH] events in the SD sample, which contains background events mainly from Compton scattered gamma rays and from [MATH] decays.', '1604.01825-3-13-1': 'The signal yield for axion event is extracted by maximizing a binned maximum likelihood function for the energy spectrum, which is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the number of bins, [MATH] and [MATH] are the expected number of signal and background events, respectively, [MATH] is the number of data events, and [MATH] and [MATH] are the probability density function (PDF) for signal and background in the energy bin [MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-3-13-2': 'The PDF for the energy spectra for the axion signal, [MATH], is constructed from the simulation by generating electron events with an energy distribution of [MATH].', '1604.01825-3-13-3': 'In order to model the background PDF below 12 keV, [MATH], we used the energy spectrum in the MD sample.', '1604.01825-3-13-4': 'This is possible because the spectrum contains only a flat Compton continuum, modified by the low-energy efficiency curve.', '1604.01825-3-13-5': 'Figure [REF] shows the distributions for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1604.01825-3-14-0': 'The signal yields, [MATH], for axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH] are found to be [MATH] to [MATH] events/year, consistent with no axion event.', '1604.01825-3-14-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the energy distributions for [MATH] events in the SD sample, the background events ([MATH] events) in the MD sample estimated by the fit and axion signal events.', '1604.01825-3-15-0': 'A 90 % confidence limit (C.L.) for the signal yield, [MATH], is obtained from [EQUATION]', '1604.01825-3-16-0': 'The resulting values obtained for [MATH] are varied from 58.56 to 60.92 events with axion masses of 0 keV/[MATH] to 1 keV/[MATH].', '1604.01825-3-16-1': 'The upper limit on [MATH] at the 90% C.L. is estimated with eq. [REF], and is found to be [MATH] and [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV/[MATH] and 1 keV/[MATH], respectively.', '1604.01825-3-16-2': 'From the upper limit on [MATH], we exclude a QCD axion heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-3-17-0': '# Summary', '1604.01825-3-18-0': 'A search for solar axions from 34,956 [MATH] exposure with the KIMS CsI(Tl) detector array has been performed.', '1604.01825-3-18-1': 'In this search, we used the solar axion flux recently estimated with the DFSZ model assuming that axions produce electron signals in the CsI(Tl) detector through the axio-electric effect.', '1604.01825-3-18-2': 'The number of extracted axion events is consistent with no axion signal in this data sample.', '1604.01825-3-18-3': 'At the 90 C.L., we obtain an upper limit of the axion-electron coupling, [MATH] for axion mass of 0 keV to 1 keV and exclude QCD axions heavier than 0.48 eV/[MATH] in the DFSZ model and 140.9 eV/[MATH] in the KSVZ model.', '1604.01825-3-18-4': 'We exclude a region in the plane of axion mass and the axion-electron coupling at 90 C.L. as shown in figure [REF].', '1604.01825-3-19-0': 'We thank the Korea Midland Power Co. and Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Co. for providing the underground laboratory space at Yangyang.', '1604.01825-3-19-1': 'We acknowledge support from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in Korea under the project code IBS-R016-D1, IBS-R016-D2, the WCU program (R32-10155), and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2011-0031280 and NRF-2011-35B-C00007).'}
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1608.00087
{'1608.00087-1-0-0': 'We suggest a scalar singlet extension of the standard model, in which the multiple-point principle (MPP) condition of a vanishing Higgs potential at the Planck scale is realized.', '1608.00087-1-0-1': 'Although there have been lots of attempts to realize the MPP at the Planck scale, the realization with keeping naturalness is quite difficult.', '1608.00087-1-0-2': 'Our model can easily achieve the MPP at the Planck scale without large Higgs mass corrections.', '1608.00087-1-0-3': 'It is worth noting that the electroweak symmetry can be radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-1-0-4': 'In the naturalness point of view, the singlet scalar mass should be of [MATH] or less.', '1608.00087-1-0-5': 'We also consider right-handed neutrino extension of the model for neutrino mass generation.', '1608.00087-1-0-6': 'The model does not affect the MPP scenario, and might keep the naturalness with the new particle mass scale beyond TeV, thanks to accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections.', '1608.00087-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1608.00087-1-2-0': 'The observed mass of the Higgs boson may imply that Higgs self-coupling vanish at a high energy scale in the framework of the standard model (SM).', '1608.00087-1-2-1': 'About twenty years ago, Ref. [CITATION] suggested the multiple-point principle (MPP) at the Planck scale, and predicted Higgs boson mass as [MATH] with [MATH] for the top quark mass.', '1608.00087-1-2-2': 'The MPP means that there are two degenerate vacua in the SM Higgs potential, [MATH] and [MATH], where [MATH] is the effective Higgs potential, [MATH] is the vacuum expectation value (VEV) of the Higgs doublet, and [MATH] is the reduced Planck scale.', '1608.00087-1-2-3': 'One is our vacuum at the electroweak (EW) scale, and the other vacuum lies at the Planck scale, which can be realized by the Planck-scale boundary conditions of vanishing effective Higgs self-coupling, [MATH], and its beta function, [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-2-4': 'Furthermore, an asymptotic safety scenario of gravity [CITATION] predicted 125GeV Higgs boson mass with a few GeV uncertainty.', '1608.00087-1-2-5': 'This scenario also pointed out [MATH] and [MATH] (see also Refs. [CITATION]-[CITATION] for more recent analyses).', '1608.00087-1-3-0': 'Although Ref. [CITATION] was able to predict the approximate Higgs boson mass, the MPP condition can not fit the observed 125GeV Higgs boson mass with the recent data inputs.', '1608.00087-1-3-1': 'In fact, within the context of the SM, the MPP condition at the Planck scale leads to the Higgs boson mass as [MATH] by using [MATH] for the world-averaged top quark mass [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-3-2': 'There have been lots of attempts to realize the MPP at the Planck scale so far [CITATION]-[CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-3-3': 'For example, in Ref. [CITATION] the MPP at the Planck scale is achieved by introducing a scalar dark matter and a large Majorana mass of the right-handed neutrino.', '1608.00087-1-3-4': 'In this case, masses of the dark matter and the right-handed neutrino can be predicted.', '1608.00087-1-3-5': 'However, there is a tension from the view point of naturalness, since the Higgs mass corrections via the heavy particles well-exceeds the EW scale.', '1608.00087-1-3-6': 'Actually, it turns out to be quite difficult to realize the MPP at the Planck scale while keeping naturalness.', '1608.00087-1-4-0': 'The difficulty is related with the renormalization group (RG) running of the Higgs self-coupling.', '1608.00087-1-4-1': 'In order to satisfy [MATH] and [MATH] simultaneously, there should exist one or more new particles which change [MATH] adequately from the SM case.', '1608.00087-1-4-2': 'In almost all cases, such new particles need to be much heavier than the EW scale, as long as the Higgs self-coupling is "continuous" during the RG running.', '1608.00087-1-4-3': 'However, when a new scalar field couples with the Higgs doublet and develops nonzero VEV, the Higgs self-coupling has a tree-level threshold correction [CITATION]-[CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-4-4': 'The correction causes a gap between the Higgs self-coupling in the extended model and the one in the effective theory, which is identified as the SM one.', '1608.00087-1-4-5': 'It has been shown that using the gap, the EW vacuum can be stabilized in a scalar singlet extended model [CITATION] and type-II seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-4-6': 'Most importantly, even if the new scalar particle is as light as a TeV scale, the gap can appear.', '1608.00087-1-4-7': 'Then, the model does not affect the naturalness.', '1608.00087-1-5-0': 'In this paper, we will investigate the MPP condition in a scalar singlet extended model, which can be consistent with the 125GeV Higgs boson mass.', '1608.00087-1-5-1': 'Our model is explained in the next section, in which we show the gap explicitly.', '1608.00087-1-5-2': 'Numerical analyses of the MPP scenario are given in Sec. [REF].', '1608.00087-1-5-3': 'We will find that the EW symmetry can be radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-1-5-4': 'We also discuss the naturalness of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-1-5-5': 'In Sec. [REF], we will introduce right-handed neutrinos into the scalar singlet extended model to incorporate active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-1-5-6': 'We will show that in the presence of the right-handed neutrinos, the MPP scenario can be realized.', '1608.00087-1-5-7': 'It will be pointed out that even if the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos are much heavier than the EW scale, the model might keep the naturalness thanks to an accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections coming from them.', '1608.00087-1-5-8': 'Finally, we will summarize our results in Sec. [REF].', '1608.00087-1-6-0': '# Scalar singlet extension', '1608.00087-1-7-0': 'We consider a simple extension of the SM with a real singlet scalar field.', '1608.00087-1-7-1': 'The scalar potential is given by [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the Higgs doublet and the scalar singlet fields, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-7-2': 'In this paper, we consider the case with [MATH] and [MATH], and omit a linear term of the singlet scalar field, which can vanish by a shift of the field.', '1608.00087-1-7-3': 'Note that we do not assume an ad hoc [MATH] symmetry, and then, we will find that [MATH] plays an important role for the vacuum stability and the EW symmetry breaking.', '1608.00087-1-7-4': 'In the unitary gauge, the scalar fields are written by [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are vacuum expectation values.', '1608.00087-1-7-5': 'The Higgs VEV is [MATH], and [MATH] has a negative small value in our setup as will be discussed below.', '1608.00087-1-8-0': 'The minimization conditions of the potential are given by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-8-1': 'From Eq. ([REF]), the Higgs VEV is obtained by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-8-2': 'To realize the EW symmetry breaking, the Higgs mass term [MATH] is negative at the EW scale, and [MATH] should be satisfied.', '1608.00087-1-8-3': 'Without any fine-tuning, we can expect [MATH] by a naive dimensional analysis.', '1608.00087-1-8-4': 'Thus, [MATH] should be much smaller than [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-9-0': 'The nonzero Higgs VEV induces a tadpole for the singlet scalar due to the [MATH] term.', '1608.00087-1-9-1': 'If we neglect the cubic term of [MATH], Eq. ([REF]) is approximated by [MATH] for [MATH], [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-9-2': 'It gives the singlet VEV as [EQUATION] and its order of magnitude is [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-9-3': 'In the no tadpole limit [MATH], [MATH] vanishes.', '1608.00087-1-9-4': 'The assumption of [MATH] seems to be unnatural, but it is necessarily required by the MPP condition as discussed later.', '1608.00087-1-9-5': 'Actually, we will find that [MATH] and [MATH] also vanish by the MPP condition.', '1608.00087-1-10-0': 'The mass matrix for the scalar fields is expressed by the second derivatives of the potential at the VEVs: [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-10-1': 'We identify the lighter eigenstate [MATH] with the SM-like Higgs, and its mass eigenvalue [MATH] corresponds to the observed Higgs boson mass [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-10-2': 'In our numerical calculation, we will take into account a renormalization group effect for the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-1-10-3': 'The scalar-mixing matrix is defined by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-10-4': 'For [MATH], the mixing coupling is obtained by [MATH], and it must be lower than the experimental bound [MATH] given by the LHC Run 1 data [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-10-5': 'This constraint induces [MATH], and also [MATH] from Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-1-11-0': 'In the low energy effective theory, the tree-level effective Higgs potential is given by [CITATION] [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-11-1': 'Note that the Higgs self-coupling has a nontrivial gap [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-11-2': 'It can play a crucial role to make the EW vacuum stable like in a scenario in Refs. [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-11-3': 'In particular, the Higgs self-coupling [MATH] can vanish at the UV scale, e.g. the Planck scale, as well as the effective Higgs self-coupling [MATH] explains the observed Higgs boson mass, which has been studied in a type-II seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-11-4': 'This scenario indicates [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-11-5': 'We show the RG running of the Higgs self-coupling in Fig. [REF], where we have used the beta functions given in Appendix [REF].', '1608.00087-1-12-0': 'The vertical and horizontal axes show the Higgs self-coupling and renormalization scale [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-1-12-1': 'Here, we have considered [MATH] as the cutoff of the SM, and taken the boundary condition [MATH] at [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-12-2': 'Figure [REF] shows that the Higgs self-coupling remains positive up to the Planck scale, and thus, the EW vacuum can be stabilized.', '1608.00087-1-13-0': '# Multiple-point principle', '1608.00087-1-14-0': 'The MPP condition requires vanishing all scalar-quartic couplings and simultaneously vanishing their beta functions at the UV scale.', '1608.00087-1-14-1': 'In particular, [MATH] with [MATH] requires the top Yukawa coupling as [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-14-2': 'In this paper, when we solve the RG equations, we use boundary conditions Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]).', '1608.00087-1-14-3': 'Then, to realize [MATH], the top pole mass [MATH] should be taken as 172.322GeV, 172.687GeV and 173.052GeV for the fixed strong coupling [MATH], 0.1185 and 0.1191, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-14-4': 'For measurements of the top pole mass, [MATH] [CITATION] and [MATH] [CITATION] are obtained by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-14-5': 'Thus, our result expected by the MPP is consistent with the current experimental data.', '1608.00087-1-14-6': 'In the following, we take [MATH] and [MATH] as reference values.', '1608.00087-1-15-0': 'Imposing the MPP condition in the scalar singlet extended model, [MATH] and [MATH] remain zero during the RG runnings.', '1608.00087-1-15-1': 'Then, the MPP condition also requires a vanishing triple coupling of the singlet scalar ([MATH]), because the highest term of [MATH] must be even function to realize the degenerate vacua.', '1608.00087-1-15-2': 'Once [MATH] vanishes, it also remains zero.', '1608.00087-1-15-3': 'In the rest of this paper, we can take away [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] from our discussion.', '1608.00087-1-16-0': 'It is worth noting that [MATH] is uniquely determined for a given [MATH], once the MPP condition and Eq. ([REF]) are required.', '1608.00087-1-16-1': 'Then, [MATH] is determined by [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-16-2': 'In addition, [MATH] is exactly obtained by Eq. ([REF]) because of [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-16-3': 'As a result, our model is controlled by only one free parameter.', '1608.00087-1-16-4': 'In the following, we choose [MATH] as the free parameter.', '1608.00087-1-17-0': 'The left panel of Fig. [REF] shows [MATH] dependence of [MATH] as the blue line.', '1608.00087-1-18-0': 'The red and black-dashed line show [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-1-18-1': 'We find that [MATH] is almost constant, and thus, [MATH] is roughly proportional to [MATH] as shown in the right panel of Fig. [REF].', '1608.00087-1-18-2': 'To stabilize the EW vacuum, the Higgs self-coupling should remain positive up to the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-1-18-3': 'Thus, [MATH] has to be smaller than [MATH], and we do not consider the heavier case.', '1608.00087-1-19-0': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] dependences of [MATH] and [MATH] in the left and right panels, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-20-0': 'Imposing the MPP condition, Eq. ([REF]) becomes exact equal, where values of [MATH] is obtained as [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-20-1': 'Since [MATH] is almost constant, [MATH] is almost inversely proportional to [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-20-2': 'We find that [MATH] and particularly [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-20-3': 'The scalar-mixing angle is obtained by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-20-4': 'Thus, we can estimate [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-20-5': 'Note that all parameter region is safe from the LHC Run 1 constraint [MATH] [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-20-6': 'This result is different from the estimation discussed below Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-1-20-7': 'The reason is that the estimation comes from [MATH], while the MPP condition requires [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-21-0': 'It is remarkable that the EW symmetry is radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-1-21-1': 'The beta function of [MATH] is dominated by [MATH] term for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-21-2': 'Its RG solution is approximately given by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-21-3': 'To realize the EW symmetry breaking, [MATH] should be negative at the EW scale, while [MATH] is positive at the Planck scale as [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-21-4': 'This behavior is explicitly shown in Fig. [REF].', '1608.00087-1-22-0': 'Here, we have taken the cutoff of the SM at [MATH], and then, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-23-0': 'In the end of this section, we mention the naturalness of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-1-23-1': 'When [MATH] is much higher than the EW scale, it induces [MATH], that is, the RG running of [MATH] is highly tuned to realize the observed Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-1-23-2': 'Here, we define the fine-tuning level as [MATH], where [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-23-3': 'For example, [MATH] indicates that we need to fine-tune the Higgs mass squared at the accuracy of 10% level.', '1608.00087-1-23-4': 'Figure [REF] shows the [MATH] dependence of [MATH], and we find [MATH], 10 and 100 correspond to [MATH], 3.0TeV and 9.0TeV, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-24-0': 'Therefore, from the naturalness point of view, there should exist the singlet scalar at [MATH] scale.', '1608.00087-1-24-1': 'We have have found that [MATH] vanishes for [MATH], and becomes negative in the lower [MATH] region, in which the radiative EW symmetry breaking does not occur.', '1608.00087-1-24-2': 'For a tadpole diagram which contributes Higgs mass correction, it is tiny due to the heavy mass of [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-25-0': '# Additional extension with right-handed neutrinos', '1608.00087-1-26-0': 'In addition to the singlet scalar, we can introduce right-handed neutrinos to explain the active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-1-26-1': 'Interaction parts of the Lagrangian including right-handed neutrinos are given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are lepton doublet and right-handed neutrino fields, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-26-2': 'Imposing the MPP condition at the Planck scale, [MATH] is required, and then, [MATH] vanishes in all energy scales (see Appendix [REF]).', '1608.00087-1-26-3': 'Therefore, new parameters are only [MATH] and [MATH] as same as the usual type-I seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-26-4': 'These parameters should satisfy the seesaw relation [MATH], where [MATH] is the active neutrino mass matrix calculated by mass eigenvalues and the PMNS matrix [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-27-0': 'When we consider the [MATH] (or equivalently [MATH]) case, right-handed neutrino contributions are negligible in runnings of the scalar-quartic couplings.', '1608.00087-1-27-1': 'Thus, the MPP scenario remains the same as the one without right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-1-27-2': 'However, only the RG running of [MATH] might change significantly.', '1608.00087-1-27-3': 'Including contributions of the right-handed neutrinos, Eq. ([REF]) is rewritten by [EQUATION] or [EQUATION] where, using the seesaw relation, we have defined [MATH] (in the right side [MATH] is a number not matrix).', '1608.00087-1-27-4': 'The effective neutrino mass [MATH] is typically given by the heaviest active neutrino mass, and [MATH] means the relevant number of right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-1-27-5': 'Since the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos oppositely contribute to [MATH], the Higgs mass corrections might be accidentally canceled (at the one-loop level).', '1608.00087-1-28-0': 'We show contour plot of [MATH] in Fig. [REF], where the horizontal and vertical axes show [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-1-29-0': 'For the calculation of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we have taken [MATH] and [MATH] as reference values.', '1608.00087-1-29-1': 'The positive [MATH] region, in which singlet scalar contribution is dominant, can drive the radiative EW symmetry breaking as mentioned above.', '1608.00087-1-29-2': 'When the right-handed neutrino mass becomes larger, the value of [MATH] becomes smaller and vanishes at a specific point.', '1608.00087-1-29-3': 'From Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), the point is estimated by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-1-29-4': 'If this relation is realized, [MATH] can be small and hence our scenario can be natural even for the masses of singlet scalar and right-handed neutrinos [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-30-0': '# Summary', '1608.00087-1-31-0': 'We have investigated the scalar singlet extension of the SM with the MPP condition, in which the scalar potential has two degenerate vacua at the EW and a UV scales.', '1608.00087-1-31-1': 'The condition requires all vanishing scalar-quartic couplings and simultaneously vanishing their beta functions at the UV scale, which we have taken as the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-1-31-2': 'Particularly, [MATH] with [MATH] can determine the top pole mass as 172.322GeV, 172.687GeV and 173.052GeV for [MATH], 0.1185 and 0.1191, respectively.', '1608.00087-1-31-3': 'These values are consistent with the current experimental data [MATH] by the ATLAS collaboration [CITATION] and [MATH] by the CMS collaboration [CITATION].', '1608.00087-1-31-4': 'The MPP conditions strongly restrict our model parameters, and there is only one free parameter left in our analysis, which we have taken the singlet mass [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-31-5': 'We have shown [MATH] dependence of some model predictions, and found that our model is consistent with the LHC Run 1 results for the SM Higgs boson properties.', '1608.00087-1-32-0': 'To simultaneously realize the MPP condition and the observed Higgs mass, singlet-Higgs-Higgs coupling [MATH] plays an important role.', '1608.00087-1-32-1': 'Furthermore, this coupling induces the radiative EW symmetry breaking.', '1608.00087-1-32-2': 'When the singlet mass is much larger than the Higgs mass, [MATH] term dominate the beta function of the Higgs mass squared [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-32-3': 'Then, the sign of [MATH] can flip during the RG running, that is, [MATH] becomes negative toward the EW scale while positive at the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-1-32-4': 'We have found that this behavior can occur for [MATH].', '1608.00087-1-32-5': 'On the other hand, too large [MATH] causes the fine-tuning problem of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-1-32-6': 'To avoid the problem, there should exist the singlet scalar at [MATH] scale.', '1608.00087-1-33-0': 'In order to incorporate the neutrino masses and flavor mixings to the singlet scalar extended model, we have introduced right-handed neutrinos and investigated the MPP scenario.', '1608.00087-1-33-1': 'Here, new parameters [MATH] and [MATH] are introduced, which are neutrino Dirac Yukawa coupling and right-handed neutrino Majorana mass matrices, respectively, and leading to the type-I seesaw mechanism.', '1608.00087-1-33-2': 'For [MATH] (or equivalently [MATH]), the running of all couplings except [MATH] are almost the same as before.', '1608.00087-1-33-3': 'Therefore, the model can realize the MPP scenario as well as explaining the active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-1-34-0': 'It might be possible to solve the fine-tuning problem of the Higgs mass by an accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections coming from the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-1-34-1': 'We have found its approximate condition as Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-1-34-2': 'If the condition is satisfied, masses of singlet scalar and right-handed neutrinos can exceed [MATH].'}
{'1608.00087-2-0-0': 'We suggest a scalar singlet extension of the standard model, in which the multiple-point principle (MPP) condition of a vanishing Higgs potential at the Planck scale is realized.', '1608.00087-2-0-1': 'Although there have been lots of attempts to realize the MPP at the Planck scale, the realization with keeping naturalness is quite difficult.', '1608.00087-2-0-2': 'Our model can easily achieve the MPP at the Planck scale without large Higgs mass corrections.', '1608.00087-2-0-3': 'It is worth noting that the electroweak symmetry can be radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-2-0-4': 'In the naturalness point of view, the singlet scalar mass should be of [MATH] or less.', '1608.00087-2-0-5': 'We also consider right-handed neutrino extension of the model for neutrino mass generation.', '1608.00087-2-0-6': 'The model does not affect the MPP scenario, and might keep the naturalness with the new particle mass scale beyond TeV, thanks to accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections.', '1608.00087-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1608.00087-2-2-0': 'The observed mass of the Higgs boson may imply that Higgs self-coupling vanish at a high energy scale in the framework of the standard model (SM).', '1608.00087-2-2-1': 'About twenty years ago, Ref. [CITATION] suggested the multiple-point principle (MPP) at the Planck scale, and predicted Higgs boson mass as [MATH] with [MATH] for the top quark mass.', '1608.00087-2-2-2': 'The MPP means that there are two degenerate vacua in the SM Higgs potential, [MATH] and [MATH], where [MATH] is the effective Higgs potential, [MATH] is the vacuum expectation value (VEV) of the Higgs doublet, and [MATH] is the reduced Planck scale.', '1608.00087-2-2-3': 'One is our vacuum at the electroweak (EW) scale, and the other vacuum lies at the Planck scale, which can be realized by the Planck-scale boundary conditions of vanishing effective Higgs self-coupling, [MATH], and its beta function, [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-2-4': 'Furthermore, an asymptotic safety scenario of gravity [CITATION] predicted 125GeV Higgs boson mass with a few GeV uncertainty.', '1608.00087-2-2-5': 'This scenario also pointed out [MATH] and [MATH] (see also Refs. [CITATION]-[CITATION] for more recent analyses).', '1608.00087-2-3-0': 'Although Ref. [CITATION] was able to predict the approximate Higgs boson mass, the MPP condition can not fit the observed 125GeV Higgs boson mass with the recent data inputs.', '1608.00087-2-3-1': 'In fact, within the context of the SM, the MPP condition at the Planck scale leads to the Higgs boson mass as [MATH] by using [MATH] for the world-averaged top quark mass [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-3-2': 'There have been lots of attempts to realize the MPP at the Planck scale so far [CITATION]-[CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-3-3': 'For example, in Ref. [CITATION] the MPP at the Planck scale is achieved by introducing a scalar dark matter and a large Majorana mass of the right-handed neutrino.', '1608.00087-2-3-4': 'In this case, masses of the dark matter and the right-handed neutrino can be predicted.', '1608.00087-2-3-5': 'However, there is a tension from the view point of naturalness, since the Higgs mass corrections via the heavy particles well-exceeds the EW scale.', '1608.00087-2-3-6': 'Actually, it turns out to be quite difficult to realize the MPP at the Planck scale while keeping naturalness.', '1608.00087-2-4-0': 'The difficulty is related with the renormalization group (RG) running of the Higgs self-coupling.', '1608.00087-2-4-1': 'In order to satisfy [MATH] and [MATH] simultaneously, there should exist one or more new particles which change [MATH] adequately from the SM case.', '1608.00087-2-4-2': 'In almost all cases, such new particles need to be much heavier than the EW scale, as long as the Higgs self-coupling is "continuous" during the RG running.', '1608.00087-2-4-3': 'However, when a new scalar field couples with the Higgs doublet and develops nonzero VEV, the Higgs self-coupling has a tree-level threshold correction [CITATION]-[CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-4-4': 'The correction causes a gap between the Higgs self-coupling in the extended model and the one in the effective theory, which is identified as the SM one.', '1608.00087-2-4-5': 'It has been shown that using the gap, the EW vacuum can be stabilized in a scalar singlet extended model [CITATION] and type-II seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-4-6': 'Most importantly, even if the new scalar particle is as light as a TeV scale, the gap can appear.', '1608.00087-2-4-7': 'Then, the model does not affect the naturalness in the sense of Bardeen [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-5-0': 'Here, we comment on the naturalness.', '1608.00087-2-5-1': "According to the Bardeen's argument, in quantum corrections quadratic divergences can be treated as an unphysical quantity, so that only logarithmic divergences should be concerned.", '1608.00087-2-5-2': 'In this sense, there is no hierarchy problem within the SM, which possesses an approximate scale invariance and its stability is guaranteed by the smallness of logarithmic corrections.', '1608.00087-2-5-3': 'Since the logarithmic corrections can be taken into account as a beta function of the Higgs mass parameter, the naturalness can be evaluated with the solution of its RG equation.', '1608.00087-2-5-4': 'Namely, it is natural if the Higgs mass parameter does not significantly change during the RG running.', '1608.00087-2-5-5': 'We will apply this sense of naturalness to our model.', '1608.00087-2-6-0': 'In this paper, we will investigate the MPP condition in a scalar singlet extended model, which can be consistent with the 125GeV Higgs boson mass.', '1608.00087-2-6-1': 'Our model is explained in the next section, in which we show the gap explicitly.', '1608.00087-2-6-2': 'Numerical analyses of the MPP scenario are given in Sec. [REF].', '1608.00087-2-6-3': 'We will find that the EW symmetry can be radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-2-6-4': 'We also discuss the naturalness of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-2-6-5': 'In Sec. [REF], we will introduce right-handed neutrinos into the scalar singlet extended model to incorporate active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-2-6-6': 'We will show that in the presence of the right-handed neutrinos, the MPP scenario can be realized.', '1608.00087-2-6-7': 'It will be pointed out that even if the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos are much heavier than the EW scale, the model might keep the naturalness thanks to an accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections coming from them.', '1608.00087-2-6-8': 'Finally, we will summarize our results in Sec. [REF].', '1608.00087-2-7-0': '# Scalar singlet extension', '1608.00087-2-8-0': 'We consider a simple extension of the SM with a real singlet scalar field.', '1608.00087-2-8-1': 'The scalar potential is given by [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the Higgs doublet and the scalar singlet fields, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-8-2': 'In this paper, we consider the case with [MATH] and [MATH], and omit a linear term of the singlet scalar field, which can vanish by a shift of the field.', '1608.00087-2-8-3': 'Note that we do not assume an ad hoc [MATH] symmetry, and then, we will find that [MATH] plays an important role for the vacuum stability and the EW symmetry breaking.', '1608.00087-2-8-4': 'In the unitary gauge, the scalar fields are written by [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are vacuum expectation values.', '1608.00087-2-8-5': 'The Higgs VEV is [MATH], and [MATH] has a negative small value in our setup as will be discussed below.', '1608.00087-2-9-0': 'The minimization conditions of the potential are given by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-9-1': 'From Eq. ([REF]), the Higgs VEV is obtained by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-9-2': 'To realize the EW symmetry breaking, the Higgs mass term [MATH] is negative at the EW scale, and [MATH] should be satisfied.', '1608.00087-2-9-3': 'Without any fine-tuning, we can expect [MATH] by a naive dimensional analysis.', '1608.00087-2-9-4': 'Thus, [MATH] should be much smaller than [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-10-0': 'The nonzero Higgs VEV induces a tadpole for the singlet scalar due to the [MATH] term.', '1608.00087-2-10-1': 'If we neglect the cubic term of [MATH], Eq. ([REF]) is approximated by [MATH] for [MATH], [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-10-2': 'It gives the singlet VEV as [EQUATION] and its order of magnitude is [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-10-3': 'In the no tadpole limit [MATH], [MATH] vanishes.', '1608.00087-2-10-4': 'The assumption of [MATH] seems to be unnatural, but it is necessarily required by the MPP condition as discussed later.', '1608.00087-2-10-5': 'Actually, we will find that [MATH] and [MATH] also vanish by the MPP condition.', '1608.00087-2-11-0': 'The mass matrix for the scalar fields is expressed by the second derivatives of the potential at the VEVs: [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-11-1': 'We identify the lighter eigenstate [MATH] with the SM-like Higgs, and its mass eigenvalue [MATH] corresponds to the observed Higgs boson mass [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-11-2': 'In our numerical calculation, we will take into account a renormalization group effect for the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-2-11-3': 'The scalar-mixing matrix is defined by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-11-4': 'For [MATH], the mixing coupling is obtained by [MATH], and it must be lower than the experimental bound [MATH] given by the LHC Run 1 data [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-11-5': 'This constraint induces [MATH], and also [MATH] from Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-2-12-0': 'In the low energy effective theory, the tree-level effective Higgs potential is given by [CITATION] [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-12-1': 'Note that the Higgs self-coupling has a nontrivial gap [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-12-2': 'It can play a crucial role to make the EW vacuum stable like in a scenario in Refs. [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-12-3': 'In particular, the Higgs self-coupling [MATH] can vanish at the UV scale, e.g. the Planck scale, as well as the effective Higgs self-coupling [MATH] explains the observed Higgs boson mass, which has been studied in a type-II seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-12-4': 'This scenario indicates [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-12-5': 'We show the RG running of the Higgs self-coupling in Fig. [REF], where we have used the beta functions given in Appendix [REF].', '1608.00087-2-13-0': 'The vertical and horizontal axes show the Higgs self-coupling and renormalization scale [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-2-13-1': 'Here, we have considered [MATH] as the cutoff of the SM, and taken the boundary condition [MATH] at [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-13-2': 'Figure [REF] shows that the Higgs self-coupling remains positive up to the Planck scale, and thus, the EW vacuum can be stabilized.', '1608.00087-2-14-0': '# Multiple-point principle', '1608.00087-2-15-0': 'The MPP condition requires vanishing all scalar-quartic couplings and simultaneously vanishing their beta functions at the UV scale.', '1608.00087-2-15-1': 'In particular, [MATH] with [MATH] requires the top Yukawa coupling as [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-15-2': 'In this paper, when we solve the RG equations, we use boundary conditions Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]).', '1608.00087-2-15-3': 'Then, to realize [MATH], the top pole mass [MATH] should be taken as 172.322GeV, 172.687GeV and 173.052GeV for the fixed strong coupling [MATH], 0.1185 and 0.1191, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-15-4': 'For measurements of the top pole mass, [MATH] [CITATION] and [MATH] [CITATION] are obtained by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-15-5': 'Thus, our result expected by the MPP is consistent with the current experimental data.', '1608.00087-2-15-6': 'In the following, we take [MATH] and [MATH] as reference values.', '1608.00087-2-16-0': 'Imposing the MPP condition in the scalar singlet extended model, [MATH] and [MATH] remain zero during the RG runnings.', '1608.00087-2-16-1': 'Then, the MPP condition also requires a vanishing triple coupling of the singlet scalar ([MATH]), because the highest term of [MATH] must be even function to realize the degenerate vacua.', '1608.00087-2-16-2': 'Once [MATH] vanishes, it also remains zero.', '1608.00087-2-16-3': 'In the rest of this paper, we can take away [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] from our discussion.', '1608.00087-2-16-4': 'Note that for the vacuum around the Planck scale, [MATH], the stationary condition ([REF]) suggests [MATH] with [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-16-5': 'This value of [MATH] is extremely small and practically we can use the MPP condition as [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-17-0': 'It is worth noting that [MATH] is uniquely determined for a given [MATH], once the MPP condition and Eq. ([REF]) are required.', '1608.00087-2-17-1': 'Then, [MATH] is determined by [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-17-2': 'In addition, [MATH] is exactly obtained by Eq. ([REF]) because of [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-17-3': 'As a result, our model is controlled by only one free parameter.', '1608.00087-2-17-4': 'In the following, we choose [MATH] as the free parameter.', '1608.00087-2-18-0': 'The left panel of Fig. [REF] shows [MATH] dependence of [MATH] as the blue line.', '1608.00087-2-19-0': 'The red and black-dashed line show [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-2-19-1': 'We find that [MATH] is almost constant, and thus, [MATH] is roughly proportional to [MATH] as shown in the right panel of Fig. [REF].', '1608.00087-2-19-2': 'To stabilize the EW vacuum, the Higgs self-coupling should remain positive up to the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-2-19-3': 'Thus, [MATH] has to be smaller than [MATH], and we do not consider the heavier case.', '1608.00087-2-20-0': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] dependences of [MATH] and [MATH] in the left and right panels, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-21-0': 'Imposing the MPP condition, Eq. ([REF]) becomes exact equal, where values of [MATH] is obtained as [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-21-1': 'Since [MATH] is almost constant, [MATH] is almost inversely proportional to [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-21-2': 'We find that [MATH] and particularly [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-21-3': 'The scalar-mixing angle is obtained by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-21-4': 'Thus, we can estimate [MATH] for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-21-5': 'Note that all parameter region is safe from the LHC Run 1 constraint [MATH] [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-21-6': 'This result is different from the estimation discussed below Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-2-21-7': 'The reason is that the estimation comes from [MATH], while the MPP condition requires [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-22-0': 'It is remarkable that the EW symmetry is radiatively broken in our model.', '1608.00087-2-22-1': 'The beta function of [MATH] is dominated by [MATH] term for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-22-2': 'Its RG solution is approximately given by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-22-3': 'To realize the EW symmetry breaking, [MATH] should be negative at the EW scale, while [MATH] is positive at the Planck scale as [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-22-4': 'This behavior is explicitly shown in Fig. [REF].', '1608.00087-2-23-0': 'Here, we have taken the cutoff of the SM at [MATH], and then, [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-24-0': 'In the end of this section, we mention the naturalness of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-2-24-1': 'When [MATH] is much higher than the EW scale, it induces [MATH], that is, the RG running of [MATH] is highly tuned to realize the observed Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-2-24-2': 'Here, we define the fine-tuning level as [MATH], where [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-24-3': 'For example, [MATH] indicates that we need to fine-tune the Higgs mass squared at the accuracy of 10% level.', '1608.00087-2-24-4': 'Figure [REF] shows the [MATH] dependence of [MATH], and we find [MATH], 10 and 100 correspond to [MATH], 3.0TeV and 9.0TeV, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-25-0': 'Therefore, from the naturalness point of view, there should exist the singlet scalar at [MATH] scale.', '1608.00087-2-25-1': 'We have have found that [MATH] vanishes for [MATH], and becomes negative in the lower [MATH] region, in which the radiative EW symmetry breaking does not occur.', '1608.00087-2-25-2': 'For a tadpole diagram which contributes Higgs mass correction, it is tiny due to the heavy mass of [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-26-0': '# Additional extension with right-handed neutrinos', '1608.00087-2-27-0': 'In addition to the singlet scalar, we can introduce right-handed neutrinos to explain the active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-2-27-1': 'Interaction parts of the Lagrangian including right-handed neutrinos are given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are lepton doublet and right-handed neutrino fields, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-27-2': 'Imposing the MPP condition at the Planck scale, [MATH] is required, and then, [MATH] vanishes in all energy scales (see Appendix [REF]).', '1608.00087-2-27-3': 'Therefore, new parameters are only [MATH] and [MATH] as same as the usual type-I seesaw model [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-27-4': 'These parameters should satisfy the seesaw relation [MATH], where [MATH] is the active neutrino mass matrix calculated by mass eigenvalues and the PMNS matrix [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-28-0': 'When we consider the [MATH] (or equivalently [MATH]) case, right-handed neutrino contributions are negligible in runnings of the scalar-quartic couplings.', '1608.00087-2-28-1': 'Thus, the MPP scenario remains the same as the one without right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-2-28-2': 'However, only the RG running of [MATH] might change significantly.', '1608.00087-2-28-3': 'Including contributions of the right-handed neutrinos, Eq. ([REF]) is rewritten by [EQUATION] or [EQUATION] where, using the seesaw relation, we have defined [MATH] (in the right side [MATH] is a number not matrix).', '1608.00087-2-28-4': 'The effective neutrino mass [MATH] is typically given by the heaviest active neutrino mass, and [MATH] means the relevant number of right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-2-28-5': 'Since the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos oppositely contribute to [MATH], the Higgs mass corrections might be accidentally canceled (at the one-loop level).', '1608.00087-2-29-0': 'We show contour plot of [MATH] in Fig. [REF], where the horizontal and vertical axes show [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1608.00087-2-30-0': 'For the calculation of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we have taken [MATH] and [MATH] as reference values.', '1608.00087-2-30-1': 'The positive [MATH] region, in which singlet scalar contribution is dominant, can drive the radiative EW symmetry breaking as mentioned above.', '1608.00087-2-30-2': 'When the right-handed neutrino mass becomes larger, the value of [MATH] becomes smaller and vanishes at a specific point.', '1608.00087-2-30-3': 'From Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), the point is estimated by [EQUATION]', '1608.00087-2-30-4': 'If this relation is realized, [MATH] can be small and hence our scenario can be natural even for the masses of singlet scalar and right-handed neutrinos [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-31-0': '# Summary', '1608.00087-2-32-0': 'We have investigated the scalar singlet extension of the SM with the MPP condition, in which the scalar potential has two degenerate vacua at the EW and a UV scales.', '1608.00087-2-32-1': 'The condition requires all vanishing scalar-quartic couplings and simultaneously vanishing their beta functions at the UV scale, which we have taken as the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-2-32-2': 'Particularly, [MATH] with [MATH] can determine the top pole mass as 172.322GeV, 172.687GeV and 173.052GeV for [MATH], 0.1185 and 0.1191, respectively.', '1608.00087-2-32-3': 'These values are consistent with the current experimental data [MATH] by the ATLAS collaboration [CITATION] and [MATH] by the CMS collaboration [CITATION].', '1608.00087-2-32-4': 'The MPP conditions strongly restrict our model parameters, and there is only one free parameter left in our analysis, which we have taken the singlet mass [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-32-5': 'We have shown [MATH] dependence of some model predictions, and found that our model is consistent with the LHC Run 1 results for the SM Higgs boson properties.', '1608.00087-2-33-0': 'To simultaneously realize the MPP condition and the observed Higgs mass, singlet-Higgs-Higgs coupling [MATH] plays an important role.', '1608.00087-2-33-1': 'Furthermore, this coupling induces the radiative EW symmetry breaking.', '1608.00087-2-33-2': 'When the singlet mass is much larger than the Higgs mass, [MATH] term dominate the beta function of the Higgs mass squared [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-33-3': 'Then, the sign of [MATH] can flip during the RG running, that is, [MATH] becomes negative toward the EW scale while positive at the Planck scale.', '1608.00087-2-33-4': 'We have found that this behavior can occur for [MATH].', '1608.00087-2-33-5': 'On the other hand, too large [MATH] causes the fine-tuning problem of the Higgs mass.', '1608.00087-2-33-6': 'To avoid the problem, there should exist the singlet scalar at [MATH] scale.', '1608.00087-2-34-0': 'In order to incorporate the neutrino masses and flavor mixings to the singlet scalar extended model, we have introduced right-handed neutrinos and investigated the MPP scenario.', '1608.00087-2-34-1': 'Here, new parameters [MATH] and [MATH] are introduced, which are neutrino Dirac Yukawa coupling and right-handed neutrino Majorana mass matrices, respectively, and leading to the type-I seesaw mechanism.', '1608.00087-2-34-2': 'For [MATH] (or equivalently [MATH]), the running of all couplings except [MATH] are almost the same as before.', '1608.00087-2-34-3': 'Therefore, the model can realize the MPP scenario as well as explaining the active neutrino masses.', '1608.00087-2-35-0': 'It might be possible to solve the fine-tuning problem of the Higgs mass by an accidental cancellation of Higgs mass corrections coming from the singlet scalar and the right-handed neutrinos.', '1608.00087-2-35-1': 'We have found its approximate condition as Eq. ([REF]).', '1608.00087-2-35-2': 'If the condition is satisfied, masses of singlet scalar and right-handed neutrinos can exceed [MATH].'}
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'1608.00087-2-27-2'], ['1608.00087-1-26-3', '1608.00087-2-27-3'], ['1608.00087-1-26-4', '1608.00087-2-27-4'], ['1608.00087-1-5-0', '1608.00087-2-6-0'], ['1608.00087-1-5-1', '1608.00087-2-6-1'], ['1608.00087-1-5-2', '1608.00087-2-6-2'], ['1608.00087-1-5-3', '1608.00087-2-6-3'], ['1608.00087-1-5-4', '1608.00087-2-6-4'], ['1608.00087-1-5-5', '1608.00087-2-6-5'], ['1608.00087-1-5-6', '1608.00087-2-6-6'], ['1608.00087-1-5-7', '1608.00087-2-6-7'], ['1608.00087-1-5-8', '1608.00087-2-6-8'], ['1608.00087-1-28-0', '1608.00087-2-29-0'], ['1608.00087-1-4-0', '1608.00087-2-4-0'], ['1608.00087-1-4-1', '1608.00087-2-4-1'], ['1608.00087-1-4-2', '1608.00087-2-4-2'], ['1608.00087-1-4-3', '1608.00087-2-4-3'], ['1608.00087-1-4-4', '1608.00087-2-4-4'], ['1608.00087-1-4-5', '1608.00087-2-4-5'], ['1608.00087-1-4-6', '1608.00087-2-4-6'], ['1608.00087-1-0-0', '1608.00087-2-0-0'], ['1608.00087-1-0-1', '1608.00087-2-0-1'], ['1608.00087-1-0-2', '1608.00087-2-0-2'], ['1608.00087-1-0-3', '1608.00087-2-0-3'], ['1608.00087-1-0-4', '1608.00087-2-0-4'], ['1608.00087-1-0-5', '1608.00087-2-0-5'], ['1608.00087-1-0-6', '1608.00087-2-0-6'], ['1608.00087-1-12-0', '1608.00087-2-13-0'], ['1608.00087-1-12-1', '1608.00087-2-13-1'], ['1608.00087-1-12-2', '1608.00087-2-13-2'], ['1608.00087-1-8-0', '1608.00087-2-9-0'], ['1608.00087-1-8-1', '1608.00087-2-9-1'], ['1608.00087-1-8-2', '1608.00087-2-9-2'], ['1608.00087-1-8-3', '1608.00087-2-9-3'], ['1608.00087-1-8-4', '1608.00087-2-9-4'], ['1608.00087-1-10-0', '1608.00087-2-11-0'], ['1608.00087-1-10-1', '1608.00087-2-11-1'], ['1608.00087-1-10-2', '1608.00087-2-11-2'], ['1608.00087-1-10-3', '1608.00087-2-11-3'], ['1608.00087-1-10-4', '1608.00087-2-11-4'], ['1608.00087-1-10-5', '1608.00087-2-11-5'], ['1608.00087-1-3-0', '1608.00087-2-3-0'], ['1608.00087-1-3-1', '1608.00087-2-3-1'], ['1608.00087-1-3-2', '1608.00087-2-3-2'], ['1608.00087-1-3-3', '1608.00087-2-3-3'], ['1608.00087-1-3-4', '1608.00087-2-3-4'], ['1608.00087-1-3-5', '1608.00087-2-3-5'], 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['1608.00087-1-16-1', '1608.00087-2-17-1'], ['1608.00087-1-16-2', '1608.00087-2-17-2'], ['1608.00087-1-16-3', '1608.00087-2-17-3'], ['1608.00087-1-16-4', '1608.00087-2-17-4'], ['1608.00087-1-18-0', '1608.00087-2-19-0'], ['1608.00087-1-18-1', '1608.00087-2-19-1'], ['1608.00087-1-18-2', '1608.00087-2-19-2'], ['1608.00087-1-18-3', '1608.00087-2-19-3'], ['1608.00087-1-27-0', '1608.00087-2-28-0'], ['1608.00087-1-27-1', '1608.00087-2-28-1'], ['1608.00087-1-27-2', '1608.00087-2-28-2'], ['1608.00087-1-27-3', '1608.00087-2-28-3'], ['1608.00087-1-27-4', '1608.00087-2-28-4'], ['1608.00087-1-27-5', '1608.00087-2-28-5'], ['1608.00087-1-21-0', '1608.00087-2-22-0'], ['1608.00087-1-21-1', '1608.00087-2-22-1'], ['1608.00087-1-21-2', '1608.00087-2-22-2'], ['1608.00087-1-21-3', '1608.00087-2-22-3'], ['1608.00087-1-21-4', '1608.00087-2-22-4'], ['1608.00087-1-23-0', '1608.00087-2-24-0'], ['1608.00087-1-23-1', '1608.00087-2-24-1'], ['1608.00087-1-23-2', '1608.00087-2-24-2'], ['1608.00087-1-23-3', '1608.00087-2-24-3'], ['1608.00087-1-23-4', '1608.00087-2-24-4'], ['1608.00087-1-24-0', '1608.00087-2-25-0'], ['1608.00087-1-24-1', '1608.00087-2-25-1'], ['1608.00087-1-24-2', '1608.00087-2-25-2'], ['1608.00087-1-14-0', '1608.00087-2-15-0'], ['1608.00087-1-14-1', '1608.00087-2-15-1'], ['1608.00087-1-14-2', '1608.00087-2-15-2'], ['1608.00087-1-14-4', '1608.00087-2-15-4'], ['1608.00087-1-14-5', '1608.00087-2-15-5'], ['1608.00087-1-14-6', '1608.00087-2-15-6'], ['1608.00087-1-15-0', '1608.00087-2-16-0'], ['1608.00087-1-15-1', '1608.00087-2-16-1'], ['1608.00087-1-15-2', '1608.00087-2-16-2'], ['1608.00087-1-15-3', '1608.00087-2-16-3'], ['1608.00087-1-9-0', '1608.00087-2-10-0'], ['1608.00087-1-9-1', '1608.00087-2-10-1'], ['1608.00087-1-9-2', '1608.00087-2-10-2'], ['1608.00087-1-9-3', '1608.00087-2-10-3'], ['1608.00087-1-9-4', '1608.00087-2-10-4'], ['1608.00087-1-9-5', '1608.00087-2-10-5'], ['1608.00087-1-2-0', '1608.00087-2-2-0'], ['1608.00087-1-2-1', '1608.00087-2-2-1'], ['1608.00087-1-2-2', '1608.00087-2-2-2'], ['1608.00087-1-2-3', '1608.00087-2-2-3'], ['1608.00087-1-2-4', '1608.00087-2-2-4'], ['1608.00087-1-2-5', '1608.00087-2-2-5'], ['1608.00087-1-11-0', '1608.00087-2-12-0'], ['1608.00087-1-11-1', '1608.00087-2-12-1'], ['1608.00087-1-11-2', '1608.00087-2-12-2'], ['1608.00087-1-11-3', '1608.00087-2-12-3'], ['1608.00087-1-11-4', '1608.00087-2-12-4'], ['1608.00087-1-11-5', '1608.00087-2-12-5'], ['1608.00087-1-4-7', '1608.00087-2-4-7']]
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'1608.00087-2-27-2'], ['1608.00087-1-26-3', '1608.00087-2-27-3'], ['1608.00087-1-26-4', '1608.00087-2-27-4'], ['1608.00087-1-5-0', '1608.00087-2-6-0'], ['1608.00087-1-5-1', '1608.00087-2-6-1'], ['1608.00087-1-5-2', '1608.00087-2-6-2'], ['1608.00087-1-5-3', '1608.00087-2-6-3'], ['1608.00087-1-5-4', '1608.00087-2-6-4'], ['1608.00087-1-5-5', '1608.00087-2-6-5'], ['1608.00087-1-5-6', '1608.00087-2-6-6'], ['1608.00087-1-5-7', '1608.00087-2-6-7'], ['1608.00087-1-5-8', '1608.00087-2-6-8'], ['1608.00087-1-28-0', '1608.00087-2-29-0'], ['1608.00087-1-4-0', '1608.00087-2-4-0'], ['1608.00087-1-4-1', '1608.00087-2-4-1'], ['1608.00087-1-4-2', '1608.00087-2-4-2'], ['1608.00087-1-4-3', '1608.00087-2-4-3'], ['1608.00087-1-4-4', '1608.00087-2-4-4'], ['1608.00087-1-4-5', '1608.00087-2-4-5'], ['1608.00087-1-4-6', '1608.00087-2-4-6'], ['1608.00087-1-0-0', '1608.00087-2-0-0'], ['1608.00087-1-0-1', '1608.00087-2-0-1'], ['1608.00087-1-0-2', '1608.00087-2-0-2'], ['1608.00087-1-0-3', '1608.00087-2-0-3'], ['1608.00087-1-0-4', '1608.00087-2-0-4'], ['1608.00087-1-0-5', '1608.00087-2-0-5'], ['1608.00087-1-0-6', '1608.00087-2-0-6'], ['1608.00087-1-12-0', '1608.00087-2-13-0'], ['1608.00087-1-12-1', '1608.00087-2-13-1'], ['1608.00087-1-12-2', '1608.00087-2-13-2'], ['1608.00087-1-8-0', '1608.00087-2-9-0'], ['1608.00087-1-8-1', '1608.00087-2-9-1'], ['1608.00087-1-8-2', '1608.00087-2-9-2'], ['1608.00087-1-8-3', '1608.00087-2-9-3'], ['1608.00087-1-8-4', '1608.00087-2-9-4'], ['1608.00087-1-10-0', '1608.00087-2-11-0'], ['1608.00087-1-10-1', '1608.00087-2-11-1'], ['1608.00087-1-10-2', '1608.00087-2-11-2'], ['1608.00087-1-10-3', '1608.00087-2-11-3'], ['1608.00087-1-10-4', '1608.00087-2-11-4'], ['1608.00087-1-10-5', '1608.00087-2-11-5'], ['1608.00087-1-3-0', '1608.00087-2-3-0'], ['1608.00087-1-3-1', '1608.00087-2-3-1'], ['1608.00087-1-3-2', '1608.00087-2-3-2'], ['1608.00087-1-3-3', '1608.00087-2-3-3'], ['1608.00087-1-3-4', '1608.00087-2-3-4'], ['1608.00087-1-3-5', '1608.00087-2-3-5'], ['1608.00087-1-3-6', '1608.00087-2-3-6'], ['1608.00087-1-32-0', '1608.00087-2-33-0'], ['1608.00087-1-32-1', '1608.00087-2-33-1'], ['1608.00087-1-32-2', '1608.00087-2-33-2'], ['1608.00087-1-32-3', '1608.00087-2-33-3'], ['1608.00087-1-32-4', '1608.00087-2-33-4'], ['1608.00087-1-32-5', '1608.00087-2-33-5'], ['1608.00087-1-32-6', '1608.00087-2-33-6'], ['1608.00087-1-17-0', '1608.00087-2-18-0'], ['1608.00087-1-7-0', '1608.00087-2-8-0'], ['1608.00087-1-7-1', '1608.00087-2-8-1'], ['1608.00087-1-7-2', '1608.00087-2-8-2'], ['1608.00087-1-7-3', '1608.00087-2-8-3'], ['1608.00087-1-7-4', '1608.00087-2-8-4'], ['1608.00087-1-7-5', '1608.00087-2-8-5'], ['1608.00087-1-34-0', '1608.00087-2-35-0'], ['1608.00087-1-34-1', '1608.00087-2-35-1'], ['1608.00087-1-34-2', '1608.00087-2-35-2'], ['1608.00087-1-33-0', '1608.00087-2-34-0'], ['1608.00087-1-33-1', '1608.00087-2-34-1'], ['1608.00087-1-33-2', '1608.00087-2-34-2'], ['1608.00087-1-33-3', '1608.00087-2-34-3'], ['1608.00087-1-16-0', '1608.00087-2-17-0'], ['1608.00087-1-16-1', '1608.00087-2-17-1'], ['1608.00087-1-16-2', '1608.00087-2-17-2'], ['1608.00087-1-16-3', '1608.00087-2-17-3'], ['1608.00087-1-16-4', '1608.00087-2-17-4'], ['1608.00087-1-18-0', '1608.00087-2-19-0'], ['1608.00087-1-18-1', '1608.00087-2-19-1'], ['1608.00087-1-18-2', '1608.00087-2-19-2'], ['1608.00087-1-18-3', '1608.00087-2-19-3'], ['1608.00087-1-27-0', '1608.00087-2-28-0'], ['1608.00087-1-27-1', '1608.00087-2-28-1'], ['1608.00087-1-27-2', '1608.00087-2-28-2'], ['1608.00087-1-27-3', '1608.00087-2-28-3'], ['1608.00087-1-27-4', '1608.00087-2-28-4'], ['1608.00087-1-27-5', '1608.00087-2-28-5'], ['1608.00087-1-21-0', '1608.00087-2-22-0'], ['1608.00087-1-21-1', '1608.00087-2-22-1'], ['1608.00087-1-21-2', '1608.00087-2-22-2'], ['1608.00087-1-21-3', '1608.00087-2-22-3'], ['1608.00087-1-21-4', '1608.00087-2-22-4'], ['1608.00087-1-23-0', '1608.00087-2-24-0'], ['1608.00087-1-23-1', '1608.00087-2-24-1'], ['1608.00087-1-23-2', '1608.00087-2-24-2'], ['1608.00087-1-23-3', '1608.00087-2-24-3'], ['1608.00087-1-23-4', '1608.00087-2-24-4'], ['1608.00087-1-24-0', '1608.00087-2-25-0'], ['1608.00087-1-24-1', '1608.00087-2-25-1'], ['1608.00087-1-24-2', '1608.00087-2-25-2'], ['1608.00087-1-14-0', '1608.00087-2-15-0'], ['1608.00087-1-14-1', '1608.00087-2-15-1'], ['1608.00087-1-14-2', '1608.00087-2-15-2'], ['1608.00087-1-14-4', '1608.00087-2-15-4'], ['1608.00087-1-14-5', '1608.00087-2-15-5'], ['1608.00087-1-14-6', '1608.00087-2-15-6'], ['1608.00087-1-15-0', '1608.00087-2-16-0'], ['1608.00087-1-15-1', '1608.00087-2-16-1'], ['1608.00087-1-15-2', '1608.00087-2-16-2'], ['1608.00087-1-15-3', '1608.00087-2-16-3'], ['1608.00087-1-9-0', '1608.00087-2-10-0'], ['1608.00087-1-9-1', '1608.00087-2-10-1'], ['1608.00087-1-9-2', '1608.00087-2-10-2'], ['1608.00087-1-9-3', '1608.00087-2-10-3'], ['1608.00087-1-9-4', '1608.00087-2-10-4'], ['1608.00087-1-9-5', '1608.00087-2-10-5'], ['1608.00087-1-2-0', '1608.00087-2-2-0'], ['1608.00087-1-2-1', '1608.00087-2-2-1'], ['1608.00087-1-2-2', '1608.00087-2-2-2'], ['1608.00087-1-2-3', '1608.00087-2-2-3'], ['1608.00087-1-2-4', '1608.00087-2-2-4'], ['1608.00087-1-2-5', '1608.00087-2-2-5'], ['1608.00087-1-11-0', '1608.00087-2-12-0'], ['1608.00087-1-11-1', '1608.00087-2-12-1'], ['1608.00087-1-11-2', '1608.00087-2-12-2'], ['1608.00087-1-11-3', '1608.00087-2-12-3'], ['1608.00087-1-11-4', '1608.00087-2-12-4'], ['1608.00087-1-11-5', '1608.00087-2-12-5']]
[]
[]
[['1608.00087-1-4-7', '1608.00087-2-4-7']]
[]
['1608.00087-1-14-3', '1608.00087-1-31-2', '1608.00087-2-15-3', '1608.00087-2-32-2']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.00087
null
null
null
null
null
1608.03520
{'1608.03520-1-0-0': 'Encoding brain regions and their connections as a network of nodes and edges captures many of the possible paths along which information can be transmitted as humans process and perform complex behaviors.', '1608.03520-1-0-1': 'Because cognitive processes involve large and distributed networks of brain areas, principled examinations of multi-node routes within larger connection patterns can offer fundamental insights into the complexities of brain function.', '1608.03520-1-0-2': 'Here, we investigate both densely connected groups of nodes that could perform local computations as well as larger patterns of interactions that would allow for parallel processing.', '1608.03520-1-0-3': 'Finding such structures necessitates that we move from considering exclusively pairwise interactions to capturing higher order relations, considerations naturally expressed in the language of algebraic topology.', '1608.03520-1-0-4': 'In this parlance, clusters of all-to-all connected sets of brain regions that may readily share information to perform a coordinated function are called cliques.', '1608.03520-1-0-5': 'We detect cliques in the average structural connectomes of 8 healthy adults scanned in triplicate and discover the presence of more high-dimensional cliques than expected in null networks constructed via wiring minimization.', '1608.03520-1-0-6': 'This provides architecture through which brain network can perform rapid, local processing.', '1608.03520-1-0-7': 'Complementary to this study of locally dense structures, we employ a tool called persistent homology to locate cycles, topological cavities of different dimensions, around which information may flow in either diverging or converging patterns.', '1608.03520-1-0-8': 'These cycles exist consistently across subjects, differ from those observed in null model networks, and - importantly - link regions of early and late evolutionary origin in long loops, underscoring their unique role in controlling brain function.', '1608.03520-1-0-9': "These results offer a first demonstration that techniques from algebraic topology offer a novel perspective on structural connectomics, highlighting loop-like paths as crucial features in the human brain's structural architecture.", '1608.03520-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1608.03520-1-2-0': 'Macroscopic computation and cognition in the human brain are affected by an intricately interconnected collection of neurophysical mechanisms [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-2-1': 'Unlike modern parallel computers, which operate through vast numbers of programs running in tandem and in isolation from one another, it is understood that many of these processes are supported on anatomically specialized brain regions that constantly share information among themselves through a network of white matter tracts [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-2-2': 'One approach for understanding the function of such a system begins with studying the organization of this white matter substrate using the language of networks [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-2-3': 'Collections of regions that are pairwise tightly interconnected by large tracts, variously known as communities [CITATION], modules [CITATION], and rich clubs [CITATION], have been the subject of substantial prior study.', '1608.03520-1-2-4': 'Moreover, they have given critical insights into the large-scale structural units of the brain that give rise to many common cognitive functions [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-2-5': 'Such communities easily and rapidly transmit information among their members, facilitating local integration of information [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-3-0': 'Often left implicit in such investigations of the white matter network is the understanding that just as important as the strong internal connections in communities are the relative weakness of connections to external regions.', '1608.03520-1-3-1': 'This tendency to focus on strongly connected local regions arises naturally because standard network analyses are based on local properties of the network at individual vertices, where local edge strength is the primary feature [CITATION]; the particular choice of quantitative language serves as a filter that diverts attention toward certain facets of the system.', '1608.03520-1-3-2': 'However, if one takes a more macro-scale view of the network, the small or absent white matter tracts intuitively serve to isolate processes carried on the strong white matter tracts from one another.', '1608.03520-1-3-3': 'Such structure facilitates more traditional conceptual models of parallel processing, wherein data is copied or divided into multiple pieces in order to rapidly perform distinct computations, and then recombined [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-3-4': 'Together, the two notions of dense clusters and isolating cavities provide a picture of a system that performs complex computations by decomposing information into coherent pieces to be disseminated to local processing centers, and then aggregating the results.', '1608.03520-1-4-0': 'In order to quantitatively characterize this macroscale structure, we employ an enrichment of networks that comes from the field of algebraic topology [CITATION], developed precisely to understand the interplay between these weak and strong connections in systems [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-4-1': 'Beginning with a structural white matter network, we first extract the collection of all-to-all connected subgraphs, called cliques, which represent sets of brain regions that may possess a similar function, operate in unison, or share information rapidly [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-4-2': 'Attaching these cliques to one another following a map given by the network creates a topological object called a clique complex from which we can extract certain patterns of strongly connected regions called cycles [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-4-3': 'These cycles correspond to extended paths of potential information transmission along which computations can be performed serially to effect cognition in either a divergent or convergent manner.', '1608.03520-1-4-4': 'We hypothesize that the spatial distributions of cliques and cycles will differ in their anatomical locations, corresponding to their differential putative roles in neural computations.', '1608.03520-1-4-5': "Specifically, we anticipate that cliques will be observed in high densities in the rich-club linking network hubs at the brain's structural core [CITATION], while cycles will be observed in subcortical-cortical loops particularly engaging weakly connected areas in the evolutionarily more recent structures of the prefrontal cortex.", '1608.03520-1-5-0': 'To address these hypotheses, we construct structural brain networks from diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data acquired from eight volunteers in triplicate.', '1608.03520-1-5-1': 'We measure node participation in cliques and compare these with a minimally wired null model [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-5-2': "We also demonstrate the correspondence between the anatomical location of cliques and the anatomical location of the brain's structural rich club: a group of hubs that are densely connected to one another.", '1608.03520-1-5-3': 'Next, we study loop- or shell-like motifs of cliques using a recently developed method from algebraic topology called persistent homology, which detects the presence and robustness of cycles, or topological cavities in the network architecture.', '1608.03520-1-5-4': 'Specifically, we recover minimal generators for four essential cycles in the consensus structure, and show that these generators are robustly present across subjects through multiple scans.', '1608.03520-1-5-5': 'Our results demonstrate that while cliques are observed in the structural core, cycles are observed to link regions of subcortex, frontal cortex, and parietal cortex in long loops, underscoring their unique role in controlling brain function.', '1608.03520-1-6-0': '# Results', '1608.03520-1-7-0': 'To extract relevant architectural features of the human structural connectome, we first encoded diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data acquired from eight subjects in triplicate as undirected, weighted networks.', '1608.03520-1-7-1': 'In this network, nodes correspond to 83 brain regions defined by the Lausanne parcellation [CITATION] and edges correspond to the density of white matter tracts between node pairs (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-1-7-2': 'We initially study a group-averaged network, and then demonstrate that our results are consistently observed across individuals in the group as well as across multiple scans from the same individual.', '1608.03520-1-8-0': '## Closures in the Human Structural Connectome', '1608.03520-1-9-0': 'We begin by constructing a network complex from simple building blocks.', '1608.03520-1-9-1': 'Specifically, we detect [MATH]-cliques (a set of [MATH] nodes having all pairwise connections, see Fig. [REF]b for 2-, 3-, and 4-cliques representing edges, triangles, and tetrahedra, respectively) in the network at [MATH] for computational purposes.', '1608.03520-1-9-2': 'By definition, a subgraph of a clique will itself be a clique of lower dimension, called a face.', '1608.03520-1-9-3': 'A maximal clique is one that is not a face of any other (see Fig. [REF]c for a maximal 4-clique, which contains 3-, 2-, and 1-cliques as faces).', '1608.03520-1-9-4': 'We study the size and anatomical distribution of these maximal cliques in comparison to that expected in a spatially embedded null model built under the assumption of conservation of wiring cost (Fig. [REF]d).', '1608.03520-1-10-0': 'To understand the anatomical distribution of maximal cliques in both real and null model networks, we count the number of maximal [MATH]-cliques in which a node is a member, and we refer to this value as the node participation, [MATH] (see Methods).', '1608.03520-1-10-1': 'Summing over all [MATH] gives the total participation, [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-10-2': 'We observe that the distribution of maximal clique degrees is unimodal in the minimally wired null model and bimodal in the empirical data (see Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-1-10-3': 'Anatomically, we observe a general progression of maximal clique participation from anterior to posterior regions of cortex as we detect higher degrees (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-1-10-4': 'Indeed, maximal cliques of 12-16 nodes contain nearly all of the visual cortex.', '1608.03520-1-10-5': 'This spatial distribution suggests that large interacting groups of brain regions are required for early information processing, while areas of frontal cortex driving higher-order cognition utilize smaller working clusters.', '1608.03520-1-10-6': 'We also observe that the human brain displays smaller maximal cliques than the minimally wired null model, a fact that might support its distributed processing.', '1608.03520-1-11-0': 'The anterior-posterior gradient of maximal clique size can be complemented by additionally analyzing regional variation in the cognitive computations being performed.', '1608.03520-1-11-1': 'Specifically, we ask whether node participation in maximal cliques differs in specific cognitive systems [CITATION] (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-1-11-2': 'We observe that the largest maximal cliques are formed by nodes located almost exclusively in the subcortical, fronto-parietal, cingulo-opercular, and default mode systems, suggesting that these systems are tightly interconnected and might utilize robust topologically-local communication.', '1608.03520-1-11-3': 'Critically, this spatial distribution of the participation in maximal cliques differs significantly from the minimally wired null model, particularly in the cingulo-opercular and subcortical systems.', '1608.03520-1-11-4': 'We hypothesized that these differences may be driven by the excess of maximal 8-cliques in the minimally wired network (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-1-11-5': 'Expanding on the difference in node participation ([MATH]), we see indeed that the large discrepancies between empirical and null model networks in cingulo-opercular and subcortical systems are caused by a difference in maximal cliques of approximately eight nodes (Fig. [REF]b, bottom).', '1608.03520-1-12-0': 'A node with high participation must in turn be well connected locally.', '1608.03520-1-12-1': 'Therefore we expect the participation of a node to act similarly to other measures of connectivity.', '1608.03520-1-12-2': 'To test this expectation, we examine the correlation of node participation with node strength, the summed edge weight of connections emanating from a node, as well as with node communicability, a measure of the strength of long distance walks emanating from a node (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-1-12-3': 'We find that both strength and communicability exhibit a strong linear correlation with the participation of a node in maximal cliques (Pearson correlation coefficient [MATH] and [MATH], respectively).', '1608.03520-1-12-4': 'These results indicate that regions that are strongly connected to the rest of the brain by both direct paths and indirect walks also participate in many maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-1-12-5': 'Such an observation suggests the possibility that brain hubs - which are known to be strongly connected with one another in a so-called rich-club - play a key role in maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-1-12-6': 'To test this possibility, we measure the association of brain regions to the rich-club using notions of coreness.', '1608.03520-1-12-7': 'A [MATH]-core of a graph [MATH] is a maximal connected subgraph of [MATH] in which all vertices have degree at least [MATH], and an [MATH]-core is the equivalent notion for weighted graphs (see Methods).', '1608.03520-1-12-8': 'Using these notions, we consider how the [MATH]-core and [MATH]-core decompositions align with high participation (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-1-12-9': 'In both cases, nodes with higher participation often achieve higher levels in the [MATH]- and [MATH]-core decomposition.', '1608.03520-1-12-10': 'Moreover, we also observe the frequent existence of rich club connections between nodes with high participation (Fig. [REF]b, bottom).', '1608.03520-1-12-11': 'Together, these results suggest that rich-club regions of the human brain tend to participate in local computational units in the form of cliques.', '1608.03520-1-13-0': '## Cavities in the Structural Connectome', '1608.03520-1-14-0': 'Cliques in the network act as neighborhood-scale building blocks for the computational structure of the brain.', '1608.03520-1-14-1': 'The relationships between these blocks can be detected by the absence of strong connections, which leave cavities in the 3D structure of the brain network.', '1608.03520-1-14-2': 'To identify these cavities, we examine the group-averaged network - constructed by averaging weights of each edge across the individuals in the group - and order the edges by decreasing edge weight.', '1608.03520-1-14-3': 'That is, beginning with the empty graph we replace edges one at a time according to the edge weight order.', '1608.03520-1-14-4': 'This procedure - also known as a filtration - results in a sequence of binary graphs, each included in the next (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-1-14-5': 'After each edge addition, we find clique patterns called cycles that enclose a void in the structure.', '1608.03520-1-14-6': "To guide the reader's intuition in this assessment of persistent homology, we refer to Fig. [REF]a, which shows a green cycle that is first detected in the graph sequence at [MATH] (blue) (where [MATH] is the edge density = [MATH]), shrinks as a [MATH]-clique is added, then finally is tessellated by [MATH]-cliques at [MATH] (orange).", '1608.03520-1-14-7': 'We record [MATH] and [MATH] for all cycles found within the sequence, and display them on a persistence diagram (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-1-14-8': 'Cycles that survive many edge additions have a long lifetime, defined as [MATH], or a large [MATH] to [MATH] ratio (called [MATH]) and are thought to play a key role in the structure necessitating topological longevity.', '1608.03520-1-15-0': 'The persistent homology of the group-average DSI network and minimally wired null network can be examined in terms of [MATH]-cliques (called 1-cycles) and [MATH]-cliques (2-cycles) (see Fig. [REF]c).', '1608.03520-1-15-1': 'We observe four cycles with exceedingly long lifetimes or a high [MATH] to [MATH] ratio (Fig. [REF]c,d) in the empirical data.', '1608.03520-1-15-2': 'Because each cycle is part of a class of equivalent cycles (see Methods), we locate the minimal-length members of each class at [MATH] (Fig. [REF]e).', '1608.03520-1-15-3': 'The first cycle (blue) appears as early as [MATH] and is composed of the thalamus and caudate nucleus of both hemispheres.', '1608.03520-1-15-4': 'The second cycle (green) is also very long lived, but appears at a later network density (meaning it has weaker connections on average), and is composed of the medial orbitofrontal, accumbens nucleus, any of the rostral anterior cingulate (RH, LH), medial orbitofrontal (LH), lateral orbitofrontal, rostral middle frontal and any of subcortical regions hippocampus, caudate nucleus, putamen, thalamus, amygdala (see Fig. [REF] for all 12 minimal representatives).', '1608.03520-1-15-5': 'The final essential 1-cycle we observe also contains the medial and lateral orbitofrontal, and rostral anterior cingulate, to which is added the nucleus accumbens and rostral middle frontal cortex.', '1608.03520-1-15-6': 'The longest-lived 2-cycle is an octahedral connection pattern composed of the insula, the inferior and middle temporal cortices, the supramarginal gyrus, the superior and inferior parietal cortex, and the lateral occipital cortex.', '1608.03520-1-16-0': '## Test-ReTest Reliability and Other Methodological Considerations', '1608.03520-1-17-0': 'It is important to ask whether the architectural features that we observe in the group-averaged DSI network can also be consistently observed across multiple individuals, and across multiple scans of the same individual.', '1608.03520-1-17-1': 'We observed that the subcortical cycle (Fig. [REF]e, blue) exists in at least one scan of all individuals and the late-developing subcortical-frontal cycle (Fig. [REF]e, red) exists in seven of the eight individuals in at least one of three scans (Fig. [REF]b,f).', '1608.03520-1-17-2': 'The earlier arriving subcortical-frontal cycle (Fig. [REF]e, green) exists at least once in all individuals (Fig. [REF]d).', '1608.03520-1-17-3': 'Finally, we observe that the octahedral connection pattern in posterior parietal and occipital cortex (Fig. [REF]e, purple) is present at least once in six of eight individuals (Fig. [REF]h).', '1608.03520-1-17-4': 'Uncovered cyclic connection patterns of 1-cycles often appear in the opposite hemisphere as well, though not as regularly (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-1-17-5': 'In summary we find cycles observed in the group-averaged DSI network appear consistently across individuals, suggesting their potential role as conserved wiring motifs in the human brain.', '1608.03520-1-18-0': 'In addition to consistency across subjects and scans, it is important to determine whether the known high connectivity from subcortical nodes to the rest of the brain may be artificially hiding cortico-cortical cycles that are important for brain function.', '1608.03520-1-18-1': 'To address this question, we examined the 66-node group-average DSI network composed only of cortical regions, after removing subcortical regions, insula, and brainstem.', '1608.03520-1-18-2': 'We recovered a 1-cycle composed of 10 nodes connecting temporal, parietal, and frontal regions (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-1-18-3': 'Moreover, this cycle was observed in each scan of every individual (Fig. [REF]c), and often in the opposite hemisphere as well (Fig. [REF]d).', '1608.03520-1-18-4': 'These results reveal that cortico-cortical cycles are indeed present, and suggest their potential utility in segregating function across the brain.', '1608.03520-1-19-0': '# Discussion', '1608.03520-1-20-0': 'In this study, we describe a principled examination of multi-node routes within larger connection patterns that are not accessible to network analysis methods that exclusively consider pairwise interactions between nodes.', '1608.03520-1-20-1': 'Our approach draws on concepts from a discipline of mathematics known as algebraic topology to define sets of all-to-all connected nodes as structural units, called cliques, and then to use the clique architecture of the network to detect structural cavities called cycles.', '1608.03520-1-20-2': 'Using this approach, we show that node participation in maximal cliques varies spatially and by cognitive systems, suggesting a global organization of these neighborhood-scale features.', '1608.03520-1-20-3': 'These cliques form cyclical patterns of connectivity in the human structural connectome, which separate relatively early-evolving regions of the subcortex with higher-order association areas in frontal, parietal, and temporal cortex that evolved on more recent time scales.', '1608.03520-1-20-4': 'We found the recovered cycles exist consistently across individuals and are not expected in a spatially embedded null model, emphasizing their importance in neural wiring and function.', '1608.03520-1-20-5': "These results offer a first demonstration that techniques from algebraic topology offer a novel perspective on structural connectomics, highlighting cavernous spaces as crucial features in the human brain's structural architecture.", '1608.03520-1-21-0': '## Algebro-topological Tools for Neural Data Analysis', '1608.03520-1-22-0': 'Algebraic topology is a relatively young field of pure mathematics that has only recently been applied to the study of real-world data.', '1608.03520-1-22-1': 'However, the power of these techniques to measure structures that are inaccessible to common graph metrics has gained immediate traction in the neuroscience community.', '1608.03520-1-22-2': 'Here, we highlight a few notable examples from the growing literature; a more comprehensive recent account can be found in [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-22-3': 'At the neuron level, persistent homology has been used to detect intrinsic structure in correlations between neural spike trains [CITATION], expanding our understanding of the formation of spatial maps in the hippocampus [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-22-4': 'Moreover, at the level of large-scale brain regions, these tools have been exercised to characterize the global architecture of fMRI data [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-22-5': 'Based on their unique sensitivity, we expect these algebric-topological methods to provide novel contributions to our understanding of the structure and function of neural circuitry across all scales at which combinatorial components act together for a common goal: from firing patterns coding for memory [CITATION] to brain regions interacting to enable cognition.', '1608.03520-1-23-0': '## Closures and Cavities for Computations', '1608.03520-1-24-0': 'Cliques and cycles are structurally positioned to play distinct roles in neural computations.', '1608.03520-1-24-1': 'Cliques represent sets of brain regions that may possess a similar function, operate in unison, or share information rapidly [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-24-2': 'Conversely, cycles correspond to extended paths of potential information transmission along which computations can be performed serially to affect cognition in either a divergent or convergent manner.', '1608.03520-1-24-3': 'Indeed, the loop-like or chain-like nature of cycles is a structural motif that has previously been - at least qualitatively described - in neuroanatomical studies of cellular circuitry.', '1608.03520-1-24-4': 'In this context, such motifs are known to play a key role in learning [CITATION], memory [CITATION], and behavioral control [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-24-5': 'The presence of cycles in essence demonstrates the existence of polysynaptic connections and their importance to neural computations, consistent with evidence from the field of computational neuroscience highlighting the role of highly structured circuits in sequence generation and memory [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-24-6': 'Indeed, in computational models at the neuron level, architectures reminiscent of chains [CITATION] and rings are particularly conducive to the generation of sequential behavioral responses.', '1608.03520-1-24-7': 'It is interesting to speculate that the presence of these cycles at the much larger scale of white matter tracts could support diverse neural dynamics and a broader repertoire of cognitive computations than possible in simpler and more integrated network architectures [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-25-0': '## Evolutionary and Developmental Drivers', '1608.03520-1-26-0': 'Network filtration revealed several persistent cycles in the macroscale human connectome.', '1608.03520-1-26-1': 'While each cycle involved brain regions interacting in a distinct configuration, we also observed commonalities across cycles.', '1608.03520-1-26-2': 'One such commonality was that cycles tended to link evolutionarily old structures with more recently-developed neo-cortical regions [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-26-3': 'For example, the green cycle depicted in Fig. [REF]e linked the putamen, an area involved in motor behavior [CITATION], with frontal and anterior cingulate cortex, both of which are associated with higher-order cognitive functions such as error-monitoring [CITATION] and reward processing [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-26-4': 'This observation led us to speculate that the emergence of persistent cycles may reflect the disparate timescales over which brain regions and their circuitry have evolved.', '1608.03520-1-26-5': 'The cavities engendered by these cycles, then, may reflect the relative paucity of direct connections between regions that evolved to perform different functions.', '1608.03520-1-26-6': 'This hypothesis can be investigated in future work comparing the persistent homology of the human connectome with that of non-human connectomes from organisms with less developed neocortices.', '1608.03520-1-27-0': '## Towards a Global Understanding of Network Organization', '1608.03520-1-28-0': 'Though we highlighted individual cycles in the brain, by nature persistent homology describes the global organization of the network.', '1608.03520-1-28-1': 'Often regions in the brain wire minimally to conserve wiring cost [CITATION], though there are exceptions that give the brain its topological properties such as its small-world architecture [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-28-2': 'Following this idea, we could interpret the difference in the amount of homology between the minimally wired and DSI networks as a consequence of the non-minimally wired edges, which kill much of the homology in the brain itself.', '1608.03520-1-28-3': 'Yet when the subcortical regions are removed, the persistent homology of the minimally wired and DSI are much more similar (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-1-28-4': 'This suggests that the wiring of cortical regions may be more heavily influenced by energy conservation than the wiring of subcortical regions.', '1608.03520-1-28-5': 'Additionally the drop in cycle number and longevity when subcortical regions are included indicates that the subcortical regions could be cone points that then kill the cortical cycle to which they are attached.', '1608.03520-1-29-0': '## Methodological Considerations', '1608.03520-1-30-0': 'An important consideration relates to the data from which we construct the human structural connectome.', '1608.03520-1-30-1': "DSI and tractography, non-invasive tools for mapping the brain's white-matter connectivity, have some limitations.", '1608.03520-1-30-2': 'Tractography algorithms trade off specificity and sensitivity, making it challenging to simultaneously detect true connections while avoiding false connections [CITATION], fail to detect superficial connections (i.e. those that do not pass through deep white matter)[CITATION], and have challenges tracking "crossing fibers", connections with different orientations that pass through the same voxel [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-30-3': 'Nonetheless, DSI and tractography represent the only techniques for non-invasive imaging and reconstruction of the human connectome.', '1608.03520-1-30-4': 'While such shortcomings limit the applicability of DSI and tractography, they may prove addressable with the development of improved tractography algorithms and imaging techniques [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-31-0': '# Conclusion', '1608.03520-1-32-0': 'In conclusion, here we offer a unique perspective on the structural substrates of distinct types of neural computations.', '1608.03520-1-32-1': 'While traditional notions from graph theory and network science preferentially focus on local properties of the network at individual vertices or edges [CITATION], here we utilize an enriched network formalism that comes from the field of algebraic topology [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-32-2': 'These tools are tuned to the interplay between weak and strong connections [CITATION], and therefore reveal architectural features that serve to isolate information transmission processes [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-32-3': 'It will be interesting in future to compare human and non-human connectomes to further elucidate the evolutionary development of these features, and to link them to their functional [CITATION] and behavioral [CITATION] consequences.', '1608.03520-1-33-0': '# Materials and Methods', '1608.03520-1-34-0': '## Data Acquisition, Preprocessing, and Network Construction', '1608.03520-1-35-0': 'Diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data and T1-weighted anatomical scans were acquired from eight healthy adult volunteers on 3 separate days [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-35-1': 'All participants provided informed consent in writing according to the Institutional Review Board at the University of California, Santa Barbara.', '1608.03520-1-35-2': 'Whole-brain images were parcellated into 83 regions (network nodes) using the Lausanne atlas [CITATION], and connections between regions (network edges) were weighted by the number of streamlines identified using a determistic fiber tracking algorithm.', '1608.03520-1-35-3': 'We represent this network as a graph [MATH] on [MATH] nodes and [MATH] edges, corresponding to a weighted symmetric adjacency matrix [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-35-4': 'For calculations in the main text, the network was thresholded at [MATH] for consistency with previous work [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-35-5': 'See Appendix and Refs [CITATION] for detailed descriptions of acquisition parameters, data preprocessing, and fiber tracking.', '1608.03520-1-35-6': 'In the supplement, we provide additional results for the case in which we correct edge weight definitions for the effect of region size.', '1608.03520-1-36-0': '## Cliques versus Cycles', '1608.03520-1-37-0': 'In a graph [MATH] a [MATH]-clique is a set of [MATH] all-to-all connected nodes.', '1608.03520-1-37-1': 'It follows that any subset of a [MATH]-clique is a clique of smaller degree, called a face.', '1608.03520-1-37-2': 'Any clique that is not a face we call maximal.', '1608.03520-1-37-3': 'To assess how individual nodes contribute to these structures, we define node participation in maximal [MATH]-cliques as [MATH], and we record the total participation of a node as [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-38-0': 'To detect cycles, we computed the persistent homology for dimensions 1-2 using [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-38-1': 'Intuitively, we first decompose the weighted network into a sequence of binary graphs beginning with the empty graph and adding one edge at a time in order of decreasing edge weight.', '1608.03520-1-38-2': 'Formally, we translate edge weight information into a sequence of binary graphs called a filtration, [EQUATION] beginning with the empty graph [MATH] and adding back one edge at a time following the decreasing edge weight ordering.', '1608.03520-1-39-0': 'Within each binary graph of this filtration, we consider all closed walks created from [MATH]-cliques called [MATH]-cycles under the restriction that two [MATH]-cycles are perceived as the same if their set difference is a collection of [MATH]-cliques.', '1608.03520-1-39-1': 'This relation forms equivalence classes of cycles.', '1608.03520-1-40-0': 'Constructing the sequence of binary graphs allows us to follow cycles as a function of the edge density [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-40-1': 'Important points of interest along this sequence are the edge density associated with the first [MATH] in which the cycle is found (called the cycle birth, [MATH]) and the edge density associated with the first [MATH] in which the enclosed void is triangulated into higher dimensional cliques (called the cycle death, [MATH]).', '1608.03520-1-40-2': 'To evaluate the relative importance of a cycle to the weighted network architecture, we compute the cycle lifetime ([MATH]) which captures cycles that persist over many edge additions.', '1608.03520-1-40-3': 'Furthermore, we also calculate the death to birth ratio [MATH] which captures cycles that persist in relation to their edge density (see [CITATION] and Appendix).', '1608.03520-1-41-0': '## Standard Graph Statistics', '1608.03520-1-42-0': 'In addition to the notions of cliques and cycles from algebraic topology, we also examined corresponding notions from traditional graph theory including communicability and rich-club architecture, which are directly related to node participation in maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-1-43-0': 'We first considered nodes that participated in many maximal cliques, and we assessed their putative role in brain communication using the notion of network communicability.', '1608.03520-1-43-1': 'The weighted communicability between nodes [MATH] and [MATH] is [EQUATION] with [MATH] for [MATH] the strength of node [MATH] in the adjacency matrix [MATH] [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-43-2': 'This statistic accounts for all walks between node pairs and scales the walk contribution according to the product of the component edge weights.', '1608.03520-1-43-3': 'The statistic also normalizes node strength to prevent high strength nodes from skewing the walk contributions.', '1608.03520-1-43-4': "We refer to the sum of a node's communicability with all other nodes as node communicability, [MATH].", '1608.03520-1-44-0': 'Intuitively, nodes that participate in many maximal cliques may also play a critical role in the well-known rich club organization of the brain, in which highly connected nodes in the network are more connected to each other than expected in a random graph.', '1608.03520-1-44-1': 'For each degree [MATH] we compute the weighted rich club coefficient [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the summed weight of edges in the subgraph composed of nodes with degree greater than [MATH], [MATH] is the number of edges in this subgraph, and [MATH] is the [MATH]-th greatest edge weight in [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-44-2': 'Rich club nodes are those that exist in this subgraph when [MATH] is significantly greater (one sided [MATH]-test) than the rich club coefficient for random networks [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-44-3': 'Consistent with prior work, we constructed 1000 random networks in which edges of the true graph [MATH] are rewired uniformly at random while preserving node strength [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-45-0': 'Furthermore, highly participating nodes may also contribute to a hierarchical organization of the network.', '1608.03520-1-45-1': 'To evaluate this contribution, we compute the [MATH]-core and [MATH]-core decompositions of the graph [CITATION].', '1608.03520-1-45-2': 'The [MATH]-core is the maximally connected component of the subgraph with only nodes having degree greater than [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-45-3': 'The [MATH]-core is similarly defined with summed edge weights in the subgraph required to be at least [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-46-0': '## Null Model Construction', '1608.03520-1-47-0': 'We sought to compare the empirically observed network architecture to that expected in an appropriate null model.', '1608.03520-1-47-1': 'Due to the well-known spatial constraints on structural brain connectivity [CITATION], we considered a minimally wired network in which nodes are placed at the center of mass of anatomical brain regions.', '1608.03520-1-47-2': 'Each pair of nodes are then linked by an edge with weight [MATH], where [MATH] is the Euclidean distance between nodes [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.03520-1-47-3': 'This null model allows us to assess what topological properties are driven by the precise spatial locations of brain regions combined with a stringent penalty on wiring length.'}
{'1608.03520-2-0-0': 'Encoding brain regions and their connections as a network of nodes and edges captures many of the possible paths along which information can be transmitted as humans process and perform complex behaviors.', '1608.03520-2-0-1': 'Because cognitive processes involve large and distributed networks of brain areas, principled examinations of multi-node routes within larger connection patterns can offer fundamental insights into the complexities of brain function.', '1608.03520-2-0-2': 'Here, we investigate both densely connected groups of nodes that could perform local computations as well as larger patterns of interactions that would allow for parallel processing.', '1608.03520-2-0-3': 'Finding such structures necessitates that we move from considering exclusively pairwise interactions to capturing higher order relations, concepts naturally expressed in the language of algebraic topology.', '1608.03520-2-0-4': 'These tools can be used to study mesoscale network structures that arise from the arrangement of densely connected substructures called cliques in otherwise sparsely connected brain networks.', '1608.03520-2-0-5': 'We detect cliques (all-to-all connected sets of brain regions) in the average structural connectomes of 8 healthy adults scanned in triplicate and discover the presence of more large cliques than expected in null networks constructed via wiring minimization, providing architecture through which brain network can perform rapid, local processing.', '1608.03520-2-0-6': 'We then locate topological cavities of different dimensions, around which information may flow in either diverging or converging patterns.', '1608.03520-2-0-7': 'These cavities exist consistently across subjects, differ from those observed in null model networks, and - importantly - link regions of early and late evolutionary origin in long loops, underscoring their unique role in controlling brain function.', '1608.03520-2-0-8': "These results offer a first demonstration that techniques from algebraic topology offer a novel perspective on structural connectomics, highlighting loop-like paths as crucial features in the human brain's structural architecture.", '1608.03520-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1608.03520-2-2-0': 'Macroscopic computation and cognition in the human brain are affected by an intricately interconnected collection of neurophysical mechanisms [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-2-1': 'Unlike modern parallel computers, which operate through vast numbers of programs running in tandem and in isolation from one another, it is understood that many of these processes are supported on anatomically specialized brain regions that constantly share information among themselves through a network of white matter tracts [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-2-2': 'One approach for understanding the function of such a system begins with studying the organization of this white matter substrate using the language of networks [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-2-3': 'Collections of regions that are pairwise tightly interconnected by large tracts, variously known as communities [CITATION], modules [CITATION], and rich clubs [CITATION], have been the subject of substantial prior study.', '1608.03520-2-2-4': 'Moreover, they have given critical insights into the large-scale structural units of the brain that give rise to many common cognitive functions [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-2-5': 'Such communities easily and rapidly transmit information among their members, facilitating local integration of information [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-3-0': 'Often left implicit in such investigations of the white matter network is the understanding that just as important as the strong internal connections in communities are the relative weakness of connections to external regions.', '1608.03520-2-3-1': 'This tendency to focus on strongly connected local regions arises naturally because standard network analyses are based on local properties of the network at individual vertices, where local edge strength is the primary feature [CITATION]; the particular choice of quantitative language serves as a filter that diverts attention toward certain facets of the system.', '1608.03520-2-3-2': 'However, if one takes a more macro-scale view of the network, the small or absent white matter tracts intuitively serve to isolate processes carried on the strong white matter tracts from one another.', '1608.03520-2-3-3': 'Such structure facilitates more traditional conceptual models of parallel processing, wherein data is copied or divided into multiple pieces in order to rapidly perform distinct computations, and then recombined [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-3-4': 'Together, the two notions of dense cliques and isolating cavities provide a picture of a system that performs complex computations by decomposing information into coherent pieces to be disseminated to local processing centers, and then aggregating the results.', '1608.03520-2-4-0': 'In order to quantitatively characterize this macroscale structure, we employ an enrichment of networks that comes from the field of algebraic topology [CITATION], developed precisely to understand the interplay between these weak and strong connections in systems [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-4-1': 'Beginning with a structural white matter network, we first extract the collection of all-to-all connected subgraphs, called cliques, which represent sets of brain regions that may possess a similar function, operate in unison, or share information rapidly [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-4-2': 'Attaching these cliques to one another following a map given by the network creates a topological object called a clique complex from which we can extract certain patterns of strongly connected regions called cycles [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-4-3': 'Chordless cycles correspond to extended paths of potential information transmission along which computations can be performed serially to effect cognition in either a divergent or convergent manner, and we refer to these "enclosed spaces" as topological cavities in the network.', '1608.03520-2-4-4': 'We hypothesize that the spatial distributions of cliques and cavities will differ in their anatomical locations, corresponding to their differential putative roles in neural computations.', '1608.03520-2-5-0': 'To address these hypotheses, we construct structural brain networks from diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data acquired from eight volunteers in triplicate.', '1608.03520-2-5-1': 'We measure node participation in cliques and compare these with a minimally wired null model [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-5-2': "We also demonstrate the correspondence between the anatomical location of cliques and the anatomical location of the brain's structural rich club: a group of hubs that are densely connected to one another.", '1608.03520-2-5-3': 'Next, we study topological cavities using a recently developed method from algebraic topology, which detects the presence and robustness , summarized by a quantity called persistence), of shell-like motifs of cliques called cycles in the network architecture.', '1608.03520-2-5-4': 'Specifically, we recover all minimal length cycles corresponding to four persistent topological cavities in the consensus structure, and show that these features are robustly present across subjects through multiple scans.', '1608.03520-2-5-5': 'Our results demonstrate that while cliques are observed in the structural core, cycles enclosing topological cavities are observed to link regions of subcortex, frontal cortex, and parietal cortex in long loops, underscoring their unique role in controlling brain function [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-6-0': '# Results', '1608.03520-2-7-0': 'To extract relevant architectural features of the human structural connectome, we first encoded diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data acquired from eight subjects in triplicate as undirected, weighted networks.', '1608.03520-2-7-1': 'In this network, nodes correspond to 83 brain regions defined by the Lausanne parcellation [CITATION] and edges correspond to the density of white matter tracts between node pairs (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-2-7-2': 'We initially study a group-averaged network, and then demonstrate that our results are consistently observed across individuals in the group as well as across multiple scans from the same individual.', '1608.03520-2-8-0': '## Cliques in the Human Structural Connectome', '1608.03520-2-9-0': 'Here, we use the group-averaged network thresholded at an edge density ([MATH]) of 0.25 for computational purposes and for consistency with prior studies [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-9-1': 'Results at other densities are similar, and details can be found in the Supplimentary Information.', '1608.03520-2-9-2': 'As a null-model, we use minimally wired networks (Fig. [REF]d) created from assigning edge weights to the inverse Euclidean distance between brain region centers (see Methods) observed in each of 24 scans.', '1608.03520-2-9-3': 'This model mimics the tendency of the brain to conserve wiring cost by giving edges connecting physically close nodes higher weight than edges between distant nodes.', '1608.03520-2-10-0': 'For each network, we now enumerate all maximal [MATH]-cliques.', '1608.03520-2-10-1': 'Recall that a [MATH]-clique is a set of [MATH] nodes having all pairwise connections (see Fig. [REF]b for 2-, 3-, and 4-cliques representing edges, triangles, and tetrahedra, respectively.)', '1608.03520-2-10-2': 'By definition, a subgraph of a clique will itself be a clique of lower dimension, called a face.', '1608.03520-2-10-3': 'A maximal clique is one that is not a face of any other (see Fig. [REF]c for a maximal 4-clique, which contains 3-, 2-, and 1-cliques as faces).', '1608.03520-2-11-0': 'To understand the anatomical distribution of maximal cliques in both real and null model networks, we count the number of maximal [MATH]-cliques in which a node is a member, and refer to this value as the node participation, [MATH] (see Methods).', '1608.03520-2-11-1': 'Summing over all [MATH] gives the total participation, [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-11-2': 'We observe that the distribution of maximal clique degrees is unimodal in the minimally wired null model and bimodal in the empirical data (see Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-2-11-3': 'Anatomically, we observe a general progression of maximal clique participation from anterior to posterior regions of cortex as we detect higher degrees (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-2-11-4': 'Indeed, maximal cliques of 12-16 nodes contain nearly all of the visual cortex.', '1608.03520-2-11-5': 'This spatial distribution suggests that large interacting groups of brain regions are required for early information processing, while areas of frontal cortex driving higher-order cognition utilize smaller working clusters.', '1608.03520-2-11-6': 'We also observe that the human brain displays smaller maximal cliques than the minimally wired null model, a fact that might support its distributed processing.', '1608.03520-2-12-0': 'The anterior-posterior gradient of maximal clique size can be complemented by additionally analyzing regional variation in the cognitive computations being performed.', '1608.03520-2-12-1': 'Specifically, we ask whether node participation in maximal cliques differs in specific cognitive systems [CITATION] (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-2-12-2': 'We observe that the largest maximal cliques are formed by nodes located almost exclusively in the subcortical, dorsal attention, visual, and default mode systems, suggesting that these systems are tightly interconnected and might utilize robust topologically-local communication.', '1608.03520-2-12-3': 'Critically, this spatial distribution of the participation in maximal cliques differs significantly from the minimally wired null model, particularly in the cingulo-opercular and subcortical systems.', '1608.03520-2-12-4': 'We hypothesized that these differences may be driven by the excess of maximal 8-cliques in the minimally wired network (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-2-12-5': 'Expanding on the difference in node participation ([MATH]), we see indeed that the large discrepancies between empirical and null model networks in cingulo-opercular and subcortical systems are caused by a difference in maximal cliques of approximately eight nodes (Fig. [REF]b, bottom).', '1608.03520-2-13-0': 'A node with high participation must in turn be well connected locally.', '1608.03520-2-13-1': 'Therefore we expect the participation of a node to act similarly to other measures of connectivity.', '1608.03520-2-13-2': 'To test this expectation, we examine the correlation of node participation with node strength, the summed edge weight of connections emanating from a node, as well as with node communicability, a measure of the strength of long distance walks emanating from a node (Fig. [REF]a).', '1608.03520-2-13-3': 'We find that both strength and communicability exhibit a strong linear correlation with the participation of a node in maximal cliques (Pearson correlation coefficient [MATH] and [MATH], respectively).', '1608.03520-2-14-0': 'These results indicate that regions that are strongly connected to the rest of the brain by both direct paths and indirect walks also participate in many maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-2-14-1': 'Such an observation suggests the possibility that brain hubs - which are known to be strongly connected with one another in a so-called rich-club - play a key role in maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-2-14-2': 'To test this possibility, we measure the association of brain regions to the rich-club using notions of coreness.', '1608.03520-2-14-3': 'A [MATH]-core of a graph [MATH] is a maximal connected subgraph of [MATH] in which all vertices have degree at least [MATH], and an [MATH]-core is the equivalent notion for weighted graphs (see Methods).', '1608.03520-2-14-4': 'Using these notions, we consider how the [MATH]-core and [MATH]-core decompositions align with high participation (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-2-14-5': 'In both cases, nodes with higher participation often achieve higher levels in the [MATH]- and [MATH]-core decomposition.', '1608.03520-2-14-6': 'Moreover, we also observe the frequent existence of rich club connections between nodes with high participation (Fig. [REF]b, bottom).', '1608.03520-2-14-7': 'Together, these results suggest that rich-club regions of the human brain tend to participate in local computational units in the form of cliques.', '1608.03520-2-15-0': '## Cavities in the Structural Connectome', '1608.03520-2-16-0': 'Whereas cliques in the DSI network act as neighborhood-scale building blocks for the computational structure of the brain, the relationships between these blocks can be investigated by studying the unexpected absence of strong connections, which can be detected as topological cavities in the structure of the brain network.', '1608.03520-2-16-1': 'Because connections are treated as communication channels along which brain regions can signal one another and participate in shared neural function, the absence of such connections implies a decreased capacity for communication which serves to enhance the segregation of different functions.', '1608.03520-2-17-0': 'To identify topological cavities in a weighted network, we construct a sequence of binary graphs, each included in the next (Fig. [REF]a), known as a filtration.', '1608.03520-2-17-1': 'Beginning with the empty graph we replace unweighted edges one at a time according to order of decreasing edge weight, and we index each graph by its edge density [MATH], given by the number of edges in the graph divided by the number of possible edges.', '1608.03520-2-17-2': 'After each edge addition, we extract "shell-like" motifs of [MATH]-cliques called (non-trivial) [MATH]-cycles, each of which encloses a [MATH]-dimensional topological cavity in the structure.', '1608.03520-2-17-3': 'When [MATH] is clear or not pertinent, we will supress it from the notation, and refer simply to "cycles" and "cavities".', '1608.03520-2-17-4': 'While any cavity is surrounded by at least one cycle, often multiple cycles surround the same cavity.', '1608.03520-2-17-5': 'However, any two cycles that detect the same cavity will necessarily differ from one another by the boundaries of some collection of [MATH]-cliques (see Supporting Information and Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-2-17-6': 'Any two such cycles are called topologically equivalent, so each topological cavity is detected by a non-trivial equivalence class of cycles.', '1608.03520-2-17-7': 'We can represent a topological cavity using any of the cycles within the corresponding equivalence class, but for purposes of studying computational architectures it is reasonable to assume information will travel along paths of minimal length; thus, in this analysis we will consider the collection of cycles in an equivalence class with the minimal number of nodes and call these the minimal cycles representing the cavity.', '1608.03520-2-18-0': 'As we move through the filtration by adding edges, the structure of the cycles, and thus of the cavities they represent, will evolve.', '1608.03520-2-18-1': 'We consider an example in Fig. [REF]a, showing a green minimal cycle surrounding a 2D cavity which first appears (is born) in the graph sequence at [MATH] (cyan).', '1608.03520-2-18-2': 'As an edge completing a [MATH]-clique is added, the minimal cycle representative shrinks to four nodes in size, then finally is tessellated by [MATH]-cliques (dies) at [MATH] (orange).', '1608.03520-2-18-3': 'We record [MATH] and [MATH] for all topological cavities (e.g., non-trivial equivalence classes of cycles) found within the filtration, and display them on a persistence diagram (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-2-18-4': 'Cavities that survive many edge additions have a long lifetime, defined as [MATH], or a large death-to-birth ratio, [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-18-5': 'Such cycles are commonly referred to as persistent cavities and in many applications are considered the "topological features" of the system.', '1608.03520-2-19-0': 'We investigate the persistence of 2D and 3D cavities (respectively represented by equivalence classes of [MATH]- and [MATH]-cycles) in the group-average DSI network and minimally wired null networks (see Fig. [REF]c).', '1608.03520-2-19-1': 'There are substantially fewer persistent cavities in the group-average DSI network than in the null models.', '1608.03520-2-19-2': 'To illustrate the structure of these cavities, we select four representative cavities with exceedingly long lifetimes or a high [MATH] to [MATH] ratio (Fig. [REF]c,d) in the empirical data, and for each we find the minimal-length representative cycles at [MATH] (Fig. [REF]e).', '1608.03520-2-19-3': 'The first persistent cavity appears as early as [MATH] and is minimally enclosed by the unique blue cycle composed of the thalamus and caudate nucleus of both hemispheres.', '1608.03520-2-19-4': 'The green cycle connecting the medial and lateral orbitofrontal, rostaral anterior cingulate, putamen, and superior frontal cortex is the only minimal cycle surrounding a long-lived cavity in the left hemisphere.', '1608.03520-2-19-5': 'The final persistent 2D cavity in the average DSI data is found in the right hemisphere between the medial orbitofrontal, accumbens nucleus, any of the subcortical regions hippocampus, caudate nucleus, putamen, thalamus, and amygdala, and any of the rostral middle frontal, lateral orbitofrontal, medial orbitofrontal of the left hemisphere, and rostral anterior cingulate from both hemispheres (see Fig. [REF]e for all 12 minimal representatives).', '1608.03520-2-19-6': 'Finally, the purple octahedral cycle made from 3-cliques contains the inferior and middle temporal, lateral occipital, inferior parietal, supramarginal, superior parietal, and either of the superior temporal and insula of the left hemisphere, and encloses the longest-lived 3D cavity in the structural brain network.', '1608.03520-2-20-0': '## Test-ReTest Reliability and Other Methodological Considerations', '1608.03520-2-21-0': 'It is important to ask whether the architectural features that we observe in the group-averaged DSI network can also be consistently observed across multiple individuals, and across multiple scans of the same individual to ensure these cavities are not artifacts driven by a few outliers.', '1608.03520-2-21-1': 'Comparison of persistent cavities arising from two different networks is complicated by our notion of equivalence of cavities, and our desire to work with particular representative cycles.', '1608.03520-2-21-2': "To capture the extent to which the cavities and their minimal representatives in the average DSI data are present in the individual scans, we record the collection of cliques that compose each minimal cycle representing the equivalance class (as seen in Fig. [REF]e), and check both for the existence of one of those collections of cliques, corresponding to the existence of the same strong fiber tracts, and, more stringently, for the presence of a topological cavity represented by that cycle in each individual's DSI network (see Supporting Information for more details).", '1608.03520-2-21-3': 'We observed that the subcortical cycle (Fig. [REF]e, blue) exists and these nodes (thalamus and caudate nucleus of both hemispheres) surround an equivalent 2D cavity in at least one scan of all individuals and the late-developing subcortical-frontal cycle (Fig. [REF]e, red) surrounds a cavity found in seven of the eight individuals in at least one of three scans (Fig. [REF]b,f).', '1608.03520-2-21-4': 'The earlier arriving subcortical-frontal cycle (Fig. [REF]e, green) is present in all individuals and a similar cavity is seen at least once in all individuals (Fig. [REF]d).', '1608.03520-2-21-5': 'Finally, we observe that the octahedral connection pattern in posterior parietal and occipital cortex (Fig. [REF]e, purple) is present at least once in seven of eight individuals and these regions enclose a similar cavity at least once in six of these individuals (Fig. [REF]h).', '1608.03520-2-21-6': 'In the opposite hemisphere, the cyclic connection patterns and similar cavities appear though not as regularly (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-2-21-7': 'Finally we check the existence of similar cavities within the minimally wired null models, and see cavities denoted by the green and purple cycles are never seen (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-2-21-8': 'However, similar cavities to those represented by the red and blue minimal cycles appear frequently in the null model, though with different birth/death densities and lifetimes.', '1608.03520-2-21-9': 'In summary we find topological cavities observed in the group-averaged DSI network appear consistently across individuals, suggesting their potential role as conserved wiring motifs in the human brain.', '1608.03520-2-22-0': 'In addition to consistency across subjects and scans, it is important to determine whether the known high connectivity from subcortical nodes to the rest of the brain may be artificially obscuring non-trivial cortico-cortical cavities important for brain function.', '1608.03520-2-22-1': 'To address this question, we examined the 66-node group-average DSI network composed only of cortical regions, after removing subcortical regions, insula, and brainstem.', '1608.03520-2-22-2': 'We recovered a long-lived topological cavity surrounded by four cycles of minimal length composed of nine nodes connecting temporal, parietal, and frontal regions (Fig. [REF]).', '1608.03520-2-22-3': 'Note in the schematic of Fig. [REF]a we see clearly two 2D cavities.', '1608.03520-2-22-4': 'The birth edge here was between the lateral orbitofrontal and superior temporal regions, which prevents us from determining whether the exact minimal cycle surrounding this cavity follows the superior frontal (LH)/posterior cingulate or the superior frontal (RH)/caudal middle frontal branch of the top loop.', '1608.03520-2-22-5': 'Following either of these two branches (then either of the banks of the superior temporal sulcus or middle temporal route) gives four cycles in which two are equivalent to each other but not to either cycle in the other pair.', '1608.03520-2-22-6': 'We will accept all of these four as minimal maroon cycles since any of the four could be minimal representatives.', '1608.03520-2-22-7': 'Moreover, at least one of these minimal cycles and corresponding cavity was observed in each scan of every individual (Fig. [REF]c), and often in the opposite hemisphere as well (Fig. [REF]d).', '1608.03520-2-22-8': 'These results reveal that cortico-cortical cycles are indeed present and suggest their potential utility in segregating function across the brain.', '1608.03520-2-23-0': '# Discussion', '1608.03520-2-24-0': 'In this study, we describe a principled examination of multi-node routes within larger connection patterns that are not accessible to network analysis methods that exclusively consider pairwise interactions between nodes.', '1608.03520-2-24-1': 'Our approach draws on concepts from a discipline of mathematics known as algebraic topology to define sets of all-to-all connected nodes as structural units, called cliques, and then to use the clique architecture of the network to detect structural topological cavities, detected by the existence of non-trivial representative cycles.', '1608.03520-2-24-2': 'Using this approach, we show that node participation in maximal cliques varies spatially and by cognitive systems, suggesting a global organization of these neighborhood-scale features.', '1608.03520-2-24-3': 'These cliques form shell-like patterns of connectivity in the human structural connectome, which separate relatively early-evolving regions of the subcortex with higher-order association areas in frontal, parietal, and temporal cortex that evolved on more recent time scales.', '1608.03520-2-24-4': 'We found the recovered topological cavities exist consistently across individuals and are not expected in a spatially embedded null model, emphasizing their importance in neural wiring and function.', '1608.03520-2-24-5': "These results offer a first demonstration that techniques from algebraic topology offer a novel perspective on structural connectomics, highlighting cavernous spaces as crucial features in the human brain's structural architecture.", '1608.03520-2-25-0': '## Algebro-topological Tools for Neural Data Analysis', '1608.03520-2-26-0': 'Algebraic topology is a relatively young field of pure mathematics that has only recently been applied to the study of real-world data.', '1608.03520-2-26-1': 'However, the power of these techniques to measure structures that are inaccessible to common graph metrics has gained immediate traction in the neuroscience community.', '1608.03520-2-26-2': 'Here, we highlight a few notable examples from the growing literature; a more comprehensive recent account can be found in [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-26-3': 'At the neuron level, persistent persistence has been used to detect intrinsic structure in correlations between neural spike trains [CITATION], expanding our understanding of the formation of spatial maps in the hippocampus [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-26-4': 'Moreover, at the level of large-scale brain regions, these tools have been exercised to characterize the global architecture of fMRI data [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-26-5': 'Based on their unique sensitivity, we expect these algebric-topological methods to provide novel contributions to our understanding of the structure and function of neural circuitry across all scales at which combinatorial components act together for a common goal: from firing patterns coding for memory [CITATION] to brain regions interacting to enable cognition.', '1608.03520-2-27-0': 'Our study uses algebraic topology in the classical form to obtain a global understanding of the structure, and in conjunction, it investigates particular topological features themselves and relates these features to cognitive function.', '1608.03520-2-27-1': 'Cycle representatives have previously been considered in biology [CITATION], but to our knowledge this is a first attempt to compare topological features in multiple brains.', '1608.03520-2-28-0': '## Cliques and Cavities for Computations', '1608.03520-2-29-0': 'Cliques and minimal cycles representing cavities are structurally positioned to play distinct roles in neural computations.', '1608.03520-2-29-1': 'Cliques represent sets of brain regions that may possess a similar function, operate in unison, or share information rapidly [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-29-2': 'Conversely, minimal cycles correspond to extended paths of potential information transmission along which computations can be performed serially to affect cognition in either a divergent or convergent manner.', '1608.03520-2-29-3': 'Indeed, the shell-like or chain-like nature of cycles is a structural motif that has previously been - at least qualitatively - described in neuroanatomical studies of cellular circuitry.', '1608.03520-2-29-4': 'In this context, such motifs are known to play a key role in learning [CITATION], memory [CITATION], and behavioral control [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-29-5': 'The presence of minimal cycles suggests a possible role for polysynaptic connections and their importance to neural computations, consistent with evidence from the field of computational neuroscience highlighting the role of highly structured circuits in sequence generation and memory [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-29-6': 'Indeed, in computational models at the neuron level, architectures reminiscent of chains [CITATION] and rings are particularly conducive to the generation of sequential behavioral responses.', '1608.03520-2-29-7': 'It is interesting to speculate that the presence of these structures at the much larger scale of white matter tracts could support diverse neural dynamics and a broader repertoire of cognitive computations than possible in simpler and more integrated network architectures [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-30-0': 'Another consideration concerns the apparent asymmetry of our results with respect to left and right cerebral hemispheres.', '1608.03520-2-30-1': 'While unanticipated, we note that in some cases they have intuitive mathematical underpinnings.', '1608.03520-2-30-2': 'For example, in Fig. [REF], we explicitly count maximal cliques, so one edge difference between a region in the left and right hemisphere could result in a large difference in the number of observed maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-2-30-3': 'Interestingly, despite this fact we still observe a strong correlation between node strength and [MATH], instilling confidence in these results.', '1608.03520-2-30-4': 'From a neuroscience point of view, brain asymmetries are not wholly unexpected.', '1608.03520-2-30-5': 'There is a storied and ever-growing literature describing the lateralization (i.e., asymmetries) of brain function [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-30-6': 'While speech generation [CITATION] and language processing [CITATION] are among the most commonly-cited functions to exhibit lateralization [CITATION], such effects have also been linked to a diverse group of other cognitive domains.', '1608.03520-2-30-7': 'These include emotion [CITATION], processing of visual input [CITATION], and even working memory [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-30-8': 'In addition, a number of studies have also reported the emergence of pathological lateralization or the disruption of asymmetries with neurocognitive disorders including ADHD [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-30-9': 'Our study does not offer a conclusive demonstration that the observed asymmetries arise from the lateralization of any specific brain function; we merely wish note that there is a precedent for such observations.', '1608.03520-2-31-0': '## Evolutionary and Developmental Drivers', '1608.03520-2-32-0': 'Network filtration revealed several persistent cavities in the macroscale human connectome.', '1608.03520-2-32-1': 'While each minimal cycle surrounding these cavities involved brain regions interacting in a distinct configuration, we also observed commonalities across these structures.', '1608.03520-2-32-2': 'One such commonality was these minimal cycles tended to link evolutionarily old structures with more recently-developed neo-cortical regions [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-32-3': 'For example, the green cycle depicted in Fig. [REF]e linked the putamen, an area involved in motor behavior [CITATION], with the rostral anterior cingulate cortex, associated with higher-order cognitive functions such as error-monitoring [CITATION] and reward processing [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-32-4': 'This observation led us to speculate that the emergence of these cavities may reflect the disparate timescales over which brain regions and their circuitry have evolved [CITATION], through the relative paucity of direct connections between regions that evolved to perform different functions.', '1608.03520-2-32-5': 'This hypothesis can be investigated in future work comparing the clique and cavity structure of the human connectome with that of non-human connectomes from organisms with less developed neocortices.', '1608.03520-2-33-0': '## Towards a Global Understanding of Network Organization', '1608.03520-2-34-0': 'Though we highlighted minimal cycles in the brain, by nature persistence describes the global organization of the network.', '1608.03520-2-34-1': 'Often regions in the brain wire minimally to conserve wiring cost [CITATION], though there are exceptions that give the brain its topological properties such as its small-world architecture [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-34-2': 'Following this idea, we could interpret the difference in the number of persistent cavities between the minimally wired and DSI networks as a consequence of the non-minimally wired edges, which tessellate cavities in the brain itself.', '1608.03520-2-34-3': 'Yet when the subcortical regions are removed, the persistent cavities of the minimally wired and DSI networks are much more similar (Fig. [REF]b).', '1608.03520-2-34-4': 'This suggests that the wiring of cortical regions may be more heavily influenced by energy conservation than the wiring of subcortical regions.', '1608.03520-2-34-5': 'Additionally the drop in the number and lifetime of persistent cavities when subcortical regions are included indicates that these subcortical regions may prematurely collapse topological cavities.', '1608.03520-2-34-6': 'The often high participation of subcortical regions in maximal cliques suggests these well-connected nodes may have hub-like projections to regions involved in cortical cycles, thus tessellating the cortical cavity with higher dimensional cliques.', '1608.03520-2-34-7': 'Previous studies have found that networks with "star-like" configurations are optimally efficient in terms of shortest-path efficiency, but also efficient in terms of a random walk-based measure of efficiency [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-34-8': 'That is, networks optimized to have one or the other type of efficiency tend to have stars.', '1608.03520-2-34-9': 'Thus, stars appear to be useful configurations for fast communication, both along shortest paths and also in an unguided sense along random walks.', '1608.03520-2-34-10': 'The fact that we see star-like projections to cycles from subcortical regions may suggest that they are useful for efficient communication.', '1608.03520-2-35-0': '## Methodological Considerations', '1608.03520-2-36-0': 'An important consideration relates to the data from which we construct the human structural connectome.', '1608.03520-2-36-1': "DSI and tractography, non-invasive tools for mapping the brain's white-matter connectivity, have some limitations.", '1608.03520-2-36-2': 'Tractography algorithms trade off specificity and sensitivity, making it challenging to simultaneously detect true connections while avoiding false connections [CITATION], fail to detect superficial connections (i.e. those that do not pass through deep white matter)[CITATION], and have challenges tracking "crossing fibers", connections with different orientations that pass through the same voxel [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-36-3': 'Nonetheless, DSI and tractography represent the only techniques for non-invasive imaging and reconstruction of the human connectome.', '1608.03520-2-36-4': 'While such shortcomings limit the applicability of DSI and tractography, they may prove addressable with the development of improved tractography algorithms and imaging techniques [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-37-0': '# Conclusion', '1608.03520-2-38-0': 'In conclusion, here we offer a unique perspective on the structural substrates of distinct types of neural computations.', '1608.03520-2-38-1': 'While traditional notions from graph theory and network science preferentially focus on local properties of the network at individual vertices or edges [CITATION], here we utilize an enriched network formalism that comes from the field of algebraic topology [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-38-2': 'These tools are tuned to the interplay between weak and strong connections [CITATION], and therefore reveal architectural features that serve to isolate information transmission processes [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-38-3': 'It will be interesting in future to compare human and non-human connectomes across a range of spatial scales [CITATION] to further elucidate the evolutionary development of these features, and to link them to their functional [CITATION] and behavioral [CITATION] consequences.', '1608.03520-2-39-0': '# Materials and Methods', '1608.03520-2-40-0': '## Data Acquisition, Preprocessing, and Network Construction', '1608.03520-2-41-0': 'Diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) data and T1-weighted anatomical scans were acquired from eight healthy adult volunteers on 3 separate days ([MATH] years old, two female, and two left-handed) [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-41-1': 'All participants provided informed consent in writing according to the Institutional Review Board at the University of California, Santa Barbara.', '1608.03520-2-41-2': 'Whole-brain images were parcellated into 83 regions (network nodes) using the Lausanne atlas [CITATION], and connections between regions (network edges) were weighted by the number of streamlines identified using a determistic fiber tracking algorithm.', '1608.03520-2-41-3': 'We represent this network as a graph [MATH] on [MATH] nodes and [MATH] edges, corresponding to a weighted symmetric adjacency matrix [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-41-4': 'For calculations in the main text, the network was thresholded at [MATH] for consistency with previous work [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-41-5': 'See Supporting Information and Refs [CITATION] for detailed descriptions of acquisition parameters, data preprocessing, and fiber tracking.', '1608.03520-2-41-6': 'In the supplement, we provide additional results for the case in which we correct edge weight definitions for the effect of region size Fig. [REF].', '1608.03520-2-42-0': '## Cliques versus Cycles', '1608.03520-2-43-0': 'In a graph [MATH] a [MATH]-clique is a set of [MATH] all-to-all connected nodes.', '1608.03520-2-43-1': 'It follows that any subset of a [MATH]-clique is a clique of smaller degree, called a face.', '1608.03520-2-43-2': 'Any clique that is not a face we call maximal.', '1608.03520-2-43-3': 'To assess how individual nodes contribute to these structures, we define node participation in maximal [MATH]-cliques as [MATH], and we record the total participation of a node as [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-44-0': 'To detect cycles which enclose topological cavities, we computed the persistent homology for dimensions 1-2 using [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-44-1': 'This process involves first decomposing the weighted network into a sequence of binary graphs beginning with the empty graph and adding one edge at a time in order of decreasing edge weight.', '1608.03520-2-44-2': 'Formally, we translate edge weight information into a sequence of binary graphs called a filtration, [EQUATION] beginning with the empty graph [MATH] and adding back one edge at a time following the decreasing edge weight ordering.', '1608.03520-2-44-3': 'To ensure all edge weights are unique we added random noise uniformly sampled from [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-44-4': 'However, this has essentially no effect on the final results, as stability theorems ensure that small perturbation of the filtration leads to small perturbation of the persistent homology [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-45-0': 'Within each binary graph of this filtration, we extract the collection of all [MATH]-cycles, families of [MATH]-cliques which, when considered as a geometric object, form a closed shell with no boundary.', '1608.03520-2-45-1': 'Formally, these are collections of [MATH]-cliques [MATH] such that every [MATH]-subclique of some [MATH] (called a boundary) appears as a subclique in the collection an even number of times.', '1608.03520-2-45-2': 'Two [MATH]-cycles are equivalent if they differ by a boundary of [MATH]-cliques.', '1608.03520-2-45-3': 'This relation forms equivalence classes of cycles with each non-trivial equivalence class representing a unique topological cavity.', '1608.03520-2-46-0': 'Constructing the sequence of binary graphs allows us to follow equivalence classes of cycles as a function of the edge density [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-46-1': 'Important points of interest along this sequence are the edge density associated with the first [MATH] in which the equivalence class is found (called the birth density, [MATH]) and the edge density associated with the first [MATH] in which the enclosed void is triangulated into higher dimensional cliques (called the death density, [MATH]).', '1608.03520-2-46-2': 'One potential marker of the relative importance of a persistent cavity to the weighted network architecture is its lifetime ([MATH]).', '1608.03520-2-46-3': 'A large lifetime indicates topological cavities that persist over many edge additions.', '1608.03520-2-46-4': 'An alternative measure is the death to birth ratio [MATH] which highlights topological cavities that survive exceptionally long in spite of being born early, a feature that is interesting in geometric random graphs.', '1608.03520-2-46-5': '(see [CITATION] and Supporting Information).', '1608.03520-2-47-0': 'To study the role of each topological cavity in cognitive function, we extract the minimal representatives of each non-trivial equivalence class at the birth density.', '1608.03520-2-47-1': 'For unfiltered complexes, the problem of finding a minimal generator for a given homology class is well known to be intractable [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-47-2': 'However, leveraging the filtration, we are able to answer the corresponding question in this context with relative ease.', '1608.03520-2-47-3': 'The persistent homology software [CITATION] returns the starting edge and birth density of each homology class.', '1608.03520-2-47-4': 'To recover the minimal cycle we threshold the network at the density immediately preceding [MATH], then perform a breadth-first search for a path from one vertex to the other, taking all minimum length paths as solutions.', '1608.03520-2-47-5': 'If these minimum length paths arise from different equivalence classes (cycles 3, 7, and 10 in Fig. [REF]) we record and analyze each individually since each could be the generator of the homology class.', '1608.03520-2-47-6': 'For higher dimensional cycles we perform a similar process by hand, but we note that they could be algorithmically identified using appropriate generalizations of the graph search method.', '1608.03520-2-48-0': '## Standard Graph Statistics', '1608.03520-2-49-0': 'In addition to the notions of cliques and cavities from algebraic topology, we also examined corresponding notions from traditional graph theory including communicability and rich-club architecture, which are directly related to node participation in maximal cliques.', '1608.03520-2-50-0': 'We first considered nodes that participated in many maximal cliques, and we assessed their putative role in brain communication using the notion of network communicability.', '1608.03520-2-50-1': 'The weighted communicability between nodes [MATH] and [MATH] is [EQUATION] with [MATH] for [MATH] the strength of node [MATH] in the adjacency matrix [MATH], providing a normalization step where each [MATH] is divided by [MATH] [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-50-2': 'This statistic accounts for all walks between node pairs and scales the walk contribution according to the product of the component edge weights.', '1608.03520-2-50-3': 'The statistic also normalizes node strength to prevent high strength nodes from skewing the walk contributions.', '1608.03520-2-50-4': "We refer to the sum of a node's communicability with all other nodes as node communicability, [MATH].", '1608.03520-2-51-0': 'Intuitively, nodes that participate in many maximal cliques may also play a critical role in the well-known rich club organization of the brain, in which highly connected nodes in the network are more connected to each other than expected in a random graph.', '1608.03520-2-51-1': 'For each degree [MATH] we compute the weighted rich club coefficient [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the summed weight of edges in the subgraph composed of nodes with degree greater than [MATH], [MATH] is the number of edges in this subgraph, and [MATH] is the [MATH]-th greatest edge weight in [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-51-2': 'Rich club nodes are those that exist in this subgraph when [MATH] is significantly greater (one sided [MATH]-test) than [MATH], the rich club coefficient calculated from 1000 networks constructed by randomly rewiring the graph [MATH] while preserving node strength [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-52-0': 'Furthermore, highly participating nodes may also contribute to a hierarchical organization of the network.', '1608.03520-2-52-1': 'To evaluate this contribution, we compute the [MATH]-core and [MATH]-core decompositions of the graph [CITATION].', '1608.03520-2-52-2': 'The [MATH]-core is the maximally connected component of the subgraph with only nodes having degree greater than [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-52-3': 'The [MATH]-core is similarly defined with summed edge weights in the subgraph required to be at least [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-53-0': '## Null Model Construction', '1608.03520-2-54-0': 'We sought to compare the empirically observed network architecture to that expected in an appropriate null model.', '1608.03520-2-54-1': 'Due to the well-known spatial constraints on structural brain connectivity [CITATION] as well as the similarity in mesoscale homological features to the Random Geometric network [CITATION] we considered a minimally wired network in which nodes are placed at the center of mass of anatomical brain regions.', '1608.03520-2-54-2': 'Each pair of nodes are then linked by an edge with weight [MATH], where [MATH] is the Euclidean distance between nodes [MATH] and [MATH].', '1608.03520-2-54-3': 'In each scan, the locations of region centers were collected.', '1608.03520-2-54-4': 'Thus, we considered a population of 24 model networks.', '1608.03520-2-54-5': 'This null model allows us to assess what topological properties are driven by the precise spatial locations of brain regions combined with a stringent penalty on wiring length.'}
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'1608.03520-2-52-2'], ['1608.03520-1-45-3', '1608.03520-2-52-3'], ['1608.03520-1-4-0', '1608.03520-2-4-0'], ['1608.03520-1-4-1', '1608.03520-2-4-1'], ['1608.03520-1-4-2', '1608.03520-2-4-2'], ['1608.03520-1-18-1', '1608.03520-2-22-1'], ['1608.03520-1-10-1', '1608.03520-2-11-1'], ['1608.03520-1-10-2', '1608.03520-2-11-2'], ['1608.03520-1-10-3', '1608.03520-2-11-3'], ['1608.03520-1-10-4', '1608.03520-2-11-4'], ['1608.03520-1-10-5', '1608.03520-2-11-5'], ['1608.03520-1-10-6', '1608.03520-2-11-6'], ['1608.03520-1-37-0', '1608.03520-2-43-0'], ['1608.03520-1-37-1', '1608.03520-2-43-1'], ['1608.03520-1-37-2', '1608.03520-2-43-2'], ['1608.03520-1-37-3', '1608.03520-2-43-3'], ['1608.03520-1-3-0', '1608.03520-2-3-0'], ['1608.03520-1-3-1', '1608.03520-2-3-1'], ['1608.03520-1-3-2', '1608.03520-2-3-2'], ['1608.03520-1-3-3', '1608.03520-2-3-3'], ['1608.03520-1-47-0', '1608.03520-2-54-0'], ['1608.03520-1-47-2', '1608.03520-2-54-2'], ['1608.03520-1-47-3', '1608.03520-2-54-5'], ['1608.03520-1-22-0', 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['1608.03520-1-12-11', '1608.03520-2-14-7'], ['1608.03520-1-0-3', '1608.03520-2-0-3'], ['1608.03520-1-0-8', '1608.03520-2-0-7'], ['1608.03520-1-38-1', '1608.03520-2-44-1'], ['1608.03520-1-32-3', '1608.03520-2-38-3'], ['1608.03520-1-20-1', '1608.03520-2-24-1'], ['1608.03520-1-20-3', '1608.03520-2-24-3'], ['1608.03520-1-20-4', '1608.03520-2-24-4'], ['1608.03520-1-28-0', '1608.03520-2-34-0'], ['1608.03520-1-28-2', '1608.03520-2-34-2'], ['1608.03520-1-28-3', '1608.03520-2-34-3'], ['1608.03520-1-40-0', '1608.03520-2-46-0'], ['1608.03520-1-40-1', '1608.03520-2-46-1'], ['1608.03520-1-4-4', '1608.03520-2-4-4'], ['1608.03520-1-18-0', '1608.03520-2-22-0'], ['1608.03520-1-18-3', '1608.03520-2-22-7'], ['1608.03520-1-18-4', '1608.03520-2-22-8'], ['1608.03520-1-26-0', '1608.03520-2-32-0'], ['1608.03520-1-26-1', '1608.03520-2-32-1'], ['1608.03520-1-26-2', '1608.03520-2-32-2'], ['1608.03520-1-26-3', '1608.03520-2-32-3'], ['1608.03520-1-26-6', '1608.03520-2-32-5'], ['1608.03520-1-42-0', '1608.03520-2-49-0'], ['1608.03520-1-10-0', '1608.03520-2-11-0'], ['1608.03520-1-3-4', '1608.03520-2-3-4'], ['1608.03520-1-47-1', '1608.03520-2-54-1'], ['1608.03520-1-22-3', '1608.03520-2-26-3'], ['1608.03520-1-35-0', '1608.03520-2-41-0'], ['1608.03520-1-35-5', '1608.03520-2-41-5'], ['1608.03520-1-35-6', '1608.03520-2-41-6'], ['1608.03520-1-17-3', '1608.03520-2-21-5'], ['1608.03520-1-17-5', '1608.03520-2-21-9'], ['1608.03520-1-5-5', '1608.03520-2-5-5'], ['1608.03520-1-24-0', '1608.03520-2-29-0'], ['1608.03520-1-24-2', '1608.03520-2-29-2'], ['1608.03520-1-24-3', '1608.03520-2-29-3'], ['1608.03520-1-24-5', '1608.03520-2-29-5'], ['1608.03520-1-24-7', '1608.03520-2-29-7'], ['1608.03520-1-11-2', '1608.03520-2-12-2'], ['1608.03520-1-0-5', '1608.03520-2-0-5'], ['1608.03520-1-0-7', '1608.03520-2-0-6'], ['1608.03520-1-15-3', '1608.03520-2-19-3'], ['1608.03520-1-15-5', '1608.03520-2-19-4'], ['1608.03520-1-38-0', '1608.03520-2-44-0'], ['1608.03520-1-44-2', '1608.03520-2-51-2'], ['1608.03520-1-44-3', '1608.03520-2-51-2'], ['1608.03520-1-28-5', '1608.03520-2-34-5'], ['1608.03520-1-4-3', '1608.03520-2-4-3'], ['1608.03520-1-26-4', '1608.03520-2-32-4'], ['1608.03520-1-26-5', '1608.03520-2-32-4'], ['1608.03520-1-43-1', '1608.03520-2-50-1'], ['1608.03520-1-9-1', '1608.03520-2-10-1'], ['1608.03520-1-17-0', '1608.03520-2-21-0'], ['1608.03520-1-17-1', '1608.03520-2-21-3'], ['1608.03520-1-17-1', '1608.03520-2-21-4'], ['1608.03520-1-17-2', '1608.03520-2-21-4'], ['1608.03520-1-17-4', '1608.03520-2-21-6'], ['1608.03520-1-5-3', '1608.03520-2-5-3'], ['1608.03520-1-5-4', '1608.03520-2-5-4'], ['1608.03520-1-39-0', '1608.03520-2-45-0'], ['1608.03520-1-39-1', '1608.03520-2-45-3'], ['1608.03520-1-14-0', '1608.03520-2-16-0'], ['1608.03520-1-14-6', '1608.03520-2-18-1'], ['1608.03520-1-14-7', '1608.03520-2-18-3'], ['1608.03520-1-14-8', '1608.03520-2-18-4']]
[['1608.03520-1-0-0', '1608.03520-2-0-0'], ['1608.03520-1-0-1', '1608.03520-2-0-1'], ['1608.03520-1-0-2', '1608.03520-2-0-2'], ['1608.03520-1-0-9', '1608.03520-2-0-8'], ['1608.03520-1-38-2', '1608.03520-2-44-2'], ['1608.03520-1-30-0', '1608.03520-2-36-0'], ['1608.03520-1-30-1', '1608.03520-2-36-1'], ['1608.03520-1-30-2', '1608.03520-2-36-2'], ['1608.03520-1-30-3', '1608.03520-2-36-3'], ['1608.03520-1-30-4', '1608.03520-2-36-4'], ['1608.03520-1-32-0', '1608.03520-2-38-0'], ['1608.03520-1-32-1', '1608.03520-2-38-1'], ['1608.03520-1-32-2', '1608.03520-2-38-2'], ['1608.03520-1-20-0', '1608.03520-2-24-0'], ['1608.03520-1-20-2', '1608.03520-2-24-2'], ['1608.03520-1-20-5', '1608.03520-2-24-5'], ['1608.03520-1-44-0', '1608.03520-2-51-0'], ['1608.03520-1-44-1', '1608.03520-2-51-1'], ['1608.03520-1-28-1', '1608.03520-2-34-1'], ['1608.03520-1-28-4', '1608.03520-2-34-4'], ['1608.03520-1-45-0', '1608.03520-2-52-0'], ['1608.03520-1-45-1', '1608.03520-2-52-1'], ['1608.03520-1-45-2', '1608.03520-2-52-2'], ['1608.03520-1-45-3', '1608.03520-2-52-3'], ['1608.03520-1-4-0', '1608.03520-2-4-0'], ['1608.03520-1-4-1', '1608.03520-2-4-1'], ['1608.03520-1-4-2', '1608.03520-2-4-2'], ['1608.03520-1-18-1', '1608.03520-2-22-1'], ['1608.03520-1-10-1', '1608.03520-2-11-1'], ['1608.03520-1-10-2', '1608.03520-2-11-2'], ['1608.03520-1-10-3', '1608.03520-2-11-3'], ['1608.03520-1-10-4', '1608.03520-2-11-4'], ['1608.03520-1-10-5', '1608.03520-2-11-5'], ['1608.03520-1-10-6', '1608.03520-2-11-6'], ['1608.03520-1-37-0', '1608.03520-2-43-0'], ['1608.03520-1-37-1', '1608.03520-2-43-1'], ['1608.03520-1-37-2', '1608.03520-2-43-2'], ['1608.03520-1-37-3', '1608.03520-2-43-3'], ['1608.03520-1-3-0', '1608.03520-2-3-0'], ['1608.03520-1-3-1', '1608.03520-2-3-1'], ['1608.03520-1-3-2', '1608.03520-2-3-2'], ['1608.03520-1-3-3', '1608.03520-2-3-3'], ['1608.03520-1-47-0', '1608.03520-2-54-0'], ['1608.03520-1-47-2', '1608.03520-2-54-2'], ['1608.03520-1-47-3', '1608.03520-2-54-5'], ['1608.03520-1-22-0', '1608.03520-2-26-0'], ['1608.03520-1-22-1', '1608.03520-2-26-1'], ['1608.03520-1-22-2', '1608.03520-2-26-2'], ['1608.03520-1-22-4', '1608.03520-2-26-4'], ['1608.03520-1-22-5', '1608.03520-2-26-5'], ['1608.03520-1-43-0', '1608.03520-2-50-0'], ['1608.03520-1-43-2', '1608.03520-2-50-2'], ['1608.03520-1-43-3', '1608.03520-2-50-3'], ['1608.03520-1-43-4', '1608.03520-2-50-4'], ['1608.03520-1-7-0', '1608.03520-2-7-0'], ['1608.03520-1-7-1', '1608.03520-2-7-1'], ['1608.03520-1-7-2', '1608.03520-2-7-2'], ['1608.03520-1-35-1', '1608.03520-2-41-1'], ['1608.03520-1-35-2', '1608.03520-2-41-2'], ['1608.03520-1-35-3', '1608.03520-2-41-3'], ['1608.03520-1-35-4', '1608.03520-2-41-4'], ['1608.03520-1-9-2', '1608.03520-2-10-2'], ['1608.03520-1-9-3', '1608.03520-2-10-3'], ['1608.03520-1-5-0', '1608.03520-2-5-0'], ['1608.03520-1-5-1', '1608.03520-2-5-1'], ['1608.03520-1-5-2', '1608.03520-2-5-2'], ['1608.03520-1-24-1', '1608.03520-2-29-1'], ['1608.03520-1-24-4', '1608.03520-2-29-4'], ['1608.03520-1-24-6', '1608.03520-2-29-6'], ['1608.03520-1-11-0', '1608.03520-2-12-0'], ['1608.03520-1-11-1', '1608.03520-2-12-1'], ['1608.03520-1-11-3', '1608.03520-2-12-3'], ['1608.03520-1-11-4', '1608.03520-2-12-4'], ['1608.03520-1-11-5', '1608.03520-2-12-5'], ['1608.03520-1-2-0', '1608.03520-2-2-0'], ['1608.03520-1-2-1', '1608.03520-2-2-1'], ['1608.03520-1-2-2', '1608.03520-2-2-2'], ['1608.03520-1-2-3', '1608.03520-2-2-3'], ['1608.03520-1-2-4', '1608.03520-2-2-4'], ['1608.03520-1-2-5', '1608.03520-2-2-5'], ['1608.03520-1-12-0', '1608.03520-2-13-0'], ['1608.03520-1-12-1', '1608.03520-2-13-1'], ['1608.03520-1-12-2', '1608.03520-2-13-2'], ['1608.03520-1-12-3', '1608.03520-2-13-3'], ['1608.03520-1-12-4', '1608.03520-2-14-0'], ['1608.03520-1-12-5', '1608.03520-2-14-1'], ['1608.03520-1-12-6', '1608.03520-2-14-2'], ['1608.03520-1-12-7', '1608.03520-2-14-3'], ['1608.03520-1-12-8', '1608.03520-2-14-4'], ['1608.03520-1-12-9', '1608.03520-2-14-5'], ['1608.03520-1-12-10', '1608.03520-2-14-6'], ['1608.03520-1-12-11', '1608.03520-2-14-7']]
[['1608.03520-1-0-3', '1608.03520-2-0-3'], ['1608.03520-1-0-8', '1608.03520-2-0-7'], ['1608.03520-1-38-1', '1608.03520-2-44-1'], ['1608.03520-1-32-3', '1608.03520-2-38-3'], ['1608.03520-1-20-1', '1608.03520-2-24-1'], ['1608.03520-1-20-3', '1608.03520-2-24-3'], ['1608.03520-1-20-4', '1608.03520-2-24-4'], ['1608.03520-1-28-0', '1608.03520-2-34-0'], ['1608.03520-1-28-2', '1608.03520-2-34-2'], ['1608.03520-1-28-3', '1608.03520-2-34-3'], ['1608.03520-1-40-0', '1608.03520-2-46-0'], ['1608.03520-1-40-1', '1608.03520-2-46-1'], ['1608.03520-1-4-4', '1608.03520-2-4-4'], ['1608.03520-1-18-0', '1608.03520-2-22-0'], ['1608.03520-1-18-3', '1608.03520-2-22-7'], ['1608.03520-1-18-4', '1608.03520-2-22-8'], ['1608.03520-1-26-0', '1608.03520-2-32-0'], ['1608.03520-1-26-1', '1608.03520-2-32-1'], ['1608.03520-1-26-2', '1608.03520-2-32-2'], ['1608.03520-1-26-3', '1608.03520-2-32-3'], ['1608.03520-1-26-6', '1608.03520-2-32-5'], ['1608.03520-1-42-0', '1608.03520-2-49-0'], ['1608.03520-1-10-0', '1608.03520-2-11-0'], ['1608.03520-1-3-4', '1608.03520-2-3-4'], ['1608.03520-1-47-1', '1608.03520-2-54-1'], ['1608.03520-1-22-3', '1608.03520-2-26-3'], ['1608.03520-1-35-0', '1608.03520-2-41-0'], ['1608.03520-1-35-5', '1608.03520-2-41-5'], ['1608.03520-1-35-6', '1608.03520-2-41-6'], ['1608.03520-1-17-3', '1608.03520-2-21-5'], ['1608.03520-1-17-5', '1608.03520-2-21-9'], ['1608.03520-1-5-5', '1608.03520-2-5-5'], ['1608.03520-1-24-0', '1608.03520-2-29-0'], ['1608.03520-1-24-2', '1608.03520-2-29-2'], ['1608.03520-1-24-3', '1608.03520-2-29-3'], ['1608.03520-1-24-5', '1608.03520-2-29-5'], ['1608.03520-1-24-7', '1608.03520-2-29-7'], ['1608.03520-1-11-2', '1608.03520-2-12-2']]
[]
[['1608.03520-1-0-5', '1608.03520-2-0-5'], ['1608.03520-1-0-7', '1608.03520-2-0-6'], ['1608.03520-1-15-3', '1608.03520-2-19-3'], ['1608.03520-1-15-5', '1608.03520-2-19-4'], ['1608.03520-1-38-0', '1608.03520-2-44-0'], ['1608.03520-1-44-2', '1608.03520-2-51-2'], ['1608.03520-1-44-3', '1608.03520-2-51-2'], ['1608.03520-1-28-5', '1608.03520-2-34-5'], ['1608.03520-1-4-3', '1608.03520-2-4-3'], ['1608.03520-1-26-4', '1608.03520-2-32-4'], ['1608.03520-1-26-5', '1608.03520-2-32-4'], ['1608.03520-1-43-1', '1608.03520-2-50-1'], ['1608.03520-1-9-1', '1608.03520-2-10-1'], ['1608.03520-1-17-0', '1608.03520-2-21-0'], ['1608.03520-1-17-1', '1608.03520-2-21-3'], ['1608.03520-1-17-1', '1608.03520-2-21-4'], ['1608.03520-1-17-2', '1608.03520-2-21-4'], ['1608.03520-1-17-4', '1608.03520-2-21-6'], ['1608.03520-1-5-3', '1608.03520-2-5-3'], ['1608.03520-1-5-4', '1608.03520-2-5-4'], ['1608.03520-1-39-0', '1608.03520-2-45-0'], ['1608.03520-1-39-1', '1608.03520-2-45-3'], ['1608.03520-1-14-0', '1608.03520-2-16-0'], ['1608.03520-1-14-6', '1608.03520-2-18-1'], ['1608.03520-1-14-7', '1608.03520-2-18-3'], ['1608.03520-1-14-8', '1608.03520-2-18-4']]
[]
[]
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.03520
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null
null
null
null
1905.09423
{'1905.09423-1-0-0': 'Set constraints provide a highly general way to formulate program analyses.', '1905.09423-1-0-1': 'However, solving arbitrary boolean combinations of set constraints is [MATH]-complete.', '1905.09423-1-0-2': 'Moreover, while theoretical algorithms to solve arbitrary set constraints exist, they are either too complex to implement, or too slow to ever run.', '1905.09423-1-1-0': 'We present a translation that converts a set constraint formula into an SMT problem.', '1905.09423-1-1-1': 'Our technique allows for arbitrary boolean combinations of positive or negative set constraints, and leverages the performance of modern solvers such as Z3.', '1905.09423-1-1-2': 'To show the usefulness of unrestricted set constraints, we use them to devise a pattern match analysis for functional languages.', '1905.09423-1-1-3': 'This analysis ensures that missing cases of pattern matches are always unreachable.', '1905.09423-1-1-4': 'We implement our analysis in the Elm compiler and show that the our translation is fast enough to be used in practical verification.', '1905.09423-1-2-0': '# Introduction', '1905.09423-1-3-0': 'Set constraints are a powerful tool for expressing a large number of program analyses in a generic way.', '1905.09423-1-3-1': 'While they were an active area of research in decades prior, they have not seen widespread adoption.', '1905.09423-1-3-2': 'In their most general form, finding solutions for a collection of set constraints is While efficient solvers have been developed for restricted versions of the set constraint problem [CITATION], solvers for unrestricted set constraints are not used in practice.', '1905.09423-1-4-0': 'However, since the development of set constraints, there have been significant advancements in solvers for modulo theories (SMT).', '1905.09423-1-4-1': 'Although SMT requires exponential time in theory, solvers such as Z3 [CITATION] and CVC4 [CITATION] are able to solve a wide range of satisfiability problems in practice.', '1905.09423-1-4-2': 'Given the success of SMT-solvers in skirting the theoretical intractability of SAT, one wonders, can these solvers be used to solve set constraints?', '1905.09423-1-4-3': 'We show that this is indeed possible, and that in many cases, reasonable performance may be achieved.', '1905.09423-1-4-4': 'Our full contributions are as follows:', '1905.09423-1-5-0': '[itemize] & We show that projections, a construct traditionally difficult to formulate with set constraints, can be easily formulated using the disjunctions provided by SMT (subsec:proj).', '1905.09423-1-5-1': '& We provide a method for translating unrestricted set constraint problems into SAT modulo , a logical theory with booleans, uninterpreted functions, and first order quantification (sec:smtTrans).', '1905.09423-1-5-2': '& We devise a pattern match analysis for functional programming languages, expressed in terms of unrestricted set constraints (sec:matchAnalysis).', '1905.09423-1-5-3': '& We implement the above translation and analysis, showing that it is usable for verification despite the theoretical [MATH]-completeness (sec:impl).', '1905.09423-1-6-0': '## Motivation: Pattern Match Analysis', '1905.09423-1-7-0': 'We begin by showing a practical use-case for unrestricted set constraints.', '1905.09423-1-8-0': 'Many functional programming languages feature algebraic datatypes, where values of a datatype [MATH] are formed by applying a constructor function to some arguments.', '1905.09423-1-8-1': 'Values of an algebraic type can be decomposed using pattern matching, where the programmer specifies a number of branches with free variables, and the program takes the first branch that matches the given value, binding the corresponding values to the free variables.', '1905.09423-1-8-2': 'If none of the patterns match the value, a runtime error is raised.', '1905.09423-1-9-0': 'Many modern languages, such as Elm [CITATION] and Rust [CITATION] require that pattern matches be exhaustive, so that each pattern match has a branch for every possible value of the given type.', '1905.09423-1-9-1': 'This ensures that runtime errors are never raised due to unmatched patterns, and avoids the null-pointer exceptions that plague many procedural languages.', '1905.09423-1-9-2': 'However, the type systems of these languages cannot express all invariants.', '1905.09423-1-9-3': 'Consider the following pseudo-Haskell, with an algebraic type for shapes, and a function that calculates their area.', '1905.09423-1-10-0': '0.3', '1905.09423-1-11-0': 'data Shape = Square Double Circle Double NGon [Double]', '1905.09423-1-12-0': '0.65', '1905.09423-1-13-0': 'area :: Shape -> Double area shape = case shape of NGon sides -> ... _ -> simpleArea shape where simpleArea sshape = case sshape of Square len -> len * len Circle r -> pi * r * r _ -> error "This cannot happen"', '1905.09423-1-14-0': 'The above code is perfectly safe, since [language=Haskell]simpleArea can only be called from [language=Haskell]area, and will never be given an [language=Haskell]NGon.', '1905.09423-1-14-1': 'However, it is not robust to changes.', '1905.09423-1-14-2': 'If we add the constructor [language=Haskell] Triangle Double Double Double to our [language=Haskell]shape definition, then both matches are still exhaustive, since the [language=Haskell]_ pattern covers every possible case.', '1905.09423-1-14-3': 'However, we now may face a runtime error if [language=Haskell]area is given a [language=Haskell]Triangle.', '1905.09423-1-15-0': 'An alternate approach is to remove catch-all case of [language=Haskell]simpleArea, and to use a static analysis to determine that only values matching [language=Haskell]Circle or [language=Haskell]Square will be passed in.', '1905.09423-1-15-1': 'Such analysis would mark the above code safe, but would signal unsafety if [language=Haskell]Triangle were added to the definition of [language=Haskell]Shape.', '1905.09423-1-16-0': 'While performing such analysis is trivial for this particular case, in general can be complex:', '1905.09423-1-17-0': '& Because functions may be recursive, we need to be able to handle recursive equations (or inequations) of possible pattern sets.', '1905.09423-1-17-1': 'For example, a program dealing with lists may generate a constraint of the form [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-17-2': '& We need projection to determine the set of possible shapes that a variable in a pattern match can take.', '1905.09423-1-17-3': 'In the above example, if [MATH] is the set of patterns [language=Haskell]shape can take in [language=Haskell]area, then we need some way to denote the the possible shapes that [language=Haskell]sides can take.', '1905.09423-1-17-4': 'This is exactly the set constraint projection operation, denoted [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-17-5': '& We wish to encode first-match semantics: if a program takes a certain branch in the pattern match, then the matched value cannot possibly match any of the previous cases.', '1905.09423-1-17-6': '& We want our analysis to be as precise as possible, to raise as few false-negative as is possible.', '1905.09423-1-17-7': 'One way this to achieve this is to track what conditions must be true for a branch to be taken, and to only enforce constraints from that branch when it is reachable.', '1905.09423-1-17-8': 'If we use logical implication, we can express constraints of the form "if [MATH] matches pattern [MATH], then [MATH] must match pattern [MATH]".', '1905.09423-1-18-0': 'Unrestricted set constraints with SMT allow us to write an analysis fulfilling each of these goals.', '1905.09423-1-18-1': 'We detail the analysis in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-19-0': '# A Primer in Set Constraints', '1905.09423-1-20-0': 'Henceforth, we use the notation [MATH] to represent a sequence of objects matching the metavariable [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-20-1': 'These may be variables, terms, judgments, etc.', '1905.09423-1-21-0': 'We now define precisely what we mean by the unrestricted set constraint problem.', '1905.09423-1-21-1': 'Consider a set of (possibly 0-ary) functions [MATH], where each [MATH] is the arity of the function [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-21-2': 'The Herbrand Universe [MATH] is defined inductively: each [MATH] is in [MATH], and if [MATH] and [MATH] are in [MATH], then [MATH] is in [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-21-3': '(We refer to [MATH] simply as [MATH] when the set [MATH] is clear.)', '1905.09423-1-21-4': 'Each function [MATH] is injective, but is otherwise uninterpreted, just like constructors in functional languages.', '1905.09423-1-22-0': 'Suppose we have some infinite set [MATH] of variables.', '1905.09423-1-22-1': 'A set expression is an expression generated by the grammar listed in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-22-2': 'In addition to variables, we can form set expressions using union, intersection.', '1905.09423-1-22-3': 'complement, and element-wise function application.', '1905.09423-1-22-4': 'We can use a Herbrand universe to give semantics to our expressions: given a substitution [MATH], we can assign a meaning [MATH] for an expression [MATH] by mapping variables to their substitutions, and applying the corresponding set operations.', '1905.09423-1-22-5': 'The full semantics are given in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-23-0': 'A set-constraint atom is a constraint of the form [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-23-1': 'These are also referred to as positive set constraints in previous work.', '1905.09423-1-23-2': 'A set constraint literal is either an atom or its negation [MATH], which we write as [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-23-3': 'Constraints which contain negative literals are called negative set constraints.', '1905.09423-1-23-4': 'An unrestricted set constraint is simply a boolean combination (i.e. using [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]) of set constraint atoms.', '1905.09423-1-23-5': 'For example, [MATH] is an unrestricted set constraint.', '1905.09423-1-23-6': 'In our examples, we will use other boolean operations such as [MATH] and [MATH], noting that they can be decomposed using [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-23-7': 'Similarly, we use [MATH] as a shorthand for [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-24-0': 'Given an a set constraint [MATH], the satisfiability problem is to determine whether there exists a substitution [MATH] such that, if each atom [MATH] in [MATH] is replaced by the truth-value of [MATH], then the resulting boolean expression is true.', '1905.09423-1-24-1': 'Since solving for arbitrary boolean combinations of set constraints is difficult, we define a more restricted version of the problem.', '1905.09423-1-24-2': 'The conjunctive set constraint problem for a sequence of literals [MATH] is to find a variable assignment that causes [MATH] to be true.', '1905.09423-1-24-3': 'We explain how to extend our approach to arbitrary boolean combinations in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-25-0': 'One can intuitively see that the Herbrand universe [MATH] closely matches the set of terms that can be formed from a collection of algebraic datatypes, and that allowing negative constraints and arbitrary boolean expressions satisfies the desiderata for our pattern match analysis.', '1905.09423-1-26-0': '## Projection', '1905.09423-1-27-0': 'Many analysis problems rely on a notion of projection.', '1905.09423-1-27-1': 'For a set expression [MATH], we denote the [MATH]th projection of [MATH] for function [MATH] by [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-27-2': 'For a substitution [MATH], we have [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-28-0': "While we don't explicitly include projections in our grammar for set expressions, we can easily express them using boolean formulae.", '1905.09423-1-28-1': 'Given some constraint [MATH], we can replace this with: [EQUATION] where each [MATH] is a fresh variable.', '1905.09423-1-28-2': 'Intuitively, the first condition specifies that our variable holds the [MATH]th component of every [MATH] in [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-28-3': 'The second condition is necessary because [MATH] if any [MATH] is empty, so any value of [MATH] vacuously satisfies [MATH] if [MATH] and some [MATH] are empty.', '1905.09423-1-29-0': '# Translating Set Constraints to SMT', '1905.09423-1-30-0': 'We now describe how to solve set constraints using SMT.', '1905.09423-1-30-1': 'The key is that any conjunction of set constraint literals can be translated into formula in first-order monadic logic, for which satisfiability is decidable.', '1905.09423-1-30-2': 'We translate the search for a satisfying assignment to a search for a solution to an SMT problem over [MATH], the theory of booleans, uninterpreted functions and first-order quantification.', '1905.09423-1-30-3': 'We gradually build up our translation, first translating set constraints into monadic logic, then translating monadic logic into SMT, then adding optimizations for efficiency.', '1905.09423-1-30-4': 'The complete translation is given in [REF]', '1905.09423-1-31-0': '## Set Constraints and Monadic Logic', '1905.09423-1-32-0': 'Monadic first order logic, sometimes referred to as the monadic class, consists of formulae containing only unary predicates, boolean connectives, and constants.', '1905.09423-1-32-1': '[CITATION] show that any conjunction [MATH] of positive set constraint atoms can be converted into an equisatisfiable monadic formula, and and [CITATION] extend this to negative constraints with equality.', '1905.09423-1-32-2': 'We summarize their procedure here, with a full definition in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-32-3': 'For each sub-expression [MATH] of [MATH], we recursively decompose [MATH] to create a formula [MATH], which denotes whether an element [MATH] is contained in [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-32-4': 'This is similar to the Tsieten transformations used to efficiently convert arbitrary formulae to a normal form [CITATION].', '1905.09423-1-32-5': 'Given [MATH] for each [MATH], we can represent the constraint [MATH] as [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-32-6': 'Similarly, [MATH] corresponds to [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-33-0': 'The key utility of having a monadic formula is the finite model property :', '1905.09423-1-34-0': 'Let [MATH] be a theory in monadic first-order logic with [MATH] predicates.', '1905.09423-1-34-1': 'Then, for any sentence [MATH] in [MATH], there exists a model satisfying [MATH] if and only if there exists a model satisfying [MATH] with a finite domain of size at most [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-35-0': 'The intuition behind this is that if there exists a model [MATH] satisfying [MATH], then then [MATH] we can combine all elements in [MATH] that have identical truth-values for each predicate.', '1905.09423-1-35-1': 'This is enough to naively solve set constraints: we convert them into formulae monadic logic, then search the space of all models of size up to [MATH] for one that satisfies the monadic formulae.', '1905.09423-1-35-2': 'However, this is terribly inefficient, and disregards much of the information we have from the set constraints.', '1905.09423-1-36-0': '## Monadic Logic in SMT', '1905.09423-1-37-0': 'To understand how to translate monadic logic into SMT, we first look at what exactly a model for a monadic theory is.', '1905.09423-1-37-1': 'Suppose [MATH] is the set of booleans.', '1905.09423-1-37-2': 'For brevity, we refer to elements of this set as bits, and say a bit is set if it is [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-37-3': 'For our purposes, a model consists of a set [MATH], called the domain, along with interpretations [MATH] for each predicate [MATH] and [MATH] for each function, which define the value of [MATH] and [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-37-4': 'A naive search for a satisfying model could guess [MATH], set [MATH], and iterate through all possible truth assignments for each [MATH], searching for one that satisfied the formulae in the theory.', '1905.09423-1-38-0': 'However, we can greatly speed up this search if we instead impose structure on [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-38-1': 'Specifically, if we have predicates [MATH], we take [MATH]: each element of our domain is a boolean sequence with a bit for each sub-expression [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-38-2': 'The idea is that each element of [MATH] models a possible equivalence class of predicate truth-values.', '1905.09423-1-38-3': 'For [MATH], we want [MATH] to be [MATH] when [MATH] holds.', '1905.09423-1-38-4': 'This means that our maps [MATH] are already fixed: [MATH] i.e. the [MATH]th bit of sequence [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-39-0': 'However, with this interpretation, [MATH] is too large to be our domain.', '1905.09423-1-39-1': 'Suppose we have formulae [MATH] and [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-39-2': 'Then there are sequences in [MATH] with both bits [MATH] and [MATH] set to [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-39-3': 'So to respect the consistency of our logic, we need [MATH] to be a subset of [MATH] that eliminates such inconsistent elements.', '1905.09423-1-40-0': 'Suppose that we have a function [MATH], which determines whether a bit-sequence is in the domain of a potential model.', '1905.09423-1-40-1': 'If [MATH] contains the formula [MATH], we can instead write: [EQUATION]', '1905.09423-1-40-2': 'Similarly, if [MATH] contains [MATH], we can write [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-40-3': 'Since all functions in a model are implicitly closed over the domain, to ensure our formulae over boolean sequences are equivalent to the original formulae, we also specify that [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-41-0': 'This is enough to express [MATH] as an SMT problem.', '1905.09423-1-41-1': 'We assert that a function [MATH] exists, and that there is a function [MATH] for each function in our Herbrand universe.', '1905.09423-1-41-2': 'We modify each formula in [MATH] to constrain a boolean sequences variable [MATH] in place of each variable [MATH] as described above.', '1905.09423-1-41-3': 'We add [MATH] qualifiers to existential variables and universally quantified formulae, and replace each [MATH] with the [MATH]th bit of [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-41-4': 'We add a constraint asserting that each [MATH] is closed over the values satisfying [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-41-5': 'The SMT solver searches for values for all existential variables, functions, and [MATH] that satisfy this formula.', '1905.09423-1-42-0': '## Reducing the Search Space', '1905.09423-1-43-0': 'While this translation corresponds nicely to the monadic translation, it has more unknowns than are needed.', '1905.09423-1-43-1': 'Specifically, [MATH] will always reject boolean sequences that violate the constraints of each [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-43-2': 'For example, the bit for [MATH] in [MATH] must always be exactly [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-43-3': 'In fact, for each form except function applications and set variables, the value of a bit for an expression can be recursively determined by values of bits for its immediate subexpressions ([REF]).', '1905.09423-1-43-4': "This means that our boolean sequences need only contain slots for expressions of the form [MATH] or [MATH], shrinking the problem's search space.", '1905.09423-1-44-0': "What's more, we now only need to include the constraints from [MATH] for expressions of the form [MATH] or [MATH], since the other constraints hold by definition given our definitions of each [MATH].", '1905.09423-1-45-0': 'Similarly, our constraints restrict the freedom we have in choosing [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-45-1': 'Specifically, we know that [MATH] should hold if and only if [MATH] holds for each [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-45-2': 'Similarly, we know that [MATH] should always be [MATH] when [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-45-3': 'So for each [MATH], our solver only needs to find a mapping from inputs [MATH] to the value of [MATH] for each variable [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-45-4': 'This reduces the number of unknowns the SMT solver must consider.', '1905.09423-1-46-0': '## The Complete Translation', '1905.09423-1-47-0': 'We summarize our complete translation.', '1905.09423-1-47-1': 'Given a conjunction of literals [MATH], let [MATH] be the sequence of variable and function-application sub-expressions of [MATH].', '1905.09423-1-47-2': 'We define [MATH] for each sub-expression [MATH] of [MATH] as in [REF].', '1905.09423-1-48-0': 'As unknowns, we have: [itemize] & a function [MATH]; & for each negative literal [MATH], an existential variable [MATH]; & for each function [MATH] and each variable [MATH], a function [MATH], which takes [MATH] sequences of [MATH] bits, and computes the value of the bit for [MATH] in the result.', '1905.09423-1-49-0': 'We define the following known functions: [itemize] & For each [MATH] and each sub-expression of the form [MATH], a function [MATH] where [MATH] if and only if [MATH]; & For each [MATH] and each sub-expression of the form [MATH], where [MATH], a function [MATH] that always returns [MATH]; & For each [MATH], a function [MATH], where [MATH] is the sequence:', '1905.09423-1-50-0': '[MATH]', '1905.09423-1-51-0': 'We assert that the following hold: [itemize] & for each negative constraint [MATH] with corresponding existential variable [MATH], that [MATH] holds; & for each positive constraint [MATH], that [MATH]'}
{'1905.09423-2-0-0': 'Set constraints provide a highly general way to formulate program analyses.', '1905.09423-2-0-1': 'However, solving arbitrary boolean combinations of set constraints is [MATH]-hard.', '1905.09423-2-0-2': 'Moreover, while theoretical algorithms to solve arbitrary set constraints exist, they are either too complex to implement or too slow to ever run.', '1905.09423-2-1-0': 'We present a translation that converts a set constraint formula into an SMT problem.', '1905.09423-2-1-1': 'Our technique allows for arbitrary boolean combinations of set constraints, and leverages the performance of modern SMT solvers.', '1905.09423-2-1-2': 'To show the usefulness of unrestricted set constraints, we use them to devise a pattern match analysis for functional languages, which ensures that missing cases of pattern matches are always unreachable.', '1905.09423-2-1-3': 'We implement our analysis in the Elm compiler and show that the our translation is fast enough to be used in practical verification.', '1905.09423-2-2-0': '# Introduction', '1905.09423-2-3-0': 'Set constraints are a powerful tool for expressing a large number of program analyses in a generic way.', '1905.09423-2-3-1': 'Featuring recursive equations and inequations over variables denoting sets of values, set constraints allow us to model the sets of values an expression could possibly take.', '1905.09423-2-3-2': 'While they were an active area of research in decades prior, they have not seen widespread adoption.', '1905.09423-2-3-3': 'In their most general form, finding solutions for a conjunction of set constraints is While efficient solvers have been developed for restricted versions of the set constraint problem [CITATION], solvers for unrestricted set constraints are not used in practice.', '1905.09423-2-4-0': 'However, since the development of set constraints, there have been significant advances in solvers for modulo theories (SMT).', '1905.09423-2-4-1': 'Although SMT requires exponential time in theory, solvers such as Z3 [CITATION] and CVC4 [CITATION] are able to solve a wide range of satisfiability problems in practice.', '1905.09423-2-4-2': 'Given the success of SMT-solvers in skirting the theoretical intractability of SAT, one wonders, can these solvers be used to solve set constraints?', '1905.09423-2-4-3': 'We show that this is possible with reasonable performance.', '1905.09423-2-4-4': 'Our full contributions are as follows:', '1905.09423-2-5-0': '[itemize] & We devise a pattern match analysis for functional programming languages, expressed in terms of unrestricted set constraints (sec:matchAnalysis).', '1905.09423-2-5-1': '& We provide a method for translating unrestricted set constraint problems into SAT modulo , a logical theory with booleans, uninterpreted functions, and first order quantification (sec:smtTrans).', '1905.09423-2-5-2': 'Additionally, we show that projections, a construct traditionally difficult to formulate with set constraints, are easily formulated using disjunctions in SMT (subsec:primer).', '1905.09423-2-5-3': '& We implement the above translation and analysis, showing that they are usable for verification despite the theoretical [MATH]-completeness (sec:impl).', '1905.09423-2-6-0': '## Motivation: Pattern Match Analysis', '1905.09423-2-7-0': 'Our primary interest in set constraints is using them to devise a function pattern match analysis.', '1905.09423-2-7-1': 'Many functional programming languages feature algebraic datatypes, where values of a datatype [MATH] are formed by applying a constructor function to some arguments.', '1905.09423-2-7-2': 'Values of an algebraic type can be decomposed using pattern matching, where the programmer specifies a number of branches with free variables, and the program takes the first branch that matches the given value, binding the corresponding values to the free variables.', '1905.09423-2-7-3': 'If none of the patterns match the value, a runtime error is raised.', '1905.09423-2-8-0': 'Many modern languages, such as Elm [CITATION] and Rust [CITATION] require that pattern matches be exhaustive, so that each pattern match has a branch for every possible value of the given type.', '1905.09423-2-8-1': 'This ensures that runtime errors are never raised due to unmatched patterns, and avoids the null-pointer exceptions that plague many procedural languages.', '1905.09423-2-8-2': 'However, the type systems of these languages cannot express all invariants.', '1905.09423-2-8-3': 'Consider the following pseudo-Haskell, with an algebraic type for shapes, and a function that calculates their area.', '1905.09423-2-9-0': '0.3', '1905.09423-2-10-0': 'data Shape = Square Double Circle Double NGon [Double]', '1905.09423-2-11-0': '0.65', '1905.09423-2-12-0': 'area :: Shape -> Double area shape = case shape of NGon sides -> ... _ -> simpleArea shape where simpleArea sshape = case sshape of Square len -> len * len Circle r -> pi * r * r _ -> error "This cannot happen"', '1905.09423-2-13-0': 'The above code is perfectly safe, since [language=Haskell]simpleArea can only be called from [language=Haskell]area, and will never be given an [language=Haskell]NGon.', '1905.09423-2-13-1': 'However, it is not robust to changes.', '1905.09423-2-13-2': 'If we add the constructor [language=Haskell] Triangle Double Double Double to our [language=Haskell]Shape definition, then both matches are still exhaustive, since the [language=Haskell]_ pattern covers every possible case.', '1905.09423-2-13-3': 'However, we now may face a runtime error if [language=Haskell]area is given a [language=Haskell]Triangle.', '1905.09423-2-13-4': 'In general, requiring exhaustiveness forces the programmer to either manually raise an error or return a dummy value in an unreachable branch.', '1905.09423-2-14-0': 'We propose an alternate approach: remove the catch-all case of [language=Haskell]simpleArea, and use a static analysis to determine that only values matching [language=Haskell]Circle or [language=Haskell]Square will be passed in.', '1905.09423-2-14-1': 'Such analysis would mark the above code safe, but would signal unsafety if [language=Haskell]Triangle were added to the definition of [language=Haskell]Shape.', '1905.09423-2-15-0': 'The analysis for this particular case is intuitive, but can be complex in general:', '1905.09423-2-16-0': '& Because functions may be recursive, we need to be able to handle recursive equations (or inequations) of possible pattern sets.', '1905.09423-2-16-1': 'For example, a program dealing with lists may generate a constraint of the form [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-16-2': '& We wish to encode first-match semantics: if a program takes a certain branch in the pattern match, then the matched value cannot possibly match any of the previous cases.', '1905.09423-2-16-3': '& We want our analysis to be as precise as possible, to raise as few false-negative as is possible.', '1905.09423-2-16-4': 'One way this to achieve this is to track what conditions must be true for a branch to be taken, and to only enforce constraints from that branch when it is reachable.', '1905.09423-2-16-5': 'If we use logical implication, we can express constraints of the form "if [MATH] matches pattern [MATH], then [MATH] must match pattern [MATH]".', '1905.09423-2-17-0': '[REF] gives such an analysis, while [REF] describe solving these constraints.', '1905.09423-2-18-0': '# A Set Constraint based Pattern Match Analysis', '1905.09423-2-19-0': 'Here, we describe an annotated type system type for pattern match analysis.', '1905.09423-2-19-1': 'It tracks the possible values that expressions may take.', '1905.09423-2-19-2': "Instead of requiring that each match be exhaustive, we restrict functions to reject inputs that may not be covered by a pattern match in the function's body.", '1905.09423-2-19-3': 'Types are refined by constraints, which are solved using an external solver ([REF]).', '1905.09423-2-20-0': '## [MATH] Syntax', '1905.09423-2-21-0': 'We present [MATH], a small, typed functional language, whose syntax we give in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-21-1': 'In addition to functions and applications, we have a form [MATH] which applies the data constructor [MATH] to the argument sequence [MATH] to make a term of type [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-21-2': 'Conversely, the form [MATH] chooses the first branch [MATH] for which [MATH] matches pattern [MATH], and then evaluates [MATH] after binding the matching parts of [MATH] to the variables of [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-21-3': '(Here, the notation [MATH] denotes a sequence of objects matching metavariable [MATH]).', '1905.09423-2-22-0': 'During typechecking, we will use two sorts of environments.', '1905.09423-2-22-1': 'Type environments [MATH] store free type variables, and map program variables to their types.', '1905.09423-2-22-2': 'Datatype environments [MATH] store the names of each datatype [MATH], along with the name and argument-types of each constructor of [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-23-0': '## The Underlying Type System', '1905.09423-2-24-0': "The language's underlying type system is in the style of [CITATION], where monomorphic types are separated from polymorphic type schemes.", '1905.09423-2-24-1': 'We present declarative typing rules for the underlying system in [REF], noting that they are standard.', '1905.09423-2-24-2': 'The analysis we present below assumes that inference has been performed ahead of time and that all expressions have a known underlying type.', '1905.09423-2-24-3': 'Alternately, one can imagine that the analysis operates on the underlying typing derivations, rather than plain terms.', '1905.09423-2-25-0': '## Annotated Types', '1905.09423-2-26-0': 'For our analysis, we annotate types with set expressions ([REF]), representing the possible shapes that the evaluation of an expression might have in some context.', '1905.09423-2-26-1': 'Since each syntactic variant has a top-level annotation [MATH], we use [MATH] to denote an annotated type [MATH] along with its top-level annotation [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-26-2': 'A annotated types [MATH] replace underlying types [MATH] in our rules, and our analysis emits constraints on [MATH] that dictate its value.', '1905.09423-2-26-3': 'Constructors are interpreted element-wise when applied to set expressions.', '1905.09423-2-26-4': 'The interpretation of set expressions is intuitive, but we give them a formal semantics in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-27-0': '## The Analysis', '1905.09423-2-28-0': 'We present our pattern match analysis is [REF].', '1905.09423-2-28-1': 'The analysis is phrased as an annotated type system in the style of [CITATION].', '1905.09423-2-28-2': 'The judgment [MATH] says that, under context [MATH] with datatypes from [MATH], if [MATH] holds, then [MATH] has type [MATH] and can take only forms from [MATH], where the constraint [MATH] hold.', '1905.09423-2-28-3': '[MATH] is an input to the judgment called the path constraint, which must hold for this part of the program to have been reached.', '1905.09423-2-28-4': 'The set expression [MATH] and constraint [MATH] are outputs of the judgment, synthesized by traversing the expression.', '1905.09423-2-28-5': 'We need an external solver for set constraints to find a value for each variable [MATH] that satisfies [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-28-6': 'This is precisely what we define in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-29-0': 'The analysis supports higher-order functions, and it is polyvariant: refined types use polymorphism, so that precise analysis can be performed at each instantiation site.', '1905.09423-2-29-1': 'A variant of Damas-Milner style inference with let-generalization is used to generate these refined types.', '1905.09423-2-29-2': 'Moreover, the analysis is push-button: no additional input need be provided by the programmer.', '1905.09423-2-29-3': 'It is a sound but conservative analysis: it accounts for all possible values an expression may take, but declare some matches unsafe when they will not actually crash.', '1905.09423-2-29-4': 'The lack of polymorphic recursion is a source of imprecision, but a necessary one for preserving termination without requiring annotations from the programmer.', '1905.09423-2-30-0': 'We generate two sorts of constraints.', '1905.09423-2-30-1': 'First, we constrain what values expressions could possibly take.', '1905.09423-2-30-2': 'For example, if we apply a constructor [MATH], and we know the possible forms [MATH] for [MATH], then in any context, this expressions can only ever evaluate to values in the set [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-30-3': 'Second, we generate safety constraints, which must hold to ensure that the program encounters no runtime errors.', '1905.09423-2-30-4': 'Specifically, we generate a constraint that when we match on a term [MATH], all of its possible values are covered by the left-hand side of one of the branches.', '1905.09423-2-31-0': '### Variables', '1905.09423-2-32-0': 'Our analysis rule [MATH] for variables looks up a scheme from [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-32-1': 'However, typing schemes now quantify over type and set variables, and carry a constraint along with the type.', '1905.09423-2-32-2': 'We the take instantiation of type variables as given, since we know the underlying type of each expression.', '1905.09423-2-32-3': 'Each set variable is instantiated with a fresh variable.', '1905.09423-2-32-4': "We then give [MATH] the type from the scheme, with the constraint that the instantiated version of the scheme's constraint must hold if this piece of code is reachable (i.e. if the path condition is satisfiable).", '1905.09423-2-33-0': '### Functions and Applications', '1905.09423-2-34-0': 'The analysis rule [MATH] for functions is straightforward.', '1905.09423-2-34-1': 'We generate a fresh set variable with which to annotate the argument type in the environment, and check the body in this extended environment.', '1905.09423-2-34-2': 'Since functions are not algebraic datatypes and cannot be matched upon, we emit [MATH] as a trivial set of possible forms for the function itself.', '1905.09423-2-35-0': 'We know nothing about the forms that the parameter-type annotation [MATH] may take, since it depends entirely on what concrete argument is given when the function is applied.', '1905.09423-2-35-1': 'However, when checking the body, we may encounter a pattern match that constraints what values [MATH] may take without risking runtime failure.', '1905.09423-2-35-2': 'So our analysis may emit safety constraints involving [MATH], but it will not constrain it otherwise.', '1905.09423-2-35-3': 'Generally, [MATH] means that the function can safely accept any expression matching [MATH], and may return values matching [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-36-0': 'Applications are analyzed using [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-36-1': "Annotations and constraints for the function and argument are both generated, and we emit a constraint equating the argument's annotated type with its codomain, under the assumption that the path condition holds and this function call is actually reachable.", '1905.09423-2-36-2': 'The metafunction [MATH] traverses the structure of the argument and function codomain type, constraining that parallel annotations are equal.', '1905.09423-2-36-3': 'This traversal is possible because the underlying type system guarantees that the function codomain and argument have identical underlying types.', '1905.09423-2-37-0': '### Constructor', '1905.09423-2-38-0': "As we mentioned above, applying a constructor to arguments can only produce a value that is that constructor wrapped around its argument's values.", '1905.09423-2-38-1': 'The rule [MATH] for a constructor [MATH] infers annotations and constraints for each argument, then emits those constraints and applies [MATH] to those annotations.', '1905.09423-2-39-0': '### Pattern matching', '1905.09423-2-40-0': 'It is not surprising that in a pattern match analysis, the interesting details are found in the case for pattern match expressions.', '1905.09423-2-40-1': 'The rule [MATH] begins by inferring the constraint and annotation for the discriminee [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-41-0': 'We then iterate through each branch, performing two tasks.', '1905.09423-2-41-1': 'First, for each pattern [MATH] that is the left-hand side of a case, we generate the environment which binds the pattern variables to the correct types and annotations.', '1905.09423-2-41-2': "As we show in [REF], this is done for constructors by taking the [MATH]th projection of the constructor's annotation.", '1905.09423-2-41-3': 'For [MATH], the type of the whole pattern is [MATH], the annotation for [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-41-4': 'However, because of the first-match semantics of pattern matching, we know that if an expression matches [MATH], then it does not match any of [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-41-5': 'So for each [MATH], we extend the environment with annotations obtained by intersecting [MATH] with the negation of all previous patterns.', '1905.09423-2-41-6': 'The translation [MATH] gives the set expression containing exactly the terms that match [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-42-0': 'Having obtained the extended environment for each branch, we perform our second task: we check each right-hand-side in the new environment, obtaining an annotation.', '1905.09423-2-42-1': 'Additionally, when checking the right-hand sides of branches, we add a conjunct to our path constraint which is the condition that must hold for this branch to have been taken.', '1905.09423-2-42-2': 'This ensures that safety constraints for the branch are only enforced when the branch can actually be taken.', '1905.09423-2-43-0': 'To determine the annotation for the entire expression, we could naively take the union of the annotations for each branch.', '1905.09423-2-43-1': 'However, we can be more precise than this.', '1905.09423-2-43-2': 'Since we have an annotation for the input value, we can use that annotation to determine which branches could possibly be taken.', '1905.09423-2-43-3': 'We generate a fresh variable for the return annotation, and constrain that it contains the result of each branch, provided that it is possible we actually took that branch.', '1905.09423-2-43-4': 'This uses both negative set constraints and implication, justifying the need for a solver that supports these features.', '1905.09423-2-44-0': 'Finally, we emit a safety constraint, saying that if it is possible to reach this part of the program (that is, if [MATH]) holds, then the inputs to the match must be contained within the values actually matched.', '1905.09423-2-45-0': '### Let expressions', '1905.09423-2-46-0': 'Our last rule deals with the generalization of types into type schemes.', '1905.09423-2-46-1': 'This rule essentially performs Damas-Milner style inference, but for the annotations, rather than the types.', '1905.09423-2-46-2': 'In the rule ALet, when defining [MATH], we check [MATH] in a context extended with its type variables, and a monomorphic version of its own type.', '1905.09423-2-46-3': 'The metafunction [MATH] takes the underlying type for [MATH] and adds fresh annotation variables across the entire type.', '1905.09423-2-46-4': 'This allows for monomorphic recursion.', '1905.09423-2-46-5': 'The metafunction [MATH] generates the constraint that equates the freshly generated variables on [MATH] to the corresponding annotations on [MATH] obtained when checking [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-46-6': 'Again this traversal is possible because the underlying types must be identical.', '1905.09423-2-46-7': 'Once we have a constraint for the definition, we check that its constraint is in fact satisfiable, ensuring that none of the safety constraints are violated.', '1905.09423-2-46-8': 'In our implementation, this is where the call to the external solver is made.', '1905.09423-2-47-0': 'To generate a type scheme for our definition, we generalize over all free variables in the inferred annotation and constraint, except those that are free in [MATH] or [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-47-1': 'Finally, we check the body of the let-expression in a context extended with the new variable and type scheme.', '1905.09423-2-47-2': 'Because [MATH] let -declarations.', '1905.09423-2-47-3': 'A program is well well formed if it can be typed with initial environment [MATH] and path constraint [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-48-0': '### Example: Safety Constraints', '1905.09423-2-49-0': 'To illustrate our analysis, we return to the [language=Haskell]Ngon code from [REF].', '1905.09423-2-49-1': 'We assume that all [language=Haskell]Double terms are given annotation [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-49-2': 'Then, the [language=Haskell]simpleArea function would be given the following annotated type scheme: [EQUATION]', '1905.09423-2-49-3': 'This is satisfiable whenever [MATH] , since we can set [MATH] to [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-49-4': 'When we call [language=Haskell]simpleArea from [language=Haskell]area, we are in the branch after the [language=Haskell]Ngon case has been checked.', '1905.09423-2-49-5': 'The scheme for [language=Haskell]simpleArea is instantiated with the path constraint [MATH], where [MATH] is the annotation for [language=Haskell]shape, because it is called after we have a failed match with [language=Haskell]Ngon sides.', '1905.09423-2-50-0': 'Suppose we instantiate [MATH] with fresh [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-50-1': 'The call to [language=Haskell]simpleArea creates a constraint that [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-50-2': 'Taking this equality into account, the safety constraint is instantiated to [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-50-3': 'This is satisfiable for any value of [language=Haskell]shape, so at every call to [language=Haskell]area the analysis sees that the safety constraint is satisfied.', '1905.09423-2-51-0': '### Example: Precision on results of matching', '1905.09423-2-52-0': 'To illustrate the precision of our analysis for the results of pattern matching, we turn to a specialized version of the classic [language=Haskell]map function:', '1905.09423-2-53-0': 'intMap : (Int -> Int) -> List Int -> List Int -> intMap f l = case l of Nil -> Nil Cons h t -> Cons (f h) (intMap f t)', '1905.09423-2-54-0': 'Suppose we have concrete arguments [MATH] and [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-54-1': 'The safety constraint for the match is that [MATH], which is always satisfiable since the match is exhaustive.', '1905.09423-2-54-2': 'The result of the case expression is given a fresh variable annotation [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-54-3': 'From the first branch, we have the constraint that [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-55-0': 'The analysis is more interesting for the second branch.', '1905.09423-2-55-1': 'The bound pattern variables [MATH] and [MATH] are given annotations [MATH] and [MATH] respectively, since they are the first and second arguments to [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-55-2': 'Because our recursion is monomorphic, the recursive call [language=Haskell]intMap f t generates the trivial constraint [MATH], and the more interesting constraint [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-55-3': "This second constraint may seem odd, but it essentially means that without polymorphic recursion, our program's pattern matches must account for any length of list.", '1905.09423-2-55-4': 'This is where having set constraints is extremely useful: if we were to use some sort of symbolic execution to try to determine a single logical value that [MATH] could take, then treating the recursive call monomorphically would create an impossible equation.', '1905.09423-2-55-5': 'But the set [MATH] satisfies our set constraints, albeit in an imprecise way.', '1905.09423-2-56-0': 'When checking the body, suppose that [MATH] is the fresh variable ascribed to the return type of [language=Haskell]intMap.', '1905.09423-2-56-1': 'For the result of the second branch, we have the constraints [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-56-2': 'This essentially says that if the input to the function can be [language=Haskell]Cons, then so can the output, but if the input is always [language=Haskell]Nil, then this branch contributes nothing to the overall result.', '1905.09423-2-56-3': 'Finally, we have a constraint [MATH], generated by the metafunction [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-57-0': 'All together, we our result annotation [MATH] is constrained by: [EQUATION]', '1905.09423-2-57-1': 'This captures the fact that [language=Haskell]intMap will return an empty result for empty input, and non-empty results for non-empty input.', '1905.09423-2-58-0': '# Translating Set Constraints to SMT', '1905.09423-2-59-0': 'While the above analysis provides a fine-grained way to determine which pattern matches are or are not safe, it depends entirely on the existence of an external solver to check the satisfiability of the resulting set constraints.', '1905.09423-2-59-1': 'We show that such a solver can be implemented by translating set constraints into an SMT formula, allowing for a simple, performant implementation.', '1905.09423-2-60-0': '## A Primer in Set Constraints', '1905.09423-2-61-0': 'We begin by making precise the definition of the set constraint problem.', '1905.09423-2-61-1': 'Consider a set of (possibly 0-ary) functions [MATH], where each [MATH] is the arity of the function [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-61-2': 'The Herbrand Universe [MATH] is defined inductively: each [MATH] is in [MATH], and if [MATH] and [MATH] are in [MATH], then [MATH] is in [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-61-3': '(We write [MATH] as [MATH] when the set [MATH] is clear.)', '1905.09423-2-61-4': 'Each [MATH] is injective, but is otherwise uninterpreted, behaving as a constructor in a functional language.', '1905.09423-2-62-0': 'Suppose we have some infinite set [MATH] of variables.', '1905.09423-2-62-1': 'A set expression is an expression generated by the grammar listed in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-62-2': 'In addition to variables, we can form set expressions using union, intersection.', '1905.09423-2-62-3': 'complement, and element-wise function application.', '1905.09423-2-62-4': 'We can use a Herbrand universe to give semantics to our expressions: given a substitution [MATH], we can assign a meaning [MATH] for an expression [MATH] by mapping variables to their substitutions, and applying the corresponding set operations.', '1905.09423-2-62-5': 'The full semantics are given in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-63-0': 'A set constraint atom is a constraint of the form [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-63-1': 'These are also referred to as positive set constraints in previous work.', '1905.09423-2-63-2': 'A set constraint literal is either an atom or its negation [MATH], which we write as [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-63-3': 'Constraints which contain negative literals are called negative set constraints.', '1905.09423-2-63-4': 'An unrestricted set constraint is simply a boolean combination (i.e. using [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH]) of set constraint atoms.', '1905.09423-2-63-5': 'For example, [MATH] is an unrestricted set constraint.', '1905.09423-2-63-6': 'In our examples, we will use other boolean operations such as [MATH] and [MATH], noting that they can be decomposed using [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-63-7': 'Similarly, we use [MATH] as a shorthand for [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-64-0': 'Given an a set constraint [MATH], the satisfiability problem is to determine whether there exists a substitution [MATH] such that, if each atom [MATH] in [MATH] is replaced by the truth-value of [MATH], then the resulting boolean expression is true.', '1905.09423-2-64-1': 'Since solving for arbitrary boolean combinations of set constraints is difficult, we focus on a more restricted version of the problem.', '1905.09423-2-64-2': 'The conjunctive set constraint problem for a sequence of literals [MATH] is to find a variable assignment that causes [MATH] to be true.', '1905.09423-2-64-3': 'We explain how to extend our approach to arbitrary boolean combinations in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-65-0': 'One can intuitively see that the Herbrand universe [MATH] closely matches the set of terms that can be formed from a collection of algebraic datatypes, and that allowing negative constraints and arbitrary boolean expressions satisfies the desiderata for our pattern match analysis.', '1905.09423-2-66-0': '## Projection', '1905.09423-2-67-0': 'Many analysis problems rely on a notion of projection.', '1905.09423-2-67-1': 'For a set expression [MATH], we denote the [MATH]th projection of [MATH] for function [MATH] by [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-67-2': 'For a substitution [MATH], we have [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-68-0': "While we don't explicitly include projections in our grammar for set expressions, we can easily express them using boolean formulae.", '1905.09423-2-68-1': 'Given some constraint [MATH], we can replace this with: [EQUATION] where each [MATH] is a fresh variable.', '1905.09423-2-68-2': 'Intuitively, the first condition specifies that our variable holds the [MATH]th component of every [MATH] in [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-68-3': 'The second condition is necessary because [MATH] if any [MATH] is empty, so any value of [MATH] vacuously satisfies [MATH] if [MATH] and some [MATH] are empty.', '1905.09423-2-69-0': 'We now describe how to solve set constraints using SMT.', '1905.09423-2-69-1': 'The key is that any conjunction of set constraint literals can be translated into a formula in first-order monadic logic, for which satisfiability is decidable.', '1905.09423-2-69-2': 'We translate the search for a satisfying assignment into a search for a solution to an SMT problem over [MATH], the theory of booleans, uninterpreted functions and first-order quantification.', '1905.09423-2-69-3': 'We gradually build up our translation, first translating set constraints into monadic logic, then translating monadic logic into SMT, then adding optimizations for efficiency.', '1905.09423-2-69-4': 'The complete translation is given in [REF]', '1905.09423-2-70-0': '## Set Constraints and Monadic Logic', '1905.09423-2-71-0': 'Monadic first order logic, sometimes referred to as the monadic class, consists of formulae containing only unary predicates, boolean connectives, and constants.', '1905.09423-2-71-1': '[CITATION] show that any conjunction [MATH] of positive set constraint atoms can be converted into an equisatisfiable monadic formula, and and [CITATION] extend this to negative constraints with equality.', '1905.09423-2-71-2': 'We summarize their procedure here, with a full definition in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-71-3': 'For each sub-expression [MATH] of [MATH], we create a predicate [MATH], which denotes whether an element [MATH] is contained in [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-71-4': 'Along with this, the formula [MATH] gives the statement that must hold for [MATH] to respect the semantics of set expressions.', '1905.09423-2-71-5': 'This is similar to the Tsieten transformations used to efficiently convert arbitrary formulae to a normal form [CITATION].', '1905.09423-2-71-6': 'Given [MATH] for each [MATH], we can represent the constraint [MATH] as [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-71-7': 'Similarly, [MATH] corresponds to [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-72-0': 'The key utility of having a monadic formula is the finite model property :', '1905.09423-2-73-0': 'Let [MATH] be a theory in monadic first-order logic with [MATH] predicates.', '1905.09423-2-73-1': 'Then, for any sentence [MATH] in [MATH], there exists a model satisfying [MATH] if and only if there exists a model satisfying [MATH] with a finite domain of size at most [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-74-0': 'The intuition behind this is that if there exists a model [MATH] satisfying [MATH], then then [MATH] we can combine all elements in [MATH] that have identical truth-values for each predicate.', '1905.09423-2-74-1': 'This is enough to naively solve set constraints: we convert them into formulae monadic logic, then search the space of all models of size up to [MATH] for one that satisfies the monadic formulae.', '1905.09423-2-74-2': 'However, this is terribly inefficient, and disregards much of the information we have from the set constraints.', '1905.09423-2-75-0': '## Monadic Logic in SMT', '1905.09423-2-76-0': 'To understand how to translate monadic logic into SMT, we first look at what exactly a model for a monadic theory is.', '1905.09423-2-76-1': 'Suppose [MATH] is the set of booleans.', '1905.09423-2-76-2': 'For brevity, we refer to elements of this set as bits, and say a bit is set if it is [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-76-3': 'For our purposes, a model consists of a set [MATH], called the domain, along with interpretations [MATH] for each predicate [MATH] and [MATH] for each function, which define the value of [MATH] and [MATH] for each [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-76-4': 'A naive search for a satisfying model could guess [MATH], set [MATH], and iterate through all possible truth assignments for each [MATH], and all possible mappings for each [MATH], searching for one that satisfies the formulae in the theory.', '1905.09423-2-77-0': 'However, we can greatly speed up this search if we instead impose structure on [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-77-1': 'Specifically, if we have predicates [MATH], we take [MATH]: each element of our domain is a boolean sequence with a bit for each sub-expression [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-77-2': 'The idea is that each element of [MATH] models a possible equivalence class of predicate truth-values.', '1905.09423-2-77-3': 'For [MATH], we want [MATH] to be [MATH] when [MATH] holds.', '1905.09423-2-77-4': 'This means that our maps [MATH] are already fixed: [MATH] i.e. the [MATH]th bit of sequence [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-78-0': 'However, with this interpretation, [MATH] is too large to be our domain.', '1905.09423-2-78-1': 'Suppose we have formulae [MATH] and [MATH] where [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-78-2': 'Then there are sequences in [MATH] with both bits [MATH] and [MATH] set to [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-78-3': 'To respect the consistency of our logic, we need [MATH] to be a subset of [MATH] that eliminates such inconsistent elements.', '1905.09423-2-79-0': 'Suppose that we have a function [MATH], which determines whether a bit-sequence is in the domain of a potential model.', '1905.09423-2-79-1': 'If [MATH] contains the formula [MATH], for some [MATH], we can instead write: [EQUATION]', '1905.09423-2-79-2': 'That is, our domain can only contain values that respect the semantics of set expressions.', '1905.09423-2-79-3': 'Similarly, if [MATH] contains [MATH], we can write [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-79-4': 'Since all functions in a model are implicitly closed over the domain, we also specify that [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-79-5': 'This ensures that our formulae over boolean sequences are equivalent to the original formulae.', '1905.09423-2-80-0': 'This is enough to express [MATH] as an SMT problem.', '1905.09423-2-80-1': 'We assert that a function [MATH] exists, and that there is a function [MATH] for each function in our Herbrand universe.', '1905.09423-2-80-2': 'We modify each formula in [MATH] to constrain a boolean sequences variable [MATH] in place of each variable [MATH] as described above.', '1905.09423-2-80-3': 'We add [MATH] qualifiers to existentially and universally quantified formulae, and replace each [MATH] with the [MATH]th bit of [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-80-4': 'We add a constraint asserting that each [MATH] is closed over the values satisfying [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-80-5': 'The SMT solver searches for values for all existential variables, functions, and [MATH] that satisfy this formula.', '1905.09423-2-81-0': '## Reducing the Search Space', '1905.09423-2-82-0': 'While this translation corresponds nicely to the monadic translation, it has more unknowns than are needed.', '1905.09423-2-82-1': 'Specifically, [MATH] will always reject boolean sequences that violate the constraints of each [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-82-2': 'For example, the bit for [MATH] in [MATH] must always be exactly [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-82-3': 'In fact, for each form except function applications and set variables, the value of a bit for an expression can be recursively determined by values of bits for its immediate subexpressions ([REF]).', '1905.09423-2-82-4': "This means that our boolean sequences need only contain slots for expressions of the form [MATH] or [MATH], shrinking the problem's search space.", '1905.09423-2-83-0': "What's more, we now only need to include the constraints from [MATH] for expressions of the form [MATH] or [MATH], since the other constraints hold by definition given our definitions of each [MATH].", '1905.09423-2-84-0': 'Similarly, our constraints restrict the freedom we have in choosing [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-84-1': 'Specifically, we know that [MATH] should hold if and only if [MATH] holds for each [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-84-2': 'Similarly, we know that [MATH] should always be [MATH] when [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-84-3': 'So for each [MATH], it suffices to find a mapping from inputs [MATH] to the value of [MATH] for each variable [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-84-4': 'This again reduces the number of unknowns in the SMT problem.', '1905.09423-2-85-0': '## The Complete Translation', '1905.09423-2-86-0': 'We summarize our complete translation.', '1905.09423-2-86-1': 'Given a conjunction of literals [MATH], let [MATH] be the sequence of variable and function-application sub-expressions of [MATH].', '1905.09423-2-86-2': 'We define [MATH] for each sub-expression [MATH] of [MATH] as in [REF].', '1905.09423-2-87-0': 'As unknowns, we have: [itemize] & a function [MATH]; & for each negative literal [MATH], an existential variable [MATH]; & for each function [MATH] and each variable [MATH], a function [MATH], which takes [MATH] sequences of [MATH] bits, and computes the value of the bit for [MATH] in the result.', '1905.09423-2-88-0': 'We define the following known functions: [itemize] & For each [MATH] and each sub-expression of the form [MATH], a function [MATH] where [MATH] if and only if [MATH]; & For each [MATH] and each sub-expression of the form [MATH], where [MATH], a function [MATH] that always returns [MATH]; & For each [MATH], a function [MATH], where [MATH] is the sequence:', '1905.09423-2-89-0': '[MATH]', '1905.09423-2-90-0': 'We assert that the following hold: [itemize] & for each negative constraint [MATH] with corresponding existential variable [MATH], that [MATH] holds; & for each positive constraint [MATH], that [MATH]-completeness is not a complete barrier to the use of set constraints in practical verification.'}
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['1905.09423-1-14-0', '1905.09423-2-13-0'], ['1905.09423-1-14-1', '1905.09423-2-13-1'], ['1905.09423-1-14-3', '1905.09423-2-13-3'], ['1905.09423-1-22-0', '1905.09423-2-62-0'], ['1905.09423-1-22-1', '1905.09423-2-62-1'], ['1905.09423-1-22-2', '1905.09423-2-62-2'], ['1905.09423-1-22-3', '1905.09423-2-62-3'], ['1905.09423-1-22-4', '1905.09423-2-62-4'], ['1905.09423-1-22-5', '1905.09423-2-62-5'], ['1905.09423-1-23-1', '1905.09423-2-63-1'], ['1905.09423-1-23-2', '1905.09423-2-63-2'], ['1905.09423-1-23-3', '1905.09423-2-63-3'], ['1905.09423-1-23-4', '1905.09423-2-63-4'], ['1905.09423-1-23-5', '1905.09423-2-63-5'], ['1905.09423-1-23-6', '1905.09423-2-63-6'], ['1905.09423-1-23-7', '1905.09423-2-63-7'], ['1905.09423-1-37-0', '1905.09423-2-76-0'], ['1905.09423-1-37-1', '1905.09423-2-76-1'], ['1905.09423-1-37-2', '1905.09423-2-76-2'], ['1905.09423-1-37-3', '1905.09423-2-76-3'], ['1905.09423-1-32-0', '1905.09423-2-71-0'], ['1905.09423-1-32-1', '1905.09423-2-71-1'], ['1905.09423-1-32-2', '1905.09423-2-71-2'], ['1905.09423-1-32-4', '1905.09423-2-71-5'], ['1905.09423-1-32-5', '1905.09423-2-71-6'], ['1905.09423-1-32-6', '1905.09423-2-71-7'], ['1905.09423-1-27-0', '1905.09423-2-67-0'], ['1905.09423-1-27-1', '1905.09423-2-67-1'], ['1905.09423-1-27-2', '1905.09423-2-67-2'], ['1905.09423-1-47-0', '1905.09423-2-86-0'], ['1905.09423-1-47-1', '1905.09423-2-86-1'], ['1905.09423-1-47-2', '1905.09423-2-86-2'], ['1905.09423-1-13-0', '1905.09423-2-12-0'], ['1905.09423-1-3-0', '1905.09423-2-3-0'], ['1905.09423-1-3-1', '1905.09423-2-3-2'], ['1905.09423-1-41-0', '1905.09423-2-80-0'], ['1905.09423-1-41-1', '1905.09423-2-80-1'], ['1905.09423-1-41-2', '1905.09423-2-80-2'], ['1905.09423-1-41-4', '1905.09423-2-80-4'], ['1905.09423-1-41-5', '1905.09423-2-80-5'], ['1905.09423-1-30-0', '1905.09423-2-69-0'], ['1905.09423-1-30-3', '1905.09423-2-69-3'], ['1905.09423-1-30-4', '1905.09423-2-69-4'], ['1905.09423-1-0-0', '1905.09423-2-0-0'], ['1905.09423-1-25-0', '1905.09423-2-65-0'], ['1905.09423-1-4-1', '1905.09423-2-4-1'], ['1905.09423-1-4-2', '1905.09423-2-4-2'], ['1905.09423-1-40-0', '1905.09423-2-79-0'], ['1905.09423-1-40-2', '1905.09423-2-79-3'], ['1905.09423-1-34-0', '1905.09423-2-73-0'], ['1905.09423-1-34-1', '1905.09423-2-73-1'], ['1905.09423-1-5-1', '1905.09423-2-5-1'], ['1905.09423-1-35-0', '1905.09423-2-74-0'], ['1905.09423-1-35-1', '1905.09423-2-74-1'], ['1905.09423-1-35-2', '1905.09423-2-74-2'], ['1905.09423-1-28-0', '1905.09423-2-68-0'], ['1905.09423-1-28-1', '1905.09423-2-68-1'], ['1905.09423-1-28-2', '1905.09423-2-68-2'], ['1905.09423-1-28-3', '1905.09423-2-68-3'], ['1905.09423-1-38-0', '1905.09423-2-77-0'], ['1905.09423-1-38-1', '1905.09423-2-77-1'], ['1905.09423-1-38-2', '1905.09423-2-77-2'], ['1905.09423-1-38-3', '1905.09423-2-77-3'], ['1905.09423-1-38-4', '1905.09423-2-77-4'], ['1905.09423-1-24-0', '1905.09423-2-64-0'], ['1905.09423-1-24-2', '1905.09423-2-64-2'], ['1905.09423-1-24-3', '1905.09423-2-64-3'], ['1905.09423-1-43-0', '1905.09423-2-82-0'], ['1905.09423-1-43-1', '1905.09423-2-82-1'], ['1905.09423-1-43-2', '1905.09423-2-82-2'], ['1905.09423-1-43-3', '1905.09423-2-82-3'], ['1905.09423-1-43-4', '1905.09423-2-82-4'], ['1905.09423-1-15-0', '1905.09423-2-14-0'], ['1905.09423-1-39-1', '1905.09423-2-78-1'], ['1905.09423-1-39-3', '1905.09423-2-78-3'], ['1905.09423-1-45-3', '1905.09423-2-84-3'], ['1905.09423-1-14-2', '1905.09423-2-13-2'], ['1905.09423-1-23-0', '1905.09423-2-63-0'], ['1905.09423-1-37-4', '1905.09423-2-76-4'], ['1905.09423-1-32-3', '1905.09423-2-71-3'], ['1905.09423-1-3-2', '1905.09423-2-3-3'], ['1905.09423-1-41-3', '1905.09423-2-80-3'], ['1905.09423-1-30-1', '1905.09423-2-69-1'], ['1905.09423-1-30-2', '1905.09423-2-69-2'], ['1905.09423-1-0-1', '1905.09423-2-0-1'], ['1905.09423-1-0-2', '1905.09423-2-0-2'], ['1905.09423-1-4-0', '1905.09423-2-4-0'], ['1905.09423-1-40-1', '1905.09423-2-79-1'], ['1905.09423-1-5-2', '1905.09423-2-5-0'], ['1905.09423-1-5-3', '1905.09423-2-5-3'], ['1905.09423-1-24-1', '1905.09423-2-64-1'], ['1905.09423-1-51-0', '1905.09423-2-90-0'], ['1905.09423-1-1-1', '1905.09423-2-1-1'], ['1905.09423-1-1-2', '1905.09423-2-1-2'], ['1905.09423-1-45-4', '1905.09423-2-84-4'], ['1905.09423-1-4-3', '1905.09423-2-4-3'], ['1905.09423-1-40-3', '1905.09423-2-79-4'], ['1905.09423-1-40-3', '1905.09423-2-79-5'], ['1905.09423-1-5-0', '1905.09423-2-5-2'], ['1905.09423-1-20-0', '1905.09423-2-21-3'], ['1905.09423-1-21-1', '1905.09423-2-61-1'], ['1905.09423-1-21-2', '1905.09423-2-61-2'], ['1905.09423-1-21-3', '1905.09423-2-61-3'], ['1905.09423-1-21-4', '1905.09423-2-61-4']]
[['1905.09423-1-15-1', '1905.09423-2-14-1'], ['1905.09423-1-1-0', '1905.09423-2-1-0'], ['1905.09423-1-1-4', '1905.09423-2-1-3'], ['1905.09423-1-39-0', '1905.09423-2-78-0'], ['1905.09423-1-39-2', '1905.09423-2-78-2'], ['1905.09423-1-48-0', '1905.09423-2-87-0'], ['1905.09423-1-45-0', '1905.09423-2-84-0'], ['1905.09423-1-45-1', '1905.09423-2-84-1'], ['1905.09423-1-45-2', '1905.09423-2-84-2'], ['1905.09423-1-8-0', '1905.09423-2-7-1'], ['1905.09423-1-8-1', '1905.09423-2-7-2'], ['1905.09423-1-8-2', '1905.09423-2-7-3'], ['1905.09423-1-17-0', '1905.09423-2-16-0'], ['1905.09423-1-17-1', '1905.09423-2-16-1'], ['1905.09423-1-17-5', '1905.09423-2-16-2'], ['1905.09423-1-17-6', '1905.09423-2-16-3'], ['1905.09423-1-17-7', '1905.09423-2-16-4'], ['1905.09423-1-17-8', '1905.09423-2-16-5'], ['1905.09423-1-44-0', '1905.09423-2-83-0'], ['1905.09423-1-9-0', '1905.09423-2-8-0'], ['1905.09423-1-9-1', '1905.09423-2-8-1'], ['1905.09423-1-9-2', '1905.09423-2-8-2'], ['1905.09423-1-9-3', '1905.09423-2-8-3'], ['1905.09423-1-14-0', '1905.09423-2-13-0'], ['1905.09423-1-14-1', '1905.09423-2-13-1'], ['1905.09423-1-14-3', '1905.09423-2-13-3'], ['1905.09423-1-22-0', '1905.09423-2-62-0'], ['1905.09423-1-22-1', '1905.09423-2-62-1'], ['1905.09423-1-22-2', '1905.09423-2-62-2'], ['1905.09423-1-22-3', '1905.09423-2-62-3'], ['1905.09423-1-22-4', '1905.09423-2-62-4'], ['1905.09423-1-22-5', '1905.09423-2-62-5'], ['1905.09423-1-23-1', '1905.09423-2-63-1'], ['1905.09423-1-23-2', '1905.09423-2-63-2'], ['1905.09423-1-23-3', '1905.09423-2-63-3'], ['1905.09423-1-23-4', '1905.09423-2-63-4'], ['1905.09423-1-23-5', '1905.09423-2-63-5'], ['1905.09423-1-23-6', '1905.09423-2-63-6'], ['1905.09423-1-23-7', '1905.09423-2-63-7'], ['1905.09423-1-37-0', '1905.09423-2-76-0'], ['1905.09423-1-37-1', '1905.09423-2-76-1'], ['1905.09423-1-37-2', '1905.09423-2-76-2'], ['1905.09423-1-37-3', '1905.09423-2-76-3'], ['1905.09423-1-32-0', '1905.09423-2-71-0'], ['1905.09423-1-32-1', '1905.09423-2-71-1'], ['1905.09423-1-32-2', '1905.09423-2-71-2'], ['1905.09423-1-32-4', '1905.09423-2-71-5'], ['1905.09423-1-32-5', '1905.09423-2-71-6'], ['1905.09423-1-32-6', '1905.09423-2-71-7'], ['1905.09423-1-27-0', '1905.09423-2-67-0'], ['1905.09423-1-27-1', '1905.09423-2-67-1'], ['1905.09423-1-27-2', '1905.09423-2-67-2'], ['1905.09423-1-47-0', '1905.09423-2-86-0'], ['1905.09423-1-47-1', '1905.09423-2-86-1'], ['1905.09423-1-47-2', '1905.09423-2-86-2'], ['1905.09423-1-13-0', '1905.09423-2-12-0'], ['1905.09423-1-3-0', '1905.09423-2-3-0'], ['1905.09423-1-3-1', '1905.09423-2-3-2'], ['1905.09423-1-41-0', '1905.09423-2-80-0'], ['1905.09423-1-41-1', '1905.09423-2-80-1'], ['1905.09423-1-41-2', '1905.09423-2-80-2'], ['1905.09423-1-41-4', '1905.09423-2-80-4'], ['1905.09423-1-41-5', '1905.09423-2-80-5'], ['1905.09423-1-30-0', '1905.09423-2-69-0'], ['1905.09423-1-30-3', '1905.09423-2-69-3'], ['1905.09423-1-30-4', '1905.09423-2-69-4'], ['1905.09423-1-0-0', '1905.09423-2-0-0'], ['1905.09423-1-25-0', '1905.09423-2-65-0'], ['1905.09423-1-4-1', '1905.09423-2-4-1'], ['1905.09423-1-4-2', '1905.09423-2-4-2'], ['1905.09423-1-40-0', '1905.09423-2-79-0'], ['1905.09423-1-40-2', '1905.09423-2-79-3'], ['1905.09423-1-34-0', '1905.09423-2-73-0'], ['1905.09423-1-34-1', '1905.09423-2-73-1'], ['1905.09423-1-5-1', '1905.09423-2-5-1'], ['1905.09423-1-35-0', '1905.09423-2-74-0'], ['1905.09423-1-35-1', '1905.09423-2-74-1'], ['1905.09423-1-35-2', '1905.09423-2-74-2'], ['1905.09423-1-28-0', '1905.09423-2-68-0'], ['1905.09423-1-28-1', '1905.09423-2-68-1'], ['1905.09423-1-28-2', '1905.09423-2-68-2'], ['1905.09423-1-28-3', '1905.09423-2-68-3'], ['1905.09423-1-38-0', '1905.09423-2-77-0'], ['1905.09423-1-38-1', '1905.09423-2-77-1'], ['1905.09423-1-38-2', '1905.09423-2-77-2'], ['1905.09423-1-38-3', '1905.09423-2-77-3'], ['1905.09423-1-38-4', '1905.09423-2-77-4'], ['1905.09423-1-24-0', '1905.09423-2-64-0'], ['1905.09423-1-24-2', '1905.09423-2-64-2'], ['1905.09423-1-24-3', '1905.09423-2-64-3'], ['1905.09423-1-43-0', '1905.09423-2-82-0'], ['1905.09423-1-43-1', '1905.09423-2-82-1'], ['1905.09423-1-43-2', '1905.09423-2-82-2'], ['1905.09423-1-43-3', '1905.09423-2-82-3'], ['1905.09423-1-43-4', '1905.09423-2-82-4']]
[['1905.09423-1-15-0', '1905.09423-2-14-0'], ['1905.09423-1-39-1', '1905.09423-2-78-1'], ['1905.09423-1-39-3', '1905.09423-2-78-3'], ['1905.09423-1-45-3', '1905.09423-2-84-3'], ['1905.09423-1-14-2', '1905.09423-2-13-2'], ['1905.09423-1-23-0', '1905.09423-2-63-0'], ['1905.09423-1-37-4', '1905.09423-2-76-4'], ['1905.09423-1-32-3', '1905.09423-2-71-3'], ['1905.09423-1-3-2', '1905.09423-2-3-3'], ['1905.09423-1-41-3', '1905.09423-2-80-3'], ['1905.09423-1-30-1', '1905.09423-2-69-1'], ['1905.09423-1-30-2', '1905.09423-2-69-2'], ['1905.09423-1-0-1', '1905.09423-2-0-1'], ['1905.09423-1-0-2', '1905.09423-2-0-2'], ['1905.09423-1-4-0', '1905.09423-2-4-0'], ['1905.09423-1-40-1', '1905.09423-2-79-1'], ['1905.09423-1-5-2', '1905.09423-2-5-0'], ['1905.09423-1-5-3', '1905.09423-2-5-3'], ['1905.09423-1-24-1', '1905.09423-2-64-1']]
[]
[['1905.09423-1-51-0', '1905.09423-2-90-0'], ['1905.09423-1-1-1', '1905.09423-2-1-1'], ['1905.09423-1-1-2', '1905.09423-2-1-2'], ['1905.09423-1-45-4', '1905.09423-2-84-4'], ['1905.09423-1-4-3', '1905.09423-2-4-3'], ['1905.09423-1-40-3', '1905.09423-2-79-4'], ['1905.09423-1-40-3', '1905.09423-2-79-5'], ['1905.09423-1-5-0', '1905.09423-2-5-2']]
[['1905.09423-1-20-0', '1905.09423-2-21-3'], ['1905.09423-1-21-1', '1905.09423-2-61-1'], ['1905.09423-1-21-2', '1905.09423-2-61-2'], ['1905.09423-1-21-3', '1905.09423-2-61-3'], ['1905.09423-1-21-4', '1905.09423-2-61-4']]
['1905.09423-1-4-4', '1905.09423-1-10-0', '1905.09423-1-11-0', '1905.09423-1-12-0', '1905.09423-1-16-0', '1905.09423-1-33-0', '1905.09423-1-49-0', '1905.09423-1-50-0', '1905.09423-2-4-4', '1905.09423-2-9-0', '1905.09423-2-10-0', '1905.09423-2-11-0', '1905.09423-2-15-0', '1905.09423-2-52-0', '1905.09423-2-72-0', '1905.09423-2-88-0', '1905.09423-2-89-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.09423
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1902.11123
{'1902.11123-1-0-0': '# Introduction', '1902.11123-1-1-0': '# Related Work', '1902.11123-1-2-0': '# Proposed Method', '1902.11123-1-3-0': '## Few-shot Problem Setup', '1902.11123-1-4-0': 'We formulate a problem similar to [CITATION], we define an initial phase of training with large scale dataset [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-4-1': 'The training set [MATH] includes semantic label maps for classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-4-2': 'Similar to the few shot learning literature a support set is sampled that is labelled with novel classes in [MATH], where [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-4-3': 'It is worth noting that during training if images contain labels from [MATH] they are rather labelled as background or ignored in the back-propagation.', '1902.11123-1-4-4': 'Only images that include at least one pixel belonging to [MATH] are included in [MATH] for large-scale training.', '1902.11123-1-5-0': 'During the test phase a support set is randomly sampled that contains pairs [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] image in the set and [MATH] is the corresponding binary mask.', '1902.11123-1-5-1': 'The binary mask [MATH] is constructed with novel class [MATH] labelled as foreground while the rest of the pixels are considered background.', '1902.11123-1-5-2': 'Similar to the k-shot setting in the few shot learning literature, [MATH] indicates the number of images provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-1-5-3': 'A query image is randomly sampled from the test set in similar fashion to the support set.', '1902.11123-1-6-0': '## Base Network', '1902.11123-1-7-0': 'The backbone architecture used in our segmentation network is a VGG-16 [CITATION] that is pre-trained on ImageNet [CITATION].', '1902.11123-1-7-1': 'Similar to FCN8s architecture [CITATION] skip connections are used to benefit from higher resolution feature maps, and a 1x1 convolution layers are used to map from the feature space to the label space.', '1902.11123-1-7-2': 'However, unlike FCN8s we solely utilize bilinear interpolation layers with fixed weights for the upsampling.', '1902.11123-1-7-3': 'The main reason behind that choice, as it is hard to update the weights for the transposed convolution layers based on the support set.', '1902.11123-1-8-0': 'On the other hand the 1x1 convolutional layers can benefit from masked weight imprinting to update its weights and accommodate the novel classes.', '1902.11123-1-8-1': 'During the test phase an extra normalization layer is utilized before all 1x1 convolutional layers that maps to the label space and normalizes the output tensors.', '1902.11123-1-8-2': 'An extension on the above base network uses dilated convolution [CITATION] and termed as Dilated-FCN8s.', '1902.11123-1-8-3': 'The last two pooling layers are replaced by dilated convolution with dilation factors 2 and 4 respectively.', '1902.11123-1-8-4': 'Thus, increasing the receptive field without affecting the resolution and improving the segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-1-8-5': 'Finally, a more compact version of the network with two final convolutional layers removed is denoted as Reduced-DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-1-9-0': '## Masked Weight Imprinting', '1902.11123-1-10-0': 'Inspiring from the work in few-shot image classification with imprinted weights [CITATION] we propose to utilize a masked weight imprinting scheme.', '1902.11123-1-10-1': 'The weight imprinting method is based on the relation between metric learning methods and softmax classification.', '1902.11123-1-10-2': 'Metric learning methods such as neighbourhood component analysis [CITATION] learn a distance metric using a softmax-like loss function.', '1902.11123-1-10-3': 'A modified version of neighbourhood component analysis learns it by using proxies as shown in equation [REF].', '1902.11123-1-10-4': '[EQUATION]', '1902.11123-1-10-5': 'Where [MATH] is the set of negative proxies, and the distance used is based on the L2 distance [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-10-6': 'In the case of unit vectors minimizing the squared L2 distance becomes equivalent to maximizing the dot product.', '1902.11123-1-10-7': '[EQUATION]', '1902.11123-1-10-8': 'When substituting in equation [REF] we get a similar form to softmax classification as shown in equation [REF].', '1902.11123-1-10-9': '[EQUATION]', '1902.11123-1-10-10': 'Where [MATH] is the proxy for class [MATH], while [MATH] is the proxies representing the rest of classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-10-11': 'Similar to [CITATION] this intuition can be further used to utilize the normalized embeddings for the few labelled samples from the novel class as proxies.', '1902.11123-1-10-12': 'These proxies can be fused directly as weights in the final fully connected classification layer.', '1902.11123-1-10-13': 'There exist some major differences between the classification setting and the segmentation setting: (1) only convolutional layers are utilized in semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-1-10-14': '(2) the support set provides additional information not only to the novel class but it can include updated information about older classes as well.', '1902.11123-1-10-15': '(3) The output embeddings are 3D tensors unlike in classification where the output embedding vector can be used directly.', '1902.11123-1-10-16': '(4) Multi-resolution support is necessary to ensure the segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-1-11-0': 'It is well known that 1x1 convolution are equivalent to fully connected layers so the same concept can be utilized in fully convolutional networks.', '1902.11123-1-11-1': 'In this case the weight filter is used as a proxy that convolves the output feature map and computes the extent to which the different parts in the feature map matches these proxies.', '1902.11123-1-11-2': 'In order to incorporate the pixels that belong mainly to the novel class, masked feature maps with the binary labels provided in the support set are used.', '1902.11123-1-11-3': 'This is followed by average pooling the masked feature maps per channel as in equation [REF], we denote this layer as masked average pooling.', '1902.11123-1-11-4': '[EQUATION]', '1902.11123-1-11-5': 'Where [MATH] is a binary mask for [MATH] image with the novel class [MATH], [MATH] is the corresponding output feature maps for [MATH] image.', '1902.11123-1-11-6': '[MATH] is the set of all possible spatial locations and [MATH] is the number of pixels that are labelled as foreground for class [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-11-7': 'The output from the masked average pooling layer [MATH] can be further used as proxies representing class [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-11-8': 'In the case of a novel class the imprinted weights can be utilized directly as the weight filter representing that new class.', '1902.11123-1-11-9': 'An average of all the masked pooling features for the k-shot samples provided in the support set is used.', '1902.11123-1-12-0': '## Adaptive Weight Imprinting', '1902.11123-1-13-0': 'In case of the older classes, it is not possible to use the weights directly as it overrides what the network learned from large-scale training although that would be valuable.', '1902.11123-1-13-1': 'It is not efficient either to ignore the newly added information for these negative proxies.', '1902.11123-1-13-2': 'An example that shows the reason to incorporate negative proxies is the addition of class boat, it is clear that the background class needs to be updated to include sea as well.', '1902.11123-1-13-3': 'Similar to adaptive correlation filters [CITATION] that was used in visual object tracking with handcrafted features, the convolutional layer weights in our model can be updated with the newly imprinted weights for that class in an adaptive scheme.', '1902.11123-1-14-0': 'A running average is used to update the weights following equation [REF] for older classes with the update rate [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-14-1': 'The update rate can either be treated as a hyper parameter or it can be learned separately according to the input embeddings.', '1902.11123-1-14-2': 'It can also be a learnable scalar value or it can vary according to which neuron is being updated.', '1902.11123-1-14-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the adaptive masked weight imprinting scheme with each new support set for the positive proxy and the negative proxies used to update the weights of the previously known classes.', '1902.11123-1-14-4': '[EQUATION]', '1902.11123-1-14-5': 'Another major difference to the classification setting, is the use of the skip connections to improve the accuracy of the segmentation.', '1902.11123-1-14-6': 'Thus, masked weight imprinting is performed on the multiple resolution levels.', '1902.11123-1-14-7': 'The imprinted filters are computed on the two 1x1 convolutional layers following dilated convolutions in the case of Dilated-FCN8s.', '1902.11123-1-14-8': 'While imprinted filters are used in the 1x1 convolutional layers following the [MATH] and [MATH] pooling layers in FCN8s.', '1902.11123-1-14-9': 'The output heat-maps from each resolution level are combined using summation, which results in the final probability maps.', '1902.11123-1-15-0': '## Continuous Problem Setup', '1902.11123-1-16-0': 'We formulate another setup for the continuous case in order to assess the effectiveness of providing an adaptive method.', '1902.11123-1-16-1': 'The PASCAL VOC dataset [CITATION] classes are split into [MATH] and [MATH] with 10 classes each, where [MATH] .', '1902.11123-1-16-2': 'The classes belonging to the [MATH] are used to construct the training dataset [MATH] and pre-train the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-1-16-3': 'Unlike the static setting in the few shot case, the continuous segmentation mode provides the image-label pairs incrementally with different encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-1-16-4': 'Each task introduces two novel classes to learn.', '1902.11123-1-16-5': 'The tasks are in the form of triplets [MATH], where [MATH] represent the overall batch of images and labels from task [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-16-6': 'The batch labels are for the two novel classes belonging to task [MATH], and the previously learned classes in the encountered tasks [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-17-0': 'The continuous setup can be a way to assess how adapting for novel classes in a task affects the previous tasks.', '1902.11123-1-17-1': 'In each task the model encounters each image-label pair from the current batch only once.', '1902.11123-1-17-2': 'This simulates the realistic setting where an agent is required to learn about novel objects incrementally.', '1902.11123-1-17-3': 'The proposed setup for the continuous mode on PASCAL VOC is termed as iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-1-18-0': '# Experimental Results', '1902.11123-1-19-0': 'Our proposed method is evaluated on pascal-[MATH] [CITATION] in order to compare with the state of the art.', '1902.11123-1-19-1': 'In order to asses the effectiveness of proposing an adaptive method, we evaluate our method on DAVIS benchmark [CITATION] and our proposed setup for iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-1-19-2': 'Evaluation is done using mean intersection over union (mIoU).', '1902.11123-1-20-0': '## Few-Shot Segmentation Evaluation', '1902.11123-1-21-0': 'The setup for pretraining the models to be tested on PASCAL-[MATH] is detailed.', '1902.11123-1-21-1': 'The base network is trained using RMSProp [CITATION] with learning rate [MATH], and L2 regularization with a factor of 5x[MATH] on the 15 classes outside of the current fold.', '1902.11123-1-21-2': 'In the few-shot evaluation 1000 samples are used similar to OSLSM setup [CITATION].', '1902.11123-1-21-3': 'The alpha parameter used for adapting the previously learned weights is 0.5.', '1902.11123-1-21-4': 'Each sample contains a support set that has k labelled examples for the k-shot segmentation, and a query image.', '1902.11123-1-21-5': 'Both the support set and the query image are labelled with binary masks.', '1902.11123-1-22-0': 'Table [REF] and Table [REF] show the results for the 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation respectively on PASCAL-[MATH] using mIoU of the foreground class.', '1902.11123-1-22-1': 'Our method is compared to OSLSM [CITATION] and the baseline methods for few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-1-22-2': 'It shows that our method outperforms the baseline fine-tuning method by 7.6% in terms of mIoU, without the need for extra back-propagation iterations through directly using the imprinted weights.', '1902.11123-1-22-3': 'Our method performs on par with OSLSM [CITATION] method in the 1-shot in terms of mean across folds, while it outperforms OSLSM in the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-1-22-4': 'However, unlike OSLSM our method does not need to train an extra branch for predicting the parameters.', '1902.11123-1-22-5': 'We conducted an experiment while setting [MATH] parameter to 0 to ensure that the adaptation of the background class weights improves the overall mIoU.', '1902.11123-1-22-6': 'The results on fold 0 was 13 instead of the 36 with [MATH] set to 0.5.', '1902.11123-1-22-7': 'This shows that the imprinting method standalone without the adaptation mechanism will degrade by 23 in mIoU.', '1902.11123-1-23-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the qualitative results on PASCAL-[MATH] which shows both the support set image-label pair, and our predicted segmentation for the query image.', '1902.11123-1-23-1': 'It demonstrates the promise for the model to learn from as few as one sample to segment the required object.', '1902.11123-1-23-2': 'It also shows that it does not depend on the saliency of the object.', '1902.11123-1-23-3': 'Since in some of the query images multiple potential objects can be categorized as salient, but it rather learns to segment the object that best matches the learned proxy.', '1902.11123-1-23-4': 'It is worth noting that our baseline model using Dilated-FCN8s does not provide the state of the art segmentation, but was rather used to compare against other methods that used similar architecture.', '1902.11123-1-24-0': 'Table [REF] shows our method in comparison to the state of the art methods in terms of the mean on all folds for 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation with a different evaluation.', '1902.11123-1-24-1': 'The same evaluation utilized by [CITATION] and [CITATION] is rather used, which computes mIoU as the mean of the foreground and background IoU.', '1902.11123-1-24-2': 'Our proposed method outperforms the baseline FG-BG proposed by [CITATION] with 2% and 4.4% mIoU in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases respectively.', '1902.11123-1-24-3': 'When our method is coupled with few iterations of back-propagation through the last layers it outperforms the the state of the art methods in the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-1-24-4': 'In our experiments 10 iterations are used in the case of 1-shot evaluation, while 2 iterations per sample are used in the 5-shot evaluation.', '1902.11123-1-24-5': 'Fine-tuning is performed using RMSProp and a learning rate of [MATH] and the same L2 regularization factor as previous experiments.', '1902.11123-1-25-0': '## Effectiveness of Adaptation', '1902.11123-1-26-0': 'One of the major benefits of the inspiration from adaptive correlation filters is its ability to incrementally update the learned weights.', '1902.11123-1-26-1': 'In order to assess the adaptation capability of our model we compare it against the baseline method.', '1902.11123-1-26-2': 'Initially our method is evaluated on DAVIS-2016 benchmark [CITATION], where our base network is a Wide ResNet model similar to [CITATION], in order to use a better baseline method on DAVIS dataset.', '1902.11123-1-26-3': 'The last 2 convolutional layers in our model has been changed to dilation rate of 1 instead of 12.', '1902.11123-1-26-4': 'High dilation rate corrupts the imprinting process, since the output spatial locations belonging to foreground class participate as well to the background class features.', '1902.11123-1-26-5': 'Figure [REF] shows that effect and motivates the reason to use dilation rate of 1 at the layer where the imprinting process and masked average pooling will occur.', '1902.11123-1-26-6': 'The model is trained on PASCAL dataset first then finetuned on DAVIS training set.', '1902.11123-1-26-7': 'The model is then adapted with the first frame initialization in the validation set sequence during the weight imprinting process.', '1902.11123-1-26-8': 'We compare then both our adaptive masked imprinting scheme against the baseline model.', '1902.11123-1-27-0': 'The alpha parameter during imprinting is set to 0.001 when operating on DAVIS since the model has learned background-foreground segmentation on the large-scale training set.', '1902.11123-1-27-1': 'During adaptation, the weights responsible for foreground and background classes are both updated using our proposed adaptive imprinting scheme.', '1902.11123-1-27-2': 'This is unlike PASCAL setup in which only the background class is updated, while the novel class is imprinted directly as no previously trained weights exist for it.', '1902.11123-1-27-3': 'Table [REF] shows the mIoU over all the validation set and over some specific sequences.', '1902.11123-1-27-4': 'It shows generally that the imprinting scheme outperforms the baseline method.', '1902.11123-1-27-5': 'It is worth noting that the adaptation process does not incorporate fine-tuning and can be performed directly, but can also be paired with finetuning for a better improvement.', '1902.11123-1-28-0': 'We conducted further experiments on iPASCAL, where triplets for the task, the corresponding images and semantic labels are provided.', '1902.11123-1-28-1': 'Semantic labels include the new classes in the current and previous encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-1-28-2': 'Figure [REF] shows the comparison between naive fine-tuning from random weights against our proposed adaptive masked weight imprinting without any fine-tuning operations in terms of mIoU.', '1902.11123-1-28-3': 'It shows that masked imprinting provides better mIoU in comparison to fine-tuning that will lead to over-fitting.', '1902.11123-1-28-4': 'Fine-tuning was conducted using RMSProp with learning rate [MATH].', '1902.11123-1-28-5': 'Fine-tuning is performed only to the last layers responsible for pixel-wise classification, while the feature extraction weights for VGG16 are fixed.', '1902.11123-1-28-6': 'It is worth noting that the current evaluation setting is a [MATH]-way 1-shot, where [MATH] increases with 2 additional classes with each encountered task resulting in 10-way 1-shot evaluation in the last task.', '1902.11123-1-28-7': 'This explains the discrepancy between the mIoU in Table [REF] and Figure [REF], it demonstrates the fact that [MATH]-way classification is more challenging than 1-way.', '1902.11123-1-29-0': '## Learned Proxies Analysis', '1902.11123-1-30-0': 'Since our method is highly dependant on the learned proxies, a further analysis on them is conducted.', '1902.11123-1-30-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the T-SNE [CITATION] embeddings for the proxies learned as output from our masked weight imprinting scheme.', '1902.11123-1-30-2': 'The plot shows the 5 classes belonging to fold 0 in PASCAL-[MATH].', '1902.11123-1-30-3': 'Since our model performs imprinting on multiple resolution levels, the plot visualizes for the 3 different resolution levels.', '1902.11123-1-30-4': 'It motivates the reason for using the proxies as a way to imprint the weights for the final classification layer.', '1902.11123-1-31-0': 'We compute the average Euclidean distance between the 1000 sampled support set and query image features.', '1902.11123-1-31-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the box plots showing the average, minimum and maximum distances for the 3 different resolution levels.', '1902.11123-1-31-2': 'It shows how the average distance decreases as we increase the resolution level, which signifies the benefit form using higher resolution feature maps.', '1902.11123-1-32-0': '# Conclusion'}
{'1902.11123-2-0-0': '# Introduction', '1902.11123-2-1-0': 'Children are able to adapt their knowledge and learn about their surrounding environment with limited samples [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-1-1': 'One of the main bottlenecks in the current deep learning methods is their requirement to train on large-scale data.', '1902.11123-2-1-2': 'However, it is intractable to collect one large-scale dataset that contains all the required object classes for different environments, especially in robotics.', '1902.11123-2-1-3': 'That motivated the emergence of few-shot learning methods [CITATION] [CITATION][CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-1-4': 'One of the current challenges is to enable deep networks to mimic human behaviour, and adapt their model in a sample efficient and computationally efficient manner.', '1902.11123-2-2-0': 'The earliest attempt to few-shot segmentation was based on learning a parameter predictor [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-2-1': 'A conditional network method was proposed in another work [CITATION] based on sparse or dense labels to guide the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-2-2-2': 'More recently, a method that inspires from prototypical networks [CITATION] has been proposed [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-2-3': 'The previous methods require the training of an additional branch to guide the backbone segmentation network.', '1902.11123-2-2-4': 'On top of that, existing approaches cannot be trivially extended to handle a continuous stream of data containing annotations for both novel and previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-2-2-5': 'Lately, a similarity guided network has been proposed as a concurrent work [CITATION] to ours.', '1902.11123-2-2-6': 'Nonetheless, the method is still incapable of adapting to a continuous stream of data.', '1902.11123-2-3-0': 'In this paper, we propose a novel adaptive masked proxies as a way to improve few-shot semantic segmentation and extend it further to a continuous data stream as shown in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-2-3-1': 'Our main inspiration is from classical approaches in learning adaptive correlation filters [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-3-2': 'Correlation filters date back to 1980s.', '1902.11123-2-3-3': 'One example, Hester et.', '1902.11123-2-3-4': 'al. [CITATION] proposed learning an averaged matched spatial filter constructed as a weighted linear combination of basis functions.', '1902.11123-2-3-5': 'A fast object tracking method based on adaptive correlation filters was proposed, where hand crafted features were used to form the correlation filters and adapted using a running average [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-3-6': 'Our method proposes a novel scheme to compute filters in convolutional neural networks using masked adaptive proxies.', '1902.11123-2-3-7': 'A normalized average pooling layer is utilized on the output feature maps masked with the segmentation label provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-2-3-8': 'We denote proxies to be the representative class signature based on the average pooling output, that is later used to set the 1x1 convolutional filters.', '1902.11123-2-3-9': 'Unlike previous methods, our approach can easily operate with any pretrained network without the need to train a second branch which entails fewer number of parameters.', '1902.11123-2-3-10': 'We show in video object segmentation that it can be used with a 2-stream motion and appearance network without any additional branch for learning guidance.', '1902.11123-2-3-11': 'However, imprinting only the weights for the positive class, i.e. the newly added class, is insufficient as new samples will incorporate new information about other classes as well.', '1902.11123-2-3-12': 'For example, learning new class for boat will also entail learning new information about the background class which should include sea.', '1902.11123-2-3-13': 'To address this, a novel method for updating the weights of the previously learned classes without back-propagation is proposed.', '1902.11123-2-3-14': 'This opens the door toward leveraging segmentation networks to continually learn semantic segmentation in both sample efficient and computationally efficient manner.', '1902.11123-2-3-15': 'Our method is flexible and still allows to be coupled with back-propagation using the support image-label pair.', '1902.11123-2-3-16': 'The proxy weight imprinting steps can be interleaved with the back-propagation steps to boost the adaptation process.', '1902.11123-2-3-17': 'Our proposed method is evaluated on PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION], DAVIS benchmark [CITATION], FBMS [CITATION] and our proposed iPASCAL setup.', '1902.11123-2-4-0': 'The contributions of this paper are as follows.', '1902.11123-2-5-0': '# Related Work', '1902.11123-2-6-0': '## Few-shot Learning', '1902.11123-2-7-0': 'One of the earliest attempts toward few-shot learning was using a Bayesian approach by Fei et.', '1902.11123-2-7-1': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-7-2': 'Vinyals et.', '1902.11123-2-7-3': 'al. proposed matching networks that learns an end-to-end differentiable nearest neighbour [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-7-4': 'Snell et.', '1902.11123-2-7-5': 'al. proposed prototypical networks based on the assumption that, there exist an embedding space in which points belonging to one class, cluster around their corresponding prototype [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-7-6': 'Qiao et.', '1902.11123-2-7-7': 'al. proposed a parameter predictor method based on the activations learned during large-scale training [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-7-8': 'Finally, a method for computing imprinted weights was proposed by Qi et.', '1902.11123-2-7-9': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-8-0': 'In few-shot learning, the model is provided with a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-2-8-1': 'The support set contains the few labelled samples that can be used to train the model, while the query image is used to test the final model.', '1902.11123-2-8-2': 'The setup is formulated as [MATH] shot [MATH] way, where [MATH] denotes the number of samples in the support set, while [MATH] denotes the number of classes to classify among.', '1902.11123-2-9-0': '## Few-shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-2-10-0': 'Few-shot segmentation requires the model to provide pixel-wise classification for the query image unlike classification.', '1902.11123-2-10-1': 'The current dataset used in the literature to evaluate few-shot segmentation is PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-10-2': 'The dataset is sub-divided into 4 folds each containing 5 classes.', '1902.11123-2-10-3': 'A fold contains labelled samples from 5 classes that are used for evaluating the few-shot learning method.', '1902.11123-2-10-4': 'While the rest 15 classes are used to train the model.', '1902.11123-2-10-5': 'The baselines that were proposed by Shaban et.', '1902.11123-2-10-6': 'al. [CITATION] included the baseline classifiers with the nearest neighbour and logistic regression methods.', '1902.11123-2-10-7': 'Another baseline was proposed based on a siamese method that compares the support set and query image.', '1902.11123-2-10-8': 'A final baseline is simply fine-tuning the final layers of the network.', '1902.11123-2-11-0': 'Shaban et.', '1902.11123-2-11-1': 'al. proposed a 2-branch method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-11-2': 'In this method, the first branch produces generic segmentation embeddings, while the second one predicts the parameters for the final segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-11-3': 'Rakelly et.', '1902.11123-2-11-4': 'al. proposed another 2-branch method where the second branch acts as a conditioning branch instead [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-11-5': 'Finally, Dong et.', '1902.11123-2-11-6': 'al. inspiring from prototypical networks, designed a method to learn prototypes for the few-shot segmentation problem [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-11-7': 'It proposed a 2-branch architecture as well, where the second branch is responsible for learning prototypes that can aid the final segmentation task.', '1902.11123-2-11-8': 'In a concurrent work to ours, Zhang et.', '1902.11123-2-11-9': 'al proposed a single branch network that uses guidance features based on masked average pooling layer [CITATION], but it does not adapt to a continuous stream of data.', '1902.11123-2-11-10': 'We propose to set the convolutional filters directly to our proposed adaptive masked proxies, which enables further adaptation with a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-2-11-11': 'Clearly, most of the previously proposed methods require an extra branch trained in a simulated few-shot setting to condition the backbone segmentation architecture.', '1902.11123-2-11-12': 'The above methods were designed to operate with few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-11-13': 'They cannot be trivially extended to continue adaptation efficiently whilst processing a continuous stream of data with multiple classes.', '1902.11123-2-12-0': '# Proposed Method', '1902.11123-2-13-0': '## Few-shot Problem Setup', '1902.11123-2-14-0': 'We use a setup similar to Shaban et.', '1902.11123-2-14-1': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-14-2': 'The training procedure consists of two steps.', '1902.11123-2-14-3': 'The initial training phase relies on a large scale dataset [MATH] including semantic label maps for classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-14-4': 'During the test phase, a support set is sampled that is labelled with novel classes in [MATH], where [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-14-5': 'The support set contains pairs [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] image in the set and [MATH] is the corresponding binary mask.', '1902.11123-2-14-6': 'The binary mask [MATH] is constructed with novel class [MATH] labelled as foreground while the rest of the pixels are considered background.', '1902.11123-2-14-7': 'Similar to the [MATH]-shot setting in the few shot learning literature, [MATH] indicates the number of images provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-2-14-8': 'A query image is randomly sampled from the test set in a similar fashion to the support set.', '1902.11123-2-14-9': 'It is worth noting that during training if images contain labels from [MATH] they are not used in the back-propagation.', '1902.11123-2-14-10': 'Only images that include at least one pixel belonging to [MATH] are included in [MATH] for large-scale training.', '1902.11123-2-14-11': 'Our model does not need to be trained in the few-shot regime by sampling a support set and a query image, but is rather trained in a normal fashion with image-label pairs.', '1902.11123-2-15-0': '## Base Network', '1902.11123-2-16-0': 'The backbone architecture used in our segmentation network is a VGG-16 [CITATION] that is pre-trained on ImageNet [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-16-1': 'Similar to the FCN8s architecture [CITATION] skip connections are used to benefit from higher resolution feature maps, and a 1x1 convolution layers are used to map from the feature space to the label space.', '1902.11123-2-16-2': 'However, unlike FCN8s we solely utilize bilinear interpolation layers with fixed weights for the upsampling.', '1902.11123-2-16-3': 'The main reason behind that choice, is that it is hard to imprint the weights for the transposed convolution layers based on the support set.', '1902.11123-2-17-0': 'An extension to the above base network uses dilated convolution [CITATION] and called Dilated-FCN8s.', '1902.11123-2-17-1': 'The last two pooling layers are replaced by dilated convolution with dilation factors 2 and 4 respectively.', '1902.11123-2-17-2': 'Thus, increasing the receptive field without affecting the resolution and improving the segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-2-17-3': 'Finally, a more compact version of the network with two final convolutional layers removed is denoted as Reduced-DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-2-18-0': 'Another baseline network is used in the video object segmentation which is a 2-stream wide-resnet [CITATION] architecture.', '1902.11123-2-18-1': 'Where each stream has 11 residual blocks followed by multiplying the output activation from both motion and appearance.', '1902.11123-2-18-2': 'The motion is presented to the model as optical flow based on Liu et.', '1902.11123-2-18-3': 'al. method [CITATION] and converted to RGB using a color wheel.', '1902.11123-2-18-4': 'Dilated convolution [CITATION] is used in the final layers to maintain the resolution while increasing the receptive field.', '1902.11123-2-18-5': 'The flexibility of our method enables it to work with different architectures without the overhead of designing another branch to provide guidance, predicted parameters or prototypes.', '1902.11123-2-19-0': '## Weight Imprinting', '1902.11123-2-20-0': 'Inspiring from the work in few-shot image classification with imprinted weights [CITATION], we propose to utilize masked proxies to imprint the convolutional filters.', '1902.11123-2-20-1': 'The weight imprinting method is originally based on the relation between metric learning methods and softmax classification.', '1902.11123-2-20-2': 'Metric learning methods such as neighbourhood component analysis (NCA) [CITATION] learn a distance metric using a softmax-like loss function.', '1902.11123-2-20-3': 'In the case of unit vectors minimizing the squared L2 distance becomes equivalent to maximizing the dot product, which shows that the NCA loss is equivalent to cross entropy.', '1902.11123-2-20-4': 'In [CITATION] weight imprinting was performed to the final fully connected layers that are responsible for the classification, where the normalized output activations are compared to proxies used in [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-20-5': 'We propose to perform weight imprinting for the 1x1 convolutional filters.', '1902.11123-2-20-6': 'We view the weight imprinting process as learning a proxy to directly set the weights.', '1902.11123-2-20-7': 'The imprinted convolution weights form a signature for a class.', '1902.11123-2-20-8': 'When convolved with the query image, the proxy activates pixels maximally similar to the class signature.', '1902.11123-2-21-0': 'However, it is not trivial to perform weight imprinting in semantic segmentation, unlike in classification.', '1902.11123-2-21-1': 'First, in the segmentation setup the support set provides additional information both about the novel class and about previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-2-21-2': 'Second, in the classification setup the output embedding vector corresponds to a single class and hence can be used directly for imprinting.', '1902.11123-2-21-3': 'In contrast to that, segmentation network outputs 3D embeddings, which incorporate features for a multitude of different classes, both novel and previously learnt.', '1902.11123-2-21-4': 'The mixture cannot be imprinted directly.', '1902.11123-2-21-5': 'Finally, in classification scenario resolution aspect is not present, while in the segmentation scenario multi-resolution support is necessary to ensure the final segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-2-22-0': 'We propose the following novel architectural components to address the challenges outlined above.', '1902.11123-2-22-1': 'First, in Section [REF] and in Section [REF] we propose the proxy masking and adaptation methods to handle multi-class segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-22-2': 'Second, in Section [REF] we propose a multi-resolution weight imprinting scheme to maintain segmentation accuracy during imprinting.', '1902.11123-2-23-0': '## Normalized Masked Average Pooling', '1902.11123-2-24-0': 'In order to build the proxies and incorporate the pixels that belong mainly to the novel class, masked feature maps with the binary labels provided in the support set are used.', '1902.11123-2-24-1': 'Initially, the feature maps are bilinearly upsampled before performing masking, since down-sampling the labels instead can degrade the masking process.', '1902.11123-2-24-2': 'This is followed by average pooling of the masked feature maps per channel, the normalization is performed on the proxies as follows: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-2-24-3': 'Here [MATH] is a binary mask for [MATH] image with the novel class [MATH], [MATH] are the corresponding output feature maps for [MATH] image and [MATH] resolution.', '1902.11123-2-24-4': '[MATH] is the set of all possible spatial locations and [MATH] is the number of pixels that are labelled as foreground for class [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-24-5': 'The normalized output from the masked average pooling layer [MATH] can be further used as proxies representing class [MATH] and resolution [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-24-6': 'In the case of a novel class the proxy can be utilized directly as the weight filter.', '1902.11123-2-24-7': 'An average of all the masked pooling features for the [MATH]-shot samples provided in the support set is used.', '1902.11123-2-25-0': 'We denote this layer as a normalized masked average pooling as shown in Fig [REF].', '1902.11123-2-25-1': 'A similar layer is developed in a concurrent work [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-25-2': 'It uses the output to compute a guidance to the network, while our method uses the output proxy to imprint the 1x1 convolutional layer weights.', '1902.11123-2-25-3': 'This is the reason we use normalization.', '1902.11123-2-25-4': 'The advantage of our approach is that it allows to adapt the imprinted weights when faced with a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-2-25-5': 'Additionally, it can be coupled with back-propagation to improve the output segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-26-0': '## Adaptive Proxies', '1902.11123-2-27-0': 'Each incoming support set provides information on both the new class and the background class.', '1902.11123-2-27-1': 'It is valuable to utilize both instead of solely imprinting the new class weights.', '1902.11123-2-27-2': 'At the same time, in the case of the previously learnt classes, e.g. background, it is not wise to simply override what the network learned from the large-scale training either.', '1902.11123-2-27-3': 'A good example illustrating the need to update the negative classes is the addition of class boat.', '1902.11123-2-27-4': 'It is obvious that the background class needs to be updated to match the sea background, especially if the classes with sea background are not part of the large scale training dataset.', '1902.11123-2-28-0': 'We propose to update the convolutional layer weights in our model with the masked proxies for a given class using the following exponentially smoothed average adaptive scheme: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-2-28-1': 'Exponential smoothing is used to update the weights following equation [REF] for older classes with the update rate [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-28-2': '[MATH] is the normalized masked proxy for class [MATH], [MATH] is the previously learned 1x1 conovlutional filter at resolution [MATH], while [MATH] is the adapted one.', '1902.11123-2-28-3': 'The update rate can either be treated as a hyper parameter or it can be learned separately according to the input embeddings.', '1902.11123-2-28-4': 'It can also be a learnable scalar value or it can vary according to which neuron is being updated.', '1902.11123-2-28-5': 'Figure [REF] shows our proposed adaptive masked proxies and its use to imprint the weights with each new support set.', '1902.11123-2-28-6': 'The new class weights are imprinted directly while the previously learned classes weights are updated.', '1902.11123-2-29-0': '## Multiresolution Imprinting Scheme', '1902.11123-2-30-0': 'The masked proxies are used as the 1x1 convolutional filters in a skip architecture [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-30-1': 'The final classification layer, and the two 1x1 convolutional layers following dilated convolutions in the case of Dilated-FCN8s are the ones imprinted.', '1902.11123-2-30-2': 'In case of FCN8s that does not utilize dilated convolultion, the imprinted filters are used in the 1x1 convolutional layers following the third and fourth pooling layers.', '1902.11123-2-30-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the the output heatmaps from 1x1 convolution using our proposed proxies as imprinted weights on three different resolution [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-30-4': 'The coarse resolution captures more global information, while the fine resolution provide the details required for an accurate segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-31-0': 'To motivate why we have picked [MATH] to act as proxies for the classes with few labelled samples, we plot the T-SNE [CITATION] embedding for the learned proxies using normalized masked average pooling in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-2-31-1': 'The plot shows the 5 classes belonging to fold 0 in PASCAL-[MATH].', '1902.11123-2-31-2': 'Since our model performs imprinting on multiple resolution levels, the plot visualizes for the 3 different resolution levels.', '1902.11123-2-32-0': '## Continuous Object Segmentation Setup', '1902.11123-2-33-0': 'We formulate another setup for the continuous case in order to assess the effectiveness of providing an adaptive method.', '1902.11123-2-33-1': 'The PASCAL VOC dataset [CITATION] classes are split into [MATH] and [MATH] with 10 classes each, where [MATH] .', '1902.11123-2-33-2': 'The classes belonging to the [MATH] are used to construct the training dataset [MATH] and pre-train the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-2-33-3': 'Unlike the static setting in the few-shot case, the continuous segmentation mode provides the image-label pairs incrementally with different encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-2-33-4': 'Each task introduces two novel classes to learn.', '1902.11123-2-33-5': 'The tasks are in the form of triplets [MATH], where [MATH] represent the overall batch of images and labels from task [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-33-6': 'The batch labels are for the two novel classes belonging to task [MATH], and the previously learned classes in the encountered tasks [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-33-7': 'It follows the class incremental learning scenario as detailed in [CITATION] which is harder than task or domain incremental learning scenarios.', '1902.11123-2-34-0': 'The continuous setup can be a way to assess the use of an adaptive method that is sample efficient.', '1902.11123-2-34-1': 'In each task the model encounters each image-label pair from the current batch only once.', '1902.11123-2-34-2': 'The proposed setup for the continuous mode on PASCAL VOC is called incremental PASCAL (iPASCAL).', '1902.11123-2-35-0': '# Experimental Results', '1902.11123-2-36-0': 'Our proposed method is evaluated on pascal-[MATH] [CITATION] in order to compare with the state of the art.', '1902.11123-2-36-1': 'An ablation study is performed to demonstrate the improvement from multi-resolution imprinting, and adaptive proxies.', '1902.11123-2-36-2': 'The study also compares weight imprinting coupled with back-propagation against back-propagating on randomly generated weights.', '1902.11123-2-36-3': 'In order to demonstrate the benefit of the adaptive method that can incrementally update the weights unlike previous methods we evaluate on iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-2-36-4': 'We further evaluate the proposed method in the online adaptation scenario on DAVIS [CITATION] and FBMS [CITATION] benchmarks.', '1902.11123-2-36-5': 'We use widely accepted metrics such as mean intersection over union (mIoU), precision and recall to evaluate our results [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-36-6': 'Our code will be made publicly available to further benefit the few-shot learning research community.', '1902.11123-2-36-7': 'Extended experiments are further provided in the supplementary material.', '1902.11123-2-37-0': '## Experimental Setup', '1902.11123-2-38-0': 'The setup for pretraining the models to be tested on PASCAL-[MATH] is detailed.', '1902.11123-2-38-1': 'The base network is trained using RMSProp [CITATION] with learning rate [MATH], and L2 regularization with a factor of 5x[MATH] on the 15 classes outside of the current test fold.', '1902.11123-2-38-2': 'In the few-shot evaluation 1000 samples with support and query sets are used, similar to OSLSM setup [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-39-0': 'A hyper-parameter random search is conducted on the [MATH] parameter, number of iterations, and the learning rate.', '1902.11123-2-39-1': 'The search is conducted on 10 classes from the training set and imprinting on the other 5 classes of the training set.', '1902.11123-2-39-2': 'Thus ensuring all the classes used are outside the fold used in the test phase.', '1902.11123-2-39-3': 'The [MATH] parameter selected is 0.26 for the 1 shot and 0.20 for the 5 shot.', '1902.11123-2-39-4': 'In the case of performing fine-tuning, the selected learning rate is 7.6e-5 with 2 iterations.', '1902.11123-2-40-0': '## Few-Shot Segmentation', '1902.11123-2-41-0': 'Table [REF] and Table [REF] show the results for the 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation respectively on PASCAL-[MATH] using mIoU of the foreground class.', '1902.11123-2-41-1': 'Our method is compared to OSLSM [CITATION] and the baseline methods for few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-2-41-2': 'It shows that our method outperforms the baseline fine-tuning [CITATION] method by 7.6% in terms of mIoU, without the need for extra back-propagation iterations through directly using the adaptive masked proxies.', '1902.11123-2-41-3': 'Our method performs on par with OSLSM [CITATION] method in the 1-shot in terms of mean across folds, while it outperforms OSLSM in the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-2-41-4': 'However, unlike OSLSM our method does not need to train an extra branch for predicting the parameters.', '1902.11123-2-41-5': 'This advantage will provide us with the means to use a similar approach with a 2-stream motion and appearance based network as shown in the following section.', '1902.11123-2-42-0': 'Our method outperforms the co-FCN [CITATION] method as shown in Table [REF] by 3.9%.', '1902.11123-2-42-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the qualitative results on PASCAL-[MATH] which shows both the support set image-label pair, and our predicted segmentation for the query image.', '1902.11123-2-42-2': 'It shows that it does not depend on the saliency of the object.', '1902.11123-2-42-3': 'Since in some of the query images multiple potential objects can be categorized as salient, but it rather learns to segment what best matches the proxy.', '1902.11123-2-43-0': 'Table [REF] shows our method in comparison to the state of the art methods in terms of the mean on all folds for 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation with a different evaluation.', '1902.11123-2-43-1': 'The same evaluation utilized by [CITATION] and [CITATION] is used, which computes mIoU as the mean of the foreground and background IoU.', '1902.11123-2-43-2': 'Our proposed method outperforms the baseline FG-BG [CITATION] in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-2-43-3': 'When our method is coupled with two iterations of back-propagation through the last layers solely it outperforms the the state of the art methods in the 5-shot case by 3.6%.', '1902.11123-2-44-0': '## Ablation Study', '1902.11123-2-45-0': 'We perform an ablation study to ensure the effectiveness of our proposed method.', '1902.11123-2-45-1': 'Table [REF] shows the benefit from our proposed method, it outperforms fine-tuning using randomly generated weights with 14%.', '1902.11123-2-45-2': 'It also allows for coupling it with back-propagation to fine-tune the weights, which is ideal for a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-2-45-3': 'Note, that the same learning rate is used for both fine-tuning from random weights versus imprinted weights for fair comparison.', '1902.11123-2-45-4': 'It also shows the benefit from proposing an adaptive method, where no adaptation with [MATH] set to 0, degrades accuracy by 31.3%.', '1902.11123-2-45-5': 'It demonstrates that directly imprinting the weights for the new class solely is not sufficient and has to be coupled with our proposed adaptive scheme.', '1902.11123-2-45-6': 'We also motivate the use of our proposed multi-resolution imprinting.', '1902.11123-2-45-7': 'As shown in Table [REF] it outperforms the method that does not support multi-resolution by 3.2% and 1.4% in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases respectively.', '1902.11123-2-45-8': 'It was reported in OSLSM [CITATION] that the use of higher resolution dilated-FCN8s only improved the results on the 1-shot case but did not affect the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-2-45-9': 'In our approach the results are positively affected by adding multi-resolution support.', '1902.11123-2-45-10': 'Since we are not training the network to predict parameters but we are rather performing multi-resolution imprinting.', '1902.11123-2-46-0': '## Self Adaptation', '1902.11123-2-47-0': 'Our method is evaluated on the DAVIS-2016 benchmark [CITATION], where our base network is a 2-stream Wide ResNet model similar to [CITATION].', '1902.11123-2-47-1': 'In order for the model to adapt the appearance changes that the object undergoes in the video sequence, it is adapted based on the probability maps output from the model.', '1902.11123-2-47-2': 'The [MATH] parameter used during imprinting is set to 0.001, since the model has learned background-foreground segmentation already.', '1902.11123-2-48-0': 'In order to compare with unsupervised methods we do not employ the manual segmentation masks but rather adapt with the output probability maps from the network, which is termed as self adaptation.', '1902.11123-2-48-1': 'Table [REF] shows the mIoU over all the validation set in comparison to the state of the art methods that utilize a motion and appearance based model as well.', '1902.11123-2-48-2': 'Our method when followed with fully connected conditional random fields [CITATION] post processing outperforms the state of the art.', '1902.11123-2-48-3': 'Table [REF] shows our self adaptation on FBMS dataset where it outperforms all methods except for MotAdapt [CITATION] which it is on-par with.', '1902.11123-2-49-0': '## Continuous Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-2-50-0': 'We conducted experiments on iPASCAL, to further demonstrate the benefit of our adaptation method.', '1902.11123-2-50-1': 'Triplets for the task, the corresponding images and semantic labels are provided.', '1902.11123-2-50-2': 'Semantic labels include the new classes in the current and previous encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-2-50-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the comparison between naive fine-tuning from random weights against our proposed multi-resolution imprinting using adaptive masked proxies without any fine-tuning operations in terms of mIoU.', '1902.11123-2-50-4': 'It shows that masked imprinting provides better mIoU in comparison to fine-tuning that will lead to over-fitting.', '1902.11123-2-50-5': 'Fine-tuning was conducted using RMSProp with learning rate [MATH].', '1902.11123-2-50-6': 'Fine-tuning is performed to the last layers responsible for pixel-wise classification, while the feature extraction weights are fixed.', '1902.11123-2-50-7': 'It is worth noting that the current evaluation setting is a [MATH]-way 1-shot, where [MATH] increases with 2 additional classes with each encountered task resulting in 10-way 1-shot evaluation in the last task.', '1902.11123-2-50-8': 'This explains the discrepancy between the mIoU in Table [REF] and Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-2-50-9': 'It demonstrates the fact that [MATH]-way classification is more challenging than 1-way.', '1902.11123-2-51-0': '# Conclusion'}
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[]
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['1902.11123-1-10-4', '1902.11123-1-10-7', '1902.11123-1-10-9', '1902.11123-1-11-4', '1902.11123-1-14-4', '1902.11123-2-4-0', '1902.11123-2-7-1', '1902.11123-2-7-2', '1902.11123-2-7-4', '1902.11123-2-7-6', '1902.11123-2-7-9', '1902.11123-2-11-0', '1902.11123-2-11-3', '1902.11123-2-11-5', '1902.11123-2-14-1', '1902.11123-3-5-0', '1902.11123-3-8-1', '1902.11123-3-8-2', '1902.11123-3-8-4', '1902.11123-3-8-6', '1902.11123-3-8-9', '1902.11123-3-12-0', '1902.11123-3-12-3', '1902.11123-3-12-5', '1902.11123-3-15-1', '1902.11123-3-46-9', '1902.11123-4-28-0', '1902.11123-4-29-0', '1902.11123-5-28-0', '1902.11123-5-29-0']
{'1': 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/', '2': 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/', '3': 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/', '4': 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/', '5': 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.11123
{'1902.11123-3-0-0': '# Introduction', '1902.11123-3-1-0': 'Children are able to adapt their knowledge and learn about their surrounding environment with limited samples [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-1-1': 'One of the main bottlenecks in the current deep learning methods is their requirement to train on large-scale data.', '1902.11123-3-1-2': 'However, it is intractable to collect one large-scale dataset that contains all the required object classes for different environments, especially in robotics.', '1902.11123-3-1-3': 'That motivated the emergence of few-shot learning methods [CITATION] [CITATION][CITATION] that was initially focused on image classification.', '1902.11123-3-2-0': 'The earliest attempt to few-shot segmentation was based on learning a parameter predictor [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-2-1': 'A conditional network method was proposed in another work [CITATION] based on sparse or dense labels to guide the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-3-2-2': 'More recently, a method that inspires from prototypical networks [CITATION] has been proposed [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-2-3': 'The previous methods require the training of an additional branch to guide the backbone segmentation network.', '1902.11123-3-2-4': 'On top of that, existing approaches cannot be trivially extended to handle a continuous stream of data containing annotations for both novel and previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-3-2-5': 'Lately, a similarity guided network has been proposed as a concurrent work [CITATION] to ours.', '1902.11123-3-2-6': 'Nonetheless, the method is still incapable of adapting to a continuous stream of data.', '1902.11123-3-3-0': 'In this paper, we propose a novel multi-resolution imprinting of adaptive masked proxies as a sample efficient method to construct new classes weights as shown in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-3-3-1': 'A normalized average pooling layer is utilized on the output feature maps masked with the segmentation label provided in the support set to output what we denote as proxies [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-3-2': 'Proxies act as a representative signature for each class.', '1902.11123-3-3-3': 'Based on the relation between metric learning and softmax classification, the computed proxies are used to set the 1x1 convolutional filters for the new classes which is known as weight imprinting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-3-4': 'Multi-resolution weight imprinting is proposed to improve the segmentation accuracy of our method.', '1902.11123-3-3-5': 'We propose further to adapt the previously learned classes weights with the proxies specific to these classes.', '1902.11123-3-3-6': 'Since imprinting only the weights for the positive class, i.e. the newly added class, is insufficient as new samples will incorporate new information about other classes as well.', '1902.11123-3-3-7': 'For example, learning new class for boat will also entail learning new information about the background class which should include sea.', '1902.11123-3-3-8': 'To address this, a novel method for updating the weights of the previously learned classes without back-propagation is proposed.', '1902.11123-3-3-9': 'This opens the door toward leveraging segmentation networks to continually learn semantic segmentation in a sample efficient manner.', '1902.11123-3-4-0': 'Our main inspiration is from classical approaches in learning adaptive correlation filters [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-4-1': 'Correlation filters date back to 1980s [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-4-2': 'A fast object tracking method based on adaptive correlation filters was proposed [CITATION], where hand crafted features were used to form the correlation filters and adapted using a running average.', '1902.11123-3-4-3': 'It inspired our work to adapt the previously learned weights as detailed further in section [REF].', '1902.11123-3-4-4': 'Our method is shown to provide sample efficiency in three scenarios: (1) few-shot semantic segmentation, (2) video object segmentation and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-4-5': 'Unlike previous methods, our approach can easily operate with any pre-trained network without the need to train a second branch which entails fewer number of parameters.', '1902.11123-3-4-6': 'We show in video object segmentation that it can be used with a 2-stream motion and appearance network without any additional branch for learning guidance.', '1902.11123-3-4-7': 'Our method is flexible and still allows to be coupled with back-propagation using the support image-label pair.', '1902.11123-3-4-8': 'The proxy weight imprinting steps can be interleaved with the back-propagation steps to boost the adaptation process.', '1902.11123-3-4-9': 'Our proposed method is evaluated on PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION], DAVIS benchmark [CITATION], FBMS [CITATION] and our proposed iPASCAL setup.', '1902.11123-3-5-0': 'The contributions of this paper are as follows:', '1902.11123-3-6-0': '# Related Work', '1902.11123-3-7-0': '## Few-shot Learning', '1902.11123-3-8-0': 'One of the earliest attempts toward few-shot learning was using a Bayesian approach by Fei et.', '1902.11123-3-8-1': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-8-2': 'Vinyals et.', '1902.11123-3-8-3': 'al. proposed matching networks that learns an end-to-end differentiable nearest neighbour [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-8-4': 'Snell et.', '1902.11123-3-8-5': 'al. proposed prototypical networks based on the assumption that, there exist an embedding space in which points belonging to one class, cluster around their corresponding prototype [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-8-6': 'Qiao et.', '1902.11123-3-8-7': 'al. proposed a parameter predictor method based on the activations learned during large-scale training [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-8-8': 'Finally, a method for computing imprinted weights was proposed by Qi et.', '1902.11123-3-8-9': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-9-0': 'In few-shot learning, the model is provided with a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-3-9-1': 'The support set contains the few labelled samples that can be used to train the model, while the query image is used to test the final model.', '1902.11123-3-9-2': 'The setup is formulated as [MATH] shot [MATH] way, where [MATH] denotes the number of samples in the support set, while [MATH] denotes the number of classes to classify among.', '1902.11123-3-10-0': '## Few-shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-3-11-0': 'Few-shot segmentation requires the model to provide pixel-wise classification for the query image unlike classification.', '1902.11123-3-11-1': 'The current dataset used in the literature to evaluate few-shot segmentation is PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-11-2': 'The dataset is sub-divided into 4 folds each containing 5 classes.', '1902.11123-3-11-3': 'A fold contains labelled samples from 5 classes that are used for evaluating the few-shot learning method.', '1902.11123-3-11-4': 'While the rest 15 classes are used to train the model.', '1902.11123-3-11-5': 'The baselines that were proposed by Shaban et.', '1902.11123-3-11-6': 'al. [CITATION] included nearest neighbour, logistic regression, siamese network, and naive fine-tuning.', '1902.11123-3-12-0': 'Shaban et.', '1902.11123-3-12-1': 'al. proposed a 2-branch method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-12-2': 'In this method, the second branch predicts the parameters for the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-3-12-3': 'Rakelly et.', '1902.11123-3-12-4': 'al. proposed another 2-branch method where the second branch acts as a conditioning branch instead [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-12-5': 'Finally, Dong et.', '1902.11123-3-12-6': 'al. inspiring from prototypical networks, designed a method to learn prototypes for the few-shot segmentation problem [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-12-7': 'It proposed a 2-branch architecture as well, where the second branch is responsible for learning prototypes.', '1902.11123-3-12-8': 'In a concurrent work to ours, Zhang et.', '1902.11123-3-12-9': 'al proposed a single branch network that uses guidance features based on masked average pooling layer [CITATION], but it does not adapt to a continuous stream of data.', '1902.11123-3-12-10': 'We propose to set the convolutional filters directly to our proposed adaptive masked proxies, which enables further adaptation with a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-3-12-11': 'Clearly, most of the previously proposed methods require an extra branch trained in a simulated few-shot setting.', '1902.11123-3-12-12': 'The above methods cannot be trivially extended to continue adaptation whilst processing a continuous stream of data with multiple classes.', '1902.11123-3-13-0': '# Proposed Method', '1902.11123-3-14-0': '## Few-shot Problem Setup', '1902.11123-3-15-0': 'We use a setup similar to Shaban et.', '1902.11123-3-15-1': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-15-2': 'The training procedure consists of two steps.', '1902.11123-3-15-3': 'The initial training phase relies on a large scale dataset [MATH] including semantic label maps for classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-15-4': 'During the test phase, a support set is sampled that is labelled with novel classes in [MATH], where [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-15-5': 'The support set contains pairs [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] image in the set and [MATH] is the corresponding binary mask.', '1902.11123-3-15-6': 'The binary mask [MATH] is constructed with novel class [MATH] labelled as foreground while the rest of the pixels are considered background.', '1902.11123-3-15-7': 'While [MATH] indicates the number of images provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-3-15-8': 'A query image is randomly sampled from the test set in a similar fashion to the support set.', '1902.11123-3-15-9': 'It is worth noting that during training only images that include at least one pixel belonging to [MATH] are included in [MATH] for large-scale training.', '1902.11123-3-15-10': 'If some images have pixels labelled as classes belonging to [MATH] they are ignored and not used in the back-propagation.', '1902.11123-3-15-11': 'Our model does not need to be trained in the few-shot regime by sampling a support set and a query image, but is rather trained in a normal fashion with image-label pairs.', '1902.11123-3-16-0': '## Base Network', '1902.11123-3-17-0': 'The backbone architecture used in our segmentation network is a VGG-16 [CITATION] that is pre-trained on ImageNet [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-17-1': 'Similar to the FCN8s architecture [CITATION] skip connections are used to benefit from higher resolution feature maps, and a 1x1 convolution layers are used to map from the feature space to the label space.', '1902.11123-3-17-2': 'However, unlike FCN8s we solely utilize bilinear interpolation layers with fixed weights for the upsampling.', '1902.11123-3-17-3': 'The main reason behind that choice, is that it is hard to imprint the weights for the transposed convolution layers based on the support set.', '1902.11123-3-18-0': 'An extension to the above base network uses dilated convolution [CITATION] and called Dilated-FCN8s.', '1902.11123-3-18-1': 'The last two pooling layers are replaced by dilated convolution with dilation factors 2 and 4 respectively.', '1902.11123-3-18-2': 'Thus, increasing the receptive field without affecting the resolution and improving the segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-3-18-3': 'Finally, a more compact version of the network with two final convolutional layers removed is denoted as Reduced-DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-3-19-0': 'Another baseline network is used in the video object segmentation which is a 2-stream wide-resnet [CITATION] architecture.', '1902.11123-3-19-1': 'Where each stream has 11 residual blocks followed by multiplying the output activation from both motion and appearance.', '1902.11123-3-19-2': 'The motion is presented to the model as optical flow based on Liu et.', '1902.11123-3-19-3': 'al. method [CITATION] and converted to RGB using a color wheel.', '1902.11123-3-19-4': 'The flexibility of our method enables it to work with different architectures without the overhead of designing another branch to provide guidance, predicted parameters or prototypes.', '1902.11123-3-20-0': '## Weight Imprinting', '1902.11123-3-21-0': 'The relation between metric learning and softmax classification has been investigated in [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-21-1': 'A proxy-NCA loss [CITATION] was reformulated as a softmax cross-entropy loss based on the equivalence between minimizing the euclidean distance and maximizing dot product of normalized vectors.', '1902.11123-3-21-2': 'It motivated the use of the output proxies for each class as the weights of the final fully connected layer for image classification, which is known as weight imprinting.', '1902.11123-3-21-3': 'Since 1x1 convolutional layers are equivalent to fully connected layers, we propose to utilize proxies to imprint the 1x1 convolutional filters of the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-3-21-4': 'The imprinted convolution weights form a signature for each class.', '1902.11123-3-21-5': 'When convolved with the query image, the proxy activates pixels maximally similar to that class signature.', '1902.11123-3-22-0': 'However, it is not trivial to perform weight imprinting in semantic segmentation, unlike in classification.', '1902.11123-3-22-1': 'First, in the classification setup the output embedding vector corresponds to a single class and hence can be used directly for imprinting.', '1902.11123-3-22-2': 'In contrast to that, segmentation network outputs 3D embeddings, which incorporate features for a multitude of different classes, both novel and previously learned.', '1902.11123-3-22-3': 'Second, in the classification scenario resolution aspect is not present, while in the segmentation scenario multi-resolution support is necessary to ensure the final segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-3-23-0': 'We propose the following novel architectural components to address the challenges outlined above.', '1902.11123-3-23-1': 'First, in Section [REF] and in Section [REF] we propose the proxy masking and adaptation methods to handle multi-class segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-23-2': 'Second, in Section [REF] we propose a multi-resolution weight imprinting scheme to maintain the segmentation accuracy during imprinting.', '1902.11123-3-23-3': 'The significant contribution of each method to the overall accuracy is further motivated experimentally in section [REF].', '1902.11123-3-24-0': '## Normalized Masked Average Pooling', '1902.11123-3-25-0': 'In order to build the proxies and incorporate the pixels that belong mainly to the novel class, masked feature maps with the labels provided in the support set are used.', '1902.11123-3-25-1': 'Initially, the feature maps are bilinearly upsampled before performing masking.', '1902.11123-3-25-2': 'This is followed by average pooling per channel, then normalization as follows: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-3-25-3': 'Here [MATH] is a binary mask for [MATH] image with the novel class [MATH], [MATH] is the corresponding output feature maps for [MATH] image and [MATH] resolution.', '1902.11123-3-25-4': '[MATH] is the set of all possible spatial locations and [MATH] is the number of pixels that are labelled as foreground for class [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-25-5': 'The normalized output from the masked average pooling layer [MATH] can be further used as proxies representing class [MATH] and resolution [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-25-6': 'In the case of a novel class the proxy can be utilized directly as the weight filter.', '1902.11123-3-25-7': 'An average of all the masked pooling features for the [MATH]-shot samples provided in the support set is used.', '1902.11123-3-26-0': 'We denote this layer as a normalized masked average pooling as shown in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-3-26-1': 'A similar layer is developed in a concurrent work [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-26-2': 'It uses the output to compute a guidance to the network, while our method uses the output proxy to imprint the 1x1 convolutional layer weights.', '1902.11123-3-26-3': 'This is the reason we use normalization.', '1902.11123-3-26-4': 'The advantage of our approach is that it allows to adapt the imprinted weights when faced with a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-3-26-5': 'Additionally, it can be coupled with back-propagation to improve the output segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-27-0': '## Adaptive Proxies', '1902.11123-3-28-0': 'Each incoming support set provides information on both the new class and the previously learned class.', '1902.11123-3-28-1': 'It is valuable to utilize both instead of solely imprinting the new class weights.', '1902.11123-3-28-2': 'At the same time, in the case of the previously learned classes, e.g. background, it is not wise to simply override what the network learned from the large-scale training either.', '1902.11123-3-28-3': 'A good example illustrating the need to update the negative classes is the addition of class boat.', '1902.11123-3-28-4': 'It is obvious that the background class needs to be updated to match the sea background, especially if the image with sea background are not part of the large scale training dataset.', '1902.11123-3-29-0': 'We propose to update the convolutional layer weights in our model with the masked proxies for a given class using the following exponentially smoothed average adaptive scheme: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-3-29-1': 'Exponential smoothing is used to update the weights following equation [REF] for older classes with the update rate [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-29-2': '[MATH] is the normalized masked proxy for class [MATH], [MATH] is the previously learned 1x1 convolutional filter at resolution [MATH], while [MATH] is the adapted one.', '1902.11123-3-29-3': 'The update rate can either be treated as a hyper parameter or it can be learned separately according to the input embeddings.', '1902.11123-3-29-4': 'It can also be a learnable scalar value or it can vary according to which neuron is being updated.', '1902.11123-3-29-5': 'Figure [REF] shows our proposed adaptive masked proxies and its use to imprint the weights with each new support set.', '1902.11123-3-29-6': 'The new class weights are imprinted directly while the previously learned classes weights are updated.', '1902.11123-3-29-7': 'During the few-shot setup the support set contains segmentation masks for the new class foreground and background.', '1902.11123-3-29-8': 'Thus, the adaptation process is performed on the background class weights solely in the few-shot setup.', '1902.11123-3-29-9': 'As for the continuous setup, the support set contains all the classes learned up to the current task.', '1902.11123-3-29-10': 'Thus, we adapt the classes weights learned in all the previous tasks.', '1902.11123-3-30-0': '## Multiresolution Imprinting Scheme', '1902.11123-3-31-0': 'The adaptive masked proxies are used as the 1x1 convolutional filters in a skip architecture [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-31-1': 'The final classification layer, and the two 1x1 convolutional layers following dilated convolutions in the case of Dilated-FCN8s are the ones imprinted.', '1902.11123-3-31-2': 'In case of FCN8s that does not utilize dilated convolution, the imprinted filters are used in the 1x1 convolutional layers following the third and fourth pooling layers.', '1902.11123-3-31-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the the output heatmaps from 1x1 convolution using our proposed proxies as imprinted weights on three different resolution [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-31-4': 'It shows that the coarse resolution captures blobs necessary for global alignment, while the fine resolution provides the granular details required for an accurate segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-32-0': 'To motivate why we have picked [MATH] to act as proxies for the classes with few labelled samples, we plot the T-SNE [CITATION] embedding for the learned proxies using normalized masked average pooling in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-3-32-1': 'The plot shows the 5 classes belonging to fold 0 in PASCAL-[MATH].', '1902.11123-3-32-2': 'Since our model performs imprinting on multiple resolution levels, the plot visualizes for the 3 different resolution levels.', '1902.11123-3-32-3': 'It also shows that better clustering happens in the intermediate layer, which confirms previous findings in a different problem setting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-33-0': '## Continuous Object Segmentation Setup', '1902.11123-3-34-0': 'In order to assess further the adaptive method we formulate another setup for the continuous case.', '1902.11123-3-34-1': 'The PASCAL VOC dataset [CITATION] classes are split into [MATH] and [MATH] with 10 classes each, where [MATH] .', '1902.11123-3-34-2': 'The classes belonging to the [MATH] are used to construct the training dataset [MATH] and pre-train the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-3-34-3': 'Unlike the static setting in the few-shot case, the continuous segmentation mode provides the image-label pairs incrementally with different encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-3-34-4': 'The tasks are in the form of triplets [MATH], where [MATH] represent the overall batch of images and labels from task [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-34-5': 'Each task [MATH] introduces two novel classes to learn in its batch.', '1902.11123-3-34-6': 'That batch contains samples with at least one pixel belonging to these two novel classes.', '1902.11123-3-34-7': 'The labels per task [MATH] include the two novel classes belonging to that task, and the previously learned classes in the encountered tasks [MATH].', '1902.11123-3-35-0': 'Our setup follows the class incremental learning scenario as detailed in [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-35-1': 'The continuous setup can be a way to assess the use of an adaptive method that is sample efficient.', '1902.11123-3-35-2': 'A single pass on the batch for each task is performed to better assess the sample efficiency.', '1902.11123-3-35-3': 'We call the proposed setup for the continuous mode on PASCAL VOC, incremental PASCAL (iPASCAL).', '1902.11123-3-36-0': '# Experimental Results', '1902.11123-3-37-0': "Our proposed method's sample efficiency is evaluated in three different scenarios: (1) few-shot segmentation, (2) video object segmentation, and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.", '1902.11123-3-37-1': 'In the few-shot segmentation scenario our method is evaluated on pascal-[MATH] [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-37-2': 'An ablation study is performed to demonstrate the improvement from multi-resolution imprinting, and adaptive proxies.', '1902.11123-3-37-3': 'The study also compares weight imprinting coupled with back-propagation against back-propagating on randomly generated weights.', '1902.11123-3-37-4': 'In order to demonstrate the benefit of the adaptive method that can incrementally update the weights unlike previous methods we evaluate on iPASCAL for continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-37-5': 'We further evaluate the proposed method in the online adaptation scenario on DAVIS [CITATION] and FBMS [CITATION] benchmarks for video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-37-6': 'We use mean intersection over union (mIoU) similar to [CITATION], where per-class IoU is computed and the mIoU denotes the average of the classes IoU per fold.', '1902.11123-3-37-7': 'Our code is made publicly available to further benefit the few-shot learning research community.', '1902.11123-3-37-8': 'Our code base has benefited from the semantic segmentation work [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-38-0': '## Experimental Setup', '1902.11123-3-39-0': 'The setup for pretraining the models to be tested on PASCAL-[MATH] is detailed.', '1902.11123-3-39-1': 'The base network is trained using RMSProp [CITATION] with learning rate [MATH], and L2 regularization with a factor of 5x[MATH] on the 15 classes outside of the current test fold.', '1902.11123-3-39-2': 'In the few-shot evaluation 1000 samples with support and query sets are used, similar to OSLSM setup [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-40-0': 'A hyper-parameter random search is conducted on the [MATH] parameter, number of iterations, and the learning rate.', '1902.11123-3-40-1': 'The search is conducted on 10 classes from the training set and imprinting on the other 5 classes of the training set.', '1902.11123-3-40-2': 'Thus ensuring all the classes used are outside the fold used in the test phase.', '1902.11123-3-40-3': 'The [MATH] parameter selected is 0.26.', '1902.11123-3-40-4': 'In the case of performing fine-tuning, the selected learning rate is 7.6x[MATH] with 2 iterations.', '1902.11123-3-41-0': '## Few-Shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-3-42-0': 'Table [REF] and Table [REF] show the results for the 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation respectively on PASCAL-[MATH] using mIoU of the foreground class.', '1902.11123-3-42-1': 'Our method is compared to OSLSM [CITATION] and the baseline methods for few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-42-2': 'It shows that our method outperforms the baseline fine-tuning [CITATION] method by 8.2% in terms of mIoU, without the need for extra back-propagation iterations through directly using the adaptive masked proxies.', '1902.11123-3-42-3': 'Our method out-performs OSLSM [CITATION] method in the 1-shot and the 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-3-42-4': 'However, unlike OSLSM our method does not need to train an extra branch for predicting the parameters.', '1902.11123-3-42-5': 'This advantage will provide us with the means to use a similar approach with a 2-stream motion and appearance based network as shown in the following section.', '1902.11123-3-43-0': 'Our method outperforms the co-FCN [CITATION] method as shown in Table [REF] by 7.0%.', '1902.11123-3-43-1': 'Figure [REF] shows the qualitative results on PASCAL-[MATH] which shows both the support set image-label pair, and our predicted segmentation for the query image.', '1902.11123-3-43-2': 'It shows that it does not depend on the saliency of the object.', '1902.11123-3-43-3': 'Since in some of the query images multiple potential objects can be categorized as salient, but it rather learns to segment what best matches the proxy.', '1902.11123-3-44-0': 'Table [REF] shows our method in comparison to the state of the art methods in terms of the mean on all folds for 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation with a different evaluation.', '1902.11123-3-44-1': 'The same evaluation utilized by [CITATION] and [CITATION] is used, which computes mIoU as the mean of the foreground and background IoU.', '1902.11123-3-44-2': 'Our proposed method outperforms the baseline FG-BG [CITATION] in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-3-44-3': 'When our method is coupled with two iterations of back-propagation through the last layers solely it outperforms the the state of the art methods in the 5-shot case by 3.6%.', '1902.11123-3-45-0': '## Ablation Study', '1902.11123-3-46-0': 'We perform an ablation study to ensure the effectiveness of different components in our proposed method.', '1902.11123-3-46-1': 'Table [REF] shows the benefit from our proposed method, it outperforms fine-tuning using randomly generated weights with 11.7%.', '1902.11123-3-46-2': 'It also allows for coupling it with back-propagation to fine-tune the weights, which is ideal for a continuous data stream.', '1902.11123-3-46-3': 'Note, that the same learning rate is used for both fine-tuning from random weights versus imprinted weights for fair comparison.', '1902.11123-3-46-4': 'It also shows the benefit from proposing an adaptive method, where no adaptation with [MATH] set to 0, degrades accuracy by 23.1%.', '1902.11123-3-46-5': 'It demonstrates that directly imprinting the weights for the new class solely is not sufficient and has to be coupled with our proposed adaptive scheme.', '1902.11123-3-46-6': 'We also motivate the use of our proposed multi-resolution imprinting.', '1902.11123-3-46-7': 'As shown in Table [REF] it outperforms the method that does not support multi-resolution.', '1902.11123-3-46-8': 'Results in Table [REF] for our final method corresponds to the evaluation method and results provided in Table [REF] and Table [REF] on fold 0 following Shaban et.', '1902.11123-3-46-9': 'al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-47-0': '## Video Object Segmentation', '1902.11123-3-48-0': 'In order to assess the adaptive method we start by experiments to adapt 2-stream segmentation networks based on pseudo-labels to perform video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-3-48-1': 'We evaluate on the DAVIS-2016 benchmark [CITATION], where our base network is a 2-stream Wide ResNet model similar to [CITATION].', '1902.11123-3-48-2': 'In order for the model to adapt the appearance changes that the object undergoes in the video sequence, it is adapted based on the probability maps output from the model which we call self adaptation.', '1902.11123-3-48-3': 'The [MATH] parameter used during imprinting is set to 0.001, since the model has learned background-foreground segmentation already.', '1902.11123-3-49-0': 'We do not employ the manual segmentation masks but rather adapt with the output probability maps from the network, so we compare with unsupervised methods.', '1902.11123-3-49-1': 'Table [REF] shows the mIoU over all the validation set in comparison to the state of the art methods that utilize a motion and appearance based model as well.', '1902.11123-3-49-2': 'Our method when followed with fully connected conditional random fields [CITATION] post processing outperforms the state of the art.', '1902.11123-3-49-3': 'Table [REF] shows our self adaptation on FBMS dataset where it outperforms all methods except for MotAdapt [CITATION] which it is on-par with.', '1902.11123-3-49-4': 'One of the drawbacks of our method is its inability to operate with high dilation rates since it relies on masked proxies which can lead to interference between background and foreground features.', '1902.11123-3-49-5': 'Another drawback for our method it might face failures in segmenting a specific instance, since it uses a proxy per class that generalizes among different instances.', '1902.11123-3-50-0': '## Continuous Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-3-51-0': 'We conducted experiments on iPASCAL, to further demonstrate the benefit of our adaptation method.', '1902.11123-3-51-1': 'Triplets for the task, the corresponding images and semantic labels are provided.', '1902.11123-3-51-2': 'Semantic labels include the new classes in the current and previous encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-3-51-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the comparison between naive fine-tuning from random weights against our proposed multi-resolution imprinting using adaptive masked proxies without any fine-tuning operations in terms of mIoU.', '1902.11123-3-51-4': 'It shows that masked imprinting provides better mIoU in comparison to fine-tuning that will lead to over-fitting.', '1902.11123-3-51-5': 'Fine-tuning was conducted using RMSProp with the best learning rate from the 1-shot setup 9.06x[MATH] .', '1902.11123-3-51-6': 'Fine-tuning is performed to the last layers responsible for pixel-wise classification, while the feature extraction weights are fixed.', '1902.11123-3-51-7': 'Since we are focusing on improving sample efficiency by imprinting the weights of the final layer, therefore we perform the fine-tuning on the final weights.', '1902.11123-3-52-0': 'It is worth noting that the current evaluation setting is a [MATH]-way where [MATH] increases with 2 additional classes with each encountered task resulting in 10-way evaluation in the last task.', '1902.11123-3-52-1': 'This explains the discrepancy between the mIoU in Table [REF] and Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-3-52-2': 'It demonstrates the fact that [MATH]-way classification is more challenging than 1-way.', '1902.11123-3-52-3': 'The reason that mIoU changes from one task to another as in Figure [REF] is partly due to the change in the average size of the segmentation mask with respect to the image size.', '1902.11123-3-52-4': 'It decreases in task 2 then increases in task 3.', '1902.11123-3-52-5': 'Thus task 2 is more difficult, since smaller objects are harder to segment.', '1902.11123-3-52-6': 'The reported mIoU is reported per task on all the classes learned up to the current task.', '1902.11123-3-53-0': '# Conclusion'}
{'1902.11123-4-0-0': '# Introduction', '1902.11123-4-1-0': 'Children are able to adapt their knowledge and learn about their surrounding environment with limited samples [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-1-1': 'One of the main bottlenecks in the current deep learning methods is their dependency on the large-scale training data.', '1902.11123-4-1-2': 'However, it is intractable to collect one large-scale dataset that contains all the required object classes for different environments.', '1902.11123-4-1-3': 'This motivated the emergence of few-shot learning methods [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-1-4': 'These early works were primarily focused on solving few-shot image classification tasks, where a support set consists of a few images and their class labels.', '1902.11123-4-1-5': 'The earliest attempt to solve the few-shot segmentation task seems to be the approach proposed by Shaban et al. [CITATION] that predicts the parameters of the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-4-1-6': 'This and other previous methods require the training of an additional branch to guide the backbone segmentation network.', '1902.11123-4-1-7': 'The additional network introduces extra computational burden.', '1902.11123-4-1-8': 'On top of that, existing approaches cannot be trivially extended to handle the continuous stream of data containing annotations for both novel and previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-4-2-0': 'To address these shortcomings, we propose a novel sample efficient adaptive masked proxies method, which we call AMP.', '1902.11123-4-2-1': 'It constructs weights of the final segmentation layer via multi-resolution imprinting.', '1902.11123-4-2-2': 'AMP does not rely on a second guidance branch, as shown in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-4-2-3': 'Following the terminology of [CITATION], a proxy is a representative signature of a given class.', '1902.11123-4-2-4': 'In the few-shot segmentation setup, the support set contains pixel-wise class labels for each support image.', '1902.11123-4-2-5': 'Therefore, the response of the backbone fully convolutional network (FCN) to a set of images from a given class in the support set can be masked by segmentation labels and then average pooled to create a proxy for this class.', '1902.11123-4-2-6': 'This forms what we call a normalized masked average pooling layer (NMAP in Fig. [REF]).', '1902.11123-4-2-7': 'The computed proxies are used to set the 1x1 convolutional filters for the new classes, forming the process known as weight imprinting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-2-8': 'Multi-resolution weight imprinting is proposed to improve the segmentation accuracy of our method.', '1902.11123-4-3-0': 'We further consider the continual learning setup in which a few-shot algorithm may be presented with a sequence of support sets (continuous semantic segmentation scenario).', '1902.11123-4-3-1': 'In connection with this scenario, we propose to adapt the previously learned class weights with the new proxies from each incoming support set.', '1902.11123-4-3-2': 'Imprinting only the weights for the positive class, i.e. the newly added class, is insufficient as new samples will incorporate new information about other classes as well.', '1902.11123-4-3-3': 'For example, learning a new class for boat will also entail learning new information about the background class, which should include sea.', '1902.11123-4-3-4': 'To address this, a novel method for updating the weights of the previously learned classes without back-propagation is proposed.', '1902.11123-4-3-5': 'The adaptation part of our method is inspired by the classical approaches in learning adaptive correlation filters [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-3-6': 'Correlation filters date back to 1980s [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-3-7': 'More recently, the fast object tracking method [CITATION] relied on hand crafted features to form the correlation filters and adapted them using a running average.', '1902.11123-4-3-8': 'In our method the adaptation of the previously learned weights is based on a similar approach, yielding the ability to process the continuous stream of data containing novel and existing classes.', '1902.11123-4-3-9': 'This opens the door toward leveraging segmentation networks to continually learn semantic segmentation in a sample efficient manner.', '1902.11123-4-4-0': 'To sum up, AMP is shown to provide sample efficiency in three scenarios: (1) few-shot semantic segmentation, (2) video object segmentation and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-4-1': 'Unlike previous methods, AMP can easily operate with any pre-trained network without the need to train a second branch, which entails fewer parameters.', '1902.11123-4-4-2': 'In the video object segmentation scenario we show that our method can be used with a 2-stream motion and appearance network without any additional guidance branch.', '1902.11123-4-4-3': 'AMP is flexible and still allows coupling with back-propagation using the support image-label pair.', '1902.11123-4-4-4': 'The proxy weight imprinting steps can be interleaved with the back-propagation steps to boost the adaptation process.', '1902.11123-4-4-5': 'AMP is evaluated on PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION], DAVIS benchmark [CITATION], FBMS [CITATION] and our proposed iPASCAL setup.', '1902.11123-4-4-6': 'The novel contributions of this paper can be summarized as follows.', '1902.11123-4-5-0': '# Related Work', '1902.11123-4-6-0': '## Few-shot Classification', '1902.11123-4-7-0': 'In few-shot classification, the model is provided with a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-4-7-1': 'The support set contains a few labelled samples that can be used to train the model, while the query image is used to test the final model.', '1902.11123-4-7-2': 'The setup is formulated as [MATH]-shot [MATH]-way, where [MATH] denotes the number of samples per class, while [MATH] denotes the number of classes in the support set.', '1902.11123-4-7-3': 'An early approach to solve the few-shot learning problem relied on Bayesian methodology [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-7-4': 'More recently, Vinyals et al. proposed matching networks approach that learns an end-to-end differentiable nearest neighbour [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-7-5': 'Following that, Snell et al. proposed prototypical networks based on the assumption that there exists an embedding space in which points belonging to one class cluster around their corresponding centroid [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-7-6': 'Qiao et al. proposed a parameter predictor method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-7-7': 'Finally, a method for computing imprinted weights was proposed by Qi et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-8-0': '## Few-shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-4-9-0': 'Unlike the classification scenario that assumes the availability of image level class labels, the few-shot segmentation relies on pixel-wise class labels for support images.', '1902.11123-4-9-1': 'A popular dataset used to evaluate few-shot segmentation is PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-9-2': 'The dataset is sub-divided into 4 folds each containing 5 classes.', '1902.11123-4-9-3': 'A fold contains labelled samples from 5 classes that are used for evaluating the few-shot learning method.', '1902.11123-4-9-4': 'The rest 15 classes are used for training.', '1902.11123-4-9-5': 'Shaban et al. proposed a 2-branch method [CITATION], where the second branch predicts the parameters for the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-4-9-6': 'The baselines proposed by Shaban et al. [CITATION] included nearest neighbour, siamese network, and naive fine-tuning.', '1902.11123-4-9-7': 'Rakelly et al. proposed a 2-branch method where the second branch acts as a conditioning branch instead [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-9-8': 'Finally, Dong et al. inspired from prototypical networks, designed another 2-branch method to learn prototypes for the few-shot segmentation problem [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-9-9': 'Clearly, most of the previously proposed methods require an extra branch trained in a simulated few-shot setting.', '1902.11123-4-9-10': 'They cannot be trivially extended to continue adaptation whilst processing a continuous stream of data with multiple classes.', '1902.11123-4-10-0': 'In a concurrent work, Zhang et al. [CITATION] proposed a single branch network deriving guidance features from masked average pooling layer.', '1902.11123-4-10-1': 'This is similar to our NMAP layer.', '1902.11123-4-10-2': 'Zhang et al. [CITATION] use the output of their pooling layer to compute a guidance to the base network.', '1902.11123-4-10-3': 'AMP uses NMAP output to imprint the 1x1 convolutional layer weights.', '1902.11123-4-10-4': 'AMP has the following advantages: (i) it allows the adaptation of imprinted weights in continuous data stream, (ii) it can be seamlessly coupled with any pre-trained networks, including 2-stream networks for video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-11-0': '# AMP: Adaptive Masked Proxies', '1902.11123-4-12-0': 'Our approach, which we call AMP, is rooted deeply in the concept of weight imprinting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-12-1': 'The imprinting process was initially proposed in the context of classification [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-12-2': 'The method used the normalized responses of the base feature extractor as weights of the final fully connected layer.', '1902.11123-4-12-3': 'In this context, the normalized response of the feature extractor for a given class is called a proxy.', '1902.11123-4-12-4': 'The justification behind such learning scheme is based on the relation between metric learning, proxy-NCA loss and softmax cross-entropy loss [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-12-5': '1x1 convolutional layers are equivalent to fully connected layers.', '1902.11123-4-12-6': 'Hence we propose to utilize base segmentation network activations as proxies to imprint the 1x1 convolutional filters of the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-4-12-7': 'When convolved with the query image, the imprinted proxy activates pixels maximally similar to its class signature.', '1902.11123-4-13-0': 'However, it is not trivial to perform weight imprinting in semantic segmentation, unlike in classification.', '1902.11123-4-13-1': 'First, in the classification setup the output embedding vector corresponds to a single class and hence can be used directly for imprinting.', '1902.11123-4-13-2': 'By contrast, a segmentation network outputs 3D embeddings, which incorporate features for a multitude of different classes, both novel and previously learned.', '1902.11123-4-13-3': 'Second, unlike classification, multi-resolution support is essential in segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-14-0': 'We propose the following novel architectural components to address the challenges outlined above.', '1902.11123-4-14-1': 'First, in Section [REF] and in Section [REF] we propose the proxy masking and adaptation methods to handle multi-class segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-14-2': 'Second, in Section [REF] we propose a multi-resolution weight imprinting scheme to maintain the segmentation accuracy during imprinting.', '1902.11123-4-14-3': 'The contribution of each method to the overall accuracy is further motivated experimentally in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-4-15-0': '## Normalized Masked Average Pooling', '1902.11123-4-16-0': 'We propose to address the problem of imprinting the 3D segmentation base network embeddings that contain responses from multiple classes in a single image by masking the embeddings prior to averaging and normalization.', '1902.11123-4-16-1': 'We encapsulate this function in a NMAP layer (refer to Figures [REF] and [REF]).', '1902.11123-4-16-2': 'To construct a proxy for one target class, the NMAP layer bilinearly upsamples segmentation base network outputs and masks them via the pixel-wise labels for the target class available in the support set.', '1902.11123-4-16-3': 'This is followed by average pooling and normalization as follows: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-4-16-4': 'Here [MATH] is a binary mask for [MATH] image with the novel class [MATH], [MATH] is the corresponding output feature maps for [MATH] image and [MATH] resolution.', '1902.11123-4-16-5': '[MATH] is the set of all possible spatial locations and [MATH] is the number of pixels that are labelled as foreground for class [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-16-6': 'The normalized output from the masked average pooling layer [MATH] can be further used as proxies representing class [MATH] and resolution [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-16-7': 'In the case of a novel class the proxy can be utilized directly as filter weights.', '1902.11123-4-16-8': 'In the case of few-shot learning, the average of all the NMAP processed features for the samples provided in the support set for a given class is used as its proxy.', '1902.11123-4-17-0': '## Adaptive Proxies', '1902.11123-4-18-0': 'The NMAP layer solves the problem of processing a single support set.', '1902.11123-4-18-1': 'However, in practice many of the applications require the ability to process a continuous stream of support sets.', '1902.11123-4-18-2': 'This is the case in continuous semantic segmentation and video object segmentation scenarios.', '1902.11123-4-18-3': 'In this context the learning algorithm is presented with a sequence of support sets.', '1902.11123-4-18-4': 'Each incoming support set may provide information on both the new class and the previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-4-18-5': 'It is valuable to utilize both instead of solely imprinting the new class weights.', '1902.11123-4-18-6': 'At the same time, in the case of the previously learned classes, e.g. background, it is not wise to simply override what the network learned from the large-scale training either.', '1902.11123-4-18-7': 'A good example illustrating the need for updating the negative classes is the addition of class boat.', '1902.11123-4-18-8': 'It is obvious that the background class needs to be updated to match the sea background, especially if the images with sea background are not part of the large scale training dataset.', '1902.11123-4-19-0': 'To take advantage of the information available in the continuous stream of data, we propose to adapt class proxies with the information obtained from each new support set.', '1902.11123-4-19-1': 'We propose the following exponentially smoothed adaptive scheme with update rate [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-4-19-2': 'Here [MATH] is the normalized masked proxy for class [MATH], [MATH] is the previously learned 1x1 convolutional filter at resolution [MATH], [MATH] is the updated [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-19-3': 'The update rate can be either treated as as a hyper-parameter or learned.', '1902.11123-4-20-0': 'The adaptation mechanism is applied differently in the few-shot setup and in the continual learning setup.', '1902.11123-4-20-1': 'In the few-shot setup, the support set contains segmentation masks for each new class foreground and background.', '1902.11123-4-20-2': 'The adaptation process is performed on the background class weights from the large scale training.', '1902.11123-4-20-3': 'The proxies for the novel classes are derived directly from the NMAP layer via imprinting with no adaptation.', '1902.11123-4-20-4': 'In the continual learning setup, the proxies for all the classes learned up to the current task are available when a new support set is processed.', '1902.11123-4-20-5': 'Thus, we adapt all the proxies learned in all the previous tasks for which samples are available in the support set of the current task.', '1902.11123-4-21-0': '## Multi-resolution Imprinting Scheme', '1902.11123-4-22-0': 'In the classification scenario, in which imprinting was originally proposed, the resolution aspect is not naturally prominent.', '1902.11123-4-22-1': 'In contrast, in the segmentation scenario, resolution is naturally important to obtain very accurate segmentation mask predictions.', '1902.11123-4-22-2': 'On top of that, we argue that imprinting the outputs of several resolution levels and fusing the probability maps from those in the final probability map can be used to improve overall segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-4-22-3': 'This is illustrated in Fig. [REF], showing the output heatmaps from 1x1 convolution using our proposed proxies as imprinted weights at three different resolutions, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-22-4': 'Clearly, the coarse resolution captures blobs necessary for global alignment, while the fine resolution provides the granular details required for an accurate segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-23-0': 'This idea is further supported by the T-SNE [CITATION] plot of the proxies learned in the proposed NMAP layer at different resolutions depicted in Fig. [REF].', '1902.11123-4-23-1': 'It shows the 5 classes belonging to fold 0 in PASCAL-[MATH] at 3 resolutions imprinted by our AMP model.', '1902.11123-4-23-2': 'A few things catch attention in Fig. [REF].', '1902.11123-4-23-3': 'First, clustering is different at different resolutions.', '1902.11123-4-23-4': 'Fusing probability maps at different resolutions may therefore be advantageous from statistical standpoint, as slight segmentation errors at different resolutions may cancel each other.', '1902.11123-4-23-5': 'Second, the class-level clustering is not necessarily tightest at the highest resolution level: mid-resolution layer L2 seems to provide the tightest clustering.', '1902.11123-4-23-6': 'This may seem counter-intuitive.', '1902.11123-4-23-7': 'Yet, this is perfectly in line with the latest empirical results in weakly-supervised learning (see [CITATION] and related work).', '1902.11123-4-23-8': 'For example, [CITATION] clearly demonstrates that convolutional networks store most of the class level information in the middle layers, and mid-resolution features result in the best transfer learning classification results.', '1902.11123-4-24-0': '## Base Network Architectures', '1902.11123-4-25-0': 'The backbone architecture used in our segmentation network is a VGG-16 [CITATION] that is pre-trained on ImageNet [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-25-1': 'Similar to the FCN8s architecture [CITATION] skip connections are used to benefit from higher resolution feature maps, and a 1x1 convolution layers are used to map from the feature space to the label space.', '1902.11123-4-25-2': 'Unlike FCN8s we utilize bilinear interpolation layers with fixed weights for upsampling.', '1902.11123-4-25-3': 'This is to simplify the imprinting of weights based on the support set (transposed convolutions are hard to imprint).', '1902.11123-4-25-4': 'We also rely on an extension to the above base network using dilated convolution [CITATION], which we call DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-4-25-5': 'The last two pooling layers are replaced by dilated convolution with dilation factors 2 and 4 respectively.', '1902.11123-4-25-6': 'This increases the receptive field without affecting the resolution.', '1902.11123-4-25-7': 'Finally, a more compact version of the network with two final convolutional layers removed is denoted as Reduced-DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-4-25-8': 'The final classification layer, and the two 1x1 convolutional layers following dilated convolutions in the case of DFCN8s and the Reduced-DFCN8s are the ones imprinted.', '1902.11123-4-26-0': 'In the video object segmentation scenario we use a 2-stream wide-resnet [CITATION] architecture.', '1902.11123-4-26-1': 'Each stream has 11 residual blocks followed by multiplying the output activation from both motion and appearance.', '1902.11123-4-26-2': 'The motion is presented to the model as optical flow based on Liu et al. [CITATION] and converted to RGB using a color wheel.', '1902.11123-4-26-3': 'The flexibility of our method enables it to work with different architectures without the overhead of designing another branch to provide guidance, predicted parameters or prototypes.', '1902.11123-4-27-0': '## Training and Evaluation Methodology', '1902.11123-4-28-0': 'Few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-28-1': 'We use the same setup as Shaban et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-28-2': 'The initial training phase relies on a large scale dataset [MATH] including semantic label maps for classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-28-3': 'During the test phase, a support set and a query image are sampled from [MATH] containing novel classes with labels in [MATH], where [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-28-4': 'The support set contains pairs [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] image in the set and [MATH] is the corresponding binary mask.', '1902.11123-4-28-5': 'The binary mask [MATH] is constructed with novel class [MATH] labelled as foreground while the rest of the pixels are considered background.', '1902.11123-4-28-6': 'As before, [MATH] denotes the number of images provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-4-28-7': 'It is worth noting that during training only images that include at least one pixel belonging to [MATH] are included in [MATH] for large-scale training.', '1902.11123-4-28-8': 'If some images have pixels labelled as classes belonging to [MATH] they are ignored and not used in the back-propagation.', '1902.11123-4-28-9': 'Our model does not need to be trained in the few-shot regime by sampling a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-4-28-10': 'It is trained in a normal fashion with image-label pairs.', '1902.11123-4-29-0': 'Continuous Semantic Segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-29-1': 'In continuous semantic segmentation scenario, we propose the setup based on PASCAL VOC [CITATION], following the class incremental learning scenario described in [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-29-2': 'We call the proposed setup incremental PASCAL (iPASCAL).', '1902.11123-4-29-3': 'It is designed to assess sample efficiency of a method in the continual learning setting.', '1902.11123-4-29-4': 'The classes in the dataset are split into [MATH] and [MATH] with 10 classes each, where [MATH] .', '1902.11123-4-29-5': 'The classes belonging to the [MATH] are used to construct the training dataset [MATH] and pre-train the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-4-29-6': 'Unlike the static setting in the few-shot case, the continuous segmentation mode provides the image-label pairs incrementally with different encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-4-29-7': 'The tasks are in the form of triplets [MATH], where [MATH] represent the overall batch of images and labels from task [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-29-8': 'Each task [MATH] introduces two novel classes to learn in its batch.', '1902.11123-4-29-9': 'That batch contains samples with at least one pixel belonging to these two novel classes.', '1902.11123-4-29-10': 'The labels per task [MATH] include the two novel classes belonging to that task, and the previously learned classes in the encountered tasks [MATH].', '1902.11123-4-30-0': '# Experimental Results', '1902.11123-4-31-0': 'We evaluate the sample efficiency of the proposed AMP method in three different scenarios: (1) few-shot segmentation, (2) video object segmentation, and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-31-1': 'In the few-shot segmentation scenario we evaluate on pascal-[MATH] [CITATION] (see Section [REF]).', '1902.11123-4-31-2': 'An ablation study is performed to demonstrate the improvement resulting from multi-resolution imprinting and proxy adaptation in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-4-31-3': 'The study also compares weight imprinting coupled with back-propagation against back-propagation on randomly generated weights.', '1902.11123-4-31-4': 'Section [REF] demonstrates the benefit of AMP in the context of continuous semantic segmentation on the proposed incremental PASCAL VOC evaluation framework, iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-4-31-5': 'We further evaluate AMP in the online adaptation scenario on DAVIS [CITATION] and FBMS [CITATION] benchmarks for video object segmentation (see Section [REF]).', '1902.11123-4-31-6': 'We use mean intersection over union (mIoU) [CITATION] as evaluation metric unless explicitly stated otherwise.', '1902.11123-4-31-7': 'mIoU denotes the average of the per-class IoUs per fold.', '1902.11123-4-31-8': 'Our training and evaluation code is based on the semantic segmentation work [CITATION] and is made publicly available .', '1902.11123-4-32-0': '## Few-Shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-4-33-0': 'The setup for training and evaluation on PASCAL-[MATH] is as follows.', '1902.11123-4-33-1': 'The base network is trained using RMSProp [CITATION] with learning rate [MATH] and L2 regularization weight 5x[MATH].', '1902.11123-4-33-2': 'For each fold, models are pretrained on 15 train classes and evaluated on remaining 5 classes, unseen during pretraining.', '1902.11123-4-33-3': 'The few-shot evaluation is performed on 1000 randomly sampled tasks, each including a support and a query set, similar to OSLSM setup [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-33-4': 'A hyper-parameter random search is conducted over the [MATH] parameter, the number of iterations, and the learning rate.', '1902.11123-4-33-5': 'The search is conducted by training on 10 classes from the training set and evaluating on the other 5 classes of the training set.', '1902.11123-4-33-6': 'Thus ensuring all the classes used are outside the fold used in the evaluation phase.', '1902.11123-4-33-7': 'The [MATH] parameter selected is 0.26.', '1902.11123-4-33-8': 'In the case of performing fine-tuning, the selected learning rate is 7.6x[MATH] with 2 iterations for the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-4-34-0': 'Tables [REF] and [REF] show the mIoU for the 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation, respectively, on PASCAL-[MATH] (mIoU is computed on the foreground class as in [CITATION]).', '1902.11123-4-34-1': 'Our method is compared to OSLSM [CITATION] as well as other baseline methods for few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-34-2': 'AMP outperforms the baseline fine-tuning [CITATION] method by 10.8% in terms of mIoU, without the need for extra back-propagation iterations by directly using the adaptive masked proxies.', '1902.11123-4-34-3': 'AMP outperforms OSLSM [CITATION] in both the 1-shot and the 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-4-34-4': 'Unlike OSLSM, our method does not need to train an extra guidance branch.', '1902.11123-4-34-5': 'This advantage provides the means to use AMP with a 2-stream motion and appearance based network as shown in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-4-34-6': 'On top of that, AMP outperforms co-FCN method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-35-0': 'Table [REF] reports our results in comparison to the state-of-the-art using the evaluation framework of [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-35-1': 'In this framework the mIoU is computed as the mean of the foreground and background IoU averaged over folds.', '1902.11123-4-35-2': 'AMP outperforms the baseline FG-BG [CITATION] in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-4-35-3': 'When our method is coupled with two iterations of back-propagation through the last layers solely it outperforms co-FCN [CITATION] in the 5-shot case by 3%.', '1902.11123-4-36-0': 'Qualitative results on PASCAL-[MATH] are demonstrated in Figure [REF] that shows both the support set image-label pair, and segmentation for the query image predicted by AMP.', '1902.11123-4-36-1': 'Importantly, segmentation produced by AMP does not seem to depend on the saliency of objects.', '1902.11123-4-36-2': 'In some of the query images, multiple potential objects can be categorized as salient, but AMP learns to segment what best matches the target class.', '1902.11123-4-37-0': '## Ablation Study', '1902.11123-4-38-0': 'We perform an ablation study to demonstrate the effectiveness of different components in AMP.', '1902.11123-4-38-1': 'Results are reported in Table [REF].', '1902.11123-4-38-2': 'For our final method, it corresponds to the evaluation provided in Tables [REF] and [REF] on fold 0, following Shaban et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-38-3': 'First, AMP clearly outperforms naive fine-tuning using randomly generated weights by 11.6%.', '1902.11123-4-38-4': 'Second, AMP can be effectively combined with the fine-tuning of imprinted weights to further improve performance.', '1902.11123-4-38-5': 'This is ideal for a continuous data stream processing.', '1902.11123-4-38-6': "Third, AMP's proxy adaptation component is effective: no adaptation with [MATH] set to 0, degrades accuracy by 28.3% in the 1-shot scenario.", '1902.11123-4-38-7': 'Finally, multi-resolution imprinting is effective: not performing multi-resolution imprinting degrades mIoU in the 1-shot scenario.', '1902.11123-4-38-8': 'We conclude that simply imprinting the weights only for the new class is not optimal.', '1902.11123-4-38-9': 'Imprinting has to be coupled with the proposed adaptation and multi-resolution schemes to be effective in the segmentation scenario.', '1902.11123-4-39-0': '## Video Object Segmentation', '1902.11123-4-40-0': 'To assess AMP in the video object segmentation scenario, we use it to adapt 2-stream segmentation networks based on pseudo-labels and evaluate on the DAVIS-2016 benchmark [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-40-1': 'Here our base network is a 2-stream Wide ResNet model similar to [CITATION].', '1902.11123-4-40-2': 'We make the model adapt to the appearance changes that the object undergoes in the video sequence using the proposed proxy adaptation scheme with [MATH] parameter set to 0.001.', '1902.11123-4-40-3': 'The adaptation mechanism operates on top of the masked proxies derived from the segmentation probability maps output from the model itself, since the model has learned background-foreground segmentation already.', '1902.11123-4-40-4': 'Therefore, we call this "self adaptation" as it is unsupervised video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-4-40-5': 'Since we do not employ manual segmentation masks, we compare our results against the state-of-the-art unsupervised methods that utilize motion and appearance based models.', '1902.11123-4-40-6': 'Table [REF] shows the mIoU over the validation set for AMP and the baselines.', '1902.11123-4-40-7': "Our method when followed with fully connected conditional random fields [CITATION] post processing outperforms the state of the art (the CRF post-processing is commonly applied by most methods evaluated on DAVIS'16).", '1902.11123-4-41-0': 'Table [REF] shows our self adaptation results on FBMS dataset where it outperforms all methods except for MotAdapt [CITATION], which it is on-par with.', '1902.11123-4-41-1': 'These results uncover one of the weaknesses of our method: it is unable to operate with high dilation rates since it relies on masked proxies.', '1902.11123-4-41-2': 'High dilation rates can lead to interference between background and foreground features in AMP.', '1902.11123-4-41-3': "Another AMP's weakness is that it may face difficulties segmenting a specific instance, since it uses a proxy per class that aims to generalize across different instances.", '1902.11123-4-42-0': '## Continuous Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-4-43-0': 'To demonstrate the benefit of AMP in the continuous semantic segmentation scenario, we conducted experiments on iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-4-43-1': 'iPASCAL provides triplets for the task, the corresponding images and semantic labels.', '1902.11123-4-43-2': 'For each task, semantic labels include labels of new classes encountered in the current task as well as the labels of classes encountered in the previous tasks (please see Section [REF] for more details on the setup definition).', '1902.11123-4-43-3': 'Figure [REF] compares naive fine-tuning from random weights against AMP without any fine-tuning, in terms of mIoU (average over 5 runs).', '1902.11123-4-43-4': 'Multiple runs are evaluated with different seeds that control random assignment of unseen classes in new tasks.', '1902.11123-4-43-5': 'The mIoU is reported per task on all the classes learned up to the current task.', '1902.11123-4-43-6': 'Fine-tuning was conducted using RMSProp with the best learning rate from the 1-shot setup 9.06x[MATH].', '1902.11123-4-43-7': 'Fine-tuning is applied to the last layers responsible for pixel-wise classification, while the feature extraction weights are kept fixed.', '1902.11123-4-43-8': 'We are focusing on improving sample efficiency by imprinting the weights of the final layer, therefore we perform the fine-tuning on the final weights only.', '1902.11123-4-43-9': 'Figure [REF] demonstrates that in the continual learning scenario, weight imprinting via AMP is more effective than fine-tuning, which suffers from over-fitting that is very hard to overcome.', '1902.11123-4-44-0': 'It is worth noting that the current evaluation setting is a [MATH]-way where [MATH] increases with 2 additional classes with each encountered task resulting in 10-way evaluation in the last task.', '1902.11123-4-44-1': 'This explains the difference between the mIoU in Table [REF] and Figure [REF], which we attribute to the fact that [MATH]-way classification is more challenging than 1-way.', '1902.11123-4-45-0': '# Conclusion'}
{'1902.11123-5-0-0': '# Introduction', '1902.11123-5-1-0': 'Children are able to adapt their knowledge and learn about their surrounding environment with limited samples [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-1-1': 'One of the main bottlenecks in the current deep learning methods is their dependency on the large-scale training data.', '1902.11123-5-1-2': 'However, it is intractable to collect one large-scale dataset that contains all the required object classes for different environments.', '1902.11123-5-1-3': 'This motivated the emergence of few-shot learning methods [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-1-4': 'These early works were primarily focused on solving few-shot image classification tasks, where a support set consists of a few images and their class labels.', '1902.11123-5-1-5': 'The earliest attempt to solve the few-shot segmentation task seems to be the approach proposed by Shaban et al. [CITATION] that predicts the parameters of the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-5-1-6': 'This and other previous methods require the training of an additional branch to guide the backbone segmentation network.', '1902.11123-5-1-7': 'The additional network introduces extra computational burden.', '1902.11123-5-1-8': 'On top of that, existing approaches cannot be trivially extended to handle the continuous stream of data containing annotations for both novel and previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-5-2-0': 'To address these shortcomings, we propose a novel sample efficient adaptive masked proxies method, which we call AMP.', '1902.11123-5-2-1': 'It constructs weights of the final segmentation layer via multi-resolution imprinting.', '1902.11123-5-2-2': 'AMP does not rely on a second guidance branch, as shown in Figure [REF].', '1902.11123-5-2-3': 'Following the terminology of [CITATION], a proxy is a representative signature of a given class.', '1902.11123-5-2-4': 'In the few-shot segmentation setup, the support set contains pixel-wise class labels for each support image.', '1902.11123-5-2-5': 'Therefore, the response of the backbone fully convolutional network (FCN) to a set of images from a given class in the support set can be masked by segmentation labels and then average pooled to create a proxy for this class.', '1902.11123-5-2-6': 'This forms what we call a normalized masked average pooling layer (NMAP in Fig. [REF]).', '1902.11123-5-2-7': 'The computed proxies are used to set the 1x1 convolutional filters for the new classes, forming the process known as weight imprinting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-2-8': 'Multi-resolution weight imprinting is proposed to improve the segmentation accuracy of our method.', '1902.11123-5-3-0': 'We further consider the continual learning setup in which a few-shot algorithm may be presented with a sequence of support sets (continuous semantic segmentation scenario).', '1902.11123-5-3-1': 'In connection with this scenario, we propose to adapt the previously learned class weights with the new proxies from each incoming support set.', '1902.11123-5-3-2': 'Imprinting only the weights for the positive class, i.e. the newly added class, is insufficient as new samples will incorporate new information about other classes as well.', '1902.11123-5-3-3': 'For example, learning a new class for boat will also entail learning new information about the background class, which should include sea.', '1902.11123-5-3-4': 'To address this, a novel method for updating the weights of the previously learned classes without back-propagation is proposed.', '1902.11123-5-3-5': 'The adaptation part of our method is inspired by the classical approaches in learning adaptive correlation filters [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-3-6': 'Correlation filters date back to 1980s [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-3-7': 'More recently, the fast object tracking method [CITATION] relied on hand crafted features to form the correlation filters and adapted them using a running average.', '1902.11123-5-3-8': 'In our method the adaptation of the previously learned weights is based on a similar approach, yielding the ability to process the continuous stream of data containing novel and existing classes.', '1902.11123-5-3-9': 'This opens the door toward leveraging segmentation networks to continually learn semantic segmentation in a sample efficient manner.', '1902.11123-5-4-0': 'To sum up, AMP is shown to provide sample efficiency in three scenarios: (1) few-shot semantic segmentation, (2) video object segmentation and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-4-1': 'Unlike previous methods, AMP can easily operate with any pre-trained network without the need to train a second branch, which entails fewer parameters.', '1902.11123-5-4-2': 'In the video object segmentation scenario we show that our method can be used with a 2-stream motion and appearance network without any additional guidance branch.', '1902.11123-5-4-3': 'AMP is flexible and still allows coupling with back-propagation using the support image-label pair.', '1902.11123-5-4-4': 'The proxy weight imprinting steps can be interleaved with the back-propagation steps to boost the adaptation process.', '1902.11123-5-4-5': 'AMP is evaluated on PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION], DAVIS benchmark [CITATION], FBMS [CITATION] and our proposed iPASCAL setup.', '1902.11123-5-4-6': 'The novel contributions of this paper can be summarized as follows.', '1902.11123-5-5-0': '# Related Work', '1902.11123-5-6-0': '## Few-shot Classification', '1902.11123-5-7-0': 'In few-shot classification, the model is provided with a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-5-7-1': 'The support set contains a few labelled samples that can be used to train the model, while the query image is used to test the final model.', '1902.11123-5-7-2': 'The setup is formulated as [MATH]-shot [MATH]-way, where [MATH] denotes the number of samples per class, while [MATH] denotes the number of classes in the support set.', '1902.11123-5-7-3': 'An early approach to solve the few-shot learning problem relied on Bayesian methodology [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-7-4': 'More recently, Vinyals et al. proposed matching networks approach that learns an end-to-end differentiable nearest neighbour [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-7-5': 'Following that, Snell et al. proposed prototypical networks based on the assumption that there exists an embedding space in which points belonging to one class cluster around their corresponding centroid [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-7-6': 'Qiao et al. proposed a parameter predictor method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-7-7': 'Finally, a method for computing imprinted weights was proposed by Qi et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-8-0': '## Few-shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-5-9-0': 'Unlike the classification scenario that assumes the availability of image level class labels, the few-shot segmentation relies on pixel-wise class labels for support images.', '1902.11123-5-9-1': 'A popular dataset used to evaluate few-shot segmentation is PASCAL-[MATH] [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-9-2': 'The dataset is sub-divided into 4 folds each containing 5 classes.', '1902.11123-5-9-3': 'A fold contains labelled samples from 5 classes that are used for evaluating the few-shot learning method.', '1902.11123-5-9-4': 'The rest 15 classes are used for training.', '1902.11123-5-9-5': 'Shaban et al. proposed a 2-branch method [CITATION], where the second branch predicts the parameters for the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-5-9-6': 'The baselines proposed by Shaban et al. [CITATION] included nearest neighbour, siamese network, and naive fine-tuning.', '1902.11123-5-9-7': 'Rakelly et al. proposed a 2-branch method where the second branch acts as a conditioning branch instead [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-9-8': 'Finally, Dong et al. inspired from prototypical networks, designed another 2-branch method to learn prototypes for the few-shot segmentation problem [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-9-9': 'Clearly, most of the previously proposed methods require an extra branch trained in a simulated few-shot setting.', '1902.11123-5-9-10': 'They cannot be trivially extended to continue adaptation whilst processing a continuous stream of data with multiple classes.', '1902.11123-5-10-0': 'In a concurrent work, Zhang et al. [CITATION] proposed a single branch network deriving guidance features from masked average pooling layer.', '1902.11123-5-10-1': 'This is similar to our NMAP layer.', '1902.11123-5-10-2': 'Zhang et al. [CITATION] use the output of their pooling layer to compute a guidance to the base network.', '1902.11123-5-10-3': 'AMP uses NMAP output to imprint the 1x1 convolutional layer weights.', '1902.11123-5-10-4': 'AMP has the following advantages: (i) it allows the adaptation of imprinted weights in continuous data stream, (ii) it can be seamlessly coupled with any pre-trained networks, including 2-stream networks for video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-11-0': '# AMP: Adaptive Masked Proxies', '1902.11123-5-12-0': 'Our approach, which we call AMP, is rooted deeply in the concept of weight imprinting [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-12-1': 'The imprinting process was initially proposed in the context of classification [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-12-2': 'The method used the normalized responses of the base feature extractor as weights of the final fully connected layer.', '1902.11123-5-12-3': 'In this context, the normalized response of the feature extractor for a given class is called a proxy.', '1902.11123-5-12-4': 'The justification behind such learning scheme is based on the relation between metric learning, proxy-NCA loss and softmax cross-entropy loss [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-12-5': '1x1 convolutional layers are equivalent to fully connected layers.', '1902.11123-5-12-6': 'Hence we propose to utilize base segmentation network activations as proxies to imprint the 1x1 convolutional filters of the final segmentation layer.', '1902.11123-5-12-7': 'When convolved with the query image, the imprinted proxy activates pixels maximally similar to its class signature.', '1902.11123-5-13-0': 'However, it is not trivial to perform weight imprinting in semantic segmentation, unlike in classification.', '1902.11123-5-13-1': 'First, in the classification setup the output embedding vector corresponds to a single class and hence can be used directly for imprinting.', '1902.11123-5-13-2': 'By contrast, a segmentation network outputs 3D embeddings, which incorporate features for a multitude of different classes, both novel and previously learned.', '1902.11123-5-13-3': 'Second, unlike classification, multi-resolution support is essential in segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-14-0': 'We propose the following novel architectural components to address the challenges outlined above.', '1902.11123-5-14-1': 'First, in Section [REF] and in Section [REF] we propose the proxy masking and adaptation methods to handle multi-class segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-14-2': 'Second, in Section [REF] we propose a multi-resolution weight imprinting scheme to maintain the segmentation accuracy during imprinting.', '1902.11123-5-14-3': 'The contribution of each method to the overall accuracy is further motivated experimentally in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-5-15-0': '## Normalized Masked Average Pooling', '1902.11123-5-16-0': 'We propose to address the problem of imprinting the 3D segmentation base network embeddings that contain responses from multiple classes in a single image by masking the embeddings prior to averaging and normalization.', '1902.11123-5-16-1': 'We encapsulate this function in a NMAP layer (refer to Figures [REF] and [REF]).', '1902.11123-5-16-2': 'To construct a proxy for one target class, the NMAP layer bilinearly upsamples segmentation base network outputs and masks them via the pixel-wise labels for the target class available in the support set.', '1902.11123-5-16-3': 'This is followed by average pooling and normalization as follows: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-5-16-4': 'Here [MATH] is a binary mask for [MATH] image with the novel class [MATH], [MATH] is the corresponding output feature maps for [MATH] image and [MATH] resolution.', '1902.11123-5-16-5': '[MATH] is the set of all possible spatial locations and [MATH] is the number of pixels that are labelled as foreground for class [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-16-6': 'The normalized output from the masked average pooling layer [MATH] can be further used as proxies representing class [MATH] and resolution [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-16-7': 'In the case of a novel class the proxy can be utilized directly as filter weights.', '1902.11123-5-16-8': 'In the case of few-shot learning, the average of all the NMAP processed features for the samples provided in the support set for a given class is used as its proxy.', '1902.11123-5-17-0': '## Adaptive Proxies', '1902.11123-5-18-0': 'The NMAP layer solves the problem of processing a single support set.', '1902.11123-5-18-1': 'However, in practice many of the applications require the ability to process a continuous stream of support sets.', '1902.11123-5-18-2': 'This is the case in continuous semantic segmentation and video object segmentation scenarios.', '1902.11123-5-18-3': 'In this context the learning algorithm is presented with a sequence of support sets.', '1902.11123-5-18-4': 'Each incoming support set may provide information on both the new class and the previously learned classes.', '1902.11123-5-18-5': 'It is valuable to utilize both instead of solely imprinting the new class weights.', '1902.11123-5-18-6': 'At the same time, in the case of the previously learned classes, e.g. background, it is not wise to simply override what the network learned from the large-scale training either.', '1902.11123-5-18-7': 'A good example illustrating the need for updating the negative classes is the addition of class boat.', '1902.11123-5-18-8': 'It is obvious that the background class needs to be updated to match the sea background, especially if the images with sea background are not part of the large scale training dataset.', '1902.11123-5-19-0': 'To take advantage of the information available in the continuous stream of data, we propose to adapt class proxies with the information obtained from each new support set.', '1902.11123-5-19-1': 'We propose the following exponentially smoothed adaptive scheme with update rate [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1902.11123-5-19-2': 'Here [MATH] is the normalized masked proxy for class [MATH], [MATH] is the previously learned 1x1 convolutional filter at resolution [MATH], [MATH] is the updated [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-19-3': 'The update rate can be either treated as as a hyper-parameter or learned.', '1902.11123-5-20-0': 'The adaptation mechanism is applied differently in the few-shot setup and in the continual learning setup.', '1902.11123-5-20-1': 'In the few-shot setup, the support set contains segmentation masks for each new class foreground and background.', '1902.11123-5-20-2': 'The adaptation process is performed on the background class weights from the large scale training.', '1902.11123-5-20-3': 'The proxies for the novel classes are derived directly from the NMAP layer via imprinting with no adaptation.', '1902.11123-5-20-4': 'In the continual learning setup, the proxies for all the classes learned up to the current task are available when a new support set is processed.', '1902.11123-5-20-5': 'Thus, we adapt all the proxies learned in all the previous tasks for which samples are available in the support set of the current task.', '1902.11123-5-21-0': '## Multi-resolution Imprinting Scheme', '1902.11123-5-22-0': 'In the classification scenario, in which imprinting was originally proposed, the resolution aspect is not naturally prominent.', '1902.11123-5-22-1': 'In contrast, in the segmentation scenario, resolution is naturally important to obtain very accurate segmentation mask predictions.', '1902.11123-5-22-2': 'On top of that, we argue that imprinting the outputs of several resolution levels and fusing the probability maps from those in the final probability map can be used to improve overall segmentation accuracy.', '1902.11123-5-22-3': 'This is illustrated in Fig. [REF], showing the output heatmaps from 1x1 convolution using our proposed proxies as imprinted weights at three different resolutions, [MATH], [MATH], [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-22-4': 'Clearly, the coarse resolution captures blobs necessary for global alignment, while the fine resolution provides the granular details required for an accurate segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-23-0': 'This idea is further supported by the T-SNE [CITATION] plot of the proxies learned in the proposed NMAP layer at different resolutions depicted in Fig. [REF].', '1902.11123-5-23-1': 'It shows the 5 classes belonging to fold 0 in PASCAL-[MATH] at 3 resolutions imprinted by our AMP model.', '1902.11123-5-23-2': 'A few things catch attention in Fig. [REF].', '1902.11123-5-23-3': 'First, clustering is different at different resolutions.', '1902.11123-5-23-4': 'Fusing probability maps at different resolutions may therefore be advantageous from statistical standpoint, as slight segmentation errors at different resolutions may cancel each other.', '1902.11123-5-23-5': 'Second, the class-level clustering is not necessarily tightest at the highest resolution level: mid-resolution layer L2 seems to provide the tightest clustering.', '1902.11123-5-23-6': 'This may seem counter-intuitive.', '1902.11123-5-23-7': 'Yet, this is perfectly in line with the latest empirical results in weakly-supervised learning (see [CITATION] and related work).', '1902.11123-5-23-8': 'For example, [CITATION] clearly demonstrates that convolutional networks store most of the class level information in the middle layers, and mid-resolution features result in the best transfer learning classification results.', '1902.11123-5-24-0': '## Base Network Architectures', '1902.11123-5-25-0': 'The backbone architecture used in our segmentation network is a VGG-16 [CITATION] that is pre-trained on ImageNet [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-25-1': 'Similar to the FCN8s architecture [CITATION] skip connections are used to benefit from higher resolution feature maps, and a 1x1 convolution layers are used to map from the feature space to the label space.', '1902.11123-5-25-2': 'Unlike FCN8s we utilize bilinear interpolation layers with fixed weights for upsampling.', '1902.11123-5-25-3': 'This is to simplify the imprinting of weights based on the support set (transposed convolutions are hard to imprint).', '1902.11123-5-25-4': 'We also rely on an extension to the above base network using dilated convolution [CITATION], which we call DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-5-25-5': 'The last two pooling layers are replaced by dilated convolution with dilation factors 2 and 4 respectively.', '1902.11123-5-25-6': 'This increases the receptive field without affecting the resolution.', '1902.11123-5-25-7': 'Finally, a more compact version of the network with two final convolutional layers removed is denoted as Reduced-DFCN8s.', '1902.11123-5-25-8': 'The final classification layer, and the two 1x1 convolutional layers following dilated convolutions in the case of DFCN8s and the Reduced-DFCN8s are the ones imprinted.', '1902.11123-5-26-0': 'In the video object segmentation scenario we use a 2-stream wide-resnet [CITATION] architecture.', '1902.11123-5-26-1': 'Each stream has 11 residual blocks followed by multiplying the output activation from both motion and appearance.', '1902.11123-5-26-2': 'The motion is presented to the model as optical flow based on Liu et al. [CITATION] and converted to RGB using a color wheel.', '1902.11123-5-26-3': 'The flexibility of our method enables it to work with different architectures without the overhead of designing another branch to provide guidance, predicted parameters or prototypes.', '1902.11123-5-27-0': '## Training and Evaluation Methodology', '1902.11123-5-28-0': 'Few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-28-1': 'We use the same setup as Shaban et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-28-2': 'The initial training phase relies on a large scale dataset [MATH] including semantic label maps for classes in [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-28-3': 'During the test phase, a support set and a query image are sampled from [MATH] containing novel classes with labels in [MATH], where [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-28-4': 'The support set contains pairs [MATH], where [MATH] is the [MATH] image in the set and [MATH] is the corresponding binary mask.', '1902.11123-5-28-5': 'The binary mask [MATH] is constructed with novel class [MATH] labelled as foreground while the rest of the pixels are considered background.', '1902.11123-5-28-6': 'As before, [MATH] denotes the number of images provided in the support set.', '1902.11123-5-28-7': 'It is worth noting that during training only images that include at least one pixel belonging to [MATH] are included in [MATH] for large-scale training.', '1902.11123-5-28-8': 'If some images have pixels labelled as classes belonging to [MATH] they are ignored and not used in the back-propagation.', '1902.11123-5-28-9': 'Our model does not need to be trained in the few-shot regime by sampling a support set and a query image.', '1902.11123-5-28-10': 'It is trained in a normal fashion with image-label pairs.', '1902.11123-5-29-0': 'Continuous Semantic Segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-29-1': 'In continuous semantic segmentation scenario, we propose the setup based on PASCAL VOC [CITATION], following the class incremental learning scenario described in [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-29-2': 'We call the proposed setup incremental PASCAL (iPASCAL).', '1902.11123-5-29-3': 'It is designed to assess sample efficiency of a method in the continual learning setting.', '1902.11123-5-29-4': 'The classes in the dataset are split into [MATH] and [MATH] with 10 classes each, where [MATH] .', '1902.11123-5-29-5': 'The classes belonging to the [MATH] are used to construct the training dataset [MATH] and pre-train the segmentation network.', '1902.11123-5-29-6': 'Unlike the static setting in the few-shot case, the continuous segmentation mode provides the image-label pairs incrementally with different encountered tasks.', '1902.11123-5-29-7': 'The tasks are in the form of triplets [MATH], where [MATH] represent the overall batch of images and labels from task [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-29-8': 'Each task [MATH] introduces two novel classes to learn in its batch.', '1902.11123-5-29-9': 'That batch contains samples with at least one pixel belonging to these two novel classes.', '1902.11123-5-29-10': 'The labels per task [MATH] include the two novel classes belonging to that task, and the previously learned classes in the encountered tasks [MATH].', '1902.11123-5-30-0': '# Experimental Results', '1902.11123-5-31-0': 'We evaluate the sample efficiency of the proposed AMP method in three different scenarios: (1) few-shot segmentation, (2) video object segmentation, and (3) continuous semantic segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-31-1': 'In the few-shot segmentation scenario we evaluate on pascal-[MATH] [CITATION] (see Section [REF]).', '1902.11123-5-31-2': 'An ablation study is performed to demonstrate the improvement resulting from multi-resolution imprinting and proxy adaptation in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-5-31-3': 'The study also compares weight imprinting coupled with back-propagation against back-propagation on randomly generated weights.', '1902.11123-5-31-4': 'Section [REF] demonstrates the benefit of AMP in the context of continuous semantic segmentation on the proposed incremental PASCAL VOC evaluation framework, iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-5-31-5': 'We further evaluate AMP in the online adaptation scenario on DAVIS [CITATION] and FBMS [CITATION] benchmarks for video object segmentation (see Section [REF]).', '1902.11123-5-31-6': 'We use mean intersection over union (mIoU) [CITATION] as evaluation metric unless explicitly stated otherwise.', '1902.11123-5-31-7': 'mIoU denotes the average of the per-class IoUs per fold.', '1902.11123-5-31-8': 'Our training and evaluation code is based on the semantic segmentation work [CITATION] and is made publicly available .', '1902.11123-5-32-0': '## Few-Shot Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-5-33-0': 'The setup for training and evaluation on PASCAL-[MATH] is as follows.', '1902.11123-5-33-1': 'The base network is trained using RMSProp [CITATION] with learning rate [MATH] and L2 regularization weight 5x[MATH].', '1902.11123-5-33-2': 'For each fold, models are pretrained on 15 train classes and evaluated on remaining 5 classes, unseen during pretraining.', '1902.11123-5-33-3': 'The few-shot evaluation is performed on 1000 randomly sampled tasks, each including a support and a query set, similar to OSLSM setup [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-33-4': 'A hyper-parameter random search is conducted over the [MATH] parameter, the number of iterations, and the learning rate.', '1902.11123-5-33-5': 'The search is conducted by training on 10 classes from the training set and evaluating on the other 5 classes of the training set.', '1902.11123-5-33-6': 'Thus ensuring all the classes used are outside the fold used in the evaluation phase.', '1902.11123-5-33-7': 'The [MATH] parameter selected is 0.26.', '1902.11123-5-33-8': 'In the case of performing fine-tuning, the selected learning rate is 7.6x[MATH] with 2 iterations for the 5-shot case.', '1902.11123-5-34-0': 'Tables [REF] and [REF] show the mIoU for the 1-shot and 5-shot segmentation, respectively, on PASCAL-[MATH] (mIoU is computed on the foreground class as in [CITATION]).', '1902.11123-5-34-1': 'Our method is compared to OSLSM [CITATION] as well as other baseline methods for few-shot segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-34-2': 'AMP outperforms the baseline fine-tuning [CITATION] method by 10.8% in terms of mIoU, without the need for extra back-propagation iterations by directly using the adaptive masked proxies.', '1902.11123-5-34-3': 'AMP outperforms OSLSM [CITATION] in both the 1-shot and the 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-5-34-4': 'Unlike OSLSM, our method does not need to train an extra guidance branch.', '1902.11123-5-34-5': 'This advantage provides the means to use AMP with a 2-stream motion and appearance based network as shown in Section [REF].', '1902.11123-5-34-6': 'On top of that, AMP outperforms co-FCN method [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-35-0': 'Table [REF] reports our results in comparison to the state-of-the-art using the evaluation framework of [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-35-1': 'In this framework the mIoU is computed as the mean of the foreground and background IoU averaged over folds.', '1902.11123-5-35-2': 'AMP outperforms the baseline FG-BG [CITATION] in the 1-shot and 5-shot cases.', '1902.11123-5-35-3': 'When our method is coupled with two iterations of back-propagation through the last layers solely it outperforms co-FCN [CITATION] in the 5-shot case by 3%.', '1902.11123-5-36-0': 'Qualitative results on PASCAL-[MATH] are demonstrated in Figure [REF] that shows both the support set image-label pair, and segmentation for the query image predicted by AMP.', '1902.11123-5-36-1': 'Importantly, segmentation produced by AMP does not seem to depend on the saliency of objects.', '1902.11123-5-36-2': 'In some of the query images, multiple potential objects can be categorized as salient, but AMP learns to segment what best matches the target class.', '1902.11123-5-37-0': '## Ablation Study', '1902.11123-5-38-0': 'We perform an ablation study to demonstrate the effectiveness of different components in AMP.', '1902.11123-5-38-1': 'Results are reported in Table [REF].', '1902.11123-5-38-2': 'For our final method, it corresponds to the evaluation provided in Tables [REF] and [REF] on fold 0, following Shaban et al. [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-38-3': 'First, AMP clearly outperforms naive fine-tuning using randomly generated weights by 11.6%.', '1902.11123-5-38-4': 'Second, AMP can be effectively combined with the fine-tuning of imprinted weights to further improve performance.', '1902.11123-5-38-5': 'This is ideal for a continuous data stream processing.', '1902.11123-5-38-6': "Third, AMP's proxy adaptation component is effective: no adaptation with [MATH] set to 0, degrades accuracy by 28.3% in the 1-shot scenario.", '1902.11123-5-38-7': 'Finally, multi-resolution imprinting is effective: not performing multi-resolution imprinting degrades mIoU in the 1-shot scenario.', '1902.11123-5-38-8': 'We conclude that simply imprinting the weights only for the new class is not optimal.', '1902.11123-5-38-9': 'Imprinting has to be coupled with the proposed adaptation and multi-resolution schemes to be effective in the segmentation scenario.', '1902.11123-5-39-0': '## Video Object Segmentation', '1902.11123-5-40-0': 'To assess AMP in the video object segmentation scenario, we use it to adapt 2-stream segmentation networks based on pseudo-labels and evaluate on the DAVIS-2016 benchmark [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-40-1': 'Here our base network is a 2-stream Wide ResNet model similar to [CITATION].', '1902.11123-5-40-2': 'We make the model adapt to the appearance changes that the object undergoes in the video sequence using the proposed proxy adaptation scheme with [MATH] parameter set to 0.001.', '1902.11123-5-40-3': 'The adaptation mechanism operates on top of the masked proxies derived from the segmentation probability maps output from the model itself, since the model has learned background-foreground segmentation already.', '1902.11123-5-40-4': 'Therefore, we call this "self adaptation" as it is unsupervised video object segmentation.', '1902.11123-5-40-5': 'Since we do not employ manual segmentation masks, we compare our results against the state-of-the-art unsupervised methods that utilize motion and appearance based models.', '1902.11123-5-40-6': 'Table [REF] shows the mIoU over the validation set for AMP and the baselines.', '1902.11123-5-40-7': "Our method when followed with fully connected conditional random fields [CITATION] post processing outperforms the state of the art (the CRF post-processing is commonly applied by most methods evaluated on DAVIS'16).", '1902.11123-5-41-0': 'Table [REF] shows our self adaptation results on FBMS dataset where it outperforms all methods except for MotAdapt [CITATION], which it is on-par with.', '1902.11123-5-41-1': 'These results uncover one of the weaknesses of our method: it is unable to operate with high dilation rates since it relies on masked proxies.', '1902.11123-5-41-2': 'High dilation rates can lead to interference between background and foreground features in AMP.', '1902.11123-5-41-3': "Another AMP's weakness is that it may face difficulties segmenting a specific instance, since it uses a proxy per class that aims to generalize across different instances.", '1902.11123-5-42-0': '## Continuous Semantic Segmentation', '1902.11123-5-43-0': 'To demonstrate the benefit of AMP in the continuous semantic segmentation scenario, we conducted experiments on iPASCAL.', '1902.11123-5-43-1': 'iPASCAL provides triplets for the task, the corresponding images and semantic labels.', '1902.11123-5-43-2': 'For each task, semantic labels include labels of new classes encountered in the current task as well as the labels of classes encountered in the previous tasks (please see Section [REF] for more details on the setup definition).', '1902.11123-5-43-3': 'Figure [REF] compares naive fine-tuning from random weights against AMP without any fine-tuning, in terms of mIoU (average over 5 runs).', '1902.11123-5-43-4': 'Multiple runs are evaluated with different seeds that control random assignment of unseen classes in new tasks.', '1902.11123-5-43-5': 'The mIoU is reported per task on all the classes learned up to the current task.', '1902.11123-5-43-6': 'Fine-tuning was conducted using RMSProp with the best learning rate from the 1-shot setup 9.06x[MATH].', '1902.11123-5-43-7': 'Fine-tuning is applied to the last layers responsible for pixel-wise classification, while the feature extraction weights are kept fixed.', '1902.11123-5-43-8': 'We are focusing on improving sample efficiency by imprinting the weights of the final layer, therefore we perform the fine-tuning on the final weights only.', '1902.11123-5-43-9': 'Figure [REF] demonstrates that in the continual learning scenario, weight imprinting via AMP is more effective than fine-tuning, which suffers from over-fitting that is very hard to overcome.', '1902.11123-5-44-0': 'It is worth noting that the current evaluation setting is a [MATH]-way where [MATH] increases with 2 additional classes with each encountered task resulting in 10-way evaluation in the last task.', '1902.11123-5-44-1': 'This explains the difference between the mIoU in Table [REF] and Figure [REF], which we attribute to the fact that [MATH]-way classification is more challenging than 1-way.', '1902.11123-5-45-0': '# Conclusion'}
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1711.04832
{'1711.04832-1-0-0': 'We consider a non-supersymmetric USp Yang-Mills Chern-Simons gauge theory coupled to fundamental flavours.', '1711.04832-1-0-1': 'The theory is realised in type IIB string theory via an embedding in a Hanany-Witten brane configuration which includes an orientifold and anti branes.', '1711.04832-1-0-2': 'We argue that the theory admits a magnetic Seiberg dual.', '1711.04832-1-0-3': 'Using the magnetic dual we identify dynamics in field theory and brane physics that correspond to various phases, obtaining a better understanding of 3d bosonization and dynamical breaking of flavour symmetry in USp QCD[MATH] theory.', '1711.04832-1-0-4': "In field theory both phases correspond to magnetic 'squark' condensation.", '1711.04832-1-0-5': 'In string theory they correspond to open string tachyon condensation and brane reconnection.', '1711.04832-1-0-6': "We also discuss other phases where the magnetic 'squark' is massive.", '1711.04832-1-0-7': 'Finally, we briefly comment on the case of unitary gauge groups.', '1711.04832-1-1-0': 'pageanchor=true', '1711.04832-1-2-0': 'empty', '1711.04832-1-3-0': 'linkcolor=black', '1711.04832-1-4-0': 'plain', '1711.04832-1-5-0': '# Introduction and conclusions', '1711.04832-1-6-0': 'Quantum chromodynamics in three spacetime dimensions (QCD[MATH]) is an interesting variant of the more familiar QCD in four dimensions.', '1711.04832-1-6-1': 'In a sense, the three dimensional theory is richer because three dimensions allow the addition of a topological Chern-Simons (CS) term which blocks the RG running of the Yang-Mills interaction towards strong coupling and alters the infra-red (IR) dynamics.', '1711.04832-1-7-0': 'In the past decade or so there has been significant progress in understanding the dynamics of 3d supersymmetric gauge theories including the dynamics of a large class of supersymmetric Chern-Simons theories coupled to different types of matter.', '1711.04832-1-7-1': 'Steps forward have also been achieved in the study of non-supersymmetric Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons (YM-CS) theories like QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-7-2': 'For example, consider a CS theory coupled to [MATH] Dirac fermions in the fundamental representation.', '1711.04832-1-7-3': 'A recent intriguing result is a conjectured duality between the following pairs of theories[CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-7-4': 'A variant of this duality postulates that [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-7-5': 'In these expressions, and in what follows, the notation [MATH] quotes bare CS levels.', '1711.04832-1-7-6': 'These are written in terms of the shifted level [MATH] defined as [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-7-7': 'Similarly, in the notation [MATH] the first level refers to the bare level of the [MATH] part and the second to the bare level of the [MATH] part.', '1711.04832-1-7-8': 'Since both of these dualities relate a theory with fermions to a theory with bosons they are frequently referred to as bosonization (in close analogy with the more familiar bosonization in two dimensions).', '1711.04832-1-7-9': 'The scalars on the bosonic side have quartic interactions tuned to a Wilson-Fisher fixed point.', '1711.04832-1-7-10': 'The duality holds for [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-8-0': 'Versions of this duality for [MATH] and [MATH] gauge groups have also been formulated [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-8-1': 'In this paper, we will mostly focus on results that are very closely related to the [MATH] version of the duality [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-8-2': 'Similar to the [MATH] case, the bosonic side requires that the scalars are at a [MATH] invariant Wilson-Fisher fixed point.', '1711.04832-1-8-3': 'This duality is also expected to be valid for [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-9-0': 'More recently, Komargodski and Seiberg (KS) argued for a scenario [CITATION] that describes the infra-red dynamics of the fermionic theory when [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-9-1': 'According to that scenario there is a window, for [MATH], where the theory exhibits a phase of flavor symmetry breaking: [MATH] in the unitary case and [MATH] in the symplectic case.', '1711.04832-1-9-2': '[MATH] is a critical number of flavors whose precise value is currently unknown.', '1711.04832-1-9-3': 'The evidence in favour of this scenario includes the matching of anomalies and consistency under several RG flows [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-9-4': 'For [MATH] it is conjectured [CITATION] that the theory flows to some IR fixed point that does not exhibit flavor symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-1-10-0': '## Summary of results', '1711.04832-1-11-0': '## Benefits of an ultra-violet embedding', '1711.04832-1-12-0': 'In this paper we provide new evidence in favour of the above scenario for QCD[MATH] (bosonization, symmetry breaking, CFT) by embedding QCD[MATH] in an ultra-violet (UV) YM-CS theory, which is a 3d cousin of a 4d non-supersymmetric orientifold QCD theory [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-12-1': 'The main part of the paper will focus on the case of [MATH] gauge group.', '1711.04832-1-12-2': "In that case, the UV embedding involves a [MATH] YM-CS theory at bare level [MATH] coupled to a real scalar field in the 2-index symmetric representation ('scalar gaugino'), a Dirac fermion in the 2-index antisymmetric representation ('gaugino'), [MATH] scalars in the fundamental representation ('squarks') and [MATH] fermions in the fundamental representation ('quarks').", '1711.04832-1-12-3': 'We argue that when [MATH] the quantum effects lift the scalars and the IR behaviour is dominated by standard QCD[MATH] physics.', '1711.04832-1-12-4': 'The level [MATH] that appears in KS [CITATION], e.g. in eq. [REF], is related to [MATH] via the relation [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-12-5': 'The combination [MATH] arises naturally when we integrate out the antisymmetric gaugino and will appear frequently in our formulae.', '1711.04832-1-12-6': 'It is therefore convenient to introduce the integer [EQUATION] in terms of which [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-13-0': 'The great advantage of the additional degrees of freedom in the orientifold QCD theory is that they allow us to formulate a non-supersymmetric version of Seiberg duality.', '1711.04832-1-13-1': 'For [MATH] this duality reduces to level-rank duality [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-13-2': "For general [MATH] the dual 'magnetic' theory is a [MATH] gauge theory whose details will be described in detail in section [REF].", '1711.04832-1-13-3': '4d versions of the duality were studied in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-13-4': "In this paper we will show that the finite [MATH] duality passes the standard checks of consistency under RG flows, global symmetry and 't Hooft anomaly matching.", '1711.04832-1-13-5': 'Further favourable evidence is provided by string theory.', '1711.04832-1-13-6': 'We will return to some of the salient features of the string theory embedding in a moment.', '1711.04832-1-14-0': 'The electric-magnetic duality operates when the rank of the dual gauge group is positive, namely when [MATH] (equivalently, when [MATH]).', '1711.04832-1-14-1': 'For values of [MATH] outside this window there is no magnetic dual and one has to analyse separately the strong coupling dynamics of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-14-2': 'It is unclear what the infra-red physics of the theory are in this regime.', '1711.04832-1-14-3': 'In supersymmetric analogues, e.g. in 3d [MATH] SQCD theories, the supersymmetric vacuum is lifted by non-perturbative effects when the dual rank becomes negative.', '1711.04832-1-14-4': 'When the dual rank vanishes the dual theory is a theory of free chiral multiplets.', '1711.04832-1-15-0': 'In this paper we will work exclusively in the regime where the dual magnetic description exists.', '1711.04832-1-15-1': 'The magnetic description will provide an illuminating perspective on the dynamics of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-15-2': 'In particular, we will find that the magnetic theory leads to a rather natural universal description for all the phases of QCD[MATH] outlined above.', '1711.04832-1-15-3': 'We will show that when [MATH] bosonization emerges naturally in the IR via magnetic squark condensation; a mechanism that reminds of monopole condensation and the dual Meissner effect in four dimensional physics.', '1711.04832-1-15-4': 'We will not be able to prove conclusively the existence of magnetic squark condensation, but we will provide evidence indicating that it is a strong possibility and that it leads to a suggestive consistent synthesis of known results.', '1711.04832-1-16-0': 'This mechanism provides a new explanation of 3d bosonization.', '1711.04832-1-16-1': 'Unlike previous explanations based on deformations of supersymmetric 3d Seiberg dualities and mirror symmetry (see e.g. [CITATION] for beautiful work in these directions) in this mechanism bosonization arises dynamically in the infrared as a consequence of a non-supersymmetric version of Seiberg duality.', '1711.04832-1-16-2': 'These effects describe the part of the phase diagram denoted as I in the diagrams of Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-17-0': 'Once magnetic squark condensation is assumed the phase of symmetry breaking for [MATH] follows naturally.', '1711.04832-1-17-1': 'There are two regions in the phase diagram of orientifold QCD[MATH], regions II and II[MATH] in diagram B of Fig. [REF], that describe in the IR the physics of QCD[MATH] for [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-18-0': 'Interestingly, the magnetic description in regions II and II[MATH] is not identical.', '1711.04832-1-18-1': 'Consider first the situation in region II[MATH] where [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-18-2': 'In this case squark condensation leads to a complete Higgsing of the gauge group leaving behind a sigma model of Goldstone bosons for the dynamically broken symmetry.', '1711.04832-1-18-3': 'The magnetic theory provides an explicit description of how the sigma model arises.', '1711.04832-1-19-0': 'Region II of the phase diagram of orientifold QCD[MATH] refers to the parameter regime [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-20-0': 'The dictionary [REF] implies that this region describes the same IR physics as QCD[MATH] with [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-20-1': 'Naively, it looks like a natural continuation of the bosonization regime where squark condensation leads to a theory of [MATH] bosons.', '1711.04832-1-20-2': 'It is obvious, however, that this theory cannot be the same as the bosonic dual of region I, because bosonization is inconsistent for [MATH], which is also clear in the behaviour of the electric and magnetic orientifold QCD theories under mass deformations.', '1711.04832-1-20-3': 'This suggests that [MATH] is a critical point above which the magnetic theory reverts to the symmetry breaking phase.', '1711.04832-1-20-4': 'We propose a particular scenario for the mechanism behind this phase transition.', '1711.04832-1-20-5': 'This scenario is consistent with expectations about the massive deformations of the fermionic (electric) theory and predicts naturally a phase transition to a topological sector as the mass of the fermions is increased.', '1711.04832-1-20-6': 'A dual bosonic formulation appears at the transition point as anticipated by KS [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-21-0': 'The symmetry pattern for sufficiently large [MATH] persists as long as the magnetic squarks are tachyonic and condense.', '1711.04832-1-21-1': 'Competing effects in the one-loop mass normalisation of the squarks suggest the possibility that when [MATH] is large enough, [MATH] for some [MATH], the squarks become massive.', '1711.04832-1-21-2': 'Depending on the mass squared of the elementary magnetic meson fields, Seiberg duality suggests a specific description for the IR theory.', '1711.04832-1-21-3': 'We argue that the most likely scenario is one where the elementary magnetic mesons are tachyonic.', '1711.04832-1-21-4': 'The condensation of the elementary magnetic mesons leads to an IR theory of free fermions and light mesons, a scenario that agrees with the large-[MATH] results in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-22-0': '## Lessons from string theory', '1711.04832-1-23-0': 'It is useful to consider a further UV embedding of the orientifold QCD theory into a non-supersymmetric brane configuration in string theory.', '1711.04832-1-23-1': 'The immediate benefits of this embedding are:', '1711.04832-1-24-0': 'In this paper we are interested in non-supersymmetric brane configurations in a Hanany-Witten brane setup in type IIB string theory along the lines of the Giveon-Kutasov analysis [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-24-1': 'In order to break supersymmetry we consider a combination of an [MATH] plane, anti D5 branes and anti D3 branes suspended between two 5-branes, one of which is a bound state of an NS5 brane and anti D5 branes.', '1711.04832-1-24-2': 'The mutual presence of anti-branes with an orientifold plane breaks the [MATH] supersymmetry completely.', '1711.04832-1-24-3': 'Supersymmetry is restored asymptotically when [MATH] and [MATH] are taken to infinity.', '1711.04832-1-24-4': 'This feature is useful.', '1711.04832-1-24-5': 'The large-[MATH] regime is a technically convenient regime where supersymmetry is softly broken by [MATH] effects.', '1711.04832-1-25-0': 'The broken supersymmetry leads to non-trivial potentials between different components of the brane configuration.', '1711.04832-1-25-1': 'On the electric side the potentials are attractive and lead to a stable brane configuration.', '1711.04832-1-25-2': 'On the magnetic side, however, the potentials can be repulsive, leading to open string tachyon condensation and brane reconnection between the flavor and colour branes.', '1711.04832-1-25-3': 'The rich phase diagram that arises in this manner is literally a web of phases driven by the presence or absence of open string instabilities.', '1711.04832-1-25-4': 'The result translates in gauge theory either as bosonization or dynamical symmetry breaking, or a CFT.', '1711.04832-1-26-0': '## Outline of the paper', '1711.04832-1-27-0': 'The paper is organised as follows.', '1711.04832-1-27-1': 'In section [REF] we present the orientifold field theories of interest, describe how they are embedded in suitable brane configurations in ten-dimensional type IIB string theory, and formulate the non-supersymmetric electric-magnetic duality that they are conjectured to obey.', '1711.04832-1-27-2': 'The evidence in favour of the duality is summarised in a separate subsection.', '1711.04832-1-28-0': 'In section [REF] we discuss perturbative non-supersymmetric effects in both the electric and magnetic gauge theories.', '1711.04832-1-28-1': 'We discuss the expected behaviour of the electric theory in the IR and its relation to QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-28-2': 'A detailed description of the IR physics from the magnetic theory point of view is relegated to the subsequent sections.', '1711.04832-1-29-0': 'In section [REF] we consider the parameter regime where [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-29-1': "In that case of the magnetic squarks can lead to 'full color-flavor recombination' (color-flavor locking) on the magnetic side.", '1711.04832-1-29-2': 'This is translated to 3d bosonization of the electric side.', '1711.04832-1-29-3': 'The magnetic description does not provide only the correct matter content for bosonization, but also the requisite [MATH]-invariant quartic interaction needed for the Wilson-Fischer fixed point.', '1711.04832-1-29-4': 'It is argued that this picture is consistent for [MATH], but fails for larger values of [MATH], where the most natural scenario, in accordance with expectations from QCD[MATH], is a scenario of a symmetry breaking phase.', '1711.04832-1-30-0': 'The other regime is when [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-30-1': "In that regime the squark condensation Higgses the magnetic gauge group completely and leads to 'partial color-flavor recombination'.", '1711.04832-1-30-2': 'Section [REF] provides a detailed description of the effects that take place in this regime.', '1711.04832-1-30-3': 'On the electric field theory side these effects are translated as dynamical symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-1-30-4': 'The Nambu-Goldstone bosons are identified as massless modes in the low-energy spectrum of the open string theory on the branes and as massless modes after squark condensation in the magnetic Lagrangian.', '1711.04832-1-31-0': 'In section [REF] we discuss the possibility of a phase where the magnetic squark becomes massive.', '1711.04832-1-31-1': 'This leads to a phase with a CFT description in the IR in accordance with field theory expectations in QCD[MATH] [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-31-2': 'The magnetic dual provides a specific prediction for the IR CFT.', '1711.04832-1-31-3': 'This possibility requires the existence of a new critical number [MATH] with the new phase being realised when [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-32-0': 'In the above analysis it is always assumed that the bare CS level of the orientifold QCD theory [MATH] is non-zero.', '1711.04832-1-32-1': 'When [MATH] the IR physics is dominated by the YM interaction.', '1711.04832-1-32-2': 'The IR physics of this theory, which besides the effects of the fundamental fermions involves non-trivial dynamics from Dirac fermions in the 2-index anti-symmetric representation as well as additional scalar fields, is an interesting question that has not been explored in the past.', '1711.04832-1-32-3': 'This situation is discussed in section [REF].', '1711.04832-1-32-4': 'A recent discussion of CS theories with matter in the adjoint representation but no fundamentals can be found in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-33-0': '## Open problems', '1711.04832-1-34-0': 'In this paper we focus on the case of (orientifold) QCD[MATH] theories with symplectic gauge group.', '1711.04832-1-34-1': 'This choice is dictated by the fact that this case is the most straightforward one from the viewpoint of the string theory construction that underlies part of this work.', '1711.04832-1-34-2': 'Since the analysis of unitary groups with even rank, [MATH], shares many similarities with the analysis of the [MATH] case (and is related to it by a non-perturbative planar equivalence), it is rather natural to put forward a corresponding picture for [MATH] (orientifold) QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-34-3': 'Preliminary comments in this direction are summarised in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-1-35-0': 'The formulation of non-supersymmetric Seiberg duality for orientifold QCD[MATH] theories with general unitary gauge groups and orthogonal groups remains an open problem.', '1711.04832-1-35-1': 'We hope to return to these cases in a future publication.', '1711.04832-1-36-0': '## Summary of conventions', '1711.04832-1-37-0': 'In what follows when we mention the level of a UV gauge theory we will always refer, unless otherwise stated, to the bare level [MATH] (or [MATH] in the [MATH] gauge theories).', '1711.04832-1-37-1': '[MATH] is always an integer -it is the same integer (or related to the integer) that appears in the 5-brane bound states in our brane configurations.', '1711.04832-1-37-2': 'This convention is to be contrasted with other notation in the literature, e.g. [CITATION] that is closely related to our discussion, where the quoted level is [MATH] with [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-38-0': 'When we integrate out massive particles the CS level shifts.', '1711.04832-1-38-1': 'In the YM-CS regularisation (which we follow) only the fermions contribute to the shift.', '1711.04832-1-38-2': 'We will use conventions natural in string theory where the integration of a single Dirac fermion with positive mass [MATH] leads to the IR level [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-38-3': 'A list of possible mass deformations, and their string theory interpretation, is summarised in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-1-39-0': 'Another useful fact in our discussion is the fact that when we integrate out a gaugino (in the 2-index antisymmetric representation) in the [MATH] theory we obtain the CS level shift [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-40-0': '# Non-supersymmetric [MATH] Seiberg duality', '1711.04832-1-41-0': 'The gauge theories of interest can be phrased independently of string theory.', '1711.04832-1-41-1': 'Nevertheless, since string theory provides a convenient organising principle for the non-supersymmetric duality of interest we will present in parallel the gauge theories in question and their string theory embedding.', '1711.04832-1-41-2': 'We consider the [MATH] YM-CS theories that describe the IR physics on the Hanany-Witten brane configurations depicted in Figs. [REF], [REF].', '1711.04832-1-42-0': '## Electric theory', '1711.04832-1-43-0': 'Let us start with a description of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-43-1': 'The brane configuration that engineers the theory consists of [MATH] anti D3 branes suspended between an NS5 brane and a tilted [MATH] fivebrane.', '1711.04832-1-43-2': 'In addition there is an orientifold [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-43-3': 'The orientifold plane changes from [MATH] to [MATH] when it crosses the fivebrane.', '1711.04832-1-43-4': 'This is identical to the brane configuration of [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-43-5': 'In addition, we add [MATH] anti D3 branes which are attached to the right of the NS5 brane and end on D5 branes.', '1711.04832-1-43-6': 'The resulting brane configuration is depicted in Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-43-7': 'It consists of', '1711.04832-1-44-0': 'The matter content of the theory is similar to the matter content of the supersymmetric theory, except that the fields transform differently with respect to the gauge group, due to the presence of the orientifold.', '1711.04832-1-44-1': 'The full matter content of the electric theory is given in table [REF] below.', '1711.04832-1-44-2': 'Note that the gauge fields [MATH] and the scalar gaugino [MATH] transform in the two-index symmetric (adjoint) representation of the gauge group, while the Dirac gaugino [MATH] transforms in the two-index antisymmetric representation.', '1711.04832-1-44-3': 'The complex scalars [MATH] (squarks) and the Dirac fermions [MATH] (quarks) are both in a fundamental pseudo-real representation of [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-44-4': 'Note that although the global symmetry on the brane is [MATH], the global symmetry of the low energy QCD theory is [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-44-5': 'This is due to irrelevant interactions inherent to the string realisation of the theory.', '1711.04832-1-45-0': 'The classical Lagrangian of the electric theory is [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-45-1': 'The gauge part is Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons theory at level [MATH] [EQUATION] [MATH] is the standard gauge covariant derivative and the contraction of spinor indices has been kept implicit.', '1711.04832-1-45-2': 'For the matter part [EQUATION] where [MATH] are color indices and [MATH] are flavor indices.', '1711.04832-1-45-3': 'The pseudo-reality condition imposes on bosons and fermions [EQUATION] with [MATH], [MATH] the [MATH], [MATH] symplectic tensors.', '1711.04832-1-46-0': '## Magnetic theory', '1711.04832-1-47-0': 'We define the proposed magnetic dual as the theory that describes the infra-red dynamics of the brane configuration [REF], which results from that in Fig. [REF] by swapping the NS5 and [MATH] 5-branes across the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-1-47-1': 'In the presence of the orientifold [MATH] additional D3 branes are created during this swap.', '1711.04832-1-47-2': 'As a result, we find [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-47-3': 'D3 branes suspended between the NS5 and [MATH] 5-branes.', '1711.04832-1-48-0': 'The dual theory is a [MATH] gauge theory at bare CS level [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-48-1': 'It exists when [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-48-2': 'Note that classically the flavor anti D3 branes can slide freely between the tilted fivebrane bound state and the [MATH] D5 branes (which share the common directions (89)) leading to corresponding elementary meson and mesino degrees of freedom.', '1711.04832-1-48-3': 'The meson [MATH] transforms in the 2-index antisymmetric of [MATH] and the mesino [MATH] in the 2-index symmetric representation of [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-48-4': 'The full matter content of the magnetic theory is summarised in table [REF].', '1711.04832-1-49-0': 'Let us discuss the classical Lagrangian of the magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-1-49-1': 'Besides the gauge interactions [MATH] for gauge group [MATH] [EQUATION] a part of the Lagrangian includes the same terms [EQUATION] for the magnetic squarks [MATH], and quarks [MATH] as the electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-49-2': 'In addition, it includes kinetic terms for the mesons [MATH] and mesinos [MATH] [EQUATION] and a set of interactions that constitute the non-supersymmetric orientifold version of the supersymmetric cubic superpotential between mesons/mesinos and squarks/quarks.', '1711.04832-1-50-0': 'The complete matter Lagrangian is [EQUATION] and the total Lagrangian [EQUATION] [MATH] is a coupling with mass dimension [MATH] that appears in front of the cubic superpotential interactions in the supersymmetric version of the theory.', '1711.04832-1-50-1': 'In the non-supersymmetric theory at hand the RG flow will not respect the relations between the couplings that appear in front of the terms in the last line of [REF].', '1711.04832-1-50-2': 'The expression [REF] is written here only as a specific bare Lagrangian that follows from its supersymmetric ancestor by appropriately modifying the representations of certain fields.', '1711.04832-1-51-0': '## Evidence for duality', '1711.04832-1-52-0': 'We claim that the above electric and the magnetic theories form a Seiberg dual.', '1711.04832-1-52-1': "Apart from the argument in string theory based on swapping fivebranes in appendix [REF] we provide standard evidence in the form of 't Hooft anomaly matching as well as a duality after deformations and RG flows.", '1711.04832-1-53-0': 'Note that at large [MATH] and [MATH] the two theories become supersymmetric.', '1711.04832-1-53-1': 'The reason is that in this limit there is no difference between the two-index symmetric and the two-index antisymmetric representations.', '1711.04832-1-53-2': 'In the brane picture this statement translates to the fact that the orientifold (the Mobius amplitude) is a [MATH] effect.', '1711.04832-1-53-3': 'Therefore, in the large [MATH] limit the electric and magnetic theories are dual to each other as a supersymmetric pair similar to the one analysed in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-54-0': 'There is another argument, from string theory, in favour of the duality, due to Sugimoto.', '1711.04832-1-54-1': 'Start from a SUSY brane configuration that realises a USp electric-magnetic pair.', '1711.04832-1-54-2': 'Add [MATH] infinite anti-D3 branes on top of the SUSY electric theory and [MATH] infinite anti-D3 branes on top of the SUSY magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-1-54-3': 'After brane annihilation the SUSY electric theory becomes the non-supersymmetric magnetic theory and the SUSY magnetic theory becomes the non-supersymmetric electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-54-4': 'Thus the same operation on a pair of dual supersymmetric theories leads to a duality between non-supersymmetric electric and magnetic theories.', '1711.04832-1-55-0': '# Perturbative dynamics of the electric and magnetic theories', '1711.04832-1-56-0': 'Given that the electric and magnetic theories are non-supersymmetric we anticipate potentials for the various scalars.', '1711.04832-1-56-1': 'The potentials are due to non-planar effects ([MATH] effects) and they vanish in the large-[MATH] limit where both the electric and magnetic theories become a dual pair with [MATH] supersymmetry.', '1711.04832-1-56-2': 'The field theory potentials may have an interpretation as potentials between branes in the brane configuration.', '1711.04832-1-56-3': 'The potentials depend on the UV cut-off of the theory.', '1711.04832-1-56-4': 'Within field theory we can remove this dependence by renormalisation.', '1711.04832-1-56-5': 'The embedding in string theory, however, provides a natural UV cut-off, [MATH], and a physical meaning to the potentials.', '1711.04832-1-57-0': 'In all cases the effects that we consider are due to the difference between the representations of bosons and fermions.', '1711.04832-1-57-1': 'Similar dynamics and considerations were involved in a proposal of a non-supersymmetric S-duality [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-58-0': 'Consider a scalar propagator: in perturbation theory the difference between a bosonic loop and a fermionic loop will produce either a massive scalar or a tachyonic scalar, depending on whether there are more bosonic degrees of freedom or more fermionic degrees of freedom, as depicted schematically in Fig. [REF] below.', '1711.04832-1-59-0': 'If a scalar is massive it will not acquire a vev and the perturbative expansion near the origin (zero vev) is stable.', '1711.04832-1-59-1': 'If a scalar is tachyonic we anticipate a new minimum where a vev is acquired and symmetries (global or local) may be broken.', '1711.04832-1-60-0': '## Electric theory', '1711.04832-1-61-0': 'The electric theory contains two scalars, the squark [MATH] and the scalar gaugino [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-62-0': 'The scalar gaugino couples to itself, to the gauge boson and to the fermionic gaugino [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-62-1': 'The generated mass due to the bosonic and fermionic loop is [EQUATION] namely [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-62-2': 'The point [MATH] is stable and moreover, the field [MATH] decouples from the low energy dynamics.', '1711.04832-1-63-0': 'The potential [MATH] has an interpretation in the brane picture: the [MATH] color branes are attracted to the orientifold plane.', '1711.04832-1-63-1': 'The brane configuration is hence stable (non-tachyonic).', '1711.04832-1-64-0': 'A similar analysis can be performed for the squark [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-64-1': 'The squark couples to the "gauge multiplet", namely to [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-64-2': 'Since there are more bosonic than fermionic degrees of freedom perturbation theory suggests that [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-64-3': 'The squark therefore decouples from the low energy physics.', '1711.04832-1-65-0': 'The low energy field theory contains therefore a [MATH] gauge field [MATH], a gaugino [MATH] and [MATH] quarks [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-66-0': 'When [MATH] there are Chern-Simons terms.', '1711.04832-1-66-1': 'The Chern-Simons terms provide a mass [MATH] to the gauge field and to the gaugino.', '1711.04832-1-66-2': 'We therefore anticipate that the IR dynamics will be dominated by the topological Chern-Simons theory coupled to the quarks.', '1711.04832-1-66-3': 'Thus for [MATH] the electric theory is very similar to QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-67-0': 'The case [MATH] is special, as there is no Chern-Simons term.', '1711.04832-1-67-1': 'The IR theory involves the strong coupling dynamics of the Yang-Mills interaction between the gauge field, the gaugino and the quarks.', '1711.04832-1-68-0': '## Magnetic theory', '1711.04832-1-69-0': 'Similarly to the electric theory, the scalar gaugino of the magnetic theory acquires a mass and decouples.', '1711.04832-1-69-1': 'The color branes are therefore attracted to the orientifold plane.', '1711.04832-1-70-0': 'The dynamics of the squarks and the mesons is more complicated.', '1711.04832-1-70-1': 'Let us focus on the squarks.', '1711.04832-1-71-0': 'At the one-loop level there are effects due to the coupling with the gauge multiplet and effects due to the coupling with the meson multiplet.', '1711.04832-1-71-1': 'Let us denote the magnetic gauge coupling by [MATH] and the coupling to the meson multiplet by [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-72-0': 'There are more bosonic than fermionic degrees of freedom in the gauge multiplet and more fermionic than bosonic degrees of freedom in the meson multiplet.', '1711.04832-1-72-1': 'As a result, [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-72-2': 'At the one-loop level the two effects compete and the squark may become massive or tachyonic.', '1711.04832-1-72-3': 'We will consider both possibilities and identify the various phases associated with each one of them.', '1711.04832-1-72-4': 'We note that at large-[MATH] the gauge field becomes very massive and decouples, therefore we anticipate that in this limit the dynamics is dominated by a tachyonic squark.', '1711.04832-1-73-0': 'The magnetic theory includes a coupling of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-73-1': 'If the meson field acquires a vev of the form [MATH] the squark field becomes massive.', '1711.04832-1-73-2': 'If the squark field acquires a vev of the form [MATH], and if flavor symmetry is not broken (bosonized phase), the mesons become massive.', '1711.04832-1-73-3': 'We propose as the most likely scenario that in all phases [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-73-4': 'In the following sections we will discuss several phases of the magnetic theory, their realisation in the brane picture and their relation to the electric theory.', '1711.04832-1-74-0': '# Phases of orientifold QCD[MATH] and QCD[MATH]', '1711.04832-1-75-0': '## Bosonization', '1711.04832-1-76-0': 'We focus on the magnetic description of the orientifold QCD[MATH] theory.', '1711.04832-1-76-1': 'The first region of parameter space under consideration is the region where [MATH], namely region I in diagram B of Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-76-2': 'The rank of the magnetic gauge group, [MATH] is automatically positive in this regime.', '1711.04832-1-76-3': 'The one-loop computation of the previous section suggests that the [MATH] squarks are tachyonic, at least for sufficiently small [MATH] at fixed [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-76-4': 'Henceforth, we will operate under this assumption.', '1711.04832-1-77-0': 'We assume that the magnetic squarks condense.', '1711.04832-1-77-1': 'Let us examine first what happens from the viewpoint of the brane configuration that describes the magnetic theory, Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-77-2': 'The magnetic squarks are low-lying modes of the open strings that stretch between the [MATH] color D3s to the [MATH] flavor D3s (and their images).', '1711.04832-1-77-3': 'In the language of string theory condensation of the squarks is open string tachyon condensation through a process that reconnects the [MATH] color D3s with [MATH] flavor D3s.', '1711.04832-1-78-0': 'After reconnection [MATH] D3 branes are stretching between the NS5 brane and the [MATH] D5 branes, and [MATH] color D3 branes are stretching between the NS5 brane and the [MATH] fivebrane, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-79-0': 'Since the [MATH] reconnected D3 branes have no common directions with the fivebranes on which they end their low energy spectrum does not have a gauge field, gaugino, mesons or mesinos.', '1711.04832-1-79-1': 'The only low lying modes arise from the strings on the [MATH] color D3s and the strings stretching between the color D3s and the reconnected D3s.', '1711.04832-1-79-2': 'The theory on the color D3s is a [MATH] gauge theory at level [MATH] with a massive 2-index antisymmetric gaugino.', '1711.04832-1-79-3': 'The mass of the gaugino remains proportional to the level [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-79-4': 'At energies below this mass the gaugino can be integrated out.', '1711.04832-1-79-5': 'In addition, the field theory analysis below shows that the modes of the strings stretching between the color and reconnected flavor D3s are [MATH] scalars in the fundamental representation of the [MATH] gauge group.', '1711.04832-1-79-6': 'The reconnection preserves the original [MATH] global symmetry which enhances to [MATH] in the low energy theory.', '1711.04832-1-80-0': 'In this manner brane reconnection implies that the IR physics is dominated by a [MATH] CS theory coupled to [MATH] bosons.', '1711.04832-1-80-1': 'Deformations of the brane setup that induce a non-vanishing mass to the quarks in the electric description show that the magnetic theory has the right interactions to be the bosonic theory appearing in bosonization.', '1711.04832-1-80-2': 'The deformation 2 in Fig. [REF] leaves the level unchanged and Higgses the dual gauge group.', '1711.04832-1-80-3': 'The deformation 4 shifts the level but does not Higgs the dual gauge group.', '1711.04832-1-81-0': 'Let us take a closer look at the features of the magnetic field theory.', '1711.04832-1-81-1': 'In terms of the low-energy magnetic theory of section [REF] it is easy to see that the color-flavor locking vev of the magnetic squarks Higgses the color gauge group from [EQUATION] and leaves behind the gauginos in the 2-index antisymmetric of the Higgsed gauge group and [MATH] fundamental squarks.', '1711.04832-1-81-2': 'The [MATH] magnetic quarks become massive in the presence of the squark vev because of the Yukawa coupling between the squarks, the gauginos and the quarks.', '1711.04832-1-81-3': 'Similarly, both the elementary mesons and mesinos obtain masses and decouple at low energies.', '1711.04832-1-82-0': 'The resulting low energy theory has global symmetry [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-82-1': 'After integrating out the massive gaugino (with the assumption that [MATH] everywhere in this section), we obtain a [MATH] CS theory at level [MATH] coupled to [MATH] squarks.', '1711.04832-1-82-2': 'The magnetic tree-level Lagrangian that was Higgsed leads automatically to a [MATH]-invariant quartic interaction for the squarks of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-82-3': 'This is one of the two possible quartic scalar interactions that are [MATH]-invariant (see [CITATION] for related comments; the interaction [MATH] is the second possibility).', '1711.04832-1-82-4': 'The renormalization group will naturally induce this second interaction, as well as the [MATH]-invariant mass term [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-82-5': 'The match of massive deformations in the electric and magnetic theory above via suitable brane motions reinforces the picture that the bosonic theory is indeed at a Wilson-Fischer fixed point as required by bosonization.', '1711.04832-1-83-0': 'To summarise, in the IR of the electric theory we have [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-83-1': 'In the IR of the magnetic theory we have [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-83-2': 'In this regime the non-supersymmetric Seiberg duality implies the 3d bosonization duality [REF] with the identification [REF], [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-84-0': '## Symmetry breaking', '1711.04832-1-85-0': 'In this subsection we discuss the regions II and II[MATH] in the phase diagram B in Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-85-1': 'We will argue in favour of a symmetry breaking scenario in both regions.', '1711.04832-1-85-2': 'Region II is characterised by the inequalities [MATH] and region II[MATH] by the inequalities [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-85-3': 'It is convenient to consider first region II[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-86-0': '### Region II[MATH] means that there are more flavor D3 branes than color D3 branes.', '1711.04832-1-86-1': 'As a result, at most [MATH] D3 branes can reconnect.', '1711.04832-1-86-2': 'The color group is fully Higgsed and one is left with [MATH] flavor D3s stretching between the [MATH] and the flavor D5s over an O3[MATH] plane in addition to the reconnected D3s, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-87-0': 'The elementary mesons on the [MATH] D3s are massive.', '1711.04832-1-87-1': 'The flavor D3s stay attached to the orientifold and their global symmetry remains [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-88-0': 'At the same time there is a global [MATH] symmetry associated with the [MATH] D3s.', '1711.04832-1-88-1': 'We deduce that in string theory there is a breaking of the global [MATH] symmetry of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-88-2': 'In the IR field theory the global symmetries enhance and it is not hard to show that the color-flavor locking vev of the squarks breaks the global [MATH] in the following way [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-1-88-3': 'This is exactly the same pattern of symmetry breaking [EQUATION] anticipated in [CITATION] with the identification [REF], [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-88-4': 'This identification is consistent with massive deformations of the theory.', '1711.04832-1-89-0': 'Consequently, the IR physics of this phase is described by the coset [MATH]-model of the Nambu-Goldstone modes associated with the breaking [REF].', '1711.04832-1-89-1': 'There are [EQUATION] massless Nambu-Goldstone bosons, which arise as massless modes on the open strings stretching between the [MATH] D3-branes and the [MATH] D3-branes, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-1-89-2': 'As a check, notice that the result [REF] (derived from [REF]) agrees with the counting of Nambu-Goldstone bosons in QCD[MATH] [REF].', '1711.04832-1-90-0': 'The order parameter for the breaking is [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-91-0': '### Region II', '1711.04832-1-92-0': 'The region II, characterised by the parameter regime [MATH], is more intriguing.', '1711.04832-1-92-1': 'On one hand, this is a case where, at first sight, all [MATH] flavor D3s can reconnect with color D3s leading to an IR [MATH] theory coupled to [MATH] bosons implying bosonization and no global symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-1-92-2': 'On the other hand, the dictionary [REF] implies that this phase should still be describing the symmetry breaking phase of QCD[MATH] with [MATH] where bosonization is inconsistent.', '1711.04832-1-92-3': 'It is hard to believe that the association of the orientifold QCD[MATH] with QCD[MATH] breaks down in this region because we can go to a limit of large [MATH] where the gaugino becomes arbitrarily massive and can be integrated out safely.', '1711.04832-1-92-4': 'The only logical conclusion seems to be that something critical is happening to the brane configuration as one crosses the threshold [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-93-0': 'A natural guess is the presence of additional instabilities in the brane setup that describes the magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-1-93-1': 'Previously, in region I, it was sensible to expect that the brane reconnection leads to a stable vacuum.', '1711.04832-1-93-2': 'We would like to propose that the vacuum after brane reconnection is unstable, namely the [MATH] scalars in the resulting IR description have a negative mass squared.', '1711.04832-1-93-3': 'In that case, it seems likely that open string condensation could proceed by annihilating the [MATH] color D3s against another set of [MATH] color D3s eventually leaving behind [MATH] reconnected D3s (between [MATH] D5s and the NS5) and [MATH] flavor D3s (between [MATH] D5s and the [MATH] bound state).', '1711.04832-1-93-4': 'This is identical to the symmetry breaking configuration in region II[MATH].', '1711.04832-1-94-0': 'As a check of this scenario let us consider a deformation of the configuration with [MATH] reconnected D3s and [MATH] D3s between the [MATH] bound state and the NS5 brane that adds mass to the scalars (equivalently, a real mass to the fermion quarks in the electric description).', '1711.04832-1-94-1': 'The deformation (see deformation 4 in Fig. [REF] in appendix [REF]) is implemented by bringing the [MATH] D5s on top of the [MATH] bound state and breaking them up to two half-D5s separated symmetrically in the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-1-94-2': 'The [MATH] bound state connects with the broken D5s to create a [MATH] fivebrane bound state.', '1711.04832-1-94-3': 'The reconnected D3s are attached to the broken D5s and dragged along the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-1-94-4': 'Hence, for a finite separation the low-lying scalar modes on the strings stretching between the color D3s and the reconnected D3s acquire a positive mass squared shift.', '1711.04832-1-94-5': 'If they are tachyonic at zero separation, as the above scenario dictates, then there is a critical distance where they become massless.', '1711.04832-1-94-6': 'Precisely at that point there is a dual description of the system in terms of the bosonic degrees of freedom.', '1711.04832-1-94-7': 'For larger separations the scalars are massive and can be integrated out to recover a topological QFT in the infra-red.', '1711.04832-1-94-8': 'This picture reproduces nicely all the features of the phase transition in Fig. 6 of Ref. [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-94-9': 'Similar statements can be made for the mass deformation represented by the brane move 2 in Fig. [REF] in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-1-95-0': 'The above-mentioned checks imply an overall picture which is consistent with the proposed scenario of a transition in brane physics at [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-95-1': 'It would be interesting to find further evidence in favour of this scenario with a more explicit computation in string theory.', '1711.04832-1-96-0': '## Scenario of symmetry restoration', '1711.04832-1-97-0': 'In QCD[MATH] it is expected [CITATION] that there is some [MATH] such that when [MATH] the IR CFT is interacting and there is no symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-1-97-1': 'Can this possibility arise naturally in our framework?', '1711.04832-1-97-2': 'We would like to argue that this could be described in the magnetic brane setup by a regime where the magnetic squarks are massive.', '1711.04832-1-98-0': 'Assume that quantum effects make the squarks massive (namely, their mass squared is positive).', '1711.04832-1-98-1': 'Integrating out the massive squarks we obtain [EQUATION] where the dots indicate higher dimension interactions including an [MATH] interaction.', '1711.04832-1-98-2': '[MATH] is an induced tachyonic mass squared to the mesons.', '1711.04832-1-98-3': 'To write this mass term we employed the proposed relation [REF] between the signs of the mass squared of the squarks and the mesons, which suggests that the mesons are tachyonic in this case.', '1711.04832-1-98-4': 'Then, as the tachyonic mesons [MATH] condense the quarks become massive.', '1711.04832-1-98-5': 'In the IR we obtain the sum of a topological QFT with free mesinos.', '1711.04832-1-98-6': 'In addition, at the true vacuum of the theory we have massive mesons, with [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-98-7': 'Indeed, in the large-[MATH] limit the theory on the flavor branes acquires supersymmetry because there is no distinction between the symmetric and the anti-symmetric representations.', '1711.04832-1-98-8': '[MATH] corrections should give a small mass to the mesons.', '1711.04832-1-99-0': '# The special case of Yang-Mills theory without a Chern-Simons term', '1711.04832-1-100-0': 'Consider the special case where [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-100-1': 'In the absence of a bare CS term the IR of the field theory is dominated by the Yang-Mills interaction.', '1711.04832-1-100-2': 'The theory is parity invariant classically.', '1711.04832-1-100-3': 'Due to the Vafa-Witten theorem [CITATION] that states that parity cannot be broken spontaneously, the theory is also parity invariant quantum mechanically.', '1711.04832-1-101-0': 'The brane dynamics is also expected to be different with respect to the case [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-101-1': 'Instead of having configurations with NS5 brane and a tilted fivebrane we have configurations with parallel NS5 branes.', '1711.04832-1-102-0': 'The magnetic theory is [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-102-1': 'For [MATH], we have [MATH], hence brane dynamics implies that the bosonization phase cannot occur.', '1711.04832-1-103-0': 'According to the philosophy advocated in this paper, whether flavour symmetry is broken or not depends on whether the magnetic squarks condense or become massive.', '1711.04832-1-104-0': 'Brane dynamics suggests that if the squarks condense the flavour symmetry is broken [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-104-1': 'This pattern, however, is not consistent with the Vafa-Witten theorem, because such a breaking pattern does not preserve parity.', '1711.04832-1-105-0': 'According to eq. [REF] the squarks may become tachyonic or massive.', '1711.04832-1-105-1': 'For large enough [MATH] they become tachyonic.', '1711.04832-1-105-2': 'We propose that for [MATH] the squarks are massive.', '1711.04832-1-106-0': 'When the squarks become massive flavour symmetry is not broken.', '1711.04832-1-106-1': 'The dynamics is the same as that of the case [MATH], which was described in section [REF].', '1711.04832-1-106-2': 'This result is different from the one for QCD[MATH] with [MATH], as described in the literature [CITATION].', '1711.04832-1-106-3': 'For sufficiently small [MATH] QCD[MATH] without a Chern-Simons term is expected to break the flavour symmetry in a pattern consistent with parity [MATH].', '1711.04832-1-106-4': 'This disparity does not lead to an obvious inconsistency, because the present electric theory contains a massless gluino.', '1711.04832-1-106-5': 'The gluino does not acquire a CS mass and its presence can alter the IR dynamics.', '1711.04832-1-107-0': 'We therefore make a prediction, using brane dynamics, that 3d Yang-Mills theory with a fermion in the antisymmetric representation and [MATH] fundamental fermions does not break the USp flavour symmetry, as opposed to the theory without the antisymmetric fermion.'}
{'1711.04832-2-0-0': 'We consider a non-supersymmetric USp Yang-Mills Chern-Simons gauge theory coupled to fundamental flavours.', '1711.04832-2-0-1': 'The theory is realised in type IIB string theory via an embedding in a Hanany-Witten brane configuration which includes an orientifold and anti branes.', '1711.04832-2-0-2': 'We argue that the theory admits a magnetic Seiberg dual.', '1711.04832-2-0-3': 'Using the magnetic dual we identify dynamics in field theory and brane physics that correspond to various phases, obtaining a better understanding of 3d bosonization and dynamical breaking of flavour symmetry in USp QCD[MATH] theory.', '1711.04832-2-0-4': "In field theory both phases correspond to magnetic 'squark' condensation.", '1711.04832-2-0-5': 'In string theory they correspond to open string tachyon condensation and brane reconnection.', '1711.04832-2-0-6': "We also discuss other phases where the magnetic 'squark' is massive.", '1711.04832-2-0-7': 'Finally, we briefly comment on the case of unitary gauge groups.', '1711.04832-2-1-0': 'pageanchor=true', '1711.04832-2-2-0': 'empty', '1711.04832-2-3-0': 'linkcolor=black', '1711.04832-2-4-0': 'plain', '1711.04832-2-5-0': '# Introduction and conclusions', '1711.04832-2-6-0': 'Quantum chromodynamics in three spacetime dimensions (QCD[MATH]) is an interesting variant of the more familiar QCD in four dimensions.', '1711.04832-2-6-1': 'In a sense, the three dimensional theory is richer because three dimensions allow the addition of a topological Chern-Simons (CS) term which blocks the RG running of the Yang-Mills interaction towards strong coupling and alters the infra-red (IR) dynamics.', '1711.04832-2-7-0': 'In the past decade or so there has been significant progress in understanding the dynamics of 3d supersymmetric gauge theories including the dynamics of a large class of supersymmetric Chern-Simons theories coupled to different types of matter.', '1711.04832-2-7-1': 'Steps forward have also been achieved in the study of non-supersymmetric Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons (YM-CS) theories like QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-7-2': 'For example, consider a CS theory coupled to [MATH] Dirac fermions in the fundamental representation.', '1711.04832-2-7-3': 'A recent intriguing result is a conjectured duality between the following pairs of theories[CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-7-4': 'A variant of this duality postulates that [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-7-5': 'In these expressions, and in what follows, the notation [MATH] quotes bare CS levels.', '1711.04832-2-7-6': 'These are written in terms of the shifted level [MATH] defined as [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-7-7': 'Similarly, in the notation [MATH] the first level refers to the bare level of the [MATH] part and the second to the bare level of the [MATH] part.', '1711.04832-2-7-8': 'Since both of these dualities relate a theory with fermions to a theory with bosons they are frequently referred to as bosonization (in close analogy with the more familiar bosonization in two dimensions).', '1711.04832-2-7-9': 'The scalars on the bosonic side have quartic interactions tuned to a Wilson-Fisher fixed point.', '1711.04832-2-7-10': 'The duality holds for [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-8-0': 'Versions of this duality for [MATH] and [MATH] gauge groups have also been formulated [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-8-1': 'In this paper, we will mostly focus on results that are very closely related to the [MATH] version of the duality [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-8-2': 'Similar to the [MATH] case, the bosonic side requires that the scalars are at a [MATH] invariant Wilson-Fisher fixed point.', '1711.04832-2-8-3': 'This duality is also expected to be valid for [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-9-0': 'More recently, Komargodski and Seiberg (KS) argued for a scenario [CITATION] that describes the infra-red dynamics of the fermionic theory when [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-9-1': 'According to that scenario there is a window, for [MATH], where the theory exhibits a phase of flavor symmetry breaking: [MATH] in the unitary case and [MATH] in the symplectic case.', '1711.04832-2-9-2': '[MATH] is a critical number of flavors whose precise value is currently unknown.', '1711.04832-2-9-3': 'The evidence in favour of this scenario includes the matching of anomalies and consistency under several RG flows [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-9-4': 'For [MATH] it is conjectured [CITATION] that the theory flows to some IR fixed point that does not exhibit flavor symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-2-10-0': '## Summary of results', '1711.04832-2-11-0': '## Benefits of an ultra-violet embedding', '1711.04832-2-12-0': 'In this paper we provide new evidence in favour of the above scenario for QCD[MATH] (bosonization, symmetry breaking, CFT) by embedding the IR dynamics of QCD[MATH] in an ultra-violet (UV) YM-CS theory, which is a 3d cousin of a 4d non-supersymmetric orientifold QCD theory [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-12-1': 'The main part of the paper will focus on the case of [MATH] gauge group.', '1711.04832-2-12-2': "In that case, the UV embedding involves a [MATH] YM-CS theory at bare level [MATH] coupled to a real scalar field in the 2-index symmetric representation ('scalar gaugino'), a Dirac fermion in the 2-index antisymmetric representation ('gaugino'), [MATH] scalars in the fundamental representation ('squarks') and [MATH] fermions in the fundamental representation ('quarks').", '1711.04832-2-12-3': 'We argue that there are regimes when [MATH] where the quantum effects lift the scalars and the IR behaviour is dominated by standard QCD[MATH] physics.', '1711.04832-2-12-4': 'The level [MATH] that appears in KS [CITATION], e.g. in eq. [REF], is related to [MATH] via the relation [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-12-5': 'The combination [MATH] arises naturally when we integrate out the antisymmetric gaugino and will appear frequently in our formulae.', '1711.04832-2-12-6': 'It is therefore convenient to introduce the integer [EQUATION] in terms of which [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-13-0': 'The great advantage of the additional degrees of freedom in the orientifold QCD theory is that they allow us to formulate a non-supersymmetric version of Seiberg duality.', '1711.04832-2-13-1': 'For [MATH] this duality reduces to level-rank duality [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-13-2': "For general [MATH] the dual 'magnetic' theory is a [MATH] gauge theory whose details will be described in detail in section [REF].", '1711.04832-2-13-3': '4d versions of the duality were studied in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-13-4': "In this paper we will show that the finite [MATH] duality passes the standard checks of consistency under RG flows, global symmetry and 't Hooft anomaly matching.", '1711.04832-2-13-5': 'Further favourable evidence is provided by string theory.', '1711.04832-2-13-6': 'We will return to some of the salient features of the string theory embedding in a moment.', '1711.04832-2-14-0': 'The electric-magnetic duality operates when the rank of the dual gauge group is positive, namely when [MATH] (equivalently, when [MATH]).', '1711.04832-2-14-1': 'For values of [MATH] outside this window there is no magnetic dual and one has to analyse separately the strong coupling dynamics of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-14-2': 'It is unclear what the infra-red physics of the theory are in this regime.', '1711.04832-2-14-3': 'In supersymmetric analogues, e.g. in 3d [MATH] SQCD theories, the supersymmetric vacuum is lifted by non-perturbative effects when the dual rank becomes negative.', '1711.04832-2-14-4': 'When the dual rank vanishes the dual theory is a theory of free chiral multiplets.', '1711.04832-2-15-0': 'In this paper we will work exclusively in the regime where the dual magnetic description exists.', '1711.04832-2-15-1': 'The magnetic description will provide an illuminating perspective on the dynamics of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-15-2': 'In particular, we will find, under certain assumptions, that the magnetic theory leads to a rather natural universal description for all the phases of QCD[MATH] outlined above.', '1711.04832-2-15-3': 'We will show that when [MATH] bosonization emerges naturally in the IR via magnetic squark condensation; a mechanism that reminds of monopole condensation and the dual Meissner effect in four dimensional physics.', '1711.04832-2-15-4': 'We will not be able to prove conclusively the existence of magnetic squark condensation, but we will provide evidence indicating that it is a viable possibility and that it leads to a suggestive consistent synthesis of known results.', '1711.04832-2-16-0': 'This mechanism provides a new explanation of 3d bosonization.', '1711.04832-2-16-1': 'Unlike previous explanations based on deformations of supersymmetric 3d Seiberg dualities and mirror symmetry (see e.g. [CITATION] for beautiful work in these directions) in this mechanism bosonization arises dynamically in the infrared as a consequence of a non-supersymmetric version of Seiberg duality.', '1711.04832-2-16-2': 'These effects describe the part of the phase diagram denoted as I in the diagrams of Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-17-0': 'Once magnetic squark condensation is assumed the phase of symmetry breaking for [MATH] follows naturally.', '1711.04832-2-17-1': 'There are two regions in the phase diagram of orientifold QCD[MATH], regions II and II[MATH] in diagram B of Fig. [REF], that describe in the IR the physics of QCD[MATH] for [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-18-0': 'Interestingly, the magnetic description in regions II and II[MATH] is not identical.', '1711.04832-2-18-1': 'Consider first the situation in region II[MATH] where [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-18-2': 'In this case squark condensation leads to a complete Higgsing of the gauge group leaving behind a sigma model of Goldstone bosons for the dynamically broken symmetry.', '1711.04832-2-18-3': 'The magnetic theory provides an explicit description of how the sigma model arises.', '1711.04832-2-19-0': 'Region II of the phase diagram of orientifold QCD[MATH] refers to the parameter regime [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-20-0': 'The dictionary [REF] implies that this region describes the same IR physics as QCD[MATH] with [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-20-1': 'Naively, it looks like a natural continuation of the bosonization regime where squark condensation leads to a theory of [MATH] bosons.', '1711.04832-2-20-2': 'It is obvious, however, that this theory cannot be the same as the bosonic dual of region I, because bosonization is inconsistent for [MATH], which is also clear in the behaviour of the electric and magnetic orientifold QCD theories under mass deformations.', '1711.04832-2-20-3': 'This suggests that [MATH] is a critical point above which the magnetic theory reverts to the symmetry breaking phase.', '1711.04832-2-20-4': 'We propose a particular scenario for the mechanism behind this phase transition.', '1711.04832-2-20-5': 'This scenario is consistent with expectations about the massive deformations of the fermionic (electric) theory and predicts naturally a phase transition to a topological sector as the mass of the fermions is increased.', '1711.04832-2-20-6': 'A dual bosonic formulation appears at the transition point as anticipated by KS [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-21-0': 'The symmetry pattern for sufficiently large [MATH] persists as long as the magnetic squarks are tachyonic and condense.', '1711.04832-2-21-1': 'Competing effects in the one-loop mass normalisation of the squarks suggest the possibility that when [MATH] is large enough, [MATH] for some [MATH], the squarks become massive.', '1711.04832-2-21-2': 'Depending on the mass squared of the elementary magnetic meson fields, Seiberg duality suggests a specific description for the IR theory.', '1711.04832-2-21-3': 'We argue that the most likely scenario is one where the elementary magnetic mesons are tachyonic.', '1711.04832-2-21-4': 'The condensation of the elementary magnetic mesons leads to an IR theory of free fermions and light mesons, a scenario that agrees with the large-[MATH] results in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-22-0': '## Lessons from string theory', '1711.04832-2-23-0': 'It is useful to consider a further UV embedding of the orientifold QCD theory into a non-supersymmetric brane configuration in string theory.', '1711.04832-2-23-1': 'The immediate benefits of this embedding are:', '1711.04832-2-24-0': 'In this paper we are interested in non-supersymmetric brane configurations in a Hanany-Witten brane setup in type IIB string theory along the lines of the Giveon-Kutasov analysis [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-24-1': 'In order to break supersymmetry we consider a combination of an [MATH] plane, anti D5 branes and anti D3 branes suspended between two 5-branes, one of which is a bound state of an NS5 brane and anti D5 branes.', '1711.04832-2-24-2': 'The mutual presence of anti-branes with an orientifold plane breaks the [MATH] supersymmetry completely.', '1711.04832-2-24-3': 'Supersymmetry is restored asymptotically when [MATH] and [MATH] are taken to infinity.', '1711.04832-2-24-4': 'This feature is useful.', '1711.04832-2-24-5': 'The large-[MATH] regime is a technically convenient regime where supersymmetry is softly broken by [MATH] effects.', '1711.04832-2-25-0': 'The broken supersymmetry leads to non-trivial potentials between different components of the brane configuration.', '1711.04832-2-25-1': 'On the electric side the potentials are attractive and lead to a stable brane configuration.', '1711.04832-2-25-2': 'On the magnetic side, however, the potentials can be repulsive, leading to open string tachyon condensation and brane reconnection between the flavor and colour branes.', '1711.04832-2-25-3': 'The rich phase diagram that arises in this manner is literally a web of phases driven by the presence or absence of open string instabilities.', '1711.04832-2-25-4': 'The result translates in gauge theory either as bosonization or dynamical symmetry breaking, or a CFT.', '1711.04832-2-26-0': '## Outline of the paper', '1711.04832-2-27-0': 'The paper is organised as follows.', '1711.04832-2-27-1': 'In section [REF] we present the orientifold field theories of interest, describe how they are embedded in suitable brane configurations in ten-dimensional type IIB string theory, and formulate the non-supersymmetric electric-magnetic duality that they are conjectured to obey.', '1711.04832-2-27-2': 'The evidence in favour of the duality is summarised in a separate subsection.', '1711.04832-2-28-0': 'In section [REF] we discuss perturbative non-supersymmetric effects in both the electric and magnetic gauge theories.', '1711.04832-2-28-1': 'We discuss the expected behaviour of the electric theory in the IR and its relation to QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-28-2': 'A detailed description of the IR physics from the magnetic theory point of view is relegated to the subsequent sections.', '1711.04832-2-29-0': 'In section [REF] we consider the parameter regime where [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-29-1': "In that case of the magnetic squarks can lead to 'full color-flavor recombination' (color-flavor locking) on the magnetic side.", '1711.04832-2-29-2': 'This is translated to 3d bosonization of the electric side.', '1711.04832-2-29-3': 'The magnetic description does not provide only the correct matter content for bosonization, but also the requisite [MATH]-invariant quartic interaction needed for the Wilson-Fischer fixed point.', '1711.04832-2-29-4': 'It is argued that this picture is consistent for [MATH], but fails for larger values of [MATH], where the most natural scenario, in accordance with expectations from QCD[MATH], is a scenario of a symmetry breaking phase.', '1711.04832-2-30-0': 'The other regime is when [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-30-1': "In that regime the squark condensation Higgses the magnetic gauge group completely and leads to 'partial color-flavor recombination'.", '1711.04832-2-30-2': 'Section [REF] provides a detailed description of the effects that take place in this regime.', '1711.04832-2-30-3': 'On the electric field theory side these effects are translated as dynamical symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-2-30-4': 'The Nambu-Goldstone bosons are identified as massless modes in the low-energy spectrum of the open string theory on the branes and as massless modes after squark condensation in the magnetic Lagrangian.', '1711.04832-2-31-0': 'In section [REF] we discuss the possibility of a phase where the magnetic squark becomes massive.', '1711.04832-2-31-1': 'This leads to a phase with a CFT description in the IR in accordance with field theory expectations in QCD[MATH] [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-31-2': 'The magnetic dual provides a specific prediction for the IR CFT.', '1711.04832-2-31-3': 'This possibility requires the existence of a new critical number [MATH] with the new phase being realised when [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-32-0': 'In the above analysis it is always assumed that the bare CS level of the orientifold QCD theory [MATH] is non-zero.', '1711.04832-2-32-1': 'When [MATH] the IR physics is dominated by the YM interaction.', '1711.04832-2-32-2': 'The IR physics of this theory, which besides the effects of the fundamental fermions involves non-trivial dynamics from Dirac fermions in the 2-index anti-symmetric representation as well as additional scalar fields, is an interesting question that has not been explored in the past.', '1711.04832-2-32-3': 'This situation is discussed in section [REF].', '1711.04832-2-32-4': 'A recent discussion of CS theories with matter in the adjoint representation but no fundamentals can be found in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-33-0': '## Open problems', '1711.04832-2-34-0': 'In this paper we focus on the case of (orientifold) QCD[MATH] theories with symplectic gauge group.', '1711.04832-2-34-1': 'This choice is dictated by the fact that this case is the most straightforward one from the viewpoint of the string theory construction that underlies part of this work.', '1711.04832-2-34-2': 'Since the analysis of unitary groups with even rank, [MATH], shares many similarities with the analysis of the [MATH] case (and is related to it by a non-perturbative planar equivalence), it is rather natural to put forward a corresponding picture for [MATH] (orientifold) QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-34-3': 'Preliminary comments in this direction are summarised in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-2-35-0': 'The formulation of non-supersymmetric Seiberg duality for orientifold QCD[MATH] theories with general unitary gauge groups and orthogonal groups remains an open problem.', '1711.04832-2-35-1': 'We hope to return to these cases in a future publication.', '1711.04832-2-36-0': '## Summary of conventions', '1711.04832-2-37-0': 'In what follows when we mention the level of a UV gauge theory we will always refer, unless otherwise stated, to the bare level [MATH] (or [MATH] in the [MATH] gauge theories).', '1711.04832-2-37-1': '[MATH] is always an integer -it is the same integer (or related to the integer) that appears in the 5-brane bound states in our brane configurations.', '1711.04832-2-37-2': 'This convention is to be contrasted with other notation in the literature, e.g. [CITATION] that is closely related to our discussion, where the quoted level is [MATH] with [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-38-0': 'When we integrate out massive particles the CS level shifts.', '1711.04832-2-38-1': 'In the YM-CS regularisation (which we follow) only the fermions contribute to the shift.', '1711.04832-2-38-2': 'We will use conventions natural in string theory where the integration of a single Dirac fermion with positive mass [MATH] leads to the IR level [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-38-3': 'A list of possible mass deformations, and their string theory interpretation, is summarised in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-2-39-0': 'Another useful fact in our discussion is the fact that when we integrate out a gaugino (in the 2-index antisymmetric representation) in the [MATH] theory we obtain the CS level shift [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-40-0': '# Non-supersymmetric [MATH] Seiberg duality', '1711.04832-2-41-0': 'The gauge theories of interest can be phrased independently of string theory.', '1711.04832-2-41-1': 'Nevertheless, since string theory provides a convenient organising principle for the non-supersymmetric duality of interest we will present in parallel the gauge theories in question and their string theory embedding.', '1711.04832-2-41-2': 'We consider the [MATH] YM-CS theories that describe the IR physics on the Hanany-Witten brane configurations depicted in Figs. [REF], [REF].', '1711.04832-2-42-0': '## Electric theory', '1711.04832-2-43-0': 'Let us start with a description of the electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-43-1': 'The brane configuration that engineers the theory consists of [MATH] anti D3 branes suspended between an NS5 brane and a tilted [MATH] fivebrane.', '1711.04832-2-43-2': 'In addition there is an orientifold [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-43-3': 'The orientifold plane changes from [MATH] to [MATH] when it crosses the fivebrane.', '1711.04832-2-43-4': 'This is identical to the brane configuration of [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-43-5': 'In addition, we add [MATH] anti D3 branes which are attached to the right of the NS5 brane and end on D5 branes.', '1711.04832-2-43-6': 'The resulting brane configuration is depicted in Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-43-7': 'It consists of', '1711.04832-2-44-0': 'The matter content of the theory is similar to the matter content of the supersymmetric theory, except that the fields transform differently with respect to the gauge group, due to the presence of the orientifold.', '1711.04832-2-44-1': 'The full matter content of the electric theory is given in table [REF] below.', '1711.04832-2-44-2': 'Note that the gauge fields [MATH] and the scalar gaugino [MATH] transform in the two-index symmetric (adjoint) representation of the gauge group, while the Dirac gaugino [MATH] transforms in the two-index antisymmetric representation.', '1711.04832-2-44-3': 'The complex scalars [MATH] (squarks) and the Dirac fermions [MATH] (quarks) are both in a fundamental pseudo-real representation of [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-44-4': 'Note that although the global symmetry on the brane is [MATH], the global symmetry of the low energy QCD theory is [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-44-5': 'This is due to irrelevant interactions inherent to the string realisation of the theory.', '1711.04832-2-45-0': 'The classical Lagrangian of the electric theory is [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-45-1': 'The gauge part is Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons theory at level [MATH] [EQUATION] [MATH] is the standard gauge covariant derivative and the contraction of spinor indices has been kept implicit.', '1711.04832-2-45-2': 'For the matter part [EQUATION] where [MATH] are color indices and [MATH] are flavor indices.', '1711.04832-2-45-3': 'The pseudo-reality condition imposes on bosons and fermions [EQUATION] with [MATH], [MATH] the [MATH], [MATH] symplectic tensors.', '1711.04832-2-46-0': '## Magnetic theory', '1711.04832-2-47-0': 'We define the proposed magnetic dual as the theory that describes the infra-red dynamics of the brane configuration in Fig. [REF], which results from that in Fig. [REF] by swapping the NS5 and [MATH] 5-branes across the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-2-47-1': 'In the presence of the orientifold [MATH] additional D3 branes are created during this swap.', '1711.04832-2-47-2': 'As a result, we find [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-47-3': 'D3 branes suspended between the NS5 and [MATH] 5-branes.', '1711.04832-2-48-0': 'The dual theory is a [MATH] gauge theory at bare CS level [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-48-1': 'It exists when [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-48-2': 'Note that classically the flavor anti D3 branes can slide freely between the tilted fivebrane bound state and the [MATH] D5 branes (which share the common directions (89)) leading to corresponding elementary meson and mesino degrees of freedom.', '1711.04832-2-48-3': 'The meson [MATH] transforms in the 2-index antisymmetric of [MATH] and the mesino [MATH] in the 2-index symmetric representation of [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-48-4': 'The full matter content of the magnetic theory is summarised in table [REF].', '1711.04832-2-49-0': 'Let us discuss the classical Lagrangian of the magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-2-49-1': 'Besides the gauge interactions [MATH] for gauge group [MATH] [EQUATION] a part of the Lagrangian includes the same terms [EQUATION] for the magnetic squarks [MATH], and quarks [MATH] as the electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-49-2': 'In addition, it includes kinetic terms for the mesons [MATH] and mesinos [MATH] [EQUATION] and a set of interactions that constitute the non-supersymmetric orientifold version of the supersymmetric cubic superpotential between mesons/mesinos and squarks/quarks.', '1711.04832-2-50-0': 'The complete matter Lagrangian is [EQUATION] and the total Lagrangian [EQUATION] [MATH] is a coupling with mass dimension [MATH] that appears in front of the cubic superpotential interactions in the supersymmetric version of the theory.', '1711.04832-2-50-1': 'In the non-supersymmetric theory at hand the RG flow will not respect the relations between the couplings that appear in front of the terms in the last line of [REF].', '1711.04832-2-50-2': 'The expression [REF] is written here only as a specific bare Lagrangian that follows from its supersymmetric ancestor by appropriately modifying the representations of certain fields.', '1711.04832-2-51-0': '## Evidence for duality', '1711.04832-2-52-0': 'We claim that the above electric and the magnetic theories form a Seiberg dual.', '1711.04832-2-52-1': "Apart from the argument in string theory based on swapping fivebranes, in appendix [REF] we provide standard evidence in the form of 't Hooft anomaly matching as well as a duality after deformations and RG flows.", '1711.04832-2-53-0': 'Note that at large [MATH] and [MATH] the two theories become supersymmetric.', '1711.04832-2-53-1': 'The reason is that in this limit there is no difference between the two-index symmetric and the two-index antisymmetric representations.', '1711.04832-2-53-2': 'In the brane picture this statement translates to the fact that the orientifold (the Mobius amplitude) is a [MATH] effect.', '1711.04832-2-53-3': 'Therefore, in the large [MATH] limit the electric and magnetic theories are dual to each other as a supersymmetric pair similar to the one analysed in [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-54-0': 'There is another argument, from string theory, in favour of the duality, due to Sugimoto.', '1711.04832-2-54-1': 'This argument does not involve fivebrane swapping.', '1711.04832-2-54-2': 'It relies on the SUSY duality and, under certain assumptions, leads to the non-SUSY duality.', '1711.04832-2-54-3': 'The idea is that the same operation (adding [MATH] antibranes) on a pair of dual supersymmetric theories leads to a duality between non-supersymmetric electric and magnetic theories.', '1711.04832-2-54-4': 'The electric SUSY theory becomes the magnetic non-SUSY theory and the magnetic SUSY theory becomes the electric non-SUSY theory.', '1711.04832-2-55-0': 'More explicitly, start from a SUSY Giveon-Kutasov brane configuration that realises a USp electric-magnetic pair [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-55-1': 'Consider the electric side with [MATH] color branes and the magnetic side with [MATH] colour branes.', '1711.04832-2-55-2': 'Both sides contain [MATH] flavour branes.', '1711.04832-2-55-3': 'Add [MATH] infinite anti-D3 branes on top of the SUSY electric theory and [MATH] infinite anti-D3 branes on top of the SUSY magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-2-55-4': 'In both sides of the duality the [MATH] antibranes extend over the flavour branes, the colour branes and beyond them where there are no D3 branes.', '1711.04832-2-56-0': 'In the original electric side of the duality we obtain [MATH] anti D3 branes as colour branes.', '1711.04832-2-56-1': 'Let us split the [MATH] flavour segment of the anti branes into [MATH] and [MATH] anti branes.', '1711.04832-2-56-2': 'The [MATH] anti branes annihilate the [MATH] branes and the [MATH] anti branes make the fivebrane bound state an NS5 brane.', '1711.04832-2-56-3': 'Similarly, on the "other side" of the brane configuration the [MATH] antibranes become [MATH] flavour antibranes and a tilted fivebrane bound state.', '1711.04832-2-56-4': 'The result is the magnetic [MATH] non-SUSY theory.', '1711.04832-2-57-0': 'In a similar way, adding [MATH] antibranes to the colour part of the SUSY magnetic theory with [MATH] colour brane results in [MATH] antibranes.', '1711.04832-2-57-1': 'The annihilation of branes in the other segments of the configuration lead to the [MATH] non-SUSY electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-58-0': 'We obtained the non-supersymmetric duality between the electric [MATH] theory and the magnetic [MATH] theory from the SUSY pair.', '1711.04832-2-58-1': 'It will be interesting to repeat this exercise in a pure field theory language.', '1711.04832-2-59-0': '# Perturbative dynamics of the electric and magnetic theories', '1711.04832-2-60-0': 'Given that the electric and magnetic theories are non-supersymmetric we anticipate potentials for the various scalars.', '1711.04832-2-60-1': 'The potentials are due to non-planar effects ([MATH] effects) and they vanish in the large-[MATH] limit where both the electric and magnetic theories become a dual pair with [MATH] supersymmetry.', '1711.04832-2-60-2': 'In some cases the field theory potentials have an interpretation as potentials between branes in the brane configuration.', '1711.04832-2-60-3': 'The potentials depend on the UV cut-off of the theory.', '1711.04832-2-60-4': 'Within field theory we can remove this dependence by renormalisation.', '1711.04832-2-60-5': 'The embedding in string theory, however, provides a natural UV cut-off, [MATH], and a physical meaning to the potentials.', '1711.04832-2-61-0': 'In all cases the effects that we consider are due to the difference between the representations of bosons and fermions.', '1711.04832-2-61-1': 'Similar dynamics and considerations were involved in a proposal of a non-supersymmetric S-duality [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-62-0': 'Consider a scalar propagator: in perturbation theory the difference between a bosonic loop and a fermionic loop will produce either a massive scalar or a tachyonic scalar, depending on whether there are more bosonic degrees of freedom or more fermionic degrees of freedom, as depicted schematically in Fig. [REF] below.', '1711.04832-2-63-0': 'If a scalar is massive it will not acquire a vev and the perturbative expansion near the origin (zero vev) is stable.', '1711.04832-2-63-1': 'If a scalar is tachyonic we anticipate a new minimum where a vev is acquired and symmetries (global or local) may be broken.', '1711.04832-2-64-0': '## Electric theory', '1711.04832-2-65-0': 'The electric theory contains two scalars, the squark [MATH] and the scalar gaugino [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-66-0': 'The scalar gaugino couples to itself, to the gauge boson and to the fermionic gaugino [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-66-1': 'The generated mass due to the bosonic and fermionic loops is [EQUATION] namely [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-66-2': 'This suggests aht the point [MATH] is stable, and moreover, that the field [MATH] decouples from the low energy dynamics.', '1711.04832-2-67-0': 'The potential [MATH] has an interpretation in the brane picture: the [MATH] colour branes are attracted to the orientifold plane.', '1711.04832-2-67-1': 'The brane configuration is hence stable (non-tachyonic).', '1711.04832-2-68-0': 'A similar analysis can be performed for the squark [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-68-1': 'The squark couples to the "gauge multiplet", namely to [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-68-2': 'Since there are more bosonic than fermionic degrees of freedom perturbation theory suggests that [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-68-3': 'The squark therefore decouples from the low energy physics.', '1711.04832-2-69-0': 'As a result, the low energy field theory contains a [MATH] gauge field [MATH], a gaugino [MATH] and [MATH] quarks [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-70-0': 'When [MATH] there are Chern-Simons terms.', '1711.04832-2-70-1': 'The Chern-Simons terms provide a mass [MATH] to the gauge field and to the gaugino.', '1711.04832-2-70-2': 'We therefore anticipate that the IR dynamics will be dominated by the topological Chern-Simons theory coupled to the quarks.', '1711.04832-2-70-3': 'In that sense for [MATH] the electric theory is very similar to QCD[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-71-0': 'The case [MATH] is special, as there is no Chern-Simons term.', '1711.04832-2-71-1': 'The IR theory involves the strong coupling dynamics of the Yang-Mills interaction between the gauge field, the gaugino and the quarks.', '1711.04832-2-72-0': '## Magnetic theory', '1711.04832-2-73-0': 'Similarly to the electric theory, the scalar gaugino of the magnetic theory acquires a mass and decouples.', '1711.04832-2-73-1': 'The color branes are therefore attracted to the orientifold plane.', '1711.04832-2-74-0': 'The dynamics of the squarks and the mesons is more complicated.', '1711.04832-2-74-1': 'Let us focus on the squarks.', '1711.04832-2-75-0': 'At the one-loop level there are effects due to the coupling with the gauge multiplet and effects due to the coupling with the meson multiplet.', '1711.04832-2-75-1': 'Let us denote the magnetic gauge coupling by [MATH] and the coupling to the meson multiplet by [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-76-0': 'There are more bosonic than fermionic degrees of freedom in the gauge multiplet and more fermionic than bosonic degrees of freedom in the meson multiplet.', '1711.04832-2-76-1': 'As a result, [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-76-2': 'At the one-loop level the two effects compete and the squark may become massive or tachyonic.', '1711.04832-2-76-3': 'We will consider both possibilities and identify the various phases associated with each one of them.', '1711.04832-2-76-4': 'We note that at large-[MATH] the gauge field becomes very massive and decouples, therefore we anticipate that in this limit the dynamics is dominated by a tachyonic squark.', '1711.04832-2-77-0': 'The magnetic theory includes a coupling of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-77-1': 'If the meson field acquires a vev of the form [MATH] the squark field becomes massive.', '1711.04832-2-77-2': 'If the squark field acquires a vev of the form [MATH], and if flavor symmetry is not broken (bosonized phase), the mesons become massive.', '1711.04832-2-77-3': 'We propose as the most likely scenario that in all phases [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-77-4': 'In the following sections we will discuss several phases of the magnetic theory, their realisation in the brane picture and their relation to the electric theory.', '1711.04832-2-78-0': '# Phases of orientifold QCD[MATH] and QCD[MATH]', '1711.04832-2-79-0': '## Bosonization', '1711.04832-2-80-0': 'We focus on the magnetic description of the orientifold QCD[MATH] theory.', '1711.04832-2-80-1': 'The first region of parameter space under consideration is the region where [MATH], namely region I in diagram B of Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-80-2': 'The rank of the magnetic gauge group, [MATH] is automatically positive in this regime.', '1711.04832-2-80-3': 'The one-loop computation of the previous section suggests that the [MATH] squarks are tachyonic, at least for sufficiently small [MATH] at fixed [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-80-4': 'Henceforth, we will operate under this assumption for the whole region I in diagram B of Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-81-0': 'We assume that the magnetic squarks condense.', '1711.04832-2-81-1': 'Let us examine first what happens from the viewpoint of the brane configuration that describes the magnetic theory, Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-81-2': 'The magnetic squarks are low-lying modes of the open strings that stretch between the [MATH] color D3s to the [MATH] flavor D3s (and their images).', '1711.04832-2-81-3': 'In the language of string theory condensation of the squarks is open string tachyon condensation through a process that reconnects the [MATH] color D3s with [MATH] flavor D3s.', '1711.04832-2-82-0': 'After reconnection [MATH] D3 branes are stretching between the NS5 brane and the [MATH] D5 branes, and [MATH] color D3 branes are stretching between the NS5 brane and the [MATH] fivebrane, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-83-0': 'Since the [MATH] reconnected D3 branes have no common directions with the fivebranes on which they end their low energy spectrum does not have a gauge field, gaugino, mesons or mesinos.', '1711.04832-2-83-1': 'The only low lying modes arise from the strings on the [MATH] color D3s and the strings stretching between the color D3s and the reconnected D3s.', '1711.04832-2-83-2': 'The theory on the color D3s is a [MATH] gauge theory at level [MATH] with a massive 2-index antisymmetric gaugino.', '1711.04832-2-83-3': 'The mass of the gaugino remains proportional to the level [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-83-4': 'At energies below this mass the gaugino can be integrated out.', '1711.04832-2-83-5': 'In addition, the field theory analysis below shows that the modes of the strings stretching between the color and reconnected flavor D3s are [MATH] scalars in the fundamental representation of the [MATH] gauge group.', '1711.04832-2-83-6': 'The reconnection preserves the original [MATH] global symmetry which enhances to [MATH] in the low energy theory.', '1711.04832-2-84-0': 'In this manner brane reconnection implies that the IR physics is dominated by a [MATH] CS theory coupled to [MATH] bosons.', '1711.04832-2-84-1': 'Deformations of the brane setup that induce a non-vanishing mass to the quarks in the electric description show that the magnetic theory has the right interactions to be the bosonic theory appearing in bosonization.', '1711.04832-2-84-2': 'The deformation 2 in Fig. [REF] leaves the level unchanged and Higgses the dual gauge group.', '1711.04832-2-84-3': 'The deformation 4 shifts the level but does not Higgs the dual gauge group.', '1711.04832-2-85-0': 'Let us take a closer look at the features of the magnetic field theory.', '1711.04832-2-85-1': 'In terms of the low-energy magnetic theory of section [REF] it is easy to see that the color-flavor locking vev of the magnetic squarks Higgses the color gauge group from [EQUATION] and leaves behind the gauginos in the 2-index antisymmetric of the Higgsed gauge group and [MATH] fundamental squarks.', '1711.04832-2-85-2': 'The [MATH] magnetic quarks become massive in the presence of the squark vev because of the Yukawa coupling between the squarks, the gauginos and the quarks.', '1711.04832-2-85-3': 'Similarly, both the elementary mesons and mesinos obtain masses and decouple at low energies.', '1711.04832-2-86-0': 'The resulting low energy theory has global symmetry [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-86-1': 'After integrating out the massive gaugino (with the assumption that [MATH] everywhere in this section), we obtain a [MATH] CS theory at level [MATH] coupled to [MATH] squarks.', '1711.04832-2-86-2': 'The magnetic tree-level Lagrangian that was Higgsed leads automatically to a [MATH]-invariant quartic interaction for the squarks of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-86-3': 'This is one of the two possible quartic scalar interactions that are [MATH]-invariant (see [CITATION] for related comments; the interaction [MATH] is the second possibility).', '1711.04832-2-86-4': 'The renormalization group will naturally induce this second interaction, as well as the [MATH]-invariant mass term [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-86-5': 'The match of massive deformations in the electric and magnetic theory above via suitable brane motions reinforces the picture that the bosonic theory is indeed at a Wilson-Fischer fixed point as required by bosonization.', '1711.04832-2-87-0': 'To summarise, after integrating out the gaugino, in the IR of the electric theory we have [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-87-1': 'In the IR of the magnetic theory we have [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-87-2': 'In th regime of this subsection the non-supersymmetric Seiberg duality implies the 3d bosonization duality [REF] with the identification [REF], [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-88-0': '## Symmetry breaking', '1711.04832-2-89-0': 'Next we discuss the regions II and II[MATH] in the phase diagram B in Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-89-1': 'We will argue in favour of a symmetry breaking scenario in both regions.', '1711.04832-2-89-2': 'Region II is characterised by the inequalities [MATH] and region II[MATH] by the inequalities [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-89-3': 'It is convenient to consider first region II[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-90-0': '### Region II[MATH] means that there are more flavor D3 branes than color D3 branes.', '1711.04832-2-90-1': 'As a result, at most [MATH] D3 branes can reconnect.', '1711.04832-2-90-2': 'The color group is fully Higgsed and one is left with [MATH] flavor D3s stretching between the [MATH] and the flavor D5s over an O3[MATH] plane in addition to the reconnected D3s, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-91-0': 'The elementary mesons on the [MATH] D3s are massive.', '1711.04832-2-91-1': 'The flavor D3s stay attached to the orientifold and their global symmetry remains [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-92-0': 'At the same time there is a global [MATH] symmetry associated with the [MATH] D3s.', '1711.04832-2-92-1': 'We deduce that in string theory there is a breaking of the global [MATH] symmetry of the form [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-92-2': 'In the IR field theory the global symmetries enhance and it is not hard to show that the color-flavor locking vev of the squarks breaks the global [MATH] in the following way [EQUATION]', '1711.04832-2-92-3': 'This is exactly the same pattern of symmetry breaking [EQUATION] anticipated in [CITATION] with the identification [REF], [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-92-4': 'This identification is consistent with massive deformations of the theory.', '1711.04832-2-93-0': 'Consequently, the IR physics of this phase is described by the coset [MATH]-model of the Nambu-Goldstone modes associated with the breaking [REF].', '1711.04832-2-93-1': 'There are [EQUATION] massless Nambu-Goldstone bosons, which arise as massless modes on the open strings stretching between the [MATH] D3-branes and the [MATH] D3-branes, see Fig. [REF].', '1711.04832-2-93-2': 'As a check, notice that the result [REF] (derived from [REF]) agrees with the counting of Nambu-Goldstone bosons in QCD[MATH] [REF].', '1711.04832-2-94-0': 'The order parameter for the breaking is [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-95-0': '### Region II', '1711.04832-2-96-0': 'The region II, characterised by the parameter regime [MATH], is more intriguing.', '1711.04832-2-96-1': 'On one hand, this is a case where, at first sight, all [MATH] flavor D3s can reconnect with color D3s leading to an IR [MATH] theory coupled to [MATH] bosons implying bosonization and no global symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-2-96-2': 'On the other hand, the dictionary [REF] implies that this phase should still be describing the symmetry breaking phase of QCD[MATH] with [MATH] where bosonization is inconsistent.', '1711.04832-2-96-3': 'It is hard to believe that the association of the orientifold QCD[MATH] with QCD[MATH] breaks down in this region because we can go to a limit of large [MATH] where the gaugino becomes arbitrarily massive and can be integrated out safely.', '1711.04832-2-96-4': 'The only logical conclusion seems to be that something critical is happening to the brane configuration as one crosses the threshold [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-97-0': 'A natural guess is the presence of additional instabilities in the brane setup that describes the magnetic theory.', '1711.04832-2-97-1': 'Previously, in region I, it was sensible to expect that the brane reconnection leads to a stable vacuum.', '1711.04832-2-97-2': 'We would like to propose that the vacuum after brane reconnection is unstable, namely the [MATH] scalars in the resulting IR description have a negative mass squared.', '1711.04832-2-97-3': 'In that case, it seems likely that open string condensation could proceed by annihilating the [MATH] color D3s against another set of [MATH] color D3s eventually leaving behind [MATH] reconnected D3s (between [MATH] D5s and the NS5) and [MATH] flavor D3s (between [MATH] D5s and the [MATH] bound state).', '1711.04832-2-97-4': 'This is identical to the symmetry breaking configuration in region II[MATH].', '1711.04832-2-98-0': 'As a check of this scenario let us consider a deformation of the configuration with [MATH] reconnected D3s and [MATH] D3s between the [MATH] bound state and the NS5 brane that adds mass to the scalars (equivalently, a real mass to the fermion quarks in the electric description).', '1711.04832-2-98-1': 'The deformation (see deformation 4 in Fig. [REF] in appendix [REF]) is implemented by bringing the [MATH] D5s on top of the [MATH] bound state and breaking them up to two half-D5s separated symmetrically in the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-2-98-2': 'The [MATH] bound state connects with the broken D5s to create a [MATH] fivebrane bound state.', '1711.04832-2-98-3': 'The reconnected D3s are attached to the broken D5s and dragged along the [MATH] direction.', '1711.04832-2-98-4': 'Hence, for a finite separation the low-lying scalar modes on the strings stretching between the color D3s and the reconnected D3s acquire a positive mass squared shift.', '1711.04832-2-98-5': 'If they are tachyonic at zero separation, as the above scenario dictates, then there is a critical distance where they become massless.', '1711.04832-2-98-6': 'Precisely at that point there is a dual description of the system in terms of the bosonic degrees of freedom.', '1711.04832-2-98-7': 'For larger separations the scalars are massive and can be integrated out to recover a topological QFT in the infra-red.', '1711.04832-2-98-8': 'This picture reproduces nicely all the features of the phase transition in Fig. 6 of Ref. [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-98-9': 'Similar statements can be made for the mass deformation represented by the brane move 2 in Fig. [REF] in appendix [REF].', '1711.04832-2-99-0': 'The above-mentioned checks imply an overall picture which is consistent with the proposed scenario of a transition in brane physics at [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-99-1': 'It would be interesting to find further evidence in favour of this scenario with a more explicit computation in string theory.', '1711.04832-2-100-0': '## Scenario of symmetry restoration', '1711.04832-2-101-0': 'In QCD[MATH] it is expected [CITATION] that there is some [MATH] such that when [MATH] the IR CFT is interacting and there is no symmetry breaking.', '1711.04832-2-101-1': 'Can this possibility arise naturally in our framework?', '1711.04832-2-101-2': 'We would like to argue that this could be described in the magnetic brane setup by a regime where the magnetic squarks are massive.', '1711.04832-2-102-0': 'Assume that quantum effects make the squarks massive (namely, their mass squared is positive).', '1711.04832-2-102-1': 'Integrating out the massive squarks we obtain [EQUATION] where the dots indicate higher dimension interactions including an [MATH] interaction.', '1711.04832-2-102-2': '[MATH] is an induced tachyonic mass squared to the mesons.', '1711.04832-2-102-3': 'To write this mass term we employed the proposed relation [REF] between the signs of the mass squared of the squarks and the mesons, which suggests that the mesons are tachyonic in this case.', '1711.04832-2-102-4': 'Then, as the tachyonic mesons [MATH] condense the quarks become massive.', '1711.04832-2-102-5': 'In the IR we obtain the sum of a topological QFT with free mesinos.', '1711.04832-2-102-6': 'In addition, at the true vacuum of the theory we have massive mesons, with [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-102-7': 'Indeed, in the large-[MATH] limit the theory on the flavor branes acquires supersymmetry because there is no distinction between the symmetric and the anti-symmetric representations.', '1711.04832-2-102-8': '[MATH] corrections should give a small mass to the mesons.', '1711.04832-2-103-0': '# The special case of Yang-Mills theory without a Chern-Simons term', '1711.04832-2-104-0': 'Consider the special case where [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-104-1': 'In the absence of a bare CS term the IR of the field theory is dominated by the Yang-Mills interaction.', '1711.04832-2-104-2': 'The theory is parity invariant classically.', '1711.04832-2-104-3': 'Due to the Vafa-Witten theorem [CITATION] that states that parity cannot be broken spontaneously, the theory is also parity invariant quantum mechanically.', '1711.04832-2-105-0': 'The brane dynamics is also expected to be different with respect to the case [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-105-1': 'Instead of having configurations with an NS5 brane and a tilted fivebrane we have configurations with parallel NS5 branes.', '1711.04832-2-106-0': 'The magnetic theory is [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-106-1': 'For [MATH], we have [MATH], hence brane dynamics implies that the bosonization phase cannot occur.', '1711.04832-2-107-0': 'According to the philosophy advocated in this paper, whether flavour symmetry is broken or not depends on whether the magnetic squarks condense or become massive.', '1711.04832-2-108-0': 'Brane dynamics suggests that if the squarks condense the flavour symmetry is broken [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-108-1': 'This pattern, however, is not consistent with the Vafa-Witten theorem, because such a breaking pattern does not preserve parity.', '1711.04832-2-109-0': 'According to eq. [REF] the squarks may become tachyonic or massive.', '1711.04832-2-109-1': 'For large enough [MATH] they become tachyonic.', '1711.04832-2-109-2': 'We propose that for [MATH] the squarks are massive.', '1711.04832-2-110-0': 'When the squarks become massive flavour symmetry is not broken.', '1711.04832-2-110-1': 'The dynamics is the same as that of the case [MATH], which was described in section [REF].', '1711.04832-2-110-2': 'This result is different from the one for QCD[MATH] with [MATH], as described in the literature [CITATION].', '1711.04832-2-110-3': 'For sufficiently small [MATH] QCD[MATH] without a Chern-Simons term is expected to break the flavour symmetry in a pattern consistent with parity [MATH].', '1711.04832-2-110-4': 'This disparity does not lead to an obvious inconsistency, because the present electric theory contains a massless gluino.', '1711.04832-2-110-5': 'The gluino does not acquire a CS mass and its presence can alter the IR dynamics.', '1711.04832-2-111-0': 'We therefore make a prediction, using brane dynamics, that 3d Yang-Mills theory with a fermion in the antisymmetric representation and [MATH] fundamental fermions does not break the USp flavour symmetry, as opposed to the theory without the antisymmetric fermion.'}
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['1711.04832-1-30-3', '1711.04832-2-30-3'], ['1711.04832-1-30-4', '1711.04832-2-30-4'], ['1711.04832-1-73-0', '1711.04832-2-77-0'], ['1711.04832-1-73-1', '1711.04832-2-77-1'], ['1711.04832-1-73-2', '1711.04832-2-77-2'], ['1711.04832-1-73-3', '1711.04832-2-77-3'], ['1711.04832-1-73-4', '1711.04832-2-77-4'], ['1711.04832-1-54-0', '1711.04832-2-54-0'], ['1711.04832-1-54-2', '1711.04832-2-55-3']]
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[]
[['1711.04832-1-76-4', '1711.04832-2-80-4'], ['1711.04832-1-62-2', '1711.04832-2-66-2'], ['1711.04832-1-54-1', '1711.04832-2-55-0'], ['1711.04832-1-54-3', '1711.04832-2-54-4']]
[]
['1711.04832-1-1-0', '1711.04832-1-2-0', '1711.04832-1-3-0', '1711.04832-1-4-0', '1711.04832-1-23-1', '1711.04832-1-43-7', '1711.04832-1-90-0', '1711.04832-2-1-0', '1711.04832-2-2-0', '1711.04832-2-3-0', '1711.04832-2-4-0', '1711.04832-2-23-1', '1711.04832-2-43-7', '1711.04832-2-94-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1711.04832
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1408.4517
{'1408.4517-1-0-0': 'We study the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-0-1': 'We first generalize, adopting the local source hypothesis, the formalism proposed by Dalibard, Dupont-Roc and Cohen-Tannoudji, which separates the contributions of thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift and allows a distinct treatment to atoms in the ground and excited states, to the case out of thermal equilibrium, and then use the generalized formalism to calculate the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an isotropically polarizable neutral atom.', '1408.4517-1-0-2': 'We identify the effects of the thermal fluctuations that originate from the substrate and the environment and discuss in detail how the Casimir-Polder force out of thermal equilibrium behaves in three different distance regions in both the low-temperature limit and the high-temperature limit for both the ground-state and excited-state atoms, with special attention devoted to the new features as opposed to thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-0-3': 'In particular, we recover the new behavior of the atom-wall force out of thermal equilibrium at large distances in the low temperature limit recently found in a different theoretical framework and furthermore we give a concrete region where this behavior holds.', '1408.4517-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1408.4517-1-2-0': 'The effect of interaction between an atom and quantum electromagnetic fields has been a long-standing subject of research.', '1408.4517-1-2-1': 'It is well-known that even in vacuum, the energy levels of an atom are slightly shifted as a result of the interaction between the atom and the fluctuating vacuum electromagnetic fields [CITATION], and these shifts are further modified when boundaries which confine the fields appear.', '1408.4517-1-2-2': 'In fact, when the fluctuations of quantum fields are altered by the presence of boundaries, many novel effects may arise, such as the Casimir effect [CITATION], the light-cone fluctuations when gravity is quantized [CITATION], and the Brownian (random) motion of test particles in an electromagnetic vacuum [CITATION] (Also see [CITATION]), just to name a few.', '1408.4517-1-3-0': 'In 1948, Casimir and Polder discovered that a neutral atom near a perfectly conducting wall feels a net force as a result of the interaction between the atom and vacuum electromagnetic fluctuations [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-3-1': 'At short distances, the force behaves like the van der Waals-London interatomic force which decays like [MATH] where [MATH] is the distance from the wall, while at large distances, the inclusion of relativistic retardation effects yields a different [MATH] dependence and this region is called the Casimir-Polder regime.', '1408.4517-1-3-2': 'Subsequently, by employing the theory of electromagnetic fluctuations developed by Rytov [CITATION], Lifshitz showed that besides the zero-point fluctuations, the thermal fluctuations also give rise to a revision to the atom-wall force [CITATION] which actually becomes the leading contribution to the total force at distances much larger than the wavelength of thermal photons and decays like [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-3-3': 'Later, it was shown that the thermal fluctuations also alter the energy shifts of an atom [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-3-4': 'In recent years, the research on the Casimir-Polder force has been extended to various circumstances, such as in the presence of partly or perfectly reflecting boundaries in the vicinity of an atom which is static or in non-inertial motion in vacuum [CITATION] or immersed in a thermal bath [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-4-0': 'The effect of the thermal fluctuations on the Casimir-Polder force referred to above is about an atom-wall system in thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-4-1': 'Recently, there is growing interest in the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium both theoretically and experimentally [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-4-2': 'In Refs. [CITATION], Antezza etal calculate, using the fluctuational electrodynamics developed by Rytov et.', '1408.4517-1-4-3': 'al [CITATION] and the linear response theory by Wiley and Sipe [CITATION], the Casimir-Polder force felt by an atom near the surface of a half-space dielectric substrate whose temperature is different from that of the thermal bath in the other half-space (environment) under the assumption that the whole system is a stationary configuration, and find that the force exhibits a new behavior at very large distances when the temperature is low, which decays more slowly with the distance than at the thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-4-4': 'The force is also distinctive from that in the case of thermal equilibrium as it displays a sizable temperature dependence which could be attractive or repulsive depending on whether the temperature of the substrate is higher or lower than that of the environment.', '1408.4517-1-4-5': 'It is interesting to note that this new behavior has already been demonstrated in experiment [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-0': 'In this paper, we study the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a dielectric substrate out of thermal equilibrium using a QED treatment of the atom-field coupling.', '1408.4517-1-5-1': 'In such a framework, on one hand, the fluctuating field which is modified by the appearance of the substrate disturbs the atom, and on the other hand, the disturbed atom induces a radiative field in reaction to the disturbance, and both these fields affect the dynamics of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-5-2': 'It has been found in QED that to what extent each mechanism plays a part is determined by the ordering between the operators of the atom and the field in the interaction Hamiltonian [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-3': 'In other words, there exists an indetermination in the contribution of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction.', '1408.4517-1-5-4': 'The ambiguity was resolved when Dalibard, Dupont-Roc and Cohen-Tannoudji (DDC) showed that there exists a preferred symmetric operator ordering which assures that the distinct contributions of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction of the atom to the rate of change of the atomic observables are separately Hermitian [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-5': 'Recently, this formalism has been employed to study the radiative properties of atoms in various cases including non inertial motion of the atom and a thermal bath at equilibrium [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-6': 'In the present paper, we will first generalize the DDC formalism originally established for thermal equilibrium to the case out of thermal equilibrium in a stationary regime and then perform a systematic analysis of the atom-wall force for an atom near a dielectric substrate which was examined before by other authors only for atoms in the ground state in the low temperature limit at very large distances [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-7': 'The DDC formalism based upon the atom-field coupling separates the contributions of thermal fluctuations (including vacuum fluctuations) and radiation reaction and allows a distinct microscopic treatment to atoms in the ground and excited states, and it differs from the macroscopic approach using Lifshitz theory where atoms are treated as a limiting case of a dielectric [CITATION] and the linear response description of the atom [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-5-8': 'With the DDC formalism to be generalized to the atom-wall system out of thermal equilibrium, we are able to derive the Casimir-Polder force for an atom out of thermal equilibrium at all distance regimes in both the high- and low-temperature limits for both the ground and excited states.', '1408.4517-1-5-9': 'In particular, we quantify the region of "very large distances" which was taken as mathematical infinity ([MATH]) in [CITATION], where the new behavior of the force with a slower distance dependence characterized by [MATH] appears.', '1408.4517-1-5-10': 'In other words, we give a concrete region where this new behavior holds.', '1408.4517-1-6-0': 'The paper is organized as follows.', '1408.4517-1-6-1': 'In section II, we briefly review the quantum electromagnetic fields concerned with a general dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-6-2': 'In section III, we generalize the DDC formalism to the case out of thermal-equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-6-3': 'In section IV, we calculate the energy shift of a two-level atom near a dielectric substrate, separating the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction using the generalized DDC formalism.', '1408.4517-1-6-4': 'In section V, we discuss the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force near a non-dispersive real dielectric substrate, and we summarize in section VI.', '1408.4517-1-7-0': '# The quantum electromagnetic field', '1408.4517-1-8-0': 'In the presence of magnetoelectric background media where no external sources and currents appear, the classical electromagnetic fields satisfy the Maxwell equations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-8-1': 'By performing the Fourier transformation which is defined for an arbitrary operator, [MATH], as [EQUATION] the Maxwell equations can be transformed to [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-8-2': 'Assuming that the medium under consideration is not bi-anisotropic, we can express the electric displacement vector [MATH] and the magnetic field strength [MATH] as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the permittivity and permeability of vacuum, and [MATH] and [MATH] are the polarization and magnetization fields respectively.', '1408.4517-1-8-3': 'Particularly, for the medium which responds linearly and locally to externally applied fields, the most general relations between the fields that are consistent with causality and the linear fluctuation-dissipation theorem can be cast into [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are respectively the noise polarization and magnetization associated with the absorption of the medium with electric and magnetic susceptibilities [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-8-4': 'Plugging the above two equations into Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), and then performing the Fourier transform ([REF]) for the operators concerned, we obtain [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [EQUATION] which are called the relative permittivity and permeability respectively.', '1408.4517-1-8-5': 'The insertion of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into equations ([REF]) yields [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-8-6': 'For a non-magnetic medium, [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-8-7': 'Combining these relations with the second and the fourth equations in equations ([REF]), we arrive at the differential equation satisfied by the electric field, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-8-8': "The solution of this equation can be expressed in terms of the dyadic Green's function, [MATH], as [EQUATION]", '1408.4517-1-8-9': "Substitution of the above equation into Eq. ([REF]) leads to the differential equation for the Green's function [EQUATION] where [MATH].", '1408.4517-1-8-10': 'Hereafter, the Einstein summation convention is assumed for repeated indices.', '1408.4517-1-9-0': 'So far, all the discussions regard the classical electrodynamics.', '1408.4517-1-9-1': 'However, we need a theory of quantized electromagnetic fields in a dielectric medium for our purpose.', '1408.4517-1-9-2': 'In this regard, let us note that the quantization of the electromagnetic field in an absorbing dielectric has been widely discussed [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-9-3': 'In this paper, we are concerned with a type of nonmagnetic medium with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-9-4': 'Following Refs. [CITATION], [MATH] can be related to a bosonic vector field, [MATH], as [EQUATION] with the vector operator [MATH] and its Hermitian conjugates satisfying the following commutation relations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-9-5': 'Taking Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]), the field operator can be re-expressed as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-9-6': "It is explicit that the spatial distribution of the electric field is determined by the dyadic Green's function, [MATH], which is determined by the spatial distribution of the medium.", '1408.4517-1-10-0': "For a configuration with half-space ([MATH]) occupied by a dielectric substrate and the other half-space ([MATH]) being an empty space, which we are particularly interested in the present paper, the components of the dyadic Green's function are [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] corresponds to the Green's function of vacuum that is Fourier transformed, [MATH] and [MATH] describe the reflection and transmission at the interface and they can be expanded as follows [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] are two-dimensional vectors in the [MATH] plane, [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]", '1408.4517-1-10-1': 'Here we have denoted [MATH] and [MATH] by [MATH] and [MATH] for simplicity.', '1408.4517-1-11-0': 'In the following, we calculate the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a half-space dielectric substrate which is locally at thermal equilibrium at a temperature that is different from the temperature of the environment (empty space with thermal radiation) where the atom is located.', '1408.4517-1-11-1': 'To do so, we should first generalize the DDC formalism to the case out of thermal-equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-12-0': '# The generalized DDC formalism', '1408.4517-1-13-0': 'Consider an atom in interaction with quantum electromagnetic fields.', '1408.4517-1-13-1': 'Let [MATH] denote the atomic proper time and [MATH] represent the stationary atomic trajectory.', '1408.4517-1-13-2': 'The stationarity of the trajectory guarantees the existence of stationary states of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-13-3': 'The Hamiltonian that governs the evolution of the atom is [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-13-4': 'The Hamiltonian of the free electromagnetic field with respect to [MATH] is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-13-5': 'In the multipolar coupling scheme [CITATION], the Hamiltonian that describes the interaction between the atom and the field is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the electric dipole moment of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-13-6': 'The total Hamiltonian of the system (atom + field) is composed of the above three parts [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-13-7': 'Starting form the above Hamiltonian, we can write out the Heisenberg equations of motion for the dynamical variables of the atom and the field, and up to the first order of the coupling constant [MATH], the solutions of each equation can then be divided into two parts: a free part that exists even when there is no coupling between the atom and the field and corresponds to the effect of the thermal fluctuations (including vacuum fluctuations), and a source part that is induced by the interaction between the atom and the field and corresponds to the effect of radiation reaction of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-13-8': 'As a result, the field operator can be written into a sum of the free part and the source part as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where "H.C." denotes the Hermitian conjugate term.', '1408.4517-1-13-9': 'On the right hand side of the above two equations, we have replaced the operators [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] which is correct for the first order approximation.', '1408.4517-1-14-0': 'Assume that the system is composed of two half spaces, one at a temperature [MATH], and the other at a temperature [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-14-1': "Generally, [MATH] doesn't coincide with [MATH], and we assume that each part is in local thermal equilibrium.", '1408.4517-1-14-2': 'For the system composed of the substrate and the environment, we denote the state of the quantum electromagnetic field with [MATH] in which [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is the Boltzmann constant.', '1408.4517-1-14-3': 'The density operator of the state is [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] being the density operators of the two subsystems (the substrate and the environment) respectively.', '1408.4517-1-14-4': 'Now with the free part and source part given in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we can analyze the rate of change of an arbitrary observable of the atom, [MATH], in terms of [MATH] (corresponding to the effect of the thermal fluctuations) and [MATH] (corresponding to the effect of radiation reaction of the atom).', '1408.4517-1-14-5': 'Following DDC [CITATION], we choose the symmetric ordering between the operators of the atom and the field to identify the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the rate of change of [MATH], and obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-14-6': 'Taking the average value of the above two equations over the state of the field, [MATH], and proceeding in a manner similar to Refs. [CITATION], we can identify, in the resulting expressions, the part that acts as an effective Hamiltonian for the atomic observable, which is [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are respectively the symmetric correlation function and linear susceptibility function of the field defined as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-14-7': 'Assuming that the atom is initially in state [MATH], and taking the average value of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) over the state, we obtain the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom respectively as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-14-8': 'In the above two equations, [MATH] and [MATH] are two statistical functions of the atom in state [MATH] which are defined as [EQUATION] and they can be further explicitly written as [EQUATION] with [MATH] and the summation extends over the complete set of the atomic states.', '1408.4517-1-15-0': 'To evaluate the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom, we need the correlation functions of the field, i.e., Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-15-1': 'Our next task is to find these functions.', '1408.4517-1-15-2': 'For this purpose, let us further assume that the right half-space with [MATH] is filled with a thermal bath at a temperature [MATH], the left half-space is filled with a dielectric substrate at a temperature [MATH], each half-space is in local thermal equilibrium, and the surface of the substrate coincides with the plane [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-15-3': 'By using the fluctuation-dissipation theorem together with the local source hypothesis [CITATION], the two correlation functions of the field can be expressed as (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-15-4': '[REF]) [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-16-0': '# Energy shift of an atom near the surface of a general dielectric substrate', '1408.4517-1-17-0': 'With the field correlation functions found, now we are able to calculate the energy shift of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a general dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-17-1': 'Inserting the statistical function of the atom, Eq. ([REF]), and the symmetric correlation function of the field, Eq. ([REF]), into Eq. ([REF]), we find the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-17-2': 'Similarly, the insertion of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]) gives rise to the contribution of radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-17-3': 'Adding up the above two equations, we arrive at the total energy shift of the atom in state [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-17-4': 'For simplicity, we now consider an isotropically polarizable two-level atom with its levels being [MATH], and define the polarizability of the atom in state [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-17-5': 'Now we can write the total boundary-dependent energy shift into a sum of three parts as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-17-6': 'Here it is obvious that the first term, [MATH], corresponds to the energy shift of the atom caused by zero-point fluctuations, the second term, [MATH], corresponds to the contribution of the thermal fluctuations for the system in thermal equilibrium at a temperature [MATH], and the third term, [MATH], arises from the out of thermal equilibrium nature of the system.', '1408.4517-1-17-7': 'When the temperature of the substrate and the environment coincides, i.e., [MATH], the third term which reflects the revision generated by the effect out of thermal equilibrium vanishes and the result of thermal equilibrium is recovered.', '1408.4517-1-18-0': 'Combining Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) with Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), [MATH] and [MATH] can be expressed, after lengthy simplifications, as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-18-1': 'It is worth noting here that the functions [MATH] and [MATH] give the contributions by the traveling modes of the quantum electromagnetic field and [MATH] describes those by the evanescent modes.', '1408.4517-1-18-2': 'Obviously, function [MATH] is independent of [MATH], thus we leave it out in the following discussions as we are concerned with the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-19-0': '# Energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a non-dispersive dielectric substrate', '1408.4517-1-20-0': 'Since an analytical computation of the integrals Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]) looks like mission impossible, we now apply the general results we derived in the proceeding section to the atom near a non-dispersive dielectric substrate with real constant relative permittivity.', '1408.4517-1-20-1': 'Before that, we will first look at a special case, i.e, the case of a perfect conductor, which corresponds to an infinitely large real relative permittivity, i.e., [MATH], and in this case, we can deduce from Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]) that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-20-2': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]) with Eq. ([REF]), we find that [MATH] .', '1408.4517-1-20-3': 'This means that effects from out of thermal equilibrium vanishes for a perfect conductor, and as a result the total energy shift of the atom in state [MATH] can be simplified as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-20-4': 'This expression is in a form different from and a bit simpler than that in Ref. [CITATION] for an atom in a thermal bath near a conducting plane obtained using the field correlation functions found by the method of images, which involves both integration and summation over an infinite series.', '1408.4517-1-20-5': 'We do not plan to prove mathematically that they are equivalent.', '1408.4517-1-20-6': 'However, we will demonstrate that they do agree in the special circumstances which are examined in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-20-7': 'Using Eq. ([REF]), we can show that in the low temperature limit, when the wavelength of thermal photons is much larger than the transition wavelength of the atom, i.e., [MATH] where [MATH], we have for the ground-state atom, [EQUATION] and for the excited atom, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-20-8': 'Note that in both the short and intermediate distance regions ([MATH] and [MATH]), the revision induced by thermal fluctuations to the energy shift for the atom in both the ground and excited state is proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-20-9': 'This seems to differ from the result in Ref. [CITATION] in which the contribution of thermal fluctuations in the leading order is found to be proportional to [MATH] (see Eqs. (6.3) and (6.6) in Ref. [CITATION]).', '1408.4517-1-20-10': 'However, these two results are actually not contradictory to each other as here we are concerned with distance-dependent energy shift of the atom and the [MATH] term is distance-independent.', '1408.4517-1-20-11': 'Similarly, in the high temperature limit, when the wavelength of thermal photons is much smaller than the transition wavelength of the atom, i.e., [MATH], we find for the ground-state atom, [EQUATION] and for the excited atom, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-20-12': 'These results agree with those obtained in Ref. [CITATION] for a two-level atom near a perfect conducting plane in interaction with quantum electromagnetic fields in a thermal bath at thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-21-0': 'Now let us turn to the main focus of the paper, that is the atom-wall force for a two-level atom out of thermal equilibrium near a dielectric substrate with a real constant permittivity.', '1408.4517-1-21-1': 'In this case, the functions [MATH] and [MATH] can be simplified as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-21-2': 'Then by inserting Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), the three parts of the energy shift of the atom in state [MATH] can now be re-expressed as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-21-3': 'The above three parts sum up to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom.', '1408.4517-1-22-0': 'Noticing the relation that [EQUATION] we can divide the first part, [MATH], which corresponds to the contribution of zero-point fluctuations into a sum of three parts as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and then calculate them one by one.', '1408.4517-1-22-1': 'For the double-integral in [MATH], we find, using the method proposed in Refs. [CITATION] (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-22-2': '[REF]), [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-22-3': 'A combination of the above result with the concrete forms of [MATH] and [MATH] (see Eqs. ([REF])-([REF])) yields [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-22-4': 'This term is proportional to [MATH] at an arbitrary position.', '1408.4517-1-22-5': 'Actually, it corresponds to the contribution of the electrostatic interaction in the minimal coupling scheme (see Eq. (3.26) in Ref. [CITATION]).', '1408.4517-1-22-6': 'The double-integral in Eq. ([REF]) has been calculated in Ref. [CITATION], so here we just list it without giving the details, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-22-7': 'Putting this result into Eq. ([REF]), we find that [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] for the atom at an arbitrary distance from the surface of the dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-22-8': 'This term corresponds to the average value of [MATH] (where [MATH] represents the vector potential operator of the electromagnetic field) in the minimal coupling scheme, and it is actually the self energy of an electron at a distance [MATH] from the surface of the dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-22-9': 'For [MATH], the double-integral in Eq. ([REF]) is also discussed in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-22-10': 'It corresponds to the contribution of the term [MATH] in the minimal coupling scheme, i.e., the coupling between the momentum of the electron and the vector potential of the quantum field.', '1408.4517-1-22-11': 'An exact analytical result for an arbitrary position is however difficult to get, but in two limiting cases, the approximate analytical results are obtainable.', '1408.4517-1-23-0': 'In the short distance region where [MATH] , the leading term of the double-integral in [MATH] is [EQUATION] yielding a [MATH] proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-23-1': 'As a result, [MATH] prevails over the other terms, and we have [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-23-2': 'This shows that in the short distance region, [MATH], no matter if the atom is in its excited state or the ground state, the boundary-dependent energy shift due to zero-point fluctuations is proportional to [MATH], and resulting atom-wall force obeys the van der Waals law.', '1408.4517-1-24-0': 'In the long distance region, i.e., when [MATH], after complicated simplifications, we find that [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the step-function defined as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-24-1': 'For the details on how to get Eq. ([REF]), see Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-24-2': 'Here we point out that in the expression of Eq. (B31) in Ref. [CITATION], there is a typo for the sign of the fourth term in the coefficient of the term [MATH] (concerned with the expression of [MATH] here) and we have corrected it.', '1408.4517-1-24-3': 'A substitution of Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]) reveals that for the ground-state atom ([MATH] is proportional to [MATH] as the leading term [MATH], while for the excited atom ([MATH]), [MATH] oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the substrate.', '1408.4517-1-24-4': 'Adding up the three parts, we find that [MATH] and [MATH] are completely canceled by parts of [MATH], and as a result, the boundary-dependent energy shift due to zero-point fluctuations in the long distance region becomes [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-24-5': 'As is shown in the following figure, for [MATH], [MATH] is always negative.', '1408.4517-1-25-0': 'Thus for the ground-state atom, [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] and is always negative, leading to an attractive Casimir-Polder force proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-25-1': 'For the excited atom, [MATH] usually oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the dielectric substrate, and the amplitude of oscillation is much larger than that of the constant term proportional to [MATH], thus [MATH] can either be positive or negative or even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-25-2': 'Accordingly, the Casimir-Polder force due to the zero-point fluctuations can either be repulsive or attractive or even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-25-3': 'Let us note that the above result is not valid for the case of a perfect conducting plane in which [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-25-4': 'In this case, we should be careful in taking the limit of [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-25-5': 'In fact, we should take the limit [MATH] in [MATH] and [MATH] before performing differentiation on them when simplifying Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-25-6': 'Then by so doing, we find that [MATH], and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-25-7': 'Thereby, the energy shift of an isotropically polarizable two-level atom far from the surface of a perfect conducting plane is recovered.', '1408.4517-1-26-0': 'Until now we have only discussed the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force due to zero-point fluctuations.', '1408.4517-1-26-1': 'Next, we will turn our attention to the contributions of the thermal fluctuations.', '1408.4517-1-26-2': 'It is difficult to get analytical results for a general case.', '1408.4517-1-26-3': 'However, fortunately, we are able to find asymptotic behaviors in the low and high temperature limits.', '1408.4517-1-26-4': 'In the following discussions, we assume that the difference between the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], and that of the environment, [MATH], is neither extremely large nor extremely small.', '1408.4517-1-27-0': '## Low temperature limit', '1408.4517-1-28-0': 'We first deal with the low temperature limit, i.e., [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-28-1': 'For simplicity, we abbreviate these two conditions by [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-28-2': 'Here, we will analyze how the energy shift and the atom-wall force behave as the distance varies.', '1408.4517-1-28-3': 'Since now we have two length scales, i.e., the transition wavelength of the atom [MATH] and the wavelength of thermal photons [MATH] or [MATH], we can define a short distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-28-4': 'By doing the [MATH]-integration before the [MATH]-integration, [MATH] can be simplified as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-28-5': 'Here it is easy to see that the term proportional to [MATH] in Eq. ([REF]) which is absent in the case of a perfect conducting plane (see Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])) is much larger than that proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-29-0': 'For the effect out of thermal equilibrium (Eq. ([REF])), similarly, we find, when [MATH], that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-29-1': 'Here it is worth pointing out that Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are not valid for the case of a perfect conducting plane as they are obtained under the conditions, [MATH] and [MATH] respectively, which means that the parameter [MATH] can not be infinitely large.', '1408.4517-1-29-2': 'Adding up Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) gives rise to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the excited and ground-state atoms due to the thermal fluctuations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-29-3': 'Notice that this result is valid in the region [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-29-4': 'One can see that although both the thermal fluctuations associated with the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift in this region, the contribution of the former dominates over the latter.', '1408.4517-1-30-0': 'Combining the above result for the contribution of the thermal fluctuations with the contribution of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), we find that in the short distance region, [MATH], the total boundary-dependent energy shift for an isotropically polarizable two-level atom in the stationary regime out of thermal equilibrium is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-30-1': 'Obviously, both the thermal fluctuations associated with the substrate and with the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-1-30-2': 'Comparing the contribution due to the thermal fluctuations with that due to zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH], we find that the revision caused by the thermal fluctuations is negligible.', '1408.4517-1-30-3': 'Thus the Casimir-Polder force the atom in both the ground state and the excited state feels is attractive and proportional to [MATH] which is the van der Waals law.', '1408.4517-1-31-0': 'We can also introduce an intermediate distance region where [MATH], then we find, by combining Eq. ([REF]) with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])), that in this region [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-31-1': 'Similarly, as in the short distance region, both the thermal fluctuations associated with the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-1-31-2': 'For the ground-state atom, the contribution due to the thermal fluctuations is much smaller than that due to zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH], and so the Casimir-Polder force the atom feels is attractive (as [MATH]) and proportional to [MATH] .', '1408.4517-1-31-3': 'For the excited atom, oscillatory terms caused by zero-point fluctuations appear and the amplitude of oscillation is much larger than the terms due to the thermal fluctuations and the term proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-31-4': 'As a result, the atomic energy shift can either be negative or positive or even be zero, yielding an atom-wall force that can either be attractive or repulsive or even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-32-0': 'Finally let us turn to the long distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-32-1': 'When [MATH], [MATH] can be calculated by performing the integrations in Eq. ([REF]) (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-32-2': '[REF]) to get [EQUATION] and when [MATH], similar treatments to Eq. ([REF]) (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-32-3': '[REF]) lead to [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-32-4': 'Notice that in Eq. ([REF]), if we take the limit [MATH], we recover the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of an atom at a distance [MATH] from a perfect conducting plane in a thermal bath at a temperature [MATH] (see the third line in both Eqs. ([REF]) and Eq. ([REF])).', '1408.4517-1-32-5': 'But trouble appears if we take the [MATH] limit in Eq. ([REF]) as the result would be divergent.', '1408.4517-1-32-6': 'However, as pointed out in the paragraph above Eq. ([REF]), we should take the limit [MATH] in [MATH] and [MATH] before taking the derivatives on them.', '1408.4517-1-32-7': 'Then following similar steps as taken in Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-32-8': '[REF], we get [EQUATION] which means that for the perfect conducting plane, the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes due to the infinite [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-33-0': 'For a general real dielectric substrate, adding up Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we obtain the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-1-33-1': 'Under the assumption that the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], and that of the environment, [MATH], are not extremely close, the result can be approximated by [EQUATION] since [MATH] is negligible as compared to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-33-2': 'This result is valid in the region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-33-3': 'So, in this region, the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium to the atomic energy shift prevails over the effect of thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-33-4': 'Noteworthily, here both contributions of the thermal fluctuations of the substrate and that of the environment are of the same order and are all proportional to [MATH] but with opposite signs.', '1408.4517-1-33-5': 'It is then a matter of an easy differentiation exercise to get the Casimir-Polder force due to the thermal fluctuations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-33-6': 'Thus, for the atom in its ground (excited) state, the Casimir-Polder force is attractive (repulsive) if the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], is higher than that of the environment, [MATH], and repulsive (attractive) if otherwise.', '1408.4517-1-33-7': 'Here it is worth pointing out that our result for the ground-state atom is consistent with that obtained by M. Antezza, et al. in Refs. [CITATION] (see Eq. (12) in Ref. [CITATION]) although the issue is dealt with from a different perspective in the present paper.', '1408.4517-1-33-8': 'Moreover, in Refs. [CITATION], the result is obtained by mathematically assuming [MATH], and thus the physical region where this result is valid is not clearly given.', '1408.4517-1-33-9': 'In contrast, here we find out the concrete region.', '1408.4517-1-33-10': 'Notice that we use the SI units while the Gauss units is adopted in Ref. [CITATION], so a discrepancy of a factor [MATH] appears between our results and theirs.', '1408.4517-1-34-0': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]), with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we find that in the long distance region, [MATH], the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-34-1': 'Notice that in this region, if [MATH] and [MATH] are not extremely close, the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium for the energy shift of the ground-state atom dominates over the contribution of zero-point fluctuations which is proportional to [MATH], thus the Casimir-Polder force it feels behaves like [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-34-2': 'If [MATH], the force is attractive and repulsive if otherwise.', '1408.4517-1-34-3': 'For the excited atom, as the amplitude of the oscillatory terms is always larger than the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium and the term proportional to [MATH], the energy shift of the atom can either be negative or positive and even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-34-4': 'As a result, the Casimir-Polder force for the excited atom can either be attractive or repulsive or even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-35-0': '## High temperature limit', '1408.4517-1-36-0': 'We now analyze the behavior of the atom-wall force out of thermal equilibrium in the high temperature limit, i.e., when[MATH] and [MATH], which is not considered in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-1-36-1': 'We can combine these conditions into [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-36-2': 'We then find in the short region where [MATH], [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-36-3': 'Here the term proportional to [MATH] which is absent in the case of a conducting plane (see Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])) dominates over the term proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-36-4': 'When [MATH], we can show that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-36-5': 'For details on how to get the above analytical result, see Appendix.', '1408.4517-1-36-6': '[REF].', '1408.4517-1-36-7': 'By adding up Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), the total contributions of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the ground-state and excited atom out of thermal equilibrium are found to be [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-36-8': 'Notice that this result is valid in the short region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-36-9': 'Just as in the case of the low temperature limit, both the thermal fluctuations that originates from the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift and the former (characterized by [MATH]) is much larger than the latter (characterized by [MATH]).', '1408.4517-1-37-0': 'Combining the above result with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), gives rises to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom in the short distance region, [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-37-1': 'Obviously, in this region, the contribution of zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH] prevails over the contribution of the thermal fluctuations, thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive and proportional to [MATH] no matter if the atom is in its ground-state or the excited state.', '1408.4517-1-38-0': 'Now let us look at the intermediate distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-38-1': 'In this region, we have [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-38-2': 'This shows that for the ground-state atom, the force is repulsive (attractive) if [MATH]), and the other way around for the excited atom.', '1408.4517-1-38-3': 'Adding up Eq. ([REF]) with Eq. ([REF]), we get the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-38-4': 'Again, both the the thermal fluctuations of the substrate and that of the environment contribute to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom out of thermal equilibrium, but now their contributions are of the same order and all proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-38-5': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]) with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), yields the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-38-6': 'Thus, for the ground-state (excited) atom, if [MATH]), the boundary-dependent energy shift is negative and the Casimir-Polder force on the atom is attractive, and if [MATH]), the boundary-dependent energy shift is negative (positive), and thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive (repulsive).', '1408.4517-1-39-0': 'Finally, let us turn our attention to the long distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-39-1': 'For a finite [MATH], one finds [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and for an infinite [MATH] which corresponds to the case of a perfect conducting plane, we find by following the same procedure as that in the case of the low temperature limit, [EQUATION] which is exactly the same as that in Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-39-2': 'Similarly, we find, in the region [MATH], that for a finite [MATH], [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and for [MATH], [EQUATION] which shows that the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes for a perfect conducting plane as expected.', '1408.4517-1-39-3': 'Adding up Eq. ([REF]) with Eq. ([REF]), we get the contributions of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom (for finite [MATH]), [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-39-4': 'So, in this region, the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the atomic boundary-dependent energy shift oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the substrate, and the amplitude of oscillation is always much larger than the term proportional to [MATH] if the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], is not much higher than that of the environment, [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-40-0': 'For the case of a perfect conducting plane, the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes, so the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of the atom is actually described by Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-41-0': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]), with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we obtain the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom in the long distance region and in the high temperature limit [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-41-1': 'In this region, as [MATH] and [MATH] are not extremely close, the term proportional to [MATH] which exists when thermal equilibrium is not reached is always much larger than the term proportional to [MATH] due to zero-point fluctuations.', '1408.4517-1-41-2': 'For the ground-state atom, the amplitude of the oscillation term due to the thermal fluctuations at equilibrium is always much larger than the second term which arises because of non-thermal equilibrium, and as a result, the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom can be negative or positive or even be zero, thus resulting in a Casimir-Polder force that can be attractive or repulsive or even be zero.', '1408.4517-1-41-3': 'For the excited atom, the energy shift and Casimir-Polder force also exhibits similar behaviors.', '1408.4517-1-42-0': 'Let us now comment on the contributions of the evanescent modes from the substrate and traveling modes from the environment to the Casimir-Polder force.', '1408.4517-1-42-1': 'By adding up Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), it is easy for us to see that both the evanescent modes from the substrate and the traveling modes from the environment generally contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-1-42-2': 'In the short distance region in both the low- and high- temperature limits, the contribution of the evanescent modes from the substrate dominates over that of the traveling modes from the environment.', '1408.4517-1-42-3': 'This conclusion also holds for an atom in the intermediate distance region and in the low temperature limit.', '1408.4517-1-42-4': 'However, for an atom in the intermediate distance region and in the high temperature limit, the contributions of the evanescent modes from the substrate and the traveling modes from the environment are always of the same order, and the same is true for an atom in the long distance region in both the low- and high- temperature limits.', '1408.4517-1-43-0': 'The above discussions are about the energy shift and Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a real dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-43-1': 'Extending the present discussion to a general dispersive dielectric substrate for which the dielectric constant depends on the frequency, i.e., [MATH], the Drude model for a metal for example, is an interesting topic for future research.', '1408.4517-1-44-0': '# summary', '1408.4517-1-45-0': 'We have generalized the DDC formalism originally established for thermal equilibrium to the case out of thermal equilibrium but in a stationary state by adopting the local source hypothesis and then applied it to the calculation of the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near a dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-1-45-1': 'In particular, we have calculated the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an isotropically polarizable two-level atom near a real dielectric half-space substrate and analyzed in detail their behaviors in three different distance regions in both the low-temperature limit and the high-temperature limit for both the ground-state and excited-state atoms.', '1408.4517-1-46-0': 'In the low-temperature limit where the wavelength of thermal photons is assumed to be much larger than the transition wavelength of the atom, we find that in all distance regions, i.e., the short, intermediate and long distance regions, both the thermal fluctuations that originate from the substrate and from the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force.', '1408.4517-1-46-1': 'In the short and intermediate distance regions, the contribution of the former is much larger than the contribution of the latter, whereas in the long distance region, the contributions of both thermal fluctuations are of the same order but with opposite signs.', '1408.4517-1-46-2': 'More importantly, the out of thermal equilibrium fluctuations give rise to an atom-wall force in the long distance region with a slower dependence on the distance and strong dependence on the temperature as opposed to the Lifshitz law at thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-1-46-3': 'In particular, for the ground state atom, the force behaves like [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-46-4': 'Our result in the long distance region at low temperature not only confirms that by Antezza etal obtained in a different context [CITATION], but also gives a concrete region not clearly quantified in Ref. [CITATION] where the new asymptotic behavior is valid.', '1408.4517-1-46-5': 'In the low temperature limit, the effects from out of thermal equilibrium only become appreciable in the long distance region, while they are negligible in the short and intermediate distance regions, leading to an atom-wall force which respectively obeys the van de Waals law and the Casimir-Polder law for the ground state atoms.', '1408.4517-1-47-0': 'In the high-temperature limit where the wavelength of thermal photons is assumed to be much smaller than the transition wavelength of the atom, the contribution of zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH] prevails over the contribution of the thermal fluctuations in the short distance region, thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive and proportional to [MATH] no matter if the atom is in its ground-state or the excited state.', '1408.4517-1-47-1': 'In the intermediate distance region, the contribution of the thermal fluctuations may become comparable to that of the zero-point fluctuations and the Casimir-Polder may be attractive or repulsive depending on several factors including whether the atom is the ground or excited states and the relative temperature between the substrate and the environment.', '1408.4517-1-47-2': 'Only in long distance region do the effects of the thermal fluctuations both at and out of thermal equilibrium dominate over that of the zero-point fluctuations, and in this region, even the atom-wall force on the ground state atoms becomes oscillatory around zero, meaning that the force can either be attractive or repulsive.', '1408.4517-1-48-0': 'This work was supported in part by the NSFC under Grants No. 11075083, No. 11375092 and No. 11435006, the SRFDP under Grant No. 20124306110001, the Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant No. LQ14A050001, the Research Program of Ningbo University under No. E00829134702, No. xkzwl10 and No. XYL14029, and K.C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University.', '1408.4517-1-49-0': '# Correlation functions of the field out of thermal equilibrium', '1408.4517-1-50-0': 'In order to find the two correlation functions of the field out of thermal equilibrium defined in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), [MATH] and [MATH], we firstly consider the quantity [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-1': 'Taking the Fourier transformation (see Eq. ([REF])) for the electromagnetic field operator, we can expand the above quantity into a sum of four parts as [EQUATION] where we have denoted [MATH] with [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-50-2': 'To obtain the above equation, we have used the relation [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-50-3': 'By resorting to Eq. ([REF]), we obtain [EQUATION] where the sign "[MATH]" denotes the complex conjugate.', '1408.4517-1-50-4': 'Noticing that the density operator of the thermal baths with temperatures [MATH] and [MATH] are separately [MATH] and [MATH], we find [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-5': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-6': 'Similarly, we can find the average values in the other three terms in Eq. ([REF]), and then we have [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-7': 'Using the relation [CITATION] (see Eq. (27)) [EQUATION] where [MATH] represents the imaginary part of [MATH], we deduce that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-8': 'So [MATH] can be simplified to be [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-50-9': 'For an atom at [MATH], combining Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), we deduce that only when [MATH] are [MATH] and [MATH] nonzero.', '1408.4517-1-51-0': 'Take similar procedures as the above and we can get [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-51-1': 'So, the two correlation functions of the field can be simplified as [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-51-2': 'Here we point out that in the above two correlation functions we have renormalized the term, [MATH], which corresponds to the fluctuations of vacuum and is infinitely large for [MATH], by simply subtracting it out.', '1408.4517-1-52-0': '# The double-integral in Eq. ([REF])', '1408.4517-1-53-0': 'We use here the method proposed by C. Eberlein, et.', '1408.4517-1-53-1': 'al to calculate the double-integration in Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-53-2': 'The double-integral [MATH] is the sum of the following two integrals, [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-53-3': 'As the two integrals are not convergent separately, we replace the up-limit of the [MATH]-integral in each by a positive [MATH] and take it to be infinity in the end.', '1408.4517-1-54-0': 'For [MATH], do the [MATH]-integration by parts and we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-1': 'For the last term in the above equation, we can subtract the term [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and then add it later, i.e., [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-2': 'For the first term on the right hand side of the above equation, do the [MATH]-integration by parts, and for the second term, do the double-integration directly, then we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-3': 'Similarly, for the last term on the right hand side of the above equation, repeat the above steps and we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-4': 'To obtain the above result, we have discarded the terms proportional to or of order higher than [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-54-5': 'Thus [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-6': 'Take similar steps on [MATH] and we find [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-7': 'Now adding Eq. ([REF]) to Eq. ([REF]) and discarding the infinite oscillating terms, we arrive at [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-54-8': 'Notice that to obtain the above result, we have used the relation [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-55-0': '# Integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) in the long distance region and in the low temperature limit', '1408.4517-1-56-0': 'The integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are of the following forms [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-1': 'In the low temperature limit, [MATH] where [MATH], the above integrals can be approximated as [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-56-2': 'For [MATH], do the [MATH]-integration by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-3': 'This integral can be done by subtracting [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and adding it later.', '1408.4517-1-56-4': 'Then taking the limit [MATH], we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-5': 'Similarly, for [MATH], do the [MATH]-integration by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-6': 'Do the [MATH]-integration in the second integral on the right hand side of the above equation by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-7': 'For the last integral in the above square bracket, we can firstly subtract [MATH] from the t-integration and add it later.', '1408.4517-1-56-8': 'Then take the limit [MATH] and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-56-9': 'Computing the other integrations in Eq. ([REF]) and combining the results with Eq. ([REF]), we get the approximate result for [MATH] as [EQUATION] up to the order [MATH] in the limit [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-57-0': 'Notice that when adding up [MATH] (see Eq. ([REF])) with [MATH] (see Eq. ([REF])), by using the relation Eq. ([REF]), the terms proportional to [MATH] are cancelled out completely and the leading term is proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-57-1': 'This is just what happens when calculating Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-58-0': '# Integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) in the high temperature limit', '1408.4517-1-59-0': 'In the high temperature limit, [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-59-1': 'The integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are of the same forms as those in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), which can be changed to [EQUATION] where the parameters [MATH] and [MATH] are the same as those defined in Appendix [REF] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-60-0': '(1)The asymptotic result of [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-61-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], [EQUATION] in which [MATH] and we have only kept the [MATH]-dependent term.', '1408.4517-1-62-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], for the [MATH]-integration in Eq. ([REF]), we can expand the factor [MATH] to be an infinite sum of a series, and then by changing variables, it can be re-expressed as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-62-1': 'As [MATH], we approximate the infinite sum in the above equation by integration.', '1408.4517-1-62-2': 'After some simplifications, [MATH] can be changed to [EQUATION] thus [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-62-3': 'Doing the [MATH]-integration in Eq. ([REF]) directly and then taking the limit [MATH] and [MATH], we get the asymptotic result [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-62-4': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we can firstly change Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]), then do the [MATH]-integration by parts, subtract [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add it.', '1408.4517-1-62-5': 'Finally, taking the limit [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION] (2)The asymptotic result of [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-63-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], taking similar steps as we have done in simplifying [MATH], we get [EQUATION] where we have only kept the leading [MATH]-dependent term.', '1408.4517-1-64-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we firstly change [MATH] to [EQUATION] as we have done for Eq. ([REF]) (see Eqs. ([REF])-([REF])).', '1408.4517-1-64-1': 'Then we divide the above double-integral into the sum of two parts as [EQUATION] do the two integrals on the right hand side of the above equation directly, and finally take the limits [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-1-64-2': 'As a result, we get the asymptotic result [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-1-64-3': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we firstly change [MATH] into the sum of two parts as Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-1-64-4': 'For the first double integral on the right hand side of Eq. ([REF]), the [MATH]-integration can be done directly, so only the [MATH]-integration is left.', '1408.4517-1-64-5': 'For the [MATH]-integration, it diverges at the point [MATH] if we take the limit [MATH] directly.', '1408.4517-1-64-6': 'However, we can subtract [MATH] and [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add them.', '1408.4517-1-64-7': 'Similarly, for the second double integral on the right hand side of Eq. ([REF]), as it diverges at the point [MATH] if we do the [MATH]-integration and take the limit [MATH] directly, we can subtract [MATH] and [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add them.', '1408.4517-1-64-8': 'After these steps and further taking the limits [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]'}
{'1408.4517-2-0-0': 'We study the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-0-1': 'We first generalize, adopting the local source hypothesis, the formalism proposed by Dalibard, Dupont-Roc and Cohen-Tannoudji, which separates the contributions of thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift and allows a distinct treatment to atoms in the ground and excited states, to the case out of thermal equilibrium, and then we use the generalized formalism to calculate the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an isotropically polarizable neutral atom.', '1408.4517-2-0-2': 'We identify the effects of the thermal fluctuations that originate from the substrate and the environment and discuss in detail how the Casimir-Polder force out of thermal equilibrium behaves in three different distance regions in both the low-temperature limit and the high-temperature limit for both the ground-state and excited-state atoms, with special attention devoted to the new features as opposed to thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-0-3': 'In particular, we recover the new behavior of the atom-wall force out of thermal equilibrium at large distances in the low temperature limit recently found in a different theoretical framework and furthermore we give a concrete region where this behavior holds.', '1408.4517-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1408.4517-2-2-0': 'The effect of interaction between an atom and quantum electromagnetic fields has been a long-standing subject of research.', '1408.4517-2-2-1': 'It is well-known that even in vacuum, the energy levels of an atom are slightly shifted as a result of the interaction between the atom and the fluctuating vacuum electromagnetic fields [CITATION], and these shifts are further modified when boundaries which confine the fields appear.', '1408.4517-2-2-2': 'In fact, when the fluctuations of quantum fields are altered by the presence of boundaries, many novel effects may arise, such as the Casimir effect [CITATION], the light-cone fluctuations when gravity is quantized [CITATION], and the Brownian (random) motion of test particles in an electromagnetic vacuum [CITATION] (also see [CITATION]), just to name a few.', '1408.4517-2-3-0': 'In 1948, Casimir and Polder discovered that a neutral atom near a perfectly conducting wall feels a net force as a result of the interaction between the atom and vacuum electromagnetic fluctuations [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-3-1': 'At short distances, the force behaves like the van der Waals-London interatomic force which decays as [MATH] where [MATH] is the distance from the wall, while at large distances, the inclusion of relativistic retardation effects yields a different [MATH] dependence and this region is called the Casimir-Polder regime.', '1408.4517-2-3-2': 'Subsequently, by employing the theory of electromagnetic fluctuations developed by Rytov [CITATION], Lifshitz showed that besides the zero-point fluctuations, the thermal fluctuations also give rise to a revision to the atom-wall force [CITATION] which actually becomes the leading contribution to the total force at distances much larger than the wavelength of thermal photons and decays as [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-3-3': 'Later, it was shown that the thermal fluctuations also alter the energy shifts of an atom [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-3-4': 'In recent years, the research on the Casimir-Polder force has been extended to various circumstances, such as in the presence of partly or perfectly reflecting boundaries in the vicinity of an atom which is static or in non-inertial motion in vacuum [CITATION] or immersed in a thermal bath [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-4-0': 'The effect of the thermal fluctuations on the Casimir-Polder force referred to above is about an atom-wall system in thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-4-1': 'Recently, there has been growing interest in the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium both theoretically and experimentally [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-4-2': 'In Refs. [CITATION], Antezza etal calculate, using the fluctuational electrodynamics developed by Rytov et.', '1408.4517-2-4-3': 'al [CITATION] and the linear response theory by Wiley and Sipe [CITATION], the Casimir-Polder force felt by an atom near the surface of a half-space dielectric substrate whose temperature is different from that of the thermal bath in the other half-space (environment) under the assumption that the whole system is a stationary configuration, and they find that the force exhibits a new behavior at very large distances when the temperature is low, which decays more slowly with the distance than at the thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-4-4': 'The force is also distinctive from that in the case of thermal equilibrium as it displays a sizable temperature dependence which could be attractive or repulsive depending on whether the temperature of the substrate is higher or lower than that of the environment.', '1408.4517-2-4-5': 'It is interesting to note that this new behavior has already been demonstrated in experiment [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-0': 'In this paper, we study the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a dielectric substrate out of thermal equilibrium using a QED treatment of the atom-field coupling.', '1408.4517-2-5-1': 'In such a framework, on the one hand, the fluctuating field which is modified by the appearance of the substrate disturbs the atom, and on the other hand, the disturbed atom induces a radiative field in reaction to the disturbance, and both these fields affect the dynamics of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-5-2': 'It has been found in QED that to what extent each mechanism plays a part is determined by the ordering between the operators of the atom and the field in the interaction Hamiltonian [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-3': 'In other words, there exists an indetermination in the contribution of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction.', '1408.4517-2-5-4': 'The ambiguity was resolved when Dalibard, Dupont-Roc and Cohen-Tannoudji (DDC) showed that there exists a preferred symmetric operator ordering which enssures that the distinct contributions of vacuum fluctuations and the radiation reaction of the atom to the rate of change of the atomic observables are separately Hermitian [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-5': 'Recently, this formalism has been employed to study the radiative properties of atoms in various cases including non inertial motion of the atom and a thermal bath at equilibrium [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-6': 'In the present paper, we will first generalize the DDC formalism originally established for thermal equilibrium to the case out of thermal equilibrium in a stationary regime and then perform a systematic analysis of the atom-wall force for an atom near a dielectric substrate which was examined before by other authors only for atoms in the ground state in the low temperature limit at very large distances [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-7': 'The DDC formalism based upon the atom-field coupling separates the contributions of thermal fluctuations (including vacuum fluctuations) and the radiation reaction and allows a distinct microscopic treatment to atoms in the ground and excited states, and it differs from the macroscopic approach using Lifshitz theory where atoms are treated as a limiting case of a dielectric [CITATION] and the linear response description of the atom [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-5-8': 'With the DDC formalism to be generalized to the atom-wall system out of thermal equilibrium, we are able to derive the Casimir-Polder force for an atom out of thermal equilibrium at all distance regimes in both the high- and low-temperature limits for both the ground and excited states.', '1408.4517-2-5-9': 'In particular, we quantify the region of "very large distances" which was taken as mathematical infinity ([MATH]) in [CITATION], where the new behavior of the force with a weaker distance dependence characterized by [MATH] appears.', '1408.4517-2-5-10': 'In other words, we give a concrete region where this new behavior holds.', '1408.4517-2-6-0': 'The paper is organized as follows.', '1408.4517-2-6-1': 'In section II, we briefly review the quantum electromagnetic fields concerned with a general dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-6-2': 'In section III, we generalize the DDC formalism to the case out of thermal-equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-6-3': 'In section IV, we calculate the energy shift of a two-level atom near a dielectric substrate, separating the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction using the generalized DDC formalism.', '1408.4517-2-6-4': 'In section V, we discuss the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force near a non-dispersive real dielectric substrate, and we summarize in section VI.', '1408.4517-2-7-0': '# The quantum electromagnetic field', '1408.4517-2-8-0': 'In the presence of magnetoelectric background media where no external sources and currents appear, the classical electromagnetic fields satisfy the Maxwell equations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-8-1': 'By performing the Fourier transformation which is defined for an arbitrary operator, [MATH], as [EQUATION] the Maxwell equations can be transformed to [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-8-2': 'Assuming that the medium under consideration is not bi-anisotropic, we can express the electric displacement vector [MATH] and the magnetic field strength [MATH] as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the permittivity and permeability of vacuum, and [MATH] and [MATH] are the polarization and magnetization fields respectively.', '1408.4517-2-8-3': 'Particularly, for the medium which responds linearly and locally to externally applied fields, the most general relations between the fields that are consistent with causality and the linear fluctuation-dissipation theorem can be written as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are respectively the noise polarization and magnetization associated with the absorption of the medium with electric and magnetic susceptibilities [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-8-4': 'Plugging the above two equations into Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), and then performing the Fourier transform ([REF]) for the operators concerned, we obtain [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [EQUATION] which are called the relative permittivity and permeability respectively.', '1408.4517-2-8-5': 'The insertion of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into Equations ([REF]) yields [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-8-6': 'For a non-magnetic medium, [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-8-7': 'Combining these relations with the second and the fourth equations in Equations ([REF]), we arrive at the differential equation satisfied by the electric field, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-8-8': "The solution of this equation can be expressed in terms of the dyadic Green's function, [MATH], as [EQUATION]", '1408.4517-2-8-9': "Substitution of the above equation into Eq. ([REF]) leads to the differential equation for the Green's function [EQUATION] where [MATH].", '1408.4517-2-8-10': 'Hereafter, the Einstein summation convention is assumed for repeated indices.', '1408.4517-2-9-0': 'So far, all the discussions regard the classical electrodynamics.', '1408.4517-2-9-1': 'However, we need a theory of quantized electromagnetic fields in a dielectric medium for our purpose.', '1408.4517-2-9-2': 'In this regard, let us note that the quantization of the electromagnetic field in an absorbing dielectric has been widely discussed [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-9-3': 'In this paper, we are concerned with a type of nonmagnetic medium with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-9-4': 'Following Refs. [CITATION], [MATH] can be related to a bosonic vector field, [MATH], as [EQUATION] with the vector operator [MATH] and its Hermitian conjugates satisfying the following commutation relations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-9-5': 'Putting Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]), the field operator can be re-expressed as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-9-6': "It is explicit that the spatial distribution of the electric field is determined by the dyadic Green's function, [MATH], which is determined by the spatial distribution of the medium.", '1408.4517-2-10-0': "For a configuration with one half-space ([MATH]) occupied by a dielectric substrate and the other half-space ([MATH]) being an empty space, which is of particular interest in the present paper, the components of the dyadic Green's function are [CITATION] [EQUATION] where [MATH] corresponds to the Green's function of a vacuum that is Fourier transformed, [MATH] and [MATH] describe the reflection and transmission at the interface and they can be expanded as follows [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] are two-dimensional vectors in the [MATH] plane, [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]", '1408.4517-2-10-1': 'Here we have denoted [MATH] and [MATH] by [MATH] and [MATH] for simplicity.', '1408.4517-2-11-0': 'In the following, we calculate the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a half-space dielectric substrate which is locally at thermal equilibrium at a temperature that is different from the temperature of the environment (empty space with thermal radiation) where the atom is located.', '1408.4517-2-11-1': 'To do so, we should first generalize the DDC formalism to the case out of thermal-equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-12-0': '# The generalized DDC formalism', '1408.4517-2-13-0': 'Consider an atom in interaction with quantum electromagnetic fields.', '1408.4517-2-13-1': 'Let [MATH] denote the atomic proper time and [MATH] represent the stationary atomic trajectory.', '1408.4517-2-13-2': 'The stationarity of the trajectory guarantees the existence of stationary states of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-13-3': 'The Hamiltonian that governs the evolution of the atom is [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-13-4': 'The Hamiltonian of the free electromagnetic field with respect to [MATH] is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-13-5': 'In the multipolar coupling scheme [CITATION], the Hamiltonian that describes the interaction between the atom and the field is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the electric dipole moment of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-13-6': 'The total Hamiltonian of the system (atom + field) is composed of the above three parts [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-13-7': 'Starting from the above Hamiltonian, we can write out the Heisenberg equations of motion for the dynamical variables of the atom and the field, and up to the first order of the coupling constant [MATH], the solutions of each equation can then be divided into two parts: a free part that exists even when there is no coupling between the atom and the field and corresponds to the effect of the thermal fluctuations (including vacuum fluctuations), and a source part that is induced by the interaction between the atom and the field and corresponds to the effect of the radiation reaction of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-13-8': 'As a result, the field operator can be written into a sum of the free part and the source part as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where "H.C." denotes the Hermitian conjugate term.', '1408.4517-2-13-9': 'On the right hand side of the above two equations, we have replaced operators [MATH] and [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] which is correct for the first order approximation.', '1408.4517-2-14-0': 'Assume that the system is composed of two half spaces, one at a temperature [MATH], and the other at a temperature [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-14-1': "Generally, [MATH] doesn't coincide with [MATH], and we assume that each part is in local thermal equilibrium.", '1408.4517-2-14-2': 'For the system composed of the substrate and the environment, we denote the state of the quantum electromagnetic field with [MATH] in which [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is the Boltzmann constant.', '1408.4517-2-14-3': 'The density operator of the state is [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] being the density operators of the two subsystems (the substrate and the environment) respectively.', '1408.4517-2-14-4': 'Now with the free part and the source part given in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we can analyze the rate of change of an arbitrary observable of the atom, [MATH], in terms of [MATH] (corresponding to the effect of the thermal fluctuations) and [MATH] (corresponding to the effect of radiation reaction of the atom).', '1408.4517-2-14-5': 'Following DDC [CITATION], we choose the symmetric ordering between the operators of the atom and the field to identify the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the rate of change of [MATH], and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-14-6': 'Taking the average value of the above two equations over the state of the field, [MATH], and proceeding in a manner similar to that in Refs. [CITATION], we can identify, in the resulting expressions, the part that acts as an effective Hamiltonian for the atomic observable, which is [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are respectively the symmetric correlation function and linear susceptibility function of the field defined as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-14-7': 'Assuming that the atom is initially in state [MATH], and taking the average value of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) over the state, we obtain the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom respectively as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-14-8': 'In the above two equations, [MATH] and [MATH] are two statistical functions of the atom in state [MATH] which are defined as [EQUATION] and they can be further explicitly written as [EQUATION] where [MATH] and the summation extends over the complete set of the atomic states.', '1408.4517-2-15-0': 'To evaluate the contributions of the thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom, we need the correlation functions of the field, i.e., Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-15-1': 'Our next task is to find these functions.', '1408.4517-2-15-2': 'For this purpose, let us further assume that the right half-space with [MATH] is filled with a thermal bath at a temperature [MATH], the left half-space is filled with a dielectric substrate at a temperature [MATH], each half-space is in local thermal equilibrium, and the surface of the substrate coincides with the plane [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-15-3': 'By using the fluctuation-dissipation theorem together with the local source hypothesis [CITATION], the two correlation functions of the field can be expressed as (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-15-4': '[REF]) [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-16-0': '# Energy shift of an atom near the surface of a general dielectric substrate', '1408.4517-2-17-0': 'With the field correlation functions found, now we are able to calculate the energy shift of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a general dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-17-1': 'Inserting the statistical function of the atom, Eq. ([REF]), and the symmetric correlation function of the field, Eq. ([REF]), into Eq. ([REF]), we find the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-17-2': 'Similarly, the insertion of Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]) gives rise to the contribution of radiation reaction to the energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-17-3': 'Adding up the above two equations, we arrive at the total energy shift of the atom in state [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-17-4': 'For simplicity, we now consider an isotropically polarizable two-level atom with its levels being [MATH], and we define the polarizability of the atom in state [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-17-5': 'Now we can write the total boundary-dependent energy shift into a sum of three parts as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-17-6': 'Here it is obvious that the first term, [MATH], corresponds to the energy shift of the atom caused by zero-point fluctuations, the second term, [MATH], corresponds to the contribution of the thermal fluctuations for the system in thermal equilibrium at a temperature [MATH], and the third term, [MATH], arises from the out of thermal equilibrium nature of the system.', '1408.4517-2-17-7': 'When the temperature of the substrate and the environment coincides, i.e., [MATH], the third term which reflects the revision generated by the effect out of thermal equilibrium vanishes and the result of thermal equilibrium is recovered.', '1408.4517-2-18-0': 'Combining Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) with Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), [MATH] and [MATH] can be expressed, after lengthy simplifications, as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-18-1': 'It is worth noting here that the functions [MATH] and [MATH] give the contributions of the traveling modes of the quantum electromagnetic field and [MATH] describes those of the evanescent modes.', '1408.4517-2-18-2': 'Obviously, function [MATH] is independent of [MATH], thus we leave it out in the following discussions as we are concerned with the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-19-0': '# Energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom near a non-dispersive dielectric substrate', '1408.4517-2-20-0': 'Since an analytical computation of the integrals Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]) looks like mission impossible, we now apply the general results we derived in the preceding section to the atom near a non-dispersive dielectric substrate with real constant relative permittivity.', '1408.4517-2-20-1': 'Before that, we will first look at a special case, i.e, the case of a perfect conductor, which corresponds to an infinitely large real relative permittivity, i.e., [MATH], and in this case, we can deduce from Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]) that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-20-2': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]) with Eq. ([REF]), we find that [MATH] .', '1408.4517-2-20-3': 'This means that effects from being out of thermal equilibrium vanish for a perfect conductor, and as a result the total energy shift of the atom in state [MATH] can be simplified to [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-20-4': 'This expression is in a form different from and a bit simpler than that in Ref. [CITATION] for an atom in a thermal bath near a conducting plane obtained using the field correlation functions found by the method of images, which involves both integration and summation over an infinite series.', '1408.4517-2-20-5': 'We do not plan to prove mathematically that they are equivalent.', '1408.4517-2-20-6': 'However, we will demonstrate that they do agree in the special circumstances which are examined in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-20-7': 'Using Eq. ([REF]), we can show that in the low temperature limit, when the wavelength of the thermal photons is much larger than the transition wavelength of the atom, i.e., [MATH] where [MATH], we have for the ground-state atom, [EQUATION] and for the excited atom, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-20-8': 'Note that in both the short and intermediate distance regions ([MATH] and [MATH]), the revision induced by thermal fluctuations to the energy shift for the atom in both the ground and excited states is proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-20-9': 'This seems to differ from the result in Ref. [CITATION] in which the contribution of thermal fluctuations in the leading order is found to be proportional to [MATH] (see Eqs. (6.3) and (6.6) in Ref. [CITATION]).', '1408.4517-2-20-10': 'However, these two results are actually not contradictory to each other as here we are concerned with the distance-dependent energy shift of the atom and the [MATH] term is distance-independent.', '1408.4517-2-20-11': 'Similarly, in the high temperature limit, when the wavelength of the thermal photons is much smaller than the transition wavelength of the atom, i.e., [MATH], we find for the ground-state atom, [EQUATION] and for the excited atom, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-20-12': 'These results agree with those obtained in Ref. [CITATION] for a two-level atom near a perfect conducting plane in interaction with quantum electromagnetic fields in a thermal bath at thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-21-0': 'Now let us turn to the main focus of the paper, which is the atom-wall force for a two-level atom out of thermal equilibrium near a dielectric substrate with a real constant permittivity.', '1408.4517-2-21-1': 'In this case, the functions [MATH] and [MATH] can be simplified to [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-21-2': 'Then by inserting Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) into Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), the three parts of the energy shift of the atom in state [MATH] can now be re-expressed as [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-21-3': 'The above three parts sum to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom.', '1408.4517-2-22-0': 'Noticing the relation [EQUATION] we can divide the first part, [MATH], which corresponds to the contribution of zero-point fluctuations into a sum of three parts as [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and then we can calculate them one by one.', '1408.4517-2-22-1': 'For the double-integral in [MATH], we find, using the method proposed in Refs. [CITATION] (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-22-2': '[REF]), [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-22-3': 'Combining the above result with the concrete forms of [MATH] and [MATH] (see Eqs. ([REF])-([REF])) yields [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-22-4': 'This term is proportional to [MATH] at an arbitrary position.', '1408.4517-2-22-5': 'Actually, it corresponds to the contribution of the electrostatic interaction in the minimal coupling scheme (see Eq. (3.26) in Ref. [CITATION]).', '1408.4517-2-22-6': 'The double-integral in Eq. ([REF]) has been calculated in Ref. [CITATION], so here we just list it without giving the details, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-22-7': 'Putting this result into Eq. ([REF]), we find that [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] for the atom at an arbitrary distance from the surface of the dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-22-8': 'This term corresponds to the average value of [MATH] (where [MATH] represents the vector potential operator of the electromagnetic field) in the minimal coupling scheme, and it is actually the self energy of an electron at a distance [MATH] from the surface of the dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-22-9': 'For [MATH], the double-integral in Eq. ([REF]) is also discussed in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-22-10': 'It corresponds to the contribution of the term [MATH] in the minimal coupling scheme, i.e., the coupling between the momentum of the electron and the vector potential of the quantum field.', '1408.4517-2-22-11': 'An exact analytical result for an arbitrary position is however difficult to get, but in two limiting cases, the approximate analytical results are obtainable.', '1408.4517-2-23-0': 'In the short distance region where [MATH] , the leading term of the double-integral in [MATH] is [EQUATION] yielding a [MATH] proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-23-1': 'As a result, [MATH] prevails over the other terms, and we have [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-23-2': 'This shows that in the short distance region, [MATH], no matter if the atom is in its excited state or the ground state, the boundary-dependent energy shift due to zero-point fluctuations is proportional to [MATH], and the resulting atom-wall force obeys the van der Waals law.', '1408.4517-2-24-0': 'In the long distance region, i.e., when [MATH], after complicated simplifications, we find that [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the step-function defined as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-24-1': 'For the details on how to get Eq. ([REF]), see Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-24-2': 'Here we point out that in the expression of Eq. (B31) in Ref. [CITATION], there is a typo for the sign of the fourth term in the coefficient of the term [MATH] (concerning the expression of [MATH] here) and we have corrected it.', '1408.4517-2-24-3': 'A substitution of Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]) reveals that for the ground-state atom ([MATH] is proportional to [MATH] as the leading term [MATH], while for the excited atom ([MATH]), [MATH] oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the substrate.', '1408.4517-2-24-4': 'Adding up the three parts, we find that [MATH] and [MATH] are completely canceled by parts of [MATH], and as a result, the boundary-dependent energy shift due to zero-point fluctuations in the long distance region becomes [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-24-5': 'As is shown in the following figure, for [MATH], [MATH] is always negative.', '1408.4517-2-25-0': 'Thus for the ground-state atom, [MATH] is proportional to [MATH] and is always negative, leading to an attractive Casimir-Polder force proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-25-1': 'For the excited atom, [MATH] usually oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the dielectric substrate, and the amplitude of oscillation is much larger than that of the constant term proportional to [MATH], thus [MATH] can be either positive or negative or can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-25-2': 'Accordingly, the Casimir-Polder force due to the zero-point fluctuations can be either repulsive or attractive or can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-25-3': 'Let us note that the above result is not valid for the case of a perfect conducting plane in which [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-25-4': 'In this case, we should be careful in taking the limit of [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-25-5': 'In fact, we should take the limit [MATH] in [MATH] and [MATH] before performing differentiation on them when simplifying Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-25-6': 'Then by so doing, we find that [MATH], and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-25-7': 'Thereby, the energy shift of an isotropically polarizable two-level atom far from the surface of a perfect conducting plane is recovered.', '1408.4517-2-26-0': 'Until now we have only discussed the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force due to zero-point fluctuations.', '1408.4517-2-26-1': 'Next, we will turn our attention to the contributions of the thermal fluctuations.', '1408.4517-2-26-2': 'It is difficult to get analytical results for a general case.', '1408.4517-2-26-3': 'However, fortunately, we are able to find asymptotic behaviors in the low and high temperature limits.', '1408.4517-2-26-4': 'In the following discussion, we assume that the difference between the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], and that of the environment, [MATH], is neither extremely large nor extremely small.', '1408.4517-2-27-0': '## Low temperature limit', '1408.4517-2-28-0': 'We first deal with the low temperature limit, i.e., [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-28-1': 'For simplicity, we abbreviate these two conditions by [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-28-2': 'Here, we will analyze how the energy shift and the atom-wall force behave as the distance varies.', '1408.4517-2-28-3': 'Since now we have two length scales, i.e., the transition wavelength of the atom [MATH] and the wavelength of thermal photons [MATH] or [MATH], we can define a short distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-28-4': 'By doing the [MATH]-integration before the [MATH]-integration, [MATH] can be simplified to [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-28-5': 'Here it is easy to see that the term proportional to [MATH] in Eq. ([REF]) which is absent in the case of a perfect conducting plane (see Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])) is much larger than that proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-29-0': 'For the effect out of thermal equilibrium (Eq. ([REF])), similarly, we find, when [MATH], that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-29-1': 'Here it is worth pointing out that Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are not valid for the case of a perfect conducting plane as they are obtained under the conditions, [MATH] and [MATH] respectively, which means that the parameter [MATH] can not be infinitely large.', '1408.4517-2-29-2': 'Adding up Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) gives rise to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the excited and ground-state atoms due to the thermal fluctuations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-29-3': 'Notice that this result is valid in the region [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-29-4': 'One can see that although both the thermal fluctuations associated with the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift in this region, the contribution of the former dominates over the latter.', '1408.4517-2-30-0': 'Combining the above result for the contribution of the thermal fluctuations with the contribution of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), we find that in the short distance region, [MATH], the total boundary-dependent energy shift for an isotropically polarizable two-level atom in the stationary regime out of thermal equilibrium is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-30-1': 'Obviously, the thermal fluctuations associated with both the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-2-30-2': 'Comparing the contribution due to the thermal fluctuations with that due to zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH], we find that the revision caused by the thermal fluctuations is negligible.', '1408.4517-2-30-3': 'Thus the Casimir-Polder force the atoms in both the ground state and the excited state feel is attractive and proportional to [MATH] which is the van der Waals law.', '1408.4517-2-31-0': 'We can also introduce an intermediate distance region where [MATH], then we find, by combining Eq. ([REF]) with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])), that in this region [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-31-1': 'Similarly, as in the short distance region, the thermal fluctuations associated with both the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-2-31-2': 'For the ground-state atom, the contribution due to the thermal fluctuations is much smaller than that due to zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH], and so the Casimir-Polder force the atom feels is attractive (as [MATH]) and proportional to [MATH] .', '1408.4517-2-31-3': 'For the excited atom, oscillatory terms caused by zero-point fluctuations appear and the amplitude of oscillation is much larger than the terms due to the thermal fluctuations and the term proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-31-4': 'As a result, the atomic energy shift can be either negative or positive or can even be zero, yielding an atom-wall force that can be either attractive or repulsive or can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-32-0': 'Finally let us turn to the long distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-32-1': 'When [MATH], [MATH] can be calculated by performing the integrations in Eq. ([REF]) (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-32-2': '[REF]) to get [EQUATION] and when [MATH], treating Eq. ([REF]) in a similar way (see Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-32-3': '[REF]) leads to [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-32-4': 'Notice that in Eq. ([REF]), if we take the limit [MATH], we recover the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of an atom at a distance [MATH] from a perfect conducting plane in a thermal bath at a temperature [MATH] (see the third line in both Eqs. ([REF]) and Eq. ([REF])).', '1408.4517-2-32-5': 'But trouble appears if we take the [MATH] limit in Eq. ([REF]) as the result would be divergent.', '1408.4517-2-32-6': 'However, as pointed out in the paragraph above Eq. ([REF]), we should take the limit [MATH] in [MATH] and [MATH] before taking their derivatives.', '1408.4517-2-32-7': 'Then following steps as those taken in Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-32-8': '[REF], we get [EQUATION] which means that for the perfect conducting plane, the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes due to the infinite [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-33-0': 'For a general real dielectric substrate, adding Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we obtain the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-2-33-1': 'Under the assumption that the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], and that of the environment, [MATH], are not extremely close, the result can be approximated by [EQUATION] since [MATH] is negligible as compared to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-33-2': 'This result is valid in the region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-33-3': 'So, in this region, the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium to the atomic energy shift prevails over the effect of thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-33-4': 'Noteworthily, here both contributions of the thermal fluctuations of the substrate and that of the environment are of the same order and are all proportional to [MATH] but with opposite signs.', '1408.4517-2-33-5': 'It is then a matter of an easy differentiation exercise to get the Casimir-Polder force due to the thermal fluctuations [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-33-6': 'Thus, for an atom in its ground (excited) state, the Casimir-Polder force is attractive (repulsive) if the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], is higher than that of the environment, [MATH], and repulsive (attractive) if otherwise.', '1408.4517-2-33-7': 'Here it is worth pointing out that our result for the ground-state atom is consistent with that obtained by M. Antezza, et al. in Refs. [CITATION] (see Eq. (12) in Ref. [CITATION]) although the issue is dealt with from a different perspective in the present paper.', '1408.4517-2-33-8': 'Moreover, in Refs. [CITATION], the result is obtained by mathematically assuming [MATH], and thus the physical region where this result is valid is not clearly given.', '1408.4517-2-33-9': 'In contrast, here we find out the concrete region.', '1408.4517-2-33-10': 'Notice that we use SI units while the Gauss units are adopted in Refs. [CITATION], so a discrepancy of a factor [MATH] appears between our results and theirs.', '1408.4517-2-34-0': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]), with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we find that in the long distance region, [MATH], the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom is [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-34-1': 'Notice that in this region, if [MATH] and [MATH] are not extremely close, the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium for the energy shift of the ground-state atom dominates over the contribution of zero-point fluctuations which is proportional to [MATH], thus the Casimir-Polder force it feels behaves like [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-34-2': 'If [MATH], the force is attractive and it is repulsive otherwise.', '1408.4517-2-34-3': 'For the excited atom, as the amplitude of the oscillatory terms is always larger than the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium and the term proportional to [MATH], the energy shift of the atom can be either negative or positive and can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-34-4': 'As a result, the Casimir-Polder force for the excited atom can be either attractive or repulsive or can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-35-0': '## High temperature limit', '1408.4517-2-36-0': 'We now analyze the behavior of the atom-wall force out of thermal equilibrium in the high temperature limit, i.e., when[MATH] and [MATH], which is not considered in Ref. [CITATION].', '1408.4517-2-36-1': 'We can combine these conditions into [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-36-2': 'We then find in the short-distance region where [MATH], [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-36-3': 'Here the term proportional to [MATH] which is absent in the case of a conducting plane (see Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF])) dominates over the term proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-36-4': 'When [MATH], we can show that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-36-5': 'For details on how to get the above analytical result, see Appendix.', '1408.4517-2-36-6': '[REF].', '1408.4517-2-36-7': 'By adding Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), the total contributions of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the ground-state and excited atoms out of thermal equilibrium are found to be [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-36-8': 'Notice that this result is valid in the short-distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-36-9': 'Just as in the case of the low temperature limit, the thermal fluctuations that originate from both the substrate and the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift and the former (characterized by [MATH]) is much larger than the latter (characterized by [MATH]).', '1408.4517-2-37-0': 'Combining the above result with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), gives rises to the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom in the short distance region, [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-37-1': 'Obviously, in this region, the contribution of zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH] prevails over the contribution of the thermal fluctuations, thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive and proportional to [MATH] no matter if the atom is in its ground-state or the excited state.', '1408.4517-2-38-0': 'Now let us look at the intermediate distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-38-1': 'In this region, we have [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-38-2': 'This shows that for the ground-state atom, the force is repulsive (attractive) if [MATH]), and it is the other way around for the excited atom.', '1408.4517-2-38-3': 'Adding Eq. ([REF]) and Eq. ([REF]), we get the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-38-4': 'Again, the thermal fluctuations of both the substrate and that of the environment contribute to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom out of thermal equilibrium, but now their contributions are of the same order and are all proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-38-5': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]) with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eq. ([REF]), yields the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-38-6': 'Thus, for the ground-state (excited) atom, if [MATH]), the boundary-dependent energy shift is negative and the Casimir-Polder force on the atom is attractive, and if [MATH]), the boundary-dependent energy shift is negative (positive), and thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive (repulsive).', '1408.4517-2-39-0': 'Finally, let us turn our attention to the long distance region where [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-39-1': 'For a finite [MATH], we find [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and for an infinite [MATH] which corresponds to the case of a perfect conducting plane, we find by following the same procedure as that in the case of the low temperature limit, [EQUATION] which is exactly the same as the result in Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-39-2': 'Similarly, we find, in the region [MATH], that for a finite [MATH], [EQUATION] with [EQUATION] and for [MATH], [EQUATION] which shows that the contribution of the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes for a perfect conducting plane as expected.', '1408.4517-2-39-3': 'Adding Eq. ([REF]) and Eq. ([REF]), we get the contributions of the thermal fluctuations to the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom (for finite [MATH]), [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-39-4': 'So, in this region, the contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the atomic boundary-dependent energy shift oscillates with the distance between the atom and the surface of the substrate, and the amplitude of oscillation is always much larger than the term proportional to [MATH] if the temperature of the substrate, [MATH], is not much higher than that of the environment, [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-40-0': 'For the case of a perfect conducting plane, the effect of non-thermal equilibrium vanishes, so the total contribution of the thermal fluctuations to the energy shift of the atom is actually described by Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-41-0': 'Combining Eq. ([REF]), with the contributions of zero-point fluctuations, Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), we obtain the total boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom in the long distance region and in the high temperature limit [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-41-1': 'In this region, as [MATH] and [MATH] are not extremely close, the term proportional to [MATH] which exists when thermal equilibrium is not reached is always much larger than the term proportional to [MATH] due to zero-point fluctuations.', '1408.4517-2-41-2': 'For the ground-state atom, the amplitude of the oscillation term due to the thermal fluctuations at equilibrium is always much larger than the second term which arises because of non-thermal equilibrium, and as a result, the boundary-dependent energy shift of the atom can be either negative or positive or can even be zero, thus resulting in a Casimir-Polder force that can be either attractive or repulsive or can even be zero.', '1408.4517-2-41-3': 'For the excited atom, the energy shift and Casimir-Polder force also exhibits similar behaviors.', '1408.4517-2-42-0': 'Let us now comment on the contributions of the evanescent modes from the substrate and traveling modes from the environment to the Casimir-Polder force.', '1408.4517-2-42-1': 'By adding Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), it is easy for us to see that both the evanescent modes from the substrate and the traveling modes from the environment generally contribute to the atomic energy shift.', '1408.4517-2-42-2': 'In the short distance region in both the low- and high- temperature limits, the contribution of the evanescent modes from the substrate dominates over that of the traveling modes from the environment.', '1408.4517-2-42-3': 'This conclusion also holds for an atom in the intermediate distance region and in the low temperature limit.', '1408.4517-2-42-4': 'However, for an atom in the intermediate distance region and in the high temperature limit, the contributions of the evanescent modes from the substrate and the traveling modes from the environment are always of the same order, and the same is true for an atom in the long distance region in both the low- and high- temperature limits.', '1408.4517-2-43-0': 'The above discussions are about the energy shift and Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near the surface of a real dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-43-1': 'Extending the present discussion to a general dispersive dielectric substrate for which the dielectric constant depends on the frequency, i.e., [MATH], the Drude model for a metal for example, is an interesting topic for future research.', '1408.4517-2-44-0': '# summary', '1408.4517-2-45-0': 'We have generalized the DDC formalism originally established for thermal equilibrium to the case out of thermal equilibrium but in a stationary state by adopting the local source hypothesis and then we applied it to the calculation of the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an atom out of thermal equilibrium near a dielectric substrate.', '1408.4517-2-45-1': 'In particular, we have calculated the energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force of an isotropically polarizable two-level atom near a real dielectric half-space substrate and analyzed in detail their behaviors in three different distance regions in both the low-temperature limit and the high-temperature limit for both the ground-state and excited-state atoms.', '1408.4517-2-46-0': 'In the low-temperature limit where the wavelength of thermal photons is assumed to be much larger than the transition wavelength of the atom, we find that in all distance regions, i.e., the short, intermediate and long distance regions, the thermal fluctuations that originate from both the substrate and from the environment contribute to the atomic energy shift and the Casimir-Polder force.', '1408.4517-2-46-1': 'In the short and intermediate distance regions, the contribution of the former is much larger than the contribution of the latter, whereas in the long distance region, the contributions of both thermal fluctuations are of the same order but with opposite signs.', '1408.4517-2-46-2': 'More importantly, the out of thermal equilibrium fluctuations give rise to an atom-wall force in the long distance region with a slower dependence on the distance and strong dependence on the temperature as opposed to the Lifshitz law at thermal equilibrium.', '1408.4517-2-46-3': 'In particular, for the ground state atom, the force behaves like [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-46-4': 'Our result in the long distance region at low temperature not only confirms that by Antezza etal obtained in a different context [CITATION], but also gives a concrete region not clearly quantified in Refs. [CITATION] where the new asymptotic behavior is valid.', '1408.4517-2-46-5': 'In the low temperature limit, the effects from being out of thermal equilibrium only become appreciable in the long distance region, while they are negligible in the short and intermediate distance regions, leading to an atom-wall force which respectively obeys the van de Waals law and the Casimir-Polder law for the ground state atoms.', '1408.4517-2-47-0': 'In the high-temperature limit where the wavelength of thermal photons is assumed to be much smaller than the transition wavelength of the atom, the contribution of zero-point fluctuations characterized by the term proportional to [MATH] prevails over the contribution of the thermal fluctuations in the short distance region, thus the Casimir-Polder force is attractive and proportional to [MATH] no matter if the atom is in its ground-state or the excited state.', '1408.4517-2-47-1': 'In the intermediate distance region, the contribution of the thermal fluctuations may become comparable to that of the zero-point fluctuations and the Casimir-Polder force may be attractive or repulsive depending on several factors including whether the atom is the ground or excited states and the relative temperature between the substrate and the environment.', '1408.4517-2-47-2': 'Only in the long distance region do the effects of the thermal fluctuations both at and out of thermal equilibrium dominate over that of the zero-point fluctuations, and in this region, even the atom-wall force on the ground state atoms becomes oscillatory around zero, meaning that the force can either be attractive or repulsive.', '1408.4517-2-48-0': 'This work was supported in part by the NSFC under Grants No. 11075083, No. 11375092 and No. 11435006, the SRFDP under Grant No. 20124306110001, the Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant No. LQ14A050001, the Research Program of Ningbo University under No. E00829134702, No. xkzwl10 and No. XYL14029, and K.C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University.', '1408.4517-2-49-0': '# Correlation functions of the field out of thermal equilibrium', '1408.4517-2-50-0': 'In order to find the two correlation functions of the field out of thermal equilibrium defined in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), [MATH] and [MATH], we firstly consider the quantity [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-1': 'Taking the Fourier transformation (see Eq. ([REF])) for the electromagnetic field operator, we can expand the above quantity into a sum of four parts as [EQUATION] where we have denoted [MATH] with [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-50-2': 'To obtain the above equation, we have used the relation [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-50-3': 'By resorting to Eq. ([REF]), we obtain [EQUATION] where the symbol "[MATH]" denotes the complex conjugate.', '1408.4517-2-50-4': 'Noticing that the density operator of the thermal baths with temperatures [MATH] and [MATH] are separately [MATH] and [MATH], we find [EQUATION] with [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-5': 'Thus, [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-6': 'Similarly, we can find the average values in the other three terms in Eq. ([REF]), and then we have [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-7': 'Using the relation [CITATION] (see Eq. (27)) [EQUATION] where [MATH] represents the imaginary part of [MATH], we deduce that [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-8': 'So [MATH] can be simplified to be [EQUATION] where [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-50-9': 'For an atom at [MATH], combining Eqs. ([REF])-([REF]), we deduce that [MATH] and [MATH] are nonzero only when [MATH] .', '1408.4517-2-51-0': 'Using procedures similar to those above, we can get [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-51-1': 'So, the two correlation functions of the field can be simplified as [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-51-2': 'Here we point out that in the above two correlation functions we have renormalized the term, [MATH], which corresponds to the fluctuations of a vacuum and is infinitely large for [MATH], by simply subtracting it out.', '1408.4517-2-52-0': '# The double-integral in Eq. ([REF])', '1408.4517-2-53-0': 'We use here the method proposed by C. Eberlein, et.', '1408.4517-2-53-1': 'al to calculate the double-integration in Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-53-2': 'The double-integral [MATH] is the sum of the following two integrals, [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-53-3': 'As the two integrals are not separately convergent, we replace the upper-limit of the [MATH]-integral in each by a positive [MATH] and take it to be infinity in the end.', '1408.4517-2-54-0': 'For [MATH], if we do the [MATH]-integration by parts, we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-1': 'For the last term in the above equation, we can subtract the term [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and then add it later, i.e., [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-2': 'For the first term on the right hand side of the above equation, we do the [MATH]-integration by parts, and for the second term, wedo the double-integration directly, then we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-3': 'Similarly, for the last term on the right hand side of the above equation, we repeat the above steps and we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-4': 'To obtain the above result, we have discarded the terms proportional to or of order higher than [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-54-5': 'Thus [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-6': 'Take similar steps on [MATH] and we find [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-7': 'Now adding Eq. ([REF]) to Eq. ([REF]) and discarding the infinite oscillating terms, we arrive at [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-54-8': 'Notice that to obtain the above result, we have used the relation [CITATION] [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-55-0': '# Integrals in Equations.', '1408.4517-2-55-1': '([REF]) and ([REF]) in the long distance region and in the low temperature limit', '1408.4517-2-56-0': 'The integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are of the following forms [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-1': 'In the low temperature limit, [MATH] where [MATH], the above integrals can be approximated as [EQUATION] with [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-56-2': 'For [MATH], we perform the [MATH]-integration by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-3': 'This integral can be done by subtracting [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and adding it later.', '1408.4517-2-56-4': 'Then taking the limit [MATH], we get [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-5': 'Similarly, for [MATH], do the [MATH]-integration by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-6': 'We do the [MATH]-integration in the second integral on the right hand side of the above equation by parts and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-7': 'For the last integral in the above square bracket, we can first subtract [MATH] from the t-integration and add it later.', '1408.4517-2-56-8': 'Then we take the limit [MATH] and we obtain [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-56-9': 'Computing the other integrations in Eq. ([REF]) and combining the results with Eq. ([REF]), we get the approximate result for [MATH] as [EQUATION] up to the order [MATH] in the limit [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-57-0': 'Notice that when adding [MATH] (see Eq. ([REF])) and [MATH] (see Eq. ([REF])), by using the relation Eq. ([REF]), the terms proportional to [MATH] are canceled out completely and the leading term is proportional to [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-57-1': 'This is exactly what happens when calculating Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-58-0': '# Integrals in Equations.', '1408.4517-2-58-1': '([REF]) and ([REF]) in the high temperature limit', '1408.4517-2-59-0': 'In the high temperature limit, [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-59-1': 'The integrals in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]) are of the same forms as those in Eqs. ([REF]) and ([REF]), which can be changed to [EQUATION] where the parameters [MATH] and [MATH] are the same as those defined in Appendix [REF] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-60-0': '(1)The asymptotic result of [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-61-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], [EQUATION] in which [MATH] and we have only kept the [MATH]-dependent term.', '1408.4517-2-62-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], for the [MATH]-integration in Eq. ([REF]), we can expand the factor [MATH] to be an infinite sum of a series, and then by changing variables, it can be re-expressed as [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-62-1': 'As [MATH], we approximate the infinite sum in the above equation by integration.', '1408.4517-2-62-2': 'After some simplifications, [MATH] can be changed to [EQUATION] thus [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-62-3': 'Performing the [MATH]-integration in Eq. ([REF]) directly and then taking the limit [MATH] and [MATH], we get the asymptotic result [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-62-4': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we can firstly change Eq. ([REF]) into Eq. ([REF]), then do the [MATH]-integration by parts, subtract [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add it.', '1408.4517-2-62-5': 'Finally, taking the limit [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION] (2)The asymptotic result of [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-63-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], taking steps as those we did in simplifying [MATH], we get [EQUATION] where we have kept only the leading [MATH]-dependent term.', '1408.4517-2-64-0': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we firstly change [MATH] to [EQUATION] as we have done for Eq. ([REF]) (see Eqs. ([REF])-([REF])).', '1408.4517-2-64-1': 'Then we divide the above double-integral into the sum of two parts as [EQUATION] do the two integrals on the right hand side of the above equation directly, and finally take the limits [MATH] and [MATH].', '1408.4517-2-64-2': 'As a result, we get the asymptotic result [EQUATION]', '1408.4517-2-64-3': 'When [MATH] and [MATH], i.e., [MATH], we firstly change [MATH] into the sum of two parts as in Eq. ([REF]).', '1408.4517-2-64-4': 'For the first double integral on the right hand side of Eq. ([REF]), the [MATH]-integration can be done directly, so only the [MATH]-integration is left.', '1408.4517-2-64-5': 'For the [MATH]-integration, it diverges at the point [MATH] if we take the limit [MATH] directly.', '1408.4517-2-64-6': 'However, we can subtract [MATH] and [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add them.', '1408.4517-2-64-7': 'Similarly, for the second double integral on the right hand side of Eq. ([REF]), because it diverges at the point [MATH] if we do the [MATH]-integration and take the limit [MATH] directly, we can subtract [MATH] and [MATH] from the [MATH]-integration and later add them.', '1408.4517-2-64-8': 'After these steps and further taking the limits [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]'}
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'1408.4517-2-64-8'], ['1408.4517-1-25-0', '1408.4517-2-25-0'], ['1408.4517-1-25-3', '1408.4517-2-25-3'], ['1408.4517-1-25-4', '1408.4517-2-25-4'], ['1408.4517-1-25-5', '1408.4517-2-25-5'], ['1408.4517-1-25-6', '1408.4517-2-25-6'], ['1408.4517-1-25-7', '1408.4517-2-25-7'], ['1408.4517-1-47-0', '1408.4517-2-47-0'], ['1408.4517-1-53-0', '1408.4517-2-53-0'], ['1408.4517-1-53-1', '1408.4517-2-53-1'], ['1408.4517-1-53-2', '1408.4517-2-53-2'], ['1408.4517-1-45-1', '1408.4517-2-45-1'], ['1408.4517-1-54-1', '1408.4517-2-54-1'], ['1408.4517-1-54-4', '1408.4517-2-54-4'], ['1408.4517-1-54-6', '1408.4517-2-54-6'], ['1408.4517-1-54-7', '1408.4517-2-54-7'], ['1408.4517-1-54-8', '1408.4517-2-54-8'], ['1408.4517-1-9-0', '1408.4517-2-9-0'], ['1408.4517-1-9-1', '1408.4517-2-9-1'], ['1408.4517-1-9-2', '1408.4517-2-9-2'], ['1408.4517-1-9-3', '1408.4517-2-9-3'], ['1408.4517-1-9-4', '1408.4517-2-9-4'], ['1408.4517-1-9-6', '1408.4517-2-9-6'], ['1408.4517-1-3-0', '1408.4517-2-3-0'], ['1408.4517-1-3-3', '1408.4517-2-3-3'], ['1408.4517-1-3-4', '1408.4517-2-3-4'], ['1408.4517-1-21-2', '1408.4517-2-21-2'], ['1408.4517-1-5-0', '1408.4517-2-5-0'], ['1408.4517-1-5-2', '1408.4517-2-5-2'], ['1408.4517-1-5-3', '1408.4517-2-5-3'], ['1408.4517-1-5-5', '1408.4517-2-5-5'], ['1408.4517-1-5-6', '1408.4517-2-5-6'], ['1408.4517-1-5-8', '1408.4517-2-5-8'], ['1408.4517-1-5-10', '1408.4517-2-5-10'], ['1408.4517-1-41-0', '1408.4517-2-41-0'], ['1408.4517-1-41-1', '1408.4517-2-41-1'], ['1408.4517-1-41-3', '1408.4517-2-41-3'], ['1408.4517-1-46-1', '1408.4517-2-46-1'], ['1408.4517-1-46-2', '1408.4517-2-46-2'], ['1408.4517-1-46-3', '1408.4517-2-46-3'], ['1408.4517-1-2-0', '1408.4517-2-2-0'], ['1408.4517-1-2-1', '1408.4517-2-2-1'], ['1408.4517-1-31-0', '1408.4517-2-31-0'], ['1408.4517-1-31-2', '1408.4517-2-31-2'], ['1408.4517-1-31-3', '1408.4517-2-31-3'], ['1408.4517-1-42-0', '1408.4517-2-42-0'], ['1408.4517-1-42-2', '1408.4517-2-42-2'], ['1408.4517-1-42-3', '1408.4517-2-42-3'], ['1408.4517-1-42-4', '1408.4517-2-42-4'], ['1408.4517-1-33-1', '1408.4517-2-33-1'], ['1408.4517-1-33-2', '1408.4517-2-33-2'], ['1408.4517-1-33-3', '1408.4517-2-33-3'], ['1408.4517-1-33-4', '1408.4517-2-33-4'], ['1408.4517-1-33-5', '1408.4517-2-33-5'], ['1408.4517-1-33-7', '1408.4517-2-33-7'], ['1408.4517-1-33-8', '1408.4517-2-33-8'], ['1408.4517-1-33-9', '1408.4517-2-33-9'], ['1408.4517-1-20-1', '1408.4517-2-20-1'], ['1408.4517-1-20-2', '1408.4517-2-20-2'], ['1408.4517-1-20-4', '1408.4517-2-20-4'], ['1408.4517-1-20-5', '1408.4517-2-20-5'], ['1408.4517-1-20-6', '1408.4517-2-20-6'], ['1408.4517-1-20-9', '1408.4517-2-20-9'], ['1408.4517-1-20-12', '1408.4517-2-20-12'], ['1408.4517-1-24-0', '1408.4517-2-24-0'], ['1408.4517-1-24-1', '1408.4517-2-24-1'], ['1408.4517-1-24-3', '1408.4517-2-24-3'], ['1408.4517-1-24-4', '1408.4517-2-24-4'], ['1408.4517-1-24-5', '1408.4517-2-24-5'], ['1408.4517-1-40-0', '1408.4517-2-40-0'], ['1408.4517-1-50-0', '1408.4517-2-50-0'], ['1408.4517-1-50-1', '1408.4517-2-50-1'], ['1408.4517-1-50-2', '1408.4517-2-50-2'], ['1408.4517-1-50-4', '1408.4517-2-50-4'], ['1408.4517-1-50-6', '1408.4517-2-50-6'], ['1408.4517-1-50-7', '1408.4517-2-50-7'], ['1408.4517-1-50-8', '1408.4517-2-50-8'], ['1408.4517-1-43-0', '1408.4517-2-43-0'], ['1408.4517-1-43-1', '1408.4517-2-43-1'], ['1408.4517-1-28-0', '1408.4517-2-28-0'], ['1408.4517-1-28-1', '1408.4517-2-28-1'], ['1408.4517-1-28-2', '1408.4517-2-28-2'], ['1408.4517-1-28-3', '1408.4517-2-28-3'], ['1408.4517-1-28-5', '1408.4517-2-28-5'], ['1408.4517-1-30-0', '1408.4517-2-30-0'], ['1408.4517-1-30-2', '1408.4517-2-30-2'], ['1408.4517-1-39-0', '1408.4517-2-39-0'], ['1408.4517-1-39-2', '1408.4517-2-39-2'], ['1408.4517-1-39-4', '1408.4517-2-39-4'], ['1408.4517-1-8-0', '1408.4517-2-8-0'], ['1408.4517-1-8-1', '1408.4517-2-8-1'], ['1408.4517-1-8-2', '1408.4517-2-8-2'], ['1408.4517-1-8-4', '1408.4517-2-8-4'], ['1408.4517-1-8-6', '1408.4517-2-8-6'], ['1408.4517-1-8-8', '1408.4517-2-8-8'], ['1408.4517-1-8-9', '1408.4517-2-8-9'], ['1408.4517-1-8-10', '1408.4517-2-8-10'], ['1408.4517-1-32-0', '1408.4517-2-32-0'], ['1408.4517-1-32-1', '1408.4517-2-32-1'], ['1408.4517-1-32-4', '1408.4517-2-32-4'], ['1408.4517-1-32-5', '1408.4517-2-32-5'], ['1408.4517-1-32-8', '1408.4517-2-32-8'], ['1408.4517-1-51-1', '1408.4517-2-51-1'], ['1408.4517-1-14-0', '1408.4517-2-14-0'], ['1408.4517-1-14-1', '1408.4517-2-14-1'], ['1408.4517-1-14-2', '1408.4517-2-14-2'], ['1408.4517-1-14-3', '1408.4517-2-14-3'], ['1408.4517-1-14-7', '1408.4517-2-14-7'], ['1408.4517-1-15-0', '1408.4517-2-15-0'], ['1408.4517-1-15-1', '1408.4517-2-15-1'], ['1408.4517-1-15-2', '1408.4517-2-15-2'], ['1408.4517-1-15-3', '1408.4517-2-15-3'], ['1408.4517-1-56-0', '1408.4517-2-56-0'], ['1408.4517-1-56-1', '1408.4517-2-56-1'], ['1408.4517-1-56-3', '1408.4517-2-56-3'], ['1408.4517-1-56-4', '1408.4517-2-56-4'], ['1408.4517-1-56-5', '1408.4517-2-56-5'], ['1408.4517-1-56-9', '1408.4517-2-56-9'], ['1408.4517-1-37-0', '1408.4517-2-37-0'], ['1408.4517-1-37-1', 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'1408.4517-2-62-5'], ['1408.4517-1-11-0', '1408.4517-2-11-0'], ['1408.4517-1-11-1', '1408.4517-2-11-1'], ['1408.4517-1-26-0', '1408.4517-2-26-0'], ['1408.4517-1-26-1', '1408.4517-2-26-1'], ['1408.4517-1-26-2', '1408.4517-2-26-2'], ['1408.4517-1-26-3', '1408.4517-2-26-3'], ['1408.4517-1-23-0', '1408.4517-2-23-0'], ['1408.4517-1-23-1', '1408.4517-2-23-1'], ['1408.4517-1-29-0', '1408.4517-2-29-0'], ['1408.4517-1-29-1', '1408.4517-2-29-1'], ['1408.4517-1-29-2', '1408.4517-2-29-2'], ['1408.4517-1-29-3', '1408.4517-2-29-3'], ['1408.4517-1-29-4', '1408.4517-2-29-4'], ['1408.4517-1-6-0', '1408.4517-2-6-0'], ['1408.4517-1-6-1', '1408.4517-2-6-1'], ['1408.4517-1-6-2', '1408.4517-2-6-2'], ['1408.4517-1-6-3', '1408.4517-2-6-3'], ['1408.4517-1-6-4', '1408.4517-2-6-4'], ['1408.4517-1-18-0', '1408.4517-2-18-0'], ['1408.4517-1-18-2', '1408.4517-2-18-2'], ['1408.4517-1-13-0', '1408.4517-2-13-0'], ['1408.4517-1-13-1', '1408.4517-2-13-1'], ['1408.4517-1-13-2', '1408.4517-2-13-2'], ['1408.4517-1-13-3', 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'1408.4517-2-62-5'], ['1408.4517-1-11-0', '1408.4517-2-11-0'], ['1408.4517-1-11-1', '1408.4517-2-11-1'], ['1408.4517-1-26-0', '1408.4517-2-26-0'], ['1408.4517-1-26-1', '1408.4517-2-26-1'], ['1408.4517-1-26-2', '1408.4517-2-26-2'], ['1408.4517-1-26-3', '1408.4517-2-26-3'], ['1408.4517-1-23-0', '1408.4517-2-23-0'], ['1408.4517-1-23-1', '1408.4517-2-23-1'], ['1408.4517-1-29-0', '1408.4517-2-29-0'], ['1408.4517-1-29-1', '1408.4517-2-29-1'], ['1408.4517-1-29-2', '1408.4517-2-29-2'], ['1408.4517-1-29-3', '1408.4517-2-29-3'], ['1408.4517-1-29-4', '1408.4517-2-29-4'], ['1408.4517-1-6-0', '1408.4517-2-6-0'], ['1408.4517-1-6-1', '1408.4517-2-6-1'], ['1408.4517-1-6-2', '1408.4517-2-6-2'], ['1408.4517-1-6-3', '1408.4517-2-6-3'], ['1408.4517-1-6-4', '1408.4517-2-6-4'], ['1408.4517-1-18-0', '1408.4517-2-18-0'], ['1408.4517-1-18-2', '1408.4517-2-18-2'], ['1408.4517-1-13-0', '1408.4517-2-13-0'], ['1408.4517-1-13-1', '1408.4517-2-13-1'], ['1408.4517-1-13-2', '1408.4517-2-13-2'], ['1408.4517-1-13-3', '1408.4517-2-13-3'], ['1408.4517-1-13-4', '1408.4517-2-13-4'], ['1408.4517-1-13-5', '1408.4517-2-13-5'], ['1408.4517-1-13-6', '1408.4517-2-13-6'], ['1408.4517-1-13-8', '1408.4517-2-13-8']]
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[]
[['1408.4517-1-51-0', '1408.4517-2-51-0']]
[]
['1408.4517-1-15-4', '1408.4517-1-22-2', '1408.4517-1-32-3', '1408.4517-1-36-6', '1408.4517-1-48-0', '1408.4517-1-50-5', '1408.4517-1-54-5', '1408.4517-1-60-0', '1408.4517-1-61-0', '1408.4517-1-64-0', '1408.4517-2-15-4', '1408.4517-2-22-2', '1408.4517-2-32-3', '1408.4517-2-36-6', '1408.4517-2-48-0', '1408.4517-2-50-5', '1408.4517-2-54-5', '1408.4517-2-60-0', '1408.4517-2-61-0', '1408.4517-2-64-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1408.4517
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null
null
null
null
1706.04499
{'1706.04499-1-0-0': 'We propose SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for recurrent neural networks (RNNs) inspired by the "learning to search" (L2S) approach to structured prediction.', '1706.04499-1-0-1': 'RNNs have been widely successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation or parsing, and are commonly trained using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE).', '1706.04499-1-0-2': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not always an appropriate surrogate for the test error: by only maximizing the ground truth probability, it fails to exploit the wealth of information offered by structured losses.', '1706.04499-1-0-3': 'Further, it introduces discrepancies between training and predicting (such as exposure bias) that may hurt test performance.', '1706.04499-1-0-4': 'Instead, SeaRnn leverages test-alike search space exploration to introduce global-local losses that are closer to the test error.', '1706.04499-1-0-5': 'We demonstrate improved performance over MLE on three different tasks: OCR, spelling correction and text chunking.', '1706.04499-1-0-6': 'Finally, we propose a subsampling strategy to enable SeaRnn to scale to large vocabulary sizes.', '1706.04499-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1706.04499-1-2-0': 'Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) have been recently quite successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation , parsing or caption generation .', '1706.04499-1-2-1': 'These models use the same repeated cell (or unit) to output a sequence of tokens one by one.', '1706.04499-1-2-2': 'As each prediction takes into account all previous predictions, this cell learns to output the next token conditioned on the previous ones.', '1706.04499-1-2-3': 'The standard training loss for RNNs is derived from maximum likelihood estimation (MLE): we consider that the cell outputs a probability distribution at each step in the sequence, and we seek to maximize the probability of the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-3-0': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not a particularly close surrogate to the various test errors we want to minimize.', '1706.04499-1-3-1': 'A striking example of discrepancy is that the MLE loss is close to 0/1: it makes no distinction between candidates that are close or far away from the ground truth (with respect to the structured test error), thus failing to exploit valuable information.', '1706.04499-1-3-2': 'Another example of train/test discrepancy is called exposure or exploration bias : in traditional MLE training the cell learns the conditional probability of the next token, based on the previous ground truth tokens - this is often referred to as teacher forcing.', '1706.04499-1-3-3': 'However, at test time the model does not have access to the ground truth, and thus feeds its own previous predictions to its next cell for prediction instead.', '1706.04499-1-4-0': 'Improving RNN training thus appears as a relevant endeavor, which has received much attention recently.', '1706.04499-1-4-1': 'In particular, ideas coming from reinforcement learning (RL), such as the Reinforce and Actor-Critic algorithms , have been used to derive training losses that are more closely related to the test error that we actually want to minimize.', '1706.04499-1-5-0': 'In order to address the issues of MLE training, we propose instead to use ideas from the structured prediction field, in particular from the "learning to search" (L2S) approach introduced by [CITATION] and later refined by [CITATION] and [CITATION] among others.', '1706.04499-1-6-0': 'Contributions.', '1706.04499-1-6-1': 'In Section [REF], we review the limitations of MLE training for RNNs in details.', '1706.04499-1-6-2': 'We also clarify some related claims made in the recent literature.', '1706.04499-1-6-3': 'In Section [REF], we make explicit the strong links between RNNs and the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-1-6-4': 'In Section [REF], we present SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for RNNs, using ideas from L2S to derive a global-local loss that is much closer to the test error than MLE.', '1706.04499-1-6-5': 'We demonstrate that this novel approach leads to significant improvements on three difficult structured prediction tasks, including a spelling correction problem recently introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-6-6': 'As this algorithm is quite costly, in Section [REF] we investigate scaling solutions.', '1706.04499-1-6-7': 'We propose a subsampling strategy that allows us to considerably reduce training times while maintaining improved performance compared to MLE.', '1706.04499-1-6-8': 'Finally, in Section [REF] we contrast our novel approach to the related RL-inspired methods.', '1706.04499-1-7-0': '# Traditional RNN training and its limitations', '1706.04499-1-8-0': 'RNNs are a large family of neural network models aimed at representing sequential data.', '1706.04499-1-8-1': 'To do so, they produce a sequence of states [MATH] by recursively applying the same transformation (or cell) [MATH] on the sequential data: [MATH], with [MATH] an initial state and [MATH] an optional input.', '1706.04499-1-9-0': 'Many possible design choices fit this framework.', '1706.04499-1-9-1': 'We focus on a subset typically used for structured prediction, where we want to model the joint probability of a target sequence [MATH] given an input [MATH] (e.g. the decoder RNN in the encoder-decoder architecture ).', '1706.04499-1-9-2': 'Here [MATH] is the alphabet of output tokens and [MATH] is the length of the output sequence associated with input [MATH] (though [MATH] may take different values, in the following we drop the dependency in [MATH] and use [MATH] for simplicity).', '1706.04499-1-9-3': 'To achieve this modeling, we feed [MATH] through a projection layer (i.e. a linear classifier) to obtain a vector of scores [MATH] over all possible tokens [MATH], and normalize these with a softmax layer (an exponential normalizer) to obtain a distribution [MATH] over tokens: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-9-4': 'The vector [MATH] is interpreted as the predictive conditional distribution for the [MATH] token given by the RNN model, i.e. [MATH] for [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-9-5': 'Multiplying the values [MATH] together thus yields the joint probability of the sequence [MATH] defined by the RNN (thanks to the chain rule): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-9-6': 'As pointed in [CITATION], the underlying structure of these RNNs as graphical models is thus a complete graph, and there is no conditional independence assumption to simplify the difficult prediction task of computing [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-9-7': 'In practice, one typically uses either beam search to approximate this decoding, or a sequence of greedy predictions [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-10-0': 'If we use the "teacher forcing" regimen, where the inputs to the RNN cell are the ground truth tokens (as opposed to its own greedy predictions), we obtain the probability of each ground truth sequence according to the RNN model.', '1706.04499-1-10-1': 'We can then use MLE to derive a loss to train the RNN.', '1706.04499-1-10-2': 'One should note here that despite the fact that the individual output probabilities are at the token level, the MLE loss involves the joint probability (computed via the chain rule) and is thus at the sequence level.', '1706.04499-1-11-0': 'The limitations of MLE training.', '1706.04499-1-11-1': 'While this maximum likelihood style of training has been very successful in various applications, it suffers from several known issues, especially for structured prediction problems.', '1706.04499-1-11-2': 'The first one is called exposure or exploration bias .', '1706.04499-1-11-3': 'During training (with teacher forcing), the model learns the probabilities of the next tokens conditioned on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-11-4': 'But at test time, the model does not have access to the ground truth and outputs probabilities are conditioned on its own previous predictions instead.', '1706.04499-1-11-5': 'Therefore if the predictions differ from the ground truth, the model has to continue based on an exploration path it has not seen during training, which means that it is less likely to make accurate predictions.', '1706.04499-1-11-6': 'This can lead to a compounding of errors, where mistakes in prediction accumulate and prevent good performance.', '1706.04499-1-12-0': 'The second major issue is the discrepancy between the training loss and the various test errors associated with the tasks for which RNNs are used (e.g. edit distance, F1 score...).', '1706.04499-1-12-1': 'Of course, a single surrogate is not likely be a good approximation for all these errors.', '1706.04499-1-12-2': 'One salient illustration is that MLE ignores the information contained in structured losses.', '1706.04499-1-12-3': 'It is only focusing on maximizing the probability of the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-12-4': 'This means that it does not distinguish between a prediction that is very close to the ground truth and one that is very far away.', '1706.04499-1-12-5': 'Thus, most of the information given by a structured loss is not leveraged with this approach.', '1706.04499-1-13-0': 'Local vs. sequence-level.', '1706.04499-1-13-1': 'Some recent papers also point out the fact that since RNNs output next token predictions, their loss is local instead of sequence-level, contrary to the error we typically want to minimize.', '1706.04499-1-13-2': 'This claim seems to contradict the standard RNN analysis, which postulates that the underlying graphical model is the complete graph: that is, the RNN outputs the probability of the next tokens conditioned on all the previous predictions.', '1706.04499-1-13-3': 'Thanks to the chain rule, one recovers the probability of the whole sequence.', '1706.04499-1-13-4': 'Thus the maximum likelihood training loss is indeed a sequence level loss, even though we can decompose it in a product of local losses at each cell.', '1706.04499-1-13-5': 'However, if we assume that the RNN outputs are only conditioned on the last few predictions (instead of all previous ones), then we can indeed consider the MLE loss as local.', '1706.04499-1-13-6': 'In this setting the underlying graphical model obeys Markovian constraints (as in maximum entropy Markov models (MEMMs)) rather than the complete graph; this corresponds to the assumption that the information from the previous inputs is imperfectly carried through the network to the cell, preventing the model from accurately representing long-term dependencies.', '1706.04499-1-14-0': 'Given all these limitations, exploring novel ways of training RNNs appears to be a worthy endeavor, and this field has attracted a lot of interest in the past few years.', '1706.04499-1-14-1': 'Contrary to many papers which try to adapt ideas coming from the reinforcement learning literature, we focus in this paper on the links we can draw with structured prediction, and in particular with the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-1-15-0': '# Links between RNNs and learning to search', '1706.04499-1-16-0': 'The L2S approach to structured prediction was first introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-16-1': 'The main idea behind it is a learning reduction : transforming a complex learning problem (structured prediction) into a simpler one that we know how to solve (multiclass classification).', '1706.04499-1-16-2': 'To achieve this, [CITATION] propose in their Searn algorithm to train a shared local classifier to predict each token sequentially (conditioned on all inputs and all past decisions), thus searching greedily step by step in the big combinatorial space of structured outputs.', '1706.04499-1-16-3': 'The idea that tokens can be predicted one at a time, conditioned on their predecessors, is central to this approach.', '1706.04499-1-17-0': 'The training procedure is iterative: at the beginning of each round, one uses the current model or policy to build an intermediate dataset to train the shared classifier on.', '1706.04499-1-17-1': 'The specificity of this new dataset is that each sample is accompanied by a cost vector containing one entry per token in the output vocabulary [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-17-2': 'To obtain these cost vectors, one starts by applying a roll-in strategy to predict all the tokens up to [MATH], thus building one trajectory (or exploration path) per sample in the search space.', '1706.04499-1-17-3': 'Then, at each time step, one picks arbitrarily each possible token (diverging from the roll-in trajectory) and then continues predicting to finish the modified trajectory using a roll-out strategy.', '1706.04499-1-17-4': 'One then computes the cost of all the obtained sequences, and ends up with [MATH] vectors (one per time step) of size [MATH] (the number of possible tokens) for every sample.', '1706.04499-1-17-5': 'Figure [REF] describes the same process for our SeaRnn algorithm (although it uses a different classifier).', '1706.04499-1-18-0': 'One then extracts features from the "state" at each time step [MATH] (which encompasses the full input and the previous tokens predicted up to [MATH] during the roll-in).', '1706.04499-1-18-1': 'Combining the cost vectors to these features yields the new intermediary dataset.', '1706.04499-1-18-2': 'The original problem is thus reduced to multi-class cost-sensitive classification, which can be further reduced to binary classification.', '1706.04499-1-18-3': 'Once the shared classifier has been fully trained on this new dataset, the policy is updated for the next round.', '1706.04499-1-18-4': 'Theoretical guarantees for various policy updating rules are provided by e.g. [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-19-0': 'Roll-in and roll-out strategies.', '1706.04499-1-19-1': 'The strategies used to create the intermediate datasets fulfill different roles.', '1706.04499-1-19-2': 'The roll-in policy controls what part of the search space the algorithm explores, while the roll-out policy determines how the cost of each token is computed.', '1706.04499-1-19-3': 'The main possibilities for both roll-in and roll-out are explored by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-19-4': 'The reference policy tries to pick the optimal token based on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-19-5': 'During the roll-in, it corresponds to picking the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-19-6': 'For the roll-out phase, while it is easy to compute an optimal policy in some cases (e.g. for the Hamming loss where simply copying the ground truth is also optimal), it is often intractable (e.g. for BLEU score).', '1706.04499-1-19-7': 'One then uses a heuristic (in our experiments the reference policy is always to copy the ground truth for both roll-in and roll-out).', '1706.04499-1-19-8': 'The learned policy simply uses the current model instead, and the mixed policy stochastically combines both.', '1706.04499-1-19-9': 'According to [CITATION], the best combination when the reference policy is poor is to use a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-1-20-0': 'Links to RNNs.', '1706.04499-1-20-1': 'One can identify the following interesting similarities between a greedy approach to RNNs and L2S.', '1706.04499-1-20-2': 'Both models handle sequence labeling problems by outputting tokens recursively, conditioned on past decisions.', '1706.04499-1-20-3': 'Further, the RNN "cell" is shared at each time step and can thus also be seen as a shared local classifier that is used to make structured predictions, as in the L2S framework.', '1706.04499-1-21-0': 'Despite this connection, many differences remain.', '1706.04499-1-21-1': 'For example, while there is a clear equivalent to the roll-in strategy in RNNs, i.e. the decision to train with or without teacher forcing (conditioning the outputs on the ground truth or instead on the previous predictions of the model), there are no roll-outs involved in standard RNN training.', '1706.04499-1-21-2': 'We thus consider next whether ideas coming from L2S could mitigate the limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-1-21-3': 'In particular, one key property of L2S worth porting over to RNN training is that the former fully leverages structured losses information, contrarily to MLE as previously noted.', '1706.04499-1-22-0': '# Improving RNN training with L2S', '1706.04499-1-23-0': 'Since we are interested in leveraging structured loss information, we can try to obtain it in the same fashion as L2S.', '1706.04499-1-23-1': 'The main tool that L2S uses in order to construct a cost-sensitive dataset is the roll-out policy.', '1706.04499-1-23-2': 'In many classical structured prediction use cases, one does not need to follow through with a policy because the "cost-to-go" that the roll-out yields is either free or easily computable from the ground truth.', '1706.04499-1-23-3': 'We are however also interested in cases where this information is unavailable, and roll-outs are needed to approximate it (e.g. for machine translation).', '1706.04499-1-23-4': 'This leads to several questions: How can we integrate roll-outs in a RNN model?', '1706.04499-1-23-5': 'How do we use this additional information, i.e. what loss do we use to train the model on?', '1706.04499-1-23-6': 'How do we make it computationally tractable?', '1706.04499-1-24-0': 'The SeaRnn Algorithm.', '1706.04499-1-24-1': 'The basic idea of the SeaRnn algorithm is quite simple: we borrow from L2S the idea of using a global loss for each local cell of the RNN.', '1706.04499-1-24-2': 'As in L2S, we first compute a roll-in trajectory, following a specific roll-in strategy.', '1706.04499-1-24-3': 'Then, at each step [MATH] of this trajectory, we compute the costs [MATH] associated with each possible token [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-24-4': 'To do so we pick [MATH] at this step and then follow a roll-out strategy to finish the output sequence [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-24-5': 'We then compare [MATH] with the ground truth using the test error itself, rather than a surrogate.', '1706.04499-1-24-6': 'By repeating this for the [MATH] steps we obtain [MATH] cost vectors.', '1706.04499-1-24-7': 'We use this information to derive one cost-sensitive training loss for each cell, which allows us to compute an update for the parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-1-24-8': 'The full process for one cell is illustrated in Figure [REF].', '1706.04499-1-24-9': 'Our losses are global-local, in the sense that they appear at the local level but all contain sequence-level information.', '1706.04499-1-24-10': 'Our final loss is the sum over the [MATH] local losses.', '1706.04499-1-24-11': 'We provide the pseudo-code for SeaRnn in Appendix [REF].', '1706.04499-1-25-0': 'Choosing a multi-class classifier.', '1706.04499-1-25-1': 'SeaRnn appears quite similar to L2S, but there are a few key differences that merit more explanation.', '1706.04499-1-25-2': 'As the RNN cell can serve as a multi-class classifier, in SeaRnn we could pick the cell as a (shallow) shared classifier.', '1706.04499-1-25-3': 'Instead, we pick the RNN itself, thus getting a (deep) shared classifier that also learns the features.', '1706.04499-1-25-4': 'The difference between the two options is more thoroughly detailed in Appendix [REF].', '1706.04499-1-25-5': 'Arbitrarily picking a token [MATH] during the roll-out phase can then be done by emulating the teacher forcing technique: if predicted tokens are fed back to the model (say if the roll-out strategy requires it), we use [MATH] for the next cell (instead of the prediction the cell would have output).', '1706.04499-1-25-6': 'We also use [MATH] in the output sequence before computing the cost.', '1706.04499-1-26-0': 'Choosing a cost-sensitive loss.', '1706.04499-1-26-1': 'We now also explain our choice for the training loss function derived from the cost vectors.', '1706.04499-1-26-2': 'One popular possibility from L2S is go the full reduction route down to binary classification.', '1706.04499-1-26-3': 'However, this technique involves creating multiple new datasets (which is hard to implement as part of a neural network), as well as training [MATH] binary classifiers.', '1706.04499-1-26-4': 'We rather simply work with the multi-class classifier encoded by the RNN cell with training losses defined next.', '1706.04499-1-27-0': 'One central idea in L2S is to learn the target tokens the model should aim for.', '1706.04499-1-27-1': 'This can be more meaningful than blindly imposing the ground truth as target, in particular when the model has deviated from the ground truth trajectory.', '1706.04499-1-27-2': 'In the specific context of RNN training, we call this approach target learning.', '1706.04499-1-27-3': 'It is related to the dynamic oracle concept introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-27-4': 'We define three losses that follow this principle.', '1706.04499-1-27-5': 'In the following, each loss is defined at the cell level.', '1706.04499-1-27-6': 'The global loss is the sum of all [MATH] losses.', '1706.04499-1-27-7': '[MATH] refers to the score output by cell [MATH] for token [MATH].', '1706.04499-1-28-0': 'Log-loss (LL).', '1706.04499-1-28-1': 'Our first loss is a simple log-loss with the minimal cost token as target: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-28-2': 'It is structurally similar to MLE, which is a significant advantage from an optimization perspective: as RNNs have mostly been trained using MLE, this allows us to leverage decades of previous work.', '1706.04499-1-28-3': 'Note that when the reference policy is to always copy the ground truth (which is sometimes optimal, e.g. when the test error is the Hamming loss), [MATH] is always the ground truth token.', '1706.04499-1-28-4': 'LL with reference roll-in and roll-out is in this case equivalent to MLE.', '1706.04499-1-29-0': 'Log-loss with cost-augmented softmax (LLCAS).', '1706.04499-1-29-1': 'The log-loss approach appears to be relatively wasteful with the structured information we have access to since we are only exploiting the minimal cost value.', '1706.04499-1-29-2': 'A slight modification allows us to exploit this information more meaningfully: we add information about the full costs in the exponential, following e.g. [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-29-3': '[EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-29-4': 'The associated gradient update discriminates between tokens based on their costs.', '1706.04499-1-29-5': 'It leverages the structured loss information more directly and thus mitigates the 0/1 nature of MLE better.', '1706.04499-1-30-0': 'Structured hinge loss (SHL).', '1706.04499-1-30-1': 'The LLCAS can be seen as a smooth version of the (cost-sensitive) structured hinge loss used for structured SVMs , that we also consider: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-30-2': 'Optimization.', '1706.04499-1-30-3': 'Note that we do not need the test error to be differentiable, as our costs [MATH] are fixed when we minimize our training loss.', '1706.04499-1-30-4': 'This corresponds to defining a different loss at each round, which is the way it is done in L2S.', '1706.04499-1-30-5': 'In this case our gradient is unbiased.', '1706.04499-1-30-6': 'However, if instead we consider that we define a single loss for the whole procedure, then the costs depend on the parameters of the model and we effectively compute an approximation of the gradient.', '1706.04499-1-30-7': 'Whether it is possible not to fix the costs and to backpropagate through the roll-in and roll-out remains an open problem.', '1706.04499-1-31-0': 'Another difference between Searn and RNNs is that RNNs are typically trained using stochastic gradient descent, whereas Searn is a batch method.', '1706.04499-1-31-1': 'In order to facilitate training, we decide to go for the stochastic optimization route, by selecting a random mini-batch of samples at each round (as proposed in [CITATION]).', '1706.04499-1-31-2': 'We also choose to do a single gradient step on the parameters with the associated loss (contrary to Searn where the reduced classifier is fully trained at each round).', '1706.04499-1-32-0': 'Expected benefits.', '1706.04499-1-32-1': 'SeaRnn can improve performance because of a few key properties.', '1706.04499-1-32-2': 'First, our losses leverage the test error, leading to potentially much better surrogates than MLE.', '1706.04499-1-33-0': 'Second, all of our training losses (even plain LL) leverage the structured information that is contained in the computed costs.', '1706.04499-1-33-1': 'This is much more satisfactory than MLE which does not exploit this information and ignores nuances between good and bad candidate predictions.', '1706.04499-1-33-2': 'Indeed, our hypothesis is that the more complex the error is, the more SeaRnn can improve performance.', '1706.04499-1-34-0': 'Third, the exploration bias we find in teacher forcing can be mitigated by using a "learned" roll-in strategy, which can be the best roll-in strategy for L2S applications according to [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-35-0': 'Fourth, the loss at each cell is global, in the sense that the computed costs contain information about full sequences.', '1706.04499-1-35-1': 'This may help with the classical vanishing gradients problem that is prevalent in RNN training and motivated the introduction of specialized cells such as LSTMs or GRUs .', '1706.04499-1-35-2': 'It may also alleviate the label bias issue that might appear if the information is not flowing perfectly through the RNN, as pointed out in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-1-36-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-1-36-1': 'In order to validate these theoretical benefits, we ran SeaRnn on three datasets and compared its performance against that of MLE.', '1706.04499-1-36-2': 'For fair comparison, we use the same optimization routine for all methods.', '1706.04499-1-36-3': 'We pick the one that performs best for the MLE baseline.', '1706.04499-1-37-0': 'The first dataset is the optical character recognition (OCR) dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-37-1': 'The task is to output English words given an input sequence of handwritten characters.', '1706.04499-1-37-2': 'We use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 128.', '1706.04499-1-37-3': 'For all runs, we use SGD with constant step-size 0.5 and batch size of 64.', '1706.04499-1-37-4': 'The cost used in the SeaRnn algorithm is the hamming error.', '1706.04499-1-37-5': 'Performance are reported on the test set with the total hamming error, normalized by the total number of characters.', '1706.04499-1-38-0': 'The second experiment is run on the text-chunking CoNLL dataset (see Appendix [REF] for details).', '1706.04499-1-38-1': 'We use an encoder-decoder model with 2 layers GRU cells of size 172.', '1706.04499-1-38-2': 'Our cost here is the sentence-level normalized Hamming error.', '1706.04499-1-38-3': 'On this dataset, the Adadelta optimizer with learning rate 1 worked best.', '1706.04499-1-39-0': 'The third dataset is the Spelling dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-39-1': 'The task is to recover correct text from a corrupted version.', '1706.04499-1-39-2': 'This dataset is synthetically generated from a text corpus (One Billion Word dataset): for each character, we decide with some fixed probability whether or not to replace it with a random one.', '1706.04499-1-39-3': 'The total number of tokens [MATH] is 43 (alphabet size plus a few special characters) and the maximum sequence length [MATH] is 10 (sentences from the corpus are clipped).', '1706.04499-1-39-4': 'We provide results for two sub-datasets generated with the following replacement probabilities: 0.3 and 0.5.', '1706.04499-1-39-5': 'For this task, we follow [CITATION] and use the edit distance as our cost.', '1706.04499-1-39-6': 'It is defined as the edit distance between predicted sequence and the ground truth sequence over the ground truth length.', '1706.04499-1-39-7': 'We use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 100 with the attention mechanism described in .', '1706.04499-1-39-8': 'For all runs, we use the Adam optimizer with learning rate 0.001 and batch size of 128.', '1706.04499-1-39-9': 'Results are given in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-1-40-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-1-40-1': 'First, SeaRnn outperforms MLE by a significant margin on the three different tasks and datasets, which confirms our intuition that taking structured information into account enables better performance.', '1706.04499-1-40-2': 'Second, we observed that the SHL loss was not improving results in general, while LL and LLCAS - which are structurally close to MLE - achieve better performance.', '1706.04499-1-40-3': 'This might be explained by the fact that RNN architectures and optimization techniques have been evolving for decades with MLE training in mind.', '1706.04499-1-40-4': 'Third, the best roll-in/out strategy appears to be combining a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out, which is consistent with the claims from [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-40-5': 'Fourth, the spelling task shows us that the harder the task is (hence the less a simplistic roll-out strategy - akin to MLE - is efficient), the stronger the improvements SeaRnn makes over MLE.', '1706.04499-1-40-6': 'One should note that we get improvements even in the case where simply outputting the ground truth is the optimal policy, regardless of the current trajectory.', '1706.04499-1-41-0': '# Scaling up SeaRnn', '1706.04499-1-42-0': 'While SeaRnn does provide significant improvements on the two tasks we have tested it on, it comes with a rather heavy price, since a large number of roll-outs (i.e. forward passes) have to be run in order to compute the costs.', '1706.04499-1-42-1': 'This number, [MATH], is proportional both to the length of the sequences, and to the number of possible tokens.', '1706.04499-1-42-2': 'SeaRnn is therefore not directly applicable to tasks with large output sequences or vocabulary size (such as machine translation) where computing so many forward passes becomes a computational bottleneck.', '1706.04499-1-42-3': 'Even though forward passes can be parallelized more heavily than backward ones (because they do not require maintaining activations in memory), their asymptotic cost remains in [MATH], where [MATH] is the number of parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-1-43-0': 'There are a number of ways to mitigate this issue.', '1706.04499-1-43-1': 'In this paper, we focus on subsampling both the cells and the tokens when computing the costs.', '1706.04499-1-43-2': 'That is, instead of computing a cost vector for each cell, we only compute them for a subsample of all cells.', '1706.04499-1-43-3': 'Similarly, we also compute these costs only for a small portion of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-1-43-4': 'The speedups we can expect from this strategy are large, since the total number of roll-outs is proportional to both the quantities we are decreasing.', '1706.04499-1-44-0': 'Sampling strategies.', '1706.04499-1-44-1': 'First, we need to decide how we select the steps and tokens that we sample.', '1706.04499-1-44-2': 'We have chosen to sample steps uniformly when we do not take all of them.', '1706.04499-1-44-3': 'On the other hand, we have explored several different possibilities for token sampling.', '1706.04499-1-44-4': 'The first is indeed the uniform sampling strategy.', '1706.04499-1-44-5': 'We also tested sampling according to pre-computed, corpus-wide statistics.', '1706.04499-1-44-6': 'Finally, we tried 3 samplings using the current state of our model: stochastic current policy sampling (where we use the current state of the stochastic policy to pick at random), a biased version of current policy sampling where we boost the scores of the low-probability tokens, and finally a top-k strategy where we take the top k tokens according to the current policy.', '1706.04499-1-44-7': 'Note that in all strategies we always sample the ground truth action to make sure that our performance is at least as good as MLE.', '1706.04499-1-45-0': 'Adapting our losses to sampling.', '1706.04499-1-45-1': 'Several losses require computing the costs of all possible tokens at a given step, including LL.', '1706.04499-1-45-2': 'One could still use LL by simply making the assumption that the token with minimum cost is always sampled.', '1706.04499-1-45-3': 'However this is a rather strong assumption and it means pushing down the scores of tokens that were not even sampled and hence could not compete with the others.', '1706.04499-1-45-4': 'To alleviate this issue, we replace the full softmax by a layer applied only on the tokens that were sampled .', '1706.04499-1-45-5': 'While the target can still only be in the sampled tokens, the unsampled tokens are left alone by the gradient update, at least for the first order dependency.', '1706.04499-1-45-6': 'This trick is even more needed for LLCAS, which otherwise requires a "reference" score for unsampled tokens, adding a difficult to tune hyperparameter.', '1706.04499-1-45-7': 'We refer to these new losses as sLL and sLLCAS.', '1706.04499-1-46-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-1-46-1': 'The main goal of these experiments is to assess whether or not combining subsampling with the SeaRnn algorithm is a viable strategy.', '1706.04499-1-46-2': 'To do so we ran the method on two datasets that we used in the previous section.', '1706.04499-1-46-3': 'We decided to only focus on subsampling tokens as the vocabulary size is usually the blocking factor rather than the sequence length.', '1706.04499-1-46-4': 'Thus in the following we always sample all cells.', '1706.04499-1-46-5': 'We evaluate different sampling strategies and training losses.', '1706.04499-1-46-6': 'For all experiments, we use the learned strategy for roll-in and the mixed one for roll-out and we sample 5 tokens per cell.', '1706.04499-1-46-7': 'Finally, we use the same optimization techniques than in the previous experiment.', '1706.04499-1-47-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-1-47-1': 'Results are given in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-1-47-2': 'The analysis of this experiment yields interesting observations.', '1706.04499-1-47-3': 'First, and perhaps most importantly, subsampling appears to be a viable strategy to obtain a large part of the improvements of SeaRnn while keeping computational costs under control.', '1706.04499-1-47-4': 'Indeed, we recover a substantial part of the improvements of the full method while only sampling a fraction of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-1-47-5': 'Second, it is difficult to decide on a best strategy for token sampling.', '1706.04499-1-47-6': 'Consequently, a mixture of several might be the best option.', '1706.04499-1-47-7': 'Third, it seems also difficult to distinguish a best performing loss.', '1706.04499-1-47-8': 'Experimentations with larger vocabulary size might be needed to better differentiate the different tokens sampling strategies and losses.', '1706.04499-1-47-9': 'Finally, this sampling technique yields a 5x speedup, therefore validating our scaling approach.', '1706.04499-1-48-0': '# Discussion', '1706.04499-1-49-0': 'RL-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-1-49-1': 'In structured prediction tasks, we have access to ground truth trajectories, i.e. a lot more information than in traditional RL.', '1706.04499-1-49-2': 'One major direction of research has been to adapt RL techniques to leverage this additional information.', '1706.04499-1-49-3': 'The main idea is to try to optimize the expectation of the test error directly (under the stochastic policy parameterized by the RNN): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-1-49-4': 'Since we are taking an expectation over all possible structured outputs, the only term that depends on the parameters is the probability term (the tokens in the error term are fixed).', '1706.04499-1-49-5': 'This allows this loss function to support non-differentiable test errors, which is a key advantage.', '1706.04499-1-49-6': 'Of course, actually computing the expectation over an exponential number of possibilities is computationally intractable.', '1706.04499-1-50-0': 'To circumvent this issue, [CITATION] subsample trajectories according to the learned policy, while [CITATION] use the Reinforce algorithm, which essentially approximates the expectation with a single trajectory sample.', '1706.04499-1-50-1': '[CITATION] adapt the Actor-Critic algorithm, where a second critic network is trained to approximate the expectation.', '1706.04499-1-51-0': 'While all these approaches report significant improvement on various tasks, one trait they share is that they only work when initialized from a good pre-trained model.', '1706.04499-1-51-1': 'This phenomenon is often explained by the sparsity of the information contained in "sequence-level" losses.', '1706.04499-1-51-2': 'Indeed, in the case of Reinforce, no distinction is made between the tokens that form a sequence: depending on whether the sampled trajectory is above a global baseline, all tokens are pushed up or down by the gradient update.', '1706.04499-1-51-3': 'This means good tokens are sometimes penalized and bad tokens rewarded.', '1706.04499-1-52-0': 'In contrast, SeaRnn uses "global-local" losses, with a local loss attached to each step, which contains global information since the costs are computed on full sequences.', '1706.04499-1-52-1': 'To do so, we have to "sample" more trajectories through our roll-in/roll-outs.', '1706.04499-1-52-2': 'As a result, SeaRnn does not require warm-starting to achieve good experimental performance.', '1706.04499-1-52-3': 'This distinction is quite relevant, because warm-starting means initializing in a specific region of parameter space which may be hard to escape.', '1706.04499-1-52-4': 'Exploration is less constrained when starting from scratch, leading to potentially larger gains over MLE.', '1706.04499-1-53-0': 'Reinforcement-based models also often require optimizing additional models (Reinforce needs to learn baselines and Actor-Critic the critic model), which can introduce more complexity (e.g. target networks).', '1706.04499-1-53-1': 'SeaRnn does not.', '1706.04499-1-53-2': 'This too may contribute to the warm start difference.', '1706.04499-1-54-0': 'Finally, while minimizing the expected reward allows the RL approaches to use gradient descent even though the test error might not be differentiable, it introduces another discrepancy between training and testing.', '1706.04499-1-54-1': 'Indeed, at test time, one does not decode by sampling from the stochastic policy.', '1706.04499-1-54-2': 'Instead, one selects the best performing sequence (according to a search algorithm, such as greedy or beam search).', '1706.04499-1-54-3': 'SeaRnn avoids this averse effect by computing costs using the same decoding technique as the one used at test time, so that its loss can be even closer to the test loss.', '1706.04499-1-54-4': 'The price we pay here is that we approximate the gradient by fixing the costs, although they are dependent on the parameters.', '1706.04499-1-55-0': 'L2S-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-1-55-1': 'Several other papers have tried using L2S-like ideas for better RNN training.', '1706.04499-1-55-2': '[CITATION] propose to include the beam search procedure in a sequence-level loss, following the "Learning A Search Optimization" approach of [CITATION].', '1706.04499-1-55-3': 'Here again the sequence-level loss information is too sparse and warm starting has to be used.', '1706.04499-1-55-4': '[CITATION] use a loss that is similar to LL for parsing.', '1706.04499-1-55-5': 'However, their approach is limited to a specific task where cost-to-go are essentially free, whereas SeaRnn can be used on any task.', '1706.04499-1-55-6': 'This limit also affects [CITATION], in which new gradient procedures are introduced to incorporate neural classifiers in the AggreVaTe variant of L2S.', '1706.04499-1-56-0': 'Conclusion and future work.', '1706.04499-1-56-1': 'We have described SeaRnn, a novel algorithm that uses core ideas from the learning to search framework in order to alleviate the known limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-1-56-2': 'By leveraging structured cost information obtained through strategic exploration, we define global-local losses.', '1706.04499-1-56-3': 'These losses give a global feedback related to the structured task at hand, distributed locally within the cells of the RNN.', '1706.04499-1-56-4': 'This alternative procedure allows us to train RNNs from scratch and to outperform MLE on three challenging structured prediction tasks.', '1706.04499-1-56-5': 'Finally we have proposed promising scaling techniques that open up the possibility of applying SeaRnn on structured tasks for which the output vocabulary is very large, such as neural machine translation.'}
{'1706.04499-2-0-0': 'We propose SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for recurrent neural networks (RNNs) inspired by the "learning to search" (L2S) approach to structured prediction.', '1706.04499-2-0-1': 'RNNs have been widely successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation or parsing, and are commonly trained using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE).', '1706.04499-2-0-2': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not always an appropriate surrogate for the test error: by only maximizing the ground truth probability, it fails to exploit the wealth of information offered by structured losses.', '1706.04499-2-0-3': 'Further, it introduces discrepancies between training and predicting (such as exposure bias) that may hurt test performance.', '1706.04499-2-0-4': 'Instead, SeaRnn leverages test-alike search space exploration to introduce global-local losses that are closer to the test error.', '1706.04499-2-0-5': 'We first demonstrate improved performance over MLE on two different tasks: OCR and spelling correction.', '1706.04499-2-0-6': 'Then, we propose a subsampling strategy to enable SeaRnn to scale to large vocabulary sizes.', '1706.04499-2-0-7': 'This allows us to validate the benefits of our approach on a machine translation task.', '1706.04499-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1706.04499-2-2-0': 'Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) have been quite successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation , parsing or caption generation .', '1706.04499-2-2-1': 'These models use the same repeated cell (or unit) to output a sequence of tokens one by one.', '1706.04499-2-2-2': 'As each prediction takes into account all previous predictions, this cell learns to output the next token conditioned on the previous ones.', '1706.04499-2-2-3': 'The standard training loss for RNNs is derived from maximum likelihood estimation (MLE): we consider that the cell outputs a probability distribution at each step in the sequence, and we seek to maximize the probability of the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-3-0': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not a particularly close surrogate to the various test errors we want to minimize.', '1706.04499-2-3-1': 'A striking example of discrepancy is that the MLE loss is close to 0/1: it makes no distinction between candidates that are close or far away from the ground truth (with respect to the structured test error), thus failing to exploit valuable information.', '1706.04499-2-3-2': 'Another example of train/test discrepancy is called exposure or exploration bias : in traditional MLE training the cell learns the conditional probability of the next token, based on the previous ground truth tokens - this is often referred to as teacher forcing.', '1706.04499-2-3-3': 'However, at test time the model does not have access to the ground truth, and thus feeds its own previous predictions to its next cell for prediction instead.', '1706.04499-2-4-0': 'Improving RNN training thus appears as a relevant endeavor, which has received much attention recently.', '1706.04499-2-4-1': 'In particular, ideas coming from reinforcement learning (RL), such as the Reinforce and Actor-Critic algorithms , have been adapted to derive training losses that are more closely related to the test error that we actually want to minimize.', '1706.04499-2-5-0': 'In order to address the issues of MLE training, we propose instead to use ideas from the structured prediction field, in particular from the "learning to search" (L2S) approach introduced by [CITATION] and later refined by [CITATION] and [CITATION] among others.', '1706.04499-2-6-0': 'Contributions.', '1706.04499-2-6-1': 'In Section [REF], we review the limitations of MLE training for RNNs in details.', '1706.04499-2-6-2': 'We also clarify some related claims made in the recent literature.', '1706.04499-2-6-3': 'In Section [REF], we make explicit the strong links between RNNs and the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-2-6-4': 'In Section [REF], we present SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for RNNs, using ideas from L2S to derive a global-local loss that is much closer to the test error than MLE.', '1706.04499-2-6-5': 'We demonstrate that this novel approach leads to significant improvements on two difficult structured prediction tasks, including a spelling correction problem recently introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-6-6': 'As this algorithm is quite costly, we investigate scaling solutions in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-2-6-7': 'We explore a subsampling strategy that allows us to considerably reduce training times, while maintaining improved performance compared to MLE.', '1706.04499-2-6-8': 'We apply this new algorithm to machine translation and report significant improvements in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-2-6-9': 'Finally, we contrast our novel approach to the related L2S and RL-inspired methods in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-2-7-0': '# Traditional RNN training and its limitations', '1706.04499-2-8-0': 'RNNs are a large family of neural network models aimed at representing sequential data.', '1706.04499-2-8-1': 'To do so, they produce a sequence of states [MATH] by recursively applying the same transformation (or cell) [MATH] on the sequential data: [MATH], with [MATH] an initial state and [MATH] an optional input.', '1706.04499-2-9-0': 'Many possible design choices fit this framework.', '1706.04499-2-9-1': 'We focus on a subset typically used for structured prediction, where we want to model the joint probability of a target sequence [MATH] given an input [MATH] (e.g. the decoder RNN in the encoder-decoder architecture ).', '1706.04499-2-9-2': 'Here [MATH] is the alphabet of output tokens and [MATH] is the length of the output sequence associated with input [MATH] (though [MATH] may take different values, in the following we drop the dependency in [MATH] and use [MATH] for simplicity).', '1706.04499-2-9-3': 'To achieve this modeling, we feed [MATH] through a projection layer (i.e. a linear classifier) to obtain a vector of scores [MATH] over all possible tokens [MATH], and normalize these with a softmax layer (an exponential normalizer) to obtain a distribution [MATH] over tokens: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-9-4': 'The vector [MATH] is interpreted as the predictive conditional distribution for the [MATH] token given by the RNN model, i.e. [MATH] for [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-9-5': 'Multiplying the values [MATH] together thus yields the joint probability of the sequence [MATH] defined by the RNN (thanks to the chain rule): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-9-6': 'As pointed by [CITATION], the underlying structure of these RNNs as graphical models is thus a complete graph, and there is no conditional independence assumption to simplify the difficult prediction task of computing [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-9-7': 'In practice, one typically uses either beam search to approximate this decoding, or a sequence of greedy predictions [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-10-0': 'If we use the "teacher forcing" regimen, where the inputs to the RNN cell are the ground truth tokens (as opposed to its own greedy predictions), we obtain the probability of each ground truth sequence according to the RNN model.', '1706.04499-2-10-1': 'We can then use MLE to derive a loss to train the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-10-2': 'One should note here that despite the fact that the individual output probabilities are at the token level, the MLE loss involves the joint probability (computed via the chain rule) and is thus at the sequence level.', '1706.04499-2-11-0': 'The limitations of MLE training.', '1706.04499-2-11-1': 'While this maximum likelihood style of training has been very successful in various applications, it suffers from several known issues, especially for structured prediction problems.', '1706.04499-2-11-2': 'The first one is called exposure or exploration bias .', '1706.04499-2-11-3': 'During training (with teacher forcing), the model learns the probabilities of the next tokens conditioned on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-11-4': 'But at test time, the model does not have access to the ground truth and outputs probabilities are conditioned on its own previous predictions instead.', '1706.04499-2-11-5': 'Therefore if the predictions differ from the ground truth, the model has to continue based on an exploration path it has not seen during training, which means that it is less likely to make accurate predictions.', '1706.04499-2-11-6': 'This phenomenon, which is typical of sequential prediction tasks can lead to a compounding of errors, where mistakes in prediction accumulate and prevent good performance.', '1706.04499-2-12-0': 'The second major issue is the discrepancy between the training loss and the various test errors associated with the tasks for which RNNs are used (e.g. edit distance, F1 score...).', '1706.04499-2-12-1': 'Of course, a single surrogate is not likely to be a good approximation for all these errors.', '1706.04499-2-12-2': 'One salient illustration is that MLE ignores the information contained in structured losses.', '1706.04499-2-12-3': 'As it only focuses on maximizing the probability of the ground truth, it does not distinguish between a prediction that is very close to the ground truth and one that is very far away.', '1706.04499-2-12-4': 'Thus, most of the information given by a structured loss is not leveraged with this approach.', '1706.04499-2-13-0': 'Local vs. sequence-level.', '1706.04499-2-13-1': 'Some recent papers also point out the fact that since RNNs output next token predictions, their loss is local instead of sequence-level, contrary to the error we typically want to minimize.', '1706.04499-2-13-2': 'This claim seems to contradict the standard RNN analysis, which postulates that the underlying graphical model is the complete graph: that is, the RNN outputs the probability of the next tokens conditioned on all the previous predictions.', '1706.04499-2-13-3': 'Thanks to the chain rule, one recovers the probability of the whole sequence.', '1706.04499-2-13-4': 'Thus the maximum likelihood training loss is indeed a sequence level loss, even though we can decompose it in a product of local losses at each cell.', '1706.04499-2-13-5': 'However, if we assume that the RNN outputs are only conditioned on the last few predictions (instead of all previous ones), then we can indeed consider the MLE loss as local.', '1706.04499-2-13-6': 'In this setting, the underlying graphical model obeys Markovian constraints (as in maximum entropy Markov models (MEMMs)) rather than being the complete graph; this corresponds to the assumption that the information from the previous inputs is imperfectly carried through the network to the cell, preventing the model from accurately representing long-term dependencies.', '1706.04499-2-14-0': 'Given all these limitations, exploring novel ways of training RNNs appears to be a worthy endeavor, and this field has attracted a lot of interest in the past few years.', '1706.04499-2-14-1': 'While many papers try to adapt ideas coming from the reinforcement learning literature, we instead focus in this paper on the links we can draw with structured prediction, and in particular with the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-2-15-0': '# Links between RNNs and learning to search', '1706.04499-2-16-0': 'The L2S approach to structured prediction was first introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-16-1': 'The main idea behind it is a learning reduction : transforming a complex learning problem (structured prediction) into a simpler one that we know how to solve (multiclass classification).', '1706.04499-2-16-2': 'To achieve this, [CITATION] propose in their Searn algorithm to train a shared local classifier to predict each token sequentially (conditioned on all inputs and all past decisions), thus searching greedily step by step in the big combinatorial space of structured outputs.', '1706.04499-2-16-3': 'The idea that tokens can be predicted one at a time, conditioned on their predecessors, is central to this approach.', '1706.04499-2-17-0': 'The training procedure is iterative: at the beginning of each round, one uses the current model (or policy) to build an intermediate dataset to train the shared classifier on.', '1706.04499-2-17-1': 'The specificity of this new dataset is that each new sample is accompanied by a cost vector containing one entry per token in the output vocabulary [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-17-2': 'To obtain these cost vectors, one starts by applying a roll-in policy to predict all the tokens up to [MATH], thus building one trajectory (or exploration path) in the search space per sample in the initial dataset.', '1706.04499-2-17-3': 'Then, at each time step [MATH], one picks arbitrarily each possible token (diverging from the roll-in trajectory) and then continues predicting to finish the modified trajectory using a roll-out policy.', '1706.04499-2-17-4': 'One then computes the cost of all the obtained sequences, and ends up with [MATH] vectors (one per time step) of size [MATH] (the number of possible tokens) for every sample.', '1706.04499-2-17-5': 'Figure [REF] describes the same process for our SeaRnn algorithm (although in this case the shared classifier is an RNN).', '1706.04499-2-18-0': 'One then extracts features from the "context" at each time step [MATH] (which encompasses the full input and the previous tokens predicted up to [MATH] during the roll-in).', '1706.04499-2-18-1': 'Combining the cost vectors to these features yields the new intermediary dataset.', '1706.04499-2-18-2': 'The original problem is thus reduced to multi-class cost-sensitive classification.', '1706.04499-2-18-3': 'Once the shared classifier has been fully trained on this new dataset, the policy is updated for the next round.', '1706.04499-2-18-4': 'The algorithm is described more formally in Algorithm [REF] (see Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-2-18-5': 'Theoretical guarantees for various policy updating rules are provided by e.g. [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-19-0': 'Roll-in and roll-out policies.', '1706.04499-2-19-1': 'The policies used to create the intermediate datasets fulfill different roles.', '1706.04499-2-19-2': 'The roll-in policy controls what part of the search space the algorithm explores, while the roll-out policy determines how the cost of each token is computed.', '1706.04499-2-19-3': 'The main possibilities for both roll-in and roll-out are explored by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-19-4': 'The reference policy tries to pick the optimal token based on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-19-5': 'During the roll-in, it corresponds to picking the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-19-6': 'For the roll-out phase, while it is easy to compute an optimal policy in some cases (e.g. for the Hamming loss where simply copying the ground truth is also optimal), it is often too expensive (e.g. for BLEU score).', '1706.04499-2-19-7': 'One then uses a heuristic (in our experiments the reference policy is always to copy the ground truth for both roll-in and roll-out).', '1706.04499-2-19-8': 'The learned policy simply uses the current model instead, and the mixed policy stochastically combines both.', '1706.04499-2-19-9': 'According to [CITATION], the best combination when the reference policy is poor is to use a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-2-20-0': 'Links to RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-20-1': 'One can identify the following interesting similarities between a greedy approach to RNNs and L2S.', '1706.04499-2-20-2': 'Both models handle sequence labeling problems by outputting tokens recursively, conditioned on past decisions.', '1706.04499-2-20-3': 'Further, the RNN "cell" is shared at each time step and can thus also be seen as a shared local classifier that is used to make structured predictions, as in the L2S framework.', '1706.04499-2-20-4': 'In addition, there is a clear equivalent to the choice of roll-in policy in RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-20-5': 'Indeed, teacher forcing (conditioning the outputs on the ground truth) can be seen as the roll-in reference policy for the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-20-6': 'Instead, if one conditions the outputs on the previous predictions of the model, then we obtain a roll-in learned policy.', '1706.04499-2-21-0': 'Despite this connection, many differences remain.', '1706.04499-2-21-1': 'Amongst them, no roll-outs are involved in standard RNN training.', '1706.04499-2-21-2': 'We thus consider next whether ideas coming from L2S could mitigate the limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-21-3': 'In particular, one key property of L2S worth porting over to RNN training is that the former fully leverages structured losses information, contrarily to MLE as previously noted.', '1706.04499-2-22-0': '# Improving RNN training with L2S', '1706.04499-2-23-0': 'Since we are interested in leveraging structured loss information, we can try to obtain it in the same fashion as L2S.', '1706.04499-2-23-1': 'The main tool that L2S uses in order to construct a cost-sensitive dataset is the roll-out policy.', '1706.04499-2-23-2': 'In many classical structured prediction use cases, one does not need to follow through with a policy because the "cost-to-go" that the roll-out yields is either free or easily computable from the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-23-3': 'We are however also interested in cases where this information is unavailable, and roll-outs are needed to approximate it (e.g. for machine translation).', '1706.04499-2-23-4': 'This leads to several questions.', '1706.04499-2-23-5': 'How can we integrate roll-outs in a RNN model?', '1706.04499-2-23-6': 'How do we use this additional information, i.e. what loss do we use to train the model on?', '1706.04499-2-23-7': 'How do we make it computationally tractable?', '1706.04499-2-24-0': 'The SeaRnn Algorithm.', '1706.04499-2-24-1': 'The basic idea of the SeaRnn algorithm is quite simple: we borrow from L2S the idea of using a global loss for each local cell of the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-24-2': 'As in L2S, we first compute a roll-in trajectory, following a specific roll-in policy.', '1706.04499-2-24-3': 'Then, at each step [MATH] of this trajectory, we compute the costs [MATH] associated with each possible token [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-24-4': 'To do so we pick [MATH] at this step and then follow a roll-out policy to finish the output sequence [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-24-5': 'We then compare [MATH] with the ground truth using the test error itself, rather than a surrogate.', '1706.04499-2-24-6': 'By repeating this for the [MATH] steps we obtain [MATH] cost vectors.', '1706.04499-2-24-7': 'We use this information to derive one cost-sensitive training loss for each cell, which allows us to compute an update for the parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-2-24-8': 'The full process for one cell is illustrated in Figure [REF].', '1706.04499-2-24-9': 'Our losses are global-local, in the sense that they appear at the local level but all contain sequence-level information.', '1706.04499-2-24-10': 'Our final loss is the sum over the [MATH] local losses.', '1706.04499-2-24-11': 'We provide the pseudo-code for SeaRnn in Algorithm [REF].', '1706.04499-2-25-0': 'Choosing a multi-class classifier.', '1706.04499-2-25-1': 'SeaRnn appears quite similar to L2S, but there are a few key differences that merit more explanation.', '1706.04499-2-25-2': 'As the RNN cell can serve as a multi-class classifier, in SeaRnn we could pick the cell as a (shallow) shared classifier, whose input are features extracted from the full context by the previous cells of the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-25-3': 'Instead, we pick the RNN itself, thus getting a (deep) shared classifier that also learns the features directly from the context.', '1706.04499-2-25-4': 'The difference between the two options is more thoroughly detailed in Appendix [REF].', '1706.04499-2-25-5': 'Arbitrarily picking a token [MATH] during the roll-out phase can then be done by emulating the teacher forcing technique: if predicted tokens are fed back to the model (say if the roll-out policy requires it), we use [MATH] for the next cell (instead of the prediction the cell would have output).', '1706.04499-2-25-6': 'We also use [MATH] in the output sequence before computing the cost.', '1706.04499-2-26-0': 'Choosing a cost-sensitive loss.', '1706.04499-2-26-1': 'We now also explain our choice for the training loss function derived from the cost vectors.', '1706.04499-2-26-2': 'One popular possibility from L2S is to go the full reduction route down to binary classification.', '1706.04499-2-26-3': 'However, this technique involves creating multiple new datasets (which is hard to implement as part of a neural network), as well as training [MATH] binary classifiers.', '1706.04499-2-26-4': 'We rather simply work with the multi-class classifier encoded by the RNN cell with training losses defined next.', '1706.04499-2-27-0': 'We now introduce two of the more successful losses we used (although we experimented with many others, which are detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-2-27-1': 'In the following, each loss is defined at the cell level.', '1706.04499-2-27-2': 'The global loss is the sum of all [MATH] losses.', '1706.04499-2-27-3': '[MATH] refers to the score output by cell [MATH] for token [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-28-0': 'Log-loss (LL).', '1706.04499-2-28-1': 'A central idea in L2S is to learn the target tokens the model should aim for.', '1706.04499-2-28-2': 'This is more meaningful than blindly imposing the ground truth as target, in particular when the model has deviated from the ground truth trajectory.', '1706.04499-2-28-3': 'In the context of RNN training, we call this approach target learning.', '1706.04499-2-28-4': 'It is related to the dynamic oracle concept introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-29-0': 'Our first loss is thus a simple log-loss with the minimal cost token as target: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-29-1': 'It is structurally similar to MLE, which is a significant advantage from an optimization perspective: as RNNs have mostly been trained using MLE, this allows us to leverage decades of previous work.', '1706.04499-2-29-2': 'Note that when the reference policy is to simply copy the ground truth (which is sometimes optimal, e.g. when the test error is the Hamming loss), [MATH] is always the ground truth token.', '1706.04499-2-29-3': 'LL with reference roll-in and roll-out is in this case equivalent to MLE.', '1706.04499-2-30-0': 'Kullback-Leibler divergence (KL).', '1706.04499-2-30-1': 'The log-loss approach appears to be relatively wasteful with the structured information we have access to since we are only using the minimal cost value.', '1706.04499-2-30-2': 'To exploit this information more meaningfully, we consider the following approach: we convert each cost vector into a probability distribution (e.g. through a softmax operator) and then minimize a divergence between the current model distribution [MATH] and the "target distribution" [MATH] derived from the costs.', '1706.04499-2-30-3': 'As the MLE objective itself can be expressed as the KL divergence between [MATH] (a Dirac distribution with full mass on the ground truth) and [MATH], we also choose to minimize the KL divergence between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-30-4': 'Since the costs are considered fixed with respect to the parameters of the model, our loss is equivalent to the cross-entropy between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-30-5': '[EQUATION] [MATH] is a scaling parameter that controls how peaky the target distributions are.', '1706.04499-2-30-6': 'It can be chosen using a validation set.', '1706.04499-2-30-7': 'The associated gradient update discriminates between tokens based on their costs.', '1706.04499-2-30-8': 'It leverages the structured loss information more directly and thus mitigates the 0/1 nature of MLE better.', '1706.04499-2-31-0': 'Optimization.', '1706.04499-2-31-1': 'Another difference between Searn and RNNs is that RNNs are typically trained using stochastic gradient descent, whereas Searn is a batch method.', '1706.04499-2-31-2': 'In order to facilitate training, we decide to adapt the optimization process of Lols, an online variant of Searn introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-31-3': 'At each round, we select a random mini-batch of samples, and then take a single gradient step on the parameters with the associated loss (contrary to Searn where the reduced classifier is fully trained at each round).', '1706.04499-2-32-0': 'Note that we do not need the test error to be differentiable, as our costs [MATH] are fixed when we minimize our training loss.', '1706.04499-2-32-1': 'This corresponds to defining a different loss at each round, which is the way it is done in L2S.', '1706.04499-2-32-2': 'In this case our gradient is unbiased.', '1706.04499-2-32-3': 'However, if instead we consider that we define a single loss for the whole procedure, then the costs depend on the parameters of the model and we effectively compute an approximation of the gradient.', '1706.04499-2-32-4': 'Whether it is possible not to fix the costs and to backpropagate through the roll-in and roll-out remains an open problem.', '1706.04499-2-33-0': 'Expected benefits.', '1706.04499-2-33-1': 'SeaRnn can improve performance because of a few key properties.', '1706.04499-2-33-2': 'First, our losses leverage the test error, leading to potentially much better surrogates than MLE.', '1706.04499-2-34-0': 'Second, all of our training losses (even plain LL) leverage the structured information that is contained in the computed costs.', '1706.04499-2-34-1': 'This is much more satisfactory than MLE which does not exploit this information and ignores nuances between good and bad candidate predictions.', '1706.04499-2-34-2': 'Indeed, our hypothesis is that the more complex the error is, the more SeaRnn can improve performance.', '1706.04499-2-35-0': 'Third, the exploration bias we find in teacher forcing can be mitigated by using a "learned" roll-in policy, which may be the best roll-in policy for L2S applications according to [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-36-0': 'Fourth, the loss at each cell is global, in the sense that the computed costs contain information about full sequences.', '1706.04499-2-36-1': 'This may help with the classical vanishing gradients problem that is prevalent in RNN training and motivated the introduction of specialized cells such as LSTMs or GRUs .', '1706.04499-2-37-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-2-37-1': 'In order to validate these theoretical benefits, we ran SeaRnn on two datasets and compared its performance against that of MLE.', '1706.04499-2-37-2': 'For a fair comparison, we use the same optimization routine for all methods.', '1706.04499-2-37-3': 'We pick the one that performs best for the MLE baseline.', '1706.04499-2-37-4': 'Note that in all the experiments of the paper, we use greedy decoding, both for our cost computation and for evaluation.', '1706.04499-2-37-5': 'Furthermore, whenever we use a mixed roll-out we always use 0.5 as our mixin parameter, following [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-38-0': 'The first dataset is the optical character recognition (OCR) dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-38-1': 'The task is to output English words given an input sequence of handwritten characters.', '1706.04499-2-38-2': 'We use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 128.', '1706.04499-2-38-3': 'For all runs, we use SGD with constant step-size 0.5 and batch size of 64.', '1706.04499-2-38-4': 'The cost used in the SeaRnn algorithm is the Hamming error.', '1706.04499-2-38-5': 'We report the total Hamming error, normalized by the total number of characters on the test set.', '1706.04499-2-39-0': 'The second dataset is the Spelling dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-39-1': 'The task is to recover correct text from a corrupted version.', '1706.04499-2-39-2': 'This dataset is synthetically generated from a text corpus (One Billion Word dataset): for each character, we decide with some fixed probability whether or not to replace it with a random one.', '1706.04499-2-39-3': 'The total number of tokens [MATH] is 43 (alphabet size plus a few special characters) and the maximum sequence length [MATH] is 10 (sentences from the corpus are clipped).', '1706.04499-2-39-4': 'We provide results for two sub-datasets generated with the following replacement probabilities: 0.3 and 0.5.', '1706.04499-2-39-5': 'For this task, we follow [CITATION] and use the edit distance as our cost.', '1706.04499-2-39-6': 'It is defined as the edit distance between the predicted sequence and the ground truth sequence divided by the ground truth length.', '1706.04499-2-39-7': 'We reuse the attention-based encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 100 described in .', '1706.04499-2-39-8': 'For all runs, we use the Adam optimizer with learning rate 0.001 and batch size of 128.', '1706.04499-2-39-9': 'Results are given in Table [REF], including Actor-Critic runs on our data splits as baseline.', '1706.04499-2-40-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-2-40-1': 'First, SeaRnn outperforms MLE by a significant margin on the two different tasks and datasets, which confirms our intuition that taking structured information into account enables better performance.', '1706.04499-2-40-2': 'Second, we observed that the best performing losses were those structurally close to MLE - LL and KL - whereas others (detailed in Appendix [REF]) did not improve results.', '1706.04499-2-40-3': 'This might be explained by the fact that RNN architectures and optimization techniques have been evolving for decades with MLE training in mind.', '1706.04499-2-40-4': 'Third, the best roll-in/out strategy appears to be combining a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out, which is consistent with the claims from [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-40-5': 'Fourth, although we expect SeaRnn to make stronger improvements over MLE on hard tasks (where a simplistic roll-out policy - akin to MLE - is suboptimal), we do get improvements even when outputting the ground truth (regardless of the current trajectory) is the optimal policy.', '1706.04499-2-41-0': '# Scaling up SeaRnn', '1706.04499-2-42-0': 'While SeaRnn does provide significant improvements on the two tasks we have tested it on, it comes with a rather heavy price, since a large number of roll-outs (i.e. forward passes) have to be run in order to compute the costs.', '1706.04499-2-42-1': 'This number, [MATH], is proportional both to the length of the sequences, and to the number of possible tokens.', '1706.04499-2-42-2': 'SeaRnn is therefore not directly applicable to tasks with large output sequences or vocabulary size (such as machine translation) where computing so many forward passes becomes a computational bottleneck.', '1706.04499-2-42-3': 'Even though forward passes can be parallelized more heavily than backward ones (because they do not require maintaining activations in memory), their asymptotic cost remains in [MATH], where [MATH] is the number of parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-2-43-0': 'There are a number of ways to mitigate this issue.', '1706.04499-2-43-1': 'In this paper, we focus on subsampling both the cells and the tokens when computing the costs.', '1706.04499-2-43-2': 'That is, instead of computing a cost vector for each cell, we only compute them for a subsample of all cells.', '1706.04499-2-43-3': 'Similarly, we also compute these costs only for a small portion of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-2-43-4': 'The speedups we can expect from this strategy are large, since the total number of roll-outs is proportional to both the quantities we are decreasing.', '1706.04499-2-44-0': 'Sampling strategies.', '1706.04499-2-44-1': 'First, we need to decide how we select the steps and tokens that we sample.', '1706.04499-2-44-2': 'We have chosen to sample steps uniformly when we do not take all of them.', '1706.04499-2-44-3': 'On the other hand, we have explored several different possibilities for token sampling.', '1706.04499-2-44-4': 'The first is indeed the uniform sampling strategy.', '1706.04499-2-44-5': 'The 3 alternative samplings we tried use the current state of our model: stochastic current policy sampling (where we use the current state of the stochastic policy to pick at random), a biased version of current policy sampling where we boost the scores of the low-probability tokens, and finally a top-k strategy where we take the top k tokens according to the current policy.', '1706.04499-2-44-6': 'Note that the latter strategy (top-k) can be seen as a simplified variant of targeted sampling , another smarter strategy introduced to help L2S methods scale.', '1706.04499-2-44-7': 'Finally, in all strategies we always sample the ground truth action to make sure that our performance is at least as good as MLE.', '1706.04499-2-45-0': 'Adapting our losses to sampling.', '1706.04499-2-45-1': 'Our losses require computing the costs of all possible tokens at a given step.', '1706.04499-2-45-2': 'One could still use LL by simply making the assumption that the token with minimum cost is always sampled.', '1706.04499-2-45-3': 'However this is a rather strong assumption and it means pushing down the scores of tokens that were not even sampled and hence could not compete with the others.', '1706.04499-2-45-4': 'To alleviate this issue, we replace the full softmax by a layer applied only on the tokens that were sampled .', '1706.04499-2-45-5': 'While the target can still only be in the sampled tokens, the unsampled tokens are left alone by the gradient update, at least for the first order dependency.', '1706.04499-2-45-6': 'This trick is even more needed for KL, which otherwise requires a "reference" score for unsampled tokens, adding a difficult to tune hyperparameter.', '1706.04499-2-45-7': 'We refer to these new losses as sLL and sKL.', '1706.04499-2-46-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-2-46-1': 'The main goal of these experiments is to assess whether or not combining subsampling with the SeaRnn algorithm is a viable strategy.', '1706.04499-2-46-2': 'To do so we ran the method on the same two datasets that we used in the previous section.', '1706.04499-2-46-3': 'We decided to only focus on subsampling tokens as the vocabulary size is usually the blocking factor rather than the sequence length.', '1706.04499-2-46-4': 'Thus we sampled all cells.', '1706.04499-2-46-5': 'We evaluate different sampling strategies and training losses.', '1706.04499-2-46-6': 'For all experiments, we use the learned policy for roll-in and the mixed one for roll-out and we sample 5 tokens per cell.', '1706.04499-2-46-7': 'Finally, we use the same optimization techniques than in the previous experiment.', '1706.04499-2-47-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-2-47-1': 'Results are given in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-2-47-2': 'The analysis of this experiment yields interesting observations.', '1706.04499-2-47-3': 'First, and perhaps most importantly, subsampling appears to be a viable strategy to obtain a large part of the improvements of SeaRnn while keeping computational costs under control.', '1706.04499-2-47-4': 'Indeed, we recover all of the improvements of the full method while only sampling a fraction of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-2-47-5': 'Second, it appears that the best strategy for token sampling depends on the chosen loss.', '1706.04499-2-47-6': 'In the case of sLL, the top-k strategy performs best, whereas sKL favors the biased current policy.', '1706.04499-2-47-7': 'Third, it also seems like the best performing loss is task-dependent.', '1706.04499-2-47-8': 'Finally, this sampling technique yields a 5[MATH] speedup, therefore validating our scaling approach.', '1706.04499-2-48-0': '# Neural Machine Translation.', '1706.04499-2-49-0': 'Having introduced a cheaper alternative SeaRnn method enables us to apply it to a large-scale structured prediction task and to thus investigate whether our algorithm also improves upon MLE in more challenging real-life settings.', '1706.04499-2-50-0': 'We choose neural machine translation as out task, and the German-English translation track of the IWSLT 2014 campaign as our dataset, as it was used in several related papers and thus allows for easier comparisons.', '1706.04499-2-50-1': 'We reuse the pre-processing of [CITATION], obtaining training, validation and test datasets of roughly 153k, 7k and 7k sentence pairs respectively with vocabularies of size 22822 words for English and 32009 words for German.', '1706.04499-2-51-0': 'For fair comparison to related methods, we use similar architectures.', '1706.04499-2-51-1': 'To compare with BSO and Actor-Critic, we use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 256, with a bidirectional encoder and single-layer RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-51-2': 'For the specific case of Mixer, we replace the recurrent encoder with a convolutional encoder as in [CITATION] .', '1706.04499-2-51-3': 'We use Adam as our optimizer, with an initial learning rate of [MATH] gradually decreasing to [MATH], and a batch size of 64.', '1706.04499-2-51-4': 'We select the best models on the validation set and report results both without and with dropout (0.3).', '1706.04499-2-52-0': 'Regarding the specific settings of SeaRnn, we use a reference roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-2-52-1': 'Additionally, we sample 25 tokens at each cell, following a mixed sampling strategy (detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-2-52-2': 'We use the best performing loss on the validation set, i.e. the KL loss with scaling parameter 200.', '1706.04499-2-53-0': 'The traditional evaluation metric for such tasks is the BLEU score .', '1706.04499-2-53-1': 'As we cannot use this corpus-wide metric to compute our sentence-level intermediate costs, we adopt the alternative smoothed BLEU score of [CITATION] as our cost.', '1706.04499-2-53-2': 'We use a custom reference policy (detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-2-53-3': 'We report the corpus-wide BLEU score on the test set in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-2-54-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-2-54-1': 'First, the significant improvements SeaRnn obtains over MLE on this task (2 BLEU points without dropout) show that the algorithm can be profitably applied to large-scale, challenging structured prediction tasks at a reasonable computational cost.', '1706.04499-2-54-2': 'Second, our performance is on par or better than those of related methods with comparable baselines.', '1706.04499-2-54-3': 'Our performance using a convolutional encoder is similar to that of Mixer.', '1706.04499-2-54-4': 'Compared to BSO , our baseline, absolute performance and improvements are all stronger.', '1706.04499-2-54-5': 'While SeaRnn presents similar improvements to Actor-Critic, the absolute performance is slightly worse.', '1706.04499-2-54-6': 'This can be explained in part by the fact that SeaRnn requires twice less parameters during training.', '1706.04499-2-55-0': 'Finally, the learned roll-in policy performed poorly for this specific task, so we used instead a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-55-1': 'While this observation seems to go against the L2S analysis from [CITATION], it is consistent with another experiment we ran: we tried applying scheduled sampling - which uses a schedule of mixed roll-ins - on this dataset, but did not succeed to obtain any improvements, despite using a careful schedule as proposed by their authors in private communications.', '1706.04499-2-55-2': 'One potential factor is that our reference policy is not good enough to yield valuable signal when starting from a poor roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-55-3': 'Another possibility is that the underlying optimization problem becomes harder when using a learned rather than a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-56-0': '# Discussion', '1706.04499-2-57-0': 'We now contrast SeaRnn to several related algorithms, including traditional L2S approaches (which are not adapted to RNN training), and RNN training methods inspired by L2S and RL.', '1706.04499-2-58-0': 'Traditional L2S approaches.', '1706.04499-2-58-1': 'Although SeaRnn is heavily inspired by Searn, it is actually closer to Lols , another L2S algorithm.', '1706.04499-2-58-2': 'As Lols, SeaRnn is a meta-algorithm where roll-in/roll-out strategies are customizable (we explored most combinations in our experiments).', '1706.04499-2-58-3': 'Our findings are in agreement with those of [CITATION]: we advocate using the same combination, that is, a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-2-58-4': 'The one exception to this rule of thumb is when the associated reduced problem is too hard (as seems to be the case for machine translation), in which case we recommend switching to a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-59-0': 'Moreover, as noted in Section [REF], SeaRnn adapts the optimization process of Lols (the one difference being that our method is stochastic rather than online): each intermediate dataset is only used for a single gradient step.', '1706.04499-2-59-1': 'This means the policy interpolation is of a different nature than in Searn where intermediate datasets are optimized for fully and the resulting policy is mixed with the previous one.', '1706.04499-2-60-0': 'However, despite the similarities we have just underlined, SeaRnn presents significant differences from these traditional L2S algorithms.', '1706.04499-2-60-1': 'First off, and most importantly, SeaRnn is a full integration of the L2S ideas to RNN training, whereas previous methods cannot be used for this purpose directly.', '1706.04499-2-60-2': 'Second, in order to achieve this adaptation we had to modify several design choices, including:', '1706.04499-2-61-0': 'L2S-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-2-61-1': 'Several other papers have tried using L2S-like ideas for better RNN training, starting with [CITATION] which introduces "scheduled sampling" to avoid the exposure bias problem.', '1706.04499-2-61-2': 'The idea is to start with teacher forcing and to gradually use more and more model predictions instead of ground truth tokens during training.', '1706.04499-2-61-3': 'This is akin to a mixed roll-in - an idea which also appears in .', '1706.04499-2-62-0': '[CITATION]]Wiseman2016b adapt one of the early variants of the L2S framework: the "Learning A Search Optimization" approach of [CITATION]]Daume2005 to train RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-62-1': 'However LaSO is quite different from the more modern Searn family of algorithms that we focus on: it does not include either local classifiers or roll-outs, and has much weaker theoretical guarantees.', '1706.04499-2-62-2': 'Additionally, BSO’s training loss is defined by violations in the beam-search procedure, yielding a very different algorithm from SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-2-62-3': 'Furthermore, BSO requires being able to compute a meaningful loss on partial sequences, and thus does not handle general structured losses unlike SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-2-62-4': 'Finally, its ad hoc surrogate objective provides very sparse sequence-level training signal, as mentioned by their authors, thus requiring warm-start.', '1706.04499-2-63-0': '[CITATION] use a loss that is similar to LL for parsing, a specific task where cost-to-go are essentially free.', '1706.04499-2-63-1': 'This property is also a requirement for [CITATION], in which new gradient procedures are introduced to incorporate neural classifiers in the AggreVaTe variant of L2S.', '1706.04499-2-63-2': 'In contrast, SeaRnn can be used on tasks without a free cost-to-go oracle.', '1706.04499-2-64-0': 'RL-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-2-64-1': 'In structured prediction tasks, we have access to ground truth trajectories, i.e. a lot more information than in traditional RL.', '1706.04499-2-64-2': 'One major direction of research has been to adapt RL techniques to leverage this additional information.', '1706.04499-2-64-3': 'The main idea is to try to optimize the expectation of the test error directly (under the stochastic policy parameterized by the RNN): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-64-4': 'Since we are taking an expectation over all possible structured outputs, the only term that depends on the parameters is the probability term (the tokens in the error term are fixed).', '1706.04499-2-64-5': 'This allows this loss function to support non-differentiable test errors, which is a key advantage.', '1706.04499-2-64-6': 'Of course, actually computing the expectation over an exponential number of possibilities is computationally intractable.', '1706.04499-2-65-0': 'To circumvent this issue, [CITATION] subsample trajectories according to the learned policy, while [CITATION] use the Reinforce algorithm, which essentially approximates the expectation with a single trajectory sample.', '1706.04499-2-65-1': '[CITATION] adapt the Actor-Critic algorithm, where a second critic network is trained to approximate the expectation.', '1706.04499-2-66-0': 'While all these approaches report significant improvement on various tasks, one trait they share is that they only work when initialized from a good pre-trained model.', '1706.04499-2-66-1': 'This phenomenon is often explained by the sparsity of the information contained in "sequence-level" losses.', '1706.04499-2-66-2': 'Indeed, in the case of Reinforce, no distinction is made between the tokens that form a sequence: depending on whether the sampled trajectory is above a global baseline, all tokens are pushed up or down by the gradient update.', '1706.04499-2-66-3': 'This means good tokens are sometimes penalized and bad tokens rewarded.', '1706.04499-2-67-0': 'In contrast, SeaRnn uses "global-local" losses, with a local loss attached to each step, which contains global information since the costs are computed on full sequences.', '1706.04499-2-67-1': 'To do so, we have to "sample" more trajectories through our roll-in/roll-outs.', '1706.04499-2-67-2': 'As a result, SeaRnn does not require warm-starting to achieve good experimental performance.', '1706.04499-2-67-3': 'This distinction is quite relevant, because warm-starting means initializing in a specific region of parameter space which may be hard to escape.', '1706.04499-2-67-4': 'Exploration is less constrained when starting from scratch, leading to potentially larger gains over MLE.', '1706.04499-2-68-0': 'RL-based methods often involve optimizing additional models (baselines for Reinforce and the critic for Actor-Critic), introducing more complexity (e.g. target networks).', '1706.04499-2-68-1': 'SeaRnn does not.', '1706.04499-2-69-0': 'Finally, while maximizing the expected reward allows the RL approaches to use gradient descent even when the test error is not differentiable, it introduces another discrepancy between training and testing.', '1706.04499-2-69-1': 'Indeed, at test time, one does not decode by sampling from the stochastic policy.', '1706.04499-2-69-2': 'Instead, one selects the "best" sequence (according to a search algorithm, e.g. greedy or beam search).', '1706.04499-2-69-3': 'SeaRnn avoids this averse effect by computing costs using deterministic roll-outs - the same decoding technique as the one used at test time - so that its loss is even closer to the test loss.', '1706.04499-2-69-4': 'The associated price is that we approximate the gradient by fixing the costs, although they do depend on the parameters.', '1706.04499-2-70-0': 'Raml is another RL-inspired approach.', '1706.04499-2-70-1': 'Though quite different from the previous papers we have cited, it is also related to SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-2-70-2': 'Here, in order to mitigate the 0/1 aspect of MLE training, the authors introduce noise in the target outputs at each iteration.', '1706.04499-2-70-3': 'The amount of random noise is determined according to the associated reward (target outputs with a lot of noise obtain lower rewards and are thus less sampled).', '1706.04499-2-70-4': 'This idea is linked to the label smoothing technique , where the target distribution at each step is the addition of a Dirac (the usual MLE target) and a uniform distribution.', '1706.04499-2-70-5': 'In this sense, when using the KL loss SeaRnn can be viewed as doing learned label smoothing, where we compute the target distribution from the intermediate costs rather than arbitrarily adding the uniform distribution.', '1706.04499-2-71-0': 'Conclusion and future work.', '1706.04499-2-71-1': 'We have described SeaRnn, a novel algorithm that uses core ideas from the learning to search framework in order to alleviate the known limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-2-71-2': 'By leveraging structured cost information obtained through strategic exploration, we define global-local losses.', '1706.04499-2-71-3': 'These losses provide a global feedback related to the structured task at hand, distributed locally within the cells of the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-71-4': 'This alternative procedure allows us to train RNNs from scratch and to outperform MLE on three challenging structured prediction tasks.', '1706.04499-2-71-5': 'Finally we have proposed efficient scaling techniques that allow us to apply SeaRnn on structured tasks for which the output vocabulary is very large, such as neural machine translation.', '1706.04499-2-72-0': 'The L2S literature provides several promising directions for further research.', '1706.04499-2-72-1': 'Adapting "bandit" L2S alternatives would allow us to apply SeaRnn to tasks where only a single trajectory may be observed at any given point (so trying every possible token is not possible).', '1706.04499-2-72-2': 'Focused costing - a mixed roll-out policy where a fixed number of learned steps are taken before resorting to the reference policy - could help us lift the quadratic dependency of SeaRnn on the sequence length.', '1706.04499-2-72-3': 'Finally, targeted sampling - a smart sampling strategy that prioritizes cells where the model is uncertain of what to do - could enable more efficient exploration for large-scale tasks.', '1706.04499-2-73-0': '# Algorithms', '1706.04499-2-74-0': '## Searn (adapted from [CITATION], Figure 1.)', '1706.04499-2-74-1': 'definecolorcommentRGB86, 115, 154 [] Searn algorithm', '1706.04499-2-75-0': '[1] Initialize a policy [MATH] with the reference policy [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-1': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Start of round [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-2': 'Initialize the set of cost-sensitive examples [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-3': 'comment Create the intermediate dataset for round [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-4': '[MATH] in the ground truth input/output structured pairs comment Perform the roll-in (actually only run once).', '1706.04499-2-75-5': 'Compute predictions under the current policy, [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-6': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Compute input features [MATH] for context [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-7': 'Initialize a cost vector [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-8': 'Perform the roll-outs for each action to fill the cost vector.', '1706.04499-2-75-9': 'each possible token [MATH] Get a full sequence [MATH] by applying an expert policy, starting from [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-75-10': 'Collect the cost [MATH] by comparing [MATH] and [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-76-0': 'Add cost-sensitive example [MATH] to S', '1706.04499-2-77-0': 'Learn a classifier [MATH] on [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-77-1': 'Interpolate [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-77-2': 'Return [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-78-0': '## SeaRnn', '1706.04499-2-79-0': 'definecolorcommentRGB86, 115, 154 [] SeaRnn algorithm (for a simple encoder-decoder network)', '1706.04499-2-80-0': '[1] Initialize the weights [MATH] of the RNN network.', '1706.04499-2-80-1': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Sample [MATH] ground truth input/output structured pairs [MATH] comment Perform the roll-in/roll-outs to get the costs.', '1706.04499-2-80-2': 'Can be heavily parallelized [MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Compute input features [MATH] in 1 to [MATH] comment The following roll-in is actually run only once Run the RNN until [MATH] cell with [MATH] as initial state by following the roll-in policy (see [REF] for details in the case of reference roll-in policy) Store the state in order to perform several roll-outs comment Roll-outs for all actions in order to collect the cost vector [MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Pick a decoding method (e.g. greedy or beam search) Run the RNN from the [MATH] cell to the end by first enforcing action [MATH] at cell [MATH], a a a a a a a a a a a a a and then following the decoding method.', '1706.04499-2-80-3': 'Collect the cost [MATH] by comparing the obtained output sequence [MATH] to [MATH]', '1706.04499-2-81-0': 'Derive a loss for each cell from the collected costs Update the parameters of the network [MATH] by doing a single gradient step', '1706.04499-2-82-0': '## Reference roll-in with an RNN.', '1706.04499-2-83-0': 'As mentioned in Section [REF], teacher forcing can be seen as the roll-in reference policy of the RNN.', '1706.04499-2-83-1': 'In this section, we detail this analogy further.', '1706.04499-2-84-0': 'Let us consider the case where we perform the roll-in up until the [MATH] cell.', '1706.04499-2-84-1': 'In order to be able to perform roll-outs from that [MATH] cell, a hidden state is needed.', '1706.04499-2-84-2': 'If we used a reference policy roll-in, this state is obtained by running the RNN until the [MATH] cell by using the teacher forcing strategy, i.e. by conditioning the outputs on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-84-3': 'Finally, SeaRnn also needs to know what the predictions for the full sequence were in order to compute the costs.', '1706.04499-2-84-4': 'When the reference roll-in is used, we obtain the predictions up until the [MATH] cell by simply copying the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-84-5': 'Hence, we discard the outputs of the RNN that are before the [MATH] cell.', '1706.04499-2-85-0': '# Design decisions', '1706.04499-2-86-0': 'Choosing a classifier: to backpropagate or not to backpropagate?', '1706.04499-2-86-1': 'In standard L2S, the classifier and the feature extractor are clearly delineated.', '1706.04499-2-86-2': 'The latter is a fixed hand-crafted transformation applied on the input and the partial sequence that has already been predicted.', '1706.04499-2-86-3': 'One then has to pick a classifier and its convergence properties carry over to the initial problem.', '1706.04499-2-87-0': 'In SeaRnn, we choose the RNN itself as our classifier.', '1706.04499-2-87-1': 'The fixed feature extractor is reduced to the bare minimum (e.g. one-hot encoding) and the classifier performs feature learning afterwards.', '1706.04499-2-87-2': 'In this setting, the intermediate dataset is the initial state and all previous decisions [MATH] combined with the cost vector.', '1706.04499-2-88-0': 'An alternative way to look at RNNs, is to consider the RNN cell as a shared classifier in its own right, and the beginning of the RNN (including the previous cells) as a feature extractor.', '1706.04499-2-88-1': 'One could then pick the RNN cell (instead of the full RNN) as the SeaRnn classifier, in which case the intermediate dataset would be [MATH] (the state at the previous step, combined with the previous decision) plus the cost vector.', '1706.04499-2-89-0': 'While this last perspective - seeing the RNN cell as the shared classifier instead of the full RNN - is perhaps more intuitive, it actually fits the L2S framework less well.', '1706.04499-2-89-1': 'Indeed, there is no clear delineation between classifier and feature extractor as these functions are carried out by different instances of the same RNN cell (and as such share weights).', '1706.04499-2-89-2': 'This means that the feature extraction in this case is learned instead of being fixed.', '1706.04499-2-90-0': 'This choice of classifier has a direct consequence on the optimization routine.', '1706.04499-2-90-1': 'In case we pick the RNN itself, then each loss gradient has to be fully backpropagated through the network.', '1706.04499-2-90-2': 'On the other hand, if the classifier is the cell itself, then one should not backpropagate the gradient updates.', '1706.04499-2-91-0': 'Reference policy.', '1706.04499-2-91-1': 'The reference policy defined by [CITATION] picks the action which "minimizes the (corresponding) cost, assuming all future decisions are made optimally", i.e. [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-92-0': 'For the roll-in phase, this policy corresponds to always picking the ground truth, since it leads to predicting the full ground truth sequence and hence the best possible loss.', '1706.04499-2-93-0': 'For the roll-out phase, computing this policy explicitly is easy in a few select cases.', '1706.04499-2-93-1': 'However, in the general case it is not tractable.', '1706.04499-2-93-2': 'One then has to turn to heuristics, whose performance can be relatively poor.', '1706.04499-2-93-3': 'While [CITATION] tell us that overcoming a bad reference policy can be done through a careful choice of roll-in/roll-out policies, the fact remains that the better the reference policy is, the better performance will be.', '1706.04499-2-93-4': 'Choosing this heuristic well is then quite important.', '1706.04499-2-94-0': 'The most basic heuristic is to simply use the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-94-1': 'Of course, one can readily see that it is not always optimal.', '1706.04499-2-94-2': 'For example, when the model skips a token and outputs the next one, [MATH], instead, it may be more beneficial to also skip [MATH] in the roll-out phase rather than to repeat it.', '1706.04499-2-95-0': 'Although we mostly chose this basic heuristic in this paper, using tailored alternatives can yield better results for tasks where it is suboptimal, such as machine translation (see Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-2-96-0': '# Additional experimental details', '1706.04499-2-97-0': '## Losses.', '1706.04499-2-98-0': 'We now describe other losses we tried but did not perform as well (or at least not better) than the ones presented in the main text.', '1706.04499-2-99-0': 'The first two follow the target learning principle, as LL.', '1706.04499-2-100-0': 'Log-loss with cost-augmented softmax (LLCAS).', '1706.04499-2-100-1': 'LLCAS is another attempt to leverage the structured information we have access to more meaningfully, through a slight modification of LL.', '1706.04499-2-100-2': 'We add information about the full costs in the exponential, following e.g. [CITATION].', '1706.04499-2-100-3': '[EQUATION] [MATH] is a scaling parameter that ensures that the scores of the model and the costs are not too dissimilar, and can be chosen using a validation set.', '1706.04499-2-100-4': 'The associated gradient update discriminates between tokens based on their costs.', '1706.04499-2-100-5': 'Although it leverages the structured loss information more directly and thus should in principle mitigate the 0/1 nature of MLE better, we did not observe any significant improvements over LL, even after tuning the scaling parameter [MATH].', '1706.04499-2-101-0': 'Structured hinge loss (SHL).', '1706.04499-2-101-1': 'The LLCAS can be seen as a smooth version of the (cost-sensitive) structured hinge loss used for structured SVMs , that we also consider: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-101-2': 'While this loss did enable the RNNs to learn, the overall performance was actually slightly worse than that of MLE.', '1706.04499-2-101-3': 'This may be due to the fact that RNNs have a harder time optimizing the resulting objective, compared to others more similar to the traditional MLE objective (which they have been tuned to train well on).', '1706.04499-2-102-0': 'Consistent loss.', '1706.04499-2-102-1': 'This last loss is inspired from traditional structured prediction.', '1706.04499-2-102-2': 'Following [CITATION], we define: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-2-102-3': 'Unfortunately, we encountered optimization issues and could not get significant improvements over the MLE baseline.', '1706.04499-2-103-0': 'KL and label smoothing.', '1706.04499-2-103-1': 'We have seen that when the loss function is the Hamming loss, the reference policy is to simply output the ground truth.', '1706.04499-2-103-2': 'In this case, LL with a reference roll-in and roll-out is equivalent to MLE.', '1706.04499-2-103-3': 'Interestingly, in the same setup KL is also equivalent to an existing method: the label smoothing technique.', '1706.04499-2-103-4': 'Indeed, the vector of costs can be written as a vector with equal coordinates minus a one-hot vector with all its mass on the ground truth token.', '1706.04499-2-103-5': 'After transformation through a softmax operator, this yields the same target distribution as in label smoothing.', '1706.04499-2-104-0': '## NMT', '1706.04499-2-105-0': 'Custom sampling.', '1706.04499-2-105-1': 'For this experiment, we decided to sample 15 tokens per cell according to the top-k policy (as the vocabulary size is quite big, sampling tokens with low probability is not very attractive), as well as 10 neighboring ground truth labels around the cell.', '1706.04499-2-105-2': 'The rationale for these neighboring tokens is that skipping or repeating words is quite a common mistake in NMT.', '1706.04499-2-106-0': 'Custom reference policy.', '1706.04499-2-106-1': 'The very basic reference policy we have been using for the other experiments of the paper is too bad a heuristic for BLEU to perform well.', '1706.04499-2-106-2': 'Instead, we try adding every suffix in the ground truth sequence to the current predictions and we pick the one with the highest BLEU-1 score (using this strategy with BLEU-4 leads to unfortunate events when the best suffix to add is always the entire sequence, leading to uninformative costs).', '1706.04499-2-107-0': 'Reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-107-1': 'As mentioned in Section [REF], we had to switch from a learned to a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-2-107-2': 'In addition to the existing problems of a weak reference policy (which affects a learned roll-in much more than a reference one), and the introduction of a harder optimization problem, there is another potential source of explanation: this may illustrate a gap in the standard reduction theory from the L2S framework.', '1706.04499-2-107-3': 'Indeed, the standard reduction analysis guarantees that the level of performance of the classifier on the reduced problem translates to overall performance on the initial problem.', '1706.04499-2-108-0': 'However, this does not take into account the fact that the reduced problem may be harder or easier, depending on the choice of roll-in/roll-out combination.', '1706.04499-2-108-1': 'In this case, it appears that using a learned roll-in may have lead to a harder reduced problem and thus ultimately worse overall performance.'}
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{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.04499
{'1706.04499-3-0-0': 'We propose SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for recurrent neural networks (RNNs) inspired by the "learning to search" (L2S) approach to structured prediction.', '1706.04499-3-0-1': 'RNNs have been widely successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation or parsing, and are commonly trained using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE).', '1706.04499-3-0-2': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not always an appropriate surrogate for the test error: by only maximizing the ground truth probability, it fails to exploit the wealth of information offered by structured losses.', '1706.04499-3-0-3': 'Further, it introduces discrepancies between training and predicting (such as exposure bias) that may hurt test performance.', '1706.04499-3-0-4': 'Instead, SeaRnn leverages test-alike search space exploration to introduce global-local losses that are closer to the test error.', '1706.04499-3-0-5': 'We first demonstrate improved performance over MLE on two different tasks: OCR and spelling correction.', '1706.04499-3-0-6': 'Then, we propose a subsampling strategy to enable SeaRnn to scale to large vocabulary sizes.', '1706.04499-3-0-7': 'This allows us to validate the benefits of our approach on a machine translation task.', '1706.04499-3-1-0': '# Introduction', '1706.04499-3-2-0': 'Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) have been quite successful in structured prediction applications such as machine translation , parsing or caption generation .', '1706.04499-3-2-1': 'These models use the same repeated cell (or unit) to output a sequence of tokens one by one.', '1706.04499-3-2-2': 'As each prediction takes into account all previous predictions, this cell learns to output the next token conditioned on the previous ones.', '1706.04499-3-2-3': 'The standard training loss for RNNs is derived from maximum likelihood estimation (MLE): we consider that the cell outputs a probability distribution at each step in the sequence, and we seek to maximize the probability of the ground truth.', '1706.04499-3-3-0': 'Unfortunately, this training loss is not a particularly close surrogate to the various test errors we want to minimize.', '1706.04499-3-3-1': 'A striking example of discrepancy is that the MLE loss is close to 0/1: it makes no distinction between candidates that are close or far away from the ground truth (with respect to the structured test error), thus failing to exploit valuable information.', '1706.04499-3-3-2': 'Another example of train/test discrepancy is called exposure or exploration bias : in traditional MLE training the cell learns the conditional probability of the next token, based on the previous ground truth tokens - this is often referred to as teacher forcing.', '1706.04499-3-3-3': 'However, at test time the model does not have access to the ground truth, and thus feeds its own previous predictions to its next cell for prediction instead.', '1706.04499-3-4-0': 'Improving RNN training thus appears as a relevant endeavor, which has received much attention recently.', '1706.04499-3-4-1': 'In particular, ideas coming from reinforcement learning (RL), such as the Reinforce and Actor-Critic algorithms , have been adapted to derive training losses that are more closely related to the test error that we actually want to minimize.', '1706.04499-3-5-0': 'In order to address the issues of MLE training, we propose instead to use ideas from the structured prediction field, in particular from the "learning to search" (L2S) approach introduced by [CITATION] and later refined by [CITATION] and [CITATION] among others.', '1706.04499-3-6-0': 'Contributions.', '1706.04499-3-6-1': 'In Section [REF], we review the limitations of MLE training for RNNs in details.', '1706.04499-3-6-2': 'We also clarify some related claims made in the recent literature.', '1706.04499-3-6-3': 'In Section [REF], we make explicit the strong links between RNNs and the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-3-6-4': 'In Section [REF], we present SeaRnn, a novel training algorithm for RNNs, using ideas from L2S to derive a global-local loss that is much closer to the test error than MLE.', '1706.04499-3-6-5': 'We demonstrate that this novel approach leads to significant improvements on two difficult structured prediction tasks, including a spelling correction problem recently introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-6-6': 'As this algorithm is quite costly, we investigate scaling solutions in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-3-6-7': 'We explore a subsampling strategy that allows us to considerably reduce training times, while maintaining improved performance compared to MLE.', '1706.04499-3-6-8': 'We apply this new algorithm to machine translation and report significant improvements in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-3-6-9': 'Finally, we contrast our novel approach to the related L2S and RL-inspired methods in Section [REF].', '1706.04499-3-7-0': '# Traditional RNN training and its limitations', '1706.04499-3-8-0': 'RNNs are a large family of neural network models aimed at representing sequential data.', '1706.04499-3-8-1': 'To do so, they produce a sequence of states [MATH] by recursively applying the same transformation (or cell) [MATH] on the sequential data: [MATH], with [MATH] an initial state and [MATH] an optional input.', '1706.04499-3-9-0': 'Many possible design choices fit this framework.', '1706.04499-3-9-1': 'We focus on a subset typically used for structured prediction, where we want to model the joint probability of a target sequence [MATH] given an input [MATH] (e.g. the decoder RNN in the encoder-decoder architecture ).', '1706.04499-3-9-2': 'Here [MATH] is the alphabet of output tokens and [MATH] is the length of the output sequence associated with input [MATH] (though [MATH] may take different values, in the following we drop the dependency in [MATH] and use [MATH] for simplicity).', '1706.04499-3-9-3': 'To achieve this modeling, we feed [MATH] through a projection layer (i.e. a linear classifier) to obtain a vector of scores [MATH] over all possible tokens [MATH], and normalize these with a softmax layer (an exponential normalizer) to obtain a distribution [MATH] over tokens: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-3-9-4': 'The vector [MATH] is interpreted as the predictive conditional distribution for the [MATH] token given by the RNN model, i.e. [MATH] for [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-9-5': 'Multiplying the values [MATH] together thus yields the joint probability of the sequence [MATH] defined by the RNN (thanks to the chain rule): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-3-9-6': 'As pointed by [CITATION], the underlying structure of these RNNs as graphical models is thus a complete graph, and there is no conditional independence assumption to simplify the difficult prediction task of computing [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-9-7': 'In practice, one typically uses either beam search to approximate this decoding, or a sequence of greedy predictions [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-10-0': 'If we use the "teacher forcing" regimen, where the inputs to the RNN cell are the ground truth tokens (as opposed to its own greedy predictions), we obtain the probability of each ground truth sequence according to the RNN model.', '1706.04499-3-10-1': 'We can then use MLE to derive a loss to train the RNN.', '1706.04499-3-10-2': 'One should note here that despite the fact that the individual output probabilities are at the token level, the MLE loss involves the joint probability (computed via the chain rule) and is thus at the sequence level.', '1706.04499-3-11-0': 'The limitations of MLE training.', '1706.04499-3-11-1': 'While this maximum likelihood style of training has been very successful in various applications, it suffers from several known issues, especially for structured prediction problems.', '1706.04499-3-11-2': 'The first one is called exposure or exploration bias .', '1706.04499-3-11-3': 'During training (with teacher forcing), the model learns the probabilities of the next tokens conditioned on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-3-11-4': 'But at test time, the model does not have access to the ground truth and outputs probabilities are conditioned on its own previous predictions instead.', '1706.04499-3-11-5': 'Therefore if the predictions differ from the ground truth, the model has to continue based on an exploration path it has not seen during training, which means that it is less likely to make accurate predictions.', '1706.04499-3-11-6': 'This phenomenon, which is typical of sequential prediction tasks can lead to a compounding of errors, where mistakes in prediction accumulate and prevent good performance.', '1706.04499-3-12-0': 'The second major issue is the discrepancy between the training loss and the various test errors associated with the tasks for which RNNs are used (e.g. edit distance, F1 score...).', '1706.04499-3-12-1': 'Of course, a single surrogate is not likely to be a good approximation for all these errors.', '1706.04499-3-12-2': 'One salient illustration of that fact is that MLE ignores the information contained in structured losses.', '1706.04499-3-12-3': 'As it only focuses on maximizing the probability of the ground truth, it does not distinguish between a prediction that is very close to the ground truth and one that is very far away.', '1706.04499-3-12-4': 'Thus, most of the information given by a structured loss is not leveraged when using this approach.', '1706.04499-3-13-0': 'Local vs. sequence-level.', '1706.04499-3-13-1': 'Some recent papers also point out the fact that since RNNs output next token predictions, their loss is local instead of sequence-level, contrary to the error we typically want to minimize.', '1706.04499-3-13-2': 'This claim seems to contradict the standard RNN analysis, which postulates that the underlying graphical model is the complete graph: that is, the RNN outputs the probability of the next tokens conditioned on all the previous predictions.', '1706.04499-3-13-3': 'Thanks to the chain rule, one recovers the probability of the whole sequence.', '1706.04499-3-13-4': 'Thus the maximum likelihood training loss is indeed a sequence level loss, even though we can decompose it in a product of local losses at each cell.', '1706.04499-3-13-5': 'However, if we assume that the RNN outputs are only conditioned on the last few predictions (instead of all previous ones), then we can indeed consider the MLE loss as local.', '1706.04499-3-13-6': 'In this setting, the underlying graphical model obeys Markovian constraints (as in maximum entropy Markov models (MEMMs)) rather than being the complete graph; this corresponds to the assumption that the information from the previous inputs is imperfectly carried through the network to the cell, preventing the model from accurately representing long-term dependencies.', '1706.04499-3-14-0': 'Given all these limitations, exploring novel ways of training RNNs appears to be a worthy endeavor, and this field has attracted a lot of interest in the past few years.', '1706.04499-3-14-1': 'While many papers try to adapt ideas coming from the reinforcement learning literature, we instead focus in this paper on the links we can draw with structured prediction, and in particular with the L2S approach.', '1706.04499-3-15-0': '# Links between RNNs and learning to search', '1706.04499-3-16-0': 'The L2S approach to structured prediction was first introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-16-1': 'The main idea behind it is a learning reduction : transforming a complex learning problem (structured prediction) into a simpler one that we know how to solve (multiclass classification).', '1706.04499-3-16-2': 'To achieve this, [CITATION] propose in their Searn algorithm to train a shared local classifier to predict each token sequentially (conditioned on all inputs and all past decisions), thus searching greedily step by step in the big combinatorial space of structured outputs.', '1706.04499-3-16-3': 'The idea that tokens can be predicted one at a time, conditioned on their predecessors, is central to this approach.', '1706.04499-3-17-0': 'The training procedure is iterative: at the beginning of each round, one uses the current model (or policy) to build an intermediate dataset to train the shared classifier on.', '1706.04499-3-17-1': 'The specificity of this new dataset is that each new sample is accompanied by a cost vector containing one entry per token in the output vocabulary [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-17-2': 'To obtain these cost vectors, one starts by applying a roll-in policy to predict all the tokens up to [MATH], thus building one trajectory (or exploration path) in the search space per sample in the initial dataset.', '1706.04499-3-17-3': 'Then, at each time step [MATH], one picks arbitrarily each possible token (diverging from the roll-in trajectory) and then continues predicting to finish the modified trajectory using a roll-out policy.', '1706.04499-3-17-4': 'One then computes the cost of all the obtained sequences, and ends up with [MATH] vectors (one per time step) of size [MATH] (the number of possible tokens) for every sample.', '1706.04499-3-17-5': 'Figure [REF] describes the same process for our SeaRnn algorithm (although in this case the shared classifier is an RNN).', '1706.04499-3-18-0': 'One then extracts features from the "context" at each time step [MATH] (which encompasses the full input and the previous tokens predicted up to [MATH] during the roll-in).', '1706.04499-3-18-1': 'Combining the cost vectors to these features yields the new intermediary dataset.', '1706.04499-3-18-2': 'The original problem is thus reduced to multi-class cost-sensitive classification.', '1706.04499-3-18-3': 'Once the shared classifier has been fully trained on this new dataset, the policy is updated for the next round.', '1706.04499-3-18-4': 'The algorithm is described more formally in Algorithm [REF] (see Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-3-18-5': 'Theoretical guarantees for various policy updating rules are provided by e.g. [CITATION] and [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-19-0': 'Roll-in and roll-out policies.', '1706.04499-3-19-1': 'The policies used to create the intermediate datasets fulfill different roles.', '1706.04499-3-19-2': 'The roll-in policy controls what part of the search space the algorithm explores, while the roll-out policy determines how the cost of each token is computed.', '1706.04499-3-19-3': 'The main possibilities for both roll-in and roll-out are explored by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-19-4': 'The reference policy tries to pick the optimal token based on the ground truth.', '1706.04499-3-19-5': 'During the roll-in, it corresponds to picking the ground truth.', '1706.04499-3-19-6': 'For the roll-out phase, while it is easy to compute an optimal policy in some cases (e.g. for the Hamming loss where simply copying the ground truth is also optimal), it is often too expensive (e.g. for BLEU score).', '1706.04499-3-19-7': 'One then uses a heuristic (in our experiments the reference policy is to copy the ground truth for both roll-in and roll-out unless indicated otherwise).', '1706.04499-3-19-8': 'The learned policy simply uses the current model instead, and the mixed policy stochastically combines both.', '1706.04499-3-19-9': 'According to [CITATION], the best combination when the reference policy is poor is to use a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-3-20-0': 'Links to RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-20-1': 'One can identify the following interesting similarities between a greedy approach to RNNs and L2S.', '1706.04499-3-20-2': 'Both models handle sequence labeling problems by outputting tokens recursively, conditioned on past decisions.', '1706.04499-3-20-3': 'Further, the RNN "cell" is shared at each time step and can thus also be seen as a shared local classifier that is used to make structured predictions, as in the L2S framework.', '1706.04499-3-20-4': 'In addition, there is a clear equivalent to the choice of roll-in policy in RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-20-5': 'Indeed, teacher forcing (conditioning the outputs on the ground truth) can be seen as the roll-in reference policy for the RNN.', '1706.04499-3-20-6': 'Instead, if one conditions the outputs on the previous predictions of the model, then we obtain a roll-in learned policy.', '1706.04499-3-21-0': 'Despite these connections, many differences remain.', '1706.04499-3-21-1': 'Amongst them, the fact that no roll-outs are involved in standard RNN training.', '1706.04499-3-21-2': 'We thus consider next whether ideas coming from L2S could mitigate the limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-21-3': 'In particular, one key property of L2S worth porting over to RNN training is that the former fully leverages structured losses information, contrarily to MLE as previously noted.', '1706.04499-3-22-0': '# Improving RNN training with L2S', '1706.04499-3-23-0': 'Since we are interested in leveraging structured loss information, we can try to obtain it in the same fashion as L2S.', '1706.04499-3-23-1': 'The main tool that L2S uses in order to construct a cost-sensitive dataset is the roll-out policy.', '1706.04499-3-23-2': 'In many classical structured prediction use cases, one does not need to follow through with a policy because the "cost-to-go" that the roll-out yields is either free or easily computable from the ground truth.', '1706.04499-3-23-3': 'We are however also interested in cases where this information is unavailable, and roll-outs are needed to approximate it (e.g. for machine translation).', '1706.04499-3-23-4': 'This leads to several questions.', '1706.04499-3-23-5': 'How can we integrate roll-outs in a RNN model?', '1706.04499-3-23-6': 'How do we use this additional information, i.e. what loss do we use to train the model on?', '1706.04499-3-23-7': 'How do we make it computationally tractable?', '1706.04499-3-24-0': 'The SeaRnn Algorithm.', '1706.04499-3-24-1': 'The basic idea of the SeaRnn algorithm is quite simple: we borrow from L2S the idea of using a global loss for each local cell of the RNN.', '1706.04499-3-24-2': 'As in L2S, we first compute a roll-in trajectory, following a specific roll-in policy.', '1706.04499-3-24-3': 'Then, at each step [MATH] of this trajectory, we compute the costs [MATH] associated with each possible token [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-24-4': 'To do so we pick [MATH] at this step and then follow a roll-out policy to finish the output sequence [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-24-5': 'We then compare [MATH] with the ground truth using the test error itself, rather than a surrogate.', '1706.04499-3-24-6': 'By repeating this for the [MATH] steps we obtain [MATH] cost vectors.', '1706.04499-3-24-7': 'We use this information to derive one cost-sensitive training loss for each cell, which allows us to compute an update for the parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-3-24-8': 'The full process for one cell is illustrated in Figure [REF].', '1706.04499-3-24-9': 'Our losses are global-local, in the sense that they appear at the local level but all contain sequence-level information.', '1706.04499-3-24-10': 'Our final loss is the sum over the [MATH] local losses.', '1706.04499-3-24-11': 'We provide the pseudo-code for SeaRnn in Algorithm [REF].', '1706.04499-3-25-0': 'definecolorcommentRGB86, 115, 154 [] SeaRnn algorithm (for a simple encoder-decoder network)', '1706.04499-3-26-0': '[1] Initialize the weights [MATH] of the RNN network.', '1706.04499-3-26-1': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Sample [MATH] ground truth input/output structured pairs [MATH] Perform the roll-in/roll-outs to get the costs.', '1706.04499-3-26-2': 'This step can be heavily parallelized.', '1706.04499-3-26-3': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Compute input features [MATH] comment Roll-in.', '1706.04499-3-26-4': 'Run the RNN until [MATH] cell with [MATH] as initial state by following the roll-in policy (see Appendix [REF] for details in the case of reference roll-in policy) Store the sequence of hidden states in order to perform several roll-outs [MATH] in 1 to [MATH] comment Roll-outs for all actions in order to collect the cost vector at the [MATH] cell.', '1706.04499-3-26-5': '[MATH] in 1 to [MATH] Pick a decoding method (e.g. greedy or beam search) Run the RNN from the [MATH] cell to the end by first enforcing action [MATH] at cell [MATH], a a a a a a a a a a a a a and then following the decoding method.', '1706.04499-3-26-6': 'Collect the cost [MATH] by comparing the obtained output sequence [MATH] to [MATH]', '1706.04499-3-27-0': 'Derive a loss for each cell from the collected costs Update the parameters of the network [MATH] by doing a single gradient step', '1706.04499-3-28-0': 'Choosing a multi-class classifier.', '1706.04499-3-28-1': 'SeaRnn appears quite similar to L2S, but there are a few key differences that merit more explanation.', '1706.04499-3-28-2': 'As the RNN cell can serve as a multi-class classifier, in SeaRnn we could pick the cell as a (shallow) shared classifier, whose input are features extracted from the full context by the previous cells of the RNN.', '1706.04499-3-28-3': 'Instead, we pick the RNN itself, thus getting a (deep) shared classifier that also learns the features directly from the context.', '1706.04499-3-28-4': 'The difference between the two options is more thoroughly detailed in Appendix [REF].', '1706.04499-3-28-5': 'Arbitrarily picking a token [MATH] during the roll-out phase can then be done by emulating the teacher forcing technique: if predicted tokens are fed back to the model (say if the roll-out policy requires it), we use [MATH] for the next cell (instead of the prediction the cell would have output).', '1706.04499-3-28-6': 'We also use [MATH] in the output sequence before computing the cost.', '1706.04499-3-29-0': 'Choosing a cost-sensitive loss.', '1706.04499-3-29-1': 'We now also explain our choice for the training loss function derived from the cost vectors.', '1706.04499-3-29-2': 'One popular possibility from L2S is to go the full reduction route down to binary classification.', '1706.04499-3-29-3': 'However, this technique involves creating multiple new datasets (which is hard to implement as part of a neural network), as well as training [MATH] binary classifiers.', '1706.04499-3-29-4': 'Instead, we simply work with the multi-class classifier encoded by the RNN cell with training losses defined next.', '1706.04499-3-30-0': 'We now introduce two of the more successful losses we used (although we experimented with many others, which are detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-3-30-1': 'In the following, each loss is defined at the cell level.', '1706.04499-3-30-2': 'The global loss is the sum of all [MATH] losses.', '1706.04499-3-30-3': '[MATH] refers to the score output by cell [MATH] for token [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-31-0': 'Log-loss (LL).', '1706.04499-3-31-1': 'A central idea in L2S is to learn the target tokens the model should aim for.', '1706.04499-3-31-2': 'This is more meaningful than blindly imposing the ground truth as target, in particular when the model has deviated from the ground truth trajectory.', '1706.04499-3-31-3': '[CITATION] refer to this technique as using dynamic oracles.', '1706.04499-3-31-4': 'In the context of RNN training, we call this approach target learning.', '1706.04499-3-32-0': 'Our first loss is thus a simple log-loss with the minimal cost token as target: [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-3-32-1': 'It is structurally similar to MLE.', '1706.04499-3-32-2': 'The only difference is that instead of maximizing the probability of the ground truth action, we maximize the probability of the best performing action with respect to the cost vector.', '1706.04499-3-32-3': 'This similarity is a significant advantage from an optimization perspective: as RNNs have mostly been trained using MLE, this allows us to leverage decades of previous work.', '1706.04499-3-32-4': 'Note that when the reference policy is to simply copy the ground truth (which is sometimes optimal, e.g. when the test error is the Hamming loss), [MATH] is always the ground truth token.', '1706.04499-3-32-5': 'LL with reference roll-in and roll-out is in this case equivalent to MLE.', '1706.04499-3-33-0': 'Kullback-Leibler divergence (KL).', '1706.04499-3-33-1': 'The log-loss approach appears to be relatively wasteful with the structured information we have access to since we are only using the minimal cost value.', '1706.04499-3-33-2': 'To exploit this information more meaningfully, we consider the following approach: we convert each cost vector into a probability distribution (e.g. through a softmax operator) and then minimize a divergence between the current model distribution [MATH] and the "target distribution" [MATH] derived from the costs.', '1706.04499-3-33-3': 'As the MLE objective itself can be expressed as the KL divergence between [MATH] (a Dirac distribution with full mass on the ground truth) and [MATH], we also choose to minimize the KL divergence between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-33-4': 'Since the costs are considered fixed with respect to the parameters of the model, our loss is equivalent to the cross-entropy between [MATH] and [MATH].', '1706.04499-3-33-5': '[EQUATION] [MATH] is a scaling parameter that controls how peaky the target distributions are.', '1706.04499-3-33-6': 'It can be chosen using a validation set.', '1706.04499-3-33-7': 'The associated gradient update discriminates between tokens based on their costs.', '1706.04499-3-33-8': 'Compared to LL, KL leverages the structured loss information more directly and thus mitigates the 0/1 nature of MLE better.', '1706.04499-3-34-0': 'Optimization.', '1706.04499-3-34-1': 'Another difference between Searn and RNNs is that RNNs are typically trained using stochastic gradient descent, whereas Searn is a batch method.', '1706.04499-3-34-2': 'In order to facilitate training, we decide to adapt the optimization process of Lols, an online variant of Searn introduced by [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-34-3': 'At each round, we select a random mini-batch of samples, and then take a single gradient step on the parameters with the associated loss (contrary to Searn where the reduced classifier is fully trained at each round).', '1706.04499-3-35-0': 'Note that we do not need the test error to be differentiable, as our costs [MATH] are fixed when we minimize our training loss.', '1706.04499-3-35-1': 'This corresponds to defining a different loss at each round, which is the way it is done in L2S.', '1706.04499-3-35-2': 'In this case our gradient is unbiased.', '1706.04499-3-35-3': 'However, if instead we consider that we define a single loss for the whole procedure, then the costs depend on the parameters of the model and we effectively compute an approximation of the gradient.', '1706.04499-3-35-4': 'Whether it is possible not to fix the costs and to backpropagate through the roll-in and roll-out remains an open problem.', '1706.04499-3-36-0': 'Expected benefits.', '1706.04499-3-36-1': 'SeaRnn can improve performance because of a few key properties.', '1706.04499-3-36-2': 'First, our losses leverage the test error, leading to potentially much better surrogates than MLE.', '1706.04499-3-37-0': 'Second, all of our training losses (even plain LL) leverage the structured information that is contained in the computed costs.', '1706.04499-3-37-1': 'This is much more satisfactory than MLE which does not exploit this information and ignores nuances between good and bad candidate predictions.', '1706.04499-3-37-2': 'Indeed, our hypothesis is that the more complex the error is, the more SeaRnn can improve performance.', '1706.04499-3-38-0': 'Third, the exploration bias we find in teacher forcing can be mitigated by using a "learned" roll-in policy, which may be the best roll-in policy for L2S applications according to [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-39-0': 'Fourth, the loss at each cell is global, in the sense that the computed costs contain information about full sequences.', '1706.04499-3-39-1': 'This may help with the classical vanishing gradients problem that is prevalent in RNN training and motivated the introduction of specialized cells such as LSTMs or GRUs .', '1706.04499-3-40-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-3-40-1': 'In order to validate these theoretical benefits, we ran SeaRnn on two datasets and compared its performance against that of MLE.', '1706.04499-3-40-2': 'For a fair comparison, we use the same optimization routine for all methods.', '1706.04499-3-40-3': 'We pick the one that performs best for the MLE baseline.', '1706.04499-3-40-4': 'Note that in all the experiments of the paper, we use greedy decoding, both for our cost computation and for evaluation.', '1706.04499-3-40-5': 'Furthermore, whenever we use a mixed roll-out we always use 0.5 as our mixin parameter, following [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-41-0': 'The first dataset is the optical character recognition (OCR) dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-41-1': 'The task is to output English words given an input sequence of handwritten characters.', '1706.04499-3-41-2': 'We use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 128.', '1706.04499-3-41-3': 'For all runs, we use SGD with constant step-size 0.5 and batch size of 64.', '1706.04499-3-41-4': 'The cost used in the SeaRnn algorithm is the Hamming error.', '1706.04499-3-41-5': 'We report the total Hamming error, normalized by the total number of characters on the test set.', '1706.04499-3-42-0': 'The second dataset is the Spelling dataset introduced in [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-42-1': 'The task is to recover correct text from a corrupted version.', '1706.04499-3-42-2': 'This dataset is synthetically generated from a text corpus (One Billion Word dataset): for each character, we decide with some fixed probability whether or not to replace it with a random one.', '1706.04499-3-42-3': 'The total number of tokens [MATH] is 43 (alphabet size plus a few special characters) and the maximum sequence length [MATH] is 10 (sentences from the corpus are clipped).', '1706.04499-3-42-4': 'We provide results for two sub-datasets generated with the following replacement probabilities: 0.3 and 0.5.', '1706.04499-3-42-5': 'For this task, we follow [CITATION] and use the edit distance as our cost.', '1706.04499-3-42-6': 'It is defined as the edit distance between the predicted sequence and the ground truth sequence divided by the ground truth length.', '1706.04499-3-42-7': 'We reuse the attention-based encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 100 described in .', '1706.04499-3-42-8': 'For all runs, we use the Adam optimizer with learning rate 0.001 and batch size of 128.', '1706.04499-3-42-9': 'Results are given in Table [REF], including Actor-Critic runs on our data splits as an additional baseline.', '1706.04499-3-43-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-3-43-1': 'First, SeaRnn outperforms MLE by a significant margin on the two different tasks and datasets, which confirms our intuition that taking structured information into account enables better performance.', '1706.04499-3-43-2': 'Second, we observed that the best performing losses were those structurally close to MLE - LL and KL - whereas others (detailed in Appendix [REF]) did not improve results.', '1706.04499-3-43-3': 'This might be explained by the fact that RNN architectures and optimization techniques have been evolving for decades with MLE training in mind.', '1706.04499-3-43-4': 'Third, the best roll-in/out strategy appears to be combining a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out, which is consistent with the claims from [CITATION].', '1706.04499-3-43-5': 'Fourth, although we expect SeaRnn to make stronger improvements over MLE on hard tasks (where a simplistic roll-out policy - akin to MLE - is suboptimal), we do get improvements even when outputting the ground truth (regardless of the current trajectory) is the optimal policy.', '1706.04499-3-44-0': '# Scaling up SeaRnn', '1706.04499-3-45-0': 'While SeaRnn does provide significant improvements on the two tasks we have tested it on, it comes with a rather heavy price, since a large number of roll-outs (i.e. forward passes) have to be run in order to compute the costs.', '1706.04499-3-45-1': 'This number, [MATH], is proportional both to the length of the sequences, and to the number of possible tokens.', '1706.04499-3-45-2': 'SeaRnn is therefore not directly applicable to tasks with large output sequences or vocabulary size (such as machine translation) where computing so many forward passes becomes a computational bottleneck.', '1706.04499-3-45-3': 'Even though forward passes can be parallelized more heavily than backward ones (because they do not require maintaining activations in memory), their asymptotic cost remains in [MATH], where [MATH] is the number of parameters of the model.', '1706.04499-3-46-0': 'There are a number of ways to mitigate this issue.', '1706.04499-3-46-1': 'In this paper, we focus on subsampling both the cells and the tokens when computing the costs.', '1706.04499-3-46-2': 'That is, instead of computing a cost vector for each cell, we only compute them for a subsample of all cells.', '1706.04499-3-46-3': 'Similarly, we also compute these costs only for a small portion of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-3-46-4': 'The speedups we can expect from this strategy are large, since the total number of roll-outs is proportional to both the quantities we are decreasing.', '1706.04499-3-47-0': 'Sampling strategies.', '1706.04499-3-47-1': 'First, we need to decide how we select the steps and tokens that we sample.', '1706.04499-3-47-2': 'We have chosen to sample steps uniformly when we do not take all of them.', '1706.04499-3-47-3': 'On the other hand, we have explored several different possibilities for token sampling.', '1706.04499-3-47-4': 'The first is indeed the uniform sampling strategy.', '1706.04499-3-47-5': 'The 3 alternative samplings we tried use the current state of our model: stochastic current policy sampling (where we use the current state of the stochastic policy to pick at random), a biased version of current policy sampling where we boost the scores of the low-probability tokens, and finally a top-k strategy where we take the top k tokens according to the current policy.', '1706.04499-3-47-6': 'Note that the latter strategy (top-k) can be seen as a simplified variant of targeted sampling , another smarter strategy introduced to help L2S methods scale.', '1706.04499-3-47-7': 'Finally, in all strategies we always sample the ground truth action to make sure that our performance is at least as good as MLE.', '1706.04499-3-48-0': 'Adapting our losses to sampling.', '1706.04499-3-48-1': 'Our losses require computing the costs of all possible tokens at a given step.', '1706.04499-3-48-2': 'One could still use LL by simply making the assumption that the token with minimum cost is always sampled.', '1706.04499-3-48-3': 'However this is a rather strong assumption and it means pushing down the scores of tokens that were not even sampled and hence could not compete with the others.', '1706.04499-3-48-4': 'To alleviate this issue, we replace the full softmax by a layer applied only on the tokens that were sampled .', '1706.04499-3-48-5': 'While the target can still only be in the sampled tokens, the unsampled tokens are left alone by the gradient update, at least for the first order dependency.', '1706.04499-3-48-6': 'This trick is even more needed for KL, which otherwise requires a "default" score for unsampled tokens, adding a difficult to tune hyperparameter.', '1706.04499-3-48-7': 'We refer to these new losses as sLL and sKL.', '1706.04499-3-49-0': 'Experiments.', '1706.04499-3-49-1': 'The main goal of these experiments is to assess whether or not combining subsampling with the SeaRnn algorithm is a viable strategy.', '1706.04499-3-49-2': 'To do so we ran the method on the same two datasets that we used in the previous section.', '1706.04499-3-49-3': 'We decided to only focus on subsampling tokens as the vocabulary size is usually the blocking factor rather than the sequence length.', '1706.04499-3-49-4': 'Thus we sampled all cells.', '1706.04499-3-49-5': 'We evaluate different sampling strategies and training losses.', '1706.04499-3-49-6': 'For all experiments, we use the learned policy for roll-in and the mixed one for roll-out and we sample 5 tokens per cell.', '1706.04499-3-49-7': 'Finally, we use the same optimization techniques than in the previous experiment.', '1706.04499-3-50-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-3-50-1': 'Results are given in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-3-50-2': 'The analysis of this experiment yields interesting observations.', '1706.04499-3-50-3': 'First, and perhaps most importantly, subsampling appears to be a viable strategy to obtain a large part of the improvements of SeaRnn while keeping computational costs under control.', '1706.04499-3-50-4': 'Indeed, we recover all of the improvements of the full method while only sampling a fraction of all possible tokens.', '1706.04499-3-50-5': 'Second, it appears that the best strategy for token sampling depends on the chosen loss.', '1706.04499-3-50-6': 'In the case of sLL, the top-k strategy performs best, whereas sKL favors the biased current policy.', '1706.04499-3-50-7': 'Third, it also seems like the best performing loss is task-dependent.', '1706.04499-3-50-8': 'Finally, this sampling technique yields a 5[MATH] running time speedup, therefore validating our scaling approach.', '1706.04499-3-51-0': '# Neural Machine Translation.', '1706.04499-3-52-0': 'Having introduced a cheaper alternative SeaRnn method enables us to apply it to a large-scale structured prediction task and to thus investigate whether our algorithm also improves upon MLE in more challenging real-life settings.', '1706.04499-3-53-0': 'We choose neural machine translation as out task, and the German-English translation track of the IWSLT 2014 campaign as our dataset, as it was used in several related papers and thus allows for easier comparisons.', '1706.04499-3-53-1': 'We reuse the pre-processing of [CITATION], obtaining training, validation and test datasets of roughly 153k, 7k and 7k sentence pairs respectively with vocabularies of size 22822 words for English and 32009 words for German.', '1706.04499-3-54-0': 'For fair comparison to related methods, we use similar architectures.', '1706.04499-3-54-1': 'To compare with BSO and Actor-Critic, we use an encoder-decoder model with GRU cells of size 256, with a bidirectional encoder and single-layer RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-54-2': 'For the specific case of Mixer, we replace the recurrent encoder with a convolutional encoder as in [CITATION] .', '1706.04499-3-54-3': 'We use Adam as our optimizer, with an initial learning rate of [MATH] gradually decreasing to [MATH], and a batch size of 64.', '1706.04499-3-54-4': 'We select the best models on the validation set and report results both without and with dropout (0.3).', '1706.04499-3-55-0': 'Regarding the specific settings of SeaRnn, we use a reference roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-3-55-1': 'Additionally, we sample 25 tokens at each cell, following a mixed sampling strategy (detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-3-55-2': 'We use the best performing loss on the validation set, i.e. the KL loss with scaling parameter 200.', '1706.04499-3-56-0': 'The traditional evaluation metric for such tasks is the BLEU score .', '1706.04499-3-56-1': 'As we cannot use this corpus-wide metric to compute our sentence-level intermediate costs, we adopt the alternative smoothed BLEU score of [CITATION] as our cost.', '1706.04499-3-56-2': 'We use a custom reference policy (detailed in Appendix [REF]).', '1706.04499-3-56-3': 'We report the corpus-wide BLEU score on the test set in Table [REF].', '1706.04499-3-57-0': 'Key takeaways.', '1706.04499-3-57-1': 'First, the significant improvements SeaRnn obtains over MLE on this task (2 BLEU points without dropout) show that the algorithm can be profitably applied to large-scale, challenging structured prediction tasks at a reasonable computational cost.', '1706.04499-3-57-2': 'Second, our performance is on par or better than those of related methods with comparable baselines.', '1706.04499-3-57-3': 'Our performance using a convolutional encoder is similar to that of Mixer.', '1706.04499-3-57-4': 'Compared to BSO , our baseline, absolute performance and improvements are all stronger.', '1706.04499-3-57-5': 'While SeaRnn presents similar improvements to Actor-Critic, the absolute performance is slightly worse.', '1706.04499-3-57-6': 'This can be explained in part by the fact that SeaRnn requires twice less parameters during training.', '1706.04499-3-58-0': 'Finally, the learned roll-in policy performed poorly for this specific task, so we used instead a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-3-58-1': 'While this observation seems to go against the L2S analysis from [CITATION], it is consistent with another experiment we ran: we tried applying scheduled sampling - which uses a schedule of mixed roll-ins - on this dataset, but did not succeed to obtain any improvements, despite using a careful schedule as proposed by their authors in private communications.', '1706.04499-3-58-2': 'One potential factor is that our reference policy is not good enough to yield valuable signal when starting from a poor roll-in.', '1706.04499-3-58-3': 'Another possibility is that the underlying optimization problem becomes harder when using a learned rather than a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-3-59-0': '# Discussion', '1706.04499-3-60-0': 'We now contrast SeaRnn to several related algorithms, including traditional L2S approaches (which are not adapted to RNN training), and RNN training methods inspired by L2S and RL.', '1706.04499-3-61-0': 'Traditional L2S approaches.', '1706.04499-3-61-1': 'Although SeaRnn is heavily inspired by Searn, it is actually closer to Lols , another L2S algorithm.', '1706.04499-3-61-2': 'As Lols, SeaRnn is a meta-algorithm where roll-in/roll-out strategies are customizable (we explored most combinations in our experiments).', '1706.04499-3-61-3': 'Our findings are in agreement with those of [CITATION]: we advocate using the same combination, that is, a learned roll-in and a mixed roll-out.', '1706.04499-3-61-4': 'The one exception to this rule of thumb is when the associated reduced problem is too hard (as seems to be the case for machine translation), in which case we recommend switching to a reference roll-in.', '1706.04499-3-62-0': 'Moreover, as noted in Section [REF], SeaRnn adapts the optimization process of Lols (the one difference being that our method is stochastic rather than online): each intermediate dataset is only used for a single gradient step.', '1706.04499-3-62-1': 'This means the policy interpolation is of a different nature than in Searn where intermediate datasets are optimized for fully and the resulting policy is mixed with the previous one.', '1706.04499-3-63-0': 'However, despite the similarities we have just underlined, SeaRnn presents significant differences from these traditional L2S algorithms.', '1706.04499-3-63-1': 'First off, and most importantly, SeaRnn is a full integration of the L2S ideas to RNN training, whereas previous methods cannot be used for this purpose directly.', '1706.04499-3-63-2': 'Second, in order to achieve this adaptation we had to modify several design choices, including:', '1706.04499-3-64-0': 'L2S-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-3-64-1': 'Several other papers have tried using L2S-like ideas for better RNN training, starting with [CITATION] which introduces "scheduled sampling" to avoid the exposure bias problem.', '1706.04499-3-64-2': 'The idea is to start with teacher forcing and to gradually use more and more model predictions instead of ground truth tokens during training.', '1706.04499-3-64-3': 'This is akin to a mixed roll-in - an idea which also appears in .', '1706.04499-3-65-0': '[CITATION]]Wiseman2016b adapt one of the early variants of the L2S framework: the "Learning A Search Optimization" approach of [CITATION]]Daume2005 to train RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-65-1': 'However LaSO is quite different from the more modern Searn family of algorithms that we focus on: it does not include either local classifiers or roll-outs, and has much weaker theoretical guarantees.', '1706.04499-3-65-2': 'Additionally, BSO’s training loss is defined by violations in the beam-search procedure, yielding a very different algorithm from SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-3-65-3': 'Furthermore, BSO requires being able to compute a meaningful loss on partial sequences, and thus does not handle general structured losses unlike SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-3-65-4': 'Finally, its ad hoc surrogate objective provides very sparse sequence-level training signal, as mentioned by their authors, thus requiring warm-start.', '1706.04499-3-66-0': '[CITATION] use a loss that is similar to LL for parsing, a specific task where cost-to-go are essentially free.', '1706.04499-3-66-1': 'This property is also a requirement for [CITATION], in which new gradient procedures are introduced to incorporate neural classifiers in the AggreVaTe variant of L2S.', '1706.04499-3-66-2': 'In contrast, SeaRnn can be used on tasks without a free cost-to-go oracle.', '1706.04499-3-67-0': 'RL-inspired approaches.', '1706.04499-3-67-1': 'In structured prediction tasks, we have access to ground truth trajectories, i.e. a lot more information than in traditional RL.', '1706.04499-3-67-2': 'One major direction of research has been to adapt RL techniques to leverage this additional information.', '1706.04499-3-67-3': 'The main idea is to try to optimize the expectation of the test error directly (under the stochastic policy parameterized by the RNN): [EQUATION]', '1706.04499-3-67-4': 'Since we are taking an expectation over all possible structured outputs, the only term that depends on the parameters is the probability term (the tokens in the error term are fixed).', '1706.04499-3-67-5': 'This allows this loss function to support non-differentiable test errors, which is a key advantage.', '1706.04499-3-67-6': 'Of course, actually computing the expectation over an exponential number of possibilities is computationally intractable.', '1706.04499-3-68-0': 'To circumvent this issue, [CITATION] subsample trajectories according to the learned policy, while [CITATION] use the Reinforce algorithm, which essentially approximates the expectation with a single trajectory sample.', '1706.04499-3-68-1': '[CITATION] adapt the Actor-Critic algorithm, where a second critic network is trained to approximate the expectation.', '1706.04499-3-69-0': 'While all these approaches report significant improvement on various tasks, one trait they share is that they only work when initialized from a good pre-trained model.', '1706.04499-3-69-1': 'This phenomenon is often explained by the sparsity of the information contained in "sequence-level" losses.', '1706.04499-3-69-2': 'Indeed, in the case of Reinforce, no distinction is made between the tokens that form a sequence: depending on whether the sampled trajectory is above a global baseline, all tokens are pushed up or down by the gradient update.', '1706.04499-3-69-3': 'This means good tokens are sometimes penalized and bad tokens rewarded.', '1706.04499-3-70-0': 'In contrast, SeaRnn uses "global-local" losses, with a local loss attached to each step, which contains global information since the costs are computed on full sequences.', '1706.04499-3-70-1': 'To do so, we have to "sample" more trajectories through our roll-in/roll-outs.', '1706.04499-3-70-2': 'As a result, SeaRnn does not require warm-starting to achieve good experimental performance.', '1706.04499-3-70-3': 'This distinction is quite relevant, because warm-starting means initializing in a specific region of parameter space which may be hard to escape.', '1706.04499-3-70-4': 'Exploration is less constrained when starting from scratch, leading to potentially larger gains over MLE.', '1706.04499-3-71-0': 'RL-based methods often involve optimizing additional models (baselines for Reinforce and the critic for Actor-Critic), introducing more complexity (e.g. target networks).', '1706.04499-3-71-1': 'SeaRnn does not.', '1706.04499-3-72-0': 'Finally, while maximizing the expected reward allows the RL approaches to use gradient descent even when the test error is not differentiable, it introduces another discrepancy between training and testing.', '1706.04499-3-72-1': 'Indeed, at test time, one does not decode by sampling from the stochastic policy.', '1706.04499-3-72-2': 'Instead, one selects the "best" sequence (according to a search algorithm, e.g. greedy or beam search).', '1706.04499-3-72-3': 'SeaRnn avoids this averse effect by computing costs using deterministic roll-outs - the same decoding technique as the one used at test time - so that its loss is even closer to the test loss.', '1706.04499-3-72-4': 'The associated price is that we approximate the gradient by fixing the costs, although they do depend on the parameters.', '1706.04499-3-73-0': 'Raml is another RL-inspired approach.', '1706.04499-3-73-1': 'Though quite different from the previous papers we have cited, it is also related to SeaRnn.', '1706.04499-3-73-2': 'Here, in order to mitigate the 0/1 aspect of MLE training, the authors introduce noise in the target outputs at each iteration.', '1706.04499-3-73-3': 'The amount of random noise is determined according to the associated reward (target outputs with a lot of noise obtain lower rewards and are thus less sampled).', '1706.04499-3-73-4': 'This idea is linked to the label smoothing technique , where the target distribution at each step is the addition of a Dirac (the usual MLE target) and a uniform distribution.', '1706.04499-3-73-5': 'In this sense, when using the KL loss SeaRnn can be viewed as doing learned label smoothing, where we compute the target distribution from the intermediate costs rather than arbitrarily adding the uniform distribution.', '1706.04499-3-74-0': 'Conclusion and future work.', '1706.04499-3-74-1': 'We have described SeaRnn, a novel algorithm that uses core ideas from the learning to search framework in order to alleviate the known limitations of MLE training for RNNs.', '1706.04499-3-74-2': 'By leveraging structured cost information obtained through strategic exploration, we define global-local losses.', '1706.04499-3-74-3': 'These losses provide a global feedback related to the structured task at hand, distributed locally within the cells of the RNN.', '1706.04499-3-74-4': 'This alternative procedure allows us to train RNNs from scratch and to outperform MLE on three challenging structured prediction tasks.', '1706.04499-3-74-5': 'Finally we have proposed efficient scaling techniques that allow us to apply SeaRnn on structured tasks for which the output vocabulary is very large, such as neural machine translation.', '1706.04499-3-75-0': 'The L2S literature provides several promising directions for further research.', '1706.04499-3-75-1': 'Adapting "bandit" L2S alternatives would allow us to apply SeaRnn to tasks where only a single trajectory may be observed at any given point (so trying every possible token is not possible).', '1706.04499-3-75-2': 'Focused costing - a mixed roll-out policy where a fixed number of learned steps are taken before resorting to the reference policy - could help us lift the quadratic dependency of SeaRnn on the sequence length.', '1706.04499-3-75-3': 'Finally, targeted sampling - a smart sampling strategy that prioritizes cells where the model is uncertain of what to do - could enable more efficient exploration for large-scale tasks.'}
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1412.6607
{'1412.6607-1-0-0': 'We study the structure of representations, defined as approximations of minimal sufficient statistics that are maximal invariants to nuisance factors, for visual data subject to scaling and occlusion of line-of-sight.', '1412.6607-1-0-1': 'We derive analytical expressions for such representations and show that, under certain restrictive assumptions, they are related to features commonly in use in the computer vision community.', '1412.6607-1-0-2': 'This link highlights the condition tacitly assumed by these descriptors, and also suggests ways to improve and generalize them.', '1412.6607-1-0-3': 'This new interpretation draws connections to the classical theories of sampling, hypothesis testing and group invariance.', '1412.6607-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1412.6607-1-2-0': 'A visual representation is a function of past images that is useful to answer questions about the scene given future images from it, regardless of nuisance variability that will affect them.', '1412.6607-1-2-1': '[CITATION] define an optimal representation as a minimal sufficient statistic (of past data for the scene) and a maximal invariant (of future data to nuisance factors), and propose a measure of how "useful" (informative) a representation is, via the uncertainty of the prediction density.', '1412.6607-1-2-2': 'What is a nuisance depends on the task, that includes decision and control actions about the surrounding environment, or scene and its geometry (shape, pose), photometry (reflectance), dynamics (motion) and semantics (identities, relations of "objects" within).', '1412.6607-1-2-3': 'Depending on the task, nuisance variables may include viewpoint, illumination, sensor calibration, and occlusion of line of sight.', '1412.6607-1-2-4': 'In this paper we focus on the latter and its impact in the design and learning of representations.', '1412.6607-1-3-0': '## Related Work and Contributions', '1412.6607-1-4-0': 'This paper builds on [CITATION] by focusing on occlusion and scaling phenomena.', '1412.6607-1-4-1': 'There, a representation is seen as an approximation of the likelihood function, with nuisance factors either marginalized or profiled.', '1412.6607-1-4-2': 'Most work in low-level vision handles occlusions by restricting the attention to local regions of the image, resulting in representations known as local descriptors - too many to review here, with SIFT a prototypical representative [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-4-3': 'Scale changes are handled by performing computation in scale-space [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-4-4': 'Empirical comparisons abound (e.g., [CITATION]) and recently expanded to include convolutional networks [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-4-5': 'What is missing is a framework to relate various descriptors to each other, so the assumptions on which they rely become patent, and to an "ideal" representation, so one can see how to improve them, not just compare them on any given dataset.', '1412.6607-1-5-0': 'We show how removing nuisance variability due to occlusions is generally intractable, but can be approximated leading to a composite (correspondence) hypothesis test, which provides grounding for the use of "patches" or "receptive fields," ubiquitous in practice (Sect. [REF]).', '1412.6607-1-5-1': 'The analysis reveals that the size of the domain of the filters should be decoupled from spectral characteristics of the image, unlike traditionally taught in scale-space theory, an unintuitive consequence of the analysis (Sect. [REF]).', '1412.6607-1-5-2': 'In Sect. [REF], as a way of example, we show how the theory can be exploited to approximate the optimal descriptor of a single image, under an explicit model of image formation (the Lambert-Ambient, or LA, model), and nuisance variability.', '1412.6607-1-5-3': 'This turns out to be related to SIFT [CITATION] and the Scattering Transform [CITATION], except for an important modification and known as domain-scale pooling (DSP).', '1412.6607-1-5-4': 'This suggests a way to improve both: DSP-SIFT was introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-5-5': 'An extension of domain-size pooling to the scattering transform (DSP-SC) and to a convolutional neural network (DSP-CNN) are described in Sect. [REF] and [REF] respectively.', '1412.6607-1-6-0': 'Of course, the restriction to a single training image is rather limiting, so in Sect. [REF] we show how to exploit multiple images to construct local representations, either by sampling (an approach known as multi-view (MV)-HOG) or by explicitly reconstructing a point-estimate of the underlying geometry (reconstructive (R)-HOG), both introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-7-0': '# Background', '1412.6607-1-8-0': 'We treat images as random vectors [MATH] and the scene [MATH] as an (infinite-dimensional) parameter.', '1412.6607-1-8-1': 'A representation is a function [MATH] of past images [MATH] that maximally reduces uncertainty on the scene, given images from it and regardless of nuisances [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-8-2': 'Unfortunately, even defining the uncertainty on the scene is challenging, let alone computing it and optimizing it with respect to all possible measurable functions to find optimal representations.', '1412.6607-1-8-3': 'Mutual information is defined for random variables that can take a countable number of values, and can be extended to the continuum, but there are technical problems with the extension to infinite-dimensional objects such as [MATH]: Its entropy would be infinite no matter how large the sample on which we are conditioning [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-8-4': '[CITATION] propose a characterization in terms of the likelihood function, which summarized in Sect. [REF] after some nomenclature.', '1412.6607-1-9-0': '## Nomenclature', '1412.6607-1-10-0': 'A statistic [MATH] is a function of the sample; it is sufficient (of [MATH] for [MATH]) if [MATH] does not depend on [MATH] (Def. 3.1 of [CITATION]); it is minimal if it is a function of all other sufficient statistics ([CITATION], page 368).', '1412.6607-1-10-1': 'Thus all "information" about [MATH] in the sample [MATH] is contained in [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-10-2': 'If [MATH] is minimal, any smaller [MATH] (in the sense of inclusion of sigma algebras) entails "information loss."', '1412.6607-1-10-3': 'A nuisance [MATH] is an unknown parameter that is not of interest and yet appears in the likelihood.', '1412.6607-1-10-4': 'A function [MATH] is [MATH]-invariant if [MATH] for all [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-10-5': 'It is a maximal invariant if [MATH] for some [MATH] (Def. 2.4 of [CITATION]).', '1412.6607-1-10-6': 'A statistic [MATH] is complete if for any function [MATH] we have [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-10-7': 'The likelihood approach to eliminating nuisance parameters is to maximize, or max-out: If [MATH] is the joint likelihood, omitting reference to the data [MATH], [EQUATION] is the profile likelihood.', '1412.6607-1-10-8': 'If [MATH] is treated as a random variable with prior [MATH], it can be eliminated by marginalization from the conditional likelihood [MATH]: [EQUATION] is the marginal likelihood.', '1412.6607-1-10-9': 'The prior may be uninformative, [MATH] the base (normalized Haar) measure on [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-10-10': 'If [MATH] is a group, the orbit traced for all possible values of [MATH] is the orbit likelihood: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-11-0': '## Sampling, anti-aliasing and the SOA likelihood', '1412.6607-1-12-0': 'Sampling refers to a restriction of a function [MATH] to a discrete subset [MATH] generated by a (deterministic or stochastic) sampling mechanism [MATH], possibly depending on the data.', '1412.6607-1-12-1': 'A co-variant detector is a functional [MATH] (Morse in [MATH], i.e. ) having isolated extrema [MATH] that equivary, [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-12-2': 'Anti-aliasing refers to the weighted average of the function [MATH] in a (possibly unbounded) neighborhood of a sample [MATH] with weight function [MATH]: [MATH], normalized with [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-12-3': 'When the weights are positive we indicate [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-12-4': 'In this case, anti-aliasing is equivalent to local marginalization around the sample [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-12-5': 'Although classical sampling theory only considers the translation group of the real line, the definitions apply to other groups.', '1412.6607-1-12-6': 'The sampled-orbit anti-aliased (SOA) likelihood is defined in [CITATION] as [EQUATION] where the integral with respect to [MATH] is anti-aliasing.', '1412.6607-1-12-7': 'The point maximum of the SOA is the profile SOA likelihood: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-12-8': 'Under suitable regularity conditions on the map [MATH], when samples are generated by a co-variant detector, the SOA likelihoods arbitrarily approximate a maximal [MATH]-invariant, even when marginalization is not relative to the base measure (and therefore marginalization does not yield invariance) [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-13-0': '## The Lambert-Ambient (LA) model', '1412.6607-1-14-0': 'The Lambert-Ambient (LA) model [CITATION] is the simplest to capture the phenomenology of image formation including scaling, occlusion, and rudimentary illumination.', '1412.6607-1-14-1': 'For us, what matters of the LA model are three facts: First, the scene separates the past from the future: [MATH], meaning that [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-14-2': 'Second, conditioning on viewpoint factorizes the likelihood: If [MATH] is the position and orientation of the camera in the reference frame of the scene [MATH] and the image [MATH] is made of pixels [MATH], then [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-14-3': 'Third, the action of restricted groups [MATH], for instance planar translations, rotations, scalings, affine and projective transformations, contrast transformations, etc. is approximately equivariant, in the sense that for a sufficiently small domain, [EQUATION] where the product [MATH] denotes group composition and the bar (omitted henceforth) denotes the embedding of the group action on the (2-D) plane into (3-D) Euclidean space.', '1412.6607-1-14-4': 'In Sect. [REF] we will motivate these assumptions by restricting the representation to local spatial domains, and use it in Sect. [REF] to achieve invariance to arbitrary vantage points.', '1412.6607-1-15-0': '## Optimal representation for the LA model', '1412.6607-1-16-0': 'Under the assumptions of the LA model, an optimal representation [CITATION] [EQUATION] for nuisance variables [MATH] including contrast (Sect. [REF]), viewpoint (Sect. [REF]), and occlusions (Sect. [REF]), where [MATH], can be approximated from a training set [MATH], via [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-16-1': 'Alternatively, invariance to [MATH] can be achieved by marginalization of the base measure, in which case [EQUATION] [What you lose if you use lousy view(s) - Active Sensing] A representation, informative as it may be, can be no more informative than the data itself, uninformative as it may be.', '1412.6607-1-16-2': 'This is irrelevant in our context, for we are seeking statistics that are as informative as the (training) data (sufficient), however good or bad that is.', '1412.6607-1-16-3': 'For the representation to (asymptotically) approach the informative content of the scene, it is necessary to design the experiment [MATH] so that the data collected [MATH], with [MATH], yields statistics that are asymptotically complete [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-16-4': 'Such active learning or active sensing is beyond the scope of this paper.', '1412.6607-1-17-0': 'When a single training datum is given, [MATH], no intrinsic (intra-class) variability can be learned, and the variability in the data is ascribed to the nuisances.', '1412.6607-1-17-1': 'The representation for [MATH] thus reduces to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-17-2': 'We now illustrate how to approximate optimal representations explicitly.', '1412.6607-1-18-0': '# Learning Visual Representations', '1412.6607-1-19-0': 'In [CITATION], it is shown that the orbit likelihood of the LA model is maximally invariant and minimally sufficient.', '1412.6607-1-19-1': 'The advantage of retaining the orbit is that conditioning on the vantage points makes each pixel independent [REF].', '1412.6607-1-19-2': 'This greatly simplifies the construction of the representation as the joint histogram is the product of one-dimensional marginals.', '1412.6607-1-19-3': 'The disadvantage is that, to evaluate a test datum [MATH] we have to solve an optimization problem [REF], a search that cannot be performed until the test datum [MATH] becomes available.', '1412.6607-1-19-4': 'On the other hand, evaluation of the marginal likelihood [REF] is straightforward and does not entail any search.', '1412.6607-1-19-5': 'However, groups acting on the domain of the data introduce spatial dependencies, and therefore the marginal likelihood is difficult to construct.', '1412.6607-1-19-6': 'Furthermore, although the marginal likelihood is [MATH]-invariant, it is not maximal.', '1412.6607-1-19-7': 'The SOA likelihood (Sect. [REF]) trades off the two approaches (marginalization and max-out), within the framework of sampling theory.', '1412.6607-1-19-8': 'Thus, visual representations can be learned or designed to compute the SOA likelihood with respect to nuisances that include illumination, viewpoint (with the associated scale changes), and partial occlusions.', '1412.6607-1-20-0': '## Contrast invariance', '1412.6607-1-21-0': 'Contrast is a monotonic continuous transformation of the (range space of the) data, and it is well-known that the curvature of the level setsblue is a maximal invariant [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-21-1': 'Since the gradient orientation is everywhere orthogonal to the level sets, it is also a maximal contrast invariant.blue The following expression for the invariant is obtained via marginalization of the norm of the gradient for a single training image, since the action of contrast is independent at each pixel.', '1412.6607-1-22-0': 'Given a training image [MATH] and a test image [MATH], assuming that the latter is affected by noise that is independent in the gradient direction and magnitude, then the maximal invariant of [MATH] to the group [MATH] of contrast transformations is given by [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-22-1': 'The independence assumption above is equivalent to assuming that the gradient magnitude and orientation of [MATH] are related to the gradient magnitude and orientation of [MATH] by a simple additive model: [MATH] and [MATH], where [MATH] denotes addition modulo [MATH], and [MATH] and [MATH] are independent.', '1412.6607-1-22-2': 'These are all modeling assumptions, clearly not strictly satisfied in practice, but reasonable first-order approximations.', '1412.6607-1-22-3': 'Note that, other than for the gradient, the computations above can be performed point-wise, so we could write [REF] at each pixel [MATH]: if [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-22-4': 'In the rest of the paper, we use the symbol [MATH] to denote the orientation of the image gradient relative to one of the coordinate axes, and omit the subscript [MATH] when referring to contrast (since the use of the argument [MATH] makes it unambiguous).', '1412.6607-1-22-5': 'The width of the kernel [MATH] is a design (regularization) parameter.', '1412.6607-1-23-0': '[No invariance for [MATH]] Note that [REF] is invariant to contrast transformations of [MATH], but not of [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-23-1': 'For a single training image, the latter can be handled by normalization as we will see next.', '1412.6607-1-23-2': 'For multiple images, the factor can in principle be different for each training image.', '1412.6607-1-24-0': '[Bayesian invariant]', '1412.6607-1-25-0': 'In the proof of Theorem [REF], the gradient magnitude is marginalized with respect to the base measure.', '1412.6607-1-25-1': 'With a different prior, for instance arising from bounds on the gradient or from statistics of natural images, marginalization yields a factor other than [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-25-2': 'Clamping, described next, can be understood as a particular choice of prior for marginalization of the gradient magnitude.', '1412.6607-1-26-0': 'Invariance to contrast transformations in the (single) training image can be performed by normalizing the likelihood, which in turn can be done in a number of ways.', '1412.6607-1-26-1': 'If contrast transformations are globally affineblue, then the joint likelihood can be normalized by simply dividing by the integral over [MATH], which is the [MATH] norm of the histogram across the entire image/patch [EQUATION] that should be used instead of the customary [MATH] [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-26-2': 'If the contrast transformation is non-linear, it cannot be eliminated by global normalizationblue.', '1412.6607-1-27-0': 'When the joint distribution is approximated by the product of marginals, as in [CITATION], joint normalization is still favored in practice as it introduces some correlations among marginal histograms [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-27-1': 'However, cells with large gradients tend to dominate the histogram, pushing all other peaks lower.', '1412.6607-1-27-2': 'Alternatively, one could independently normalize each of the histograms, [MATH] and then concatenate them.', '1412.6607-1-27-3': 'But this has the opposite effect: Cells with faint peaks, once re-normalized, are given undue importance and relative intensity difference between different cells are discarded.', '1412.6607-1-27-4': 'A common trick consisting of joint normalization (so faint cells do not prevail) followed by "clamping" (saturation of the maximum to a fraction of the value of the highest peak, so large gradients do not dominate), and then re-normalization, seems to achieve a tradeoff between the two [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-27-5': 'This process can also be understood as a way of marginalizing [MATH], with respect to a different measure [MATH], as described in Rem.', '1412.6607-1-27-6': '[REF] while assuming that, within each region, contrast transformations are affine.', '1412.6607-1-28-0': 'Once invariance to contrast transformations is achieved, which can be done on a single image [MATH], we are left with nuisances [MATH] that include general viewpoint changes, including the occlusions they induce.', '1412.6607-1-28-1': 'This can be handled by computing the SOA likelihood with respect to the product [MATH] of [MATH] (the group of general rigid motions, Sect. [REF]) and the scale semi-group, which we discuss next, from a training sample [MATH], leading to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-28-2': 'In the next section we show how to handle occlusions, and in the following one general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-1-29-0': '## Occlusions', '1412.6607-1-30-0': 'We do not know ahead of time what portion of an object or scene, seen in training images, will be visible in a test image.', '1412.6607-1-30-1': 'Occlusion, or visibility, is arguably the single most critical aspect of visual representations.', '1412.6607-1-30-2': 'It enforces locality, as dealing with occlusion nuisances entails searching through, or marginalizing, all possible (multiply-connected) subsets of the test image.', '1412.6607-1-30-3': 'This power set is clearly intractable even for very small images.', '1412.6607-1-31-0': '### Bypassing shape and justifying "patches" or "receptive fields"', '1412.6607-1-32-0': 'We illustrate a principle to bypass combinatorial explosion for a single training image, absent all other nuisances.', '1412.6607-1-32-1': 'A training [MATH] and a test image [MATH] correspond (hypothesis [MATH]) if there exist subsets of [MATH], [MATH], and of [MATH], [MATH], such that the restrictions come from the same scene, i.e. in this setting they differ by a white (zero-mean, uninformative) residual.', '1412.6607-1-32-2': 'Under this simplistic model, the subsets [MATH] are the same, and [MATH] where [MATH] is either a white (spatially i.i.d) zero-mean process with a small covariance, [MATH] in the corresponding region, or something else, for instance uniform with a mean in the order of magnitude of the intensity range, assumed normalized to one, [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-32-3': 'Hypothesis [MATH] is that there exists no such region, and [MATH] on the entire domain.', '1412.6607-1-32-4': 'Since we do not know the region [MATH], this is a composite hypothesis testing problem, where the likelihood ratio is given by [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-32-5': 'Missed detections (treating a co-visible pixel as occluded) and false alarms (treating an occluded pixel as visible) have different costs: Omitting a co-visible pixel from [MATH] decreases the likelihood by a factor corresponding to multiplication by a Gaussian for samples drawn from the same distribution; vice-versa, including a pixel from [MATH] (false alarm) decreases the log-likelihood by a factor equal to multiplying by a Gaussian evaluated at points drawn from another distribution, such as uniform.', '1412.6607-1-32-6': 'So, testing for correspondence on subsets of the co-visible regions, assuming the region is sufficiently large, reduces the power, but not the validity, of the test.', '1412.6607-1-32-7': 'This observation can be used to fix the shape of the regions, leaving only their size to be marginalized, or searched over.blue This reasoning justifies the use of "patches" or "receptive fields" to seed image matching, but emphasizes that a search over different sizes (not "scales", Sect. [REF]) is needed.', '1412.6607-1-33-0': '### Invariance to occlusion', '1412.6607-1-34-0': 'Much of the literature on local descriptors further simplifies correspondence by selecting scales [CITATION], using the appearance of the scene (really, an image [MATH]) to determines the size of the region [MATH] where the descriptor is computed.', '1412.6607-1-34-1': 'This is motivated byblue [CITATION], where the tying of appearance (e.g., spatial frequencies) and size is known as the "uncertainty principle."', '1412.6607-1-34-2': 'But while the tie makes sense when the goal is to compress the image, it does not for correspondence, as the size of a region that will be visible in a test image has nothing to do with the appearance of the scene within.blue Therefore, the size of the domain where the descriptor is computed must be untied from the appearance of the scene within, and instead treated as an independent nuisance and included among those to be managed by max-out or marginalization.', '1412.6607-1-34-3': 'Surprisingly, no existing descriptor or convolutional architecture did so, until recently.', '1412.6607-1-35-0': '### Local descriptors revisited', '1412.6607-1-36-0': 'Co-variant scale selection can be thought as a way to sample scale, as opposed to selecting corresponding scales between training and test sets.', '1412.6607-1-36-1': 'But to approximate the SOA likelihood, co-variant sampling must be coupled with anti-aliasing, which corresponds to domain-size pooling (DS pooling), a concept introduced in [CITATION] and illustrated below for the case of a descriptor built on a single image.', '1412.6607-1-36-2': 'The difference between scale-space and "size-space" is illustrated in Fig. [REF].', '1412.6607-1-36-3': 'If a translation-scale co-variant detector generates a (sufficient) number of locations [MATH] and scales [MATH], then the SOA likelihood with respect to the translation-scale group of the plane is given by [EQUATION] where the location prior is captured by an isotropic kernel [MATH] with dispersion parameter [MATH], and the scale prior is captured by a measure [MATH] (for instance an exponential unilateral).', '1412.6607-1-36-4': 'If orientation is also sampled in a co-variant manner, or canonized with gravity as described in Ex.', '1412.6607-1-36-5': '[REF], then orientation anti-aliasing is already implicit in the histogram binning, represented by a kernel with dispersion parameter [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-36-6': 'The above is precisely one cell of DSP-SIFT as introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-36-7': 'We therefore have the following: [DSP-SIFT] The DSP-SIFT descriptor [CITATION] [REF] approximates the ideal representation [REF], [REF] for [MATH] the group of planar similarities and local contrast transformations, when the scene is a single training image, and the test image is restricted to an unknown subset of its domain.', '1412.6607-1-37-0': 'Since the standard SIFT/HOG and its variants do not anti-alias domain size, invariance to partial occlusion (and therefore scale) is lost.', '1412.6607-1-37-1': '[Assumptions implicit in SIFT/HOG] The SIFT descriptor [CITATION] and its variants are a special case of DSP-SIFT [REF] with [MATH], and therefore approximate the ideal representation [REF] only at a fixed scale [MATH] for a scene that is flat, fronto-parallel, undergoing purely translational motion along the image plane.', '1412.6607-1-38-0': 'SIFT as designed violates the sampling principles described here, as sampling occurs with respect to the full similarity group (positions, scales and rotations are selected using a co-variant detector), but anti-aliasing is only performed in position (spatial pooling) and orientation (histogram smoothing), not in scale, which in SIFT is tied to domain size.', '1412.6607-1-39-0': 'In both SIFT and DSP-SIFT, and most other local descriptors, samples are aggregated independently at each neighborhood (although there may be overlap) and concatenated.', '1412.6607-1-39-1': 'In the interpretation of SIFT as a likelihood function, this corresponds to assuming that the joint likelihood factorizes as the product of the marginals, which in turn corresponds to assuming that the random variables [MATH] are (spatially) independent.', '1412.6607-1-39-2': 'Each local descriptor is then considered independently, as in a "bag-of-word" approach.', '1412.6607-1-39-3': 'Deep convolutional architectures relax this assumption, as shown in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-39-4': 'In Sect. [REF] we show how a scattering network [CITATION] fits in our framework.', '1412.6607-1-40-0': 'Finally, a single image does not afford the ability to separate nuisance from intrinsic variability.', '1412.6607-1-40-1': 'This issue becomes patent when attempting to achieve invariance to general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-1-41-0': '## General viewpoint changes', '1412.6607-1-42-0': 'If a co-variant translation-scale and size sampling/anti-aliasing mechanism is employed, then around each sample the only residual variability to viewpoint [MATH] is reduced to [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-42-1': 'That can be further factored into a rotation of the image plane ("in-plane" rotation), and its complement ("out-of-plane" rotation).', '1412.6607-1-42-2': 'We next show how in-plane rotations can be eliminated, leaving only out-of-plane rotations.', '1412.6607-1-43-0': '[Rotation Invariance]', '1412.6607-1-44-0': 'Canonization is particularly well suited to deal with planar rotation, since the statistics of natural images ensure that with high probability orientation-co-variant detectors have few isolated extrema.', '1412.6607-1-44-1': 'An example is the local maximum of the norm of the gradient along the direction [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-44-2': 'Invariance to [MATH] can be achieved by retaining the samples [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-44-3': 'Rotation anti-aliasing is performed by regularizing the orientation histogram.', '1412.6607-1-44-4': 'Note that, as it was for contrast, planar rotations can affect both the training [MATH] and the test image [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-44-5': 'In some cases, a consistent reference (canonical element) is available for both when scenes or objects are geo-referenced: The projection of the gravity vector onto the image plane .', '1412.6607-1-44-6': 'In this case, [MATH], and [MATH] is the angle of the projection of gravity onto the image plane (well defined unless they are orthogonal): [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-44-7': 'In reality, rotation canonization should contend with spatial quantization, neglected here since rotation errors are absorbed by the binning of gradient orientation [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-45-0': 'This leaves out-of-plane rotations to be profiled or marginalized.', '1412.6607-1-45-1': 'Unfortunately, the effects of such rotations on future images depend on the shape of the underlying scene, which is unknown, and that cannot be determined from a single image.', '1412.6607-1-45-2': 'Therefore, the only way in which true viewpoint changes can be factored out of the representation is if multiple training images of the same scene are available.', '1412.6607-1-45-3': 'In the next section we show how such multi-view representations can be constructed.', '1412.6607-1-46-0': '## Extension to multiple views', '1412.6607-1-47-0': 'Out-of-plane rotations induce a scene shape-dependent deformation on the domain of the image that cannot be determined from a single training image.', '1412.6607-1-47-1': '[CITATION] have proposed extensions based on a sampling approximation of the likelihood function, [MATH], or on a point estimate of the scene [MATH], multi-view HOG and reconstructive HOG respectively.', '1412.6607-1-47-2': 'The estimated scene has a geometric component (shape) [MATH] and a photometric component (radiance) [MATH], inferred from the LA model as described in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-47-3': 'These in turn enable the approximation of the predictive likelihood [MATH], and hence the representation: [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is the pre-image of a perspective projection (the point of first intersection of the ray through the pixel [MATH] with the surface [MATH]).', '1412.6607-1-47-4': 'Alternatively, a sampling approximation of the likelihood function [MATH] yields "multi-view HOG" [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-47-5': 'Note that the gradient weight [MATH] is absent, since individual samples of past data do not enable separating nuisance from intrinsic variability, and each sample image [MATH] has different contrast, so the factor cannot be simply eliminated by normalization as done in Rem.', '1412.6607-1-47-6': '[REF] for a single image.', '1412.6607-1-47-7': 'Therefore, in MV-HOG it is necessary to assume that training images are captured under the same illumination conditions.', '1412.6607-1-47-8': 'In MV-HOG, regularization is implicit in the kernel, and the predictive likelihood is based on simple planar transformations.', '1412.6607-1-47-9': 'In R-HOG, the estimated scene (which requires regularization to be inferred) acts as the regularizer [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-48-0': 'Once the effects of occlusions are considered (which force the representation to be local), and the effects of general viewpoint changes are accounted for (which creates the necessity for multiple training images of the same scene), a maximal contrast/viewpoint/occlusion invariant can be approximated via the SOA likelihood.', '1412.6607-1-48-1': 'Using [REF] and [REF], the SOA likelihood [REF] becomes:', '1412.6607-1-49-0': '[EQUATION]', '1412.6607-1-50-0': 'The assumption that all existing multiple-view extensions of SIFT do not overcome is the conditional independence of the intensity of different pixels [REF].', '1412.6607-1-50-1': 'This is discussed in [CITATION] for the case of convolutional deep architectures, and in the next section for Scattering Networks.', '1412.6607-1-51-0': '## DSP-Scattering Networks', '1412.6607-1-52-0': 'The scattering transform [CITATION] convolves an image (or patch) with a Gabor filter bank at different rotations and dilations, takes the modulus of the responses, and applies an average operator to yield coefficients.', '1412.6607-1-52-1': 'This is repeated to produce coefficients at different layers in a scattering network.', '1412.6607-1-52-2': 'The first layer is equivalent to SIFT [CITATION], in the sense that [REF] can be implemented via convolution with a Gabor element with orientation [MATH] then taking the modulus of the response.', '1412.6607-1-52-3': 'This is the convolution-modulus step in the scattering transform.', '1412.6607-1-52-4': 'Then the local marginalization in [REF], except for the integral with respect to [MATH], corresponds to a low-pass filter applied to the histogram, yielding a spatially-pooled (regularized) histogram of gradient orientations.', '1412.6607-1-52-5': 'This is [REF] for a fixed [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-52-6': 'The same operator exists in the scattering network where the modulus of the filter response goes through a low-pass filter to generate the final coefficients.', '1412.6607-1-53-0': 'Of course there could be implementational difference depending on the choices of kernels, their parameters, and number of samples or filters in the bank.', '1412.6607-1-53-1': 'Nevertheless, one could conjecture that domain-size pooling (DSP) applied to a scattering network would improve performance in tasks that involve changes of scale and visibility.', '1412.6607-1-53-2': 'We call the resulting method DSP Scattering Transform (DSP-SC).', '1412.6607-1-53-3': "Indeed, this is the case, as we show in the Supplementary Material, where we compare DSP-SC to the single-scale scattering transform (SC) on both the Oxford [CITATION] and Fischer's [CITATION] datasets.", '1412.6607-1-54-0': 'Stacked architectures, such as the SC, offer the promise to lift the strong spatial independence assumption implicit in SIFT and its variant, as well as DSP-SIFT [CITATION].', '1412.6607-1-54-1': 'However, the empirical results in [CITATION] suggest that this value is exhausted after [MATH] layers.', '1412.6607-1-54-2': 'In the next section we discuss an extension to deep architectures.', '1412.6607-1-55-0': '## DSP-CNN', '1412.6607-1-56-0': 'Deep convolutional architectures can be understood as implementing successive approximations of the optimal representation [REF], by stacking layers of (conditionally) independent local representations of the form [REF], which have been shown by [CITATION] to increasingly achieve invariance to large deformations, despite locally marginalizing only affine (or similarity) transformations.', '1412.6607-1-56-1': 'As [CITATION] did for SIFT, and as we did for the Scattering Transform above, we conjectured that pooling over domain size would improve the performance of a convolutional network.', '1412.6607-1-56-2': 'In the Supplementary material we report experiments to test the conjecture using a pre-trained and fine-tuned network on benchmark datasets.', '1412.6607-1-56-3': 'For computational reasons, we limited the domain-size pooling to 3 sizes (including the base size), and only to the first two layers.', '1412.6607-1-56-4': 'Still, the experiments show marginal improvement.', '1412.6607-1-56-5': 'We conjecture that more thorough incorporation of domain-size pooling, as described in the appendix, would further improve performance after proper training (rather than a pre-trained network) is employed.', '1412.6607-1-57-0': '# Conclusions', '1412.6607-1-58-0': 'We have derived an expression [REF] for a minimal sufficient statistic of past data when the test image is restricted to a neighborhood of [MATH] where [MATH] is computed, corresponding to sampled locations around [MATH], with scales [MATH] pooled according to the prior [MATH] around the samples [MATH].', '1412.6607-1-59-0': 'If a sufficiently exciting training set is available, spanning variability due to out-of-plane rotations, marginalization of [MATH] can be replaced by temporal averaging of the training images [REF].', '1412.6607-1-59-1': 'The joint distribution of local descriptors can be captured by a stacked architectures, as shown in [CITATION] and illustrated for Scattering Networks, Deformable Parts Models, and general deep convolutional architectures.'}
{'1412.6607-2-0-0': 'We study the structure of representations, defined as approximations of minimal sufficient statistics that are maximal invariants to nuisance factors, for visual data subject to scaling and occlusion of line-of-sight.', '1412.6607-2-0-1': 'We derive analytical expressions for such representations and show that, under certain restrictive assumptions, they are related to features commonly in use in the computer vision community.', '1412.6607-2-0-2': 'This link highlights the condition tacitly assumed by these descriptors, and also suggests ways to improve and generalize them.', '1412.6607-2-0-3': 'This new interpretation draws connections to the classical theories of sampling, hypothesis testing and group invariance.', '1412.6607-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1412.6607-2-2-0': 'A visual representation is a function of past images that is useful to answer questions about the scene given future images from it, regardless of nuisance variability that will affect them.', '1412.6607-2-2-1': '[CITATION] define an optimal representation as a minimal sufficient statistic (of past data for the scene) and a maximal invariant (of future data to nuisance factors), and propose a measure of how "useful" (informative) a representation is, via the uncertainty of the prediction density.', '1412.6607-2-2-2': 'What is a nuisance depends on the task, that includes decision and control actions about the surrounding environment, or scene and its geometry (shape, pose), photometry (reflectance), dynamics (motion) and semantics (identities, relations of "objects" within).', '1412.6607-2-2-3': 'Depending on the task, nuisance variables may include viewpoint, illumination, sensor calibration, and occlusion of line of sight.', '1412.6607-2-2-4': 'In this paper we focus on the latter and its impact in the design and learning of representations.', '1412.6607-2-3-0': '## Related Work and Contributions', '1412.6607-2-4-0': 'This paper builds on [CITATION] by focusing on occlusion and scaling phenomena.', '1412.6607-2-4-1': 'There, a representation is seen as an approximation of the likelihood function, with nuisance factors either marginalized or profiled.', '1412.6607-2-4-2': 'Most work in low-level vision handles occlusions by restricting the attention to local regions of the image, resulting in representations known as local descriptors - too many to review here, with SIFT a prototypical representative [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-4-3': 'Scale changes are handled by performing computation in scale-space [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-4-4': 'Empirical comparisons abound (e.g., [CITATION]) and recently expanded to include convolutional networks [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-4-5': 'What is missing is a framework to relate various descriptors to each other, so the assumptions on which they rely become patent, and to an "ideal" representation, so one can see how to improve them, not just compare them on any given dataset.', '1412.6607-2-5-0': 'We show how removing nuisance variability due to occlusions is generally intractable, but can be approximated leading to a composite (correspondence) hypothesis test, which provides grounding for the use of "patches" or "receptive fields," ubiquitous in practice (Sect. [REF]).', '1412.6607-2-5-1': 'The analysis reveals that the size of the domain of the filters should be decoupled from spectral characteristics of the image, unlike traditionally taught in scale-space theory, an unintuitive consequence of the analysis (Sect. [REF]).', '1412.6607-2-5-2': 'In Sect. [REF], as a way of example, we show how the theory can be exploited to approximate the optimal descriptor of a single image, under an explicit model of image formation (the Lambert-Ambient, or LA, model), and nuisance variability.', '1412.6607-2-5-3': 'This turns out to be related to SIFT [CITATION] and the Scattering Transform [CITATION], except for an important modification and known as domain-scale pooling (DSP).', '1412.6607-2-5-4': 'This suggests a way to improve both: DSP-SIFT was introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-5-5': 'Extensions of domain-size pooling to the scattering transform (DSP-SC), to a convolutional neural network (DSP-CNN) and to the deformable part model (DSP-DPM) are described in Sect. [REF], [REF] and [REF] respectively.', '1412.6607-2-6-0': 'Of course, the restriction to a single training image is rather limiting, so in Sect. [REF] we show how to exploit multiple images to construct local representations, either by sampling (an approach known as multi-view (MV)-HOG) or by explicitly reconstructing a point-estimate of the underlying geometry (reconstructive (R)-HOG), both introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-7-0': '# Background', '1412.6607-2-8-0': 'We treat images as random vectors [MATH] and the scene [MATH] as an (infinite-dimensional) parameter.', '1412.6607-2-8-1': 'A representation is a function [MATH] of past images [MATH] that maximally reduces uncertainty on the scene, given images from it and regardless of nuisances [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-8-2': 'Unfortunately, even defining the uncertainty on the scene is challenging, let alone computing it and optimizing it with respect to all possible measurable functions to find optimal representations.', '1412.6607-2-8-3': 'Mutual information is defined for random variables that can take a countable number of values, and can be extended to the continuum, but there are technical problems with the extension to infinite-dimensional objects such as [MATH]: Its entropy would be infinite no matter how large the sample on which we are conditioning [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-8-4': '[CITATION] propose a characterization in terms of the likelihood function, which summarized in Sect. [REF] after some nomenclature.', '1412.6607-2-9-0': '## Nomenclature', '1412.6607-2-10-0': 'A statistic [MATH] is a function of the sample; it is sufficient (of [MATH] for [MATH]) if [MATH] does not depend on [MATH] (Def. 3.1 of [CITATION]); it is minimal if it is a function of all other sufficient statistics ([CITATION], page 368).', '1412.6607-2-10-1': 'Thus all "information" about [MATH] in the sample [MATH] is contained in [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-10-2': 'If [MATH] is minimal, any smaller statistic (in the sense of inclusion of sigma algebras) entails "information loss."', '1412.6607-2-10-3': 'A nuisance [MATH] is an unknown parameter that is not of interest and yet appears in the likelihood.', '1412.6607-2-10-4': 'A function [MATH] is [MATH]-invariant if [MATH] for all [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-10-5': 'It is a maximal invariant if [MATH] for some [MATH] (Def. 2.4 of [CITATION]).', '1412.6607-2-10-6': 'A statistic [MATH] is complete if for any function [MATH] we have [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-10-7': 'The likelihood approach to eliminating nuisance parameters is to maximize, or max-out: If [MATH] is the joint likelihood, omitting reference to the data [MATH], [EQUATION] is the profile likelihood.', '1412.6607-2-10-8': 'If [MATH] is treated as a random variable with prior [MATH], it can be eliminated by marginalization from the conditional likelihood [MATH]: [EQUATION] is the marginal likelihood.', '1412.6607-2-10-9': 'The prior may be uninformative, [MATH] the base (normalized Haar) measure on [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-10-10': 'If [MATH] is a group, the orbit traced for all possible values of [MATH] is the orbit likelihood: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-11-0': '## Sampling, anti-aliasing and the SOA likelihood', '1412.6607-2-12-0': 'Sampling refers to a restriction of a function [MATH] to a discrete subset [MATH] generated by a (deterministic or stochastic) sampling mechanism [MATH], possibly depending on the data.', '1412.6607-2-12-1': 'A co-variant detector is a functional [MATH] (Morse in [MATH], i.e. ) having isolated extrema [MATH] that equivary, [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-12-2': 'Anti-aliasing refers to the weighted average of the function [MATH] in a (possibly unbounded) neighborhood of a sample [MATH] with weight function [MATH]: [MATH], normalized with [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-12-3': 'When the weights are positive we indicate [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-12-4': 'In this case, anti-aliasing is equivalent to local marginalization around the sample [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-12-5': 'Although classical sampling theory only considers the translation group of the real line, the definitions apply to other groups.', '1412.6607-2-12-6': 'The sampled-orbit anti-aliased (SOA) likelihood is defined in [CITATION] as [EQUATION] where the integral with respect to [MATH] is anti-aliasing.', '1412.6607-2-12-7': 'The point maximum of the SOA is the profile SOA likelihood: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-12-8': 'Under suitable regularity conditions on the map [MATH], when samples are generated by a co-variant detector, the SOA likelihoods arbitrarily approximate a maximal [MATH]-invariant, even when marginalization is not relative to the base measure (and therefore marginalization does not yield invariance) [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-13-0': '## The Lambert-Ambient (LA) model', '1412.6607-2-14-0': 'The Lambert-Ambient (LA) model [CITATION] is the simplest to capture the phenomenology of image formation including scaling, occlusion, and rudimentary illumination.', '1412.6607-2-14-1': 'For us, what matters of the LA model are three facts: First, the scene separates the past from the future: [MATH], meaning that [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-14-2': 'Second, conditioning on viewpoint factorizes the likelihood: If [MATH] is the position and orientation of the camera in the reference frame of the scene [MATH] and the image [MATH] is made of pixels [MATH], then [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-14-3': 'Third, the action of restricted groups [MATH], for instance planar translations, rotations, scalings, affine and projective transformations, contrast transformations, etc. is approximately equivariant, in the sense that for a sufficiently small domain, [EQUATION] where the product [MATH] denotes group composition and the bar (omitted henceforth) denotes the embedding of the group action on the (2-D) plane into (3-D) Euclidean space.', '1412.6607-2-14-4': 'In Sect. [REF] we will motivate these assumptions by restricting the representation to local spatial domains, and use it in Sect. [REF] to achieve invariance to arbitrary vantage points.', '1412.6607-2-15-0': '## Optimal representation for the LA model', '1412.6607-2-16-0': 'Under the assumptions of the LA model, an optimal representation [CITATION] [EQUATION] for nuisance variables [MATH] including contrast (Sect. [REF]), viewpoint (Sect. [REF]), and occlusions (Sect. [REF]), where [MATH], can be approximated from a training set [MATH], via [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-16-1': 'Alternatively, invariance to [MATH] can be achieved by marginalization of the base measure, in which case [EQUATION] [What you lose if you use lousy view(s) - Active Sensing] A representation, informative as it may be, can be no more informative than the data itself, uninformative as it may be.', '1412.6607-2-16-2': 'This is irrelevant in our context, for we are seeking statistics that are as informative as the (training) data (sufficient), however good or bad that is.', '1412.6607-2-16-3': 'For the representation to (asymptotically) approach the informative content of the scene, it is necessary to design the experiment [MATH] so that the data collected [MATH], with [MATH], yields statistics that are asymptotically complete [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-16-4': 'Such active learning or active sensing is beyond the scope of this paper.', '1412.6607-2-17-0': 'When a single training datum is given, [MATH], no intrinsic (intra-class) variability can be learned, and the variability in the data is ascribed to the nuisances.', '1412.6607-2-17-1': 'The representation for [MATH] thus reduces to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-17-2': 'We now illustrate how to approximate optimal representations explicitly.', '1412.6607-2-18-0': '# Learning Visual Representations', '1412.6607-2-19-0': 'In [CITATION], it is shown that the orbit likelihood of the LA model is maximally invariant and minimally sufficient.', '1412.6607-2-19-1': 'The advantage of retaining the orbit is that conditioning on the vantage points makes each pixel independent [REF].', '1412.6607-2-19-2': 'This greatly simplifies the construction of the representation as the joint histogram is the product of one-dimensional marginals.', '1412.6607-2-19-3': 'The disadvantage is that, to evaluate a test datum [MATH] we have to solve an optimization problem [REF], a search that cannot be performed until the test datum [MATH] becomes available.', '1412.6607-2-19-4': 'On the other hand, evaluation of the marginal likelihood [REF] is straightforward and does not entail any search.', '1412.6607-2-19-5': 'However, groups acting on the domain of the data introduce spatial dependencies, and therefore the marginal likelihood is difficult to construct.', '1412.6607-2-19-6': 'Furthermore, although the marginal likelihood is [MATH]-invariant, it is not maximal.', '1412.6607-2-19-7': 'The SOA likelihood (Sect. [REF]) trades off the two approaches (marginalization and max-out), within the framework of sampling theory.', '1412.6607-2-19-8': 'Thus, visual representations can be learned or designed to compute the SOA likelihood with respect to nuisances that include illumination, viewpoint (with the associated scale changes), and partial occlusions.', '1412.6607-2-20-0': '## Contrast invariance', '1412.6607-2-21-0': 'Contrast is a monotonic continuous transformation of the (range space of the) data, and it is well-known that the curvature of the level setsblue is a maximal invariant [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-21-1': 'Since the gradient orientation is everywhere orthogonal to the level sets, it is also a maximal contrast invariant.blue The following expression for the invariant is obtained via marginalization of the norm of the gradient for a single training image, since the action of contrast is independent at each pixel.', '1412.6607-2-22-0': 'Given a training image [MATH] and a test image [MATH], assuming that the latter is affected by noise that is independent in the gradient direction and magnitude, then the maximal invariant of [MATH] to the group [MATH] of contrast transformations is given by [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-22-1': 'The independence assumption above is equivalent to assuming that the gradient magnitude and orientation of [MATH] are related to the gradient magnitude and orientation of [MATH] by a simple additive model: [MATH] and [MATH], where [MATH] denotes addition modulo [MATH], and [MATH] and [MATH] are independent.', '1412.6607-2-22-2': 'These are all modeling assumptions, clearly not strictly satisfied in practice, but reasonable first-order approximations.', '1412.6607-2-22-3': 'Note that, other than for the gradient, the computations above can be performed point-wise, so we could write [REF] at each pixel [MATH]: if [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-22-4': 'In the rest of the paper, we use the symbol [MATH] to denote the orientation of the image gradient relative to one of the coordinate axes, and omit the subscript [MATH] when referring to contrast (since the use of the argument [MATH] makes it unambiguous).', '1412.6607-2-22-5': 'The width of the kernel [MATH] is a design (regularization) parameter.', '1412.6607-2-23-0': '[No invariance for [MATH]] Note that [REF] is invariant to contrast transformations of [MATH], but not of [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-23-1': 'For a single training image, the latter can be handled by normalization as we will see next.', '1412.6607-2-23-2': 'For multiple images, the factor can in principle be different for each training image.', '1412.6607-2-24-0': '[Bayesian invariant]', '1412.6607-2-25-0': 'In the proof of Theorem [REF], the gradient magnitude is marginalized with respect to the base measure.', '1412.6607-2-25-1': 'With a different prior, for instance arising from bounds on the gradient or from statistics of natural images, marginalization yields a factor other than [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-25-2': 'Clamping, described next, can be understood as a particular choice of prior for marginalization of the gradient magnitude.', '1412.6607-2-26-0': 'Invariance to contrast transformations in the (single) training image can be performed by normalizing the likelihood, which in turn can be done in a number of ways.', '1412.6607-2-26-1': 'If contrast transformations are globally affineblue, then the joint likelihood can be normalized by simply dividing by the integral over [MATH], which is the [MATH] norm of the histogram across the entire image/patch [EQUATION] that should be used instead of the customary [MATH] [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-26-2': 'If the contrast transformation is non-linear, it cannot be eliminated by global normalizationblue.', '1412.6607-2-27-0': 'When the joint distribution is approximated by the product of marginals, as in [CITATION], joint normalization is still favored in practice as it introduces some correlations among marginal histograms [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-27-1': 'However, cells with large gradients tend to dominate the histogram, pushing all other peaks lower.', '1412.6607-2-27-2': 'Alternatively, one could independently normalize each of the histograms, [MATH] and then concatenate them.', '1412.6607-2-27-3': 'But this has the opposite effect: Cells with faint peaks, once re-normalized, are given undue importance and relative intensity difference between different cells are discarded.', '1412.6607-2-27-4': 'A common trick consisting of joint normalization (so faint cells do not prevail) followed by "clamping" (saturation of the maximum to a fraction of the value of the highest peak, so large gradients do not dominate), and then re-normalization, seems to achieve a tradeoff between the two [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-27-5': 'This process can also be understood as a way of marginalizing [MATH], with respect to a different measure [MATH], as described in Rem.', '1412.6607-2-27-6': '[REF] while assuming that, within each region, contrast transformations are affine.', '1412.6607-2-28-0': 'Once invariance to contrast transformations is achieved, which can be done on a single image [MATH], we are left with nuisances [MATH] that include general viewpoint changes, including the occlusions they induce.', '1412.6607-2-28-1': 'This can be handled by computing the SOA likelihood with respect to the product [MATH] of [MATH] (the group of general rigid motions, Sect. [REF]) and the scale semi-group, which we discuss next, from a training sample [MATH], leading to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-28-2': 'In the next section we show how to handle occlusions, and in the following one general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-2-29-0': '## Occlusions', '1412.6607-2-30-0': 'We do not know ahead of time what portion of an object or scene, seen in training images, will be visible in a test image.', '1412.6607-2-30-1': 'Occlusion, or visibility, is arguably the single most critical aspect of visual representations.', '1412.6607-2-30-2': 'It enforces locality, as dealing with occlusion nuisances entails searching through, or marginalizing, all possible (multiply-connected) subsets of the test image.', '1412.6607-2-30-3': 'This power set is clearly intractable even for very small images.', '1412.6607-2-31-0': '### Bypassing shape and justifying "patches" or "receptive fields"', '1412.6607-2-32-0': 'We illustrate a principle to bypass combinatorial explosion for a single training image, absent all other nuisances.', '1412.6607-2-32-1': 'A training [MATH] and a test image [MATH] correspond (hypothesis [MATH]) if there exist subsets of [MATH], [MATH], and of [MATH], [MATH], such that the restrictions come from the same scene, i.e. in this setting they differ by a white (zero-mean, uninformative) residual.', '1412.6607-2-32-2': 'Under this simplistic model, the subsets [MATH] are the same, and [MATH] where [MATH] is either a white (spatially i.i.d) zero-mean process with a small covariance, [MATH] in the corresponding region, or something else, for instance uniform with a mean in the order of magnitude of the intensity range, assumed normalized to one, [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-32-3': 'Hypothesis [MATH] is that there exists no such region, and [MATH] on the entire domain.', '1412.6607-2-32-4': 'Since we do not know the region [MATH], this is a composite hypothesis testing problem, where the likelihood ratio is given by [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-32-5': 'Missed detections (treating a co-visible pixel as occluded) and false alarms (treating an occluded pixel as visible) have different costs: Omitting a co-visible pixel from [MATH] decreases the likelihood by a factor corresponding to multiplication by a Gaussian for samples drawn from the same distribution; vice-versa, including a pixel from [MATH] (false alarm) decreases the log-likelihood by a factor equal to multiplying by a Gaussian evaluated at points drawn from another distribution, such as uniform.', '1412.6607-2-32-6': 'So, testing for correspondence on subsets of the co-visible regions, assuming the region is sufficiently large, reduces the power, but not the validity, of the test.', '1412.6607-2-32-7': 'This observation can be used to fix the shape of the regions, leaving only their size to be marginalized, or searched over.blue This reasoning justifies the use of "patches" or "receptive fields" to seed image matching, but emphasizes that a search over different sizes (not "scales", Sect. [REF]) is needed.', '1412.6607-2-33-0': '### Invariance to occlusion', '1412.6607-2-34-0': 'Much of the literature on local descriptors further simplifies correspondence by selecting scales [CITATION], using the appearance of the scene (really, an image [MATH]) to determines the size of the region [MATH] where the descriptor is computed.', '1412.6607-2-34-1': 'This is motivated byblue [CITATION], where the tying of appearance (e.g., spatial frequencies) and size is known as the "uncertainty principle."', '1412.6607-2-34-2': 'But while the tie makes sense when the goal is to compress the image, it does not for correspondence, as the size of a region that will be visible in a test image has nothing to do with the appearance of the scene within.blue Therefore, the size of the domain where the descriptor is computed must be untied from the appearance of the scene within, and instead treated as an independent nuisance and included among those to be managed by max-out or marginalization.', '1412.6607-2-34-3': 'Surprisingly, no existing descriptor or convolutional architecture did so, until recently.', '1412.6607-2-35-0': '### Local descriptors revisited', '1412.6607-2-36-0': 'Co-variant scale selection can be thought as a way to sample scale, as opposed to selecting corresponding scales between training and test sets.', '1412.6607-2-36-1': 'But to approximate the SOA likelihood, co-variant sampling must be coupled with anti-aliasing, which corresponds to domain-size pooling (DS pooling), a concept introduced in [CITATION] and illustrated below for the case of a descriptor built on a single image.', '1412.6607-2-36-2': 'The difference between scale-space and "size-space" is illustrated in Fig. [REF].', '1412.6607-2-36-3': 'If a translation-scale co-variant detector generates a (sufficient) number of locations [MATH] and scales [MATH], then the SOA likelihood with respect to the translation-scale group of the plane is given by [EQUATION] where the location prior is captured by an isotropic kernel [MATH] with dispersion parameter [MATH], and the scale prior is captured by a measure [MATH] (for instance an exponential unilateral).', '1412.6607-2-36-4': 'If orientation is also sampled in a co-variant manner, or canonized with gravity as described in Ex.', '1412.6607-2-36-5': '[REF], then orientation anti-aliasing is already implicit in the histogram binning, represented by a kernel with dispersion parameter [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-36-6': 'The above is precisely one cell of DSP-SIFT as introduced in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-36-7': 'We therefore have the following: [DSP-SIFT] The DSP-SIFT descriptor [CITATION] [REF] approximates the ideal representation [REF], [REF] for [MATH] the group of planar similarities and local contrast transformations, when the scene is a single training image, and the test image is restricted to an unknown subset of its domain.', '1412.6607-2-37-0': 'Since the standard SIFT/HOG and its variants do not anti-alias domain size, invariance to partial occlusion (and therefore scale) is lost.', '1412.6607-2-37-1': '[Assumptions implicit in SIFT/HOG] The SIFT descriptor [CITATION] and its variants are a special case of DSP-SIFT [REF] with [MATH], and therefore approximate the ideal representation [REF] only at a fixed scale [MATH] for a scene that is flat, fronto-parallel, undergoing purely translational motion along the image plane.', '1412.6607-2-38-0': 'SIFT as designed violates the sampling principles described here, as sampling occurs with respect to the full similarity group (positions, scales and rotations are selected using a co-variant detector), but anti-aliasing is only performed in position (spatial pooling) and orientation (histogram smoothing), not in scale, which in SIFT is tied to domain size.', '1412.6607-2-39-0': 'In both SIFT and DSP-SIFT, and most other local descriptors, samples are aggregated independently at each neighborhood (although there may be overlap) and concatenated.', '1412.6607-2-39-1': 'In the interpretation of SIFT as a likelihood function, this corresponds to assuming that the joint likelihood factorizes as the product of the marginals, which in turn corresponds to assuming that the random variables [MATH] are (spatially) independent.', '1412.6607-2-39-2': 'Each local descriptor is then considered independently, as in a "bag-of-word" approach.', '1412.6607-2-39-3': 'Deep convolutional architectures relax this assumption, as shown in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-39-4': 'In Sect. [REF] we show how a scattering network [CITATION] fits in our framework.', '1412.6607-2-40-0': 'Finally, a single image does not afford the ability to separate nuisance from intrinsic variability.', '1412.6607-2-40-1': 'This issue becomes patent when attempting to achieve invariance to general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-2-41-0': '## General viewpoint changes', '1412.6607-2-42-0': 'If a co-variant translation-scale and size sampling/anti-aliasing mechanism is employed, then around each sample the only residual variability to viewpoint [MATH] is reduced to [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-42-1': 'That can be further factored into a rotation of the image plane ("in-plane" rotation), and its complement ("out-of-plane" rotation).', '1412.6607-2-42-2': 'We next show how in-plane rotations can be eliminated, leaving only out-of-plane rotations.', '1412.6607-2-43-0': '[Rotation Invariance]', '1412.6607-2-44-0': 'Canonization is particularly well suited to deal with planar rotation, since the statistics of natural images ensure that with high probability orientation-co-variant detectors have few isolated extrema.', '1412.6607-2-44-1': 'An example is the local maximum of the norm of the gradient along the direction [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-44-2': 'Invariance to [MATH] can be achieved by retaining the samples [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-44-3': 'Rotation anti-aliasing is performed by regularizing the orientation histogram.', '1412.6607-2-44-4': 'Note that, as it was for contrast, planar rotations can affect both the training [MATH] and the test image [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-44-5': 'In some cases, a consistent reference (canonical element) is available for both when scenes or objects are geo-referenced: The projection of the gravity vector onto the image plane .', '1412.6607-2-44-6': 'In this case, [MATH], and [MATH] is the angle of the projection of gravity onto the image plane (well defined unless they are orthogonal): [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-44-7': 'In reality, rotation canonization should contend with spatial quantization, neglected here since rotation errors are absorbed by the binning of gradient orientation [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-45-0': 'This leaves out-of-plane rotations to be profiled or marginalized.', '1412.6607-2-45-1': 'Unfortunately, the effects of such rotations on future images depend on the shape of the underlying scene, which is unknown, and that cannot be determined from a single image.', '1412.6607-2-45-2': 'Therefore, the only way in which true viewpoint changes can be factored out of the representation is if multiple training images of the same scene are available.', '1412.6607-2-45-3': 'In the next section we show how such multi-view representations can be constructed.', '1412.6607-2-46-0': '## Extension to multiple views', '1412.6607-2-47-0': 'Out-of-plane rotations induce a scene shape-dependent deformation on the domain of the image that cannot be determined from a single training image.', '1412.6607-2-47-1': '[CITATION] have proposed extensions based on a sampling approximation of the likelihood function, [MATH], or on a point estimate of the scene [MATH], multi-view HOG and reconstructive HOG respectively.', '1412.6607-2-47-2': 'The estimated scene has a geometric component (shape) [MATH] and a photometric component (radiance) [MATH], inferred from the LA model as described in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-47-3': 'These in turn enable the approximation of the predictive likelihood [MATH], and hence the representation: [EQUATION] where [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] is the pre-image of a perspective projection (the point of first intersection of the ray through the pixel [MATH] with the surface [MATH]).', '1412.6607-2-47-4': 'Alternatively, a sampling approximation of the likelihood function [MATH] yields "multi-view HOG" [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-47-5': 'Note that the gradient weight [MATH] is absent, since individual samples of past data do not enable separating nuisance from intrinsic variability, and each sample image [MATH] has different contrast, so the factor cannot be simply eliminated by normalization as done in Rem.', '1412.6607-2-47-6': '[REF] for a single image.', '1412.6607-2-47-7': 'Therefore, in MV-HOG it is necessary to assume that training images are captured under the same illumination conditions.', '1412.6607-2-47-8': 'In MV-HOG, regularization is implicit in the kernel, and the predictive likelihood is based on simple planar transformations.', '1412.6607-2-47-9': 'In R-HOG, the estimated scene (which requires regularization to be inferred) acts as the regularizer [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-48-0': 'Once the effects of occlusions are considered (which force the representation to be local), and the effects of general viewpoint changes are accounted for (which creates the necessity for multiple training images of the same scene), a maximal contrast/viewpoint/occlusion invariant can be approximated via the SOA likelihood.', '1412.6607-2-48-1': 'Using [REF] and [REF], the SOA likelihood [REF] becomes:', '1412.6607-2-49-0': '[EQUATION]', '1412.6607-2-50-0': 'The assumption that all existing multiple-view extensions of SIFT do not overcome is the conditional independence of the intensity of different pixels [REF].', '1412.6607-2-50-1': 'This is discussed in [CITATION] for the case of convolutional deep architectures, and in the next section for Scattering Networks.', '1412.6607-2-51-0': '## DSP-Scattering Networks', '1412.6607-2-52-0': 'The scattering transform [CITATION] convolves an image (or patch) with a Gabor filter bank at different rotations and dilations, takes the modulus of the responses, and applies an average operator to yield coefficients.', '1412.6607-2-52-1': 'This is repeated to produce coefficients at different layers in a scattering network.', '1412.6607-2-52-2': 'The first layer is equivalent to SIFT [CITATION], in the sense that [REF] can be implemented via convolution with a Gabor element with orientation [MATH] then taking the modulus of the response.', '1412.6607-2-52-3': 'This is the convolution-modulus step in the scattering transform.', '1412.6607-2-52-4': 'Then the local marginalization in [REF], except for the integral with respect to [MATH], corresponds to a low-pass filter applied to the histogram, yielding a spatially-pooled (regularized) histogram of gradient orientations.', '1412.6607-2-52-5': 'This is [REF] for a fixed [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-52-6': 'The same operator exists in the scattering network where the modulus of the filter response goes through a low-pass filter to generate the final coefficients.', '1412.6607-2-53-0': 'Of course there could be implementational difference depending on the choices of kernels, their parameters, and number of samples or filters in the bank.', '1412.6607-2-53-1': 'Nevertheless, one could conjecture that domain-size pooling (DSP) applied to a scattering network would improve performance in tasks that involve changes of scale and visibility.', '1412.6607-2-53-2': 'We call the resulting method DSP Scattering Transform (DSP-SC).', '1412.6607-2-53-3': "Indeed, this is the case, as we show in the Appendix, where we compare DSP-SC to the single-scale scattering transform (SC) on both the Oxford [CITATION] and Fischer's [CITATION] datasets.", '1412.6607-2-54-0': 'Stacked architectures, such as the SC, offer the promise to lift the strong spatial independence assumption implicit in SIFT and its variant, as well as DSP-SIFT [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-54-1': 'However, the empirical results in [CITATION] suggest that this value is exhausted after [MATH] layers.', '1412.6607-2-54-2': 'In the next section we discuss an extension to deep architectures.', '1412.6607-2-55-0': '## DSP-CNN', '1412.6607-2-56-0': 'Deep convolutional architectures can be understood as implementing successive approximations of the optimal representation [REF], by stacking layers of (conditionally) independent local representations of the form [REF], which have been shown by [CITATION] to increasingly achieve invariance to large deformations, despite locally marginalizing only affine (or similarity) transformations.', '1412.6607-2-56-1': 'As [CITATION] did for SIFT, and as we did for the Scattering Transform above, we conjectured that pooling over domain size would improve the performance of a convolutional network.', '1412.6607-2-56-2': 'In the Appendix we report experiments to test the conjecture using a pre-trained network which is fine-tuned with domain-size pooling on benchmark datasets.', '1412.6607-2-56-3': 'For computational reasons, we limited the domain-size pooling to 6 sizes (including the base size), and only to the first convolutional layer.', '1412.6607-2-56-4': 'Still, the experiments show marginal improvement.', '1412.6607-2-56-5': 'We conjecture that more thorough incorporation of domain-size pooling, as described in the appendix, would further improve performance after proper training (rather than a pre-trained network) is employed.', '1412.6607-2-57-0': '## DSP-DPM', '1412.6607-2-58-0': 'In addition, we have tested DSP-extensions of Deformable Parts Models (DPMs) [CITATION], small trees of local HOG descriptors ("parts"), whereby local photometry is encoded in the latter (nodes), and geometry is encoded in their position on the image relative to the root node (edges).', '1412.6607-2-58-1': 'Intra-class shape variability is captured by the posterior density of edge values, learned from samples.', '1412.6607-2-58-2': 'Photometry is captured by a "HOG pyramid" where the size of each part is pre-determined and fixed relative to the root.', '1412.6607-2-58-3': 'Interpreting the photometric descriptor as a likelihood function, rather than a "feature vector," helps interpreting DPM as a (factorized) posterior density, where photometry is encoded by the SOA likelihood.', '1412.6607-2-58-4': 'One could therefore conjecture that performing anti-aliasing with respect to the size of the parts would improve performance.', '1412.6607-2-58-5': 'We call the resulting method DSP-DPM, again in analogy to DSP-SIFT [CITATION].', '1412.6607-2-58-6': 'Some preliminary experiments are reported in the appendix.', '1412.6607-2-59-0': '# Conclusions', '1412.6607-2-60-0': 'We have derived an expression [REF] for a minimal sufficient statistic of past data when the test image is restricted to a neighborhood of [MATH] where [MATH] is computed, corresponding to sampled locations around [MATH], with scales [MATH] pooled according to the prior [MATH] around the samples [MATH].', '1412.6607-2-61-0': 'If a sufficiently exciting training set is available, spanning variability due to out-of-plane rotations, marginalization of [MATH] can be replaced by temporal averaging of the training images [REF].', '1412.6607-2-61-1': 'The joint distribution of local descriptors can be captured by a stacked architectures, as shown in [CITATION] and illustrated for Scattering Networks, Deformable Parts Models, and general deep convolutional architectures.'}
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['1412.6607-1-24-0', '1412.6607-1-43-0', '1412.6607-1-48-1', '1412.6607-1-49-0', '1412.6607-2-24-0', '1412.6607-2-43-0', '1412.6607-2-48-1', '1412.6607-2-49-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '4': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '5': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1412.6607
{'1412.6607-3-0-0': '# Introduction', '1412.6607-3-1-0': 'red [CITATION] define an optimal representation as a minimal sufficient statistic (of past data for the scene) and a maximal invariant (of future data to nuisance factors), and propose a measure of how "useful" (informative) a representation is, via the uncertainty of the prediction density.', '1412.6607-3-1-1': 'What is a nuisance depends on the task, that includes decision and control actions about the surrounding environment, or scene, and its geometry (shape, pose), photometry (reflectance), dynamics (motion) and semantics (identities, relations of "objects" within).r', '1412.6607-3-2-0': 'red red We show that optimal management of nuisance variability due to occlusion is generally intractable, but can be approximated leading to a composite (correspondence) hypothesis test, which provides grounding for the use of "patches" or "receptive fields," ubiquitous in practicered.', '1412.6607-3-2-1': 'The analysis reveals that the size of the domain of the filters should be decoupled from spectral characteristics of the image, unlike traditionally taught in scale-space theory, an unintuitive consequence of the analysis.', '1412.6607-3-2-2': 'This idea has been exploited by [CITATION] to approximate the optimal descriptor of a single image, under an explicit model of image formation (the Lambert-Ambient, or LA, model) and nuisance variability, leading to DSP-SIFT.', '1412.6607-3-2-3': 'Extensions to multiple training images, leading to MV-HoG and R-HoG, have been championed by [CITATION].', '1412.6607-3-2-4': 'Here, we apply domain-size pooling to the scattering transform [CITATION] leading to DSP-SC, to a convolutional neural network, leading to DSP-CNN, and to deformable part models [CITATION], leading to DSP-DPM, in Sect. [REF], [REF] and [REF] respectively.', '1412.6607-3-3-0': 'We treat images as random vectors [MATH] and the scene [MATH] as an (infinite-dimensional) parameter.', '1412.6607-3-3-1': 'An optimal representation is a function [MATH] of past images [MATH] that maximally reduces uncertainty on "questions about the scene" [CITATION] (a partition of [MATH]) given images from it and regardless of nuisance variables [MATH].', '1412.6607-3-3-2': 'In [CITATION] the sampled orbit anti-aliased (SOA) likelihood is introduced as: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the joint likelihood, understood as a function of the parameter [MATH] and nuisance [MATH] for fixed data [MATH], with [MATH] an anti-aliasing measure with positive weights [MATH].', '1412.6607-3-3-3': 'The SOA likelihood is an optimal representation in the sense that, for any [MATH], it is possible to choose [MATH] and a finite number of samples [MATH] so that [MATH] approximates to within [MATH] a minimal sufficient statistic (of [MATH] for [MATH]) that is maximally invariant to group transformations in [MATH].', '1412.6607-3-3-4': 'This result is valid under the assumptions of the Lambert-Ambient (LA) model [CITATION], which is the simplest known to capture the phenomenology of image formation including scaling, occlusion, and rudimentary illumination.', '1412.6607-3-4-0': '# Constructing Visual Representations', '1412.6607-3-5-0': 'Given a training image [MATH] and a test image [MATH], assuming that the latter is affected by noise that is independent in the gradient direction and magnitude, then the maximal invariant of [MATH] to the group [MATH] of contrast transformations is given by [EQUATION] red Note that, other than for the gradient, the computations above can be performed point-wise under the assumption of the LA model, so we could write [REF] at each pixel [MATH]: if [MATH], [EQUATION] red', '1412.6607-3-6-0': 'red Note that [REF] is invariant to contrast transformations of [MATH], but not of [MATH].r', '1412.6607-3-6-1': 'red red Invariance to contrast transformations in the (single) training image can be performed by normalizing the likelihood, which in turn can be donered by simply dividing by the integral over [MATH], which is the [MATH] norm of the histogram across the entire image/patch [EQUATION] that should be used instead of the customary [MATH] [CITATION].', '1412.6607-3-6-2': 'red red Once invariance to contrast transformations is achieved, which can be done on a single image [MATH], we are left with nuisances [MATH] that include general viewpoint changes, including the occlusions they induce.', '1412.6607-3-6-3': 'This can be handled by computing the SOA likelihood with respect to [MATH] of [MATH] (Sect. [REF]) from a training sample [MATH], leading to [EQUATION] red red Occlusion, or visibility, is arguably the single most critical aspect of visual representations.', '1412.6607-3-6-4': 'It enforces locality, as dealing with occlusion nuisances entails searching through, or marginalizing, all possible (multiply-connected) subsets of the test image.', '1412.6607-3-6-5': 'This power set is clearly intractable even for very small images.', '1412.6607-3-7-0': 'Missed detections (treating a co-visible pixel as occluded) and false alarms (treating an occluded pixel as visible) have different costs: Omitting a co-visible pixel from the occluded region [MATH] decreases the likelihood by a factor corresponding to multiplication by a Gaussian for samples drawn from the same distribution; vice-versa, including a pixel from [MATH] (false alarm) decreases the log-likelihood by a factor equal to multiplying by a Gaussian evaluated at points drawn from another distribution, such as uniform.', '1412.6607-3-7-1': 'So, testing for correspondence on subsets of the co-visible regions, assuming the region is sufficiently large, reduces the power, but not the validity, of the test.', '1412.6607-3-7-2': 'This observation can be used to fix the shape of the regions, leaving only their size to be marginalized, or searched over.cutForReview A region that is included in the "true" region will be accepted even if its likelihood is slightly lower than the full region.', '1412.6607-3-7-3': 'A region that straddles the occluding boundary, and therefore includes occluded regions, will be rejected as a whole.', '1412.6607-3-7-4': 'Note that this test must be performed for many regions, including different locations and sizes.', '1412.6607-3-7-5': 'This reasoning justifies the use of "patches" or "receptive fields" to seed image matching, but emphasizes that a search over different sizes [CITATION] is needed.', '1412.6607-3-8-0': 'Together with the SOA likelihood, this also justifies the local marginalization of domain sizes, along with translation, as recently championed in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-3-9-0': '[DSP-SIFT] The DSP-SIFT descriptor [CITATION] approximates an optimal representation [REF] for [MATH] the group of planar similarities and local contrast transformations, when the scene is a single training image, and the test image is restricted to a subset of its domain.', '1412.6607-3-10-0': 'The assumptions underlying all local representations built using a single image break down when the scene is not flat and not moving parallel to the image plane.', '1412.6607-3-10-1': 'In this case, multiple views are necessary to manage nuisance due to general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-3-11-0': '## General viewpoint changes', '1412.6607-3-12-0': 'If a co-variant translation-scale and size sampling/anti-aliasing mechanism is employed, then around each sample the only residual variability to viewpoint [MATH] is reducedred.', '1412.6607-3-13-0': 'red In some cases, a consistent reference (canonical element) for both training and test images is available when scenes or objects are geo-referenced: The projection of the gravity vector onto the image plane [CITATION].', '1412.6607-3-13-1': 'In this case,red [MATH] is the angle of the projection of gravity onto the image plane (well defined unless they are orthogonal).', '1412.6607-3-13-2': 'Alternatively, multiple (principal) orientation references can be selected based on the norm of the directional derivative [CITATION]: [EQUATION] red', '1412.6607-3-14-0': 'This leaves out-of-plane rotations to be managed.red [CITATION] have proposed extensions of local descriptors to multiple views, based on a sampling approximation of the likelihood function, [MATH], or on a point estimate of the scene [MATH], MV-HoG and R-HoG respectively.', '1412.6607-3-14-1': 'The estimated scene has a geometric component (shape) [MATH] and a photometric component (radiance) [MATH], inferred from the LA model as described in [CITATION]red.', '1412.6607-3-15-0': 'in addition to domain-size pooling.', '1412.6607-3-15-1': 'The assumption that all existing multiple-view extensions of SIFT do not overcome is the conditional independence of the intensity of different pixels.', '1412.6607-3-15-2': 'This is discussed in [CITATION] for the case of convolutional deep architectures, and in the next section for Scattering Networks.', '1412.6607-3-15-3': 'Capturing the joint statistics of different components of the SOA likelihood is key to modeling intra-class variability of objects or scene categories.', '1412.6607-3-16-0': '## DSP-Scattering Networks', '1412.6607-3-17-0': 'The scattering transform [CITATION] convolves an image (or patch) with a Gabor filter bank at different rotations and dilations, takes the modulus of the responses, and applies an averaging operator to yield the scattering coefficients.', '1412.6607-3-17-1': 'This is repeated to produce coefficients at different layers in a scattering network.', '1412.6607-3-17-2': 'The first layer is equivalent to SIFT [CITATION], in the sense that [REF] can be implemented via convolution with a Gabor element with orientation [MATH] then taking the modulus of the response.red One could conjecture that domain-size pooling (DSP) applied to a scattering network would improve performance in tasks that involve changes of scale and visibility.', '1412.6607-3-17-3': 'We call the resulting method DSP Scattering Transform (DSP-SC).', '1412.6607-3-17-4': 'Indeed, this is the case, as we show in the Appendix of [CITATION], where we compare DSP-SC to the single-scale scattering transform (SC) to the datasets of [CITATION] (Oxford) and [CITATION].', '1412.6607-3-18-0': '## DSP-CNN', '1412.6607-3-19-0': 'Deep convolutional architectures can be understood as implementing successive approximations of an optimal representation by stacking layers of (conditionally) independent local representations of the form [REF], which have been shown by [CITATION] to increasingly achieve invariance to large deformations, despite locally marginalizing only affine (or similarity) transformations.', '1412.6607-3-19-1': 'As [CITATION] did for SIFT, and as we did for the Scattering Transform above, we conjectured that pooling over domain size would improve the performance of a convolutional network.', '1412.6607-3-19-2': 'In the Appendix of [CITATION], we report experiments to test the conjecture using a pre-trained network which is fine-tuned with domain-size pooling on benchmark datasets.', '1412.6607-3-20-0': '## DSP-DPM', '1412.6607-3-21-0': 'We have also developed domain-size pooling extensions of deformable part models (DPMs) [CITATION], small trees of local HOG descriptors ("parts"), whereby local photometry is encoded in the latter (nodes), and geometry is encoded in their position on the image relative to the root node (edges).', '1412.6607-3-21-1': 'Intra-class shape variability is captured by the posterior density of edge values, learned from samples.', '1412.6607-3-21-2': 'Photometry is captured by a "HOG pyramid" where the size of each part is pre-determined and fixed relative to the root.red One could therefore conjecture that performing anti-aliasing with respect to the size of the parts would improve performance.', '1412.6607-3-21-3': 'Experimental results, reported in the Appendix of [CITATION], validate the conjecture.'}
{'1412.6607-4-0-0': '# Introduction', '1412.6607-4-1-0': 'red [CITATION] define an optimal representation as a minimal sufficient statistic (of past data for the scene) and a maximal invariant (of future data to nuisance factors), and propose a measure of how "useful" (informative) a representation is, via the uncertainty of the prediction density.', '1412.6607-4-1-1': 'What is a nuisance depends on the task, that includes decision and control actions about the surrounding environment, or scene, and its geometry (shape, pose), photometry (reflectance), dynamics (motion) and semantics (identities, relations of "objects" within).r', '1412.6607-4-2-0': 'red red We show that optimal management of nuisance variability due to occlusion is generally intractable, but can be approximated leading to a composite (correspondence) hypothesis test, which provides grounding for the use of "patches" or "receptive fields," ubiquitous in practicered.', '1412.6607-4-2-1': 'The analysis reveals that the size of the domain of the filters should be decoupled from spectral characteristics of the image, unlike traditionally taught in scale-space theory, an unintuitive consequence of the analysis.', '1412.6607-4-2-2': 'This idea has been exploited by [CITATION] to approximate the optimal descriptor of a single image, under an explicit model of image formation (the Lambert-Ambient, or LA, model) and nuisance variability, leading to DSP-SIFT.', '1412.6607-4-2-3': 'Extensions to multiple training images, leading to MV-HoG and R-HoG, have been championed by [CITATION].', '1412.6607-4-2-4': 'Here, we apply domain-size pooling to the scattering transform [CITATION] leading to DSP-SC, to a convolutional neural network, leading to DSP-CNN, and to deformable part models [CITATION], leading to DSP-DPM, in Sect. [REF], [REF] and [REF] respectively.', '1412.6607-4-3-0': 'We treat images as random vectors [MATH] and the scene [MATH] as an (infinite-dimensional) parameter.', '1412.6607-4-3-1': 'An optimal representation is a function [MATH] of past images [MATH] that maximally reduces uncertainty on questions about the scene [CITATION] given images from it and regardless of nuisance variables [MATH].', '1412.6607-4-3-2': 'In [CITATION] the sampled orbit anti-aliased (SOA) likelihood is introduced as: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the joint likelihood, understood as a function of the parameter [MATH] and nuisance [MATH] for fixed data [MATH], with [MATH] an anti-aliasing measure with positive weights [MATH].', '1412.6607-4-3-3': 'The SOA likelihood is an optimal representation in the sense that, for any [MATH], it is possible to choose [MATH] and a finite number of samples [MATH] so that [MATH] approximates to within [MATH] a minimal sufficient statistic (of [MATH] for [MATH]) that is maximally invariant to group transformations in [MATH].', '1412.6607-4-3-4': 'This result is valid under the assumptions of the Lambert-Ambient (LA) model [CITATION], which is the simplest known to capture the phenomenology of image formation including scaling, occlusion, and rudimentary illumination.', '1412.6607-4-4-0': '# Constructing Visual Representations', '1412.6607-4-5-0': 'Given a training image [MATH] and a test image [MATH], assuming that the latter is affected by noise that is independent in the gradient direction and magnitude, then the maximal invariant of [MATH] to the group [MATH] of contrast transformations is given by [EQUATION] red Note that, other than for the gradient, the computations above can be performed point-wise under the assumption of LA model, so we could write [REF] at each pixel [MATH]: if [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-4-5-1': 'Note that [REF] is invariant to contrast transformations of [MATH], but not of [MATH].r', '1412.6607-4-5-2': 'red red Invariance to contrast transformations in the (single) training image can be performed by normalizing the likelihood, which in turn can be donered by simply dividing by the integral over [MATH], which is the [MATH] norm of the histogram across the entire image/patch [EQUATION] that should be used instead of the customary [MATH] [CITATION].', '1412.6607-4-5-3': 'red red Once invariance to contrast transformations is achieved, which can be done on a single image [MATH], we are left with nuisances [MATH] that include general viewpoint changes, including the occlusions they induce.', '1412.6607-4-5-4': 'This can be handled by computing the SOA likelihood with respect to [MATH] of [MATH] (Sect. [REF]) from a training sample [MATH], leading to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-4-5-5': 'Occlusion, or visibility, is arguably the single most critical aspect of visual representations.', '1412.6607-4-5-6': 'It enforces locality, as dealing with occlusion nuisances entails searching through, or marginalizing, all possible (multiply-connected) subsets of the test image.', '1412.6607-4-5-7': 'This power set is clearly intractable even for very small images.', '1412.6607-4-5-8': 'Missed detections (treating a co-visible pixel as occluded) and false alarms (treating an occluded pixel as visible) have different costs: Omitting a co-visible pixel from [MATH] decreases the likelihood by a factor corresponding to multiplication by a Gaussian for samples drawn from the same distribution; vice-versa, including a pixel from [MATH] (false alarm) decreases the log-likelihood by a factor equal to multiplying by a Gaussian evaluated at points drawn from another distribution, such as uniform.', '1412.6607-4-5-9': 'So, testing for correspondence on subsets of the co-visible regions, assuming the region is sufficiently large, reduces the power, but not the validity, of the test.', '1412.6607-4-5-10': 'This observation can be used to fix the shape of the regions, leaving only their size to be marginalized, or searched over.cutForReview A region that is included in the "true" region will be accepted even if its likelihood is slightly lower than the full region.', '1412.6607-4-5-11': 'A region that straddles the occluding boundary, and therefore includes occluded regions, will be rejected as a whole.', '1412.6607-4-5-12': 'Note that this test must be performed for many regions, including different locations and sizes.', '1412.6607-4-5-13': 'This reasoning justifies the use of "patches" or "receptive fields" to seed image matching, but emphasizes that a search over different sizes [CITATION] is needed.', '1412.6607-4-6-0': 'Together with the SOA likelihood, this also justifies the local marginalization of domain sizes, along with translation, as recently championed in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-4-7-0': '[DSP-SIFT] The DSP-SIFT descriptor [CITATION] approximates an optimal representation [REF] for [MATH] the group of planar similarities and local contrast transformations, when the scene is a single training image, and the test image is restricted to a subset of its domain.', '1412.6607-4-8-0': 'The assumptions underlying all local representations built using a single image break down when the scene is not flat and not moving parallel to the image plane.', '1412.6607-4-8-1': 'In this case, multiple views are necessary to manage nuisance due to general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-4-9-0': '## General viewpoint changes', '1412.6607-4-10-0': 'If a co-variant translation-scale and size sampling/anti-aliasing mechanism is employed, then around each sample the only residual variability to viewpoint [MATH] is reducedred.', '1412.6607-4-11-0': 'red In some cases, a consistent reference (canonical element) for both training and test images is available when scenes or objects are geo-referenced: The projection of the gravity vector onto the image plane [CITATION].', '1412.6607-4-11-1': 'In this case,red [MATH] is the angle of the projection of gravity onto the image plane (well defined unless they are orthogonal).', '1412.6607-4-11-2': 'Alternatively, multiple (principal) orientation references can be selected based on the norm of the directional derivative [CITATION]: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-4-11-3': 'This leaves out-of-plane rotations to be managed.red [CITATION] have proposed extensions of local descriptors to multiple views, based on a sampling approximation of the likelihood function, [MATH], or on a point estimate of the scene [MATH], MV-HoG and R-HoG respectively.', '1412.6607-4-11-4': 'The estimated scene has a geometric component (shape) [MATH] and a photometric component (radiance) [MATH], inferred from the LA model as described in [CITATION]red.', '1412.6607-4-11-5': 'Once the effects of occlusions are considered (which force the representation to be local), and the effects of general viewpoint changes are accounted for (which creates the necessity for multiple training images of the same scene), a maximal contrast/viewpoint/occlusion invariant can be approximated: red the SOA likelihood [REF] becomes: [EQUATION] in addition to domain-size pooling.', '1412.6607-4-11-6': 'The assumption that all existing multiple-view extensions of SIFT do not overcome is the conditional independence of the intensity of different pixelsred.', '1412.6607-4-11-7': 'This is discussed in [CITATION] for the case of convolutional deep architectures, and in the next section for Scattering Networks.', '1412.6607-4-11-8': 'Capturing the joint statistics of different components of the SOA likelihood is key to modeling intra-class variability of object or scene categories.', '1412.6607-4-12-0': '## DSP-Scattering Networks', '1412.6607-4-13-0': 'The scattering transform [CITATION] convolves an image (or patch) with a Gabor filter bank at different rotations and dilations, takes the modulus of the responses, and applies an averaging operator to yield the scattering coefficients.', '1412.6607-4-13-1': 'This is repeated to produce coefficients at different layers in a scattering network.', '1412.6607-4-13-2': 'The first layer is equivalent to SIFT [CITATION], in the sense that [REF] can be implemented via convolution with a Gabor element with orientation [MATH] then taking the modulus of the response.red One could conjecture that domain-size pooling (DSP) applied to a scattering network would improve performance in tasks that involve changes of scale and visibility.', '1412.6607-4-13-3': 'We call the resulting method DSP Scattering Transform (DSP-SC).', '1412.6607-4-13-4': 'Indeed, this is the case, as we show in the Appendix of [CITATION], where we compare DSP-SC to the single-scale scattering transform (SC) to the datasets of [CITATION] (Oxford) and [CITATION].', '1412.6607-4-14-0': '## DSP-CNN', '1412.6607-4-15-0': 'Deep convolutional architectures can be understood as implementing successive approximations of an optimal representation by stacking layers of (conditionally) independent local representations of the form [REF], which have been shown by [CITATION] to increasingly achieve invariance to large deformations, despite locally marginalizing only affine (or similarity) transformations.', '1412.6607-4-15-1': 'As [CITATION] did for SIFT, and as we did for the Scattering Transform above, we conjectured that pooling over domain size would improve the performance of a convolutional network.', '1412.6607-4-15-2': 'In the Appendix of [CITATION], we report experiments to test the conjecture using a pre-trained network which is fine-tuned with domain-size pooling on benchmark datasets.', '1412.6607-4-16-0': '## DSP-DPM', '1412.6607-4-17-0': 'We have also developed domain-size pooling extensions of deformable part models (DPMs) [CITATION], small trees of local HOG descriptors ("parts"), whereby local photometry is encoded in the latter (nodes), and geometry is encoded in their position on the image relative to the root node (edges).', '1412.6607-4-17-1': 'Intra-class shape variability is captured by the posterior density of edge values, learned from samples.', '1412.6607-4-17-2': 'Photometry is captured by a "HOG pyramid" where the size of each part is pre-determined and fixed relative to the root.red One could therefore conjecture that performing anti-aliasing with respect to the size of the parts would improve performance.', '1412.6607-4-17-3': 'Experimental results, reported in the Appendix of [CITATION], validate the conjecture.'}
{'1412.6607-5-0-0': 'We study the structure of representations, defined as approximations of minimal sufficient statistics that are maximal invariants to nuisance factors, for visual data subject to scaling and occlusion of line-of-sight.', '1412.6607-5-0-1': 'We derive analytical expressions for such representations and show that, under certain restrictive assumptions, they are related to features commonly in use in the computer vision community.', '1412.6607-5-0-2': 'This link highlights the conditions tacitly assumed by these descriptors, and also suggests ways to improve and generalize them.', '1412.6607-5-1-0': '# Introduction', '1412.6607-5-2-0': 'red [CITATION] define an optimal representation as a minimal sufficient statistic (of past data for the scene) and a maximal invariant (of future data to nuisance factors), and propose a measure of how "useful" (informative) a representation is, via the uncertainty of the prediction density.', '1412.6607-5-2-1': 'What is a nuisance depends on the task, that includes decision and control actions about the surrounding environment, or scene, and its geometry (shape, pose), photometry (reflectance), dynamics (motion) and semantics (identities, relations of "objects" within).r', '1412.6607-5-3-0': 'red red We show that optimal management of nuisance variability due to occlusion is generally intractable, but can be approximated leading to a composite (correspondence) hypothesis test, which provides grounding for the use of "patches" or "receptive fields," ubiquitous in practicered.', '1412.6607-5-3-1': 'The analysis reveals that the size of the domain of the filters should be decoupled from spectral characteristics of the image, unlike traditionally taught in scale-space theory, an unintuitive consequence of the analysis.', '1412.6607-5-3-2': 'This idea has been exploited by [CITATION] to approximate the optimal descriptor of a single image, under an explicit model of image formation (the Lambert-Ambient, or LA, model) and nuisance variability, leading to DSP-SIFT.', '1412.6607-5-3-3': 'Extensions to multiple training images, leading to MV-HoG and R-HoG, have been championed by [CITATION].', '1412.6607-5-3-4': 'Here, we apply domain-size pooling to the scattering transform [CITATION] leading to DSP-SC, to a convolutional neural network, leading to DSP-CNN, and to deformable part models [CITATION], leading to DSP-DPM, in Sect. [REF], [REF] and [REF] respectively.', '1412.6607-5-4-0': 'We treat images as random vectors [MATH] and the scene [MATH] as an (infinite-dimensional) parameter.', '1412.6607-5-4-1': 'An optimal representation is a function [MATH] of past images [MATH] that maximally reduces uncertainty on questions about the scene [CITATION] given images from it and regardless of nuisance variables [MATH].', '1412.6607-5-4-2': 'In [CITATION] the sampled orbit anti-aliased (SOA) likelihood is introduced as: [EQUATION] where [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the joint likelihood, understood as a function of the parameter [MATH] and nuisance [MATH] for fixed data [MATH], with [MATH] an anti-aliasing measure with positive weights [MATH].', '1412.6607-5-4-3': 'The SOA likelihood is an optimal representation in the sense that, for any [MATH], it is possible to choose [MATH] and a finite number of samples [MATH] so that [MATH] approximates to within [MATH] a minimal sufficient statistic (of [MATH] for [MATH]) that is maximally invariant to group transformations in [MATH].', '1412.6607-5-4-4': 'This result is valid under the assumptions of the Lambert-Ambient (LA) model [CITATION], which is the simplest known to capture the phenomenology of image formation including scaling, occlusion, and rudimentary illumination.', '1412.6607-5-5-0': '# Constructing Visual Representations', '1412.6607-5-6-0': 'Given a training image [MATH] and a test image [MATH], assuming that the latter is affected by noise that is independent in the gradient direction and magnitude, then the maximal invariant of [MATH] to the group [MATH] of contrast transformations is given by [EQUATION] red Note that, other than for the gradient, the computations above can be performed point-wise under the assumption of LA model, so we could write [REF] at each pixel [MATH]: if [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-5-6-1': 'Note that [REF] is invariant to contrast transformations of [MATH], but not of [MATH].r', '1412.6607-5-6-2': 'red red Invariance to contrast transformations in the (single) training image can be performed by normalizing the likelihood, which in turn can be donered by simply dividing by the integral over [MATH], which is the [MATH] norm of the histogram across the entire image/patch [EQUATION] that should be used instead of the customary [MATH] [CITATION].', '1412.6607-5-6-3': 'red red Once invariance to contrast transformations is achieved, which can be done on a single image [MATH], we are left with nuisances [MATH] that include general viewpoint changes, including the occlusions they induce.', '1412.6607-5-6-4': 'This can be handled by computing the SOA likelihood with respect to [MATH] of [MATH] (Sect. [REF]) from a training sample [MATH], leading to [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-5-6-5': 'Occlusion, or visibility, is arguably the single most critical aspect of visual representations.', '1412.6607-5-6-6': 'It enforces locality, as dealing with occlusion nuisances entails searching through, or marginalizing, all possible (multiply-connected) subsets of the test image.', '1412.6607-5-6-7': 'This power set is clearly intractable even for very small images.', '1412.6607-5-6-8': 'Missed detections (treating a co-visible pixel as occluded) and false alarms (treating an occluded pixel as visible) have different costs: Omitting a co-visible pixel from [MATH] decreases the likelihood by a factor corresponding to multiplication by a Gaussian for samples drawn from the same distribution; vice-versa, including a pixel from [MATH] (false alarm) decreases the log-likelihood by a factor equal to multiplying by a Gaussian evaluated at points drawn from another distribution, such as uniform.', '1412.6607-5-6-9': 'So, testing for correspondence on subsets of the co-visible regions, assuming the region is sufficiently large, reduces the power, but not the validity, of the test.', '1412.6607-5-6-10': 'This observation can be used to fix the shape of the regions, leaving only their size to be marginalized, or searched over.cutForReview A region that is included in the "true" region will be accepted even if its likelihood is slightly lower than the full region.', '1412.6607-5-6-11': 'A region that straddles the occluding boundary, and therefore includes occluded regions, will be rejected as a whole.', '1412.6607-5-6-12': 'Note that this test must be performed for many regions, including different locations and sizes.', '1412.6607-5-6-13': 'This reasoning justifies the use of "patches" or "receptive fields" to seed image matching, but emphasizes that a search over different sizes [CITATION] is needed.', '1412.6607-5-7-0': 'Together with the SOA likelihood, this also justifies the local marginalization of domain sizes, along with translation, as recently championed in [CITATION].', '1412.6607-5-8-0': '[DSP-SIFT] The DSP-SIFT descriptor [CITATION] approximates an optimal representation [REF] for [MATH] the group of planar similarities and local contrast transformations, when the scene is a single training image, and the test image is restricted to a subset of its domain.', '1412.6607-5-9-0': 'The assumptions underlying all local representations built using a single image break down when the scene is not flat and not moving parallel to the image plane.', '1412.6607-5-9-1': 'In this case, multiple views are necessary to manage nuisance due to general viewpoint changes.', '1412.6607-5-10-0': '## General viewpoint changes', '1412.6607-5-11-0': 'If a co-variant translation-scale and size sampling/anti-aliasing mechanism is employed, then around each sample the only residual variability to viewpoint [MATH] is reducedred.', '1412.6607-5-12-0': 'red In some cases, a consistent reference (canonical element) for both training and test images is available when scenes or objects are geo-referenced: The projection of the gravity vector onto the image plane [CITATION].', '1412.6607-5-12-1': 'In this case,red [MATH] is the angle of the projection of gravity onto the image plane (well defined unless they are orthogonal).', '1412.6607-5-12-2': 'Alternatively, multiple (principal) orientation references can be selected based on the norm of the directional derivative [CITATION]: [EQUATION]', '1412.6607-5-12-3': 'This leaves out-of-plane rotations to be managed.red [CITATION] have proposed extensions of local descriptors to multiple views, based on a sampling approximation of the likelihood function, [MATH], or on a point estimate of the scene [MATH], MV-HoG and R-HoG respectively.', '1412.6607-5-12-4': 'The estimated scene has a geometric component (shape) [MATH] and a photometric component (radiance) [MATH], inferred from the LA model as described in [CITATION]red.', '1412.6607-5-12-5': 'Once the effects of occlusions are considered (which force the representation to be local), and the effects of general viewpoint changes are accounted for (which creates the necessity for multiple training images of the same scene), a maximal contrast/viewpoint/occlusion invariant can be approximated: red the SOA likelihood [REF] becomes: [EQUATION] in addition to domain-size pooling.', '1412.6607-5-12-6': 'The assumption that all existing multiple-view extensions of SIFT do not overcome is the conditional independence of the intensity of different pixelsred.', '1412.6607-5-12-7': 'This is discussed in [CITATION] for the case of convolutional deep architectures, and in the next section for Scattering Networks.', '1412.6607-5-12-8': 'Capturing the joint statistics of different components of the SOA likelihood is key to modeling intra-class variability of object or scene categories.', '1412.6607-5-13-0': '## DSP-Scattering Networks', '1412.6607-5-14-0': 'The scattering transform [CITATION] convolves an image (or patch) with a Gabor filter bank at different rotations and dilations, takes the modulus of the responses, and applies an averaging operator to yield the scattering coefficients.', '1412.6607-5-14-1': 'This is repeated to produce coefficients at different layers in a scattering network.', '1412.6607-5-14-2': 'The first layer is equivalent to SIFT [CITATION], in the sense that [REF] can be implemented via convolution with a Gabor element with orientation [MATH] then taking the modulus of the response.red One could conjecture that domain-size pooling (DSP) applied to a scattering network would improve performance in tasks that involve changes of scale and visibility.', '1412.6607-5-14-3': 'We call the resulting method DSP Scattering Transform (DSP-SC).', '1412.6607-5-14-4': 'Indeed, this is the case, as we show in the Appendix of [CITATION], where we compare DSP-SC to the single-scale scattering transform (SC) to the datasets of [CITATION] (Oxford) and [CITATION].', '1412.6607-5-15-0': '## DSP-CNN', '1412.6607-5-16-0': 'Deep convolutional architectures can be understood as implementing successive approximations of an optimal representation by stacking layers of (conditionally) independent local representations of the form [REF], which have been shown by [CITATION] to increasingly achieve invariance to large deformations, despite locally marginalizing only affine (or similarity) transformations.', '1412.6607-5-16-1': 'As [CITATION] did for SIFT, and as we did for the Scattering Transform above, we conjectured that pooling over domain size would improve the performance of a convolutional network.', '1412.6607-5-16-2': 'In the Appendix of [CITATION], we report experiments to test the conjecture using a pre-trained network which is fine-tuned with domain-size pooling on benchmark datasets.', '1412.6607-5-17-0': '## DSP-DPM', '1412.6607-5-18-0': 'We have also developed domain-size pooling extensions of deformable part models (DPMs) [CITATION], small trees of local HOG descriptors ("parts"), whereby local photometry is encoded in the latter (nodes), and geometry is encoded in their position on the image relative to the root node (edges).', '1412.6607-5-18-1': 'Intra-class shape variability is captured by the posterior density of edge values, learned from samples.', '1412.6607-5-18-2': 'Photometry is captured by a "HOG pyramid" where the size of each part is pre-determined and fixed relative to the root.red One could therefore conjecture that performing anti-aliasing with respect to the size of the parts would improve performance.', '1412.6607-5-18-3': 'Experimental results, reported in the Appendix of [CITATION], validate the conjecture.'}
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1812.05181
{'1812.05181-1-0-0': "In this paper we extend the WKB-like 'non-relativistic' expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationafter Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] to arbitrary order in [MATH], leading to Schrödinger equations describing a quantum particle in a general gravitational field, and compare the results with canonical quantisation of a free particle in curved spacetime, following Wajima et al. [CITATION].", '1812.05181-1-0-1': "Furthermore, using a more operator-algebraic approach, the Klein-Gordon equationand the canonical quantisation method are shown to lead to the same results for some special terms in the Hamiltonian describing a single particle in a general stationary spacetime, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion.", '1812.05181-1-1-0': 'Keywords: quantum matter in gravity, non-relativistic expansion, post-Newtonian expansion, Klein-Gordon equation, formal WKB expansion', '1812.05181-1-2-0': '# Introduction', '1812.05181-1-3-0': 'Suppose we are given a quantum-mechanical system whose time evolution in the absence of gravity is known in terms of the ordinary time-dependent Schrödinger equation.', '1812.05181-1-3-1': "In other words: We know the system's Hamiltonian if all gravitational interactions are neglected.", '1812.05181-1-3-2': "We ask: what principles do we use in order to deduce the system's interaction with a given external gravitational field?", '1812.05181-1-3-3': "Note that by 'gravitational field' we understand all the ten components [MATH] of the spacetime metric that are subject to Einstein's field equations of general relativity (or, more generally, to the equations of some other metric theory of gravity), not just the scalar component [MATH] representing the Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-1-4-0': 'The behaviour of quantum systems in general gravitational fields is naturally of fundamental interest, relating, e.g., to the reaction of quantum systems to gravitational waves [CITATION], tests of general relativity, the controversially discussed topic of gravitationally induced quantum dephasing [CITATION], quantum tests of the classical equivalence principle [CITATION] or proposals of quantum formulations of the equivalence principle [CITATION] and tests thereof [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-5-0': "The conceptual difficulty we are addressing here has to do with the fact that the usual 'minimal coupling scheme' that we usually employ in order to couple any classical field obeying Lorentz invariant equations of motion simply does not apply to the case at hand.", '1812.05181-1-5-1': "We recall that, in a nutshell, this prescription is a two step process: 1) Write down the matter's dynamical law in a Poincaré invariant fashion in Minkowski spacetime; 2) replace the flat Minkowski metric [MATH] by a general Lorentzian metric [MATH] and the partial derivatives with respect to the affine coordinates of Minkowski spacetime (i.e. the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH]) by the Levi-Civita covariant derivative with respect to [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-6-0': 'This procedure suffers from an essential non-uniqueness which has to do with the fact that the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH] commute whereas those with respect to [MATH] generally do not.', '1812.05181-1-6-1': 'Hence there are equivalent forms for the dynamical laws in step 1) that turn into inequivalent extensions after performing step 2).', '1812.05181-1-6-2': "The differences will consist in terms that result from commuting covariant derivatives and hence in local couplings of [MATH]'s curvature tensor to the matter field.", '1812.05181-1-6-3': 'Modulo this well known ambiguity the prescription just outlined is straightforward to apply and has been successfully used in all applications of general relativity.', '1812.05181-1-7-0': 'The point addressed here in connection with quantum mechanics is not so much the ambiguity just described, but rather the obvious failure to even implement step 1): There simply is no obvious way to rewrite the Schrödinger equation into a Poincaré invariant form in order to be able to apply step 2).', '1812.05181-1-7-1': 'Special relativity turns quantum mechanics into relativistic quantum field theory (RQFT) in which the particle concept ceases to be meaningful in presence of general background geometries [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-7-2': 'Does that mean we would have to employ the whole machinery of RQFT in order to just answer simple questions concerning matter-gravity interactions that go beyond the simplest (and obvious; see below) couplings to the Newtonian potential?', '1812.05181-1-7-3': "We think the answer is no, but at the same time we think that the alternative should not result in ad hoc procedures guided by more or less well founded 'physical intuition'.", '1812.05181-1-7-4': 'Rather we should look for a general and systematic method that allows to derive the full coupling by means of an algorithm that arguably qualifies as a proper post-Newtonian approximation.', '1812.05181-1-7-5': 'We see this paper as a positive contribution to this end.', '1812.05181-1-8-0': "To be slightly more precise, we recall that the Schrödinger equation describing a 'non-relativistic' particle of mass [MATH] in a background Newtonian gravitational field with potential [MATH] is [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-1-8-1': 'This equation has extensively been tested in the gravitational field of the earth, beginning with neutron interferometry in the classic COW experiment [CITATION] and leading up to atom interferometers of the Kasevich-Chu type, accomplishing, e.g., highly precise measurements of the gravitational acceleration [MATH] on the earth [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-8-2': "We now ask what kind of 'post-Newtonian corrections' to this equation arise from general relativity or other metric theories of gravity, considering additional terms involving the Newtonian potential [MATH] as well as new terms involving all ten metric components [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-9-0': 'In the existing literature, one finds two different main approaches to this problem of post-Newtonian correction terms for the Schrödinger equation describing a particle in a curved spacetime.', '1812.05181-1-9-1': 'The first, described, e.g., by Wajima et al. [CITATION], starts from a classical description of the particle and applies canonical quantisation rules adapted to the situation (in a somewhat ad hoc fashion) to derive a quantum mechanical Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-1-9-2': 'By an expansion in powers of [MATH] (at the stage of the classical Hamiltonian), one finds the desired correction terms.', '1812.05181-1-9-3': 'Other methods along a similar line use path integral quantisation on the classical system, as, e.g., the semi-classical calculation by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-10-0': 'The second, fundamentally different approach takes a field-theoretic perspective and derives the Schrödinger equation as an equation for the positive frequency solutions of the minimally coupled classical Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-1-10-1': 'This is accomplished by Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] by making a WKB-like ansatz for the Klein-Gordon field and thus (formally) expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH], in the end viewing the Klein-Gordon theory as a (formal) deformation of the Schrödinger theory, implementing the deformation of Galilei to Poincaré symmetry well-known at the level of Lie algebras [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-10-2': 'This second method seems to be more firmly rooted in first principles than the canonical quantisation method, since it can at least heuristically be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes (see the beginning of section [REF]).', '1812.05181-1-11-0': "The calculation of general-relativistic corrections to phase shifts in atom interferometry by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION] used a semi-classical approximation scheme, the so-called 'stationary phase approximation' in path integral terms, which is non-exact for Hamiltonians of higher than quadratic order in positions and momenta.", '1812.05181-1-11-1': 'The approximation breaks down for wave packets with large width in phase space, so that similar methods cannot directly be applied when considering the effect of general gravitational fields on, e.g., large spatial superpositions, for example proposed relevant for gravitational dephasing by Pikovski et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-11-2': 'In contrast to this, using a modified Schrödinger equation makes it possible to, in principle, describe quantum systems under gravity without any semi-classical approximation.', '1812.05181-1-12-0': 'Although the two methods for obtaining post-Newtonian Schrödinger equations described above are very different in spirit, they lead to comparable results in lowest orders.', '1812.05181-1-12-1': 'To make possible a general comparison beyond the explicit examples considered in the existing literature, we will apply the methods to as general a metric as possible: In section [REF], we will give a brief overview over the canonical quantisation method, while section [REF] will develop the WKB-like formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH] in a general metric given as a formal power series in [MATH], significantly extending existing explicit examples to the general case.', '1812.05181-1-12-2': 'This leads to some simple comparisons of the resulting Hamiltonian with the one from canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-1-13-0': "In section [REF], we consider a (formal) expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of momentum operators leading to a Schrödinger form of the equation, yielding some general statements about similarities between the canonical and the Klein-Gordon methods without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in powers of [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-14-0': "A general WKB-like 'non-relativistic' formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto obtain a Schrödinger equation was already considered by Tagirov in [CITATION] and a series of follow-up papers [CITATION], as summarised in [CITATION]; but unlike our approach, these works did not expand the metric, thus not allowing to directly apply the results to metrics given as a power series in [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-14-1': 'Tagirov also compared his WKB-like approach to methods of canonical quantisation [CITATION], but did this only for the case of static metrics.', '1812.05181-1-15-0': "We will use the 'mostly plus' signature convention for the spacetime metric, i.e. [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-15-1': 'Since we are concerned mostly with conceptual questions, we will generally not be mathematically very rigorous, and in particular not mention domains of definition of operators.', '1812.05181-1-16-0': '# Canonical quantisation of a free particle', '1812.05181-1-17-0': 'In the following, we will describe the canonical quantisation approach used by Wajima et al. [CITATION] to derive a Hamiltonian for a quantum particle in the post-Newtonian gravitational field of a point-like rotating source for the analysis of effects on interferometric phase shifts.', '1812.05181-1-17-1': 'We will focus on the conceptual issues of the procedure since we want to stay as general as possible.', '1812.05181-1-18-0': "The classical action for a 'relativistic' point particle of mass [MATH] in curved spacetime with metric [MATH] is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the arbitrarily parametrised worldline of the particle.", '1812.05181-1-19-0': "We assume the spacetime to be globally hyperbolic and perform a [MATH] decomposition of spacetime: We have a foliation into 3-dimensional spacelike Cauchy surfaces parametrised by a 'foliation parameter' [MATH], and we introduce coordinates such that [MATH] are coordinates on these Cauchy surfaces and [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-19-1': 'Parametrising the worldline of the particle by [MATH], the classical Hamiltonian can be computed to be [EQUATION] when expressed in terms of the spacetime metric, where [MATH] are the momenta conjugate to [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-19-2': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-1-20-0': "Now, we want to 'canonically quantise' this Hamiltonian.", '1812.05181-1-20-1': 'To this end, we define the scalar product [EQUATION] on the space of functions defined on the Cauchy surfaces - motivated by the consideration that [MATH] should be a scalar on them - and the momentum operator [EQUATION] which is symmetric with respect to the scalar product and fulfils the canonical commutation relation [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-20-2': 'Here and in the following, we write [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-21-0': 'Now we can expand the square root in the classical Hamiltonian eq:class_Ham to the desired order in [MATH] and afterwards replace the classical momentum variables by the momentum operators, applying some chosen ordering scheme to products of momenta and (functions of) position.', '1812.05181-1-21-1': 'Thus, we get a quantised Hamiltonian [MATH] acting on the space of functions defined on the Cauchy surfaces.', '1812.05181-1-21-2': 'The Schrödinger equation in this scheme then has the usual form [EQUATION].', '1812.05181-1-22-0': "If we want to express the scalar product in the form of a 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product [EQUATION] easing the comparison to non-relativistic Schrödinger theory and to the WKB method, we can achieve this by defining the 'flat wavefunction' [MATH], which evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [EQUATION] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION].", '1812.05181-1-22-1': "As is clear from the definition of the momentum operator, the second term in this flat Hamiltonian is just what we get by replacing the momentum in the classical Hamiltonian by the 'flat' momentum operator [MATH] (applying our chosen ordering scheme).", '1812.05181-1-23-0': "Thus, we can directly get the flat Hamiltonian by 'canonically quantising' the classical Hamiltonian using the flat momentum operator and afterwards adding the term [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-24-0': 'For time-dependent [MATH], probability is not conserved when using this procedure, since the scalar product depends on [MATH]; to make it conserved, we could add the term [MATH] to [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-24-1': "This would result in [MATH] being just the classical Hamiltonian 'canonically quantised' using [MATH], without any additional term.", '1812.05181-1-24-2': 'From now on, we will simply use this procedure.', '1812.05181-1-25-0': '# WKB-like expansion of the Klein-Gordon equation', '1812.05181-1-26-0': 'Now, we will consider WKB-like formal expansions in [MATH] of the classical, minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationleading to a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian corrections, as considered by Lämmerzahl in [CITATION] for a simple PPN metric in Eddington-Robertson parametrisation and by Giulini and Großardt in [CITATION] for general spherically symmetric metrics.', '1812.05181-1-27-0': 'As already mentioned in the introduction, this method can, on a heuristic level, be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes.', '1812.05181-1-27-1': "Namely, in the quantum field theory construction for the free Klein-Gordon field on a globally hyperbolic stationary spacetime (see [CITATION]), the Hilbert space of the theory is the bosonic Fock space over the 'one-particle' Hilbert space constructed as the completion of the space of classical solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationwith 'positive frequency' (wrt. the stationarity Killing field) with the Klein-Gordon inner product.", '1812.05181-1-27-2': 'I.e. the one-particle sector of the quantum field theory is described by positive frequency solutions of the classical Klein-Gordon equation, using the Klein-Gordon inner product.', '1812.05181-1-27-3': 'In the non-stationary case, there is no canonical notion of particles and thus, strictly speaking, the whole question about the behaviour of single quantum particles does not make sense.', '1812.05181-1-27-4': "Nevertheless, for an observer moving on an orbit which is approximately Killing, the classical Klein-Gordon theory can still be expected to lead to approximately correct predictions regarding this observer's observations.", '1812.05181-1-28-0': "Even if this motivation is just a heuristic, the WKB-like approach of expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH] allows us to view the Klein-Gordon theory as a formal deformation of the 'non-relativistic' Schrödinger theory, and makes the sense in which that happens formally precise.", '1812.05181-1-29-0': "We will start with describing the expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH], then explain the transformation to a 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product for comparison to canonical quantisation and finally consider the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory as a simple explicit example.", '1812.05181-1-30-0': '## General derivation', '1812.05181-1-31-0': 'We fix a coordinate system [MATH] and assume that the components of the inverse metric be (formal) power series [EQUATION] in the inverse of the velocity of light [MATH], the lowest-order term being given by the (inverse) Minkowski metric.', '1812.05181-1-31-1': "To perform the 'non-relativistic' expansion in the correct way, we have to explicitly include [MATH] in the definition of coordinate time [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-32-0': "In coordinates, the d'Alembert operator in a general Lorentz metric is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-32-1': 'The second and third term in this expression can easily be expanded in [MATH] by inserting the expansion eq:exp_metric of the components of the inverse metric.', '1812.05181-1-33-0': 'Since the remaining first term involves the expression [EQUATION] we need an expression for the [MATH]-expansion of the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-1-33-1': 'Rewriting the expansion of the inverse metric as [EQUATION] we see that a formal Neumann series can be used to invert the power series.', '1812.05181-1-33-2': 'Using the Cauchy product formula, the first term of eq:box_op can then be explicitly expanded.', '1812.05181-1-33-3': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-1-34-0': "Combining the results for the three terms, the full expansion of the d'Alembert operator reads [EQUATION] where latin indices are 'spatial' indices running from 1 to 3, [MATH] denotes the 'flat' Euclidean Laplacian in the spatial coordinates, in sums like [MATH], the indices [MATH] and [MATH] take values [MATH], and we introduced the notation [EQUATION].", '1812.05181-1-35-0': 'Now, we consider the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationfor a particle of mass [MATH], [EQUATION] and make the WKB-like ansatz [EQUATION] for the Klein-Gordon field (cf. [CITATION]), where [MATH] is a real function; i.e. we separate off a phase factor and expand the remainder as a power series in [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-35-1': 'All the functions [MATH] are assumed to be independent of the expansion parameter [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-35-2': 'The derivatives of the field are [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-35-3': "Using this and the expansion eq:box_expanded of the d'Alembert operator, we can now analyse the Klein-Gordon equationorder by order in [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-35-4': 'At the lowest occurring order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] which is equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-35-5': 'So [MATH] is a function of (coordinate) time only.', '1812.05181-1-35-6': 'Using this, the Klein-Gordon equationhas no term of order [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-36-0': 'At [MATH], we get [EQUATION] equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-36-1': 'Since we are interested in positive-frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, we choose [MATH], leading to [EQUATION] (an additional constant term would lead to an irrelevant global phase).', '1812.05181-1-37-0': 'The [MATH] coefficient leads to the equation [EQUATION] equivalent to [EQUATION].', '1812.05181-1-37-1': 'Thus the requirement that the Klein-Gordon equationhave solutions which are formal power series of the form eq:WKB_ansatz imposes restrictions on the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-1-37-2': 'In the following, we will freely use the vanishing of [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-38-0': 'Using these results, the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationfor our WKB-like solutions is equivalent to an equation for [MATH] and further, inserting the expansion [MATH], to a collective equation for the [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-38-1': 'These equations are given as eq:WKB_KG_psi and eq:WKB_KG in the appendix.', '1812.05181-1-39-0': 'Using eq:WKB_KG, we can obtain equations for the [MATH], order by order, which can then be combined into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH]: At order [MATH], we have [EQUATION] i.e. the Schrödinger equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-39-1': 'By the relation [MATH], this also gives a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] in 0[MATH] order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-40-0': 'At order [MATH], eq:WKB_KG yields the following Schrödinger-like equation for [MATH] with correction terms involving [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-40-1': 'Using [MATH], we can combine eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_1 with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_0 into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] up to order [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-40-2': 'Continuing this process of evaluating eq:WKB_KG, we can, in principle, get Schrödinger equations for [MATH] to arbitrary order in [MATH], i.e. obtain the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-41-0': "However, when considering higher orders, a difficulty arises: The Schrödinger-like equations for [MATH] begin to involve time derivatives of the lower order functions [MATH], so we have to re-use the derived equations for the [MATH] in order to get a true Schrödinger equation for [MATH] (with a purely 'spatial' Hamiltonian, i.e. not involving any time derivatives), i.e. the process becomes recursive.", '1812.05181-1-41-1': 'As far as concrete calculations up to some finite order are concerned, this is merely a computational obstacle; but for a general analysis of the expansion method this poses a bigger problem, since no general closed form can be easily obtained.', '1812.05181-1-41-2': 'This motivated the study of the Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the time derivative operator, leading to the method described in section [REF].', '1812.05181-1-42-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-1-43-0': "To transform the Hamiltonian obtained in eq:Schroedinger_WKB to the 'flat' scalar product in order to compare it to the result from canonical quantisation, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-1-43-1': 'Using [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], we get [EQUATION].', '1812.05181-1-43-2': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION].", '1812.05181-1-44-0': 'Using [MATH] and noting that conjugation with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant, we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the anticommutator.', '1812.05181-1-44-1': "This is the Hamiltonian appearing in the 'flat' Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationup to order [MATH], obtained by the WKB-like approximation in a general metric.", '1812.05181-1-45-0': 'For comparison of this result with the canonical quantisation scheme, we have to subtract the rest energy [MATH] from the classical Hamiltonian of equation eq:class_Ham, corresponding to the phase factor separated off the Klein-Gordon field, and expand it in [MATH], yielding [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-45-1': "Comparing this with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_flat, we see that by 'canonical quantisation' of this classical Hamiltonian using the rule '[MATH]', we can reproduce, using a special ordering scheme, all terms appearing in the WKB expansion, apart from [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-45-2': 'For this last term to arise by canonical quantisation, in the classical Hamiltonian there would have to be a term proportional to [MATH], which is not the case.', '1812.05181-1-46-0': "As the most simple non-trivial example, for the 'Newtonian' metric with line element [EQUATION] the inverse metric has components [EQUATION] leading to the quantum Hamiltonian [MATH] in both schemes, i.e. just the standard Hamiltonian with Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-1-47-0': '## The Eddington-Robertson PPN metric as an explicit example', '1812.05181-1-48-0': 'The Eddington-Robertson parametrised post-Newtonian metric is given by the line element [EQUATION] with the Eddington-Robertson parameters [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-48-1': 'For the case of general relativity, both these parameters take the value [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-48-2': 'The components of the metric can be read off from the expression for the line element to be [EQUATION] leading to the inverse metric having components [EQUATION].', '1812.05181-1-49-0': 'The equations arising for [MATH] from eq:WKB_KG at orders [MATH] are thus simply the Schrödinger equations [EQUATION] at order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] or equivalently the Schrödinger-like equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-49-1': 'Using the Schrödinger equation for [MATH], we have [EQUATION] and thus the equation for [MATH] becomes [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-49-2': "Combining the equations for [MATH], the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger equation [MATH] for the 'wavefunction' (i.e. phase-shifted Klein-Gordon field) [MATH] thus reads [EQUATION] reproducing, up to notational differences and the fact that we did not consider coupling to an electromagnetic field, the result of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].", '1812.05181-1-50-0': 'To transform to the flat scalar product, we note that in our metric and using this Hamiltonian, the Klein-Gordon inner product eq:KG_ip is given by [EQUATION].', '1812.05181-1-50-1': 'For this to equal the flat scalar product [MATH], the flat wavefunction has to have the form [MATH] (note that [MATH] commutes with [MATH] up to higher-order terms), resulting in the flat Hamiltonian [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-50-2': 'Using [MATH] and [MATH], this yields [EQUATION] reproducing the flat Hamiltonian of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].', '1812.05181-1-51-0': 'In comparison, the classical Hamiltonian (minus the rest energy) expands to [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-51-1': 'By canonical quantisation of this, we cannot reproduce the Hamiltonian obtained from the WKB expansion in the case of a general [MATH], but just for some special choices of [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme: For example, in the anticommutator ordering scheme, we would quantise the classical function [MATH] as [MATH], reproducig the WKB Hamiltonian in the case of [MATH]; but when quantising it as [MATH], this would lead to agreement with the WKB Hamiltonian for [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-52-0': '# General comparison of the two methods by momentum expansion', '1812.05181-1-53-0': "We will now describe a method by which general statements about similarities and differences between the two approaches explained above can be made in the case of stationary spacetimes, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in [MATH].", '1812.05181-1-53-1': "Instead, we consider 'potential' terms and terms linear, quadratic, in momentum, i.e. we perform a (formal) expansion in momenta.", '1812.05181-1-54-0': '## The Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the Hamiltonian', '1812.05181-1-55-0': 'Assume a stationary spacetime and work in adapted coordinates [MATH], i.e. coordinates such that [MATH] is (a constant multiple of) the stationarity Killing field.', '1812.05181-1-55-1': 'In particular, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-55-2': "The coordinate expression for the d'Alembert operator on functions is thus [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-1-55-3': 'Hence, the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationreads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-55-4': 'This means that the space of solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationis the kernel of [MATH], where for an operator [MATH] acting on the functions on the spacetime, [MATH] is the following operator: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-55-5': 'Thus, wanting to write the Klein-Gordon equationin the form of a Schrödinger equation [MATH] - and thus restricting to the solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationfor which this is possible - we see that this can be achieved by demanding the Hamiltonian [MATH] to be a solution of the quadratic operator equation [EQUATION] and be composed only of spatial derivative operators and coefficients of the metric, not involving any time derivatives: Stationarity of the metric then implies [MATH], such that the Schrödinger equation yields [MATH], leading to [MATH] by eq:KG_operator_expression; i.e. every solution of the Schrödinger equation is also a solution of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-1-56-0': 'In the following, we will solve equation eq:KG_operator_expression by expanding [MATH] as a formal power series in spatial derivative operators, i.e. momentum operators.', '1812.05181-1-56-1': 'The two possible solutions we will obtain for [MATH] correspond to positive and negative frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, respectively.', '1812.05181-1-57-0': '## Momentum expansion and first-order solution', '1812.05181-1-58-0': 'We expand [MATH] as [MATH], where [MATH] includes all terms involving [MATH] spatial derivative operators.', '1812.05181-1-58-1': 'Using this notation, the lowest order term of eq:KG_operator_expression, involving no spatial derivatives, reads [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION] where we choose the positive square root since we are interested in positive frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-1-59-0': 'At order [MATH], equation eq:KG_operator_expression gives [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-59-1': 'Writing [MATH] where [MATH] is a multiplication operator (involving one spatial differentiation of some function) and [MATH] are coefficient functions not involving any differentiations, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-1-59-2': 'Thus, the equation reads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-59-3': 'The right-hand side now has two different components: A multiplication operator and an operator differentiating the function it acts upon.', '1812.05181-1-59-4': 'These components have to vanish independently.', '1812.05181-1-59-5': "The 'differentiating part' is [MATH], equivalently [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-1-59-6': 'Thus, the multiplication operator part is [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-59-7': 'Since [MATH], eq:KG_operator_H0, eq:KG_operator_H1C and eq:KG_operator_H1M together yield the result [EQUATION] for the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form [EQUATION] of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equation, at first order in momenta.', '1812.05181-1-60-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-1-61-0': "To transform this Hamiltonian to the 'flat' scalar product, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-1-61-1': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION].", '1812.05181-1-61-2': 'For calculating [MATH] from [MATH], we note that conjugating with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant and that [EQUATION] yielding the final result [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-1-61-3': "Looking at the momentum expansion of the classical Hamiltonian [EQUATION] we see that 'canonical quantisation' of this Hamiltonian will lead to the same 'potential term' as did the Klein-Gordon equation, regardless of the adopted ordering scheme, and to the same term linear in momentum if we use any ordering scheme leading to 'anticommutator quantisation' for linear terms.", '1812.05181-1-62-0': '# Conclusion', '1812.05181-1-63-0': 'We have shown how to derive a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian correction terms describing a single quantum particle in a general curved background spacetime by means of a WKB-like formal expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-1-63-1': 'We extended this method to account for, in principle, terms of arbitrary orders in [MATH], although it gets recursive at higher orders, making it computationally more difficult to handle than methods based on formal quantisation of the classical description of the particle.', '1812.05181-1-63-2': 'Nevertheless, we believe this scheme to be better suited for concrete predictions, since it is more firmly based on first principles and also more systematic than ad hoc canonical quantisation procedures as employed widely in the literature.', '1812.05181-1-63-3': 'For example, no operator ordering ambiguities arise; instead, the WKB method can be seen as predicting the ordering.', '1812.05181-1-64-0': 'Comparing the Klein-Gordon expansion method to canonical quantisation, we have found that in the case of a general metric, even at lowest post-Newtonian order, the two procedures lead to slightly different quantum Hamiltonians, independent of ordering ambiguities.', '1812.05181-1-64-1': 'For the concrete case of the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory, the Hamiltonians obtained from the two methods differ in a term including the Eddington-Robertson parameter [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme employed in canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-1-64-2': 'Thus for the interpretation of tests of general relativity with quantum systems, the method used to derive the quantum Hamiltonian plays a decisive rôle.', '1812.05181-1-65-0': "For the case of stationary background metrics, without employing any 'non-relativistic' expansion, we showed that up to linear order in spatial momenta, the Hamiltonians obtained from canonical quantisation of a free particle and from the Klein-Gordon equation agree.", '1812.05181-1-65-1': "In particular, this means that the lowest-order coupling to the 'gravitomagnetic' field [MATH] is independent of the gravity-quantum matter coupling method.", '1812.05181-1-66-0': 'It should be clear that the classical Klein-Gordon equation, as well as any expansion based on it, meets its limits as soon as effects of particle creation and annihilation become relevant.', '1812.05181-1-66-1': 'Obviously, these cannot be accounted for in a single-particle description as proposed here.', '1812.05181-1-66-2': 'One may indeed wonder whether and how this single-particle scheme can be generalised to a system of a fixed number of many interacting particles.', '1812.05181-1-66-3': 'This is not as straightforward as one might think at first.', '1812.05181-1-66-4': "It is well known that there exist severe obstructions against formulating a relativistic theory of many interacting particles; see, e.g., chapter 21 of [CITATION], where the 'no-interaction-theorems' in Poincaré invariant Hamiltonian mechanics are discussed.", '1812.05181-1-67-0': 'Concerning the applicability of the WKB-like method for concrete calculations, it is also an interesting question if and how the transformation of the Hamiltonian from the Klein-Gordon inner product to an [MATH]-scalar product - be it flat or with respect to the induced measure [MATH] - can be implemented more systematically, not relying on direct calculations with the already-computed Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-1-68-0': 'Another important issue to address is the coordinate-dependence of the methods developed in this paper: It would be desirable to have at hand a coordinate-free formulation of the expansion/coupling schemes with clear geometric interpretation, thus respecting the geometric nature of gravity.'}
{'1812.05181-2-0-0': "In this paper we extend the WKB-like 'non-relativistic' expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationafter Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] to arbitrary order in [MATH], leading to Schrödinger equations describing a quantum particle in a general gravitational field, and compare the results with canonical quantisation of a free particle in curved spacetime, following Wajima et al. [CITATION].", '1812.05181-2-0-1': "Furthermore, using a more operator-algebraic approach, the Klein-Gordon equationand the canonical quantisation method are shown to lead to the same results for some special terms in the Hamiltonian describing a single particle in a general stationary spacetime, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion.", '1812.05181-2-1-0': 'Keywords: quantum matter in gravity, non-relativistic expansion, post-Newtonian expansion, Klein-Gordon equation, formal WKB expansion', '1812.05181-2-2-0': '# Introduction', '1812.05181-2-3-0': 'Suppose we are given a quantum-mechanical system whose time evolution in the absence of gravity is known in terms of the ordinary time-dependent Schrödinger equation.', '1812.05181-2-3-1': "In other words: We know the system's Hamiltonian if all gravitational interactions are neglected.", '1812.05181-2-3-2': "We ask: what principles do we use in order to deduce the system's interaction with a given external gravitational field?", '1812.05181-2-3-3': "Note that by 'gravitational field' we understand all the ten components [MATH] of the spacetime metric that are subject to Einstein's field equations of general relativity (or, more generally, to the equations of some other metric theory of gravity), not just the scalar component [MATH] representing the Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-2-4-0': 'The behaviour of quantum systems in general gravitational fields is naturally of fundamental interest, relating, e.g., to the reaction of quantum systems to gravitational waves [CITATION], tests of general relativity, the controversially discussed topic of gravitationally induced quantum dephasing [CITATION], quantum tests of the classical equivalence principle [CITATION] or proposals of quantum formulations of the equivalence principle [CITATION] and tests thereof [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-5-0': "The conceptual difficulty we are addressing here has to do with the fact that the usual 'minimal coupling scheme' that we usually employ in order to couple any classical field obeying Lorentz invariant equations of motion simply does not apply to the case at hand.", '1812.05181-2-5-1': "We recall that, in a nutshell, this prescription is a two step process: 1) Write down the matter's dynamical law in a Poincaré invariant fashion in Minkowski spacetime; 2) replace the flat Minkowski metric [MATH] by a general Lorentzian metric [MATH] and the partial derivatives with respect to the affine coordinates of Minkowski spacetime (i.e. the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH]) by the Levi-Civita covariant derivative with respect to [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-6-0': 'This procedure suffers from an essential non-uniqueness which has to do with the fact that the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH] commute whereas those with respect to [MATH] generally do not.', '1812.05181-2-6-1': 'Hence there are equivalent forms for the dynamical laws in step 1) that turn into inequivalent extensions after performing step 2).', '1812.05181-2-6-2': "The differences will consist in terms that result from commuting covariant derivatives and hence in local couplings of [MATH]'s curvature tensor to the matter field.", '1812.05181-2-6-3': 'Modulo this well known ambiguity the prescription just outlined is straightforward to apply and has been successfully used in all applications of general relativity.', '1812.05181-2-7-0': 'The point addressed here in connection with quantum mechanics is not so much the ambiguity just described, but rather the obvious failure to even implement step 1): There simply is no obvious way to rewrite the Schrödinger equation into a Poincaré invariant form in order to be able to apply step 2).', '1812.05181-2-7-1': 'Special relativity turns quantum mechanics into relativistic quantum field theory (RQFT) in which the particle concept ceases to be meaningful in presence of general background geometries [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-7-2': 'Does that mean we would have to employ the whole machinery of RQFT in order to just answer simple questions concerning matter-gravity interactions that go beyond the simplest (and obvious; see below) couplings to the Newtonian potential?', '1812.05181-2-7-3': "We think the answer is no, but at the same time we think that the alternative should not result in ad hoc procedures guided by more or less well founded 'physical intuition'.", '1812.05181-2-7-4': 'Rather we should look for a general and systematic method that allows to derive the full coupling by means of an algorithm that arguably qualifies as a proper post-Newtonian approximation.', '1812.05181-2-7-5': 'We see this paper as a positive contribution to this end.', '1812.05181-2-8-0': "To be slightly more precise, we recall that the Schrödinger equation describing a 'non-relativistic' (i.e. not Poincaré invariant) particle of mass [MATH] and zero spin in a background Newtonian gravitational field with potential [MATH] is [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-8-1': 'This equation has extensively been tested in the gravitational field of the earth, beginning with neutron interferometry in the classic COW experiment [CITATION] and leading up to atom interferometers of the Kasevich-Chu type, accomplishing, e.g., highly precise measurements of the gravitational acceleration [MATH] on the earth [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-8-2': "We now ask what kind of 'post-Newtonian corrections' to this equation arise from general relativity or other metric theories of gravity, considering additional terms involving the Newtonian potential [MATH] as well as new terms involving all ten metric components [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-9-0': 'In the existing literature, one finds two different main approaches to this problem of post-Newtonian correction terms for the Schrödinger equation describing a particle in a curved spacetime.', '1812.05181-2-9-1': 'The first, described, e.g., by Wajima et al. [CITATION], starts from a classical description of the particle and applies canonical quantisation rules adapted to the situation (in a somewhat ad hoc fashion) to derive a quantum mechanical Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-2-9-2': 'By an expansion in powers of [MATH] (at the stage of the classical Hamiltonian), one finds the desired correction terms.', '1812.05181-2-9-3': 'Other methods along a similar line use path integral quantisation on the classical system, as, e.g., the semi-classical calculation by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-10-0': 'The second, fundamentally different approach takes a field-theoretic perspective and derives the Schrödinger equation as an equation for the positive frequency solutions of the minimally coupled classical Klein-Gordon equation For simplicity we call, as is common, the Poincaré invariant mass [MATH] and zero-spin equation by the names of Oskar Klein and Walter Gordon, even though Erwin Schrödinger and Vladimir Fock were amongst the first to consider it.', '1812.05181-2-10-1': 'This is accomplished by Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] by making a WKB-like ansatz for the Klein-Gordon field and thus (formally) expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH], in the end viewing the Klein-Gordon theory as a (formal) deformation of the Schrödinger theory, implementing the deformation of Galilei to Poincaré symmetry well-known at the level of Lie algebras [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-10-2': 'This second method seems to be more firmly rooted in first principles than the canonical quantisation method, since it can at least heuristically be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes (see section [REF]).', '1812.05181-2-11-0': "The calculation of general-relativistic corrections to phase shifts in atom interferometry by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION] used a semi-classical approximation scheme, the so-called 'stationary phase approximation' in path integral terms, which is non-exact for Hamiltonians of higher than quadratic order in positions and momenta.", '1812.05181-2-11-1': 'The approximation breaks down for wave packets with large width in phase space, so that similar methods cannot directly be applied when considering the effect of general gravitational fields on, e.g., large spatial superpositions, for example proposed relevant for gravitational dephasing by Pikovski et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-11-2': 'In contrast to this, using a modified Schrödinger equation makes it possible to, in principle, describe quantum systems under gravity without any semi-classical approximation.', '1812.05181-2-12-0': 'Although the two methods for obtaining post-Newtonian Schrödinger equations described above are very different in spirit, they lead to comparable results in lowest orders.', '1812.05181-2-12-1': 'To make possible a general comparison beyond the explicit examples considered in the existing literature, we will apply the methods to as general a metric as possible: In section [REF], we will give a brief overview over the canonical quantisation method, while section [REF] will develop the WKB-like formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH] in a general metric given as a formal power series in [MATH], significantly extending existing explicit examples to the general case.', '1812.05181-2-12-2': 'This leads to some simple comparisons of the resulting Hamiltonian with the one from canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-2-13-0': "In section [REF], we consider a (formal) expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of momentum operators leading to a Schrödinger form of the equation, yielding some general statements about similarities between the canonical and the Klein-Gordon methods without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in powers of [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-14-0': "A general WKB-like 'non-relativistic' formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto obtain a Schrödinger equation was already considered by Tagirov in [CITATION] and a series of follow-up papers [CITATION], as summarised in [CITATION]; but unlike our approach, these works did not expand the metric, thus not allowing to directly apply the results to metrics given as a power series in [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-14-1': 'Tagirov also compared his WKB-like approach to methods of canonical quantisation [CITATION], but did this only for the case of static metrics.', '1812.05181-2-15-0': "We will use the 'mostly plus' signature convention for the spacetime metric, i.e. [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-15-1': 'Since we are concerned mostly with conceptual questions, we will generally not be mathematically very rigorous, and in particular not mention domains of definition of operators.', '1812.05181-2-16-0': '# Canonical quantisation of a free particle', '1812.05181-2-17-0': 'In the following, we will describe the canonical quantisation approach used by Wajima et al. [CITATION] to derive a Hamiltonian for a quantum particle in the post-Newtonian gravitational field of a point-like rotating source for the analysis of effects on interferometric phase shifts.', '1812.05181-2-17-1': 'We will focus on the conceptual issues of the procedure since we want to stay as general as possible.', '1812.05181-2-18-0': "The classical action for a 'relativistic' point particle of mass [MATH] in curved spacetime with metric [MATH] is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the arbitrarily parametrised worldline of the particle.", '1812.05181-2-19-0': "We assume the spacetime to be globally hyperbolic and perform a [MATH] decomposition of spacetime [CITATION]: We foliate spacetime [MATH] into 3-dimensional spacelike Cauchy surfaces [MATH] which are images of an 'abstract' Cauchy surface [MATH] under a family of embeddings [MATH], parametrised by a 'foliation parameter' [MATH], and we introduce spacetime coordinates such that [MATH] are coordinates on [MATH] and [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-19-1': 'Parametrising the worldline of the particle by [MATH], the classical Hamiltonian can be computed to be [EQUATION] when expressed in terms of the spacetime metric, where [MATH] are the momenta conjugate to [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-19-2': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-2-20-0': "Now, we want to 'canonically quantise' this Hamiltonian.", '1812.05181-2-20-1': 'To this end, we have to define a Hilbert space for our quantum theory, define position and momentum operators acting on this Hilbert space and satisfying the canonical commutation relations, and choose an operator ordering scheme for symmetrising products of momenta and (functions of) position.', '1812.05181-2-20-2': 'By then expanding the square root in the classical Hamiltonian eq:class_Ham to the desired order in [MATH] (or in momenta, see section [REF]) and afterwards replacing the classical momentum and position variables by the corresponding operators, applying the chosen ordering scheme, we get a quantised Hamiltonian [MATH] acting on our Hilbert space and can postulate a Schrödinger equation in the usual form [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-20-3': 'Let us stress once more that this Hamiltonian will depend not only on the choice of [MATH] decomposition of spacetime into Cauchy surfaces, which is the case since for a post-Newtonian approximation we need some notion of separate space and time, but also on the choice of operator ordering scheme, which we leave open in order to keep the discussion as general as possible.', '1812.05181-2-21-0': 'We now turn to the definition of the Hilbert space and the position and momentum operators, which is more subtle than might be anticipated at first thought.', '1812.05181-2-21-1': 'Since the position variables in the classical Hamiltonian eq:class_Ham are the spatial coordinates [MATH] on the Cauchy surfaces, we want the quantum position operators to directly correspond to these.', '1812.05181-2-21-2': "Thus, we want to define the Hilbert space as some space of square-integrable 'wavefunctions' of the [MATH], such that we can take as position operators simply the operators of multiplication with the coordinates.", '1812.05181-2-21-3': 'The question of definition of the Hilbert space thus becomes a question of choice of a scalar product on (some subspace of) the space of functions of the [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-22-0': "To be more precise, we do not just need a single Hilbert space: To any 'time' (i.e. foliation parameter) [MATH] we want to associate a wavefunction [MATH] giving rise to a position probability distribution on the Cauchy surface [MATH] corresponding to [MATH], so we need to consider an individual Hilbert space for each Cauchy surface in the [MATH] decomposition.", '1812.05181-2-22-1': 'But since we want to relate these wavefunctions by a Schrödinger equation, we have to somehow identify the Hilbert spaces corresponding to the different Cauchy surfaces, which we are now going to explain.', '1812.05181-2-23-0': 'A natural, geometric choice of scalar product on the space of functions on [MATH] is the [MATH]-scalar product with respect to the induced metric measure (cf. [CITATION]), i.e. [EQUATION] where here and in the following, we write [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-23-1': 'Consider first the case that the spatial metric [MATH] be independent of [MATH], i.e. that the induced geometry be the same for all Cauchy surfaces.', '1812.05181-2-23-2': 'Then this scalar product is independent of [MATH], such that the Hilbert spaces corresponding to the different Cauchy surfaces are canonically identified by simply identifying the wavefunctions.', '1812.05181-2-23-3': 'We can then define the momentum operator as [EQUATION] which is symmetric with respect to the scalar product and fulfils the canonical commutation relation [MATH], and carry out canonical quantisation as described above.', '1812.05181-2-24-0': 'If we allow for [MATH] to depend on [MATH], the scalar product eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced depends on [MATH] and thus the canonical map [MATH] no longer is an isomorphism of Hilbert spaces.', '1812.05181-2-24-1': 'I.e. the natural identification from above does not work, spoiling the program of canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-2-24-2': "A natural solution to this problem is to instead consider the time-independent 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product [EQUATION] together with the 'flat' momentum operator [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-24-3': 'Using these, canonical quantisation can be carried out.', '1812.05181-2-24-4': "At first sight, this scalar product could seem less 'geometric' than eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced, but it can be seen to have as much invariant meaning as the latter by realising that, geometrically speaking, the 'flat' wavefunctions [MATH] be scalar densities (of weight [MATH]) instead of scalar functions.", '1812.05181-2-24-5': "Since this choice of 'flat' scalar product can be applied to more general situations, and it eases the comparison to usual non-relativistic Schrödinger theory and to the WKB method, we will adopt it from now on, i.e. 'canonically quantise' the expanded classical Hamiltonian by replacing the classical momentum by the flat momentum operator (applying our chosen ordering scheme).", '1812.05181-2-25-0': 'In fact, in the case of time-independent [MATH] the quantum theories resulting from the two choices described above are unitarily equivalent by the Stone-von Neumann theorem, via the unitary operator given by [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-26-0': '# WKB-like expansion of the Klein-Gordon equation', '1812.05181-2-27-0': 'Now, we will consider WKB-like formal expansions in [MATH] of the classical, minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationfor a particle of mass [MATH], [EQUATION] leading to a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian corrections, as considered by Lämmerzahl in [CITATION] for a simple PPN metric in Eddington-Robertson parametrisation and by Giulini and Großardt in [CITATION] for general spherically symmetric metrics.', '1812.05181-2-28-0': 'Instead of eq:KG one could also consider the more general case of a possibly non-minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equation, i.e. including some curvature term.', '1812.05181-2-28-1': 'This is customary in modern literature on quantum field theory in curved spacetime, where an additional term [MATH] is included in the equation, [MATH] being the scalar curvature of the spacetime [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-28-2': "In particular, for the choice of [MATH] ('conformal coupling'), the equation becomes conformally invariant in the massless case [MATH], and also in the massive case there are some arguments favouring the conformally coupled Klein-Gordon equation, in particular in de Sitter spacetime [CITATION].", '1812.05181-2-28-3': 'Nevertheless, we will for the sake of simplicity stick with the minimally coupled equation in this paper, leaving non-minimal coupling for later, possibly more coordinate-independent investigations.', '1812.05181-2-29-0': "After giving a heuristic motivation for consideration of the classical Klein-Gordon equation, we will describe the expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH], then explain the transformation to a 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product for comparison to canonical quantisation and finally consider the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory as a simple explicit example.", '1812.05181-2-30-0': '## Heuristic motivation from quantum field theory in stationary spacetimes', '1812.05181-2-31-0': 'As already mentioned in the introduction, consideration of the classical Klein-Gordon equationcan, on a heuristic level, be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes.', '1812.05181-2-31-1': 'Namely, the quantum field theory construction for the free Klein-Gordon field on a globally hyperbolic stationary spacetime proceeds as follows [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-32-0': 'We consider the Klein-Gordon equationeq:KG and the Klein-Gordon inner product, which for two solutions [MATH] of eq:KG is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a spacelike Cauchy surface, [MATH] is the determinant of the induced metric on [MATH] and [MATH] is the future-directed unit normal vector field of [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-32-1': 'In the second line, which is valid in a coordinate basis, we used that the covariant derivative of a scalar function is just the ordinary derivative, i.e. given by a partial derivative in the case of a coordinate basis.', '1812.05181-2-32-2': "Using the Klein-Gordon equationand Gauß' theorem, eq:KG_ip_general can be shown to be independent of the choice of [MATH] under the assumption that the fields satisfy suitable boundary conditions.", '1812.05181-2-33-0': "The Hilbert space of the quantum field theory is now the bosonic Fock space over the 'one-particle' Hilbert space constructed, loosely speaking, as the completion of the space of classical solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationwith 'positive frequency' (wrt. the stationarity Killing field) with the Klein-Gordon inner product.", '1812.05181-2-34-0': "To be more precise, the construction of the 'one-particle' Hilbert space is a little more involved, since it is not a priori clear what is meant by 'positive frequency solutions': At first, the space of classical solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationis completed in a certain inner product to obtain an 'intermediate' Hilbert space on which the generator of time translations (wrt. the stationarity Killing field) can be shown to be a self-adjoint operator; the positive spectral subspace of this operator is then completed in the Klein-Gordon inner product to give the Hilbert space of one-particle states.", '1812.05181-2-34-1': 'For details on the construction, see [CITATION] and the references cited therein.', '1812.05181-2-35-0': 'So the one-particle sector of the free Klein-Gordon quantum field theory in globally hyperbolic stationary spacetime is described by an appropriate notion of positive frequency solutions of the classical Klein-Gordon equation, using the Klein-Gordon inner product.', '1812.05181-2-36-0': 'At this point, the quantum field theoretic motivation of the WKB-like method becomes merely heuristic: Since in the following we will not solve the Klein-Gordon equationexactly, but consider formal expansions of it in powers of [MATH], it will not be possible to exactly determine the space of positive frequency solutions according to the procedure described above; instead, we will merely choose an oscillating phase factor such as to guarantee the solution to have positive instead of negative frequency in lowest order in the expansion (see eq:WKB_pos_freq).', '1812.05181-2-36-1': 'If analysed more rigorously, it could turn out that for an asymptotic solution to be of positive frequency in some stricter sense, additional restrictions on the solution have to be made, possibly altering the function space under consideration.', '1812.05181-2-36-2': 'I.e. in principle, this could lead to the Hamiltonian we will obtain being altered when considering a rigorous post-Newtonian expansion of quantum field theory in curved spacetime.', '1812.05181-2-37-0': 'In the non-stationary case, there is no canonical notion of particles and thus, strictly speaking, the whole question about the behaviour of single quantum particles does not make sense.', '1812.05181-2-37-1': "Nevertheless, for an observer moving on an orbit which is approximately Killing, the classical Klein-Gordon theory can, on a heuristic level, still be expected to lead to approximately correct predictions regarding this observer's observations.", '1812.05181-2-38-0': "Even if this motivation is just a heuristic, the WKB-like approach of expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH] allows us to view the classical Klein-Gordon theory as a formal deformation of the 'non-relativistic' Schrödinger theory, and makes the sense in which that happens formally precise.", '1812.05181-2-39-0': '## General derivation', '1812.05181-2-40-0': 'We fix a coordinate system [MATH] and assume that the components of the inverse metric be (formal) power series [EQUATION] in the inverse of the velocity of light [MATH], the lowest-order term being given by the (inverse) Minkowski metric.', '1812.05181-2-40-1': "To perform the 'non-relativistic' expansion in the correct way, we have to explicitly include [MATH] in the definition of coordinate time [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-41-0': "In coordinates, the d'Alembert operator in a general Lorentz metric is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-41-1': 'The second and third term in this expression can easily be expanded in [MATH] by inserting the expansion eq:exp_metric of the components of the inverse metric.', '1812.05181-2-42-0': 'Since the remaining first term involves the expression [EQUATION] we need an expression for the [MATH]-expansion of the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-2-42-1': 'Rewriting the expansion of the inverse metric as [EQUATION] we see that a formal Neumann series can be used to invert the power series.', '1812.05181-2-42-2': 'Using the Cauchy product formula, the first term of eq:box_op can then be explicitly expanded.', '1812.05181-2-42-3': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-2-43-0': "Combining the results for the three terms, the full expansion of the d'Alembert operator reads [EQUATION] where latin indices are 'spatial' indices running from 1 to 3, [MATH] denotes the 'flat' Euclidean Laplacian in the spatial coordinates, in sums like [MATH], the indices [MATH] and [MATH] take values [MATH], and we introduced the notation [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-43-1': 'Now, we make the WKB-like ansatz [EQUATION] for the Klein-Gordon field (cf. [CITATION]), where [MATH] is a real function; i.e. we separate off a phase factor and expand the remainder as a power series in [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-43-2': 'All the functions [MATH] are assumed to be independent of the expansion parameter [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-43-3': 'The derivatives of the field are [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-43-4': "Using this and the expansion eq:box_expanded of the d'Alembert operator, we can now analyse the Klein-Gordon equationeq:KG order by order in [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-43-5': 'At the lowest occurring order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] which is equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-43-6': 'So [MATH] is a function of (coordinate) time only.', '1812.05181-2-43-7': 'Using this, the Klein-Gordon equationhas no term of order [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-44-0': 'At [MATH], we get [EQUATION] equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-44-1': 'Since we are interested in positive-frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, we choose [MATH], leading to [EQUATION] (an additional constant term would lead to an irrelevant global phase).', '1812.05181-2-45-0': 'The [MATH] coefficient leads to the equation [EQUATION] equivalent to [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-45-1': 'Thus the requirement that the Klein-Gordon equationhave solutions which are formal power series of the form eq:WKB_ansatz imposes restrictions on the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-2-45-2': 'In the following, we will freely use the vanishing of [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-46-0': 'Using these results, the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationfor our WKB-like solutions is equivalent to an equation for [MATH] and further, inserting the expansion [MATH], to a collective equation for the [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-46-1': 'These equations are given as eq:WKB_KG_psi and eq:WKB_KG in the appendix.', '1812.05181-2-47-0': 'Using eq:WKB_KG, we can obtain equations for the [MATH], order by order, which can then be combined into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH]: At order [MATH], we have [EQUATION] i.e. the Schrödinger equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-47-1': 'By the relation [MATH], this also gives a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] in 0[MATH] order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-48-0': 'At order [MATH], eq:WKB_KG yields the following Schrödinger-like equation for [MATH] with correction terms involving [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-48-1': 'Using [MATH], we can combine eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_1 with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_0 into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] up to order [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-48-2': 'Continuing this process of evaluating eq:WKB_KG, we can, in principle, get Schrödinger equations for [MATH] to arbitrary order in [MATH], i.e. obtain the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-49-0': "However, when considering higher orders, a difficulty arises: The Schrödinger-like equations for [MATH] begin to involve time derivatives of the lower order functions [MATH], so we have to re-use the derived equations for the [MATH] in order to get a true Schrödinger equation for [MATH] (with a purely 'spatial' Hamiltonian, i.e. not involving any time derivatives), i.e. the process becomes recursive.", '1812.05181-2-49-1': 'As far as concrete calculations up to some finite order are concerned, this is merely a computational obstacle; but for a general analysis of the expansion method this poses a bigger problem, since no general closed form can be easily obtained.', '1812.05181-2-49-2': 'This motivated the study of the Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the time derivative operator, leading to the method described in section [REF].', '1812.05181-2-50-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-2-51-0': "To transform the Hamiltonian obtained in eq:Schroedinger_WKB to the 'flat' scalar product in order to compare it to the result from canonical quantisation, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION] where we used our adapted coordinates and chose [MATH] in the general form eq:KG_ip_general of the Klein-Gordon inner product.", '1812.05181-2-52-0': 'Using [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], we get [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-52-1': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-52-2': 'Using [MATH] and noting that conjugation with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant, we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the anticommutator.', '1812.05181-2-52-3': "This is the Hamiltonian appearing in the 'flat' Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationup to order [MATH], obtained by the WKB-like approximation in a general metric.", '1812.05181-2-53-0': 'For comparison of this result with the canonical quantisation scheme, we have to subtract the rest energy [MATH] from the classical Hamiltonian of equation eq:class_Ham, corresponding to the phase factor separated off the Klein-Gordon field, and expand it in [MATH], yielding [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-53-1': "Comparing this with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_flat, we see that by 'canonical quantisation' of this classical Hamiltonian using the rule '[MATH]', we can reproduce, using a special ordering scheme, all terms appearing in the WKB expansion, apart from [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-53-2': 'For this last term to arise by naive canonical quantisation, consisting only of symmetrising according to some ordering scheme and replacing momenta by operators, in the classical Hamiltonian there would have to be a term proportional to [MATH], which is not the case.', '1812.05181-2-54-0': "As the most simple non-trivial example, for the 'Newtonian' metric with line element [EQUATION] the inverse metric has components [EQUATION] leading to the quantum Hamiltonian [MATH] in both schemes, i.e. just the standard Hamiltonian with Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-2-55-0': "The occurrence of an extra term in a geometrically motivated quantum theory which one cannot arrive at by naive canonical quantisation is reminiscent of the occurrence of a 'quantum-mechanical potential' term in the Hamiltonian found by DeWitt in his 1952 treatment of quantum motion in a curved space [CITATION]: By demanding the (free part of the) Hamiltonian to be given by [MATH] in terms of the spatial Laplace-Beltrami operator [MATH], it turns out to have the form [MATH] of a sum of a naively canonically quantised kinetic term and the quantum-mechanical potential [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-56-0': 'In fact, for our metric eq:exp_metric, in lowest order in [MATH] the quantum-mechanical potential is given by [MATH], thus reproducing the additional term arising in the WKB method.', '1812.05181-2-56-1': "This connection of the WKB-like expansion to the three-dimensional 'spatial' geometry seems interesting, but to further investigate it, a more geometric, coordinate-free formulation of the expansion, possibly starting with a choice of [MATH] decomposition of spacetime, ought to be used.", '1812.05181-2-57-0': "One could argue that DeWitt's Hamiltonian can be arrived at by canonical quantisation in some sense, since the Laplace-Beltrami operator can be written as [MATH] in terms of the momentum operator eq:canon_mom_op_induced corresponding to the 'geometric' scalar product eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced which was used by DeWitt.", '1812.05181-2-57-1': "However, such a 'clever rewriting' of the Newtonian kinetic term in the classical Hamiltonian as [MATH] before replacing momenta by operators involves more than just choosing some symmetrised operator ordering and thus is not part of what we called 'canonical quantisation' above.", '1812.05181-2-58-0': '## The Eddington-Robertson PPN metric as an explicit example', '1812.05181-2-59-0': 'The Eddington-Robertson parametrised post-Newtonian metric is given by the line element [EQUATION] with the Eddington-Robertson parameters [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-59-1': 'For the case of general relativity, both these parameters take the value [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-59-2': 'The components of the metric can be read off from the expression for the line element to be [EQUATION] leading to the inverse metric having components [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-59-3': 'The equations arising for [MATH] from eq:WKB_KG at orders [MATH] are thus simply the Schrödinger equations [EQUATION] at order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] or equivalently the Schrödinger-like equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-59-4': 'Using the Schrödinger equation for [MATH], we have [EQUATION] and thus the equation for [MATH] becomes [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-59-5': "Combining the equations for [MATH], the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger equation [MATH] for the 'wavefunction' (i.e. phase-shifted Klein-Gordon field) [MATH] thus reads [EQUATION] reproducing, up to notational differences and the fact that we did not consider coupling to an electromagnetic field, the result of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].", '1812.05181-2-60-0': 'To transform to the flat scalar product, we note that in our metric and using this Hamiltonian, the Klein-Gordon inner product eq:KG_ip is given by [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-60-1': 'For this to equal the flat scalar product [MATH], the flat wavefunction has to have the form [MATH] (note that [MATH] commutes with [MATH] up to higher-order terms), resulting in the flat Hamiltonian [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-60-2': 'Using [MATH] and [MATH], this yields [EQUATION] reproducing the flat Hamiltonian of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].', '1812.05181-2-61-0': 'In comparison, the classical Hamiltonian (minus the rest energy) expands to [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-61-1': 'By canonical quantisation of this, we cannot reproduce the Hamiltonian obtained from the WKB expansion in the case of a general [MATH], but just for some special choices of [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme: For example, in the anticommutator ordering scheme, we would quantise the classical function [MATH] as [MATH], reproducing the WKB Hamiltonian in the case of [MATH]; but when quantising it as [MATH], this would lead to agreement with the WKB Hamiltonian for [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-62-0': '# General comparison of the two methods by momentum expansion', '1812.05181-2-63-0': "We will now describe a method by which general statements about similarities and differences between the two approaches explained above can be made in the case of stationary spacetimes, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in [MATH].", '1812.05181-2-63-1': "Instead, we consider 'potential' terms and terms linear, quadratic, in momentum, i.e. we perform a (formal) expansion in momenta.", '1812.05181-2-64-0': '## The Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the Hamiltonian', '1812.05181-2-65-0': 'Assume a stationary spacetime and work in adapted coordinates [MATH], i.e. coordinates such that [MATH] is (a constant multiple of) the stationarity Killing field.', '1812.05181-2-65-1': 'In particular, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-65-2': "The coordinate expression for the d'Alembert operator on functions is thus [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-65-3': 'Hence, the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationreads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-65-4': 'This means that the space of solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationis the kernel of [MATH], where for an operator [MATH] acting on the functions on the spacetime, [MATH] is the following operator: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-65-5': 'Thus, wanting to write the Klein-Gordon equationin the form of a Schrödinger equation [MATH] - and thus restricting to the solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationfor which this is possible - we see that this can be achieved by demanding the Hamiltonian [MATH] to be a solution of the quadratic operator equation [EQUATION] and be composed only of spatial derivative operators and coefficients of the metric, not involving any time derivatives: Stationarity of the metric then implies [MATH], such that the Schrödinger equation yields [MATH], leading to [MATH] by eq:KG_operator_expression; i.e. every solution of the Schrödinger equation is also a solution of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-2-66-0': 'In the following, we will solve equation eq:KG_operator_expression by expanding [MATH] as a formal power series in spatial derivative operators, i.e. momentum operators.', '1812.05181-2-66-1': 'The two possible solutions we will obtain for [MATH] correspond to positive and negative frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, respectively.', '1812.05181-2-67-0': '## Momentum expansion and first-order solution', '1812.05181-2-68-0': 'We expand [MATH] as [MATH], where [MATH] includes all terms involving [MATH] spatial derivative operators.', '1812.05181-2-68-1': 'Using this notation, the lowest order term of eq:KG_operator_expression, involving no spatial derivatives, reads [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION] where we choose the positive square root since we are interested in positive frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-2-69-0': 'At order [MATH], equation eq:KG_operator_expression gives [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-69-1': 'Writing [MATH] where [MATH] is a multiplication operator (involving one spatial differentiation of some function) and [MATH] are coefficient functions not involving any differentiations, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-2-69-2': 'Thus, the equation reads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-69-3': 'The right-hand side now has two different components: A multiplication operator and an operator differentiating the function it acts upon.', '1812.05181-2-69-4': 'These components have to vanish independently.', '1812.05181-2-69-5': "The 'differentiating part' is [MATH], equivalently [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-69-6': 'Thus, the multiplication operator part is [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-69-7': 'Since [MATH], eq:KG_operator_H0, eq:KG_operator_H1C and eq:KG_operator_H1M together yield the result [EQUATION] for the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form [EQUATION] of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equation, at first order in momenta.', '1812.05181-2-70-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-2-71-0': "To transform this Hamiltonian to the 'flat' scalar product, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-71-1': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-2-71-2': 'For calculating [MATH] from [MATH], we note that conjugating with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant and that [EQUATION] yielding the final result [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-2-71-3': "Looking at the momentum expansion of the classical Hamiltonian [EQUATION] we see that 'canonical quantisation' of this Hamiltonian will lead to the same 'potential term' as did the Klein-Gordon equation, regardless of the adopted ordering scheme, and to the same term linear in momentum if we use any ordering scheme leading to 'anticommutator quantisation' for linear terms.", '1812.05181-2-72-0': '# Conclusion', '1812.05181-2-73-0': 'We have shown how to derive a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian correction terms describing a single quantum particle in a general curved background spacetime by means of a WKB-like formal expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-2-73-1': 'We extended this method to account for, in principle, terms of arbitrary orders in [MATH], although it gets recursive at higher orders, making it computationally more difficult to handle than methods based on formal quantisation of the classical description of the particle.', '1812.05181-2-73-2': 'Nevertheless, we believe this scheme to be better suited for concrete predictions, since it is more firmly based on first principles and also more systematic than ad hoc canonical quantisation procedures as employed widely in the literature.', '1812.05181-2-73-3': 'For example, no operator ordering ambiguities arise; instead, the WKB method can be seen as predicting the ordering.', '1812.05181-2-74-0': 'Comparing the Klein-Gordon expansion method to canonical quantisation, we have found that in the case of a general metric, even at lowest post-Newtonian order, the two procedures lead to slightly different quantum Hamiltonians, independent of ordering ambiguities.', '1812.05181-2-74-1': 'For the concrete case of the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory, the Hamiltonians obtained from the two methods differ in a term including the Eddington-Robertson parameter [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme employed in canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-2-74-2': 'Thus for the interpretation of tests of general relativity with quantum systems, the method used to derive the quantum Hamiltonian plays a decisive rôle.', '1812.05181-2-75-0': "For the case of stationary background metrics, without employing any 'non-relativistic' expansion, we showed that up to linear order in spatial momenta, the Hamiltonians obtained from canonical quantisation of a free particle and from the Klein-Gordon equation agree.", '1812.05181-2-75-1': "In particular, this means that the lowest-order coupling to the 'gravitomagnetic' field [MATH] is independent of the gravity-quantum matter coupling method.", '1812.05181-2-76-0': 'It should be clear that the classical Klein-Gordon equation, as well as any expansion based on it, meets its limits as soon as effects of particle creation and annihilation become relevant.', '1812.05181-2-76-1': 'Obviously, these cannot be accounted for in a single-particle description as proposed here.', '1812.05181-2-76-2': 'One may indeed wonder whether and how this single-particle scheme can be generalised to a system of a fixed number of many interacting particles.', '1812.05181-2-76-3': 'This is not as straightforward as one might think at first.', '1812.05181-2-76-4': "It is well known that there exist severe obstructions against formulating a relativistic theory of many interacting particles; see, e.g., chapter 21 of [CITATION], where the 'no-interaction-theorems' in Poincaré invariant Hamiltonian mechanics are discussed.", '1812.05181-2-77-0': 'Concerning the applicability of the WKB-like method for concrete calculations, it is also an interesting question if and how the transformation of the Hamiltonian from the Klein-Gordon inner product to an [MATH]-scalar product - be it flat or with respect to the induced measure [MATH] - can be implemented more systematically, not relying on direct calculations with the already-computed Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-2-78-0': 'Another important issue to address is the coordinate-dependence of the methods developed in this paper: It would be desirable to have at hand a coordinate-free formulation of the expansion/coupling schemes with clear geometric interpretation, thus possibly shedding some light on the connection of the WKB-like expansion to the spatial geometry of the Cauchy surfaces and respecting the geometric nature of gravity.'}
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['1812.05181-1-7-2', '1812.05181-2-7-2'], ['1812.05181-1-7-3', '1812.05181-2-7-3'], ['1812.05181-1-7-4', '1812.05181-2-7-4'], ['1812.05181-1-7-5', '1812.05181-2-7-5'], ['1812.05181-1-3-0', '1812.05181-2-3-0'], ['1812.05181-1-3-1', '1812.05181-2-3-1'], ['1812.05181-1-3-2', '1812.05181-2-3-2'], ['1812.05181-1-3-3', '1812.05181-2-3-3'], ['1812.05181-1-64-0', '1812.05181-2-74-0'], ['1812.05181-1-64-1', '1812.05181-2-74-1'], ['1812.05181-1-64-2', '1812.05181-2-74-2'], ['1812.05181-1-67-0', '1812.05181-2-77-0'], ['1812.05181-1-38-0', '1812.05181-2-46-0'], ['1812.05181-1-38-1', '1812.05181-2-46-1'], ['1812.05181-1-6-0', '1812.05181-2-6-0'], ['1812.05181-1-6-1', '1812.05181-2-6-1'], ['1812.05181-1-6-2', '1812.05181-2-6-2'], ['1812.05181-1-6-3', '1812.05181-2-6-3'], ['1812.05181-1-55-0', '1812.05181-2-65-0'], ['1812.05181-1-55-1', '1812.05181-2-65-1'], ['1812.05181-1-55-2', '1812.05181-2-65-2'], ['1812.05181-1-55-3', '1812.05181-2-65-3'], ['1812.05181-1-55-4', '1812.05181-2-65-4'], 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[]
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[['1812.05181-1-21-0', '1812.05181-2-20-2'], ['1812.05181-1-22-0', '1812.05181-2-52-1']]
['1812.05181-1-43-1', '1812.05181-2-52-0', '1812.05181-3-52-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1812.05181
{'1812.05181-3-0-0': "In this paper we extend the WKB-like 'non-relativistic' expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationafter Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] to arbitrary order in [MATH], leading to Schrödinger equations describing a quantum particle in a general gravitational field, and compare the results with canonical quantisation of a free particle in curved spacetime, following Wajima et al. [CITATION].", '1812.05181-3-0-1': "Furthermore, using a more operator-algebraic approach, the Klein-Gordon equationand the canonical quantisation method are shown to lead to the same results for some special terms in the Hamiltonian describing a single particle in a general stationary spacetime, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion.", '1812.05181-3-1-0': 'Keywords: quantum matter in gravity, non-relativistic expansion, post-Newtonian expansion, Klein-Gordon equation, formal WKB expansion', '1812.05181-3-2-0': '# Introduction', '1812.05181-3-3-0': 'Suppose we are given a quantum-mechanical system whose time evolution in the absence of gravity is known in terms of the ordinary time-dependent Schrödinger equation.', '1812.05181-3-3-1': "In other words: We know the system's Hamiltonian if all gravitational interactions are neglected.", '1812.05181-3-3-2': "We ask: what principles do we use in order to deduce the system's interaction with a given external gravitational field?", '1812.05181-3-3-3': "Note that by 'gravitational field' we understand all the ten components [MATH] of the spacetime metric that are subject to Einstein's field equations of general relativity (or, more generally, to the equations of some other metric theory of gravity), not just the scalar component [MATH] representing the Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-3-4-0': 'The behaviour of quantum systems in general gravitational fields is naturally of fundamental interest, relating, e.g., to the reaction of quantum systems to gravitational waves [CITATION], tests of general relativity, the controversially discussed topic of gravitationally induced quantum dephasing [CITATION], quantum tests of the classical equivalence principle [CITATION] or proposals of quantum formulations of the equivalence principle [CITATION] and tests thereof [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-5-0': "The conceptual difficulty we are addressing here has to do with the fact that the usual 'minimal coupling scheme' that we usually employ in order to couple any classical field obeying Lorentz invariant equations of motion simply does not apply to the case at hand.", '1812.05181-3-5-1': "We recall that, in a nutshell, this prescription is a two step process: 1) Write down the matter's dynamical law in a Poincaré invariant fashion in Minkowski spacetime; 2) replace the flat Minkowski metric [MATH] by a general Lorentzian metric [MATH] and the partial derivatives with respect to the affine coordinates of Minkowski spacetime (i.e. the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH]) by the Levi-Civita covariant derivative with respect to [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-6-0': 'This procedure suffers from an essential non-uniqueness which has to do with the fact that the covariant derivatives with respect to [MATH] commute whereas those with respect to [MATH] generally do not.', '1812.05181-3-6-1': 'Hence there are equivalent forms for the dynamical laws in step 1) that turn into inequivalent extensions after performing step 2).', '1812.05181-3-6-2': "The differences will consist in terms that result from commuting covariant derivatives and hence in local couplings of [MATH]'s curvature tensor to the matter field.", '1812.05181-3-6-3': 'Modulo this well known ambiguity the prescription just outlined is straightforward to apply and has been successfully used in all applications of general relativity.', '1812.05181-3-7-0': 'The point addressed here in connection with quantum mechanics is not so much the ambiguity just described, but rather the obvious failure to even implement step 1): There simply is no obvious way to rewrite the Schrödinger equation into a Poincaré invariant form in order to be able to apply step 2).', '1812.05181-3-7-1': 'Special relativity turns quantum mechanics into relativistic quantum field theory (RQFT) in which the particle concept ceases to be meaningful in presence of general background geometries [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-7-2': 'Does that mean we would have to employ the whole machinery of RQFT in order to just answer simple questions concerning matter-gravity interactions that go beyond the simplest (and obvious; see below) couplings to the Newtonian potential?', '1812.05181-3-7-3': "We think the answer is no, but at the same time we think that the alternative should not result in ad hoc procedures guided by more or less well founded 'physical intuition'.", '1812.05181-3-7-4': 'Rather we should look for a general and systematic method that allows to derive the full coupling by means of an algorithm that arguably qualifies as a proper post-Newtonian approximation.', '1812.05181-3-7-5': 'We see this paper as a positive contribution to this end.', '1812.05181-3-8-0': "To be slightly more precise, we recall that the Schrödinger equation describing a 'non-relativistic' (i.e. not Poincaré invariant) particle of mass [MATH] and zero spin in a background Newtonian gravitational field with potential [MATH] is [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-8-1': 'This equation has extensively been tested in the gravitational field of the earth, beginning with neutron interferometry in the classic COW experiment [CITATION] and leading up to atom interferometers of the Kasevich-Chu type, accomplishing, e.g., highly precise measurements of the gravitational acceleration [MATH] on the earth [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-8-2': "We now ask what kind of 'post-Newtonian corrections' to this equation arise from general relativity or other metric theories of gravity, considering additional terms involving the Newtonian potential [MATH] as well as new terms involving all ten metric components [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-9-0': 'In the existing literature, one finds two different main approaches to this problem of post-Newtonian correction terms for the Schrödinger equation describing a particle in a curved spacetime.', '1812.05181-3-9-1': 'The first, described, e.g., by Wajima et al. [CITATION], starts from a classical description of the particle and applies canonical quantisation rules adapted to the situation (in a somewhat ad hoc fashion) to derive a quantum mechanical Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-3-9-2': 'By an expansion in powers of [MATH] (at the stage of the classical Hamiltonian), one finds the desired correction terms.', '1812.05181-3-9-3': 'Other methods along a similar line use path integral quantisation on the classical system, as, e.g., the semi-classical calculation by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-10-0': 'The second, fundamentally different approach takes a field-theoretic perspective and derives the Schrödinger equation as an equation for the positive frequency solutions of the minimally coupled classical Klein-Gordon equation For simplicity we call, as is common, the Poincaré invariant mass [MATH] and zero-spin equation by the names of Oskar Klein and Walter Gordon, even though Erwin Schrödinger and Vladimir Fock were amongst the first to consider it.', '1812.05181-3-10-1': 'This is accomplished by Kiefer and Singh [CITATION], Lämmerzahl [CITATION] and Giulini and Großardt [CITATION] by making a WKB-like ansatz for the Klein-Gordon field and thus (formally) expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH], in the end viewing the Klein-Gordon theory as a (formal) deformation of the Schrödinger theory, implementing the deformation of Galilei to Poincaré symmetry well-known at the level of Lie algebras [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-10-2': 'This second method seems to be more firmly rooted in first principles than the canonical quantisation method, since it can at least heuristically be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes (see section [REF]).', '1812.05181-3-11-0': "The calculation of general-relativistic corrections to phase shifts in atom interferometry by Dimopoulos et al. [CITATION] used a semi-classical approximation scheme, the so-called 'stationary phase approximation' in path integral terms, which is non-exact for Hamiltonians of higher than quadratic order in positions and momenta.", '1812.05181-3-11-1': 'The approximation breaks down for wave packets with large width in phase space, so that similar methods cannot directly be applied when considering the effect of general gravitational fields on, e.g., large spatial superpositions, for example proposed relevant for gravitational dephasing by Pikovski et al. [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-11-2': 'In contrast to this, using a modified Schrödinger equation makes it possible to, in principle, describe quantum systems under gravity without any semi-classical approximation.', '1812.05181-3-12-0': 'Although the two methods for obtaining post-Newtonian Schrödinger equations described above are very different in spirit, they lead to comparable results in lowest orders.', '1812.05181-3-12-1': 'To make possible a general comparison beyond the explicit examples considered in the existing literature, we will apply the methods to as general a metric as possible: In section [REF], we will give a brief overview over the canonical quantisation method, while section [REF] will develop the WKB-like formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH] in a general metric given as a formal power series in [MATH], significantly extending existing explicit examples to the general case.', '1812.05181-3-12-2': 'This leads to some simple comparisons of the resulting Hamiltonian with the one from canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-3-13-0': "In section [REF], we consider a (formal) expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of momentum operators leading to a Schrödinger form of the equation, yielding some general statements about similarities between the canonical and the Klein-Gordon methods without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in powers of [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-14-0': "A general WKB-like 'non-relativistic' formal expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto obtain a Schrödinger equation was already considered by Tagirov in [CITATION] and a series of follow-up papers [CITATION], as summarised in [CITATION]; but unlike our approach, these works did not expand the metric, thus not allowing to directly apply the results to metrics given as a power series in [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-14-1': 'Tagirov also compared his WKB-like approach to methods of canonical quantisation [CITATION], but did this only for the case of static metrics.', '1812.05181-3-15-0': "We will use the 'mostly plus' signature convention for the spacetime metric, i.e. [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-15-1': 'Since we are concerned mostly with conceptual questions, we will generally not be mathematically very rigorous, and in particular not mention domains of definition of operators.', '1812.05181-3-16-0': '# Canonical quantisation of a free particle', '1812.05181-3-17-0': 'In the following, we will describe the canonical quantisation approach used by Wajima et al. [CITATION] to derive a Hamiltonian for a quantum particle in the post-Newtonian gravitational field of a point-like rotating source for the analysis of effects on interferometric phase shifts.', '1812.05181-3-17-1': 'We will focus on the conceptual issues of the procedure since we want to stay as general as possible.', '1812.05181-3-18-0': "The classical action for a 'relativistic' point particle of mass [MATH] in curved spacetime with metric [MATH] is [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the arbitrarily parametrised worldline of the particle.", '1812.05181-3-19-0': "We assume the spacetime to be globally hyperbolic and perform a [MATH] decomposition of spacetime [CITATION]: We foliate spacetime [MATH] into 3-dimensional spacelike Cauchy surfaces [MATH] which are images of an 'abstract' Cauchy surface [MATH] under a family of embeddings [MATH], parametrised by a 'foliation parameter' [MATH], and we introduce spacetime coordinates such that [MATH] are coordinates on [MATH] and [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-19-1': 'Parametrising the worldline of the particle by [MATH], the classical Hamiltonian can be computed to be [EQUATION] when expressed in terms of the spacetime metric, where [MATH] are the momenta conjugate to [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-19-2': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-3-20-0': "Now, we want to 'canonically quantise' this Hamiltonian.", '1812.05181-3-20-1': 'To this end, we have to define a Hilbert space for our quantum theory, define position and momentum operators acting on this Hilbert space and satisfying the canonical commutation relations, and choose an operator ordering scheme for symmetrising products of momenta and (functions of) position.', '1812.05181-3-20-2': 'By then expanding the square root in the classical Hamiltonian eq:class_Ham to the desired order in [MATH] (or in momenta, see section [REF]) and afterwards replacing the classical momentum and position variables by the corresponding operators, applying the chosen ordering scheme, we get a quantised Hamiltonian [MATH] acting on our Hilbert space and can postulate a Schrödinger equation in the usual form [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-20-3': 'Let us stress once more that this Hamiltonian will depend not only on the choice of [MATH] decomposition of spacetime into Cauchy surfaces, which is the case since for a post-Newtonian approximation we need some notion of separate space and time, but also on the choice of operator ordering scheme, which we leave open in order to keep the discussion as general as possible.', '1812.05181-3-21-0': 'We now turn to the definition of the Hilbert space and the position and momentum operators, which is more subtle than might be anticipated at first thought.', '1812.05181-3-21-1': 'Since the position variables in the classical Hamiltonian eq:class_Ham are the spatial coordinates [MATH] on the Cauchy surfaces, we want the quantum position operators to directly correspond to these.', '1812.05181-3-21-2': "Thus, we want to define the Hilbert space as some space of square-integrable 'wavefunctions' of the [MATH], such that we can take as position operators simply the operators of multiplication with the coordinates.", '1812.05181-3-21-3': 'The question of definition of the Hilbert space thus becomes a question of choice of a scalar product on (some subspace of) the space of functions of the [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-22-0': "To be more precise, we do not just need a single Hilbert space: To any 'time' (i.e. foliation parameter) [MATH] we want to associate a wavefunction [MATH] giving rise to a position probability distribution on the Cauchy surface [MATH] corresponding to [MATH], so we need to consider an individual Hilbert space for each Cauchy surface in the [MATH] decomposition.", '1812.05181-3-22-1': 'But since we want to relate these wavefunctions by a Schrödinger equation, we have to somehow identify the Hilbert spaces corresponding to the different Cauchy surfaces, which we are now going to explain.', '1812.05181-3-23-0': 'A natural, geometric choice of scalar product on the space of functions on [MATH] is the [MATH]-scalar product with respect to the induced metric measure (cf. [CITATION]), i.e. [EQUATION] where here and in the following, we write [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-23-1': 'Consider first the case that the spatial metric [MATH] be independent of [MATH], i.e. that the induced geometry be the same for all Cauchy surfaces.', '1812.05181-3-23-2': 'Then this scalar product is independent of [MATH], such that the Hilbert spaces corresponding to the different Cauchy surfaces are canonically identified by simply identifying the wavefunctions.', '1812.05181-3-23-3': 'We can then define the momentum operator as [EQUATION] which is symmetric with respect to the scalar product and fulfils the canonical commutation relation [MATH], and carry out canonical quantisation as described above.', '1812.05181-3-24-0': 'If we allow for [MATH] to depend on [MATH], the scalar product eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced depends on [MATH] and thus the canonical map [MATH] no longer is an isomorphism of Hilbert spaces.', '1812.05181-3-24-1': 'I.e. the natural identification from above does not work, spoiling the program of canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-3-24-2': "A natural solution to this problem is to instead consider the time-independent 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product [EQUATION] together with the 'flat' momentum operator [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-24-3': 'Using these, canonical quantisation can be carried out.', '1812.05181-3-24-4': "At first sight, this scalar product could seem less 'geometric' than eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced, but it can be seen to have as much invariant meaning as the latter by realising that, geometrically speaking, the 'flat' wavefunctions [MATH] be scalar densities (of weight [MATH]) instead of scalar functions.", '1812.05181-3-24-5': "Since this choice of 'flat' scalar product can be applied to more general situations, and it eases the comparison to usual non-relativistic Schrödinger theory and to the WKB method, we will adopt it from now on, i.e. 'canonically quantise' the expanded classical Hamiltonian by replacing the classical momentum by the flat momentum operator (applying our chosen ordering scheme).", '1812.05181-3-25-0': 'In fact, in the case of time-independent [MATH] the quantum theories resulting from the two choices described above are unitarily equivalent by the Stone-von Neumann theorem, via the unitary operator given by [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-26-0': '# WKB-like expansion of the Klein-Gordon equation', '1812.05181-3-27-0': 'Now, we will consider WKB-like formal expansions in [MATH] of the classical, minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationfor a particle of mass [MATH], [EQUATION] leading to a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian corrections, as considered by Lämmerzahl in [CITATION] for a simple PPN metric in Eddington-Robertson parametrisation and by Giulini and Großardt in [CITATION] for general spherically symmetric metrics.', '1812.05181-3-28-0': 'Instead of eq:KG one could also consider the more general case of a possibly non-minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equation, i.e. including some curvature term.', '1812.05181-3-28-1': 'This is customary in modern literature on quantum field theory in curved spacetime, where an additional term [MATH] is included in the equation, [MATH] being the scalar curvature of the spacetime [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-28-2': "In particular, for the choice of [MATH] ('conformal coupling'), the equation becomes conformally invariant in the massless case [MATH], and also in the massive case there are some arguments favouring the conformally coupled Klein-Gordon equation, in particular in de Sitter spacetime [CITATION].", '1812.05181-3-28-3': 'Nevertheless, we will for the sake of simplicity stick with the minimally coupled equation in this paper, leaving non-minimal coupling for later, possibly more coordinate-independent investigations.', '1812.05181-3-29-0': "After giving a heuristic motivation for consideration of the classical Klein-Gordon equation, we will describe the expansion of the Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH], then explain the transformation to a 'flat' [MATH]-scalar product for comparison to canonical quantisation and finally consider the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory as a simple explicit example.", '1812.05181-3-30-0': '## Heuristic motivation from quantum field theory in stationary spacetimes', '1812.05181-3-31-0': 'As already mentioned in the introduction, consideration of the classical Klein-Gordon equationcan, on a heuristic level, be motivated from quantum field theory in curved spacetimes.', '1812.05181-3-31-1': 'Namely, the quantum field theory construction for the free Klein-Gordon field on a globally hyperbolic stationary spacetime proceeds as follows [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-32-0': 'We consider the Klein-Gordon equationeq:KG and the Klein-Gordon inner product, which for two solutions [MATH] of eq:KG is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is a spacelike Cauchy surface, [MATH] is the determinant of the induced metric on [MATH] and [MATH] is the future-directed unit normal vector field of [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-32-1': 'In the second line, which is valid in a coordinate basis, we used that the covariant derivative of a scalar function is just the ordinary derivative, i.e. given by a partial derivative in the case of a coordinate basis.', '1812.05181-3-32-2': "Using the Klein-Gordon equationand Gauß' theorem, eq:KG_ip_general can be shown to be independent of the choice of [MATH] under the assumption that the fields satisfy suitable boundary conditions.", '1812.05181-3-33-0': "The Hilbert space of the quantum field theory is now the bosonic Fock space over the 'one-particle' Hilbert space constructed, loosely speaking, as the completion of the space of classical solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationwith 'positive frequency' (wrt. the stationarity Killing field) with the Klein-Gordon inner product.", '1812.05181-3-34-0': "To be more precise, the construction of the 'one-particle' Hilbert space is a little more involved, since it is not a priori clear what is meant by 'positive frequency solutions': At first, the space of classical solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationis completed in a certain inner product to obtain an 'intermediate' Hilbert space on which the generator of time translations (wrt. the stationarity Killing field) can be shown to be a self-adjoint operator; the positive spectral subspace of this operator is then completed in the Klein-Gordon inner product to give the Hilbert space of one-particle states.", '1812.05181-3-34-1': 'For details on the construction, see [CITATION] and the references cited therein.', '1812.05181-3-35-0': 'So the one-particle sector of the free Klein-Gordon quantum field theory in globally hyperbolic stationary spacetime is described by an appropriate notion of positive frequency solutions of the classical Klein-Gordon equation, using the Klein-Gordon inner product.', '1812.05181-3-36-0': 'At this point, the quantum field theoretic motivation of the WKB-like method becomes merely heuristic: Since in the following we will not solve the Klein-Gordon equationexactly, but consider formal expansions of it in powers of [MATH], it will not be possible to exactly determine the space of positive frequency solutions according to the procedure described above; instead, we will merely choose an oscillating phase factor such as to guarantee the solution to have positive instead of negative frequency in lowest order in the expansion (see eq:WKB_pos_freq).', '1812.05181-3-36-1': 'If analysed more rigorously, it could turn out that for an asymptotic solution to be of positive frequency in some stricter sense, additional restrictions on the solution have to be made, possibly altering the function space under consideration.', '1812.05181-3-36-2': 'I.e. in principle, this could lead to the Hamiltonian we will obtain being altered when considering a rigorous post-Newtonian expansion of quantum field theory in curved spacetime.', '1812.05181-3-37-0': 'In the non-stationary case, there is no canonical notion of particles and thus, strictly speaking, the whole question about the behaviour of single quantum particles does not make sense.', '1812.05181-3-37-1': "Nevertheless, for an observer moving on an orbit which is approximately Killing, the classical Klein-Gordon theory can, on a heuristic level, still be expected to lead to approximately correct predictions regarding this observer's observations.", '1812.05181-3-38-0': "Even if this motivation is just a heuristic, the WKB-like approach of expanding the Klein-Gordon equationin powers of [MATH] allows us to view the classical Klein-Gordon theory as a formal deformation of the 'non-relativistic' Schrödinger theory, and makes the sense in which that happens formally precise.", '1812.05181-3-39-0': '## General derivation', '1812.05181-3-40-0': 'We fix a coordinate system [MATH] and assume that the components of the inverse metric be (formal) power series [EQUATION] in the inverse of the velocity of light [MATH], the lowest-order term being given by the (inverse) Minkowski metric.', '1812.05181-3-40-1': "To perform the 'non-relativistic' expansion in the correct way, we have to explicitly include [MATH] in the definition of coordinate time [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-41-0': "In coordinates, the d'Alembert operator in a general Lorentz metric is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-41-1': 'The second and third term in this expression can easily be expanded in [MATH] by inserting the expansion eq:exp_metric of the components of the inverse metric.', '1812.05181-3-42-0': 'Since the remaining first term involves the expression [EQUATION] we need an expression for the [MATH]-expansion of the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-3-42-1': 'Rewriting the expansion of the inverse metric as [EQUATION] we see that a formal Neumann series can be used to invert the power series.', '1812.05181-3-42-2': 'Using the Cauchy product formula, the first term of eq:box_op can then be explicitly expanded.', '1812.05181-3-42-3': 'Full details of this calculation can be found in [REF].', '1812.05181-3-43-0': "Combining the results for the three terms, the full expansion of the d'Alembert operator reads [EQUATION] where latin indices are 'spatial' indices running from 1 to 3, [MATH] denotes the 'flat' Euclidean Laplacian in the spatial coordinates, in sums like [MATH], the indices [MATH] and [MATH] take values [MATH], and we introduced the notation [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-43-1': 'Now, we make the WKB-like ansatz [EQUATION] for the Klein-Gordon field (cf. [CITATION]), where [MATH] is a real function; i.e. we separate off a phase factor and expand the remainder as a power series in [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-43-2': 'All the functions [MATH] are assumed to be independent of the expansion parameter [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-43-3': 'The derivatives of the field are [EQUATION] and [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-43-4': "Using this and the expansion eq:box_expanded of the d'Alembert operator, we can now analyse the Klein-Gordon equationeq:KG order by order in [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-43-5': 'At the lowest occurring order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] which is equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-43-6': 'So [MATH] is a function of (coordinate) time only.', '1812.05181-3-43-7': 'Using this, the Klein-Gordon equationhas no term of order [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-44-0': 'At [MATH], we get [EQUATION] equivalent to [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-44-1': 'Since we are interested in positive-frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, we choose [MATH], leading to [EQUATION] (an additional constant term would lead to an irrelevant global phase).', '1812.05181-3-45-0': 'The [MATH] coefficient leads to the equation [EQUATION] equivalent to [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-45-1': 'Thus the requirement that the Klein-Gordon equationhave solutions which are formal power series of the form eq:WKB_ansatz imposes restrictions on the components of the metric.', '1812.05181-3-45-2': 'In the following, we will freely use the vanishing of [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-46-0': 'Using these results, the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationfor our WKB-like solutions is equivalent to an equation for [MATH] and further, inserting the expansion [MATH], to a collective equation for the [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-46-1': 'These equations are given as eq:WKB_KG_psi and eq:WKB_KG in the appendix.', '1812.05181-3-47-0': 'Using eq:WKB_KG, we can obtain equations for the [MATH], order by order, which can then be combined into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH]: At order [MATH], we have [EQUATION] i.e. the Schrödinger equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-47-1': 'By the relation [MATH], this also gives a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] in 0[MATH] order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-48-0': 'At order [MATH], eq:WKB_KG yields the following Schrödinger-like equation for [MATH] with correction terms involving [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-48-1': 'Using [MATH], we can combine eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_1 with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_exp_0 into a Schrödinger equation for [MATH] up to order [MATH]: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-48-2': 'Continuing this process of evaluating eq:WKB_KG, we can, in principle, get Schrödinger equations for [MATH] to arbitrary order in [MATH], i.e. obtain the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationto arbitrary order in [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-49-0': "However, when considering higher orders, a difficulty arises: The Schrödinger-like equations for [MATH] begin to involve time derivatives of the lower order functions [MATH], so we have to re-use the derived equations for the [MATH] in order to get a true Schrödinger equation for [MATH] (with a purely 'spatial' Hamiltonian, i.e. not involving any time derivatives), i.e. the process becomes recursive.", '1812.05181-3-49-1': 'As far as concrete calculations up to some finite order are concerned, this is merely a computational obstacle; but for a general analysis of the expansion method this poses a bigger problem, since no general closed form can be easily obtained.', '1812.05181-3-49-2': 'This motivated the study of the Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the time derivative operator, leading to the method described in section [REF].', '1812.05181-3-50-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-3-51-0': "To transform the Hamiltonian obtained in eq:Schroedinger_WKB to the 'flat' scalar product in order to compare it to the result from canonical quantisation, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION] where we used our adapted coordinates and chose [MATH] in the general form eq:KG_ip_general of the Klein-Gordon inner product.", '1812.05181-3-52-0': 'Using [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH], we get [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-52-1': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-52-2': 'Using [MATH] and noting that conjugation with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant, we obtain [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the anticommutator.', '1812.05181-3-52-3': "This is the Hamiltonian appearing in the 'flat' Schrödinger form of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equationup to order [MATH], obtained by the WKB-like approximation in a general metric.", '1812.05181-3-53-0': 'For comparison of this result with the canonical quantisation scheme, we have to subtract the rest energy [MATH] from the classical Hamiltonian of equation eq:class_Ham, corresponding to the phase factor separated off the Klein-Gordon field, and expand it in [MATH], yielding [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-53-1': "Comparing this with eq:Schroedinger_WKB_flat, we see that by 'canonical quantisation' of this classical Hamiltonian using the rule '[MATH]', we can reproduce, using a special ordering scheme, all terms appearing in the WKB expansion, apart from [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-53-2': 'For this last term to arise by naive canonical quantisation, consisting only of symmetrising according to some ordering scheme and replacing momenta by operators, in the classical Hamiltonian there would have to be a term proportional to [MATH], which is not the case.', '1812.05181-3-54-0': "As the most simple non-trivial example, for the 'Newtonian' metric with line element [EQUATION] the inverse metric has components [EQUATION] leading to the quantum Hamiltonian [MATH] in both schemes, i.e. just the standard Hamiltonian with Newtonian potential.", '1812.05181-3-55-0': "The occurrence of an extra term in a geometrically motivated quantum theory which one cannot arrive at by naive canonical quantisation is reminiscent of the occurrence of a 'quantum-mechanical potential' term in the Hamiltonian found by DeWitt in his 1952 treatment of quantum motion in a curved space [CITATION]: By demanding the (free part of the) Hamiltonian to be given by [MATH] in terms of the spatial Laplace-Beltrami operator [MATH], it turns out to have the form [MATH] of a sum of a naively canonically quantised kinetic term and the quantum-mechanical potential [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-56-0': 'In fact, for our metric eq:exp_metric, in lowest order in [MATH] the quantum-mechanical potential is given by [MATH], thus reproducing the additional term arising in the WKB method.', '1812.05181-3-56-1': "This connection of the WKB-like expansion to the three-dimensional 'spatial' geometry seems interesting, but to further investigate it, a more geometric, coordinate-free formulation of the expansion, possibly starting with a choice of [MATH] decomposition of spacetime, ought to be used.", '1812.05181-3-57-0': "One could argue that DeWitt's Hamiltonian can be arrived at by canonical quantisation in some sense, since the Laplace-Beltrami operator can be written as [MATH] in terms of the momentum operator eq:canon_mom_op_induced corresponding to the 'geometric' scalar product eq:canon_scalar_prod_induced which was used by DeWitt.", '1812.05181-3-57-1': "However, such a 'clever rewriting' of the Newtonian kinetic term in the classical Hamiltonian as [MATH] before replacing momenta by operators involves more than just choosing some symmetrised operator ordering and thus is not part of what we called 'canonical quantisation' above.", '1812.05181-3-58-0': '## The Eddington-Robertson PPN metric as an explicit example', '1812.05181-3-59-0': 'The Eddington-Robertson parametrised post-Newtonian metric is given by the line element [EQUATION] with the Eddington-Robertson parameters [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-59-1': 'For the case of general relativity, both these parameters take the value [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-59-2': 'The components of the metric can be read off from the expression for the line element to be [EQUATION] leading to the inverse metric having components [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-59-3': 'The equations arising for [MATH] from eq:WKB_KG at orders [MATH] are thus simply the Schrödinger equations [EQUATION] at order [MATH], we get [EQUATION] or equivalently the Schrödinger-like equation [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-59-4': 'Using the Schrödinger equation for [MATH], we have [EQUATION] and thus the equation for [MATH] becomes [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-59-5': "Combining the equations for [MATH], the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger equation [MATH] for the 'wavefunction' (i.e. phase-shifted Klein-Gordon field) [MATH] thus reads [EQUATION] reproducing, up to notational differences and the fact that we did not consider coupling to an electromagnetic field, the result of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].", '1812.05181-3-60-0': 'To transform to the flat scalar product, we note that in our metric and using this Hamiltonian, the Klein-Gordon inner product eq:KG_ip is given by [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-60-1': 'For this to equal the flat scalar product [MATH], the flat wavefunction has to have the form [MATH] (note that [MATH] commutes with [MATH] up to higher-order terms), resulting in the flat Hamiltonian [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-60-2': 'Using [MATH] and [MATH], this yields [EQUATION] reproducing the flat Hamiltonian of Lämmerzahl [CITATION].', '1812.05181-3-61-0': 'In comparison, the classical Hamiltonian (minus the rest energy) expands to [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-61-1': 'By canonical quantisation of this, we cannot reproduce the Hamiltonian obtained from the WKB expansion in the case of a general [MATH], but just for some special choices of [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme: For example, in the anticommutator ordering scheme, we would quantise the classical function [MATH] as [MATH], reproducing the WKB Hamiltonian in the case of [MATH]; but when quantising it as [MATH], this would lead to agreement with the WKB Hamiltonian for [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-62-0': '# General comparison of the two methods by momentum expansion', '1812.05181-3-63-0': "We will now describe a method by which general statements about similarities and differences between the two approaches explained above can be made in the case of stationary spacetimes, without any 'non-relativistic' expansion in [MATH].", '1812.05181-3-63-1': "Instead, we consider 'potential' terms and terms linear, quadratic, in momentum, i.e. we perform a (formal) expansion in momenta.", '1812.05181-3-64-0': '## The Klein-Gordon equationas a quadratic equation for the Hamiltonian', '1812.05181-3-65-0': 'Assume a stationary spacetime and work in adapted coordinates [MATH], i.e. coordinates such that [MATH] is (a constant multiple of) the stationarity Killing field.', '1812.05181-3-65-1': 'In particular, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-65-2': "The coordinate expression for the d'Alembert operator on functions is thus [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-65-3': 'Hence, the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equationreads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-65-4': 'This means that the space of solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationis the kernel of [MATH], where for an operator [MATH] acting on the functions on the spacetime, [MATH] is the following operator: [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-65-5': 'Thus, wanting to write the Klein-Gordon equationin the form of a Schrödinger equation [MATH] - and thus restricting to the solutions of the Klein-Gordon equationfor which this is possible - we see that this can be achieved by demanding the Hamiltonian [MATH] to be a solution of the quadratic operator equation [EQUATION] and be composed only of spatial derivative operators and coefficients of the metric, not involving any time derivatives: Stationarity of the metric then implies [MATH], such that the Schrödinger equation yields [MATH], leading to [MATH] by eq:KG_operator_expression; i.e. every solution of the Schrödinger equation is also a solution of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-3-66-0': 'In the following, we will solve equation eq:KG_operator_expression by expanding [MATH] as a formal power series in spatial derivative operators, i.e. momentum operators.', '1812.05181-3-66-1': 'The two possible solutions we will obtain for [MATH] correspond to positive and negative frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation, respectively.', '1812.05181-3-67-0': '## Momentum expansion and first-order solution', '1812.05181-3-68-0': 'We expand [MATH] as [MATH], where [MATH] includes all terms involving [MATH] spatial derivative operators.', '1812.05181-3-68-1': 'Using this notation, the lowest order term of eq:KG_operator_expression, involving no spatial derivatives, reads [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION] where we choose the positive square root since we are interested in positive frequency solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-3-69-0': 'At order [MATH], equation eq:KG_operator_expression gives [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-69-1': 'Writing [MATH] where [MATH] is a multiplication operator (involving one spatial differentiation of some function) and [MATH] are coefficient functions not involving any differentiations, we have [MATH].', '1812.05181-3-69-2': 'Thus, the equation reads [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-69-3': 'The right-hand side now has two different components: A multiplication operator and an operator differentiating the function it acts upon.', '1812.05181-3-69-4': 'These components have to vanish independently.', '1812.05181-3-69-5': "The 'differentiating part' is [MATH], equivalently [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-69-6': 'Thus, the multiplication operator part is [EQUATION] giving [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-69-7': 'Since [MATH], eq:KG_operator_H0, eq:KG_operator_H1C and eq:KG_operator_H1M together yield the result [EQUATION] for the Hamiltonian in the Schrödinger form [EQUATION] of the positive frequency Klein-Gordon equation, at first order in momenta.', '1812.05181-3-70-0': "## Transformation to 'flat' scalar product and comparison with canonical quantisation", '1812.05181-3-71-0': "To transform this Hamiltonian to the 'flat' scalar product, we note that for two positive frequency solutions [MATH] and [MATH], the Klein-Gordon inner product is given by [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-71-1': "For this to equal the 'flat' scalar product [MATH], we see that the 'flat wavefunction' has to have the form [MATH] and therefore evolves according to the Schrödinger equation [MATH] with the 'flat Hamiltonian' [EQUATION]", '1812.05181-3-71-2': 'For calculating [MATH] from [MATH], we note that conjugating with a multiplication operator leaves multiplication operators invariant and that [EQUATION] yielding the final result [EQUATION]', '1812.05181-3-71-3': "Looking at the momentum expansion of the classical Hamiltonian [EQUATION] we see that 'canonical quantisation' of this Hamiltonian will lead to the same 'potential term' as did the Klein-Gordon equation, regardless of the adopted ordering scheme, and to the same term linear in momentum if we use any ordering scheme leading to 'anticommutator quantisation' for linear terms.", '1812.05181-3-72-0': '# Conclusion', '1812.05181-3-73-0': 'We have shown how to derive a Schrödinger equation with post-Newtonian correction terms describing a single quantum particle in a general curved background spacetime by means of a WKB-like formal expansion of the minimally coupled Klein-Gordon equation.', '1812.05181-3-73-1': 'We extended this method to account for, in principle, terms of arbitrary orders in [MATH], although it gets recursive at higher orders, making it computationally more difficult to handle than methods based on formal quantisation of the classical description of the particle.', '1812.05181-3-73-2': 'Nevertheless, we believe this scheme to be better suited for concrete predictions, since it is more firmly based on first principles and also more systematic than ad hoc canonical quantisation procedures as employed widely in the literature.', '1812.05181-3-73-3': 'For example, no operator ordering ambiguities arise; instead, the WKB method can be seen as predicting the ordering.', '1812.05181-3-74-0': 'Comparing the Klein-Gordon expansion method to canonical quantisation, we have found that in the case of a general metric, even at lowest post-Newtonian order, the two procedures lead to slightly different quantum Hamiltonians, independent of ordering ambiguities.', '1812.05181-3-74-1': 'For the concrete case of the metric of the Eddington-Robertson PPN test theory, the Hamiltonians obtained from the two methods differ in a term including the Eddington-Robertson parameter [MATH], depending on the ordering scheme employed in canonical quantisation.', '1812.05181-3-74-2': 'Thus for the interpretation of tests of general relativity with quantum systems, the method used to derive the quantum Hamiltonian plays a decisive rôle.', '1812.05181-3-75-0': "For the case of stationary background metrics, without employing any 'non-relativistic' expansion, we showed that up to linear order in spatial momenta, the Hamiltonians obtained from canonical quantisation of a free particle and from the Klein-Gordon equation agree.", '1812.05181-3-75-1': "In particular, this means that the lowest-order coupling to the 'gravitomagnetic' field [MATH] is independent of the gravity-quantum matter coupling method.", '1812.05181-3-76-0': 'It should be clear that the classical Klein-Gordon equation, as well as any expansion based on it, meets its limits as soon as effects of particle creation and annihilation become relevant.', '1812.05181-3-76-1': 'Obviously, these cannot be accounted for in a single-particle description as proposed here.', '1812.05181-3-76-2': 'One may indeed wonder whether and how this single-particle scheme can be generalised to a system of a fixed number of many interacting particles.', '1812.05181-3-76-3': 'This is not as straightforward as one might think at first.', '1812.05181-3-76-4': "It is well known that there exist severe obstructions against formulating a relativistic theory of many interacting particles; see, e.g., chapter 21 of [CITATION], where the 'no-interaction-theorems' in Poincaré invariant Hamiltonian mechanics are discussed.", '1812.05181-3-77-0': 'Concerning the applicability of the WKB-like method for concrete calculations, it is also an interesting question if and how the transformation of the Hamiltonian from the Klein-Gordon inner product to an [MATH]-scalar product - be it flat or with respect to the induced measure [MATH] - can be implemented more systematically, not relying on direct calculations with the already-computed Hamiltonian.', '1812.05181-3-78-0': 'Another important issue to address is the coordinate-dependence of the methods developed in this paper: It would be desirable to have at hand a coordinate-free formulation of the expansion/coupling schemes with clear geometric interpretation, thus possibly shedding some light on the connection of the WKB-like expansion to the spatial geometry of the Cauchy surfaces and respecting the geometric nature of gravity.'}
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1505.02516
{'1505.02516-1-0-0': 'T-PHOT: a new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry', '1505.02516-1-1-0': 't-phot', '1505.02516-1-2-0': 'The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis.', '1505.02516-1-2-1': 'In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data.', '1505.02516-1-2-2': 'In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-1-2-3': 'We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-1-2-4': 't-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.', '1505.02516-1-2-5': 't-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot).', '1505.02516-1-2-6': 't-phot gathers data from a high resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field.', '1505.02516-1-2-7': 't-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors: namely, i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .', '1505.02516-1-2-8': 'fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful e.g. for far infrared wavelength domains.', '1505.02516-1-2-9': 'By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).', '1505.02516-1-2-10': 't-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile.', '1505.02516-1-2-11': 'This makes it an optimal choice for the analysis of large datasets.', '1505.02516-1-2-12': 'When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (albeit in a much shorter time), but in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.', '1505.02516-1-2-13': 't-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to FIR image photometry.', '1505.02516-1-2-14': 'Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.', '1505.02516-1-3-0': '# Introduction', '1505.02516-1-4-0': 'Combining observational data from the same regions of the sky in different wavelength domains has become common practice in the past few years .', '1505.02516-1-4-1': 'However, the use of both space-based and ground-based imaging instruments, with different sensitivities, pixel scales, angular resolutions, and survey depths, raises a number of challenging difficulties in the data analysis process.', '1505.02516-1-5-0': 'In this context, it is of particular interest to obtain detailed photometric measurements for high redshift galaxies in the near infrared (NIR; corresponding to rest-frame optical) and far infrared (FIR) domains.', '1505.02516-1-5-1': 'In particular, great attention must be paid to bandpasses containing spectral features which allows for thorough physical investigation of the sources, to disentangle degenerate observational features and to obtain crucial clues to the understanding of the galactic physics .', '1505.02516-1-5-2': 'For example, at [MATH] photometry longward of [MATH]-band is needed to locate and measure the size of the Balmer break.', '1505.02516-1-5-3': 'A passive galaxy at [MATH] (having the Balmer break lying longward of the [MATH]-band) can have [MATH] band and [MATH]m fluxes compatible with e.g. a star forming, dusty galaxy at [MATH], and [MATH]band photometry is necessary to disentangle the degeneracy.', '1505.02516-1-5-4': 'However, the limited resolution of the ground based [MATH]band observations can impose severe limits on the reliability of traditional aperture or even PSF-fitting photometry.', '1505.02516-1-5-5': 'Also, IRAC photometry is of crucial importance to obtain reliable photometric redshifts for red and high-[MATH] sources, and to derive robust stellar mass estimates.', '1505.02516-1-6-0': 'To address this, a high resolution image (HRI), obtained e.g. from the Hubble Space Telescope in the optical domain, can be used to retrieve detailed information on the positions and morphologies of the sources in a given region of the sky.', '1505.02516-1-6-1': 'Such information can be subsequently used to perform the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image (LRI), using the HRI data as priors.', '1505.02516-1-6-2': 'However, simply performing aperture photometry on the LRI at the positions measured in the HRI can be dramatically affected by neighbour contamination for reasonably sized apertures.', '1505.02516-1-6-3': 'On the other hand, performing source extraction on both images and matching the resulting catalogs is compromised by the inability to deblend neighbouring objects, and may introduce significant inaccuracies in the cross-correlation process.', '1505.02516-1-6-4': 'PSF-matching techniques that degrade high-resolution data to match the low resolution data discard much of the valuable information obtained in the HRI, reducing all images to the "lowest common denominator" of angular resolution.', '1505.02516-1-6-5': 'Moreover, crowded-field, PSF-fitting photometry packages such as daophot perform well if the sources in the LRI are unresolved, but are unsuitable for analysis of even marginally resolved images of extragalactic sources.', '1505.02516-1-7-0': 'A more viable approach consists of taking advantage of the morphological information given by the HRI, to obtain high resolution cutouts or models of the sources.', '1505.02516-1-7-1': 'These priors can then be degraded to the resolution of the LRI using a suitable convolution kernel, constructed by matching the PSFs of the HRI and of the LRI.', '1505.02516-1-7-2': 'Such low resolution templates, normalized to unit flux, can then be placed at the positions given by the HRI detections, and the multiplicative factor that must be assigned to each model to match the measured flux in each pixel of the LRI will give the measured flux of that source.', '1505.02516-1-7-3': 'Such an approach, although relying on some demanding assumptions as described in the following Sections, has proven to be efficient.', '1505.02516-1-7-4': 'It has been implemented in such public codes as tfit and convphot , and has already been utilized successfully in previous studies .', '1505.02516-1-8-0': 'In this paper we describe a new software package, t-phot, developed at INAF-OAR as part of the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-1-8-1': 't-phot can be considered as a new, largely improved version of tfit, supplemented with many of the features of convphot.', '1505.02516-1-8-2': 'Moreover, it adds many important new options, including the possibility of adopting different types of priors (namely, real images, analytical models, or point-sources).', '1505.02516-1-8-3': 'In particular, it is possible to use t-phot on FIR and sub-millimetric (sub-mm) datasets, as a competitive alternative to the existing dedicated software such as FastPhot and DesPhot .', '1505.02516-1-8-4': 'This makes t-phot a versatile tool, suitable for the photometric analysis of a very broad range of wavelengths from UV to sub-mm.', '1505.02516-1-9-0': 't-phot is a robust and easy-to-handle code, with a precise structural architecture (a Python envelope calling C/C++ core codes) in which different routines are encapsulated, implementing various numerical/conceptual methods, to be chosen by simple switches in a parameter file.', '1505.02516-1-9-1': 'While a standard default "best choice" usage mode is provided and suggested, the user is allowed to select their own preferred way of obtaining their dataset.', '1505.02516-1-10-0': 'One of the main advantages of t-phot is a significant saving of computational time with respect to both tfit and convphot (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-1-10-1': 'This has been achieved with the use of fast C modules and an efficient structural arrangement of the code.', '1505.02516-1-10-2': 'In addition to this, we demonstrate how different choices of parameters influence the performace, and can be optimized to significantly improve the final results with respect to e.g. tfit.', '1505.02516-1-11-0': 'The plan of the paper is as follows.', '1505.02516-1-11-1': 'Sect. [REF] provides a general introduction to the code, its mode of operation and its algorithms.', '1505.02516-1-11-2': 'Sect. [REF] presents a comprehensive set of tests, based on both simulated and real datasets, to assess the performance of the code and to fully illustrate its capabilities and limitations.', '1505.02516-1-11-3': 'Sect. [REF] briefly discusses the computational performances of t-phot and provides some reference computational timescales.', '1505.02516-1-11-4': 'Finally, in Sect. [REF] the key features of t-phot are summarized, and outstanding issues and potential complications are briefly discussed.', '1505.02516-1-12-0': '# General description of the code', '1505.02516-1-13-0': 'As described above, t-phot uses spatial and morphological information gathered from a HRI to measure the fluxes in a LRI.', '1505.02516-1-13-1': 'To this aim, a linear system is built and solved via matricial computing, minimizing the [MATH] (in which the numerically determined fluxes for each detected source are compared to the measured fluxes in the LRI, summing the contributions of all pixels).', '1505.02516-1-13-2': 'Moreover, the code produces a number of diagnostic outputs and allows for an iterative re-calibration of the results.', '1505.02516-1-13-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows a schematic depiction of the basic PSF-matched fitting algorithm used in the code.', '1505.02516-1-14-0': 'As HRI priors t-phot can use i) real cutouts of sources from the HRI, ii) models of sources obtained e.g. with Galfit or similar codes, iii) a list of coordinates where PSF-shaped sources will be placed; or a combination of these three types of priors.', '1505.02516-1-15-0': 'For a detailed technical description of the mode of operation of the code, we refer the reader to the Appendix and to the documentation included in the downloadable tarball.', '1505.02516-1-15-1': 'Here, we will briefly describe its main features.', '1505.02516-1-16-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-1-17-0': 'The pipeline followed by t-phot is outlined in the flowchart given in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-17-1': 'The following paragraphs give a short description of the pipeline.', '1505.02516-1-18-0': '### Input', '1505.02516-1-19-0': 'The input files needed by t-phot vary depending on the type(s) of priors used.', '1505.02516-1-20-0': 'If "true" high-resolution priors are used, e.g. for optical/NIR ground-based or IRAC measurements using HST cutouts, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-1-21-0': 'If analytical models priors are used as priors (e.g. Galfit models), t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-1-22-0': 'If models have more than one component, one separate stamp per component, and catalogs for each component are needed (e.g. one catalog for bulges and one catalog for disks).', '1505.02516-1-23-0': 'If unresolved, point-like priors are used, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-1-24-0': 'In this case, a potential limitation to the reliability of the method is given by the fact that the prior density usually needs to be optimised with respect to FIR/sub-mm maps, as discussed e.g. in [CITATION] and [CITATION] .', '1505.02516-1-24-1': 'The optimal number of priors turns out to be around 50-75% of the numbers of beams in the map.', '1505.02516-1-24-2': 'The key problem is to identify which of the many potential priors from e.g. an HST catalogue one should use.', '1505.02516-1-24-3': 'This is a very complex issue and we do not discuss it in this paper.', '1505.02516-1-25-0': 'If mixed priors are used, t-phot obviously needs the input files corresponding to each of the different types of priors in use.', '1505.02516-1-26-0': 'Finally, in all cases t-phot needs', '1505.02516-1-27-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the input requirements for the different choices of priors just described.', '1505.02516-1-28-0': 'All the input images must have the following keywords in their headers: CRPIXn, CRVALn, CDnn, CTYPEn (n=1,2).', '1505.02516-1-29-0': '### On the background subtraction', '1505.02516-1-30-0': 'As already mentioned, the LRI must be background subtracted before being fed to t-phot.', '1505.02516-1-30-1': 'This is of particular interest when dealing with FIR/sub-mm images, where the typical standard is to use zero-mean.', '1505.02516-1-30-2': 'To estimate the background level in optical/NIR images, one simple possibility is to take advantage of the option to fit point-like sources to measure the flux for a list of positions chosen to fall within void regions.', '1505.02516-1-30-3': 'The issue is more problematic in such confusion-limited FIR images where there are no empty sky regions.', '1505.02516-1-30-4': 'In such cases, it is important to separate the fitted sources (those listed in the prior catalogue) from the background sources, which contribute to a flat background level behind the sources of interest.', '1505.02516-1-30-5': 'The priors should be chosen so that these two populations are uncorrelated.', '1505.02516-1-30-6': 'The average contribution of the faint background source population can then be estimated e.g. by (i) injecting fake sources into the map and measuring the average offset (output-input) flux; or (ii) measuring the modal value in the residual image after a first pass through t-phot .', '1505.02516-1-31-0': '### Stages', '1505.02516-1-32-0': 't-phot goes through "stages", each of which performs a well defined task.', '1505.02516-1-32-1': 'The best results are obtained performing two runs ("pass 1" and "pass 2"), the second one using locally registered kernels, produced during the first one.', '1505.02516-1-32-2': 'The possible stages are the following:', '1505.02516-1-33-0': 'The exact pipeline followed by the code is specified by a keyword in the input parameter file.', '1505.02516-1-33-1': 'See the Appendix for a more detailed description of the whole procedure.', '1505.02516-1-34-0': '### Solution of the linear system', '1505.02516-1-35-0': 'The search for the LRI fluxes of the objects detected in the HRI is performed by creating a linear system [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [MATH] contains the pixel values of the fluxes in the LRI, [MATH] is the normalized flux of the template for the [MATH]-th objects in the (region of the) LRI being fitted, and [MATH] is the multiplicative scaling factor for each object.', '1505.02516-1-35-1': 'In physical terms, [MATH] represent the flux of each object in the LRI (that is, it is the unknown to be determined).', '1505.02516-1-36-0': 'Once the normalized templates for each object in the (region of interest within the) LRI have been generated during the convolve stage, the best fit to their fluxes can be simultaneously derived by minimizing a [MATH] statistic, [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the RMS value in the pixel.', '1505.02516-1-37-0': 'The output quantities are the best-fit solutions of the minimization procedure, i.e. the [MATH] parameters and their relative errors.', '1505.02516-1-37-1': 'They can be obtained resolving the linear system [EQUATION] for [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-38-0': 'In practice, the linear system can be rearranged into a matrix equation, [EQUATION] where the matrix [MATH] contains the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] is a vector containing the fluxes to be determined, and [MATH] is a vector given by [MATH] terms.', '1505.02516-1-38-1': 'The matrix equation is solved via one of three possible methods as described in the next subsection.', '1505.02516-1-39-0': '### Fitting options', '1505.02516-1-40-0': 't-phot allows for some different options to perform the fit:', '1505.02516-1-41-0': 'The fit can be performed (i) on the entire LRI as a whole, producing a single matrix containing all the sources (this is the method adopted in convphot); (ii) subdividing the LRI into an arbitrary grid of (overlapping) small cells, perfoming the fit in each of such cells separately, and then choosing the "best" fit for each source, using some convenient criteria to select it (because sources will be fitted more than once, if the cells overlap.', '1505.02516-1-41-1': 'This is the method adopted in tfit); (iii) ordering objects by decreasing flux, building a cell around each source including all its potential contaminants, solving the problem in that cell and assigning to the source the obtained flux (cells-on-objects method; see the Appendix for more details).', '1505.02516-1-42-0': 'While the first method is the safest and more accurate because it does not introduce any bias or arbitrary modifications, it may often be unfeasible to process at once large or very crowded images.', '1505.02516-1-42-1': 'Potentially large computational time saving is possible using the cells-on-objects method, depending on the level of blending/confusion in the LRI: if the latter is very high, most sources will be overlapping, so the cells will end up being very large.', '1505.02516-1-42-2': 'This ultimately results in repeating many times the fit on regions with dimensions comparable to the whole image (a check is implemented in the code, to automatically change the method from cells-on-objects to single fit if this is the case).', '1505.02516-1-42-3': 'If the confusion is not dramatic, a saving in computational time up to two orders of magnitude can be achieved.', '1505.02516-1-42-4': 'The results obtained using the cells-on-objects method prove to be virtually identical to those obtained with a single fit on the whole image (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-1-42-5': 'On the other hand, using the arbitrary cells method is normally the fastest option, but can introduce potentially large errors to the flux estimates, due to wrong assignments of peripheral flux from sources located outside a given cell to sources within the cell (again, see Sect. [REF] and Appendix).', '1505.02516-1-43-0': '### Post-fitting stages: kernel registration', '1505.02516-1-44-0': 'After the fitting procedure is completed, t-phot will produce the final output catalogs and diagnostic images (see [REF]).', '1505.02516-1-44-1': 'Among these, a model image is obtained by adding all the templates, scaled to their correct total flux after fitting, in the positions of the sources.', '1505.02516-1-44-2': 'This image will subsequently be used if a second pass is planned, during a stage named dance: a list of positional shifts is computed, and a set of shifted kernels are generated and stored.', '1505.02516-1-44-3': 'The dance stage consists of three conceptual steps:', '1505.02516-1-45-0': '### Second pass', '1505.02516-1-46-0': 'The registered kernels can subsequently be used in the second pass run, to obtain more astrometrically precise results.', '1505.02516-1-46-1': 't-phot automatically deals with them provided the correct keyword is given in the parameter file.', '1505.02516-1-46-2': 'If unresolved priors are used, the list of shifts generated in the dance stage will be used by the positions routine during the second pass to produce correctly shifted PSFs and generate new templates.', '1505.02516-1-47-0': '## Error budget', '1505.02516-1-48-0': 'During the fitting stage, the covariance matrix is constructed and output.', '1505.02516-1-48-1': 'Errors for each source are assigned as the square root of the diagonal element of the covariance matrix relative to that source.', '1505.02516-1-48-2': 'It must be pointed out that using any cell method for the fitting, rather the single fitting option, will affect this uncertainty budget, since a different matrix will be constructed and resolved in each cell.', '1505.02516-1-49-0': 'It is important to stress that this covariance error budget is a statistical uncertainty, relative to the RMS fluctuations in the measurement image, and is not related to any possible systematic error.', '1505.02516-1-49-1': 'The latter can instead be estimated by flagging potentially problematic sources, to be identified separately from the fitting procedure.', '1505.02516-1-49-2': 'There can be different possible causes for systematic offsets of the measured flux with respect to the true flux of a source.', '1505.02516-1-49-3': 't-phot assigns the following flags:', '1505.02516-1-50-0': '## Description of the output', '1505.02516-1-51-0': 't-phot output files are designed to be very similar in format to those produced by tfit.', '1505.02516-1-51-1': 'They provide:', '1505.02516-1-52-0': 'two catalogs reporting statistics for the fitting cells and the covariance matrices (they are described in the documentation); the model .f', '1505.02516-1-52-1': 'fits image, obtained as a collage of the templates, as already described; a diagnostic residual .f', '1505.02516-1-52-2': 'fits image, obtained by subtracting the model image from the LRI; a subdirectory containing all the low resolution model templates; a subdirectory containing the covariance matrices in graphic (.f', '1505.02516-1-52-3': 'fits) format; a few ancillary files relating to the shifts of the kernel for the second pass and a subdirectory containing the shifted kernels.', '1505.02516-1-53-0': 'All fluxes and errors are output in units consistent with the input images.', '1505.02516-1-54-0': 'Figs. [REF], [REF] and [REF] show three examples of t-phot applications on simulated and real data, using the three different options for priors.', '1505.02516-1-55-0': '# Validation', '1505.02516-1-56-0': 'To assess the performance of t-phot we set up an extensive set of simulations, aimed at various different and complementary goals.', '1505.02516-1-57-0': 'We used SkyMaker , a public software tool, to build synthetic .', '1505.02516-1-57-1': 'fits images.', '1505.02516-1-57-2': 'The code ensures direct control on all the observational parameters (the magnitude and positions of the objects, their morphology, the zero point magnitude, the noise level, and the PSF).', '1505.02516-1-57-3': 'Model galaxies are built by summing a de Vaucouleurs and an exponential light profile in order to best mimick a realistic distribution of galaxy morphologies.', '1505.02516-1-57-4': 'These models are generated using a variety of bulge-to-total light ratios, component sizes and projection angles.', '1505.02516-1-58-0': 'All tests have been run using ideal (i.e. synthetic and symmetric) PSFs and kernels.', '1505.02516-1-59-0': 'Moreover, we also perform tests on real datasets taken from the CANDELS survey (in these cases using real PSFs).', '1505.02516-1-60-0': 'Some of the tests were performed using both t-phot and tfit, to cross-check the results, ensuring the perfect equivalency of the results given by the two codes when used with the same parameter sets, and showing how appropriate settings of the t-phot parameters can ensure remarkable improvements.', '1505.02516-1-61-0': 'For simplicity, here we only show the results from a restricted selection of the tests dataset, which are representative of the performance of t-phot in standard situations.', '1505.02516-1-61-1': 'The results on the other simulations globally resemble the one we present, and are omitted for the sake of conciseness.', '1505.02516-1-62-0': '## Code performance and reliability on simulated images', '1505.02516-1-63-0': '### Basic tests', '1505.02516-1-64-0': 'As a first test, we checked the performance of the basic method by measuring the flux of two PSF-shaped synthetic sources, with varying separation and signal to noise ratios.', '1505.02516-1-64-1': 'One hundred realizations with different noise maps of each parameter set were prepared, and the averages on the measured fluxes were computed.', '1505.02516-1-64-2': 'The aim of this test was twofold: on the one hand, to check the precision to which the fitting method can retrieve "true" fluxes in the simplest possible case - two sources with ideal PSF shape; on the other hand, to check the reliability of the nominal error budget given by the covariance matrix, comparing it to the real RMS of the 100 measurements.', '1505.02516-1-64-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows three examples of the setup and the results of this test.', '1505.02516-1-64-4': 'Clearly, in both aspects the results are reassuring: the average of the 100 measurement (red diamonds) is always in very good agreement with the "true" value, with offset in relative error always well under the [MATH] limit ([MATH] is the value of the signal to noise ratio in the central pixel of the source, corresponding to roughly one third of the total [MATH]); and the nominal error (red crosses) given by the covariance matrix is always in good agreement with the RMS of the 100 measurements (red circles).', '1505.02516-1-65-0': 'When dealing with extended objects rather than with point-like sources, one must consider the additional problem that the entire profile of the source cannot be measured exactly, because the segmentation is limited by the lowest signal-to-noise isophote.', '1505.02516-1-65-1': 'The extension of the segmentation therefore comes to play a crucial role and defining it correctly is a very subtle issue.', '1505.02516-1-65-2': 'Simply taking the isophotal area as reported by SExtractor as ISOAREA often underestimates the real extension of the objects.', '1505.02516-1-65-3': 'Accordingly, the segmentation of the sources should somehow be enlarged to include the faint wings of sources.', '1505.02516-1-65-4': 'To this aim, specific software called Dilate has been developed at OAR and used in the CANDELS pipeline for the photometric analysis of GOODS-S and UDS IRAC data .', '1505.02516-1-65-5': 'Dilate enlarges the segmentation by a given factor, depending on the original area; it has proven to be reasonably robust in minimizing the effects of underestimated segmentated areas.', '1505.02516-1-66-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the effects of artificially varying the dimensions of the segmentation relative to two bright, extended and isolated sources in a simulated HRI, on the flux measured for that source in a companion simulated LRI.', '1505.02516-1-66-1': 'Note how enlarging the segmented area normally results in larger measured fluxes, because more and more light from the faint wings of the source are included in the fit.', '1505.02516-1-66-2': 'However, beyond a certain limit the measurements begin to lose accuracy due to the inclusion of noisy, too low signal-to-noise regions (which may cause a lower flux measurement).', '1505.02516-1-67-0': 'In principle, using extended analytical models rather than real high resolution cutouts should cure this problem more efficiently, because models have extended wings which are not signal-to-noise limited.', '1505.02516-1-67-1': 'Tests are ongoing to check the performance of this approach, and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.', '1505.02516-1-68-0': '### Tests on realistic simulations', '1505.02516-1-69-0': 'The next tests were aimed at investigating less idealized situations, and have been designed to provide a robust analysis of the performance of the code on realistic datasets.', '1505.02516-1-69-1': 'We used the code GenCat to produce mock catalogs of synthetic extragalactic sources, with reasonable morphological features and flux distribution.', '1505.02516-1-69-2': 'Then, a set of images were produced using such catalogs as an input for SkyMaker.', '1505.02516-1-69-3': 'A "detection" HRI mimicking an HST H band observation (FWHM = [MATH]) was generated from the GenCat catalog, using output parameters to characterize the objects\' extended properties.', '1505.02516-1-69-4': 'Then a set of measure LRI\'s were produced: a first one was populated with PSF-shaped sources, having FWHM = 1.66" (the typical IRAC-ch1/ch2 resolution, a key application for t-phot), while other LRIs were created from the input catalog, mimicking different ground-based or IRAC FWHMs.', '1505.02516-1-69-5': 'Finally, we created another HRI catalog removing all of the overlapping sources.', '1505.02516-1-69-6': 'This "non-overlapping" catalog was used to create parallel detection and measurement images, to obtain insight into the complications given by the presence of overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-1-69-7': 'In all these images, the limiting magnitude was set equal to the assigned zero point, so that the limiting flux at 1[MATH] is 1.', '1505.02516-1-69-8': 'Also, the fits were always performed on the LRI as a whole, if not otherwise specified.', '1505.02516-1-70-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the results relative to the first test, i.e. the fit on the image containing non-overlapping, PSF-shaped sources, with a "perfect" detection (i.e. the prior catalog contains all sources above the "true" detection limit), obtained with a single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-1-70-1': 'The figure shows the relative error in the measured flux of the sources, [MATH], versus the log of the real input flux [MATH]; the different symbols refer to the flag assigned to each object, while the color is a proxy for the covariance index, as described in more detail in the next paragraph.', '1505.02516-1-71-0': 'In this case, the only source of uncertainty in the measurement is given by the noise fluctuations, which clearly becomes dominant in the faint end of the distribution.', '1505.02516-1-71-1': 'Looking at the error bars of the sources, which are given by the nominal error assigned by t-phot from the covariance matrix, one can see that almost all sources have measured flux within [MATH] from their "true" flux, with only strongly covariant sources (covariance index [MATH] 1, greener colors) having [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-71-2': 'The only noticeable exceptions are sources that have been flagged as potentially unreliable, as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-71-3': 'Also note how the average [MATH] (solid black line) is consistent with zero down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-72-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the analysis of a case study in which the fluxes of a clump of highly convariant objects are measured with poor accuracy, and some of the nominal uncertainties are underestimated: a very bright source (ID 3386, m[MATH]) shows a relative difference [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-72-1': 'To cast light on the reason for such a discrepancy, the region surrounding the object was replicated 100 times with different noise realizations, and the results were analyzed and compared.', '1505.02516-1-72-2': 'The upper panels show (left) one of the 100 measurement images and (right) the position of all the sources in the region (many of which are close to the detection limit).', '1505.02516-1-72-3': 'The color code refers to the covariance index of the sources.', '1505.02516-1-72-4': 'The bottom left panel shows the relative error in the measured flux for all the sources in the region, with the inner panels showing magnifications relative to the object ID 3386 and to the bunch of objects with m[MATH].', '1505.02516-1-72-5': 'Looking at the colors of their symbols, many objects in the region turn out to be strongly covariant.', '1505.02516-1-72-6': 'Indeed, while the "bluer" sources in the upper part of the region all have covariant indexes lower than 0.5, the "greener" ones in the crowded lower part all have covariance index larger than 1 (indeed larger than 2 in many cases).', '1505.02516-1-72-7': 'This means that their flux measurements are subject to uncertainties not only from noise fluctuations, but also from systematic errors due to their extremely close and bright neighbors.', '1505.02516-1-72-8': 'As clearly demonstrated here, the covariance index can give a clue about which measurements can be safely trusted.', '1505.02516-1-73-0': 'The bottom right panel gives the sum of the measured fluxes of all sources in each of the 100 realizations (the blue line is the true total flux and the red line is the mean of the 100 measured total fluxes).', '1505.02516-1-73-1': 'It can be seen that the total flux measured in the region is always consistent with the expected true one to within [MATH] of its value.', '1505.02516-1-74-0': 'The bottom line of this analysis is that, although it is not possible to postulate a one-to-one relation (because in mane cases sources having a large covariance index have a relatively good flux estimate, see Fig. [REF]), the covariance index, together with the flagging code outputted by t-phot, can give clues about the reliability of measured flux, and should be taken into consideration during the analysis of the data.', '1505.02516-1-74-1': 'Measurements relative to sources having covariance index e.g. larger than 1 should be treated with caution.', '1505.02516-1-75-0': 'In a subsequent more realistic test, we considered extended objects (including morphologies of objects from the GenCat catalog, using FWHM[MATH]=0.2[MATH] and FWHM[MATH]=1.66[MATH] and imposing m[MATH]=m[MATH] for simplicity) and allowed for overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-1-75-1': 'To be consistent with the standard procedure adopted for real images, for this case we proceeded by producing an SExtractor catalog and segmentation map, which were then spatially cross-correlated with the "true" input catalog.', '1505.02516-1-75-2': 'The results for this test are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-75-3': 'Even in this much more complex situation, the results are reassuring: there is an overall good agreement between measured and input fluxes for bright ([MATH]) sources, with only a few flagged objects clearly showing large deviations from the expected value.', '1505.02516-1-75-4': 'However, all fluxes are measured [MATH] fainter than the true values (see the inner box in the same Figure); this is very likely to be the effect of the limited segmentation extension, as already discussed in the previous Section.', '1505.02516-1-75-5': 'On the other hand, faint sources tend to have systematically overestimated fluxes, arguably because of contamination from undetected sources.', '1505.02516-1-75-6': 'To confirm this, we focus our attention on a single case study (the source marked as ID 720) which shows a large discrepancy from its true flux, but has a relatively small covariance index.', '1505.02516-1-75-7': 'An analysis of the real segmentation map shows how in reality the detected object is a superposition of two different sources, which have been detected as a single one, so that the measured flux is of course higher than expected.', '1505.02516-1-75-8': 'One should also note that the uncertainties on the measured fluxes are smaller in this test, because there are fewer priors (only the ones detected by SExtractor are now present), implying a lower rank of the covariance matrix and a lower number of detected neighbors blending in the LRI.', '1505.02516-1-75-9': 'This causes a global underestimation of the errors.', '1505.02516-1-76-0': '### Testing different fitting options: cell dimensions', '1505.02516-1-77-0': 'We then proceeded to test the performance of the different fitting techniques that can be used in t-phot.', '1505.02516-1-77-1': 'To this aim, we repeated the fitting on the LRI, with different methods: using a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, and the cells-on-objects method, comparing the results with those from the fit of the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-1-77-2': 'The results of the tests are shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1505.02516-1-77-3': 'The first figure compares the distributions of the relative errors in measured flux for the runs performed on the [MATH] pixels grid, on the [MATH] pixels grid, and on the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-1-77-4': 'Clearly, using any regular grid of cells worsens the results, as anticipated in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-77-5': 'Enlarging the sizes of the cells yields improvement, but does not completely solve the problem.', '1505.02516-1-77-6': 'Note that the adoption of an arbitary grid of cells of any dimension in principle is prone to the introduction of potentially large errors, because (possibly bright) contaminating objects may contribute to the brightness measured in the cell, without being included as contributing sources.', '1505.02516-1-77-7': 'A mathematical sketch of this issue is explained in the Appendix (and see also Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-1-78-0': 'The second histogram compares the differences between the fit on the whole image and the one with the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-1-78-1': 'Almost all the sources yield identical results with the two methods, within [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-78-2': 'This proves how the cells-on-objects method can be considered a reliable alternative to the single fit method.', '1505.02516-1-79-0': 'Fig. [REF] compares the HRI, the LRI, and the residual images obtained with the four methods and their distributions of relative errors, showing quantitatively the difference between the analyzed cases.', '1505.02516-1-80-0': 'In summary, it is clear that an incautious choice of cell size may lead to unsatisfactory and catastrophic outcomes.', '1505.02516-1-80-1': 'On the other hand, the advantages of using a single fit, and the equivalence of the results obtained with the single fit and the cells-on-objects technique, are evident.', '1505.02516-1-80-2': 'As already anticipated, one should bear in mind that the cells-on-objects method is only convenient if the overlapping of sources is not dramatic, as in ground-based optical observations.', '1505.02516-1-80-3': 'For IRAC and FIR images, on the other hand, the extreme blending of sources would cause the cells to be extended over regions approaching the size of the whole image, so that a single fit would be more convenient, although often still CPU-time consuming.', '1505.02516-1-81-0': '### Testing different fitting options: threshold fitting', '1505.02516-1-82-0': 'As described in Sect. [REF], t-phot includes the option to impose a lower threshold on the normalized fluxes of templates so as to exclude from the fit low signal-to-noise pixels.', '1505.02516-1-82-1': 'Fig. [REF] shows a comparison of the relative errors obtained with three different values of the THRESHOLD parameter: [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] (this means that only pixels with normalized flux [MATH] in the convolved template will be used in the fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-1-82-2': 'The differences are quite small, however a non-negligible global effect can be noticed: all sources tend to slightly decrease their measurement of flux when using a threshold limit.', '1505.02516-1-82-3': 'This brings faint sources (generally overestimated without using the threshold) closer to their "true" value, at the same time making bright sources too faint.', '1505.02516-1-82-4': 'This effect deserves careful investigation which is beyond the scope of this study, and is postponed to a future paper.', '1505.02516-1-83-0': '### Colors', '1505.02516-1-84-0': 'A final test was run introducing realistic colors, i.e. assigning fluxes to the sources in the LRI consistent with a realistic SED (as output by GenCat), instead of imposing them to be equal to the HRI fluxes.', '1505.02516-1-84-1': 'We took IRAC-ch1 as a reference filter for the LRI, consistently with the chosen FWHM of 1.66".', '1505.02516-1-84-2': 'Furthermore, we allowed for variations in the bulge-to-disc ratios of the sources to take into account possible effects of color gradients.', '1505.02516-1-84-3': 'We compared the results obtained with t-phot with the ones obtained with two alternative methods to determine the magnitudes of the sources in the LRI: namely, SExtractor dual mode aperture and MAGBEST photometry (with HRI as detection image).', '1505.02516-1-84-4': 'The differences between measured and input magnitudes in the LRI, m[MATH]-m[MATH], are plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-84-5': 'Clearly, t-phot ensures the best results, with much less scattered measurements than both the other two methods, and very few outliers.', '1505.02516-1-85-0': '## What are we measuring, exactly?', '1505.02516-1-86-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we plot some basic results from a set of extended simulations and emulations aimed to understand what is corresponds the flux [MATH] measured by t-phot: should it be considered an isophotal flux, or rather a total flux of the sources?', '1505.02516-1-86-1': 'The previous tests show that, at least in ideal situations, t-phot is able to measure with great accuracy the true flux of a PSF-shaped object, while it inevitably looses some (small) fraction of it when dealing with extended objects for which a segmentation map (which is ultimately an isophotal limit) is needed.', '1505.02516-1-86-2': 'This would suggest that the measured quantity is related to the extension of the prior used in the procedure, and should therefore considered an isophotal flux.', '1505.02516-1-87-0': 'However, the results from more realistic simulations/emulations clearly show that the situation is more intrigued.', '1505.02516-1-87-1': 'Here we show only an illustrative example.', '1505.02516-1-87-2': 'Fig. [REF] plots the results of an emulation in which the HST F160 image, used as detection HRI, was smoothed to ground-based seeing (FWHM=0.8") to obtain a LRI with colors equal to zero.', '1505.02516-1-87-3': 'The t-phot measured magnitudes on such H-smoothed image were then compared to two different estimations of the original H band magnitude: the total magnitude, i.e. the SExtractor MAGAUTO, and an isophotal magnitude given by the flux integrated within the area of the (dilated) cutout.', '1505.02516-1-87-4': 'Also, plotted are the results from a simple synthetic simulation were images with similar general characteristics containing five isolated and "well behaved" objects were used (see image caption for a detailed description).', '1505.02516-1-88-0': 'The plots show that the magnitudes given by t-phot are generally fainter than the official total CANDELS magnitudes (SExtractor MAGAUTO): in real images this can partly be due to the contamination by nearby sources which is strongly reduced using the PSF-matching techinque, but since the same trend is present also in simulation including only isolated objects, we must conclude that the main reason is the dimension of the segmented cutouts.', '1505.02516-1-88-1': 'Indeed, on the other hand, the measured magnitudes are brighter than those obtained straightly from the integrated flux within the high resolution cutouts.', '1505.02516-1-88-2': 'Therefore, in this case apparently t-phot is able to give a measure closer to the total flux of the sources.', '1505.02516-1-88-3': 'This is a very subtle and delicate issue and deserves a more accurate analysis, which we postpone to a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-1-89-0': '## Direct comparison with TFIT on real data', '1505.02516-1-90-0': 'It is instructive to compare the results of a t-phot run on real datasets already processed using previous releases of the tfit package.', '1505.02516-1-91-0': 'To address this, we compared the results of the tfit CANDELS analysis on the UDS CANDELS [MATH]-band with a t-phot run obtained using the cells-on-objects method and different parameters in the kernel registration stage.', '1505.02516-1-92-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the histograms of the differences in the photometric measurements between tfit and t-phot on the same field (UDS Subaru I band) obtained using the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-1-92-1': 'The differences are evident.', '1505.02516-1-92-2': 'Many sources end up with a substantially different flux, because of the two cited factors (a better kernel registration and the different fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-1-92-3': 'Note that the majority of the sources have fainter fluxes with respect to the previous measurements, precisely because of the effect described in Sect. [REF]: fitting using a grid of cells introduces systematic errors assigning light from sources which are not listed in a given cells but overlap with it to the objects recognized as belonging to the cell.', '1505.02516-1-92-4': 'To further check this point, Fig. [REF] shows some examples of the difference between the residuals obtained with tfit (official catalog) and those obtained with this t-phot run using cells-on-objects method, also introducing better registration parameters in the dance stage.', '1505.02516-1-92-5': 'Clearly, the results are substantially different, with many black spots (sources with spurious overestimated fluxes) disappearing.', '1505.02516-1-92-6': 'Also, the registrations appear to be generally improved.', '1505.02516-1-93-0': '# Computational times', '1505.02516-1-94-0': 'As anticipated, t-phot ensures a large saving of computational times compared to similar codes like tfit and convphot, when used with identical input parameters.', '1505.02516-1-94-1': 'For example, a complete, double-pass run on the whole CANDELS UDS field at once (I band; [MATH]35000 prior sources; LRI 30720[MATH]12800 = 400 million pixels; standard tfit parameters and grid fitting) is completed without memory swaps in ca. 2 hours (i.e., 1 hour per pass) on a standard workstation (Intel i5, 3.20 GHz, RAM 8 Gb).', '1505.02516-1-94-2': 'A complete, double pass run on the GOODS-S Hawk-I W1 field ([MATH]17500 prior sources, LRI 10700[MATH]10600 = 100 millions pixels, identical parameters) is completed in [MATH]20 minutes.', '1505.02516-1-94-3': 'For comparison, tfit may require many hours ([MATH]24) to complete a single pass on this Hawk-I field on the same machine.', '1505.02516-1-94-4': 'It must be said that tfit by default produces cutouts and templates for all the sources in the HRI image; selecting the ones belonging to the LRI field and inputting an ad-hoc catalog would have reduced the computing time, say by a factor of two (i.e., 11 hours for the a single pass).', '1505.02516-1-94-5': 'It was not possible to process large images like the UDS field in a single run, because of RAM memory failing.', '1505.02516-1-94-6': 'convphot timings and memory problems are similar to the tfit ones, although due to different causes (being written in C, computation is generally faster, but it employs a slower convolution method and the solution of the linear system in performed as a single fit instead of grid fitting like in tfit, being much more time consuming).', '1505.02516-1-95-0': 'Adopting the cells-on-objects (Sect. [REF]) method increases the computational time with respect to the tfit standard cell approach, but it is still far more convenient than the convphot standard single fit approach, and gives nearly identical results.', '1505.02516-1-96-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the computational times for an extended tests on a set of simulated images having different detection depths (and therefore number of sources) and dimensions, with LRI FWHM=1.66".', '1505.02516-1-96-1': 'The simulations have been run on the same machine described above, using three different methods: whole image fitting, cells-on-objects and [MATH] pixels cells fitting.', '1505.02516-1-97-0': '# Summary and conclusions', '1505.02516-1-98-0': 'We have presented t-phot, a new software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-1-98-1': 't-phot is a robust and versatile tool, aimed at the photometric analysis of deep extragalactic fields at different wavelengths and spatial resolution, deconfusing blended sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-1-99-0': 't-phot uses priors obtained from a high resolution detection image to obtain normalized templates at the lower resolution of a measurement image, and minimizes a [MATH] problem to retrieve the multiplicative factor relative to each source, which is the searched quantity, i.e. the flux in the LRI.', '1505.02516-1-99-1': 'The priors can be either real cutouts from the HRI, or a list of positions to be fitted as PSF-shaped sources, or analytical 2-d models, or a mix of the three types.', '1505.02516-1-99-2': 'Different options for the fitting stage are given, including a cells-on-objects method which is computationally efficient while yielding accurate results for relatively small FWHMs.', '1505.02516-1-99-3': 't-phot ensures a large saving of computational time as well as increased robustness with respect to similar public codes like its direct predecessors tfit and convphot.', '1505.02516-1-99-4': 'With an appropriate choice of the parameter settings, greater accuracy is also achieved.', '1505.02516-1-100-0': 'As a final remark, it should be pointed out that the analysis presented in this work deals with idealized situations, namely simulations or comparisons with the performances of other codes on real datasets.', '1505.02516-1-100-1': 'There are a number of subtle issues regarding complex aspects of the PSF-matching techinque, which become of crucial importance when working on real data.', '1505.02516-1-100-2': 'A simple foretaste of such complexity can be obtained considering the problem described in Sect. [REF], i.e. the correct amplitude to be assigned to the segmented area of a source.', '1505.02516-1-100-3': 'Work is ongoing on this, and the full discussion will be presented in a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-1-101-0': 'As we have shown, t-phot proves to be an efficient tool for the photometric measurements of images on a very broad range of wavelengths, from UV to sub-mm, and is currently being routinely used by the Astrodeep community to analyse data from different surveys (e.g. CANDELS, Frontier Fields, AEGIS).', '1505.02516-1-101-1': 'Its main advantages with respect to similar codes like tfit or convphot can be summarized as follows:', '1505.02516-1-102-0': 'Future applications might include the processing of EUCLID and CCAT data.', '1505.02516-1-103-0': 'The authors acknowledge the contribution of the FP7 SPACE project “ASTRODEEP” (Ref.No: 312725), supported by the European Commission.', '1505.02516-1-103-1': 'JSD acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of an Advanced Grant.', '1505.02516-1-103-2': 'FB acknowledges support by FCT via the postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/103958/2014 and also the funding from the programme UID/FIS/04434/2013.', '1505.02516-1-103-3': 'RJM acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of a Consolidator Grant (PI McLure).', '1505.02516-1-103-4': 'The authors would like to thank Kuang-Han Huang, Mimi Song, Alice Mortlock and Michal Michalowski, for constructive help and suggestions.', '1505.02516-1-104-0': '# The parameter file', '1505.02516-1-105-0': 'Below is a template of the standard first pass parameter file to be given as input to t-phot (similar templates for both the first and the second pass are included in the dowloadable tarball).', '1505.02516-1-105-1': 'It is very similar to the original tfit parameter file, and part of the description is directly inherited from it.', '1505.02516-1-106-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-1-107-0': 'Standard runs can be achieved setting order standard and order standard2.', '1505.02516-1-108-0': 'A standard firstpass run includes the stages priors, convolve, fit, diags, dance, plotdance.', '1505.02516-1-108-1': 'The stage priors allows for an automatic re-construction of the pipeline depending on the input data given in the following sections (see the documentation included in the tarball).', '1505.02516-1-108-2': 'A standard second pass run includes the stages convolve, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-1-108-3': 'The archive stage creates a directory after the name of the LRI, with some specifications, and archives the products of both runs.', '1505.02516-1-109-0': '## Priors', '1505.02516-1-110-0': 'Each prior must have an unique identificative number (ID) to avoid errors.', '1505.02516-1-110-1': 'The user must be careful to give the correct information in this paramfile.', '1505.02516-1-110-2': 'Select the priors to be used by switching on/off the relative keywords: usereal, usemodels, useunresolved.', '1505.02516-1-111-0': '## Convolution', '1505.02516-1-112-0': '## Fitting stage', '1505.02516-1-113-0': 'cellmask: if true, uses a mask to exclude pixels from the fit which do not contain a value of at least maskfloor in at least one template.', '1505.02516-1-113-1': 'writecovar: if true, writes the covariance information out to the tphotcovar file.', '1505.02516-1-113-2': 'threshold: forces to use a threshold on the flux, to only use the central parts of the objects.', '1505.02516-1-113-3': 'linsyssolver: the chosen solution method, i.e. LU, Cholesky or Iterative Biconjugate Gradient (IBG).', '1505.02516-1-113-4': 'LU is default.', '1505.02516-1-113-5': 'clip: tells whether to loop on the sources excluding negative solutions.', '1505.02516-1-114-0': '## Diagnostic stages', '1505.02516-1-115-0': '# The cells-on-objects algorithm', '1505.02516-1-116-0': 'Experiments on simulated images (see Sect. [REF]) clearly show that fitting small regions (cells) of the LRI, as done by default in tfit, may lead to potentially large errors.', '1505.02516-1-116-1': 'This is particularly true if the dimensions of the cells are chosen to be smaller than an ideal size, which changes from case to case, and should however always be greater than [MATH]10 times the FWHM.', '1505.02516-1-116-2': 'However, it can be mathematically shown that the "arbitrary cells" method intrinsecally causes the introduction of errors in the fit, as soon as a source is excluded from the cell (e.g., because its center is outside the cell) but contributes with some flux in some of its pixels.', '1505.02516-1-117-0': 'Consider a cell containing [MATH] sources.', '1505.02516-1-117-1': 'For simplicity, assume that each source [MATH] only overlaps with the two neighours [MATH] and [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-117-2': 'Furthermore, assume that a [MATH]-th source is contaminating the [MATH]-th source, but is excluded from the cell for some reason, for example (as in tfit) because the centroid of the source lies outside the cell.', '1505.02516-1-118-0': 'The linear system for this cell [MATH] will consist of a matrix [MATH] with only the elements on the diagonal and those with a [MATH] offset as non-zero elements (a symmetric band matrix), and the vector [MATH] will contain the products of templates of each source with the real flux in the LRI (as a summation on all pixels), as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-1-118-1': 'Given the above assumptions, this means that the [MATH]-th term of [MATH] will be higher than it should be (because it is contaminated by the external source).', '1505.02516-1-119-0': 'Using the Cramer rule for the solution of squared linear systems, the flux for the object [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] with [MATH] a square matrix in which the [MATH]-th columns is substituted with the vector [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-119-1': 'If for example [MATH], for [MATH] this gives [EQUATION] and since [MATH] is larger than it should, [MATH] will be overestimated (slightly, if [MATH] is not large, i.e. if sources 1 and 2 do not strongly overlap).', '1505.02516-1-119-2': 'On the other hand, for [MATH] we have [EQUATION] and in this case again [MATH] might be small, but the first term given by [MATH] will be certainly large, resulting in catastrophic overestimation of [MATH].', '1505.02516-1-119-3': '[MATH] will of course be underestimated, as it would be easy to show.', '1505.02516-1-120-0': 'From this simple test case it is clear that arbitrarily dividing the LRI into regions will always introduce errors (potentially non-negligible) in the fitting procedure, unless some method to remove dangerous contaminating sources is devised.', '1505.02516-1-121-0': 'The cells-on-objects algorithm aims at ensuring the accuracy of the flux estimate while at the same time drastically decreasing computational times and memory requirements.', '1505.02516-1-121-1': 'As explained in Sect. [REF], when this method is adopted a cell is centered around each detected source, and enlarged to include all its "potential" contaminant neighbors, and the contaminant of the contaminants, and so on.', '1505.02516-1-121-2': 'To avoid an infinite loop, the process of inclusion is interrupted when one of the following criteria is satisfied:', '1505.02516-1-122-0': 'Experiments on simulations have shown that good results are obtained with [MATH] and [MATH], and these values are used as constants in the source code.', '1505.02516-1-123-0': 'Note that if a cell is enlarged to more than 75% of the dimensions of the total LRI, t-phot automatically switches to the single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-1-124-0': '# Suggested best options', '1505.02516-1-125-0': 'Of course, different problems require different approaches to obtain their best possible solution, and users are encouraged to try different options and settings.', '1505.02516-1-125-1': 'However, some indicative guidelines to optimize a run with t-phot can be summarized as follows.'}
{'1505.02516-2-0-0': 'T-PHOT: a new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry', '1505.02516-2-1-0': 't-phot', '1505.02516-2-2-0': 'The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis.', '1505.02516-2-2-1': 'In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data.', '1505.02516-2-2-2': 'In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-2-2-3': 'We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-2-2-4': 't-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.', '1505.02516-2-2-5': 't-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot).', '1505.02516-2-2-6': 't-phot gathers data from a high resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field.', '1505.02516-2-2-7': 't-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors: namely, i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .', '1505.02516-2-2-8': 'fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful e.g. for far infrared wavelength domains.', '1505.02516-2-2-9': 'By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).', '1505.02516-2-2-10': 't-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile.', '1505.02516-2-2-11': 'This makes it an optimal choice for the analysis of large datasets.', '1505.02516-2-2-12': 'When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (albeit in a much shorter time), but in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.', '1505.02516-2-2-13': 't-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to FIR image photometry.', '1505.02516-2-2-14': 'Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.', '1505.02516-2-3-0': '# Introduction', '1505.02516-2-4-0': 'Combining observational data from the same regions of the sky in different wavelength domains has become common practice in the past few years .', '1505.02516-2-4-1': 'However, the use of both space-based and ground-based imaging instruments, with different sensitivities, pixel scales, angular resolutions, and survey depths, raises a number of challenging difficulties in the data analysis process.', '1505.02516-2-5-0': 'In this context, it is of particular interest to obtain detailed photometric measurements for high redshift galaxies in the near infrared (NIR; corresponding to rest-frame optical) and far infrared (FIR) domains.', '1505.02516-2-5-1': 'In particular, great attention must be paid to bandpasses containing spectral features which allows for thorough physical investigation of the sources, to disentangle degenerate observational features and to obtain crucial clues to the understanding of the galactic physics .', '1505.02516-2-5-2': 'For example, at [MATH] photometry longward of [MATH]-band is needed to locate and measure the size of the Balmer break.', '1505.02516-2-5-3': 'A passive galaxy at [MATH] (having the Balmer break lying longward of the [MATH]-band) can have [MATH] band and [MATH]m fluxes compatible with e.g. a star forming, dusty galaxy at [MATH], and [MATH]band photometry is necessary to disentangle the degeneracy.', '1505.02516-2-5-4': 'However, the limited resolution of the ground based [MATH]band observations can impose severe limits on the reliability of traditional aperture or even PSF-fitting photometry.', '1505.02516-2-5-5': 'Also, IRAC photometry is of crucial importance to obtain reliable photometric redshifts for red and high-[MATH] sources, and to derive robust stellar mass estimates.', '1505.02516-2-6-0': 'To address this, a high resolution image (HRI), obtained e.g. from the Hubble Space Telescope in the optical domain, can be used to retrieve detailed information on the positions and morphologies of the sources in a given region of the sky.', '1505.02516-2-6-1': 'Such information can be subsequently used to perform the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image (LRI), using the HRI data as priors.', '1505.02516-2-6-2': 'However, simply performing aperture photometry on the LRI at the positions measured in the HRI can be dramatically affected by neighbour contamination for reasonably sized apertures.', '1505.02516-2-6-3': 'On the other hand, performing source extraction on both images and matching the resulting catalogs is compromised by the inability to deblend neighbouring objects, and may introduce significant inaccuracies in the cross-correlation process.', '1505.02516-2-6-4': 'PSF-matching techniques that degrade high-resolution data to match the low resolution data discard much of the valuable information obtained in the HRI, reducing all images to the "lowest common denominator" of angular resolution.', '1505.02516-2-6-5': 'Moreover, crowded-field, PSF-fitting photometry packages such as daophot perform well if the sources in the LRI are unresolved, but are unsuitable for analysis of even marginally resolved images of extragalactic sources.', '1505.02516-2-7-0': 'A more viable approach consists of taking advantage of the morphological information given by the HRI, to obtain high resolution cutouts or models of the sources.', '1505.02516-2-7-1': 'These priors can then be degraded to the resolution of the LRI using a suitable convolution kernel, constructed by matching the PSFs of the HRI and of the LRI.', '1505.02516-2-7-2': 'Such low resolution templates, normalized to unit flux, can then be placed at the positions given by the HRI detections, and the multiplicative factor that must be assigned to each model to match the measured flux in each pixel of the LRI will give the measured flux of that source.', '1505.02516-2-7-3': 'Such an approach, although relying on some demanding assumptions as described in the following Sections, has proven to be efficient.', '1505.02516-2-7-4': 'It has been implemented in such public codes as tfit and convphot , and has already been utilized successfully in previous studies .', '1505.02516-2-8-0': 'In this paper we describe a new software package, t-phot, developed at INAF-OAR as part of the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-2-8-1': 't-phot can be considered as a new, largely improved version of tfit, supplemented with many of the features of convphot.', '1505.02516-2-8-2': 'Moreover, it adds many important new options, including the possibility of adopting different types of priors (namely, real images, analytical models, or point-sources).', '1505.02516-2-8-3': 'In particular, it is possible to use t-phot on FIR and sub-millimetric (sub-mm) datasets, as a competitive alternative to the existing dedicated software such as FastPhot and DesPhot .', '1505.02516-2-8-4': 'This makes t-phot a versatile tool, suitable for the photometric analysis of a very broad range of wavelengths from UV to sub-mm.', '1505.02516-2-9-0': 't-phot is a robust and easy-to-handle code, with a precise structural architecture (a Python envelope calling C/C++ core codes) in which different routines are encapsulated, implementing various numerical/conceptual methods, to be chosen by simple switches in a parameter file.', '1505.02516-2-9-1': 'While a standard default "best choice" usage mode is provided and suggested, the user is allowed to select their own preferred way of obtaining their dataset.', '1505.02516-2-10-0': 'One of the main advantages of t-phot is a significant saving of computational time with respect to both tfit and convphot (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-2-10-1': 'This has been achieved with the use of fast C modules and an efficient structural arrangement of the code.', '1505.02516-2-10-2': 'In addition to this, we demonstrate how different choices of parameters influence the performace, and can be optimized to significantly improve the final results with respect to e.g. tfit.', '1505.02516-2-11-0': 'The plan of the paper is as follows.', '1505.02516-2-11-1': 'Sect. [REF] provides a general introduction to the code, its mode of operation and its algorithms.', '1505.02516-2-11-2': 'In Sect. [REF] some assumptions, limitations and caveats relative to the method are pointed out and discussed.', '1505.02516-2-11-3': 'Sect. [REF] presents a comprehensive set of tests, based on both simulated and real datasets, to assess the performance of the code and to fully illustrate its capabilities and limitations.', '1505.02516-2-11-4': 'Sect. [REF] briefly discusses the computational performances of t-phot and provides some reference computational timescales.', '1505.02516-2-11-5': 'Finally, in Sect. [REF] the key features of t-phot are summarized, and outstanding issues and potential complications are briefly discussed.', '1505.02516-2-12-0': '# General description of the code', '1505.02516-2-13-0': 'As described above, t-phot uses spatial and morphological information gathered from a HRI to measure the fluxes in a LRI.', '1505.02516-2-13-1': 'To this aim, a linear system is built and solved via matricial computing, minimizing the [MATH] (in which the numerically determined fluxes for each detected source are compared to the measured fluxes in the LRI, summing the contributions of all pixels).', '1505.02516-2-13-2': 'Moreover, the code produces a number of diagnostic outputs and allows for an iterative re-calibration of the results.', '1505.02516-2-13-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows a schematic depiction of the basic PSF-matched fitting algorithm used in the code.', '1505.02516-2-14-0': 'As HRI priors t-phot can use i) real cutouts of sources from the HRI, ii) models of sources obtained e.g. with Galfit or similar codes, iii) a list of coordinates where PSF-shaped sources will be placed; or a combination of these three types of priors.', '1505.02516-2-15-0': 'For a detailed technical description of the mode of operation of the code, we refer the reader to the Appendix and to the documentation included in the downloadable tarball.', '1505.02516-2-15-1': 'Here, we will briefly describe its main features.', '1505.02516-2-16-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-2-17-0': 'The pipeline followed by t-phot is outlined in the flowchart given in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-17-1': 'The following paragraphs give a short description of the pipeline.', '1505.02516-2-18-0': '### Input', '1505.02516-2-19-0': 'The input files needed by t-phot vary depending on the type(s) of priors used.', '1505.02516-2-20-0': 'If "true" high-resolution priors are used, e.g. for optical/NIR ground-based or IRAC measurements using HST cutouts, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-2-21-0': 'If analytical models priors are used as priors (e.g. Galfit models), t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-2-22-0': 'If models have more than one component, one separate stamp per component, and catalogs for each component are needed (e.g. one catalog for bulges and one catalog for disks).', '1505.02516-2-23-0': 'If unresolved, point-like priors are used, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-2-24-0': 'In this case, a potential limitation to the reliability of the method is given by the fact that the prior density usually needs to be optimised with respect to FIR/sub-mm maps, as discussed e.g. in [CITATION] and [CITATION] .', '1505.02516-2-24-1': 'The optimal number of priors turns out to be around 50-75% of the numbers of beams in the map.', '1505.02516-2-24-2': 'The key problem is to identify which of the many potential priors from e.g. an HST catalogue one should use.', '1505.02516-2-24-3': 'This is a very complex issue and we do not discuss it in this paper.', '1505.02516-2-25-0': 'If mixed priors are used, t-phot obviously needs the input files corresponding to each of the different types of priors in use.', '1505.02516-2-26-0': 'Finally, in all cases t-phot needs', '1505.02516-2-27-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the input requirements for the different choices of priors just described.', '1505.02516-2-28-0': 'All the input images must have the following keywords in their headers: CRPIXn, CRVALn, CDnn, CTYPEn (n=1,2).', '1505.02516-2-29-0': '### On the background subtraction', '1505.02516-2-30-0': 'As already mentioned, the LRI must be background subtracted before being fed to t-phot.', '1505.02516-2-30-1': 'This is of particular interest when dealing with FIR/sub-mm images, where the typical standard is to use zero-mean.', '1505.02516-2-30-2': 'To estimate the background level in optical/NIR images, one simple possibility is to take advantage of the option to fit point-like sources to measure the flux for a list of positions chosen to fall within void regions.', '1505.02516-2-30-3': 'The issue is more problematic in such confusion-limited FIR images where there are no empty sky regions.', '1505.02516-2-30-4': 'In such cases, it is important to separate the fitted sources (those listed in the prior catalogue) from the background sources, which contribute to a flat background level behind the sources of interest.', '1505.02516-2-30-5': 'The priors should be chosen so that these two populations are uncorrelated.', '1505.02516-2-30-6': 'The average contribution of the faint background source population can then be estimated e.g. by (i) injecting fake sources into the map and measuring the average offset (output-input) flux; or (ii) measuring the modal value in the residual image after a first pass through t-phot .', '1505.02516-2-31-0': '### Stages', '1505.02516-2-32-0': 't-phot goes through "stages", each of which performs a well defined task.', '1505.02516-2-32-1': 'The best results are obtained performing two runs ("pass 1" and "pass 2"), the second one using locally registered kernels, produced during the first one.', '1505.02516-2-32-2': 'The possible stages are the following:', '1505.02516-2-33-0': 'The exact pipeline followed by the code is specified by a keyword in the input parameter file.', '1505.02516-2-33-1': 'See the Appendix for a more detailed description of the whole procedure.', '1505.02516-2-34-0': '### Solution of the linear system', '1505.02516-2-35-0': 'The search for the LRI fluxes of the objects detected in the HRI is performed by creating a linear system [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [MATH] contains the pixel values of the fluxes in the LRI, [MATH] is the normalized flux of the template for the [MATH]-th objects in the (region of the) LRI being fitted, and [MATH] is the multiplicative scaling factor for each object.', '1505.02516-2-35-1': 'In physical terms, [MATH] represent the flux of each object in the LRI (that is, it is the unknown to be determined).', '1505.02516-2-36-0': 'Once the normalized templates for each object in the (region of interest within the) LRI have been generated during the convolve stage, the best fit to their fluxes can be simultaneously derived by minimizing a [MATH] statistic, [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the value in the [MATH] pixel of the RMS map.', '1505.02516-2-37-0': 'The output quantities are the best-fit solutions of the minimization procedure, i.e. the [MATH] parameters and their relative errors.', '1505.02516-2-37-1': 'They can be obtained resolving the linear system [EQUATION] for [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-38-0': 'In practice, the linear system can be rearranged into a matrix equation, [EQUATION] where the matrix [MATH] contains the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] is a vector containing the fluxes to be determined, and [MATH] is a vector given by [MATH] terms.', '1505.02516-2-38-1': 'The matrix equation is solved via one of three possible methods as described in the next subsection.', '1505.02516-2-39-0': '### Fitting options', '1505.02516-2-40-0': 't-phot allows for some different options to perform the fit:', '1505.02516-2-41-0': 'The fit can be performed (i) on the entire LRI as a whole, producing a single matrix containing all the sources (this is the method adopted in convphot); (ii) subdividing the LRI into an arbitrary grid of (overlapping) small cells, perfoming the fit in each of such cells separately, and then choosing the "best" fit for each source, using some convenient criteria to select it (because sources will be fitted more than once, if the cells overlap.', '1505.02516-2-41-1': 'This is the method adopted in tfit); (iii) ordering objects by decreasing flux, building a cell around each source including all its potential contaminants, solving the problem in that cell and assigning to the source the obtained flux (cells-on-objects method; see the Appendix for more details).', '1505.02516-2-42-0': 'While the first method is the safest and more accurate because it does not introduce any bias or arbitrary modifications, it may often be unfeasible to process at once large or very crowded images.', '1505.02516-2-42-1': 'Potentially large computational time saving is possible using the cells-on-objects method, depending on the level of blending/confusion in the LRI: if the latter is very high, most sources will be overlapping, so the cells will end up being very large.', '1505.02516-2-42-2': 'This ultimately results in repeating many times the fit on regions with dimensions comparable to the whole image (a check is implemented in the code, to automatically change the method from cells-on-objects to single fit if this is the case).', '1505.02516-2-42-3': 'If the confusion is not dramatic, a saving in computational time up to two orders of magnitude can be achieved.', '1505.02516-2-42-4': 'The results obtained using the cells-on-objects method prove to be virtually identical to those obtained with a single fit on the whole image (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-2-42-5': 'On the other hand, using the arbitrary cells method is normally the fastest option, but can introduce potentially large errors to the flux estimates, due to wrong assignments of peripheral flux from sources located outside a given cell to sources within the cell (again, see Sect. [REF] and Appendix).', '1505.02516-2-43-0': '### Post-fitting stages: kernel registration', '1505.02516-2-44-0': 'After the fitting procedure is completed, t-phot will produce the final output catalogs and diagnostic images (see [REF]).', '1505.02516-2-44-1': 'Among these, a model image is obtained by adding all the templates, scaled to their correct total flux after fitting, in the positions of the sources.', '1505.02516-2-44-2': 'This image will subsequently be used if a second pass is planned, during a stage named dance: a list of positional shifts is computed, and a set of shifted kernels are generated and stored.', '1505.02516-2-44-3': 'The dance stage consists of three conceptual steps:', '1505.02516-2-45-0': '### Second pass', '1505.02516-2-46-0': 'The registered kernels can subsequently be used in the second pass run, to obtain more astrometrically precise results.', '1505.02516-2-46-1': 't-phot automatically deals with them provided the correct keyword is given in the parameter file.', '1505.02516-2-46-2': 'If unresolved priors are used, the list of shifts generated in the dance stage will be used by the positions routine during the second pass to produce correctly shifted PSFs and generate new templates.', '1505.02516-2-47-0': '## Error budget', '1505.02516-2-48-0': 'During the fitting stage, the covariance matrix is constructed and output.', '1505.02516-2-48-1': 'Errors for each source are assigned as the square root of the diagonal element of the covariance matrix relative to that source.', '1505.02516-2-48-2': 'It must be pointed out that using any cell method for the fitting, rather the single fitting option, will affect this uncertainty budget, since a different matrix will be constructed and resolved in each cell.', '1505.02516-2-49-0': 'It is important to stress that this covariance error budget is a statistical uncertainty, relative to the RMS fluctuations in the measurement image, and is not related to any possible systematic error.', '1505.02516-2-49-1': 'The latter can instead be estimated by flagging potentially problematic sources, to be identified separately from the fitting procedure.', '1505.02516-2-49-2': 'There can be different possible causes for systematic offsets of the measured flux with respect to the true flux of a source.', '1505.02516-2-49-3': 't-phot assigns the following flags:', '1505.02516-2-50-0': '## Description of the output', '1505.02516-2-51-0': 't-phot output files are designed to be very similar in format to those produced by tfit.', '1505.02516-2-51-1': 'They provide:', '1505.02516-2-52-0': 'two catalogs reporting statistics for the fitting cells and the covariance matrices (they are described in the documentation); the model .f', '1505.02516-2-52-1': 'fits image, obtained as a collage of the templates, as already described; a diagnostic residual .f', '1505.02516-2-52-2': 'fits image, obtained by subtracting the model image from the LRI; a subdirectory containing all the low resolution model templates; a subdirectory containing the covariance matrices in graphic (.f', '1505.02516-2-52-3': 'fits) format; a few ancillary files relating to the shifts of the kernel for the second pass and a subdirectory containing the shifted kernels.', '1505.02516-2-53-0': 'All fluxes and errors are output in units consistent with the input images.', '1505.02516-2-54-0': 'Figs. [REF], [REF] and [REF] show three examples of t-phot applications on simulated and real data, using the three different options for priors.', '1505.02516-2-55-0': '# Assumptions and limitations', '1505.02516-2-56-0': 'The PSF-matching algorithms implemented in t-phot and described in the previous section are prone to some assumptions and limitations.', '1505.02516-2-56-1': 'In particular, it must be pointed out that:', '1505.02516-2-57-0': '# Validation', '1505.02516-2-58-0': 'To assess the performance of t-phot we set up an extensive set of simulations, aimed at various different and complementary goals.', '1505.02516-2-59-0': 'We used SkyMaker , a public software tool, to build synthetic .', '1505.02516-2-59-1': 'fits images.', '1505.02516-2-59-2': 'The code ensures direct control on all the observational parameters (the magnitude and positions of the objects, their morphology, the zero point magnitude, the noise level, and the PSF).', '1505.02516-2-59-3': 'Model galaxies are built by summing a de Vaucouleurs and an exponential light profile in order to best mimick a realistic distribution of galaxy morphologies.', '1505.02516-2-59-4': 'These models are generated using a variety of bulge-to-total light ratios, component sizes and projection angles.', '1505.02516-2-60-0': 'All tests have been run using ideal (i.e. synthetic and symmetric) PSFs and kernels.', '1505.02516-2-61-0': 'Moreover, we also perform tests on real datasets taken from the CANDELS survey (in these cases using real PSFs).', '1505.02516-2-62-0': 'Some of the tests were performed using both t-phot and tfit, to cross-check the results, ensuring the perfect equivalency of the results given by the two codes when used with the same parameter sets, and showing how appropriate settings of the t-phot parameters can ensure remarkable improvements.', '1505.02516-2-63-0': 'For simplicity, here we only show the results from a restricted selection of the tests dataset, which are representative of the performance of t-phot in standard situations.', '1505.02516-2-63-1': 'The results on the other simulations globally resemble the one we present, and are omitted for the sake of conciseness.', '1505.02516-2-64-0': '## Code performance and reliability on simulated images', '1505.02516-2-65-0': '### Basic tests', '1505.02516-2-66-0': 'As a first test, we checked the performance of the basic method by measuring the flux of two PSF-shaped synthetic sources, with varying separation and signal to noise ratios.', '1505.02516-2-66-1': 'One hundred realizations with different noise maps of each parameter set were prepared, and the averages on the measured fluxes were computed.', '1505.02516-2-66-2': 'The aim of this test was twofold: on the one hand, to check the precision to which the fitting method can retrieve "true" fluxes in the simplest possible case - two sources with ideal PSF shape; on the other hand, to check the reliability of the nominal error budget given by the covariance matrix, comparing it to the real RMS of the 100 measurements.', '1505.02516-2-66-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows three examples of the setup and the results of this test.', '1505.02516-2-66-4': 'Clearly, in both aspects the results are reassuring: the average of the 100 measurement (red diamonds) is always in very good agreement with the "true" value, with offset in relative error always well under the [MATH] limit ([MATH] is the value of the signal to noise ratio in the central pixel of the source, corresponding to roughly one third of the total [MATH]); and the nominal error (red crosses) given by the covariance matrix is always in good agreement with the RMS of the 100 measurements (red circles).', '1505.02516-2-67-0': 'When dealing with extended objects rather than with point-like sources, one must consider the additional problem that the entire profile of the source cannot be measured exactly, because the segmentation is limited by the lowest signal-to-noise isophote.', '1505.02516-2-67-1': 'The extension of the segmentation therefore comes to play a crucial role and defining it correctly is a very subtle issue.', '1505.02516-2-67-2': 'Simply taking the isophotal area as reported by SExtractor as ISOAREA often underestimates the real extension of the objects.', '1505.02516-2-67-3': 'Accordingly, the segmentation of the sources should somehow be enlarged to include the faint wings of sources.', '1505.02516-2-67-4': 'To this aim, specific software called Dilate has been developed at OAR and used in the CANDELS pipeline for the photometric analysis of GOODS-S and UDS IRAC data .', '1505.02516-2-67-5': 'Dilate enlarges the segmentation by a given factor, depending on the original area; it has proven to be reasonably robust in minimizing the effects of underestimated segmentated areas.', '1505.02516-2-68-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the effects of artificially varying the dimensions of the segmentation relative to two bright, extended and isolated sources in a simulated HRI, on the flux measured for that source in a companion simulated LRI.', '1505.02516-2-68-1': 'Note how enlarging the segmented area normally results in larger measured fluxes, because more and more light from the faint wings of the source are included in the fit.', '1505.02516-2-68-2': 'However, beyond a certain limit the measurements begin to lose accuracy due to the inclusion of noisy, too low signal-to-noise regions (which may cause a lower flux measurement).', '1505.02516-2-69-0': 'In principle, using extended analytical models rather than real high resolution cutouts should cure this problem more efficiently, because models have extended wings which are not signal-to-noise limited.', '1505.02516-2-69-1': 'Tests are ongoing to check the performance of this approach, and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.', '1505.02516-2-70-0': '### Tests on realistic simulations', '1505.02516-2-71-0': 'The next tests were aimed at investigating less idealized situations, and have been designed to provide a robust analysis of the performance of the code on realistic datasets.', '1505.02516-2-71-1': 'We used the code GenCat to produce mock catalogs of synthetic extragalactic sources, with reasonable morphological features and flux distribution.', '1505.02516-2-71-2': 'Then, a set of images were produced using such catalogs as an input for SkyMaker.', '1505.02516-2-71-3': 'A "detection" HRI mimicking an HST H band observation (FWHM = [MATH]) was generated from the GenCat catalog, using output parameters to characterize the objects\' extended properties.', '1505.02516-2-71-4': 'Then a set of measure LRI\'s were produced: a first one was populated with PSF-shaped sources, having FWHM = 1.66" (the typical IRAC-ch1/ch2 resolution, a key application for t-phot), while other LRIs were created from the input catalog, mimicking different ground-based or IRAC FWHMs.', '1505.02516-2-71-5': 'Finally, we created another HRI catalog removing all of the overlapping sources.', '1505.02516-2-71-6': 'This "non-overlapping" catalog was used to create parallel detection and measurement images, to obtain insight into the complications given by the presence of overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-2-71-7': 'In all these images, the limiting magnitude was set equal to the assigned zero point, so that the limiting flux at 1[MATH] is 1.', '1505.02516-2-71-8': 'Also, the fits were always performed on the LRI as a whole, if not otherwise specified.', '1505.02516-2-72-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the results relative to the first test, i.e. the fit on the image containing non-overlapping, PSF-shaped sources, with a "perfect" detection (i.e. the prior catalog contains all sources above the "true" detection limit), obtained with a single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-2-72-1': 'The figure shows the relative error in the measured flux of the sources, [MATH], versus the log of the real input flux [MATH]; the different symbols refer to the flag assigned to each object, while the color is a proxy for the covariance index, as described in more detail in the next paragraph.', '1505.02516-2-73-0': 'In this case, the only source of uncertainty in the measurement is given by the noise fluctuations, which clearly becomes dominant in the faint end of the distribution.', '1505.02516-2-73-1': 'Looking at the error bars of the sources, which are given by the nominal error assigned by t-phot from the covariance matrix, one can see that almost all sources have measured flux within [MATH] from their "true" flux, with only strongly covariant sources (covariance index [MATH] 1, greener colors) having [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-73-2': 'The only noticeable exceptions are sources that have been flagged as potentially unreliable, as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-73-3': 'Also note how the average [MATH] (solid black line) is consistent with zero down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-74-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the analysis of a case study in which the fluxes of a clump of highly convariant objects are measured with poor accuracy, and some of the nominal uncertainties are underestimated: a very bright source (ID 3386, m[MATH]) shows a relative difference [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-74-1': 'To cast light on the reason for such a discrepancy, the region surrounding the object was replicated 100 times with different noise realizations, and the results were analyzed and compared.', '1505.02516-2-74-2': 'The upper panels show (left) one of the 100 measurement images and (right) the position of all the sources in the region (many of which are close to the detection limit).', '1505.02516-2-74-3': 'The color code refers to the covariance index of the sources.', '1505.02516-2-74-4': 'The bottom left panel shows the relative error in the measured flux for all the sources in the region, with the inner panels showing magnifications relative to the object ID 3386 and to the bunch of objects with m[MATH].', '1505.02516-2-74-5': 'Looking at the colors of their symbols, many objects in the region turn out to be strongly covariant.', '1505.02516-2-74-6': 'Indeed, while the "bluer" sources in the upper part of the region all have covariant indexes lower than 0.5, the "greener" ones in the crowded lower part all have covariance index larger than 1 (indeed larger than 2 in many cases).', '1505.02516-2-74-7': 'This means that their flux measurements are subject to uncertainties not only from noise fluctuations, but also from systematic errors due to their extremely close and bright neighbors.', '1505.02516-2-74-8': 'As clearly demonstrated here, the covariance index can give a clue about which measurements can be safely trusted.', '1505.02516-2-75-0': 'The bottom right panel gives the sum of the measured fluxes of all sources in each of the 100 realizations (the blue line is the true total flux and the red line is the mean of the 100 measured total fluxes).', '1505.02516-2-75-1': 'It can be seen that the total flux measured in the region is always consistent with the expected true one to within [MATH] of its value.', '1505.02516-2-76-0': 'The bottom line of this analysis is that, although it is not possible to postulate a one-to-one relation (because in mane cases sources having a large covariance index have a relatively good flux estimate, see Fig. [REF]), the covariance index, together with the flagging code outputted by t-phot, can give clues about the reliability of measured flux, and should be taken into consideration during the analysis of the data.', '1505.02516-2-76-1': 'Measurements relative to sources having covariance index e.g. larger than 1 should be treated with caution.', '1505.02516-2-77-0': 'In a subsequent more realistic test, we considered extended objects (including morphologies of objects from the GenCat catalog, using FWHM[MATH]=0.2" and FWHM[MATH]=1.66" and imposing m[MATH]=m[MATH] for simplicity) and allowed for overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-2-77-1': 'To be consistent with the standard procedure adopted for real images, for this case we proceeded by producing an SExtractor catalog and segmentation map, which were then spatially cross-correlated with the "true" input catalog.', '1505.02516-2-77-2': 'The results for this test are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-77-3': 'Even in this much more complex situation, the results are reassuring: there is an overall good agreement between measured and input fluxes for bright ([MATH]) sources, with only a few flagged objects clearly showing large deviations from the expected value, and a reasonably good average agreement down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-77-4': 'However, all bright fluxes are measured [MATH] fainter than the true values (see the inner box in the same Figure); this is very likely to be the effect of the limited segmentation extension, as already discussed in the previous Section.', '1505.02516-2-77-5': 'On the other hand, faint sources tend to have systematically overestimated fluxes, arguably because of contamination from undetected sources.', '1505.02516-2-77-6': 'To confirm this, we focus our attention on a single case study (the source marked as ID 720) which shows a large discrepancy from its true flux, but has a relatively small covariance index.', '1505.02516-2-77-7': 'An analysis of the real segmentation map shows how in reality the detected object is a superposition of two different sources, which have been detected as a single one, so that the measured flux is of course higher than expected.', '1505.02516-2-77-8': 'One should also note that the uncertainties on the measured fluxes are smaller in this test, because there are fewer priors (only the ones detected by SExtractor are now present), implying a lower rank of the covariance matrix and a lower number of detected neighbors blending in the LRI.', '1505.02516-2-77-9': 'This causes a global underestimation of the errors.', '1505.02516-2-78-0': 'To check the performance of t-phot at FIR wavelengths, we also run a test on a simulated Herschel SPIRE 250 [MATH]m image (FWHM=25", 3.6" pixel scale).', '1505.02516-2-78-1': 'The simulated image (shown alongside with the obtained residuals in Fig. [REF]) mimics real images from the GOODS-Herschel program, the deepest Herschel images ever obtained.', '1505.02516-2-78-2': 'This image was produced with the technique presented in [CITATION]: we first derived (predicted) flux densities for all the 24 [MATH]m detections ([MATH]Jy) in GOODS-North, which are dependent on their redshift and flux densities at shorter wavelengths, and then we injected these sources into the real noise maps from GOODS-Herschel imaging.', '1505.02516-2-78-3': 'Additional positional uncertainties, typically 0.5[MATH], were also applied to mimic real images.', '1505.02516-2-78-4': 'As shown in [CITATION], these simulated images have indeed similar pixel value distribution as real images .', '1505.02516-2-78-5': 'For this test, t-phot was run using the list of all the 24 [MATH]m sources as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-2-78-6': 'The results of the test are plotted in Fig. [REF], and they show that even in this case t-phot can recover the input fluxes of the sources with great statistical accuracy (the mean of the relative deviation from the expected measurements, i.e. the black solid line in the plot, is consistent with zero down to the faintest fluxes).', '1505.02516-2-78-7': 'The results prove to be equivalent to those obtained on the same datasets with other public software specifically developed for FIR photometry, such as FastPhot .', '1505.02516-2-79-0': '### Testing different fitting options: cell dimensions', '1505.02516-2-80-0': 'We then proceeded to check the performance of the different fitting techniques that can be used in t-phot.', '1505.02516-2-80-1': 'To this aim, we repeated the test on the 1.66" LRI with extended priors and SExtractor priors, described in Sect. [REF], with different fitting methods: using a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, and the cells-on-objects method, comparing the results with those from the fit of the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-2-80-2': 'The results of the tests are shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1505.02516-2-80-3': 'The first figure compares the distributions of the relative errors in measured flux for the runs performed on the [MATH] pixels grid, on the [MATH] pixels grid, and on the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-2-80-4': 'Clearly, using any regular grid of cells worsens the results, as anticipated in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-80-5': 'Enlarging the sizes of the cells yields improvement, but does not completely solve the problem.', '1505.02516-2-80-6': 'Note that the adoption of an arbitary grid of cells of any dimension in principle is prone to the introduction of potentially large errors, because (possibly bright) contaminating objects may contribute to the brightness measured in the cell, without being included as contributing sources.', '1505.02516-2-80-7': 'A mathematical sketch of this issue is explained in the Appendix (and see also Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-2-81-0': 'The second histogram compares the differences between the fit on the whole image and the one with the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-2-81-1': 'Almost all the sources yield identical results with the two methods, within [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-81-2': 'This proves how the cells-on-objects method can be considered a reliable alternative to the single fit method.', '1505.02516-2-82-0': 'Fig. [REF] compares the HRI, the LRI, and the residual images obtained with the four methods and their distributions of relative errors, showing quantitatively the difference between the analyzed cases.', '1505.02516-2-83-0': 'In summary, it is clear that an incautious choice of cell size may lead to unsatisfactory and catastrophic outcomes.', '1505.02516-2-83-1': 'On the other hand, the advantages of using a single fit, and the equivalence of the results obtained with the single fit and the cells-on-objects technique, are evident.', '1505.02516-2-83-2': 'As already anticipated, one should bear in mind that the cells-on-objects method is only convenient if the overlapping of sources is not dramatic, as in ground-based optical observations.', '1505.02516-2-83-3': 'For IRAC and FIR images, on the other hand, the extreme blending of sources would cause the cells to be extended over regions approaching the size of the whole image, so that a single fit would be more convenient, although often still CPU-time consuming.', '1505.02516-2-84-0': '### Testing different fitting options: threshold fitting', '1505.02516-2-85-0': 'As described in Sect. [REF], t-phot includes the option to impose a lower threshold on the normalized fluxes of templates so as to exclude from the fit low signal-to-noise pixels.', '1505.02516-2-85-1': 'Fig. [REF] shows a comparison of the relative errors obtained with three different values of the THRESHOLD parameter: [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] (this means that only pixels with normalized flux [MATH] in the convolved template will be used in the fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-2-85-2': 'The differences are quite small, however a non-negligible global effect can be noticed: all sources tend to slightly decrease their measurement of flux when using a threshold limit.', '1505.02516-2-85-3': 'This brings faint sources (generally overestimated without using the threshold) closer to their "true" value, at the same time making bright sources too faint.', '1505.02516-2-85-4': 'This effect deserves careful investigation which is beyond the scope of this study, and is postponed to a future paper.', '1505.02516-2-86-0': '### Colors', '1505.02516-2-87-0': 'A final test was run introducing realistic colors, i.e. assigning fluxes to the sources in the LRI consistent with a realistic SED (as output by GenCat, see Sect. [REF]), instead of imposing them to be equal to the HRI fluxes.', '1505.02516-2-87-1': 'We took IRAC-ch1 as a reference filter for the LRI, consistently with the chosen FWHM of 1.66".', '1505.02516-2-87-2': 'Furthermore, we allowed for variations in the bulge-to-disc ratios of the sources to take into account possible effects of color gradients.', '1505.02516-2-87-3': 'We compared the results obtained with t-phot with the ones obtained with two alternative methods to determine the magnitudes of the sources in the LRI: namely, SExtractor dual mode aperture and MAGBEST photometry (with HRI as detection image).', '1505.02516-2-87-4': 'The differences between measured and input magnitudes in the LRI, m[MATH]-m[MATH], are plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-87-5': 'Clearly, t-phot ensures the best results, with much less scattered measurements than both the other two methods, and very few outliers.', '1505.02516-2-88-0': '## What are we measuring, exactly?', '1505.02516-2-89-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we plot some basic results from a set of extended simulations and emulations aimed to understand what is corresponds the flux [MATH] measured by t-phot: should it be considered an isophotal flux, or rather a total flux of the sources?', '1505.02516-2-89-1': 'The previous tests show that, at least in ideal situations, t-phot is able to measure with great accuracy the true flux of a PSF-shaped object, while it inevitably looses some (small) fraction of it when dealing with extended objects for which a segmentation map (which is ultimately an isophotal limit) is needed.', '1505.02516-2-89-2': 'This would suggest that the measured quantity is related to the extension of the prior used in the procedure, and should therefore considered an isophotal flux.', '1505.02516-2-90-0': 'However, the results from more realistic simulations/emulations clearly show that the situation is more intrigued.', '1505.02516-2-90-1': 'Here we show only an illustrative example.', '1505.02516-2-90-2': 'Fig. [REF] plots the results of an emulation in which the HST F160 image, used as detection HRI, was smoothed to ground-based seeing (FWHM=0.8") to obtain a LRI with colors equal to zero.', '1505.02516-2-90-3': 'The t-phot measured magnitudes on such H-smoothed image were then compared to two different estimations of the original H band magnitude: the total magnitude, i.e. the SExtractor MAGAUTO, and an isophotal magnitude given by the flux integrated within the area of the (dilated) cutout.', '1505.02516-2-90-4': 'Also, plotted are the results from a simple synthetic simulation were images with similar general characteristics containing five isolated and "well behaved" objects were used (see image caption for a detailed description).', '1505.02516-2-91-0': 'The plots show that the magnitudes given by t-phot are generally fainter than the official total CANDELS magnitudes (SExtractor MAGAUTO): in real images this can partly be due to the contamination by nearby sources which is strongly reduced using the PSF-matching techinque, but since the same trend is present also in simulation including only isolated objects, we must conclude that the main reason is the dimension of the segmented cutouts.', '1505.02516-2-91-1': 'Indeed, on the other hand, the measured magnitudes are brighter than those obtained straightly from the integrated flux within the high resolution cutouts.', '1505.02516-2-91-2': 'Therefore, in this case apparently t-phot is able to give a measure closer to the total flux of the sources.', '1505.02516-2-91-3': 'This is a very subtle and delicate issue and deserves a more accurate analysis, which we postpone to a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-2-92-0': '## Performance on real datasets', '1505.02516-2-93-0': 'It is instructive to check how t-phot performs on real datasets, in addition to simulations.', '1505.02516-2-93-1': 'To this aim, we run two different tests.', '1505.02516-2-93-2': 'In the first, we compared the results of the tfit CANDELS analysis on the UDS CANDELS [MATH]-band to a t-phot run obtained using the cells-on-objects method and different parameters in the kernel registration stage.', '1505.02516-2-93-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows the histograms of the differences in the photometric measurements between tfit and t-phot.', '1505.02516-2-93-4': 'Many sources end up with a substantially different flux, because of the two cited factors (a better kernel registration and the different fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-2-93-5': 'Note that the majority of the sources have fainter fluxes with respect to the previous measurements, precisely because of the effect described in Sect. [REF]: fitting using a grid of cells introduces systematic errors assigning light from sources which are not listed in a given cells but overlap with it to the objects recognized as belonging to the cell.', '1505.02516-2-93-6': 'To further check this point, Fig. [REF] shows some examples of the difference between the residuals obtained with tfit (official catalog) and those obtained with this t-phot run using cells-on-objects method, also introducing better registration parameters in the dance stage.', '1505.02516-2-93-7': 'Clearly, the results are substantially different, with many black spots (sources with spurious overestimated fluxes) disappearing.', '1505.02516-2-93-8': 'Also, the registrations appear to be generally improved.', '1505.02516-2-94-0': 'The second test was run on FIR/sub-mm SCUBA-2 (450 [MATH]m, FWHM=7.5") and Herschel (500 [MATH]m, FWHM=36") images of the COSMOS-CANDELS field.', '1505.02516-2-94-1': 'In both cases, a list of 24+850 [MATH]m soucers was used as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-2-94-2': 'Fig. [REF] shows the original images on the top row, and the residuals on the bottom row.', '1505.02516-2-94-3': 'The model has removed all significant sources from the 450 [MATH]m map and the majority from the 500 [MATH]m map.', '1505.02516-2-94-4': 'Fig. [REF] shows a comparison of the fluxes measured in the t-phot fits to the 450 [MATH]m and 500 [MATH]m maps at 24+850 [MATH]m prior positions, with the error bars combining the errors on both flux measurements.', '1505.02516-2-94-5': 'Agreement within the errors implies successful deconfusion of the Herschel image to reproduce the fluxes measured in the higher-resolution SCUBA-2 image.', '1505.02516-2-94-6': 'This typology of analysis is very complex and we do not want to address here the subtleties of the process; we refer the reader to [CITATION] and [CITATION] for detailed discussions on the definition of a robust and reliable approach to measure FIR and sub-mm fluxes.', '1505.02516-2-94-7': 'These simple tests, however, clearly show that t-phot is successful at recovering the fluxes of target sources even in cases of extreme confusion and blending, within the accuracy limits of the method.', '1505.02516-2-95-0': '# Computational times', '1505.02516-2-96-0': 'As anticipated, t-phot ensures a large saving of computational times compared to similar codes like tfit and convphot, when used with identical input parameters.', '1505.02516-2-96-1': 'For example, a complete, double-pass run on the whole CANDELS UDS field at once (I band; [MATH]35000 prior sources; LRI 30720[MATH]12800 = 400 million pixels; standard tfit parameters and grid fitting) is completed without memory swaps in ca. 2 hours (i.e., 1 hour per pass) on a standard workstation (Intel i5, 3.20 GHz, RAM 8 Gb).', '1505.02516-2-96-2': 'A complete, double pass run on the GOODS-S Hawk-I W1 field ([MATH]17500 prior sources, LRI 10700[MATH]10600 = 100 millions pixels, identical parameters) is completed in [MATH]20 minutes.', '1505.02516-2-96-3': 'For comparison, tfit may require many hours ([MATH]24) to complete a single pass on this Hawk-I field on the same machine.', '1505.02516-2-96-4': 'It must be said that tfit by default produces cutouts and templates for all the sources in the HRI image; selecting the ones belonging to the LRI field and inputting an ad-hoc catalog would have reduced the computing time, say by a factor of two (i.e., 11 hours for the a single pass).', '1505.02516-2-96-5': 'It was not possible to process large images like the UDS field in a single run, because of RAM memory failing.', '1505.02516-2-96-6': 'convphot timings and memory problems are similar to the tfit ones, although due to different causes (being written in C, computation is generally faster, but it employs a slower convolution method and the solution of the linear system in performed as a single fit instead of grid fitting like in tfit, being much more time consuming).', '1505.02516-2-97-0': 'Adopting the cells-on-objects (Sect. [REF]) method increases the computational time with respect to the tfit standard cell approach, but it is still far more convenient than the convphot standard single fit approach, and gives nearly identical results.', '1505.02516-2-98-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the computational times for an extended tests on a set of simulated images having different detection depths (and therefore number of sources) and dimensions, with LRI FWHM=1.66".', '1505.02516-2-98-1': 'The simulations have been run on the same machine described above, using three different methods: whole image fitting, cells-on-objects and [MATH] pixels cells fitting.', '1505.02516-2-99-0': '# Summary and conclusions', '1505.02516-2-100-0': 'We have presented t-phot, a new software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-2-100-1': 't-phot is a robust and versatile tool, aimed at the photometric analysis of deep extragalactic fields at different wavelengths and spatial resolution, deconfusing blended sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-2-101-0': 't-phot uses priors obtained from a high resolution detection image to obtain normalized templates at the lower resolution of a measurement image, and minimizes a [MATH] problem to retrieve the multiplicative factor relative to each source, which is the searched quantity, i.e. the flux in the LRI.', '1505.02516-2-101-1': 'The priors can be either real cutouts from the HRI, or a list of positions to be fitted as PSF-shaped sources, or analytical 2-d models, or a mix of the three types.', '1505.02516-2-101-2': 'Different options for the fitting stage are given, including a cells-on-objects method which is computationally efficient while yielding accurate results for relatively small FWHMs.', '1505.02516-2-101-3': 't-phot ensures a large saving of computational time as well as increased robustness with respect to similar public codes like its direct predecessors tfit and convphot.', '1505.02516-2-101-4': 'With an appropriate choice of the parameter settings, greater accuracy is also achieved.', '1505.02516-2-102-0': 'As a final remark, it should be pointed out that the analysis presented in this work deals with idealized situations, namely simulations or comparisons with the performances of other codes on real datasets.', '1505.02516-2-102-1': 'There are a number of subtle issues regarding complex aspects of the PSF-matching techinque, which become of crucial importance when working on real data.', '1505.02516-2-102-2': 'A simple foretaste of such complexity can be obtained considering the problem described in Sect. [REF], i.e. the correct amplitude to be assigned to the segmented area of a source.', '1505.02516-2-102-3': 'Work is ongoing on this, and the full discussion will be presented in a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-2-103-0': 'As we have shown, t-phot proves to be an efficient tool for the photometric measurements of images on a very broad range of wavelengths, from UV to sub-mm, and is currently being routinely used by the Astrodeep community to analyse data from different surveys (e.g. CANDELS, Frontier Fields, AEGIS).', '1505.02516-2-103-1': 'Its main advantages with respect to similar codes like tfit or convphot can be summarized as follows:', '1505.02516-2-104-0': 'Future applications might include the processing of EUCLID and CCAT data.', '1505.02516-2-104-1': 'New releases of the software package, including further improvements and additional options, are planned for the next future.', '1505.02516-2-105-0': 'The authors acknowledge the contribution of the FP7 SPACE project “ASTRODEEP” (Ref.No: 312725), supported by the European Commission.', '1505.02516-2-105-1': 'JSD acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of an Advanced Grant.', '1505.02516-2-105-2': 'FB acknowledges support by FCT via the postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/103958/2014 and also the funding from the programme UID/FIS/04434/2013.', '1505.02516-2-105-3': 'RJM acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of a Consolidator Grant (PI McLure).', '1505.02516-2-105-4': 'The authors would like to thank Kuang-Han Huang, Mimi Song, Alice Mortlock and Michal Michalowski, for constructive help and suggestions, and the anonymous referee for useful advice.', '1505.02516-2-106-0': '# The parameter file', '1505.02516-2-107-0': 'Below is a template of the standard first pass parameter file to be given as input to t-phot (similar templates for both the first and the second pass are included in the dowloadable tarball).', '1505.02516-2-107-1': 'It is very similar to the original tfit parameter file, and part of the description is directly inherited from it.', '1505.02516-2-108-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-2-109-0': 'Standard optical/NIR double-pass runs can be achieved setting order standard and order standard2.', '1505.02516-2-110-0': 'A standard first pass run includes the stages priors, convolve, fit, diags, dance, plotdance.', '1505.02516-2-110-1': 'The stage priors allows for an automatic re-construction of the pipeline depending on the input data given in the following sections (see the documentation included in the tarball).', '1505.02516-2-110-2': 'A standard second pass run includes the stages convolve, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-2-110-3': 'The archive stage creates a directory after the name of the LRI, with some specifications, and archives the products of both runs.', '1505.02516-2-111-0': 'FIR/sub-mm double-pass runs can be achieved setting order positions, fit, diags, dance, plotdance and order positions, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-2-112-0': '## Priors', '1505.02516-2-113-0': 'Each prior must have an unique identificative number (ID) to avoid errors.', '1505.02516-2-113-1': 'The user must be careful to give the correct information in this paramfile.', '1505.02516-2-113-2': 'Select the priors to be used by switching on/off the relative keywords: usereal, usemodels, useunresolved.', '1505.02516-2-114-0': '## Convolution', '1505.02516-2-115-0': '## Fitting stage', '1505.02516-2-116-0': 'cellmask: if true, uses a mask to exclude pixels from the fit which do not contain a value of at least maskfloor in at least one template.', '1505.02516-2-116-1': 'writecovar: if true, writes the covariance information out to the tphotcovar file.', '1505.02516-2-116-2': 'threshold: forces to use a threshold on the flux, to only use the central parts of the objects.', '1505.02516-2-116-3': 'linsyssolver: the chosen solution method, i.e. LU, Cholesky or Iterative Biconjugate Gradient (IBG).', '1505.02516-2-116-4': 'LU is default.', '1505.02516-2-116-5': 'clip: tells whether to loop on the sources excluding negative solutions.', '1505.02516-2-117-0': '## Diagnostic stages', '1505.02516-2-118-0': '# The cells-on-objects algorithm', '1505.02516-2-119-0': 'Experiments on simulated images (see Sect. [REF]) clearly show that fitting small regions (cells) of the LRI, as done by default in tfit, may lead to potentially large errors.', '1505.02516-2-119-1': 'This is particularly true if the dimensions of the cells are chosen to be smaller than an ideal size, which changes from case to case, and should however always be greater than [MATH]10 times the FWHM.', '1505.02516-2-119-2': 'However, it can be mathematically shown that the "arbitrary cells" method intrinsecally causes the introduction of errors in the fit, as soon as a source is excluded from the cell (e.g., because its center is outside the cell) but contributes with some flux in some of its pixels.', '1505.02516-2-120-0': 'Consider a cell containing [MATH] sources.', '1505.02516-2-120-1': 'For simplicity, assume that each source [MATH] only overlaps with the two neighours [MATH] and [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-120-2': 'Furthermore, assume that a [MATH]-th source is contaminating the [MATH]-th source, but is excluded from the cell for some reason, for example (as in tfit) because the centroid of the source lies outside the cell.', '1505.02516-2-121-0': 'The linear system for this cell [MATH] will consist of a matrix [MATH] with only the elements on the diagonal and those with a [MATH] offset as non-zero elements (a symmetric band matrix), and the vector [MATH] will contain the products of templates of each source with the real flux in the LRI (as a summation on all pixels), as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-2-121-1': 'Given the above assumptions, this means that the [MATH]-th term of [MATH] will be higher than it should be (because it is contaminated by the external source).', '1505.02516-2-122-0': 'Using the Cramer rule for the solution of squared linear systems, the flux for the object [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] with [MATH] a square matrix in which the [MATH]-th columns is substituted with the vector [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-122-1': 'If for example [MATH], for [MATH] this gives [EQUATION] and since [MATH] is larger than it should, [MATH] will be overestimated (slightly, if [MATH] is not large, i.e. if sources 1 and 2 do not strongly overlap).', '1505.02516-2-122-2': 'On the other hand, for [MATH] we have [EQUATION] and in this case again [MATH] might be small, but the first term given by [MATH] will be certainly large, resulting in catastrophic overestimation of [MATH].', '1505.02516-2-122-3': '[MATH] will of course be underestimated, as it would be easy to show.', '1505.02516-2-123-0': 'From this simple test case it is clear that arbitrarily dividing the LRI into regions will always introduce errors (potentially non-negligible) in the fitting procedure, unless some method to remove dangerous contaminating sources is devised.', '1505.02516-2-124-0': 'The cells-on-objects algorithm aims at ensuring the accuracy of the flux estimate while at the same time drastically decreasing computational times and memory requirements.', '1505.02516-2-124-1': 'As explained in Sect. [REF], when this method is adopted a cell is centered around each detected source, and enlarged to include all its "potential" contaminant neighbors, and the contaminant of the contaminants, and so on.', '1505.02516-2-124-2': 'To avoid an infinite loop, the process of inclusion is interrupted when one of the following criteria is satisfied:', '1505.02516-2-125-0': 'Experiments on simulations have shown that good results are obtained with [MATH] and [MATH], and these values are used as constants in the source code.', '1505.02516-2-126-0': 'Note that if a cell is enlarged to more than 75% of the dimensions of the total LRI, t-phot automatically switches to the single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-2-127-0': '# Suggested best options', '1505.02516-2-128-0': 'Of course, different problems require different approaches to obtain their best possible solution, and users are encouraged to try different options and settings.', '1505.02516-2-128-1': 'However, some indicative guidelines to optimize a run with t-phot can be summarized as follows.'}
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'1505.02516-4-75-6'], ['1505.02516-3-71-8', '1505.02516-4-75-8'], ['1505.02516-3-48-2', '1505.02516-4-48-2'], ['1505.02516-3-93-0', '1505.02516-4-96-0'], ['1505.02516-3-0-0', '1505.02516-4-0-0'], ['1505.02516-3-94-0', '1505.02516-4-97-0'], ['1505.02516-3-94-1', '1505.02516-4-97-1'], ['1505.02516-3-118-1', '1505.02516-4-121-1'], ['1505.02516-3-118-2', '1505.02516-4-121-2'], ['1505.02516-3-118-3', '1505.02516-4-121-3'], ['1505.02516-3-46-0', '1505.02516-4-46-0'], ['1505.02516-3-89-3', '1505.02516-4-92-3'], ['1505.02516-3-89-5', '1505.02516-4-92-5'], ['1505.02516-3-89-6', '1505.02516-4-92-6'], ['1505.02516-3-89-7', '1505.02516-4-92-7'], ['1505.02516-3-116-1', '1505.02516-4-119-1'], ['1505.02516-3-112-0', '1505.02516-4-115-0'], ['1505.02516-3-112-1', '1505.02516-4-115-1'], ['1505.02516-3-112-3', '1505.02516-4-115-3'], ['1505.02516-3-98-2', '1505.02516-4-101-2'], ['1505.02516-3-98-3', '1505.02516-4-101-3'], ['1505.02516-3-2-2', '1505.02516-4-2-2'], ['1505.02516-3-2-4', '1505.02516-4-2-4'], ['1505.02516-3-2-6', '1505.02516-4-2-6'], ['1505.02516-3-2-7', '1505.02516-4-2-7'], ['1505.02516-3-2-8', '1505.02516-4-2-8'], ['1505.02516-3-2-11', '1505.02516-4-2-11'], ['1505.02516-3-2-12', '1505.02516-4-2-12'], ['1505.02516-3-2-13', '1505.02516-4-2-13'], ['1505.02516-4-95-1', '1505.02516-5-94-1'], ['1505.02516-4-95-2', '1505.02516-5-94-2'], ['1505.02516-4-33-1', '1505.02516-5-33-1'], ['1505.02516-4-2-1', '1505.02516-5-2-1'], ['1505.02516-1-107-0', '1505.02516-2-109-0'], ['1505.02516-1-91-0', '1505.02516-2-93-2'], ['1505.02516-3-81-0', '1505.02516-4-85-0'], ['1505.02516-3-82-0', '1505.02516-4-85-2']]
[]
[['1505.02516-2-11-2', '1505.02516-3-11-2'], ['1505.02516-3-41-0', '1505.02516-4-41-0'], ['1505.02516-3-41-1', '1505.02516-4-41-0'], ['1505.02516-3-9-1', '1505.02516-4-9-1'], ['1505.02516-3-66-3', '1505.02516-4-70-3'], ['1505.02516-3-5-5', '1505.02516-4-5-5'], ['1505.02516-3-24-2', '1505.02516-4-24-2'], ['1505.02516-3-48-0', '1505.02516-4-48-0'], ['1505.02516-1-90-0', '1505.02516-2-93-0'], ['1505.02516-1-92-0', '1505.02516-2-93-3'], ['1505.02516-3-81-1', '1505.02516-4-85-1'], ['1505.02516-3-81-2', '1505.02516-4-85-1']]
[]
['1505.02516-1-1-0', '1505.02516-1-20-0', '1505.02516-1-21-0', '1505.02516-1-23-0', '1505.02516-1-26-0', '1505.02516-1-32-2', '1505.02516-1-40-0', '1505.02516-1-44-3', '1505.02516-1-49-3', '1505.02516-1-51-1', '1505.02516-1-57-1', '1505.02516-1-101-1', '1505.02516-1-113-4', '1505.02516-1-121-2', '1505.02516-2-1-0', '1505.02516-2-20-0', '1505.02516-2-21-0', '1505.02516-2-23-0', '1505.02516-2-26-0', '1505.02516-2-32-2', '1505.02516-2-40-0', '1505.02516-2-44-3', '1505.02516-2-49-3', '1505.02516-2-51-1', '1505.02516-2-56-1', '1505.02516-2-59-1', '1505.02516-2-103-1', '1505.02516-2-116-4', '1505.02516-2-124-2', '1505.02516-3-1-0', '1505.02516-3-20-0', '1505.02516-3-21-0', '1505.02516-3-23-0', '1505.02516-3-26-0', '1505.02516-3-32-2', '1505.02516-3-40-0', '1505.02516-3-44-3', '1505.02516-3-49-3', '1505.02516-3-51-1', '1505.02516-3-56-1', '1505.02516-3-59-1', '1505.02516-3-99-1', '1505.02516-3-112-4', '1505.02516-3-120-2', '1505.02516-4-1-0', '1505.02516-4-23-0', '1505.02516-4-26-0', '1505.02516-4-32-2', '1505.02516-4-40-0', '1505.02516-4-44-3', '1505.02516-4-49-3', '1505.02516-4-51-1', '1505.02516-4-63-1', '1505.02516-4-102-1', '1505.02516-4-115-4', '1505.02516-4-123-2', '1505.02516-5-1-0', '1505.02516-5-23-0', '1505.02516-5-26-0', '1505.02516-5-32-2', '1505.02516-5-40-0', '1505.02516-5-44-3', '1505.02516-5-49-3', '1505.02516-5-51-1', '1505.02516-5-63-1', '1505.02516-5-101-1', '1505.02516-5-114-4', '1505.02516-5-122-2']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '4': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '5': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1505.02516
{'1505.02516-3-0-0': 'T-PHOT: a new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry', '1505.02516-3-1-0': 't-phot', '1505.02516-3-2-0': 'The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis.', '1505.02516-3-2-1': 'In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data.', '1505.02516-3-2-2': 'In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-3-2-3': 'We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-3-2-4': 't-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.', '1505.02516-3-2-5': 't-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot).', '1505.02516-3-2-6': 't-phot gathers data from a high resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field.', '1505.02516-3-2-7': 't-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors: namely, i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .', '1505.02516-3-2-8': 'fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful e.g. for far infrared wavelength domains.', '1505.02516-3-2-9': 'By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).', '1505.02516-3-2-10': 't-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile.', '1505.02516-3-2-11': 'This makes it an optimal choice for the analysis of large datasets.', '1505.02516-3-2-12': 'When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (albeit in a much shorter time), but in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.', '1505.02516-3-2-13': 't-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to FIR image photometry.', '1505.02516-3-2-14': 'Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.', '1505.02516-3-3-0': '# Introduction', '1505.02516-3-4-0': 'Combining observational data from the same regions of the sky in different wavelength domains has become common practice in the past few years .', '1505.02516-3-4-1': 'However, the use of both space-based and ground-based imaging instruments, with different sensitivities, pixel scales, angular resolutions, and survey depths, raises a number of challenging difficulties in the data analysis process.', '1505.02516-3-5-0': 'In this context, it is of particular interest to obtain detailed photometric measurements for high redshift galaxies in the near infrared (NIR; corresponding to rest-frame optical) and far infrared (FIR) domains.', '1505.02516-3-5-1': 'In particular, great attention must be paid to bandpasses containing spectral features which allows for thorough physical investigation of the sources, to disentangle degenerate observational features and to obtain crucial clues to the understanding of the galactic physics .', '1505.02516-3-5-2': 'For example, at [MATH] photometry longward of [MATH]-band is needed to locate and measure the size of the Balmer break.', '1505.02516-3-5-3': 'A passive galaxy at [MATH] (having the Balmer break lying longward of the [MATH]-band) can have [MATH] band and [MATH]m fluxes compatible with e.g. a star forming, dusty galaxy at [MATH], and [MATH]band photometry is necessary to disentangle the degeneracy.', '1505.02516-3-5-4': 'However, the limited resolution of the ground based [MATH]band observations can impose severe limits on the reliability of traditional aperture or even PSF-fitting photometry.', '1505.02516-3-5-5': 'Also, IRAC photometry is of crucial importance to obtain reliable photometric redshifts for red and high-[MATH] sources, and to derive robust stellar mass estimates.', '1505.02516-3-6-0': 'To address this, a high resolution image (HRI), obtained e.g. from the Hubble Space Telescope in the optical domain, can be used to retrieve detailed information on the positions and morphologies of the sources in a given region of the sky.', '1505.02516-3-6-1': 'Such information can be subsequently used to perform the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image (LRI), using the HRI data as priors.', '1505.02516-3-6-2': 'However, simply performing aperture photometry on the LRI at the positions measured in the HRI can be dramatically affected by neighbour contamination for reasonably sized apertures.', '1505.02516-3-6-3': 'On the other hand, performing source extraction on both images and matching the resulting catalogs is compromised by the inability to deblend neighbouring objects, and may introduce significant inaccuracies in the cross-correlation process.', '1505.02516-3-6-4': 'PSF-matching techniques that degrade high-resolution data to match the low resolution data discard much of the valuable information obtained in the HRI, reducing all images to the "lowest common denominator" of angular resolution.', '1505.02516-3-6-5': 'Moreover, crowded-field, PSF-fitting photometry packages such as daophot perform well if the sources in the LRI are unresolved, but are unsuitable for analysis of even marginally resolved images of extragalactic sources.', '1505.02516-3-7-0': 'A more viable approach consists of taking advantage of the morphological information given by the HRI, to obtain high resolution cutouts or models of the sources.', '1505.02516-3-7-1': 'These priors can then be degraded to the resolution of the LRI using a suitable convolution kernel, constructed by matching the PSFs of the HRI and of the LRI.', '1505.02516-3-7-2': 'Such low resolution templates, normalized to unit flux, can then be placed at the positions given by the HRI detections, and the multiplicative factor that must be assigned to each model to match the measured flux in each pixel of the LRI will give the measured flux of that source.', '1505.02516-3-7-3': 'Such an approach, although relying on some demanding assumptions as described in the following Sections, has proven to be efficient.', '1505.02516-3-7-4': 'It has been implemented in such public codes as tfit and convphot , and has already been utilized successfully in previous studies .', '1505.02516-3-8-0': 'In this paper we describe a new software package, t-phot, developed at INAF-OAR as part of the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-3-8-1': 't-phot can be considered as a new, largely improved version of tfit, supplemented with many of the features of convphot.', '1505.02516-3-8-2': 'Moreover, it adds many important new options, including the possibility of adopting different types of priors (namely, real images, analytical models, or point-sources).', '1505.02516-3-8-3': 'In particular, it is possible to use t-phot on FIR and sub-millimetric (sub-mm) datasets, as a competitive alternative to the existing dedicated software such as FastPhot and DesPhot .', '1505.02516-3-8-4': 'This makes t-phot a versatile tool, suitable for the photometric analysis of a very broad range of wavelengths from UV to sub-mm.', '1505.02516-3-9-0': 't-phot is a robust and easy-to-handle code, with a precise structural architecture (a Python envelope calling C/C++ core codes) in which different routines are encapsulated, implementing various numerical/conceptual methods, to be chosen by simple switches in a parameter file.', '1505.02516-3-9-1': 'While a standard default "best choice" usage mode is provided and suggested, the user is allowed to select their own preferred way of obtaining their dataset.', '1505.02516-3-10-0': 'One of the main advantages of t-phot is a significant saving of computational time with respect to both tfit and convphot (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-3-10-1': 'This has been achieved with the use of fast C modules and an efficient structural arrangement of the code.', '1505.02516-3-10-2': 'In addition to this, we demonstrate how different choices of parameters influence the performace, and can be optimized to significantly improve the final results with respect to e.g. tfit.', '1505.02516-3-11-0': 'The plan of the paper is as follows.', '1505.02516-3-11-1': 'Sect. [REF] provides a general introduction to the code, its mode of operation and its algorithms.', '1505.02516-3-11-2': 'In Sect. [REF] we discuss some assumptions, limitations and caveats of the method.', '1505.02516-3-11-3': 'Sect. [REF] presents a comprehensive set of tests, based on both simulated and real datasets, to assess the performance of the code and to fully illustrate its capabilities and limitations.', '1505.02516-3-11-4': 'Sect. [REF] briefly discusses the computational performances of t-phot and provides some reference computational timescales.', '1505.02516-3-11-5': 'Finally, in Sect. [REF] the key features of t-phot are summarized, and outstanding issues and potential complications are briefly discussed.', '1505.02516-3-12-0': '# General description of the code', '1505.02516-3-13-0': 'As described above, t-phot uses spatial and morphological information gathered from a HRI to measure the fluxes in a LRI.', '1505.02516-3-13-1': 'To this aim, a linear system is built and solved via matricial computing, minimizing the [MATH] (in which the numerically determined fluxes for each detected source are compared to the measured fluxes in the LRI, summing the contributions of all pixels).', '1505.02516-3-13-2': 'Moreover, the code produces a number of diagnostic outputs and allows for an iterative re-calibration of the results.', '1505.02516-3-13-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows a schematic depiction of the basic PSF-matched fitting algorithm used in the code.', '1505.02516-3-14-0': 'As HRI priors t-phot can use i) real cutouts of sources from the HRI, ii) models of sources obtained e.g. with Galfit or similar codes, iii) a list of coordinates where PSF-shaped sources will be placed; or a combination of these three types of priors.', '1505.02516-3-15-0': 'For a detailed technical description of the mode of operation of the code, we refer the reader to the Appendix and to the documentation included in the downloadable tarball.', '1505.02516-3-15-1': 'Here, we will briefly describe its main features.', '1505.02516-3-16-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-3-17-0': 'The pipeline followed by t-phot is outlined in the flowchart given in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-17-1': 'The following paragraphs give a short description of the pipeline.', '1505.02516-3-18-0': '### Input', '1505.02516-3-19-0': 'The input files needed by t-phot vary depending on the type(s) of priors used.', '1505.02516-3-20-0': 'If "true" high-resolution priors are used, e.g. for optical/NIR ground-based or IRAC measurements using HST cutouts, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-3-21-0': 'If analytical models priors are used as priors (e.g. Galfit models), t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-3-22-0': 'If models have more than one component, one separate stamp per component, and catalogs for each component are needed (e.g. one catalog for bulges and one catalog for disks).', '1505.02516-3-23-0': 'If unresolved, point-like priors are used, t-phot needs:', '1505.02516-3-24-0': 'In this case, a potential limitation to the reliability of the method is given by the fact that the prior density usually needs to be optimised with respect to FIR/sub-mm maps, as discussed e.g. in [CITATION] and [CITATION] .', '1505.02516-3-24-1': 'The optimal number of priors turns out to be around 50-75% of the numbers of beams in the map.', '1505.02516-3-24-2': 'The key problem is to identify which of the many potential priors from e.g. an HST catalogue one should use.', '1505.02516-3-24-3': 'This is a very complex issue and we do not discuss it in this paper.', '1505.02516-3-25-0': 'If mixed priors are used, t-phot obviously needs the input files corresponding to each of the different types of priors in use.', '1505.02516-3-26-0': 'Finally, in all cases t-phot needs', '1505.02516-3-27-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the input requirements for the different choices of priors just described.', '1505.02516-3-28-0': 'All the input images must have the following keywords in their headers: CRPIXn, CRVALn, CDnn, CTYPEn (n=1,2).', '1505.02516-3-29-0': '### On the background subtraction', '1505.02516-3-30-0': 'As already mentioned, the LRI must be background subtracted before being fed to t-phot.', '1505.02516-3-30-1': 'This is of particular interest when dealing with FIR/sub-mm images, where the typical standard is to use zero-mean.', '1505.02516-3-30-2': 'To estimate the background level in optical/NIR images, one simple possibility is to take advantage of the option to fit point-like sources to measure the flux for a list of positions chosen to fall within void regions.', '1505.02516-3-30-3': 'The issue is more problematic in such confusion-limited FIR images where there are no empty sky regions.', '1505.02516-3-30-4': 'In such cases, it is important to separate the fitted sources (those listed in the prior catalogue) from the background sources, which contribute to a flat background level behind the sources of interest.', '1505.02516-3-30-5': 'The priors should be chosen so that these two populations are uncorrelated.', '1505.02516-3-30-6': 'The average contribution of the faint background source population can then be estimated e.g. by (i) injecting fake sources into the map and measuring the average offset (output-input) flux; or (ii) measuring the modal value in the residual image after a first pass through t-phot .', '1505.02516-3-31-0': '### Stages', '1505.02516-3-32-0': 't-phot goes through "stages", each of which performs a well defined task.', '1505.02516-3-32-1': 'The best results are obtained performing two runs ("pass 1" and "pass 2"), the second one using locally registered kernels, produced during the first one.', '1505.02516-3-32-2': 'The possible stages are the following:', '1505.02516-3-33-0': 'The exact pipeline followed by the code is specified by a keyword in the input parameter file.', '1505.02516-3-33-1': 'See the Appendix for a more detailed description of the whole procedure.', '1505.02516-3-34-0': '### Solution of the linear system', '1505.02516-3-35-0': 'The search for the LRI fluxes of the objects detected in the HRI is performed by creating a linear system [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [MATH] contains the pixel values of the fluxes in the LRI, [MATH] is the normalized flux of the template for the [MATH]-th objects in the (region of the) LRI being fitted, and [MATH] is the multiplicative scaling factor for each object.', '1505.02516-3-35-1': 'In physical terms, [MATH] represent the flux of each object in the LRI (that is, it is the unknown to be determined).', '1505.02516-3-36-0': 'Once the normalized templates for each object in the (region of interest within the) LRI have been generated during the convolve stage, the best fit to their fluxes can be simultaneously derived by minimizing a [MATH] statistic, [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the value of the RMS map at the [MATH] pixel position.', '1505.02516-3-37-0': 'The output quantities are the best-fit solutions of the minimization procedure, i.e. the [MATH] parameters and their relative errors.', '1505.02516-3-37-1': 'They can be obtained resolving the linear system [EQUATION] for [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-38-0': 'In practice, the linear system can be rearranged into a matrix equation, [EQUATION] where the matrix [MATH] contains the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] is a vector containing the fluxes to be determined, and [MATH] is a vector given by [MATH] terms.', '1505.02516-3-38-1': 'The matrix equation is solved via one of three possible methods as described in the next subsection.', '1505.02516-3-39-0': '### Fitting options', '1505.02516-3-40-0': 't-phot allows for some different options to perform the fit:', '1505.02516-3-41-0': 'The fit can be performed (i) on the entire LRI as a whole, producing a single matrix containing all the sources (this is the method adopted in convphot); (ii) subdividing the LRI into an arbitrary grid of (overlapping) small cells, perfoming the fit in each of such cells separately, and then choosing the "best" fit for each source, using some convenient criteria to select it (because sources will be fitted more than once, if the cells overlap.', '1505.02516-3-41-1': 'This is the method adopted in tfit); (iii) ordering objects by decreasing flux, building a cell around each source including all its potential contaminants, solving the problem in that cell and assigning to the source the obtained flux (cells-on-objects method; see the Appendix for more details).', '1505.02516-3-42-0': 'While the first method is the safest and more accurate because it does not introduce any bias or arbitrary modifications, it may often be unfeasible to process at once large or very crowded images.', '1505.02516-3-42-1': 'Potentially large computational time saving is possible using the cells-on-objects method, depending on the level of blending/confusion in the LRI: if the latter is very high, most sources will be overlapping, so the cells will end up being very large.', '1505.02516-3-42-2': 'This ultimately results in repeating many times the fit on regions with dimensions comparable to the whole image (a check is implemented in the code, to automatically change the method from cells-on-objects to single fit if this is the case).', '1505.02516-3-42-3': 'If the confusion is not dramatic, a saving in computational time up to two orders of magnitude can be achieved.', '1505.02516-3-42-4': 'The results obtained using the cells-on-objects method prove to be virtually identical to those obtained with a single fit on the whole image (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-3-42-5': 'On the other hand, using the arbitrary cells method is normally the fastest option, but can introduce potentially large errors to the flux estimates, due to wrong assignments of peripheral flux from sources located outside a given cell to sources within the cell (again, see Sect. [REF] and Appendix).', '1505.02516-3-43-0': '### Post-fitting stages: kernel registration', '1505.02516-3-44-0': 'After the fitting procedure is completed, t-phot will produce the final output catalogs and diagnostic images (see [REF]).', '1505.02516-3-44-1': 'Among these, a model image is obtained by adding all the templates, scaled to their correct total flux after fitting, in the positions of the sources.', '1505.02516-3-44-2': 'This image will subsequently be used if a second pass is planned, during a stage named dance: a list of positional shifts is computed, and a set of shifted kernels are generated and stored.', '1505.02516-3-44-3': 'The dance stage consists of three conceptual steps:', '1505.02516-3-45-0': '### Second pass', '1505.02516-3-46-0': 'The registered kernels can subsequently be used in the second pass run, to obtain more astrometrically precise results.', '1505.02516-3-46-1': 't-phot automatically deals with them provided the correct keyword is given in the parameter file.', '1505.02516-3-46-2': 'If unresolved priors are used, the list of shifts generated in the dance stage will be used by the positions routine during the second pass to produce correctly shifted PSFs and generate new templates.', '1505.02516-3-47-0': '## Error budget', '1505.02516-3-48-0': 'During the fitting stage, the covariance matrix is constructed and output.', '1505.02516-3-48-1': 'Errors for each source are assigned as the square root of the diagonal element of the covariance matrix relative to that source.', '1505.02516-3-48-2': 'It must be pointed out that using any cell method for the fitting, rather the single fitting option, will affect this uncertainty budget, since a different matrix will be constructed and resolved in each cell.', '1505.02516-3-49-0': 'It is important to stress that this covariance error budget is a statistical uncertainty, relative to the RMS fluctuations in the measurement image, and is not related to any possible systematic error.', '1505.02516-3-49-1': 'The latter can instead be estimated by flagging potentially problematic sources, to be identified separately from the fitting procedure.', '1505.02516-3-49-2': 'There can be different possible causes for systematic offsets of the measured flux with respect to the true flux of a source.', '1505.02516-3-49-3': 't-phot assigns the following flags:', '1505.02516-3-50-0': '## Description of the output', '1505.02516-3-51-0': 't-phot output files are designed to be very similar in format to those produced by tfit.', '1505.02516-3-51-1': 'They provide:', '1505.02516-3-52-0': 'two catalogs reporting statistics for the fitting cells and the covariance matrices (they are described in the documentation); the model .f', '1505.02516-3-52-1': 'fits image, obtained as a collage of the templates, as already described; a diagnostic residual .f', '1505.02516-3-52-2': 'fits image, obtained by subtracting the model image from the LRI; a subdirectory containing all the low resolution model templates; a subdirectory containing the covariance matrices in graphic (.f', '1505.02516-3-52-3': 'fits) format; a few ancillary files relating to the shifts of the kernel for the second pass and a subdirectory containing the shifted kernels.', '1505.02516-3-53-0': 'All fluxes and errors are output in units consistent with the input images.', '1505.02516-3-54-0': 'Figs. [REF], [REF] and [REF] show three examples of t-phot applications on simulated and real data, using the three different options for priors.', '1505.02516-3-55-0': '# Assumptions and limitations', '1505.02516-3-56-0': 'The PSF-matching algorithms implemented in t-phot and described in the previous section are prone to some assumptions and limitations.', '1505.02516-3-56-1': 'In particular, it must be pointed out that:', '1505.02516-3-57-0': '# Validation', '1505.02516-3-58-0': 'To assess the performance of t-phot we set up an extensive set of simulations, aimed at various different and complementary goals.', '1505.02516-3-59-0': 'We used SkyMaker , a public software tool, to build synthetic .', '1505.02516-3-59-1': 'fits images.', '1505.02516-3-59-2': 'The code ensures direct control on all the observational parameters (the magnitude and positions of the objects, their morphology, the zero point magnitude, the noise level, and the PSF).', '1505.02516-3-59-3': 'Model galaxies are built by summing a de Vaucouleurs and an exponential light profile in order to best mimick a realistic distribution of galaxy morphologies.', '1505.02516-3-59-4': 'These models are generated using a variety of bulge-to-total light ratios, component sizes and projection angles.', '1505.02516-3-60-0': 'All tests have been run using ideal (i.e. synthetic and symmetric) PSFs and kernels.', '1505.02516-3-61-0': 'Moreover, we also perform tests on real datasets taken from the CANDELS survey (in these cases using real PSFs).', '1505.02516-3-62-0': 'Some of the tests were performed using both t-phot and tfit, to cross-check the results, ensuring the perfect equivalency of the results given by the two codes when used with the same parameter sets, and showing how appropriate settings of the t-phot parameters can ensure remarkable improvements.', '1505.02516-3-63-0': 'For simplicity, here we only show the results from a restricted selection of the tests dataset, which are representative of the performance of t-phot in standard situations.', '1505.02516-3-63-1': 'The results on the other simulations globally resemble the one we present, and are omitted for the sake of conciseness.', '1505.02516-3-64-0': '## Code performance and reliability on simulated images', '1505.02516-3-65-0': '### Basic tests', '1505.02516-3-66-0': 'As a first test, we checked the performance of the basic method by measuring the flux of two PSF-shaped synthetic sources, with varying separation and signal to noise ratios.', '1505.02516-3-66-1': 'One hundred realizations with different noise maps of each parameter set were prepared, and the averages on the measured fluxes were computed.', '1505.02516-3-66-2': 'The aim of this test was twofold: on the one hand, to check the precision to which the fitting method can retrieve "true" fluxes in the simplest possible case - two sources with ideal PSF shape; on the other hand, to check the reliability of the nominal error budget given by the covariance matrix, comparing it to the real RMS of the 100 measurements.', '1505.02516-3-66-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows three examples of the setup and the results of this test.', '1505.02516-3-66-4': 'Clearly, in both aspects the results are reassuring: the average of the 100 measurement (red diamonds) is always in very good agreement with the "true" value, with offset in relative error always well under the [MATH] limit ([MATH] is the value of the signal to noise ratio in the central pixel of the source, corresponding to roughly one third of the total [MATH]); and the nominal error (red crosses) given by the covariance matrix is always in good agreement with the RMS of the 100 measurements (red circles).', '1505.02516-3-67-0': 'When dealing with extended objects rather than with point-like sources, one must consider the additional problem that the entire profile of the source cannot be measured exactly, because the segmentation is limited by the lowest signal-to-noise isophote.', '1505.02516-3-67-1': 'The extension of the segmentation therefore comes to play a crucial role and defining it correctly is a very subtle issue.', '1505.02516-3-67-2': 'Simply taking the isophotal area as reported by SExtractor as ISOAREA often underestimates the real extension of the objects.', '1505.02516-3-67-3': 'Accordingly, the segmentation of the sources should somehow be enlarged to include the faint wings of sources.', '1505.02516-3-67-4': 'To this aim, specific software called Dilate has been developed at OAR and used in the CANDELS pipeline for the photometric analysis of GOODS-S and UDS IRAC data .', '1505.02516-3-67-5': 'Dilate enlarges the segmentation by a given factor, depending on the original area; it has proven to be reasonably robust in minimizing the effects of underestimated segmentated areas.', '1505.02516-3-68-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the effects of artificially varying the dimensions of the segmentation relative to two bright, extended and isolated sources in a simulated HRI, on the flux measured for that source in a companion simulated LRI.', '1505.02516-3-68-1': 'Note how enlarging the segmented area normally results in larger measured fluxes, because more and more light from the faint wings of the source are included in the fit.', '1505.02516-3-68-2': 'However, beyond a certain limit the measurements begin to lose accuracy due to the inclusion of noisy, too low signal-to-noise regions (which may cause a lower flux measurement).', '1505.02516-3-69-0': 'In principle, using extended analytical models rather than real high resolution cutouts should cure this problem more efficiently, because models have extended wings which are not signal-to-noise limited.', '1505.02516-3-69-1': 'Tests are ongoing to check the performance of this approach, and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.', '1505.02516-3-70-0': '### Tests on realistic simulations', '1505.02516-3-71-0': 'The next tests were aimed at investigating less idealized situations, and have been designed to provide a robust analysis of the performance of the code on realistic datasets.', '1505.02516-3-71-1': 'We used the code GenCat to produce mock catalogs of synthetic extragalactic sources, with reasonable morphological features and flux distribution.', '1505.02516-3-71-2': 'Then, a set of images were produced using such catalogs as an input for SkyMaker.', '1505.02516-3-71-3': 'A "detection" HRI mimicking an HST H band observation (FWHM = [MATH]) was generated from the GenCat catalog, using output parameters to characterize the objects\' extended properties.', '1505.02516-3-71-4': 'Then a set of measure LRI\'s were produced: a first one was populated with PSF-shaped sources, having FWHM = 1.66" (the typical IRAC-ch1/ch2 resolution, a key application for t-phot), while other LRIs were created from the input catalog, mimicking different ground-based or IRAC FWHMs.', '1505.02516-3-71-5': 'Finally, we created another HRI catalog removing all of the overlapping sources.', '1505.02516-3-71-6': 'This "non-overlapping" catalog was used to create parallel detection and measurement images, to obtain insight into the complications given by the presence of overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-3-71-7': 'In all these images, the limiting magnitude was set equal to the assigned zero point, so that the limiting flux at 1[MATH] is 1.', '1505.02516-3-71-8': 'Also, the fits were always performed on the LRI as a whole, if not otherwise specified.', '1505.02516-3-72-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the results relative to the first test, i.e. the fit on the image containing non-overlapping, PSF-shaped sources, with a "perfect" detection (i.e. the prior catalog contains all sources above the "true" detection limit), obtained with a single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-3-72-1': 'The figure shows the relative error in the measured flux of the sources, [MATH], versus the log of the real input flux [MATH]; the different symbols refer to the flag assigned to each object, while the color is a proxy for the covariance index, as described in more detail in the next paragraph.', '1505.02516-3-73-0': 'In this case, the only source of uncertainty in the measurement is given by the noise fluctuations, which clearly becomes dominant in the faint end of the distribution.', '1505.02516-3-73-1': 'Looking at the error bars of the sources, which are given by the nominal error assigned by t-phot from the covariance matrix, one can see that almost all sources have measured flux within [MATH] from their "true" flux, with only strongly covariant sources (covariance index [MATH] 1, greener colors) having [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-73-2': 'The only noticeable exceptions are sources that have been flagged as potentially unreliable, as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-73-3': 'Also note how the average [MATH] (solid black line) is consistent with zero down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-74-0': 'Fig. [REF] shows the analysis of a case study in which the fluxes of a clump of highly convariant objects are measured with poor accuracy, and some of the nominal uncertainties are underestimated: a very bright source (ID 3386, m[MATH]) shows a relative difference [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-74-1': 'To cast light on the reason for such a discrepancy, the region surrounding the object was replicated 100 times with different noise realizations, and the results were analyzed and compared.', '1505.02516-3-74-2': 'The upper panels show (left) one of the 100 measurement images and (right) the position of all the sources in the region (many of which are close to the detection limit).', '1505.02516-3-74-3': 'The color code refers to the covariance index of the sources.', '1505.02516-3-74-4': 'The bottom left panel shows the relative error in the measured flux for all the sources in the region, with the inner panels showing magnifications relative to the object ID 3386 and to the bunch of objects with m[MATH].', '1505.02516-3-74-5': 'Looking at the colors of their symbols, many objects in the region turn out to be strongly covariant.', '1505.02516-3-74-6': 'Indeed, while the "bluer" sources in the upper part of the region all have covariant indexes lower than 0.5, the "greener" ones in the crowded lower part all have covariance index larger than 1 (indeed larger than 2 in many cases).', '1505.02516-3-74-7': 'This means that their flux measurements are subject to uncertainties not only from noise fluctuations, but also from systematic errors due to their extremely close and bright neighbors.', '1505.02516-3-74-8': 'As clearly demonstrated here, the covariance index can give a clue about which measurements can be safely trusted.', '1505.02516-3-75-0': 'The bottom right panel gives the sum of the measured fluxes of all sources in each of the 100 realizations (the blue line is the true total flux and the red line is the mean of the 100 measured total fluxes).', '1505.02516-3-75-1': 'It can be seen that the total flux measured in the region is always consistent with the expected true one to within [MATH] of its value.', '1505.02516-3-76-0': 'The bottom line of this analysis is that, although it is not possible to postulate a one-to-one relation (because in mane cases sources having a large covariance index have a relatively good flux estimate, see Fig. [REF]), the covariance index, together with the flagging code outputted by t-phot, can give clues about the reliability of measured flux, and should be taken into consideration during the analysis of the data.', '1505.02516-3-76-1': 'Measurements relative to sources having covariance index e.g. larger than 1 should be treated with caution.', '1505.02516-3-77-0': 'In a subsequent more realistic test, we considered extended objects (including morphologies of objects from the GenCat catalog, using FWHM[MATH]=0.2" and FWHM[MATH]=1.66" and imposing m[MATH]=m[MATH] for simplicity) and allowed for overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-3-77-1': 'To be consistent with the standard procedure adopted for real images, for this case we proceeded by producing an SExtractor catalog and segmentation map, which were then spatially cross-correlated with the "true" input catalog.', '1505.02516-3-77-2': 'The results for this test are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-77-3': 'Even in this much more complex situation, the results are reassuring: there is an overall good agreement between measured and input fluxes for bright ([MATH]) sources, with only a few flagged objects clearly showing large deviations from the expected value, and a reasonably good average agreement down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-77-4': 'However, all bright fluxes are measured [MATH] fainter than the true values (see the inner box in the same Figure); this is very likely to be the effect of the limited segmentation extension, as already discussed in the previous Section.', '1505.02516-3-77-5': 'On the other hand, faint sources tend to have systematically overestimated fluxes, arguably because of contamination from undetected sources.', '1505.02516-3-77-6': 'To confirm this, we focus our attention on a single case study (the source marked as ID 720) which shows a large discrepancy from its true flux, but has a relatively small covariance index.', '1505.02516-3-77-7': 'An analysis of the real segmentation map shows how in reality the detected object is a superposition of two different sources, which have been detected as a single one, so that the measured flux is of course higher than expected.', '1505.02516-3-77-8': 'One should also note that the uncertainties on the measured fluxes are smaller in this test, because there are fewer priors (only the ones detected by SExtractor are now present), implying a lower rank of the covariance matrix and a lower number of detected neighbors blending in the LRI.', '1505.02516-3-77-9': 'This causes a global underestimation of the errors.', '1505.02516-3-78-0': 'To check the performance of t-phot at FIR wavelengths, we also run a test on a simulated Herschel SPIRE 250 [MATH]m image (FWHM=25", 3.6" pixel scale).', '1505.02516-3-78-1': 'The simulated image (shown alongside with the obtained residuals in Fig. [REF]) mimics real images from the GOODS-Herschel program, the deepest Herschel images ever obtained.', '1505.02516-3-78-2': 'This image was produced with the technique presented in [CITATION]: we first derived (predicted) flux densities for all the 24 [MATH]m detections ([MATH]Jy) in GOODS-North, which are dependent on their redshift and flux densities at shorter wavelengths, and then we injected these sources into the real noise maps from GOODS-Herschel imaging.', '1505.02516-3-78-3': 'Additional positional uncertainties, typically 0.5[MATH], were also applied to mimic real images.', '1505.02516-3-78-4': 'As shown in [CITATION], these simulated images have indeed similar pixel value distribution as real images .', '1505.02516-3-78-5': 'For this test, t-phot was run using the list of all the 24 [MATH]m sources as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-3-78-6': 'The results of the test are plotted in Fig. [REF], and they show that even in this case t-phot can recover the input fluxes of the sources with great statistical accuracy (the mean of the relative deviation from the expected measurements, i.e. the black solid line in the plot, is consistent with zero down to the faintest fluxes).', '1505.02516-3-78-7': 'The results prove to be equivalent to those obtained on the same datasets with other public software specifically developed for FIR photometry, such as FastPhot .', '1505.02516-3-79-0': '### Testing different fitting options: cell dimensions', '1505.02516-3-80-0': 'We then proceeded to check the performance of the different fitting techniques that can be used in t-phot.', '1505.02516-3-80-1': 'To this aim, we repeated the test on the 1.66" LRI with extended priors and SExtractor priors, described in Sect. [REF], with different fitting methods: using a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, and the cells-on-objects method, comparing the results with those from the fit of the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-3-80-2': 'The results of the tests are shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1505.02516-3-80-3': 'The first figure compares the distributions of the relative errors in measured flux for the runs performed on the [MATH] pixels grid, on the [MATH] pixels grid, and on the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-3-80-4': 'Clearly, using any regular grid of cells worsens the results, as anticipated in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-80-5': 'Enlarging the sizes of the cells yields improvement, but does not completely solve the problem.', '1505.02516-3-80-6': 'Note that the adoption of an arbitary grid of cells of any dimension in principle is prone to the introduction of potentially large errors, because (possibly bright) contaminating objects may contribute to the brightness measured in the cell, without being included as contributing sources.', '1505.02516-3-80-7': 'A mathematical sketch of this issue is explained in the Appendix (and see also Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-3-81-0': 'The second histogram compares the differences between the fit on the whole image and the one with the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-3-81-1': 'Almost all the sources yield identical results with the two methods, within [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-81-2': 'This proves how the cells-on-objects method can be considered a reliable alternative to the single fit method.', '1505.02516-3-82-0': 'Fig. [REF] compares the HRI, the LRI, and the residual images obtained with the four methods and their distributions of relative errors, showing quantitatively the difference between the analyzed cases.', '1505.02516-3-83-0': 'In summary, it is clear that an incautious choice of cell size may lead to unsatisfactory and catastrophic outcomes.', '1505.02516-3-83-1': 'On the other hand, the advantages of using a single fit, and the equivalence of the results obtained with the single fit and the cells-on-objects technique, are evident.', '1505.02516-3-83-2': 'As already anticipated, one should bear in mind that the cells-on-objects method is only convenient if the overlapping of sources is not dramatic, as in ground-based optical observations.', '1505.02516-3-83-3': 'For IRAC and FIR images, on the other hand, the extreme blending of sources would cause the cells to be extended over regions approaching the size of the whole image, so that a single fit would be more convenient, although often still CPU-time consuming.', '1505.02516-3-84-0': '### Testing different fitting options: threshold fitting', '1505.02516-3-85-0': 'As described in Sect. [REF], t-phot includes the option to impose a lower threshold on the normalized fluxes of templates so as to exclude from the fit low signal-to-noise pixels.', '1505.02516-3-85-1': 'Fig. [REF] shows a comparison of the relative errors obtained with three different values of the THRESHOLD parameter: [MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] (this means that only pixels with normalized flux [MATH] in the convolved template will be used in the fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-3-85-2': 'The differences are quite small, however a non-negligible global effect can be noticed: all sources tend to slightly decrease their measurement of flux when using a threshold limit.', '1505.02516-3-85-3': 'This brings faint sources (generally overestimated without using the threshold) closer to their "true" value, at the same time making bright sources too faint.', '1505.02516-3-85-4': 'This effect deserves careful investigation which is beyond the scope of this study, and is postponed to a future paper.', '1505.02516-3-86-0': '### Colors', '1505.02516-3-87-0': 'A final test was run introducing realistic colors, i.e. assigning fluxes to the sources in the LRI consistent with a realistic SED (as output by GenCat, see Sect. [REF]), instead of imposing them to be equal to the HRI fluxes.', '1505.02516-3-87-1': 'We took IRAC-ch1 as a reference filter for the LRI, consistently with the chosen FWHM of 1.66".', '1505.02516-3-87-2': 'Furthermore, we allowed for variations in the bulge-to-disc ratios of the sources to take into account possible effects of color gradients.', '1505.02516-3-87-3': 'We compared the results obtained with t-phot with the ones obtained with two alternative methods to determine the magnitudes of the sources in the LRI: namely, SExtractor dual mode aperture and MAGBEST photometry (with HRI as detection image).', '1505.02516-3-87-4': 'The differences between measured and input magnitudes in the LRI, m[MATH]-m[MATH], are plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-87-5': 'Clearly, t-phot ensures the best results, with much less scattered measurements than both the other two methods, and very few outliers.', '1505.02516-3-88-0': '## Performance on real datasets', '1505.02516-3-89-0': 'It is instructive to check how t-phot performs on real datasets, in addition to simulations.', '1505.02516-3-89-1': 'To this aim, we run two different tests.', '1505.02516-3-89-2': 'In the first, we compared the results of the tfit CANDELS analysis on the UDS CANDELS [MATH]-band to a t-phot run obtained using the cells-on-objects method and different parameters in the kernel registration stage.', '1505.02516-3-89-3': 'Fig. [REF] shows the histograms of the differences in the photometric measurements between tfit and t-phot.', '1505.02516-3-89-4': 'Many sources end up with a substantially different flux, because of the two cited factors (a better kernel registration and the different fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-3-89-5': 'Note that the majority of the sources have fainter fluxes with respect to the previous measurements, precisely because of the effect described in Sect. [REF]: fitting using a grid of cells introduces systematic errors assigning light from sources which are not listed in a given cells but overlap with it to the objects recognized as belonging to the cell.', '1505.02516-3-89-6': 'To further check this point, Fig. [REF] shows some examples of the difference between the residuals obtained with tfit (official catalog) and those obtained with this t-phot run using cells-on-objects method, also introducing better registration parameters in the dance stage.', '1505.02516-3-89-7': 'Clearly, the results are substantially different, with many black spots (sources with spurious overestimated fluxes) disappearing.', '1505.02516-3-89-8': 'Also, the registrations appear to be generally improved.', '1505.02516-3-90-0': 'The second test was run on FIR/sub-mm SCUBA-2 (450 [MATH]m, FWHM=7.5") and Herschel (500 [MATH]m, FWHM=36") images of the COSMOS-CANDELS field.', '1505.02516-3-90-1': 'In both cases, a list of 24+850 [MATH]m soucers was used as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-3-90-2': 'Fig. [REF] shows the original images on the top row, and the residuals on the bottom row.', '1505.02516-3-90-3': 'The model has removed all significant sources from the 450 [MATH]m map and the majority from the 500 [MATH]m map.', '1505.02516-3-90-4': 'Fig. [REF] shows a comparison of the fluxes measured in the t-phot fits to the 450 [MATH]m and 500 [MATH]m maps at 24+850 [MATH]m prior positions, with the error bars combining the errors on both flux measurements.', '1505.02516-3-90-5': 'Agreement within the errors implies successful deconfusion of the Herschel image to reproduce the fluxes measured in the higher-resolution SCUBA-2 image.', '1505.02516-3-90-6': 'This typology of analysis is very complex and we do not want to address here the subtleties of the process; we refer the reader to [CITATION] and [CITATION] for detailed discussions on the definition of a robust and reliable approach to measure FIR and sub-mm fluxes.', '1505.02516-3-90-7': 'These simple tests, however, clearly show that t-phot is successful at recovering the fluxes of target sources even in cases of extreme confusion and blending, within the accuracy limits of the method.', '1505.02516-3-91-0': '# Computational times', '1505.02516-3-92-0': 'As anticipated, t-phot ensures a large saving of computational times compared to similar codes like tfit and convphot, when used with identical input parameters.', '1505.02516-3-92-1': 'For example, a complete, double-pass run on the whole CANDELS UDS field at once (I band; [MATH]35000 prior sources; LRI 30720[MATH]12800 = 400 million pixels; standard tfit parameters and grid fitting) is completed without memory swaps in ca. 2 hours (i.e., 1 hour per pass) on a standard workstation (Intel i5, 3.20 GHz, RAM 8 Gb).', '1505.02516-3-92-2': 'A complete, double pass run on the GOODS-S Hawk-I W1 field ([MATH]17500 prior sources, LRI 10700[MATH]10600 = 100 millions pixels, identical parameters) is completed in [MATH]20 minutes.', '1505.02516-3-92-3': 'For comparison, tfit may require many hours ([MATH]24) to complete a single pass on this Hawk-I field on the same machine.', '1505.02516-3-92-4': 'It must be said that tfit by default produces cutouts and templates for all the sources in the HRI image; selecting the ones belonging to the LRI field and inputting an ad-hoc catalog would have reduced the computing time, say by a factor of two (i.e., 11 hours for the a single pass).', '1505.02516-3-92-5': 'It was not possible to process large images like the UDS field in a single run, because of RAM memory failing.', '1505.02516-3-92-6': 'convphot timings and memory problems are similar to the tfit ones, although due to different causes (being written in C, computation is generally faster, but it employs a slower convolution method and the solution of the linear system in performed as a single fit instead of grid fitting like in tfit, being much more time consuming).', '1505.02516-3-93-0': 'Adopting the cells-on-objects (Sect. [REF]) method increases the computational time with respect to the tfit standard cell approach, but it is still far more convenient than the convphot standard single fit approach, and gives nearly identical results.', '1505.02516-3-94-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the computational times for an extended tests on a set of simulated images having different detection depths (and therefore number of sources) and dimensions, with LRI FWHM=1.66".', '1505.02516-3-94-1': 'The simulations have been run on the same machine described above, using three different methods: whole image fitting, cells-on-objects and [MATH] pixels cells fitting.', '1505.02516-3-95-0': '# Summary and conclusions', '1505.02516-3-96-0': 'We have presented t-phot, a new software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-3-96-1': 't-phot is a robust and versatile tool, aimed at the photometric analysis of deep extragalactic fields at different wavelengths and spatial resolution, deconfusing blended sources in low resolution images.', '1505.02516-3-97-0': 't-phot uses priors obtained from a high resolution detection image to obtain normalized templates at the lower resolution of a measurement image, and minimizes a [MATH] problem to retrieve the multiplicative factor relative to each source, which is the searched quantity, i.e. the flux in the LRI.', '1505.02516-3-97-1': 'The priors can be either real cutouts from the HRI, or a list of positions to be fitted as PSF-shaped sources, or analytical 2-d models, or a mix of the three types.', '1505.02516-3-97-2': 'Different options for the fitting stage are given, including a cells-on-objects method which is computationally efficient while yielding accurate results for relatively small FWHMs.', '1505.02516-3-97-3': 't-phot ensures a large saving of computational time as well as increased robustness with respect to similar public codes like its direct predecessors tfit and convphot.', '1505.02516-3-97-4': 'With an appropriate choice of the parameter settings, greater accuracy is also achieved.', '1505.02516-3-98-0': 'As a final remark, it should be pointed out that the analysis presented in this work deals with idealized situations, namely simulations or comparisons with the performances of other codes on real datasets.', '1505.02516-3-98-1': 'There are a number of subtle issues regarding complex aspects of the PSF-matching techinque, which become of crucial importance when working on real data.', '1505.02516-3-98-2': 'A simple foretaste of such complexity can be obtained considering the problem described in Sect. [REF], i.e. the correct amplitude to be assigned to the segmented area of a source.', '1505.02516-3-98-3': 'Work is ongoing on this, and the full discussion will be presented in a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-3-99-0': 'As we have shown, t-phot proves to be an efficient tool for the photometric measurements of images on a very broad range of wavelengths, from UV to sub-mm, and is currently being routinely used by the Astrodeep community to analyse data from different surveys (e.g. CANDELS, Frontier Fields, AEGIS).', '1505.02516-3-99-1': 'Its main advantages with respect to similar codes like tfit or convphot can be summarized as follows:', '1505.02516-3-100-0': 'Future applications might include the processing of EUCLID and CCAT data.', '1505.02516-3-100-1': 'New releases of the software package, including further improvements and additional options, are planned for the next future.', '1505.02516-3-101-0': 'The authors acknowledge the contribution of the FP7 SPACE project “ASTRODEEP” (Ref.No: 312725), supported by the European Commission.', '1505.02516-3-101-1': 'JSD acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of an Advanced Grant.', '1505.02516-3-101-2': 'FB acknowledges support by FCT via the postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/103958/2014 and also the funding from the programme UID/FIS/04434/2013.', '1505.02516-3-101-3': 'RJM acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of a Consolidator Grant (PI McLure).', '1505.02516-3-101-4': 'The authors would like to thank Kuang-Han Huang, Mimi Song, Alice Mortlock and Michal Michalowski, for constructive help and suggestions, and the anonymous referee for useful advice.', '1505.02516-3-102-0': '# The parameter file', '1505.02516-3-103-0': 'Below is a template of the standard first pass parameter file to be given as input to t-phot (similar templates for both the first and the second pass are included in the dowloadable tarball).', '1505.02516-3-103-1': 'It is very similar to the original tfit parameter file, and part of the description is directly inherited from it.', '1505.02516-3-104-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-3-105-0': 'Standard optical/NIR double-pass runs can be achieved by setting order standard and order standard2.', '1505.02516-3-106-0': 'A standard first pass run includes the stages priors, convolve, fit, diags, dance, plotdance.', '1505.02516-3-106-1': 'The stage priors allows for an automatic re-construction of the pipeline depending on the input data given in the following sections (see the documentation included in the tarball).', '1505.02516-3-106-2': 'A standard second pass run includes the stages convolve, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-3-106-3': 'The archive stage creates a directory after the name of the LRI, with some specifications, and archives the products of both runs.', '1505.02516-3-107-0': 'FIR/sub-mm double-pass runs can be achieved by setting order positions, fit, diags, dance, plotdance and order positions, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-3-108-0': '## Priors', '1505.02516-3-109-0': 'Each prior must have an unique identificative number (ID) to avoid errors.', '1505.02516-3-109-1': 'The user must be careful to give the correct information in this paramfile.', '1505.02516-3-109-2': 'Select the priors to be used by switching on/off the relative keywords: usereal, usemodels, useunresolved.', '1505.02516-3-110-0': '## Convolution', '1505.02516-3-111-0': '## Fitting stage', '1505.02516-3-112-0': 'cellmask: if true, uses a mask to exclude pixels from the fit which do not contain a value of at least maskfloor in at least one template.', '1505.02516-3-112-1': 'writecovar: if true, writes the covariance information out to the tphotcovar file.', '1505.02516-3-112-2': 'threshold: forces to use a threshold on the flux, to only use the central parts of the objects.', '1505.02516-3-112-3': 'linsyssolver: the chosen solution method, i.e. LU, Cholesky or Iterative Biconjugate Gradient (IBG).', '1505.02516-3-112-4': 'LU is default.', '1505.02516-3-112-5': 'clip: tells whether to loop on the sources excluding negative solutions.', '1505.02516-3-113-0': '## Diagnostic stages', '1505.02516-3-114-0': '# The cells-on-objects algorithm', '1505.02516-3-115-0': 'Experiments on simulated images (see Sect. [REF]) clearly show that fitting small regions (cells) of the LRI, as done by default in tfit, may lead to potentially large errors.', '1505.02516-3-115-1': 'This is particularly true if the dimensions of the cells are chosen to be smaller than an ideal size, which changes from case to case, and should however always be greater than [MATH]10 times the FWHM.', '1505.02516-3-115-2': 'However, it can be mathematically shown that the "arbitrary cells" method intrinsecally causes the introduction of errors in the fit, as soon as a source is excluded from the cell (e.g., because its center is outside the cell) but contributes with some flux in some of its pixels.', '1505.02516-3-116-0': 'Consider a cell containing [MATH] sources.', '1505.02516-3-116-1': 'For simplicity, assume that each source [MATH] only overlaps with the two neighours [MATH] and [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-116-2': 'Furthermore, assume that a [MATH]-th source is contaminating the [MATH]-th source, but is excluded from the cell for some reason, for example (as in tfit) because the centroid of the source lies outside the cell.', '1505.02516-3-117-0': 'The linear system for this cell [MATH] will consist of a matrix [MATH] with only the elements on the diagonal and those with a [MATH] offset as non-zero elements (a symmetric band matrix), and the vector [MATH] will contain the products of templates of each source with the real flux in the LRI (as a summation on all pixels), as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-3-117-1': 'Given the above assumptions, this means that the [MATH]-th term of [MATH] will be higher than it should be (because it is contaminated by the external source).', '1505.02516-3-118-0': 'Using the Cramer rule for the solution of squared linear systems, the flux for the object [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] with [MATH] a square matrix in which the [MATH]-th columns is substituted with the vector [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-118-1': 'If for example [MATH], for [MATH] this gives [EQUATION] and since [MATH] is larger than it should, [MATH] will be overestimated (slightly, if [MATH] is not large, i.e. if sources 1 and 2 do not strongly overlap).', '1505.02516-3-118-2': 'On the other hand, for [MATH] we have [EQUATION] and in this case again [MATH] might be small, but the first term given by [MATH] will be certainly large, resulting in catastrophic overestimation of [MATH].', '1505.02516-3-118-3': '[MATH] will of course be underestimated, as it would be easy to show.', '1505.02516-3-119-0': 'From this simple test case it is clear that arbitrarily dividing the LRI into regions will always introduce errors (potentially non-negligible) in the fitting procedure, unless some method to remove dangerous contaminating sources is devised.', '1505.02516-3-120-0': 'The cells-on-objects algorithm aims at ensuring the accuracy of the flux estimate while at the same time drastically decreasing computational times and memory requirements.', '1505.02516-3-120-1': 'As explained in Sect. [REF], when this method is adopted a cell is centered around each detected source, and enlarged to include all its "potential" contaminant neighbors, and the contaminant of the contaminants, and so on.', '1505.02516-3-120-2': 'To avoid an infinite loop, the process of inclusion is interrupted when one of the following criteria is satisfied:', '1505.02516-3-121-0': 'Experiments on simulations have shown that good results are obtained with [MATH] and [MATH], and these values are used as constants in the source code.', '1505.02516-3-122-0': 'Note that if a cell is enlarged to more than 75% of the dimensions of the total LRI, t-phot automatically switches to the single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-3-123-0': '# Suggested best options', '1505.02516-3-124-0': 'Of course, different problems require different approaches to obtain their best possible solution, and users are encouraged to try different options and settings.', '1505.02516-3-124-1': 'However, some indicative guidelines to optimize a run with t-phot can be summarized as follows.'}
{'1505.02516-4-0-0': 'T-PHOT: A new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry', '1505.02516-4-1-0': 't-phot', '1505.02516-4-2-0': 'The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis.', '1505.02516-4-2-1': 'In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data.', '1505.02516-4-2-2': 'In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low-resolution images.', '1505.02516-4-2-3': 'We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-4-2-4': 't-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low-resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.', '1505.02516-4-2-5': 't-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot).', '1505.02516-4-2-6': 't-phot gathers data from a high-resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field.', '1505.02516-4-2-7': 't-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors, namely i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high-resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .', '1505.02516-4-2-8': 'fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful for example for far infrared wavelength domains.', '1505.02516-4-2-9': 'By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).', '1505.02516-4-2-10': 't-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile.', '1505.02516-4-2-11': 'This makes it an excellent choice for the analysis of large datasets.', '1505.02516-4-2-12': 'When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (although in a much shorter time); in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.', '1505.02516-4-2-13': 't-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to far-infrared image photometry.', '1505.02516-4-2-14': 'Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.', '1505.02516-4-3-0': '# Introduction', '1505.02516-4-4-0': 'Combining observational data from the same regions of the sky in different wavelength domains has become common practice in the past few years .', '1505.02516-4-4-1': 'However, the use of both space-based and ground-based imaging instruments, with different sensitivities, pixel scales, angular resolutions, and survey depths, raises a number of challenging difficulties in the data analysis process.', '1505.02516-4-5-0': 'In this context, it is of particular interest to obtain detailed photometric measurements for high-redshift galaxies in the near-infrared (NIR; corresponding to rest-frame optical) and far-infrared (FIR) domains.', '1505.02516-4-5-1': 'In particular, great attention must be paid to bandpasses containing spectral features which allow a thorough investigation of the sources, disentangling degenerate observational features, and obtaining crucial clues to the understanding of the galactic physics .', '1505.02516-4-5-2': 'At [MATH], for example, photometry longward of [MATH]-band is needed to locate and measure the size of the Balmer break.', '1505.02516-4-5-3': 'A passive galaxy at [MATH] (with the Balmer break lying longward of the [MATH]-band) can have [MATH]-band and [MATH]m fluxes compatible, for example, with a star forming, dusty galaxy at [MATH], and [MATH]band photometry is necessary in order to disentangle the degeneracy.', '1505.02516-4-5-4': 'However, the limited resolution of the ground based [MATH]band observations can impose severe limits on the reliability of traditional aperture or even Point Spread Function (PSF) fitting photometry.', '1505.02516-4-5-5': 'In addition, IRAC photometry is of crucial importance so that reliable photometric redshifts of red and high-[MATH] sources can be obtained, and robust stellar mass estimates can be derived.', '1505.02516-4-6-0': 'To address this, a high-resolution image (HRI), for example obtained from the Hubble Space Telescope in the optical domain, can be used to retrieve detailed information on the positions and morphologies of the sources in a given region of the sky.', '1505.02516-4-6-1': 'Such information can be subsequently used to perform the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image (LRI), using the HRI data as priors.', '1505.02516-4-6-2': 'However, simply performing aperture photometry on the LRI at the positions measured in the HRI can be dramatically affected by neighbour contamination for reasonably sized apertures.', '1505.02516-4-6-3': 'On the other hand, performing source extraction on both images and matching the resulting catalogues is compromised by the inability to deblend neighbouring objects, and may introduce significant inaccuracies in the cross-correlation process.', '1505.02516-4-6-4': 'PSF-matching techniques that degrade high-resolution data to match the low-resolution data discard much of the valuable information obtained in the HRI, reducing all images to the "lowest common denominator" of angular resolution.', '1505.02516-4-6-5': 'Moreover, crowded-field, PSF-fitting photometry packages such as daophot perform well if the sources in the LRI are unresolved, but are unsuitable for analysis of even marginally resolved images of extragalactic sources.', '1505.02516-4-7-0': 'A more viable approach consists of taking advantage of the morphological information given by the HRI, in order to obtain high-resolution cutouts or models of the sources.', '1505.02516-4-7-1': 'These priors can then be degraded to the resolution of the LRI using a suitable convolution kernel, constructed by matching the PSFs of the HRI and of the LRI.', '1505.02516-4-7-2': 'Such low-resolution templates, normalized to unit flux, can then be placed at the positions given by the HRI detections, and the multiplicative factor that must be assigned to each model to match the measured flux in each pixel of the LRI will give the measured flux of that source.', '1505.02516-4-7-3': 'Such an approach, although relying on some demanding assumptions as described in the following sections, has proven to be efficient.', '1505.02516-4-7-4': 'It has been implemented in such public codes as tfit and convphot , and has already been utilized successfully in previous studies .', '1505.02516-4-8-0': 'In this paper we describe a new software package, t-phot, developed at INAF-OAR as part of the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-4-8-1': 'The t-phot software can be considered a new, largely improved version of tfit, supplemented with many of the features of convphot.', '1505.02516-4-8-2': 'Moreover, it adds many important new options, including the possibility of adopting different types of priors (namely real images, analytical models, or point-sources).', '1505.02516-4-8-3': 'In particular, it is possible to use t-phot on FIR and sub-millimetric (sub-mm) datasets, as a competitive alternative to the existing dedicated software such as FastPhot and DesPhot .', '1505.02516-4-8-4': 'This makes t-phot a versatile tool, suitable for the photometric analysis of a very broad range of wavelengths from UV to sub-mm.', '1505.02516-4-9-0': 't-phot is a robust and easy-to-handle code, with a precise structural architecture (a Python envelope calling C/C++ core codes) in which different routines are encapsulated, implementing various numerical/conceptual methods, to be chosen by simple switches in a parameter file.', '1505.02516-4-9-1': 'While a standard default "best choice" mode is provided and suggested, the user is allowed to select a preferred setting.', '1505.02516-4-10-0': 'One of the main advantages of t-phot is a significant saving of computational time with respect to both tfit and convphot (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-4-10-1': 'This has been achieved with the use of fast C modules and an efficient structural arrangement of the code.', '1505.02516-4-10-2': 'In addition to this, we demonstrate how different choices of parameters influence the performace, and can be optimized to significantly improve the final results with respect to tfit, for example.', '1505.02516-4-11-0': 'The plan of the paper is as follows.', '1505.02516-4-11-1': 'Sect. [REF] provides a general introduction to the code, its mode of operation and its algorithms.', '1505.02516-4-11-2': 'In Section [REF] we discuss some assumptions, limitations and caveats of the method.', '1505.02516-4-11-3': 'Section [REF] presents a comprehensive set of tests, based on simulated and real datasets, to assess the performance of the code and to fully illustrate its capabilities and limitations.', '1505.02516-4-11-4': 'Section [REF] briefly discusses the computational performances of t-phot and provides some reference computational timescales.', '1505.02516-4-11-5': 'Finally, in Section [REF] the key features of t-phot are summarized, and outstanding issues and potential complications are briefly discussed.', '1505.02516-4-12-0': '# General description of the code', '1505.02516-4-13-0': 'As described above, t-phot uses spatial and morphological information gathered from a HRI to measure the fluxes in a LRI.', '1505.02516-4-13-1': 'To this end, a linear system is built and solved via matricial computing, minimizing the [MATH] (in which the numerically determined fluxes for each detected source are compared to the measured fluxes in the LRI, summing the contributions of all pixels).', '1505.02516-4-13-2': 'Moreover, the code produces a number of diagnostic outputs and allows for an iterative re-calibration of the results.', '1505.02516-4-13-3': 'Figure [REF] shows a schematic depiction of the basic PSF-matched fitting algorithm used in the code.', '1505.02516-4-14-0': 'As HRI priors t-phot can use i) real cutouts of sources from the HRI, ii) models of sources obtained with Galfit or similar codes, iii) a list of coordinates where PSF-shaped sources will be placed, or a combination of these three types of priors.', '1505.02516-4-15-0': 'For a detailed technical description of the mode of operation of the code, we refer the reader to the Appendix and to the documentation included in the downloadable tarball.', '1505.02516-4-15-1': 'Here, we will briefly describe its main features.', '1505.02516-4-16-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-4-17-0': 'The pipeline followed by t-phot is outlined in the flowchart given in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-17-1': 'The following paragraphs give a short description of the pipeline.', '1505.02516-4-18-0': '### Input', '1505.02516-4-19-0': 'The input files needed by t-phot vary depending on the type(s) of priors used.', '1505.02516-4-20-0': 'If true high-resolution priors are used, e.g. for optical/NIR ground-based or IRAC measurements using Hubble Space Telescope (HST) cutouts, t-phot needs', '1505.02516-4-21-0': 'If analytical models are used as priors (e.g. Galfit models), t-phot needs', '1505.02516-4-22-0': 'If models have more than one component, one separate stamp per component and catalogues for each component are needed (e.g. one catalogue for bulges and one catalogue for disks).', '1505.02516-4-23-0': 'If unresolved, point-like priors are used, t-phot needs', '1505.02516-4-24-0': 'In this case, a potential limitation to the reliability of the method is given by the fact that the prior density usually needs to be optimized with respect to FIR/sub-mm maps, as discussed in [CITATION] and [CITATION] .', '1505.02516-4-24-1': 'The optimal number of priors turns out to be around 50-75% of the numbers of beams in the map.', '1505.02516-4-24-2': 'The main problem is identifying which of the many potential priors from, for example, an HST catalogue one should use.', '1505.02516-4-24-3': 'This is a very complex issue and we do not discuss it in this paper.', '1505.02516-4-25-0': 'If mixed priors are used, t-phot obviously needs the input files corresponding to each of the different types of priors in use.', '1505.02516-4-26-0': 'Finally, in all cases t-phot needs', '1505.02516-4-27-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the input requirements for the different choices of priors just described.', '1505.02516-4-28-0': 'All the input images must have the following keywords in their headers: CRPIXn, CRVALn, CDnn, CTYPEn (n=1,2).', '1505.02516-4-29-0': '### Background subtraction', '1505.02516-4-30-0': 'As already mentioned, the LRI must be background subtracted before being fed to t-phot.', '1505.02516-4-30-1': 'This is of particular interest when dealing with FIR/sub-mm images, where the typical standard is to use zero-mean.', '1505.02516-4-30-2': 'To estimate the background level in optical/NIR images, one simple possibility is to take advantage of the option to fit point-like sources to measure the flux for a list of positions chosen to fall within void regions.', '1505.02516-4-30-3': 'The issue is more problematic in such confusion-limited FIR images where there are no empty sky regions.', '1505.02516-4-30-4': 'In such cases, it is important to separate the fitted sources (those listed in the prior catalogue) from the background sources, which contribute to a flat background level behind the sources of interest.', '1505.02516-4-30-5': 'The priors should be chosen so that these two populations are uncorrelated.', '1505.02516-4-30-6': 'The average contribution of the faint background source population can then be estimated for example by i) injecting fake sources into the map and measuring the average offset (output-input) flux, or ii) measuring the modal value in the residual image after a first pass through t-phot .', '1505.02516-4-31-0': '### Stages', '1505.02516-4-32-0': 't-phot goes through "stages", each of which performs a well-defined task.', '1505.02516-4-32-1': 'The best results are obtained by performing two runs ("pass 1" and "pass 2"), the second using locally registered kernels produced during the first.', '1505.02516-4-32-2': 'The possible stages are the following:', '1505.02516-4-33-0': 'The exact pipeline followed by the code is specified by a keyword in the input parameter file.', '1505.02516-4-33-1': 'See the Appendix for a more detailed description of the whole procedure.', '1505.02516-4-34-0': '### Solution of the linear system', '1505.02516-4-35-0': 'The search for the LRI fluxes of the objects detected in the HRI is performed by creating a linear system [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [MATH] contains the pixel values of the fluxes in the LRI, [MATH] is the normalized flux of the template for the [MATH]-th objects in the (region of the) LRI being fitted, and [MATH] is the multiplicative scaling factor for each object.', '1505.02516-4-35-1': 'In physical terms, [MATH] represents the flux of each object in the LRI (i.e. it is the unknown to be determined).', '1505.02516-4-36-0': 'Once the normalized templates for each object in the LRI (or region of interest within the LRI) have been generated during the convolve stage, the best fit to their fluxes can be simultaneously derived by minimizing a [MATH] statistic, [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the value of the RMS map at the [MATH] pixel position.', '1505.02516-4-37-0': 'The output quantities are the best-fit solutions of the minimization procedure, i.e. the [MATH] parameters and their relative errors.', '1505.02516-4-37-1': 'They can be obtained by resolving the linear system [EQUATION] for [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-38-0': 'In practice, the linear system can be rearranged into a matrix equation, [EQUATION] where the matrix [MATH] contains the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] is a vector containing the fluxes to be determined, and [MATH] is a vector given by [MATH] terms.', '1505.02516-4-38-1': 'The matrix equation is solved via one of three possible methods as described in the next subsection.', '1505.02516-4-39-0': '### Fitting options', '1505.02516-4-40-0': 't-phot allows for some different options to perform the fit:', '1505.02516-4-41-0': 'The fit can be performed i) on the entire LRI as a whole, producing a single matrix containing all the sources (this is the method adopted in convphot); ii) subdividing the LRI into an arbitrary grid of (overlapping) small cells, perfoming the fit in each of such cells separately, and then choosing the best fit for each source, using some convenient criteria to select it (because sources will be fitted more than once if the cells overlap; this is the method adopted in tfit); iii) ordering objects by decreasing flux, building a cell around each source including all its potential contaminants, solving the problem in that cell and assigning to the source the obtained flux (cells-on-objects method; see the Appendix for more details).', '1505.02516-4-42-0': 'While the first method is the safest and more accurate because it does not introduce any bias or arbitrary modifications, it may often be unfeasible to process at once large or very crowded images.', '1505.02516-4-42-1': 'Potentially large computational time saving is possible using the cells-on-objects method, depending on the level of blending/confusion in the LRI; if it is very high, most sources will overlap and the cells will end up being very large.', '1505.02516-4-42-2': 'This ultimately results in repeating many times the fit on regions with dimensions comparable to the whole image (a check is implemented in the code, to automatically change the method from cells-on-objects to single fit if this is the case).', '1505.02516-4-42-3': 'If the confusion is not dramatic, a saving in computational time up to two orders of magnitude can be achieved.', '1505.02516-4-42-4': 'The results obtained using the cells-on-objects method prove to be virtually identical to those obtained with a single fit on the whole image (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-4-42-5': 'On the other hand, using the arbitrary cells method is normally the fastest option, but can introduce potentially large errors to the flux estimates owing to wrong assignments of peripheral flux from sources located outside a given cell to sources within the cell (again, see Sect. [REF] and the Appendix B).', '1505.02516-4-43-0': '### Post-fitting stages: kernel registration', '1505.02516-4-44-0': 'After the fitting procedure is completed, t-phot will produce the final output catalogues and diagnostic images (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-4-44-1': 'Among these, a model image is obtained by adding all the templates, scaled to their correct total flux after fitting, in the positions of the sources.', '1505.02516-4-44-2': 'This image will subsequently be used if a second pass is planned; during a stage named dance, a list of positional shifts is computed, and a set of shifted kernels are generated and stored.', '1505.02516-4-44-3': 'The dance stage consists of three conceptual steps:', '1505.02516-4-45-0': '### Second pass', '1505.02516-4-46-0': 'The registered kernels can subsequently be used in the second pass run to obtain more astrometrically precise results.', '1505.02516-4-46-1': 't-phot automatically deals with them provided the correct keyword is given in the parameter file.', '1505.02516-4-46-2': 'If unresolved priors are used, the list of shifts generated in the dance stage will be used by the positions routine during the second pass to produce correctly shifted PSFs and generate new templates.', '1505.02516-4-47-0': '## Error budget', '1505.02516-4-48-0': 'During the fitting stage, the covariance matrix is constructed.', '1505.02516-4-48-1': 'Errors for each source are assigned as the square root of the diagonal element of the covariance matrix relative to that source.', '1505.02516-4-48-2': 'It must be pointed out that using any cell method for the fitting rather than the single fitting option will affect this uncertainty budget, since a different matrix will be constructed and resolved in each cell.', '1505.02516-4-49-0': 'It is important to stress that this covariance error budget is a statistical uncertainty, relative to the RMS fluctuations in the measurement image, and is not related to any possible systematic error.', '1505.02516-4-49-1': 'The latter can instead be estimated by flagging potentially problematic sources, to be identified separately from the fitting procedure.', '1505.02516-4-49-2': 'There can be different possible causes for systematic offsets of the measured flux with respect to the true flux of a source.', '1505.02516-4-49-3': 't-phot assigns the following flags:', '1505.02516-4-50-0': '## Description of the output', '1505.02516-4-51-0': 't-phot output files are designed to be very similar in format to those produced by tfit.', '1505.02516-4-51-1': 'They provide', '1505.02516-4-52-0': 'two catalogues reporting statistics for the fitting cells and the covariance matrices (they are described in the documentation); the model .f', '1505.02516-4-52-1': 'fits image, obtained as a collage of the templates, as already described; a diagnostic residual .f', '1505.02516-4-52-2': 'fits image, obtained by subtracting the model image from the LRI; a subdirectory containing all the low-resolution model templates; a subdirectory containing the covariance matrices in graphic (.f', '1505.02516-4-52-3': 'fits) format; a few ancillary files relating to the shifts of the kernel for the second pass and a subdirectory containing the shifted kernels.', '1505.02516-4-53-0': 'All fluxes and errors are output in units consistent with the input images.', '1505.02516-4-54-0': 'Figures [REF], [REF] and [REF] show three examples of t-phot applications on simulated and real data, using the three different options for priors.', '1505.02516-4-55-0': '# Assumptions and limitations', '1505.02516-4-56-0': 'The PSF-matching algorithms implemented in t-phot and described in the previous section are prone to some assumptions and limitations.', '1505.02516-4-56-1': 'In particular, the following issues must be pointed out.', '1505.02516-4-57-0': 'i) The accuracy of the results strongly depends on the reliability of the determined PSFs (and consequently of the convolution kernel).', '1505.02516-4-57-1': 'An error of a few percentage points in the central slope of the PSF light profile might lead to non-negligible systematical deviations in the measured fluxes.', '1505.02516-4-57-2': 'However, since the fitting algorithm minimizes the residuals on the basis of a summation over pixels, an incorrect PSF profile will lead to characteristic positive and negative ring-shaped patterns in the residuals (see Fig. [REF]), and to some extent the summation over pixels will compensate the global flux determination.', '1505.02516-4-58-0': 'ii) When dealing with extended priors, it is assumed that the instrinsic morphology of the objects does not change with the wavelength.', '1505.02516-4-58-1': 'Of course, this is usually not the case.', '1505.02516-4-58-2': 'The issue is less of a problem when dealing with FIR images, in which the morphological features of the priors are unresolved by the low-resolution PSF.', '1505.02516-4-58-3': 'On the other hand, in the optical and NIR domains this problem may be solved by the use of multicomponent analytical models as priors.', '1505.02516-4-58-4': 'In this approach, each component should be fitted independently, thus allowing the ratio between bulge and disk components to vary between the HRI and LRI.', '1505.02516-4-58-5': 'A clear drawback of this approach is that any failure of the fit due to irregular or difficult morphological features (spiral arms, blobs, asymmetries, etc.) would be propagated into the LRI solution.', '1505.02516-4-58-6': 'This functionality is already implemented in t-phot and detailed testing is ongoing.', '1505.02516-4-59-0': 'iii) As explained in Sect. [REF], t-phot flags priors that are likely to be flawed: sources too close to the borders of the image, saturated objects, and most notably blended priors.', '1505.02516-4-59-1': 'The assumption that all priors are well separated from one another is crucial, and the method fails when this requirement is not accomplished.', '1505.02516-4-59-2': 'Again, this is crucial only when dealing with real priors, while analytical models and unresolved priors are not affected by this limitation.', '1505.02516-4-60-0': 'iv) As anticipated in Sect. [REF], FIR images can suffer from an "overfitting" problem, due to the presence of too many priors in each LRI beam if the HRI is deeper than the LRI.', '1505.02516-4-60-1': 'In this case, a selection of the priors based on some additional criteria (e.g. flux predition from SED fitting) might be necessary to avoid catastrophic outcomes .', '1505.02516-4-61-0': '# Validation', '1505.02516-4-62-0': 'To assess the performance of t-phot we set up an extensive set of simulations, aimed at various different and complementary goals.', '1505.02516-4-63-0': 'We used SkyMaker , a public software tool, to build synthetic .', '1505.02516-4-63-1': 'fits images.', '1505.02516-4-63-2': 'The code ensures direct control on all the observational parameters (the magnitude and positions of the objects, their morphology, the zero point magnitude, the noise level, and the PSF).', '1505.02516-4-63-3': 'Model galaxies were built by summing a de Vaucouleurs and an exponential light profile in order to best mimic a realistic distribution of galaxy morphologies.', '1505.02516-4-63-4': 'These models were generated using a variety of bulge-to-total light ratios, component sizes, and projection angles.', '1505.02516-4-64-0': 'All tests were run using ideal (i.e. synthetic and symmetric) PSFs and kernels.', '1505.02516-4-65-0': 'Moreover, we also performed tests on real datasets taken from the CANDELS survey (in these cases using real PSFs).', '1505.02516-4-66-0': 'Some of the tests were performed using both t-phot and tfit, to cross-check the results, ensuring the perfect equivalency of the results given by the two codes when used with the same parameter sets, and showing how appropriate settings of the t-phot parameters can ensure remarkable improvements.', '1505.02516-4-67-0': 'For simplicity, here we only show the results from a restricted selection of the test dataset, which are representative of the performance of t-phot in standard situations.', '1505.02516-4-67-1': 'The results of the other simulations resemble overall the ones we present, and are omitted for the sake of conciseness.', '1505.02516-4-68-0': '## Code performance and reliability on simulated images', '1505.02516-4-69-0': '### Basic tests', '1505.02516-4-70-0': 'As a first test, we checked the performance of the basic method by measuring the flux of two PSF-shaped synthetic sources, with varying separation and signal-to-noise ratios.', '1505.02516-4-70-1': 'One hundred realizations with different noise maps of each parameter set were prepared, and the averages on the measured fluxes were computed.', '1505.02516-4-70-2': 'The aims of this test were twofold: on the one hand, to check the precision to which the fitting method can retrieve true fluxes in the simplest possible case - two sources with ideal PSF shape; on the other hand, to check the reliability of the nominal error budget given by the covariance matrix, comparing it to the real RMS of the 100 measurements.', '1505.02516-4-70-3': 'Figure [REF] shows three examples of the set-up and the results of this test.', '1505.02516-4-70-4': 'Clearly, in both aspects the results are reassuring: the average of the 100 measurements (red diamonds) is always in very good agreement with the true value, with offset in relative error always well under the [MATH] limit ([MATH] is the value of the signal-to-noise ratio in the central pixel of the source, corresponding to roughly one third of the total [MATH]); and the nominal error (red crosses) given by the covariance matrix is always in good agreement with the RMS of the 100 measurements (red circles).', '1505.02516-4-71-0': 'When dealing with extended objects rather than with point-like sources, one must consider the additional problem that the entire profile of the source cannot be measured exactly because the segmentation is limited by the lowest signal-to-noise isophote.', '1505.02516-4-71-1': 'The extension of the segmentation therefore plays a crucial role and defining it correctly is a very subtle problem.', '1505.02516-4-71-2': 'Simply taking the isophotal area as reported by SExtractor as ISOAREA often underestimates the real extension of the objects.', '1505.02516-4-71-3': 'Accordingly, the segmentation of the sources should somehow be enlarged to include the faint wings of sources.', '1505.02516-4-71-4': 'To this aim, specific software called Dilate was developed at OAR and used in the CANDELS pipeline for the photometric analysis of GOODS-S and UDS IRAC data .', '1505.02516-4-71-5': 'Dilate enlarges the segmentation by a given factor, depending on the original area; it has proven to be reasonably robust in minimizing the effects of underestimated segmentated areas.', '1505.02516-4-72-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the effects of artificially varying the dimensions of the segmentation relative to two bright, extended and isolated sources in a simulated HRI, on the flux measured for that source in a companion simulated LRI.', '1505.02516-4-72-1': 'It is important to note how enlarging the segmented area normally results in larger measured fluxes, because more and more light from the faint wings of the source are included in the fit.', '1505.02516-4-72-2': 'However, beyond a certain limit the measurements begin to lose accuracy owing to the inclusion of noisy, too low signal-to-noise regions (which may cause a lower flux measurement).', '1505.02516-4-73-0': 'In principle, using extended analytical models rather than real high-resolution cutouts should cure this problem more efficiently, because models have extended wings that are not signal-to-noise limited.', '1505.02516-4-73-1': 'Tests are ongoing to check the performance of this approach, and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.', '1505.02516-4-74-0': '### Tests on realistic simulations', '1505.02516-4-75-0': 'The next tests were aimed at investigating less idealized situations, and have been designed to provide a robust analysis of the performance of the code on realistic datasets.', '1505.02516-4-75-1': 'We used the code GenCat to produce mock catalogues of synthetic extragalactic sources, with reasonable morphological features and flux distribution.', '1505.02516-4-75-2': 'Then, a set of images were produced using such catalogues as an input for SkyMaker.', '1505.02516-4-75-3': 'A "detection" HRI mimicking an HST H band observation (FWHM = [MATH]) was generated from the GenCat catalogue using output parameters to characterize the objects\' extended properties.', '1505.02516-4-75-4': 'Then a set of measure LRIs were produced: the first was populated with PSF-shaped sources, having FWHM = 1.66" (the typical IRAC-ch1/ch2 resolution, a key application for t-phot), while other LRIs were created from the input catalogue, mimicking different ground-based or IRAC FWHMs.', '1505.02516-4-75-5': 'Finally, we created another HRI catalogue removing all of the overlapping sources.', '1505.02516-4-75-6': 'This "non-overlapping" catalogue was used to create parallel detection and measurement images in order to obtain insight into the complications given by the presence of overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-4-75-7': 'In all these images, the limiting magnitude was set equal to the assigned zero point, so that the limiting flux at 1[MATH] is 1.', '1505.02516-4-75-8': 'In addition, the fits were always performed on the LRI as a whole, if not otherwise specified.', '1505.02516-4-76-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the results relative to the first test, i.e. the fit on the image containing non-overlapping, PSF-shaped sources, with a "perfect" detection (i.e. the priors catalogue contains all sources above the detection limit), obtained with a single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-4-76-1': 'The figure shows the relative error in the measured flux of the sources, [MATH], versus the log of the real input flux [MATH]; the different symbols refer to the flag assigned to each object, while the colour is a proxy for the covariance index.', '1505.02516-4-77-0': 'In this case, the only source of uncertainty in the measurement is given by the noise fluctuations, which clearly become dominant at the faint end of the distribution.', '1505.02516-4-77-1': 'Looking at the error bars of the sources, which are given by the nominal error assigned by t-phot from the covariance matrix, one can see that almost all sources have measured flux within [MATH] from their true flux, with only strongly covariant sources (covariance index [MATH] 1, greener colours) having [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-77-2': 'The only noticeable exceptions are sources that have been flagged as potentially unreliable, as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-77-3': 'We also note how the average [MATH] (solid black line) is consistent with zero down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-78-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the analysis of a case study in which the fluxes of a clump of highly covariant objects are measured with poor accuracy, and some of the nominal uncertainties are underestimated: a very bright source (ID 3386, m[MATH]) shows a relative difference [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-78-1': 'To cast light on the reason for such a discrepancy, the region surrounding the object was replicated 100 times with different noise realizations, and the results were analysed and compared.', '1505.02516-4-78-2': 'The upper panels show (left) one of the 100 measurement images and (right) the position of all the sources in the region (many of which are close to the detection limit).', '1505.02516-4-78-3': 'The colour code refers to the covariance index of the sources.', '1505.02516-4-78-4': 'The bottom left panel shows the relative error in the measured flux for all the sources in the region, with the inner panels showing magnifications relative to the object ID 3386 and to the bunch of objects with m[MATH].', '1505.02516-4-78-5': 'Looking at the colours of their symbols, many objects in the region turn out to be strongly covariant.', '1505.02516-4-78-6': 'Indeed, while the bluer sources in the upper part of the region all have covariant indexes lower than 0.5, the greener ones in the crowded lower part all have covariance index larger than 1 (indeed larger than 2 in many cases).', '1505.02516-4-78-7': 'This means that their flux measurements are subject to uncertainties not only from noise fluctuations, but also from systematic errors due to their extremely close and bright neighbours.', '1505.02516-4-78-8': 'As clearly demonstrated here, the covariance index can give a clue to which measurements can be safely trusted.', '1505.02516-4-79-0': 'The bottom right panel gives the sum of the measured fluxes of all sources in each of the 100 realizations (the blue line is the true total flux and the red line is the mean of the 100 measured total fluxes).', '1505.02516-4-79-1': 'It can be seen that the total flux measured in the region is always consistent with the expected true one to within [MATH] of its value.', '1505.02516-4-80-0': 'Although it is not possible to postulate a one-to-one relation (because in most cases sources having a large covariance index have a relatively good flux estimate, see Fig. [REF]), the bottom line of this analysis is that the covariance index, together with the flagging code outputted by t-phot, can give clues about the reliability of measured flux, and should be taken into consideration during the analysis of the data.', '1505.02516-4-80-1': 'Measurements relative to sources having a covariance index larger than 1 should be treated with caution.', '1505.02516-4-81-0': 'In a subsequent more realistic test, we considered extended objects (including morphologies of objects from the GenCat catalogue, using FWHM[MATH]=0.2" and FWHM[MATH]=1.66" and imposing m[MATH]=m[MATH] for simplicity) and allowed for overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-4-81-1': 'To be consistent with the standard procedure adopted for real images, for this case we proceeded by producing an SExtractor catalogue and segmentation map, which were then spatially cross-correlated with the "true" input catalogue.', '1505.02516-4-81-2': 'The results for this test are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-81-3': 'Even in this much more complex situation, the results are reassuring; there is an overall good agreement between measured and input fluxes for bright ([MATH]) sources, with only a few flagged objects clearly showing large deviations from the expected value, and a reasonably good average agreement down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-81-4': 'However, all bright fluxes are measured [MATH] fainter than the true values (see the inner box in the same figure); this is very likely the effect of the limited segmentation extension, as already discussed in the previous section.', '1505.02516-4-81-5': 'On the other hand, faint sources tend to have systematically overestimated fluxes, arguably because of contamination from undetected sources.', '1505.02516-4-81-6': 'To confirm this, we focus our attention on a single case study (the source marked as ID 720) which shows a large discrepancy from its true flux, but has a relatively small covariance index.', '1505.02516-4-81-7': 'An analysis of the real segmentation map shows how the detected object is actually a superposition of two different sources that have been detected as a single one, so that the measured flux is of course higher than expected.', '1505.02516-4-81-8': 'One should also note that the uncertainties on the measured fluxes are smaller in this test, because there are fewer priors (only the ones detected by SExtractor are now present), implying a lower rank of the covariance matrix and a lower number of detected neighbours blending in the LRI.', '1505.02516-4-81-9': 'This causes a global underestimation of the errors.', '1505.02516-4-82-0': 'To check the performance of t-phot at FIR wavelengths, we also run a test on a simulated Herschel SPIRE 250 [MATH]m image (FWHM=25", 3.6" pixel scale).', '1505.02516-4-82-1': 'The simulated image (shown alongside with the obtained residuals in Fig. [REF]) mimics real images from the GOODS-Herschel program, the deepest Herschel images ever obtained.', '1505.02516-4-82-2': 'This image was produced with the technique presented in [CITATION]; we first derived (predicted) flux densities for all the 24 [MATH]m detections ([MATH]Jy) in GOODS-North, which are dependent on their redshift and flux densities at shorter wavelengths, and then we injected these sources into the real noise maps from GOODS-Herschel imaging.', '1505.02516-4-82-3': 'Additional positional uncertainties, typically 0.5[MATH], were also applied to mimic real images.', '1505.02516-4-82-4': 'As shown in [CITATION], these simulated images have similar pixel value distributions to real images .', '1505.02516-4-82-5': 'For this test, t-phot was run using the list of all the 24 [MATH]m sources as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-4-82-6': 'The results of the test are plotted in Fig. [REF], and they show that even in this case t-phot can recover the input fluxes of the sources with great statistical accuracy (the mean of the relative deviation from the expected measurements, i.e. the black solid line in the plot, is consistent with zero down to the faintest fluxes).', '1505.02516-4-82-7': 'The results are equivalent to those obtained on the same datasets with other public software specifically developed for FIR photometry, such as FastPhot .', '1505.02516-4-83-0': '### Testing different fitting options: cell dimensions', '1505.02516-4-84-0': 'We then proceeded to check the performance of the different fitting techniques that can be used in t-phot.', '1505.02516-4-84-1': 'To this aim, we repeated the test on the 1.66" LRI with extended priors and SExtractor priors, described in Sect. [REF], with different fitting methods: using a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, and the cells-on-objects method, comparing the results with those from the fit of the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-4-84-2': 'The results of the tests are shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1505.02516-4-84-3': 'The first figure compares the distributions of the relative errors in measured flux for the runs performed on the [MATH] pixels grid, on the [MATH] pixels grid, and on the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-4-84-4': 'Clearly, using any regular grid of cells worsens the results, as anticipated in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-84-5': 'Enlarging the sizes of the cells improves the situation, but does not completely solve the problem.', '1505.02516-4-84-6': 'We note that the adoption of an arbitary grid of cells of any dimension in principle is prone to the introduction of potentially large errors, because (possibly bright) contaminating objects may contribute to the brightness measured in the cell, without being included as contributing sources.', '1505.02516-4-84-7': 'A mathematical sketch of this issue is explained in the Appendix B (see also Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-4-85-0': 'The second histogram compares the differences between the fit on the whole image and the fit with the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-4-85-1': 'Almost all the sources yield identical results with the two methods, within [MATH], which proves that the cells-on-objects method can be considered a reliable alternative to the single-fit method.', '1505.02516-4-85-2': 'Finally, Figure [REF] compares the HRI, the LRI, and the residual images obtained with the four methods and their distributions of relative errors, showing quantitatively the difference between the analyzed cases.', '1505.02516-4-86-0': 'In summary, it is clear that an incautious choice of cell size may lead to unsatisfactory and catastrophic outcomes.', '1505.02516-4-86-1': 'On the other hand, the advantages of using a single fit, and the equivalence of the results obtained with the single-fit and the cells-on-objects techniques, are evident.', '1505.02516-4-86-2': 'As already anticipated, one should bear in mind that the cells-on-objects method is only convenient if the overlapping of sources is not dramatic, as in ground-based optical observations.', '1505.02516-4-86-3': 'For IRAC and FIR images, on the other hand, the extreme blending of sources would cause the cells to be extended over regions approaching the size of the whole image, so that a single fit would be more convenient, although often still CPU-time consuming.', '1505.02516-4-87-0': '### Testing different fitting options: threshold fitting', '1505.02516-4-88-0': 'As described in Sect. [REF], t-phot includes the option of imposing a lower threshold on the normalized fluxes of templates so as to exclude low signal-to-noise pixels from the fit.', '1505.02516-4-88-1': 'Figure [REF] shows a comparison of the relative errors obtained with three different values of the THRESHOLD parameter: [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] (whic means that only pixels with normalized flux [MATH] in the convolved template will be used in the fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-4-88-2': 'The differences are quite small; however, a non-negligible global effect can be noticed: all sources tend to slightly decrease their measurement of flux when using a threshold limit.', '1505.02516-4-88-3': 'This brings faint sources (generally overestimated without using the threshold) closer to their true value, at the same time making bright sources too faint.', '1505.02516-4-88-4': 'This effect deserves careful investigation, which is beyond the scope of this study, and is postponed to a future paper.', '1505.02516-4-89-0': '### Colours', '1505.02516-4-90-0': 'A final test was run introducing realistic colours, i.e. assigning fluxes to the sources in the LRI consistent with a realistic SED (as output by GenCat, see Sect. [REF]), instead of imposing them to be equal to the HRI fluxes.', '1505.02516-4-90-1': 'We took IRAC-ch1 as a reference filter for the LRI, consistently with the chosen FWHM of 1.66".', '1505.02516-4-90-2': 'Furthermore, we allowed for variations in the bulge-to-disc ratios of the sources to take possible effects of colour gradients into account.', '1505.02516-4-90-3': 'We compared the results obtained with t-phot with the ones obtained with two alternative methods to determine the magnitudes of the sources in the LRI: namely, SExtractor dual mode aperture and MAGBEST photometry (with HRI as detection image).', '1505.02516-4-90-4': 'The differences between measured and input magnitudes in the LRI, m[MATH]m[MATH], are plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-90-5': 'Clearly, t-phot ensures the best results, with much less scatter in the measurements than both of the other two methods, and very few outliers.', '1505.02516-4-91-0': '## Performance on real datasets', '1505.02516-4-92-0': 'It is instructive to check how t-phot performs on real datasets, in addition to simulations.', '1505.02516-4-92-1': 'To this aim, we run two different tests.', '1505.02516-4-92-2': 'In the first, we compared the results of the tfit CANDELS analysis on the UDS CANDELS [MATH]-band to a t-phot run obtained using the cells-on-objects method and different parameters in the kernel registration stage.', '1505.02516-4-92-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the histograms of the differences in the photometric measurements between tfit and t-phot.', '1505.02516-4-92-4': 'Many sources end up with a substantially different flux, because of the two cited factors (a better kernel registration and the different fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-4-92-5': 'We note that the majority of the sources have fainter fluxes with respect to the previous measurements, precisely because of the effect described in Sect. [REF]: fitting using a grid of cells introduces systematic errors assigning light from sources that are not listed in a given cell, but overlap with it to the objects recognized as belonging to the cell.', '1505.02516-4-92-6': 'To further check this point, Fig. [REF] shows some examples of the difference between the residuals obtained with tfit (official catalogue) and those obtained with this t-phot run using cells-on-objects method, also introducing better registration parameters in the dance stage.', '1505.02516-4-92-7': 'Clearly, the results are substantially different, and many black spots (sources with spurious overestimated fluxes) have disappeared.', '1505.02516-4-92-8': 'Also, the registrations appear to be generally improved.', '1505.02516-4-93-0': 'The second test was run on FIR/sub-mm SCUBA-2 (450 [MATH]m, FWHM=7.5") and Herschel (500 [MATH]m, FWHM=36") images of the COSMOS-CANDELS field.', '1505.02516-4-93-1': 'In both cases, a list of 24+850 [MATH]m sources was used as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-4-93-2': 'Figure [REF] shows the original images in the top row, and the residuals in the bottom row.', '1505.02516-4-93-3': 'The model has removed all significant sources from the 450 [MATH]m map and the majority from the 500 [MATH]m map.', '1505.02516-4-93-4': 'Figure [REF] shows a comparison of the fluxes measured in the t-phot fits to the 450 [MATH]m and 500 [MATH]m maps at 24+850 [MATH]m prior positions, with the error bars combining the errors on both flux measurements.', '1505.02516-4-93-5': 'Agreement within the errors implies successful deconfusion of the Herschel image to reproduce the fluxes measured in the higher resolution SCUBA-2 image.', '1505.02516-4-93-6': 'This typology of analysis is very complex and we do not want to address here the subtleties of the process; we refer the reader to [CITATION] and [CITATION] for detailed discussions on the definition of a robust and reliable approach to measure FIR and sub-mm fluxes.', '1505.02516-4-93-7': 'These simple tests, however, clearly show that t-phot is successful at recovering the fluxes of target sources even in cases of extreme confusion and blending, within the accuracy limits of the method.', '1505.02516-4-94-0': '# Computational times', '1505.02516-4-95-0': 'As anticipated, t-phot ensures a large saving of computational time compared to similar codes like tfit and convphot when used with identical input parameters.', '1505.02516-4-95-1': 'For example, a complete, double-pass run on the whole CANDELS UDS field at once (I band; [MATH]35000 prior sources; LRI 30720[MATH]12800 = 400 million pixels; standard tfit parameters and grid fitting) is completed without memory swaps in about 2 hours (i.e. 1 hour per pass) on a standard workstation (Intel i5, 3.20 GHz, RAM 8 Gb).', '1505.02516-4-95-2': 'A complete, double-pass run on the GOODS-S Hawk-I W1 field ([MATH]17500 prior sources, LRI 10700[MATH]10600 = 100 millions pixels, identical parameters) is completed in [MATH]20 minutes.', '1505.02516-4-95-3': 'For comparison, tfit may require many hours ([MATH]24) to complete a single pass on this Hawk-I field on the same machine.', '1505.02516-4-95-4': 'It must be said that tfit by default produces cutouts and templates for all the sources in the HRI image; selecting the ones belonging to the LRI field and inputting an ad hoc catalogue would have reduced the computing time by a factor of two (i.e. 11 hours for a single pass).', '1505.02516-4-95-5': 'It was not possible to process large images like the UDS field in a single run, because of RAM memory failure.', '1505.02516-4-95-6': 'convphot timings and memory problems are similar to those of tfit, although they have different causes (being written in C, computation is generally faster, but it employs a slower convolution method and the solution of the linear system in performed as a single fit instead of grid fitting like in tfit, being much more time consuming).', '1505.02516-4-96-0': 'Adopting the cells-on-objects (Sect. [REF]) method increases the computational time with respect to the tfit standard cell approach, but it is still far more convenient than the convphot standard single-fit approach, and gives nearly identical results.', '1505.02516-4-97-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the computational times for extended tests on a set of simulated images having different detection depths (and therefore number of sources) and dimensions, with LRI FWHM=1.66".', '1505.02516-4-97-1': 'The simulations were run on the same machine described above, using three different methods: whole image fitting, cells-on-objects, and [MATH] pixels cells fitting.', '1505.02516-4-98-0': '# Summary and conclusions', '1505.02516-4-99-0': 'We have presented t-phot, a new software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-4-99-1': 't-phot is a robust and versatile tool, aimed at the photometric analysis of deep extragalactic fields at different wavelengths and spatial resolution, deconfusing blended sources in low-resolution images.', '1505.02516-4-100-0': 't-phot uses priors obtained from a high-resolution detection image to obtain normalized templates at the lower resolution of a measurement image, and minimizes a [MATH] problem to retrieve the multiplicative factor relative to each source, which is the searched quantity, i.e. the flux in the LRI.', '1505.02516-4-100-1': 'The priors can be either real cutouts from the HRI, or a list of positions to be fitted as PSF-shaped sources, or analytical 2-D models, or a mix of the three types.', '1505.02516-4-100-2': 'Different options for the fitting stage are given, including a cells-on-objects method, which is computationally efficient while yielding accurate results for relatively small FWHMs.', '1505.02516-4-100-3': 't-phot ensures a large saving of computational time as well as increased robustness with respect to similar public codes like its direct predecessors tfit and convphot.', '1505.02516-4-100-4': 'With an appropriate choice of the parameter settings, greater accuracy is also achieved.', '1505.02516-4-101-0': 'As a final remark, it should be pointed out that the analysis presented in this work deals with idealized situations, namely simulations or comparisons with the performances of other codes on real datasets.', '1505.02516-4-101-1': 'There are a number of subtle issues regarding complex aspects of the PSF-matching techinque, which become of crucial importance when working on real data.', '1505.02516-4-101-2': 'A simple foretaste of such complexity can be obtained by considering the problem described in Sect. [REF], i.e. the correct amplitude to be assigned to the segmented area of a source.', '1505.02516-4-101-3': 'Work on this is ongoing, and the full discussion will be presented in a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-4-102-0': 'As we have shown, t-phot is an efficient tool for the photometric measurements of images on a very broad range of wavelengths, from UV to sub-mm, and is currently being routinely used by the Astrodeep community to analyse data from different surveys (e.g. CANDELS, Frontier Fields, AEGIS).', '1505.02516-4-102-1': 'Its main advantages with respect to similar codes like tfit or convphot can be summarized as follows:', '1505.02516-4-103-0': 'Future applications might include the processing of EUCLID and CCAT data.', '1505.02516-4-103-1': 'New releases of the software package, including further improvements and additional options, are planned for the near future.', '1505.02516-4-104-0': 'The authors acknowledge the contribution of the FP7 SPACE project “ASTRODEEP” (Ref.No: 312725), supported by the European Commission.', '1505.02516-4-104-1': 'JSD acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of an Advanced Grant.', '1505.02516-4-104-2': 'FB acknowledges support by FCT via the postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/103958/2014 and also the funding from the programme UID/FIS/04434/2013.', '1505.02516-4-104-3': 'RJM acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of a Consolidator Grant (PI McLure).', '1505.02516-4-104-4': 'The authors would like to thank Kuang-Han Huang, Mimi Song, Alice Mortlock and Michal Michalowski, for constructive help and suggestions, and the anonymous referee for useful advice.', '1505.02516-4-105-0': '# The parameter file', '1505.02516-4-106-0': 'Below is a template of the standard first-pass parameter file to be given as input to t-phot (similar templates for both the first and the second pass are included in the dowloadable tarball).', '1505.02516-4-106-1': 'It is very similar to the original tfit parameter file, and part of the description is directly inherited from it.', '1505.02516-4-107-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-4-108-0': 'Standard optical/NIR double-pass runs can be achieved by setting order standard and order standard2.', '1505.02516-4-109-0': 'A standard first-pass run includes the stages priors, convolve, fit, diags, dance, plotdance.', '1505.02516-4-109-1': 'The stage priors allows for an automatic re-construction of the pipeline depending on the input data given in the following sections (see the documentation included in the tarball).', '1505.02516-4-109-2': 'A standard second-pass run includes the stages convolve, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-4-109-3': 'The archive stage creates a directory after the name of the LRI, with some specifications, and archives the products of both runs.', '1505.02516-4-110-0': 'Double-pass runs for FIR/sub-mm can be achieved by setting order positions, fit, diags, dance, plotdance and order positions, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-4-111-0': '## Priors', '1505.02516-4-112-0': 'Each prior must have a unique identification number (ID) to avoid errors.', '1505.02516-4-112-1': 'The user must be careful to give the correct information in this paramfile.', '1505.02516-4-112-2': 'Select the priors to be used by switching on/off the relative keywords: usereal, usemodels, useunresolved.', '1505.02516-4-113-0': '## Convolution', '1505.02516-4-114-0': '## Fitting stage', '1505.02516-4-115-0': 'cellmask: if true, it uses a mask to exclude pixels from the fit that do not contain a value of at least maskfloor in at least one template.', '1505.02516-4-115-1': 'writecovar: if true, it writes the covariance information out to the tphotcovar file.', '1505.02516-4-115-2': 'threshold: forces the use of a threshold on the flux, so that only the central parts of the objects are used in the fitting process.', '1505.02516-4-115-3': 'linsyssolver: the chosen solution method, i.e. LU, Cholesky, or Iterative Biconjugate Gradient (IBG).', '1505.02516-4-115-4': 'LU is default.', '1505.02516-4-115-5': 'clip: tells whether to loop on the sources excluding negative solutions.', '1505.02516-4-116-0': '## Diagnostic stages', '1505.02516-4-117-0': '# The cells-on-objects algorithm', '1505.02516-4-118-0': 'Experiments on simulated images (see Sect. [REF]) clearly show that fitting small regions (cells) of the LRI, as done by default in tfit, may potentially lead to large errors.', '1505.02516-4-118-1': 'This is particularly true if the dimensions of the cells are chosen to be smaller than an ideal size, which changes from case to case, but which should always be greater than [MATH]10 times the FWHM.', '1505.02516-4-118-2': 'However, it can be mathematically shown that the "arbitrary cells" method intrinsically causes the introduction of errors in the fit, as soon as a source is excluded from the cell (e.g. because its centre is outside the cell), but contributes with some flux in some of its pixels.', '1505.02516-4-119-0': 'Consider a cell containing [MATH] sources.', '1505.02516-4-119-1': 'For simplicity, assume that each source [MATH] only overlaps with the two neighbours [MATH] and [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-119-2': 'Furthermore, assume that a [MATH]-th source is contaminating the [MATH]-th source, but is excluded from the cell for some reason, for example (as in tfit) because the centroid of the source lies outside the cell.', '1505.02516-4-120-0': 'The linear system for this cell [MATH] will consist of a matrix [MATH] with only the elements on the diagonal and those with a [MATH] offset as non-zero elements (a symmetric band matrix), and the vector [MATH] will contain the products of templates of each source with the real flux in the LRI (as a summation on all pixels), as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-4-120-1': 'Given the above assumptions, this means that the [MATH]-th term of [MATH] will be higher than it should be (because it is contaminated by the external source).', '1505.02516-4-121-0': 'Using the Cramer rule for the solution of squared linear systems, the flux for the object [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] with [MATH] a square matrix in which the [MATH]-th columns is substituted with the vector [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-121-1': 'If for example [MATH], for [MATH] this gives [EQUATION] and since [MATH] is larger than it should be, [MATH] will be overestimated (slightly, if [MATH] is not large, i.e. if sources 1 and 2 do not strongly overlap).', '1505.02516-4-121-2': 'On the other hand, for [MATH] we have [EQUATION] and in this case again [MATH] might be small, but the first term given by [MATH] will certainly be large, resulting in a catastrophic overestimation of [MATH].', '1505.02516-4-121-3': 'The value of [MATH] will of course be underestimated, as it would be easy to show.', '1505.02516-4-122-0': 'From this simple test case it is clear that arbitrarily dividing the LRI into regions will always introduce errors (potentially non-negligible) in the fitting procedure, unless some method for removing dangerous contaminating sources is devised.', '1505.02516-4-123-0': 'The cells-on-objects algorithm aims at ensuring the accuracy of the flux estimate while at the same time drastically decreasing computational times and memory requirements.', '1505.02516-4-123-1': 'As explained in Sect. [REF], when this method is adopted a cell is centred around each detected source, and enlarged to include all its "potential" contaminant neighbours, and the contaminant of the contaminants, and so on.', '1505.02516-4-123-2': 'To avoid an infinite loop, the process of inclusion is interrupted when one of the following criteria is satisfied:', '1505.02516-4-124-0': 'Experiments on simulations have shown that good results are obtained with [MATH] and [MATH], and these values are used as constants in the source code.', '1505.02516-4-125-0': 'We note that if a cell is enlarged to more than 75% of the dimensions of the total LRI, t-phot automatically switches to the single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-4-126-0': '# Suggested best options', '1505.02516-4-127-0': 'Of course, different problems require different approaches in order to obtain their best possible solution, and users are encouraged to try different options and settings.', '1505.02516-4-127-1': 'However, some indicative guidelines for optimizing a run with t-phot can be summarized as follows.'}
{'1505.02516-5-0-0': 'T-PHOT: A new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry', '1505.02516-5-1-0': 't-phot', '1505.02516-5-2-0': 'The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis.', '1505.02516-5-2-1': 'In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of the sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data.', '1505.02516-5-2-2': 'In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low-resolution images.', '1505.02516-5-2-3': 'We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-5-2-4': 't-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low-resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.', '1505.02516-5-2-5': 't-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot).', '1505.02516-5-2-6': 't-phot gathers data from a high-resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field.', '1505.02516-5-2-7': 't-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors, namely i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high-resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .', '1505.02516-5-2-8': 'fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful for example for far infrared wavelength domains.', '1505.02516-5-2-9': 'By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).', '1505.02516-5-2-10': 't-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile.', '1505.02516-5-2-11': 'This makes it an excellent choice for the analysis of large datasets.', '1505.02516-5-2-12': 'When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (although in a much shorter time); in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.', '1505.02516-5-2-13': 't-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to far-infrared image photometry.', '1505.02516-5-2-14': 'Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.', '1505.02516-5-3-0': '# Introduction', '1505.02516-5-4-0': 'Combining observational data from the same regions of the sky in different wavelength domains has become common practice in the past few years .', '1505.02516-5-4-1': 'However, the use of both space-based and ground-based imaging instruments, with different sensitivities, pixel scales, angular resolutions, and survey depths, raises a number of challenging difficulties in the data analysis process.', '1505.02516-5-5-0': 'In this context, it is of particular interest to obtain detailed photometric measurements for high-redshift galaxies in the near-infrared (NIR; corresponding to rest-frame optical) and far-infrared (FIR) domains.', '1505.02516-5-5-1': 'In particular, great attention must be paid to bandpasses containing spectral features which allow a thorough investigation of the sources, disentangling degenerate observational features, and obtaining crucial clues to the understanding of the galactic physics .', '1505.02516-5-5-2': 'At [MATH], for example, photometry longward of [MATH]-band is needed to locate and measure the size of the Balmer break.', '1505.02516-5-5-3': 'A passive galaxy at [MATH] (with the Balmer break lying longward of the [MATH]-band) can have [MATH]-band and [MATH]m fluxes compatible, for example, with a star forming, dusty galaxy at [MATH], and [MATH]band photometry is necessary in order to disentangle the degeneracy.', '1505.02516-5-5-4': 'However, the limited resolution of the ground based [MATH]band observations can impose severe limits on the reliability of traditional aperture or even Point Spread Function (PSF) fitting photometry.', '1505.02516-5-5-5': 'In addition, IRAC photometry is of crucial importance so that reliable photometric redshifts of red and high-[MATH] sources can be obtained, and robust stellar mass estimates can be derived.', '1505.02516-5-6-0': 'To address this, a high-resolution image (HRI), for example obtained from the Hubble Space Telescope in the optical domain, can be used to retrieve detailed information on the positions and morphologies of the sources in a given region of the sky.', '1505.02516-5-6-1': 'Such information can be subsequently used to perform the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image (LRI), using the HRI data as priors.', '1505.02516-5-6-2': 'However, simply performing aperture photometry on the LRI at the positions measured in the HRI can be dramatically affected by neighbour contamination for reasonably sized apertures.', '1505.02516-5-6-3': 'On the other hand, performing source extraction on both images and matching the resulting catalogues is compromised by the inability to deblend neighbouring objects, and may introduce significant inaccuracies in the cross-correlation process.', '1505.02516-5-6-4': 'PSF-matching techniques that degrade high-resolution data to match the low-resolution data discard much of the valuable information obtained in the HRI, reducing all images to the "lowest common denominator" of angular resolution.', '1505.02516-5-6-5': 'Moreover, crowded-field, PSF-fitting photometry packages such as daophot perform well if the sources in the LRI are unresolved, but are unsuitable for analysis of even marginally resolved images of extragalactic sources.', '1505.02516-5-7-0': 'A more viable approach consists of taking advantage of the morphological information given by the HRI, in order to obtain high-resolution cutouts or models of the sources.', '1505.02516-5-7-1': 'These priors can then be degraded to the resolution of the LRI using a suitable convolution kernel, constructed by matching the PSFs of the HRI and of the LRI.', '1505.02516-5-7-2': 'Such low-resolution templates, normalized to unit flux, can then be placed at the positions given by the HRI detections, and the multiplicative factor that must be assigned to each model to match the measured flux in each pixel of the LRI will give the measured flux of that source.', '1505.02516-5-7-3': 'Such an approach, although relying on some demanding assumptions as described in the following sections, has proven to be efficient.', '1505.02516-5-7-4': 'It has been implemented in such public codes as tfit and convphot , and has already been utilized successfully in previous studies .', '1505.02516-5-8-0': 'In this paper we describe a new software package, t-phot, developed at INAF-OAR as part of the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-5-8-1': 'The t-phot software can be considered a new, largely improved version of tfit, supplemented with many of the features of convphot.', '1505.02516-5-8-2': 'Moreover, it adds many important new options, including the possibility of adopting different types of priors (namely real images, analytical models, or point-sources).', '1505.02516-5-8-3': 'In particular, it is possible to use t-phot on FIR and sub-millimetric (sub-mm) datasets, as a competitive alternative to the existing dedicated software such as FastPhot and DesPhot .', '1505.02516-5-8-4': 'This makes t-phot a versatile tool, suitable for the photometric analysis of a very broad range of wavelengths from UV to sub-mm.', '1505.02516-5-9-0': 't-phot is a robust and easy-to-handle code, with a precise structural architecture (a Python envelope calling C/C++ core codes) in which different routines are encapsulated, implementing various numerical/conceptual methods, to be chosen by simple switches in a parameter file.', '1505.02516-5-9-1': 'While a standard default "best choice" mode is provided and suggested, the user is allowed to select a preferred setting.', '1505.02516-5-10-0': 'One of the main advantages of t-phot is a significant saving of computational time with respect to both tfit and convphot (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-5-10-1': 'This has been achieved with the use of fast C modules and an efficient structural arrangement of the code.', '1505.02516-5-10-2': 'In addition to this, we demonstrate how different choices of parameters influence the performace, and can be optimized to significantly improve the final results with respect to tfit, for example.', '1505.02516-5-11-0': 'The plan of the paper is as follows.', '1505.02516-5-11-1': 'Sect. [REF] provides a general introduction to the code, its mode of operation and its algorithms.', '1505.02516-5-11-2': 'In Section [REF] we discuss some assumptions, limitations and caveats of the method.', '1505.02516-5-11-3': 'Section [REF] presents a comprehensive set of tests, based on simulated and real datasets, to assess the performance of the code and to fully illustrate its capabilities and limitations.', '1505.02516-5-11-4': 'Section [REF] briefly discusses the computational performances of t-phot and provides some reference computational timescales.', '1505.02516-5-11-5': 'Finally, in Section [REF] the key features of t-phot are summarized, and outstanding issues and potential complications are briefly discussed.', '1505.02516-5-12-0': '# General description of the code', '1505.02516-5-13-0': 'As described above, t-phot uses spatial and morphological information gathered from a HRI to measure the fluxes in a LRI.', '1505.02516-5-13-1': 'To this end, a linear system is built and solved via matricial computing, minimizing the [MATH] (in which the numerically determined fluxes for each detected source are compared to the measured fluxes in the LRI, summing the contributions of all pixels).', '1505.02516-5-13-2': 'Moreover, the code produces a number of diagnostic outputs and allows for an iterative re-calibration of the results.', '1505.02516-5-13-3': 'Figure [REF] shows a schematic depiction of the basic PSF-matched fitting algorithm used in the code.', '1505.02516-5-14-0': 'As HRI priors t-phot can use i) real cutouts of sources from the HRI, ii) models of sources obtained with Galfit or similar codes, iii) a list of coordinates where PSF-shaped sources will be placed, or a combination of these three types of priors.', '1505.02516-5-15-0': 'For a detailed technical description of the mode of operation of the code, we refer the reader to the Appendix and to the documentation included in the downloadable tarball.', '1505.02516-5-15-1': 'Here, we will briefly describe its main features.', '1505.02516-5-16-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-5-17-0': 'The pipeline followed by t-phot is outlined in the flowchart given in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-17-1': 'The following paragraphs give a short description of the pipeline.', '1505.02516-5-18-0': '### Input', '1505.02516-5-19-0': 'The input files needed by t-phot vary depending on the type(s) of priors used.', '1505.02516-5-20-0': 'If true high-resolution priors are used, e.g. for optical/NIR ground-based or IRAC measurements using Hubble Space Telescope (HST) cutouts, t-phot needs', '1505.02516-5-21-0': 'If analytical models are used as priors (e.g. Galfit models), t-phot needs', '1505.02516-5-22-0': 'If models have more than one component, one separate stamp per component and catalogues for each component are needed (e.g. one catalogue for bulges and one catalogue for disks).', '1505.02516-5-23-0': 'If unresolved, point-like priors are used, t-phot needs', '1505.02516-5-24-0': 'In this case, a potential limitation to the reliability of the method is given by the fact that the prior density usually needs to be optimized with respect to FIR/sub-mm maps, as discussed in [CITATION] and [CITATION] .', '1505.02516-5-24-1': 'The optimal number of priors turns out to be around 50-75% of the numbers of beams in the map.', '1505.02516-5-24-2': 'The main problem is identifying which of the many potential priors from, for example, an HST catalogue one should use.', '1505.02516-5-24-3': 'This is a very complex issue and we do not discuss it in this paper.', '1505.02516-5-25-0': 'If mixed priors are used, t-phot obviously needs the input files corresponding to each of the different types of priors in use.', '1505.02516-5-26-0': 'Finally, in all cases t-phot needs', '1505.02516-5-27-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the input requirements for the different choices of priors just described.', '1505.02516-5-28-0': 'All the input images must have the following keywords in their headers: CRPIXn, CRVALn, CDnn, CTYPEn (n=1,2).', '1505.02516-5-29-0': '### Background subtraction', '1505.02516-5-30-0': 'As already mentioned, the LRI must be background subtracted before being fed to t-phot.', '1505.02516-5-30-1': 'This is of particular interest when dealing with FIR/sub-mm images, where the typical standard is to use zero-mean.', '1505.02516-5-30-2': 'To estimate the background level in optical/NIR images, one simple possibility is to take advantage of the option to fit point-like sources to measure the flux for a list of positions chosen to fall within void regions.', '1505.02516-5-30-3': 'The issue is more problematic in such confusion-limited FIR images where there are no empty sky regions.', '1505.02516-5-30-4': 'In such cases, it is important to separate the fitted sources (those listed in the prior catalogue) from the background sources, which contribute to a flat background level behind the sources of interest.', '1505.02516-5-30-5': 'The priors should be chosen so that these two populations are uncorrelated.', '1505.02516-5-30-6': 'The average contribution of the faint background source population can then be estimated for example by i) injecting fake sources into the map and measuring the average offset (output-input) flux, or ii) measuring the modal value in the residual image after a first pass through t-phot .', '1505.02516-5-31-0': '### Stages', '1505.02516-5-32-0': 't-phot goes through "stages", each of which performs a well-defined task.', '1505.02516-5-32-1': 'The best results are obtained by performing two runs ("pass 1" and "pass 2"), the second using locally registered kernels produced during the first.', '1505.02516-5-32-2': 'The possible stages are the following:', '1505.02516-5-33-0': 'The exact pipeline followed by the code is specified by a keyword in the input parameter file.', '1505.02516-5-33-1': 'See also Appendix A for a more detailed description of the whole procedure.', '1505.02516-5-34-0': '### Solution of the linear system', '1505.02516-5-35-0': 'The search for the LRI fluxes of the objects detected in the HRI is performed by creating a linear system [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [MATH] contains the pixel values of the fluxes in the LRI, [MATH] is the normalized flux of the template for the [MATH]-th objects in the (region of the) LRI being fitted, and [MATH] is the multiplicative scaling factor for each object.', '1505.02516-5-35-1': 'In physical terms, [MATH] represents the flux of each object in the LRI (i.e. it is the unknown to be determined).', '1505.02516-5-36-0': 'Once the normalized templates for each object in the LRI (or region of interest within the LRI) have been generated during the convolve stage, the best fit to their fluxes can be simultaneously derived by minimizing a [MATH] statistic, [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] are the pixel indexes, [EQUATION] and [MATH] is the value of the RMS map at the [MATH] pixel position.', '1505.02516-5-37-0': 'The output quantities are the best-fit solutions of the minimization procedure, i.e. the [MATH] parameters and their relative errors.', '1505.02516-5-37-1': 'They can be obtained by resolving the linear system [EQUATION] for [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-38-0': 'In practice, the linear system can be rearranged into a matrix equation, [EQUATION] where the matrix [MATH] contains the coefficients [MATH], [MATH] is a vector containing the fluxes to be determined, and [MATH] is a vector given by [MATH] terms.', '1505.02516-5-38-1': 'The matrix equation is solved via one of three possible methods as described in the next subsection.', '1505.02516-5-39-0': '### Fitting options', '1505.02516-5-40-0': 't-phot allows for some different options to perform the fit:', '1505.02516-5-41-0': 'The fit can be performed i) on the entire LRI as a whole, producing a single matrix containing all the sources (this is the method adopted in convphot); ii) subdividing the LRI into an arbitrary grid of (overlapping) small cells, perfoming the fit in each of such cells separately, and then choosing the best fit for each source, using some convenient criteria to select it (because sources will be fitted more than once if the cells overlap; this is the method adopted in tfit); iii) ordering objects by decreasing flux, building a cell around each source including all its potential contaminants, solving the problem in that cell and assigning to the source the obtained flux (cells-on-objects method; see the Appendix for more details).', '1505.02516-5-42-0': 'While the first method is the safest and more accurate because it does not introduce any bias or arbitrary modifications, it may often be unfeasible to process at once large or very crowded images.', '1505.02516-5-42-1': 'Potentially large computational time saving is possible using the cells-on-objects method, depending on the level of blending/confusion in the LRI; if it is very high, most sources will overlap and the cells will end up being very large.', '1505.02516-5-42-2': 'This ultimately results in repeating many times the fit on regions with dimensions comparable to the whole image (a check is implemented in the code, to automatically change the method from cells-on-objects to single fit if this is the case).', '1505.02516-5-42-3': 'If the confusion is not dramatic, a saving in computational time up to two orders of magnitude can be achieved.', '1505.02516-5-42-4': 'The results obtained using the cells-on-objects method prove to be virtually identical to those obtained with a single fit on the whole image (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-5-42-5': 'On the other hand, using the arbitrary cells method is normally the fastest option, but can introduce potentially large errors to the flux estimates owing to wrong assignments of peripheral flux from sources located outside a given cell to sources within the cell (again, see Sect. [REF] and the Appendix B).', '1505.02516-5-43-0': '### Post-fitting stages: kernel registration', '1505.02516-5-44-0': 'After the fitting procedure is completed, t-phot will produce the final output catalogues and diagnostic images (see Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-5-44-1': 'Among these, a model image is obtained by adding all the templates, scaled to their correct total flux after fitting, in the positions of the sources.', '1505.02516-5-44-2': 'This image will subsequently be used if a second pass is planned; during a stage named dance, a list of positional shifts is computed, and a set of shifted kernels are generated and stored.', '1505.02516-5-44-3': 'The dance stage consists of three conceptual steps:', '1505.02516-5-45-0': '### Second pass', '1505.02516-5-46-0': 'The registered kernels can subsequently be used in the second pass run to obtain more astrometrically precise results.', '1505.02516-5-46-1': 't-phot automatically deals with them provided the correct keyword is given in the parameter file.', '1505.02516-5-46-2': 'If unresolved priors are used, the list of shifts generated in the dance stage will be used by the positions routine during the second pass to produce correctly shifted PSFs and generate new templates.', '1505.02516-5-47-0': '## Error budget', '1505.02516-5-48-0': 'During the fitting stage, the covariance matrix is constructed.', '1505.02516-5-48-1': 'Errors for each source are assigned as the square root of the diagonal element of the covariance matrix relative to that source.', '1505.02516-5-48-2': 'It must be pointed out that using any cell method for the fitting rather than the single fitting option will affect this uncertainty budget, since a different matrix will be constructed and resolved in each cell.', '1505.02516-5-49-0': 'It is important to stress that this covariance error budget is a statistical uncertainty, relative to the RMS fluctuations in the measurement image, and is not related to any possible systematic error.', '1505.02516-5-49-1': 'The latter can instead be estimated by flagging potentially problematic sources, to be identified separately from the fitting procedure.', '1505.02516-5-49-2': 'There can be different possible causes for systematic offsets of the measured flux with respect to the true flux of a source.', '1505.02516-5-49-3': 't-phot assigns the following flags:', '1505.02516-5-50-0': '## Description of the output', '1505.02516-5-51-0': 't-phot output files are designed to be very similar in format to those produced by tfit.', '1505.02516-5-51-1': 'They provide', '1505.02516-5-52-0': 'two catalogues reporting statistics for the fitting cells and the covariance matrices (they are described in the documentation); the model .f', '1505.02516-5-52-1': 'fits image, obtained as a collage of the templates, as already described; a diagnostic residual .f', '1505.02516-5-52-2': 'fits image, obtained by subtracting the model image from the LRI; a subdirectory containing all the low-resolution model templates; a subdirectory containing the covariance matrices in graphic (.f', '1505.02516-5-52-3': 'fits) format; a few ancillary files relating to the shifts of the kernel for the second pass and a subdirectory containing the shifted kernels.', '1505.02516-5-53-0': 'All fluxes and errors are output in units consistent with the input images.', '1505.02516-5-54-0': 'Figures [REF], [REF] and [REF] show three examples of t-phot applications on simulated and real data, using the three different options for priors.', '1505.02516-5-55-0': '# Assumptions and limitations', '1505.02516-5-56-0': 'The PSF-matching algorithms implemented in t-phot and described in the previous section are prone to some assumptions and limitations.', '1505.02516-5-56-1': 'In particular, the following issues must be pointed out.', '1505.02516-5-57-0': 'i) The accuracy of the results strongly depends on the reliability of the determined PSFs (and consequently of the convolution kernel).', '1505.02516-5-57-1': 'An error of a few percentage points in the central slope of the PSF light profile might lead to non-negligible systematical deviations in the measured fluxes.', '1505.02516-5-57-2': 'However, since the fitting algorithm minimizes the residuals on the basis of a summation over pixels, an incorrect PSF profile will lead to characteristic positive and negative ring-shaped patterns in the residuals (see Fig. [REF]), and to some extent the summation over pixels will compensate the global flux determination.', '1505.02516-5-58-0': 'ii) When dealing with extended priors, it is assumed that the instrinsic morphology of the objects does not change with the wavelength.', '1505.02516-5-58-1': 'Of course, this is usually not the case.', '1505.02516-5-58-2': 'The issue is less of a problem when dealing with FIR images, in which the morphological features of the priors are unresolved by the low-resolution PSF.', '1505.02516-5-58-3': 'On the other hand, in the optical and NIR domains this problem may be solved by the use of multicomponent analytical models as priors.', '1505.02516-5-58-4': 'In this approach, each component should be fitted independently, thus allowing the ratio between bulge and disk components to vary between the HRI and LRI.', '1505.02516-5-58-5': 'A clear drawback of this approach is that any failure of the fit due to irregular or difficult morphological features (spiral arms, blobs, asymmetries, etc.) would be propagated into the LRI solution.', '1505.02516-5-58-6': 'This functionality is already implemented in t-phot and detailed testing is ongoing.', '1505.02516-5-59-0': 'iii) As explained in Sect. [REF], t-phot flags priors that are likely to be flawed: sources too close to the borders of the image, saturated objects, and most notably blended priors.', '1505.02516-5-59-1': 'The assumption that all priors are well separated from one another is crucial, and the method fails when this requirement is not accomplished.', '1505.02516-5-59-2': 'Again, this is crucial only when dealing with real priors, while analytical models and unresolved priors are not affected by this limitation.', '1505.02516-5-60-0': 'iv) As anticipated in Sect. [REF], FIR images can suffer from an "overfitting" problem, due to the presence of too many priors in each LRI beam if the HRI is deeper than the LRI.', '1505.02516-5-60-1': 'In this case, a selection of the priors based on some additional criteria (e.g. flux predition from SED fitting) might be necessary to avoid catastrophic outcomes .', '1505.02516-5-61-0': '# Validation', '1505.02516-5-62-0': 'To assess the performance of t-phot we set up an extensive set of simulations, aimed at various different and complementary goals.', '1505.02516-5-63-0': 'We used SkyMaker , a public software tool, to build synthetic .', '1505.02516-5-63-1': 'fits images.', '1505.02516-5-63-2': 'The code ensures direct control on all the observational parameters (the magnitude and positions of the objects, their morphology, the zero point magnitude, the noise level, and the PSF).', '1505.02516-5-63-3': 'Model galaxies were built by summing a de Vaucouleurs and an exponential light profile in order to best mimic a realistic distribution of galaxy morphologies.', '1505.02516-5-63-4': 'These models were generated using a variety of bulge-to-total light ratios, component sizes, and projection angles.', '1505.02516-5-64-0': 'All tests were run using ideal (i.e. synthetic and symmetric) PSFs and kernels.', '1505.02516-5-65-0': 'Moreover, we also performed tests on real datasets taken from the CANDELS survey (in these cases using real PSFs).', '1505.02516-5-66-0': 'Some of the tests were performed using both t-phot and tfit, to cross-check the results, ensuring the perfect equivalency of the results given by the two codes when used with the same parameter sets, and showing how appropriate settings of the t-phot parameters can ensure remarkable improvements.', '1505.02516-5-67-0': 'For simplicity, here we only show the results from a restricted selection of the test dataset, which are representative of the performance of t-phot in standard situations.', '1505.02516-5-67-1': 'The results of the other simulations resemble overall the ones we present, and are omitted for the sake of conciseness.', '1505.02516-5-68-0': '## Code performance and reliability on simulated images', '1505.02516-5-69-0': '### Basic tests', '1505.02516-5-70-0': 'As a first test, we checked the performance of the basic method by measuring the flux of two PSF-shaped synthetic sources, with varying separation and signal-to-noise ratios.', '1505.02516-5-70-1': 'One hundred realizations with different noise maps of each parameter set were prepared, and the averages on the measured fluxes were computed.', '1505.02516-5-70-2': 'The aims of this test were twofold: on the one hand, to check the precision to which the fitting method can retrieve true fluxes in the simplest possible case - two sources with ideal PSF shape; on the other hand, to check the reliability of the nominal error budget given by the covariance matrix, comparing it to the real RMS of the 100 measurements.', '1505.02516-5-70-3': 'Figure [REF] shows three examples of the set-up and the results of this test.', '1505.02516-5-70-4': 'Clearly, in both aspects the results are reassuring: the average of the 100 measurements (red diamonds) is always in very good agreement with the true value, with offset in relative error always well under the [MATH] limit ([MATH] is the value of the signal-to-noise ratio in the central pixel of the source, corresponding to roughly one third of the total [MATH]); and the nominal error (red crosses) given by the covariance matrix is always in good agreement with the RMS of the 100 measurements (red circles).', '1505.02516-5-71-0': 'When dealing with extended objects rather than with point-like sources, one must consider the additional problem that the entire profile of the source cannot be measured exactly because the segmentation is limited by the lowest signal-to-noise isophote.', '1505.02516-5-71-1': 'The extension of the segmentation therefore plays a crucial role and defining it correctly is a very subtle problem.', '1505.02516-5-71-2': 'Simply taking the isophotal area as reported by SExtractor as ISOAREA often underestimates the real extension of the objects.', '1505.02516-5-71-3': 'Accordingly, the segmentation of the sources should somehow be enlarged to include the faint wings of sources.', '1505.02516-5-71-4': 'To this aim, specific software called Dilate was developed at OAR and used in the CANDELS pipeline for the photometric analysis of GOODS-S and UDS IRAC data .', '1505.02516-5-71-5': 'Dilate enlarges the segmentation by a given factor, depending on the original area; it has proven to be reasonably robust in minimizing the effects of underestimated segmentated areas.', '1505.02516-5-72-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the effects of artificially varying the dimensions of the segmentation relative to two bright, extended and isolated sources in a simulated HRI, on the flux measured for that source in a companion simulated LRI.', '1505.02516-5-72-1': 'It is important to note how enlarging the segmented area normally results in larger measured fluxes, because more and more light from the faint wings of the source are included in the fit.', '1505.02516-5-72-2': 'However, beyond a certain limit the measurements begin to lose accuracy owing to the inclusion of noisy, too low signal-to-noise regions (which may cause a lower flux measurement).', '1505.02516-5-73-0': 'In principle, using extended analytical models rather than real high-resolution cutouts should cure this problem more efficiently, because models have extended wings that are not signal-to-noise limited.', '1505.02516-5-73-1': 'Tests are ongoing to check the performance of this approach, and will be presented in a forthcoming paper.', '1505.02516-5-74-0': '### Tests on realistic simulations', '1505.02516-5-75-0': 'The next tests were aimed at investigating less idealized situations, and have been designed to provide a robust analysis of the performance of the code on realistic datasets.', '1505.02516-5-75-1': 'We used the code GenCat to produce mock catalogues of synthetic extragalactic sources, with reasonable morphological features and flux distribution.', '1505.02516-5-75-2': 'Then, a set of images were produced using such catalogues as an input for SkyMaker.', '1505.02516-5-75-3': 'A "detection" HRI mimicking an HST H band observation (FWHM = [MATH]) was generated from the GenCat catalogue using output parameters to characterize the objects\' extended properties.', '1505.02516-5-75-4': 'Then a set of measure LRIs were produced: the first was populated with PSF-shaped sources, having FWHM = 1.66" (the typical IRAC-ch1/ch2 resolution, a key application for t-phot), while other LRIs were created from the input catalogue, mimicking different ground-based or IRAC FWHMs.', '1505.02516-5-75-5': 'Finally, we created another HRI catalogue removing all of the overlapping sources.', '1505.02516-5-75-6': 'This "non-overlapping" catalogue was used to create parallel detection and measurement images in order to obtain insight into the complications given by the presence of overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-5-75-7': 'In all these images, the limiting magnitude was set equal to the assigned zero point, so that the limiting flux at 1[MATH] is 1.', '1505.02516-5-75-8': 'In addition, the fits were always performed on the LRI as a whole, if not otherwise specified.', '1505.02516-5-76-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the results relative to the first test, i.e. the fit on the image containing non-overlapping, PSF-shaped sources, with a "perfect" detection (i.e. the priors catalogue contains all sources above the detection limit), obtained with a single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-5-76-1': 'The figure shows the relative error in the measured flux of the sources, [MATH], versus the log of the real input flux [MATH]; the different symbols refer to the flag assigned to each object, while the colour is a proxy for the covariance index.', '1505.02516-5-77-0': 'In this case, the only source of uncertainty in the measurement is given by the noise fluctuations, which clearly become dominant at the faint end of the distribution.', '1505.02516-5-77-1': 'Looking at the error bars of the sources, which are given by the nominal error assigned by t-phot from the covariance matrix, one can see that almost all sources have measured flux within [MATH] from their true flux, with only strongly covariant sources (covariance index [MATH] 1, greener colours) having [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-77-2': 'The only noticeable exceptions are sources that have been flagged as potentially unreliable, as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-77-3': 'We also note how the average [MATH] (solid black line) is consistent with zero down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-78-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the analysis of a case study in which the fluxes of a clump of highly covariant objects are measured with poor accuracy, and some of the nominal uncertainties are underestimated: a very bright source (ID 3386, m[MATH]) shows a relative difference [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-78-1': 'To cast light on the reason for such a discrepancy, the region surrounding the object was replicated 100 times with different noise realizations, and the results were analysed and compared.', '1505.02516-5-78-2': 'The upper panels show (left) one of the 100 measurement images and (right) the position of all the sources in the region (many of which are close to the detection limit).', '1505.02516-5-78-3': 'The colour code refers to the covariance index of the sources.', '1505.02516-5-78-4': 'The bottom left panel shows the relative error in the measured flux for all the sources in the region, with the inner panels showing magnifications relative to the object ID 3386 and to the bunch of objects with m[MATH].', '1505.02516-5-78-5': 'Looking at the colours of their symbols, many objects in the region turn out to be strongly covariant.', '1505.02516-5-78-6': 'Indeed, while the bluer sources in the upper part of the region all have covariant indexes lower than 0.5, the greener ones in the crowded lower part all have covariance index larger than 1 (indeed larger than 2 in many cases).', '1505.02516-5-78-7': 'This means that their flux measurements are subject to uncertainties not only from noise fluctuations, but also from systematic errors due to their extremely close and bright neighbours.', '1505.02516-5-78-8': 'As clearly demonstrated here, the covariance index can give a clue to which measurements can be safely trusted.', '1505.02516-5-79-0': 'The bottom right panel gives the sum of the measured fluxes of all sources in each of the 100 realizations (the blue line is the true total flux and the red line is the mean of the 100 measured total fluxes).', '1505.02516-5-79-1': 'It can be seen that the total flux measured in the region is always consistent with the expected true one to within [MATH] of its value.', '1505.02516-5-80-0': 'Although it is not possible to postulate a one-to-one relation (because in most cases sources having a large covariance index have a relatively good flux estimate, see Fig. [REF]), the bottom line of this analysis is that the covariance index, together with the flagging code outputted by t-phot, can give clues about the reliability of measured flux, and should be taken into consideration during the analysis of the data.', '1505.02516-5-80-1': 'Measurements relative to sources having a covariance index larger than 1 should be treated with caution.', '1505.02516-5-81-0': 'In a subsequent more realistic test, we considered extended objects (including morphologies of objects from the GenCat catalogue, using FWHM[MATH]=0.2" and FWHM[MATH]=1.66" and imposing m[MATH]=m[MATH] for simplicity) and allowed for overlapping priors.', '1505.02516-5-81-1': 'To be consistent with the standard procedure adopted for real images, for this case we proceeded by producing an SExtractor catalogue and segmentation map, which were then spatially cross-correlated with the "true" input catalogue.', '1505.02516-5-81-2': 'The results for this test are shown in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-81-3': 'Even in this much more complex situation, the results are reassuring; there is an overall good agreement between measured and input fluxes for bright ([MATH]) sources, with only a few flagged objects clearly showing large deviations from the expected value, and a reasonably good average agreement down to [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-81-4': 'However, all bright fluxes are measured [MATH] fainter than the true values (see the inner box in the same figure); this is very likely the effect of the limited segmentation extension, as already discussed in the previous section.', '1505.02516-5-81-5': 'On the other hand, faint sources tend to have systematically overestimated fluxes, arguably because of contamination from undetected sources.', '1505.02516-5-81-6': 'To confirm this, we focus our attention on a single case study (the source marked as ID 720) which shows a large discrepancy from its true flux, but has a relatively small covariance index.', '1505.02516-5-81-7': 'An analysis of the real segmentation map shows how the detected object is actually a superposition of two different sources that have been detected as a single one, so that the measured flux is of course higher than expected.', '1505.02516-5-81-8': 'One should also note that the uncertainties on the measured fluxes are smaller in this test, because there are fewer priors (only the ones detected by SExtractor are now present), implying a lower rank of the covariance matrix and a lower number of detected neighbours blending in the LRI.', '1505.02516-5-81-9': 'This causes a global underestimation of the errors.', '1505.02516-5-82-0': 'To check the performance of t-phot at FIR wavelengths, we also run a test on a simulated Herschel SPIRE 250 [MATH]m image (FWHM=25", 3.6" pixel scale).', '1505.02516-5-82-1': 'The simulated image (shown alongside with the obtained residuals in Fig. [REF]) mimics real images from the GOODS-Herschel program, the deepest Herschel images ever obtained.', '1505.02516-5-82-2': 'This image was produced with the technique presented in [CITATION]; we first derived (predicted) flux densities for all the 24 [MATH]m detections ([MATH]Jy) in GOODS-North, which are dependent on their redshift and flux densities at shorter wavelengths, and then we injected these sources into the real noise maps from GOODS-Herschel imaging.', '1505.02516-5-82-3': 'Additional positional uncertainties, typically 0.5[MATH], were also applied to mimic real images.', '1505.02516-5-82-4': 'As shown in [CITATION], these simulated images have similar pixel value distributions to real images .', '1505.02516-5-82-5': 'For this test, t-phot was run using the list of all the 24 [MATH]m sources as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-5-82-6': 'The results of the test are plotted in Fig. [REF], and they show that even in this case t-phot can recover the input fluxes of the sources with great statistical accuracy (the mean of the relative deviation from the expected measurements, i.e. the black solid line in the plot, is consistent with zero down to the faintest fluxes).', '1505.02516-5-82-7': 'The results are equivalent to those obtained on the same datasets with other public software specifically developed for FIR photometry, such as FastPhot .', '1505.02516-5-83-0': '### Testing different fitting options: cell dimensions', '1505.02516-5-84-0': 'We then proceeded to check the performance of the different fitting techniques that can be used in t-phot.', '1505.02516-5-84-1': 'To this aim, we repeated the test on the 1.66" LRI with extended priors and SExtractor priors, described in Sect. [REF], with different fitting methods: using a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, a regular grid of cells of [MATH] pixels, and the cells-on-objects method, comparing the results with those from the fit of the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-5-84-2': 'The results of the tests are shown in Figs. [REF] and [REF].', '1505.02516-5-84-3': 'The first figure compares the distributions of the relative errors in measured flux for the runs performed on the [MATH] pixels grid, on the [MATH] pixels grid, and on the whole image at once.', '1505.02516-5-84-4': 'Clearly, using any regular grid of cells worsens the results, as anticipated in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-84-5': 'Enlarging the sizes of the cells improves the situation, but does not completely solve the problem.', '1505.02516-5-84-6': 'We note that the adoption of an arbitary grid of cells of any dimension in principle is prone to the introduction of potentially large errors, because (possibly bright) contaminating objects may contribute to the brightness measured in the cell, without being included as contributing sources.', '1505.02516-5-84-7': 'A mathematical sketch of this issue is explained in the Appendix B (see also Sect. [REF]).', '1505.02516-5-84-8': 'The second histogram compares the differences between the fit on the whole image and the fit with the cells-on-objects method.', '1505.02516-5-84-9': 'Almost all the sources yield identical results with the two methods, within [MATH], which proves that the cells-on-objects method can be considered a reliable alternative to the single-fit method.', '1505.02516-5-84-10': 'Finally, Figure [REF] compares the HRI, the LRI, and the residual images obtained with the four methods and their distributions of relative errors, showing quantitatively the difference between the analyzed cases.', '1505.02516-5-85-0': 'In summary, it is clear that an incautious choice of cell size may lead to unsatisfactory and catastrophic outcomes.', '1505.02516-5-85-1': 'On the other hand, the advantages of using a single fit, and the equivalence of the results obtained with the single-fit and the cells-on-objects techniques, are evident.', '1505.02516-5-85-2': 'As already anticipated, one should bear in mind that the cells-on-objects method is only convenient if the overlapping of sources is not dramatic, as in ground-based optical observations.', '1505.02516-5-85-3': 'For IRAC and FIR images, on the other hand, the extreme blending of sources would cause the cells to be extended over regions approaching the size of the whole image, so that a single fit would be more convenient, although often still CPU-time consuming.', '1505.02516-5-86-0': '### Testing different fitting options: threshold fitting', '1505.02516-5-87-0': 'As described in Sect. [REF], t-phot includes the option of imposing a lower threshold on the normalized fluxes of templates so as to exclude low signal-to-noise pixels from the fit.', '1505.02516-5-87-1': 'Figure [REF] shows a comparison of the relative errors obtained with three different values of the THRESHOLD parameter: [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH] (whic means that only pixels with normalized flux [MATH] in the convolved template will be used in the fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-5-87-2': 'The differences are quite small; however, a non-negligible global effect can be noticed: all sources tend to slightly decrease their measurement of flux when using a threshold limit.', '1505.02516-5-87-3': 'This brings faint sources (generally overestimated without using the threshold) closer to their true value, at the same time making bright sources too faint.', '1505.02516-5-87-4': 'This effect deserves careful investigation, which is beyond the scope of this study, and is postponed to a future paper.', '1505.02516-5-88-0': '### Colours', '1505.02516-5-89-0': 'A final test was run introducing realistic colours, i.e. assigning fluxes to the sources in the LRI consistent with a realistic SED (as output by GenCat, see Sect. [REF]), instead of imposing them to be equal to the HRI fluxes.', '1505.02516-5-89-1': 'We took IRAC-ch1 as a reference filter for the LRI, consistently with the chosen FWHM of 1.66".', '1505.02516-5-89-2': 'Furthermore, we allowed for variations in the bulge-to-disc ratios of the sources to take possible effects of colour gradients into account.', '1505.02516-5-89-3': 'We compared the results obtained with t-phot with the ones obtained with two alternative methods to determine the magnitudes of the sources in the LRI: namely, SExtractor dual mode aperture and MAGBEST photometry (with HRI as detection image).', '1505.02516-5-89-4': 'The differences between measured and input magnitudes in the LRI, m[MATH]m[MATH], are plotted in Fig. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-89-5': 'Clearly, t-phot ensures the best results, with much less scatter in the measurements than both of the other two methods, and very few outliers.', '1505.02516-5-90-0': '## Performance on real datasets', '1505.02516-5-91-0': 'It is instructive to check how t-phot performs on real datasets, in addition to simulations.', '1505.02516-5-91-1': 'To this aim, we run two different tests.', '1505.02516-5-91-2': 'In the first, we compared the results of the tfit CANDELS analysis on the UDS CANDELS [MATH]-band to a t-phot run obtained using the cells-on-objects method and different parameters in the kernel registration stage.', '1505.02516-5-91-3': 'Figure [REF] shows the histograms of the differences in the photometric measurements between tfit and t-phot.', '1505.02516-5-91-4': 'Many sources end up with a substantially different flux, because of the two cited factors (a better kernel registration and the different fitting procedure).', '1505.02516-5-91-5': 'We note that the majority of the sources have fainter fluxes with respect to the previous measurements, precisely because of the effect described in Sect. [REF]: fitting using a grid of cells introduces systematic errors assigning light from sources that are not listed in a given cell, but overlap with it to the objects recognized as belonging to the cell.', '1505.02516-5-91-6': 'To further check this point, Fig. [REF] shows some examples of the difference between the residuals obtained with tfit (official catalogue) and those obtained with this t-phot run using cells-on-objects method, also introducing better registration parameters in the dance stage.', '1505.02516-5-91-7': 'Clearly, the results are substantially different, and many black spots (sources with spurious overestimated fluxes) have disappeared.', '1505.02516-5-91-8': 'Also, the registrations appear to be generally improved.', '1505.02516-5-92-0': 'The second test was run on FIR/sub-mm SCUBA-2 (450 [MATH]m, FWHM=7.5") and Herschel (500 [MATH]m, FWHM=36") images of the COSMOS-CANDELS field.', '1505.02516-5-92-1': 'In both cases, a list of 24+850 [MATH]m sources was used as unresolved priors.', '1505.02516-5-92-2': 'Figure [REF] shows the original images in the top row, and the residuals in the bottom row.', '1505.02516-5-92-3': 'The model has removed all significant sources from the 450 [MATH]m map and the majority from the 500 [MATH]m map.', '1505.02516-5-92-4': 'Figure [REF] shows a comparison of the fluxes measured in the t-phot fits to the 450 [MATH]m and 500 [MATH]m maps at 24+850 [MATH]m prior positions, with the error bars combining the errors on both flux measurements.', '1505.02516-5-92-5': 'Agreement within the errors implies successful deconfusion of the Herschel image to reproduce the fluxes measured in the higher resolution SCUBA-2 image.', '1505.02516-5-92-6': 'This typology of analysis is very complex and we do not want to address here the subtleties of the process; we refer the reader to [CITATION] and [CITATION] for detailed discussions on the definition of a robust and reliable approach to measure FIR and sub-mm fluxes.', '1505.02516-5-92-7': 'These simple tests, however, clearly show that t-phot is successful at recovering the fluxes of target sources even in cases of extreme confusion and blending, within the accuracy limits of the method.', '1505.02516-5-93-0': '# Computational times', '1505.02516-5-94-0': 'As anticipated, t-phot ensures a large saving of computational time compared to similar codes like tfit and convphot when used with identical input parameters.', '1505.02516-5-94-1': 'For example, a complete, double-pass run on the whole CANDELS UDS field at once (I band; [MATH]35000 prior sources; LRI 30720[MATH] 400 million pixels; standard tfit parameters and grid fitting) is completed without memory swaps in about 2 hours (i.e. 1 hour per pass) on a standard workstation (Intel i5, 3.20 GHz, RAM 8 Gb).', '1505.02516-5-94-2': 'A complete, double-pass run on the GOODS-S Hawk-I W1 field ([MATH]17500 prior sources, LRI 10700[MATH] 100 millions pixels, identical parameters) is completed in [MATH]20 minutes.', '1505.02516-5-94-3': 'For comparison, tfit may require many hours ([MATH]24) to complete a single pass on this Hawk-I field on the same machine.', '1505.02516-5-94-4': 'It must be said that tfit by default produces cutouts and templates for all the sources in the HRI image; selecting the ones belonging to the LRI field and inputting an ad hoc catalogue would have reduced the computing time by a factor of two (i.e. 11 hours for a single pass).', '1505.02516-5-94-5': 'It was not possible to process large images like the UDS field in a single run, because of RAM memory failure.', '1505.02516-5-94-6': 'convphot timings and memory problems are similar to those of tfit, although they have different causes (being written in C, computation is generally faster, but it employs a slower convolution method and the solution of the linear system in performed as a single fit instead of grid fitting like in tfit, being much more time consuming).', '1505.02516-5-95-0': 'Adopting the cells-on-objects (Sect. [REF]) method increases the computational time with respect to the tfit standard cell approach, but it is still far more convenient than the convphot standard single-fit approach, and gives nearly identical results.', '1505.02516-5-96-0': 'Table [REF] summarizes the computational times for extended tests on a set of simulated images having different detection depths (and therefore number of sources) and dimensions, with LRI FWHM=1.66".', '1505.02516-5-96-1': 'The simulations were run on the same machine described above, using three different methods: whole image fitting, cells-on-objects, and [MATH] pixels cells fitting.', '1505.02516-5-97-0': '# Summary and conclusions', '1505.02516-5-98-0': 'We have presented t-phot, a new software package developed within the astrodeep project.', '1505.02516-5-98-1': 't-phot is a robust and versatile tool, aimed at the photometric analysis of deep extragalactic fields at different wavelengths and spatial resolution, deconfusing blended sources in low-resolution images.', '1505.02516-5-99-0': 't-phot uses priors obtained from a high-resolution detection image to obtain normalized templates at the lower resolution of a measurement image, and minimizes a [MATH] problem to retrieve the multiplicative factor relative to each source, which is the searched quantity, i.e. the flux in the LRI.', '1505.02516-5-99-1': 'The priors can be either real cutouts from the HRI, or a list of positions to be fitted as PSF-shaped sources, or analytical 2-D models, or a mix of the three types.', '1505.02516-5-99-2': 'Different options for the fitting stage are given, including a cells-on-objects method, which is computationally efficient while yielding accurate results for relatively small FWHMs.', '1505.02516-5-99-3': 't-phot ensures a large saving of computational time as well as increased robustness with respect to similar public codes like its direct predecessors tfit and convphot.', '1505.02516-5-99-4': 'With an appropriate choice of the parameter settings, greater accuracy is also achieved.', '1505.02516-5-100-0': 'As a final remark, it should be pointed out that the analysis presented in this work deals with idealized situations, namely simulations or comparisons with the performances of other codes on real datasets.', '1505.02516-5-100-1': 'There are a number of subtle issues regarding complex aspects of the PSF-matching techinque, which become of crucial importance when working on real data.', '1505.02516-5-100-2': 'A simple foretaste of such complexity can be obtained by considering the problem described in Sect. [REF], i.e. the correct amplitude to be assigned to the segmented area of a source.', '1505.02516-5-100-3': 'Work on this is ongoing, and the full discussion will be presented in a subsequent companion paper.', '1505.02516-5-101-0': 'As we have shown, t-phot is an efficient tool for the photometric measurements of images on a very broad range of wavelengths, from UV to sub-mm, and is currently being routinely used by the Astrodeep community to analyse data from different surveys (e.g. CANDELS, Frontier Fields, AEGIS).', '1505.02516-5-101-1': 'Its main advantages with respect to similar codes like tfit or convphot can be summarized as follows:', '1505.02516-5-102-0': 'Future applications might include the processing of EUCLID and CCAT data.', '1505.02516-5-102-1': 'New releases of the software package, including further improvements and additional options, are planned for the near future.', '1505.02516-5-103-0': 'The authors acknowledge the contribution of the FP7 SPACE project “ASTRODEEP” (Ref.No: 312725), supported by the European Commission.', '1505.02516-5-103-1': 'JSD acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of an Advanced Grant.', '1505.02516-5-103-2': 'FB acknowledges support by FCT via the postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/103958/2014 and also the funding from the programme UID/FIS/04434/2013.', '1505.02516-5-103-3': 'RJM acknowledges the support of the European Research Council via the award of a Consolidator Grant (PI McLure).', '1505.02516-5-103-4': 'The authors would like to thank Kuang-Han Huang, Mimi Song, Alice Mortlock and Michal Michalowski, for constructive help and suggestions, and the anonymous referee for useful advice.', '1505.02516-5-104-0': '# The parameter file', '1505.02516-5-105-0': 'Below is a template of the standard first-pass parameter file to be given as input to t-phot (similar templates for both the first and the second pass are included in the dowloadable tarball).', '1505.02516-5-105-1': 'It is very similar to the original tfit parameter file, and part of the description is directly inherited from it.', '1505.02516-5-106-0': '## Pipeline', '1505.02516-5-107-0': 'Standard optical/NIR double-pass runs can be achieved by setting order standard and order standard2.', '1505.02516-5-108-0': 'A standard first-pass run includes the stages priors, convolve, fit, diags, dance, plotdance.', '1505.02516-5-108-1': 'The stage priors allows for an automatic re-construction of the pipeline depending on the input data given in the following sections (see the documentation included in the tarball).', '1505.02516-5-108-2': 'A standard second-pass run includes the stages convolve, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-5-108-3': 'The archive stage creates a directory after the name of the LRI, with some specifications, and archives the products of both runs.', '1505.02516-5-109-0': 'Double-pass runs for FIR/sub-mm can be achieved by setting order positions, fit, diags, dance, plotdance and order positions, fit, diags, archive.', '1505.02516-5-110-0': '## Priors', '1505.02516-5-111-0': 'Each prior must have a unique identification number (ID) to avoid errors.', '1505.02516-5-111-1': 'The user must be careful to give the correct information in this paramfile.', '1505.02516-5-111-2': 'Select the priors to be used by switching on/off the relative keywords: usereal, usemodels, useunresolved.', '1505.02516-5-112-0': '## Convolution', '1505.02516-5-113-0': '## Fitting stage', '1505.02516-5-114-0': 'cellmask: if true, it uses a mask to exclude pixels from the fit that do not contain a value of at least maskfloor in at least one template.', '1505.02516-5-114-1': 'writecovar: if true, it writes the covariance information out to the tphotcovar file.', '1505.02516-5-114-2': 'threshold: forces the use of a threshold on the flux, so that only the central parts of the objects are used in the fitting process.', '1505.02516-5-114-3': 'linsyssolver: the chosen solution method, i.e. LU, Cholesky, or Iterative Biconjugate Gradient (IBG).', '1505.02516-5-114-4': 'LU is default.', '1505.02516-5-114-5': 'clip: tells whether to loop on the sources excluding negative solutions.', '1505.02516-5-115-0': '## Diagnostic stages', '1505.02516-5-116-0': '# The cells-on-objects algorithm', '1505.02516-5-117-0': 'Experiments on simulated images (see Sect. [REF]) clearly show that fitting small regions (cells) of the LRI, as done by default in tfit, may potentially lead to large errors.', '1505.02516-5-117-1': 'This is particularly true if the dimensions of the cells are chosen to be smaller than an ideal size, which changes from case to case, but which should always be greater than [MATH]10 times the FWHM.', '1505.02516-5-117-2': 'However, it can be mathematically shown that the "arbitrary cells" method intrinsically causes the introduction of errors in the fit, as soon as a source is excluded from the cell (e.g. because its centre is outside the cell), but contributes with some flux in some of its pixels.', '1505.02516-5-118-0': 'Consider a cell containing [MATH] sources.', '1505.02516-5-118-1': 'For simplicity, assume that each source [MATH] only overlaps with the two neighbours [MATH] and [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-118-2': 'Furthermore, assume that a [MATH]-th source is contaminating the [MATH]-th source, but is excluded from the cell for some reason, for example (as in tfit) because the centroid of the source lies outside the cell.', '1505.02516-5-119-0': 'The linear system for this cell [MATH] will consist of a matrix [MATH] with only the elements on the diagonal and those with a [MATH] offset as non-zero elements (a symmetric band matrix), and the vector [MATH] will contain the products of templates of each source with the real flux in the LRI (as a summation on all pixels), as described in Sect. [REF].', '1505.02516-5-119-1': 'Given the above assumptions, this means that the [MATH]-th term of [MATH] will be higher than it should be (because it is contaminated by the external source).', '1505.02516-5-120-0': 'Using the Cramer rule for the solution of squared linear systems, the flux for the object [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] with [MATH] a square matrix in which the [MATH]-th columns is substituted with the vector [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-120-1': 'If for example [MATH], for [MATH] this gives [EQUATION] and since [MATH] is larger than it should be, [MATH] will be overestimated (slightly, if [MATH] is not large, i.e. if sources 1 and 2 do not strongly overlap).', '1505.02516-5-120-2': 'On the other hand, for [MATH] we have [EQUATION] and in this case again [MATH] might be small, but the first term given by [MATH] will certainly be large, resulting in a catastrophic overestimation of [MATH].', '1505.02516-5-120-3': 'The value of [MATH] will of course be underestimated, as it would be easy to show.', '1505.02516-5-121-0': 'From this simple test case it is clear that arbitrarily dividing the LRI into regions will always introduce errors (potentially non-negligible) in the fitting procedure, unless some method for removing dangerous contaminating sources is devised.', '1505.02516-5-122-0': 'The cells-on-objects algorithm aims at ensuring the accuracy of the flux estimate while at the same time drastically decreasing computational times and memory requirements.', '1505.02516-5-122-1': 'As explained in Sect. [REF], when this method is adopted a cell is centred around each detected source, and enlarged to include all its "potential" contaminant neighbours, and the contaminant of the contaminants, and so on.', '1505.02516-5-122-2': 'To avoid an infinite loop, the process of inclusion is interrupted when one of the following criteria is satisfied:', '1505.02516-5-123-0': 'Experiments on simulations have shown that good results are obtained with [MATH] and [MATH], and these values are used as constants in the source code.', '1505.02516-5-124-0': 'We note that if a cell is enlarged to more than 75% of the dimensions of the total LRI, t-phot automatically switches to the single fit on the whole image.', '1505.02516-5-125-0': '# Suggested best options', '1505.02516-5-126-0': 'Of course, different problems require different approaches in order to obtain their best possible solution, and users are encouraged to try different options and settings.', '1505.02516-5-126-1': 'However, some indicative guidelines for optimizing a run with t-phot can be summarized as follows.'}
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1402.4794
{'1402.4794-1-0-0': 'Some models of coronal heating suppose that random (cf., coherent) convective motions at the photosphere shuffle the footpoints of coronal magnetic fields and thereby inject sufficient magnetic energy upward to account for observed coronal and chromospheric energy losses in active regions.', '1402.4794-1-0-1': 'Using high-resolution observations of plage magnetic fields made with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite, we observationally test this idea by estimating the upward transport of magnetic energy - the vertical Poynting flux, [MATH] - across the photosphere in a plage region.', '1402.4794-1-0-2': 'To do so, we combine: (i) estimates of photospheric horizontal velocities, [MATH], determined by local correlation tracking applied to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetic field maps from the Narrowband Filter Imager, with (ii) a vector magnetic field measurement from the SpectroPolarimeter.', '1402.4794-1-0-3': 'Plage fields are ideal observational targets for estimating energy injection by convection, because they are: (i) strong enough to be measured with relatively small uncertainties; (ii) not so strong that convection is heavily suppressed (as within umbrae); and (iii) unipolar, so [MATH] in plage is not influenced by mixed-polarity processes (e.g., flux emergence) that cannot explain steady heating in stable, active-region fields.', '1402.4794-1-0-4': 'In this and a previously analyzed plage region, we found that the average [MATH] varied between the regions, but was positive (upward) and sufficient to explain coronal heating, with values near [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-1-0-5': 'We find the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-1-0-6': 'A comparison of intensity in a Ca II image co-registered with one plage magnetogram shows stronger spatial correlation with unsigned vertical field, [MATH] than either [MATH] or horizontal flux density, [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1402.4794-1-2-0': 'How is the solar corona heated to temperatures of [MATH] MK, when the lower layers of the solar atmosphere are [MATH] K or less?', '1402.4794-1-2-1': 'Evidently, the energy needed to heat the Sun\'s atmosphere must cross the photosphere in some organized form before being converted into heat (disorganized, "thermalized" energy) in the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-1-2-2': 'Because the magnetic fields that permeate the corona are all anchored at the photosphere, they are natural candidates for energetic coupling between the solar interior and corona.', '1402.4794-1-2-3': "In the interior, motions in the Sun's gas are driven by convection, and some fraction of the kinetic energy in turbulent convective motions is thought to be converted into energy stored in magnetic fields that is later dissipated as heat.", '1402.4794-1-2-4': 'To be a viable coronal heating mechanism, the input energy must be commensurate with observed energy losses in active region (AR) fields, estimated by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the corona and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the chromosphere.', '1402.4794-1-2-5': 'Waves were thought once thought to be primarily responsible for coronal and chromospheric heating (see, e.g., Withbroe and Noyes 1977).', '1402.4794-1-2-6': 'While waves (e.g., Tomczyk 2007) and wave dissipation (e.g., Hahn 2012) have been reported in the corona, currently available observations have not demonstrated that they supply sufficient energy to heat the active-region corona.', '1402.4794-1-2-7': 'Other models posit that random (cf., coherent) convectively-driven motions could inject sufficient magnetic energy, which is the primary hypothesis that we explore here.', '1402.4794-1-3-0': 'There is a long history of modeling this convection-driven coronal energy input.', '1402.4794-1-3-1': 'Parker (1983a, 1983b) proposed that convection braids and twists the photospheric footpoints of coronal magnetic fields, and thereby injects energy into the corona.', '1402.4794-1-3-2': 'This energy is stored in current sheets, and is transiently dissipated in small bursts referred to as nanoflares , with typical energies of [MATH] erg, about [MATH] of the energies in very large flares.', '1402.4794-1-3-3': '[CITATION] modeled an idealization of this process by imposing shearing flows on the upper and lower boundaries of an initially uniform field in an MHD simulation, and found sufficient power to heat the corona.', '1402.4794-1-3-4': '[CITATION] imposed a more complex flow field, meant to mimic convective motions, on an MHD model of the coronal field and also found sufficient power, as well as morphology consistent with aspects of coronal observations.', '1402.4794-1-3-5': 'In the framework of reduced MHD, [CITATION], also found sufficient power, even though fields in their model were only weakly braided.', '1402.4794-1-3-6': 'More recently, [CITATION] also modeled this process in MHD with a detailed treatment of the energy equation and found heating that is transient in time and space, and concentrated in and near the modeled transition region.', '1402.4794-1-4-0': 'One promising observational approach to constraining models of coronal heating is to analyze time evolution of magnetic fields at the photosphere, where the magnetic field is precisely and routinely measured.', '1402.4794-1-4-1': 'Clear evidence of braiding or twisting motions would support the mechanism proposed by Parker.', '1402.4794-1-4-2': '[CITATION] proposed that continuous emergence and cancellation of small-scale fields in the quiet Sun\'s "magnetic carpet" leads to reconnection and heating, but [CITATION] used sequential potential models of quiet-Sun fields to argue that emergence and cancellation are not required: just reconnection between existing flux systems, as their photospheric footpoints move, should be sufficient.', '1402.4794-1-4-3': '[CITATION] recently directly incorporated magnetogram sequences into the lower boundary of a magnetofrictional model of quiet-sun coronal field evolution.', '1402.4794-1-5-0': '[CITATION] recently investigated analytic expressions for lower bounds on the upward-directed Poynting flux of magnetic energy in a region of plage fields in NOAA AR 10930, based upon observed photospheric magnetic and velocity fields.', '1402.4794-1-5-1': 'The flows they analyzed were estimated by [CITATION], who applied Fourier Local Correlation Tracking (FLCT; Fisher and Welsch 2008) to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetograms (magnetic field maps) of this active region.', '1402.4794-1-5-2': 'These "line-wing" magnetograms were observed with the Narrowband Filter Imager (NFI) instrument on the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite , with a cadence [MATH] s, over about 13 hours on 2006 December 12 - 13.', '1402.4794-1-6-0': '[CITATION] compared their lower bounds on the Poynting flux with a direct estimate of the Poynting flux, obtained with a procedure that we explain in detail here.', '1402.4794-1-6-1': 'First, they assumed that photospheric magnetic field, [MATH], is frozen to the plasma - a valid assumption in quite general circumstances (see, e.g., Parker 1984).', '1402.4794-1-6-2': 'Then the photospheric electric field, [MATH], is well approximated by [MATH], where [MATH] is the photospheric velocity.', '1402.4794-1-6-3': 'Then the (vector) Poynting flux of magnetic energy, [MATH] can be expressed in terms of [MATH] and [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-1-6-4': 'Approximating the photospheric surface as locally planar, we adopt Cartesian geometry, and use [MATH] and [MATH] to refer to vertical and horizontal directions, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-6-5': 'Then the vertical component of the Poynting flux is [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-1-6-6': 'This expression for total Poynting flux has been conceptually divided into an "emergence" term, which contains [MATH], and a "shear" term, which contains [MATH] .', '1402.4794-1-6-7': 'In fact, both terms involve the emergence of magnetized plasma across the photosphere.', '1402.4794-1-6-8': 'Since [CITATION] were primarily focused on heating in plage - regions of nearly-vertical field when new flux is not emerging - the shearing term should dominate, meaning [EQUATION] [CITATION] treated the flows estimated by FLCT as horizontal velocities.', '1402.4794-1-6-9': 'We note that there is some controversy about how to interpret of velocities determined by correlation tracking and other "optical flow" methods.', '1402.4794-1-6-10': '[CITATION] suggested that the apparently horizontal flows estimated by LCT are a linear combination of the horizontal velocity with the vertical velocity, with weighting determined by the ratio of horizontal to vertical field.', '1402.4794-1-6-11': '[CITATION], however, used synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations, in which the true flows are known, to show that optical flow methods essentially estimate the horizontal velocity, [MATH], although these estimates can be affected by vertical flows.', '1402.4794-1-7-0': 'The NFI line-wing magnetograms only provide estimates of the line-of-sight (LOS) field, [MATH], but the expressions for the Poynting flux given above all require knowledge of the vector magnetic field, [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-7-1': "Accordingly, [CITATION] co-registered the (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) region of the NFI field of view (FOV) that they studied with the corresponding sub-region of a vector magnetogram observed by SOT's SpectroPolarimeter (SP; Tsuneta 2008).", '1402.4794-1-7-2': 'This vector magnetogram was prepared by [CITATION] and is available online.', '1402.4794-1-7-3': 'The co-alignment procedure followed the approach used by [CITATION], described in their Appendix.', '1402.4794-1-8-0': 'By combining [MATH] estimated with FLCT with [MATH] from the SP magnetogram, [CITATION] estimated the average Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-1-8-1': 'This energy flux is sufficient to power coronal heating, but cannot fully satisfy chromospheric energy demand in active regions.', '1402.4794-1-8-2': 'Insufficient Poynting flux would indicate that processes on spatial or temporal scales that are unresolved in these photospheric observations (e.g., waves or smaller-scale footpoint shuffling) play a significant role in heating.', '1402.4794-1-9-0': 'Despite the central role of the Poynting flux in theories of coronal heating, to our knowledge, no observational estimates of Poynting flux in the context of coronal heating have were published prior to the work by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-9-1': 'How typical is the value they report?', '1402.4794-1-9-2': 'How is the Poynting flux related to magnetic field structure?', '1402.4794-1-10-0': 'To address these and other questions, we report here an additional estimate of the Poynting flux from another plage region in the same active region, and investigate the properties of this energy flux.', '1402.4794-1-10-1': 'The remainder of this paper is organized as follows.', '1402.4794-1-10-2': 'In the next section, we briefly describe the magnetic field data and tracking methods we used to estimate [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-10-3': "In Section [REF], we first present our estimates of the Poynting flux in two plage regions of AR 10930, then analyze the Poynting fluxes' correlations with magnetic structure in the region.", '1402.4794-1-10-4': "The region of the NFI FOV that we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by SOT's Broadband Filter Imager (BFI; Tsuneta 2008), and in [REF] we compare this chromospheric emission with the spatial distributions of Poynting flux and magnetic field components.", '1402.4794-1-10-5': 'Finally, we conclude with a brief discussion of our results in Section [REF].', '1402.4794-1-11-0': '# Data Methods', '1402.4794-1-12-0': '## NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-1-13-0': 'Many aspects of the NFI magnetograms that we track to estimate [MATH] are described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-13-1': 'These Fe I 6302 AA(shuttered) magnetograms of AR 10930 have [MATH] pixels, and were created from the Stokes [MATH] ratio in Level 0 data.', '1402.4794-1-13-2': 'The data were recorded between 12-Dec-2006 at 14:00 and 13-Dec-2006 at 02:58, with a cadence of 121.4 [MATH] 1.2 s, except for three gaps of 10 minutes and two relatively small time steps of 26 s each.', '1402.4794-1-13-3': 'The USAF/NOAA Solar Region Summary issued at 24:00 UT on 12-Dec-2006 listed AR 10930 at S06W21, meaning it was relatively near disk center during the interval we study.', '1402.4794-1-13-4': 'Since the diffraction limit of SOT is near 0.32 [MATH], we rebinned the magnetograms [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-13-5': 'During this era of the Hinode mission, a bubble present within the NFI instrument degraded image quality in the upper part of the NFI field of view; we ignore pixels from this region in our analyses.', '1402.4794-1-14-0': 'We converted the measured Stokes [MATH] and [MATH] signals into pixel-averaged flux densities, which we denote [MATH], using the approximate calibration employed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-14-1': 'While the linear scaling in this approach breaks down in umbrae, it should not be problematic for plage regions.', '1402.4794-1-14-2': 'Note that we use evolution in image structure in the NFI magnetograms to derive velocities, but do not use the estimated flux densities directly in any calculations; for correlation tracking, what matters is that the images capture the spatial structure of magnetic fields at each time in the sequence.', '1402.4794-1-14-3': '[CITATION] estimated the NFI noise level following [CITATION], by fitting the core of the distribution of flux densities ([MATH] Mx cm[MATH]) in each frame with a Gaussian.', '1402.4794-1-14-4': 'Based upon these fits, they adopted a uniform uncertainty estimate of [MATH] 15 Mx cm[MATH] for [MATH] over the 13-hour run.', '1402.4794-1-15-0': 'Prior to tracking these magnetograms, [CITATION] co-aligned them in time to remove spacecraft jitter and jumps from pointing changes.', '1402.4794-1-15-1': 'Spectral analysis showed some power at the orbital frequency, but no clear evidence of helioseismic p-mode leakage into the estimated magnetic flux densities.', '1402.4794-1-16-0': '## SP Vector Magnetograms', '1402.4794-1-17-0': 'As mentioned above, [CITATION] used SP data to estimate the vector magnetic field in AR 10930, and one of the two vector magnetograms they analyzed falls within our tracking interval, around 21:00 UT.', '1402.4794-1-17-1': 'The SP scan ran from 20:30 - 21:15, with [MATH] 0.3 pixels.', '1402.4794-1-17-2': 'For this study, we analyzed two versions of this magnetogram.', '1402.4794-1-17-3': 'In the first version, the field was derived as described by [CITATION], but was not reprojected.', '1402.4794-1-17-4': 'We refer to this plane-of-sky (POS) SP magnetogram as the POSSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-1-17-5': 'In the second version, the data were reprojected to represent the field on a Cartesian plane, and the data mapped onto a grid with a pixel scale of approximately 0.63 per pixel.', '1402.4794-1-17-6': '(This was done to reduce the array size for computational expediency in extrapolating coronal fields.)', '1402.4794-1-17-7': 'We will refer to this reduced-resolution SP magnetogram as the RRSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-1-17-8': '(The RRSP magnetogram produced by [CITATION] is online, in FITS format, at http://www.lmsal.com/[MATH]schryver/NLFFF/; file contents are described in the FITS header comment field.)', '1402.4794-1-17-9': 'As discussed below, our results for the Poynting flux are very similar for both versions of this magnetogram, demonstrating that minor changes in data handling (e.g., interpolations) do not introduce large uncertainties in our results.', '1402.4794-1-18-0': 'For the POSSP data, we adopt a locally Cartesian reference frame, and refer to the radial field as [MATH], the azimuthal field as [MATH], and [MATH] as [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-18-1': 'While this is somewhat inaccurate over the FOV of the whole active region, it is not problematic in the [MATH] pixel[MATH] area of plage that we study (about one heliocentric degree on a side).', '1402.4794-1-18-2': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] from the POSSP data in grayscale, with [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] overplotted (black for flux toward the observer, white for away).', '1402.4794-1-18-3': 'The plage region that is the focus of our study in the black box at lower left.', '1402.4794-1-18-4': 'In this image, the [MATH] coordinates for contours of [MATH] were stretched by 1.01 from the SP data, necessary to account for a small discrepancy between the 0.32 NFI pixels versus the data interpolated from [MATH] 0.3 SP raster steps.', '1402.4794-1-18-5': 'Rastering for the SP observation was left-to-right, and the observing duration was much longer for the SP data than for the NFI data, leading to some local discrepancies between the fields.', '1402.4794-1-18-6': 'The scan across our plage region took about three minutes, near the start of the sequence.', '1402.4794-1-19-0': '[CITATION] described large-scale alignment of the RRSP magnetogram with the NFI field in detail.', '1402.4794-1-19-1': 'In their Figure 20, comparing panels (a) and (b) (or panels (b) and (d) in Fig. 1 of Schrijver 2008) reveals some stretching - primarily horizontal - of the morphology of AR 10930 in the SP data.', '1402.4794-1-19-2': 'Given the position of AR 10930 near S06W21, foreshortening is too small to account for the magnitude of this distortion, with about 300 RRSP pixels covering the same horizontal distance as 250 NFI pixels - a discrepancy of 20%.', '1402.4794-1-19-3': '[CITATION] and [CITATION] therefore used repeated Fourier interpolations to spatially interpolate the RRSP data onto each column of the 0.32 NFI grid (thereby oversampling the 0.63 RRSP pixels), an approach we also used here.', '1402.4794-1-19-4': 'In the process, we reduced the horizontal extent of RRSP pixels by 5%, chosen to maximize agreement between [MATH] and [MATH] from the SP data in the plage region that we analyze here.', '1402.4794-1-19-5': '(Welsch et al. [2012] found the stretching across the full FOV to be non-uniform, as would be expected for reprojection, but it appears locally linear in the horizontal direction.)', '1402.4794-1-19-6': 'Note that distortion by foreshortening in our plage region (17[MATH] from disk center) should be a 5% effect, and nearly uniform across the region.', '1402.4794-1-20-0': 'The plage region that we studied is a [MATH] pixel[MATH] area in the data with 0.32 pixels.', '1402.4794-1-20-1': 'In the [MATH]-binned NFI data, this corresponds to [MATH] and [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-20-2': 'We roughly co-aligned the SP data by hand to within a few pixels, and then computed the cross-correlation of the nearly-aligned images to find the whole-pixel shift at the maximum of the cross-correlation function.', '1402.4794-1-20-3': 'Residual shifts for the POSSP and RRSP data in [MATH] are (-0.03,0.38) and (-0.04,0.03) pixels, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-20-4': 'To illustrate the co-alignment, we plot contours of [MATH] at [MATH] and [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] over a grayscale image of [MATH] from the POSSP data in the plage region in the left panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-1-20-5': 'In the right panel, we show a scatter plot of [MATH] from SP versus [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-20-6': 'The rank-order and linear correlation coefficients are both 0.82.', '1402.4794-1-20-7': 'A fit of [MATH] to [MATH] from the POSSP data yields a slope near 0.6, implying weaker flux densities for [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-20-8': '(The POSSP data incorporates a filling factor estimate.)', '1402.4794-1-20-9': 'Discrepancies probably arise primarily from both the more accurate polarimetric inversion of the SP data and evolution in the fields while the SP was rastered.', '1402.4794-1-21-0': 'The mean and median vertical fields in this region are -434 G and -354 G, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-21-1': 'The mean unsigned [MATH] has the same magnitude as mean [MATH], so the region really is unipolar.', '1402.4794-1-21-2': 'The mean and median horizontal field strengths are 160 G and 121 G, respectively, and the mean and median inclination angles are 154[MATH] and 157[MATH], respectively - so 26[MATH] and 23[MATH] from vertical.', '1402.4794-1-22-0': 'Deriving error estimates for the vector field is not straightforward.', '1402.4794-1-22-1': 'We examined the histogram of line-of-sight field strengths over the full [MATH]-pixel SP FOV, but found the core exhibits an unexpected dearth of field values within about [MATH] 5 G of zero, so fitting the core would not be meaningful.', '1402.4794-1-22-2': 'Nonetheless, the shape of the histogram within [MATH] 20 G suggests that the FWHM of the distribution would be about 20 G; this is also the median unsigned line-of-sight field strength.', '1402.4794-1-22-3': 'This value might more accurately represent intrinsic variability in the line-of-sight field than measurement error, but we expect it is a good upper limit on the noise level in the line-of-sight field.', '1402.4794-1-22-4': 'Given the relatively strong vertical fields in our near-disk-center plage region, the fractional error in [MATH] is therefore likely to be small - about 5%.', '1402.4794-1-22-5': 'For the horizontal fields, the situation is less clear.', '1402.4794-1-22-6': 'The median transverse field strength over the whole FOV is only 8 G, and the FWHM of the histogram of transverse field values is about only 5 G. Almost exactly 1/3 of pixels have a transverse field stronger than 30 G; we suggest this is a good "1-[MATH]" level, since 2/3 of the distribution falls below it.', '1402.4794-1-22-7': 'This transverse-field uncertainty would imply fractional errors in horizontal fields in our plage region of about 25%.', '1402.4794-1-22-8': 'If errors in [MATH] and [MATH] were uncorrelated, then their combined impact on the Poynting flux would be negligible.', '1402.4794-1-22-9': 'Both the inversion process used to derive [MATH] and the reprojection of the magnetic vector from LOS/POS components into vertical/horizontal components, however, imply the errors are coupled.', '1402.4794-1-22-10': 'Nonetheless, we expect the impact of measurement errors in [MATH] on [MATH] to be relatively small in all summed results: since all the quantities that are summed are signed (from the product of [MATH] with the dot product of [MATH] with [MATH]), some cancellation should occur.', '1402.4794-1-23-0': '## Tracking the NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-1-24-0': 'Many tracking algorithms estimate spatial displacements of local structures in a pair of images separated in time by an interval [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-24-1': 'Tracking methods then typically have at least two free parameters: the size [MATH] of the local neighborhood (around each pixel for which a velocity is sought) in which structures between the two images are associated; and the time interval [MATH] between images.', '1402.4794-1-24-2': 'Accordingly, we briefly discuss our tracking parameters.', '1402.4794-1-25-0': 'In some cases, [MATH] is tightly constrained by the cadence of observations.', '1402.4794-1-25-1': 'If, however, cadences are relatively rapid compared to the expected time scale of evolution of image structures, then successive images are likely to differ only by the noise in each measurement .', '1402.4794-1-25-2': 'Consequently, using the highest possible cadence for a given sequence of observations might be unwise.', '1402.4794-1-25-3': '[CITATION] suggested that temporal stability in the reconstructed flow maps provides a useful constraint in determining the optimal [MATH]: two flow fields estimated at times [MATH] and [MATH] (from images pairs at [MATH] and [MATH], respectively) should be very similar if [MATH] is shorter than the time scale of evolution in the flow field.', '1402.4794-1-25-4': 'In the NFI dataset, [CITATION] found that successive flow maps were poorly correlated at the observing cadence ([MATH] s), so [MATH] should be larger.', '1402.4794-1-25-5': 'They also found worse agreement between successive flow maps estimated without first temporally averaging the input magnetograms.', '1402.4794-1-25-6': 'Accordingly, the flows we analyze here were derived with [MATH] = 8 min, and the initial and final magnetograms were computed by applying a five-step boxcar average to the NFI magnetograms.', '1402.4794-1-26-0': 'As noted above, the size [MATH] of the localization (or "apodization window" or "aperture") function applied to the input images prior to tracking is set by the user.', '1402.4794-1-26-1': 'Typical weighting functions are Gaussians or "top-hats" centered on each pixel for which a velocity estimate is sought.', '1402.4794-1-26-2': "In FLCT, [MATH] is set via the [MATH] parameter in FLCT's weighting function, [MATH], where [MATH] is the horizontal distance (in pixels) from each pixel for which a velocity is sought.", '1402.4794-1-27-0': 'The best procedure to select an optimal [MATH] is unclear.', '1402.4794-1-27-1': 'As noted by [CITATION], the estimated velocity can be used to reconstruct the observed evolution between the images; and as noted by [CITATION] and [CITATION], the windowing parameter can be chosen to optimize consistency of this reconstruction with observations.', '1402.4794-1-27-2': 'A perfectly consistent reconstruction (see, e.g., Welsch 2011), however, is undesirable: exact matching of observations is problematic because any noise or artifacts in the input images is propagated directly into the estimated electric fields .', '1402.4794-1-27-3': '[CITATION] also noted that a given choice of [MATH] implies averaging over dynamics on spatial scales smaller than [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-27-4': 'To fully exploit the spatial resolution of SOT, therefore, a smaller [MATH] would be better.', '1402.4794-1-27-5': '[CITATION] noted, however, that, in the presence of noise, information from several pixels is essential to prevent spurious fluctuations from noise from obscuring actual physical displacements.', '1402.4794-1-27-6': 'Consequently, selecting too small an [MATH] can increase susceptibility to noise, since not enough pixels are used in estimating each local displacement.', '1402.4794-1-27-7': "Indeed, [CITATION] found that relatively small [MATH]'s resulted in low correlations between successive flow maps, suggesting the influence of fluctuations from noise.", '1402.4794-1-27-8': 'Accordingly, we analyze flow maps derived with [MATH] pixels here, which balances preservation of spatial resolution with the need for significant frame-to-frame correlations in flows, to ensure robustness in our estimates.', '1402.4794-1-28-0': 'We also attempt to minimize confusion of fluctuations due to noise in the input magnetograms with bona fide magnetic evolution by not estimating velocities in pixels below the noise level.', '1402.4794-1-28-1': 'Accordingly, pixels with unsigned flux densities below the 15 Mx cm[MATH] noise level for the NFI images estimated by [CITATION] were not tracked.', '1402.4794-1-29-0': 'In Figure [REF], we plot both horizontal magnetic field vectors and FLCT flow vectors over a grayscale image of [MATH], for the flow map centered at 20:30:20 UT.', '1402.4794-1-30-0': 'Velocities tend to be larger in field-free regions, consistent with the general tendency of strong vertical fields to suppress convection .', '1402.4794-1-30-1': 'The mean and median horizontal FLCT velocities, among pixels where estimates were made, are 0.15 km s[MATH] and 0.12 km s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-1-31-0': 'In addition, as a check upon our results, we have tracked the NFI data with a separate LCT code, one provided by Y.-J. Moon (private communication) that has been used in other published work (e.g., Moon 2002).', '1402.4794-1-31-1': 'While FLCT computes the cross-correlation function in Fourier space, this second tracking code computes the correlation function in regular space, following [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-31-2': 'Hence, we refer to it as Spatial LCT (SLCT), in contrast to Fourier LCT.', '1402.4794-1-31-3': 'We also only tracked pixels with absolute flux density above 15 Mx cm[MATH], with the same [MATH], but set [MATH] in this code to 3 pixels, since its weighting function includes a factor of 2 in the denominator of the exponential, [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-31-4': 'This routine returned either excessively large velocities in some pixels or even NaNs (in 4 of tracked pixels).', '1402.4794-1-31-5': 'Velocities in excess of 5 km s[MATH] of tracked pixels) or equal to NaN were set to zero.', '1402.4794-1-32-0': 'In the left panel of Figure [REF], we show SLCT velocities overlain on [MATH] from the POSSP data.', '1402.4794-1-32-1': 'Comparison of these flows with those in Figure [REF] shows rough agreement in many places, but also clear disagreements in others.', '1402.4794-1-32-2': "Rank-order correlation coefficients between these methods' [MATH] and [MATH] estimates are 0.68 and 0.73, respectively.", '1402.4794-1-32-3': 'Consistent with this significant correlation, a scatter plot in the right panel of Figure [REF] shows that the flows are substantially correlated.', '1402.4794-1-33-0': 'The mean and median horizontal SLCT velocities, among pixels where estimates were made, are 0.13 km s[MATH] and 0.10 km s[MATH], respectively, quite close to the values for FLCT.', '1402.4794-1-34-0': '# Results', '1402.4794-1-35-0': '## Poynting Fluxes', '1402.4794-1-36-0': 'We combined the FLCT flows estimated from the NFI data with the co-registered vector magnetic field from SP in equation ([REF]) to compute the Poynting flux averaged over the plage region.', '1402.4794-1-36-1': 'Using the POSSP data, we find a net positive average Poynting flux, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], very similar to the [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] that we get using the RRSP data.', '1402.4794-1-36-2': 'The similar POSSP / RRSP values demonstrate that different interpolations of the SP data are not a significant source of error (perhaps unsurprising).', '1402.4794-1-36-3': 'In Figure [REF], we show a grayscale map of the Poynting flux, with saturation set to [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], overlain with -125 G and -250 G contours of [MATH] from the POSSP data.', '1402.4794-1-36-4': 'Regions with both positive and negative Poynting flux are visible, but the net Poynting flux is positive.', '1402.4794-1-37-0': 'Using the SLCT flows with the POSSP data, we also find a net positive Poynting flux, but estimate [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], about 13% larger than the FLCT result.', '1402.4794-1-37-1': 'The Poynting flux maps are significantly correlated, with a pixel-wise rank-order correlation of 0.58.', '1402.4794-1-37-2': 'Our simplistic estimate of uncertainties in the magnetic field ([REF] above) suggests that fractional errors in [MATH] could be smaller, but are probably commensurate.', '1402.4794-1-37-3': 'Evidently, the flow estimation process is a source of at least a [MATH]% uncertainty in our estimates.', '1402.4794-1-37-4': 'Further study of this same data set, using a different tracking method (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-1-38-0': 'It is not surprising that different flow methods yield somewhat different results.', '1402.4794-1-38-1': '[CITATION] compared flows estimated by several methods using synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations of an emerging magnetic flux tube in the solar interior, in which the true velocities were known.', '1402.4794-1-38-2': 'Flows from most of the methods were significantly correlated with both each other and with the true flows.', '1402.4794-1-38-3': 'But flows from the various methods did not agree closely, and most of the methods only recovered a fraction of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-1-38-4': 'Results from the tests by [CITATION], however, are probably not applicable here, because the rising-flux-tube magnetic geometry in the MHD data they used is very different than our plage region: their field was primarily horizontal, and the Poynting flux was dominated by the emergence term, not the shearing term.', '1402.4794-1-38-5': 'For pixels in the upper 95% of the distribution in [MATH] (the criterion they used to determine the population they tracked), this can be seen in a number of statistical measures: the median horizontal field was five times stronger than the median vertical field; the mean and median inclination angles (from the vertical) were both larger than 65[MATH]; and the emergence term in the Poynting flux was largest in every pixel above their tracking 5% threshold (and in 99% of all pixels).', '1402.4794-1-39-0': 'Data from simulations by [CITATION] of a magnetic geometry similar to the plage region we study here have been obtained.', '1402.4794-1-39-1': 'He simulated magnetoconvection near the photosphere in the presence of a dynamically significant vertical magnetic field, with a detailed treatment of the energy equation.', '1402.4794-1-39-2': 'Tests using these data are planned, but a key challenge that must be addressed is the large disparity in temporal scales between the simulations and observations: in the simulations by [CITATION], the characteristic time step is a second or less, but observational cadences are about a factor of 100 or more slower.', '1402.4794-1-39-3': 'Many of the velocities in the simulations are, in fact, very short-lived, and do not cause substantial magnetic evolution.', '1402.4794-1-39-4': 'Hence, direct comparison of instantaneous velocities in such simulations with velocities obtained by tracking (or other methods, e.g., Fisher 2010, 2012) over an observationally realistic time interval [MATH] is problematic.', '1402.4794-1-39-5': 'Applying spatial and temporal averaging to the simulation data, however, might enable meaningful comparisons.', '1402.4794-1-40-0': 'It is illuminating to compare the average Poynting flux that we obtain for our plage region with that obtained for the plage region studied by [CITATION], both using FLCT flows: [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-1-40-1': 'Our flux is a factor of 1.7 larger than that reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-40-2': 'We note that the mean and median unsigned vertical fields in our plage region (434 G and 354 G, resp.)', '1402.4794-1-40-3': 'are larger than the corresponding values in the region studied by [CITATION] (365 G and 274 G, resp.)', '1402.4794-1-40-4': 'by factors of [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-40-5': 'We also used the SLCT flows to estimate the Poynting flux in the plage studied by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], about [MATH] higher than the FLCT value.', '1402.4794-1-40-6': 'This substantial disparity suggests that uncertainties in Poynting estimate due to uncertainties in the flow estimates could be larger than the [MATH] disparity that we found for the plage region that is the focus of this paper.', '1402.4794-1-41-0': 'The occurrence of [MATH] for both cases might be a coincidence, or might indicate that SLCT returns systematically higher Poynting flux estimates than FLCT.', '1402.4794-1-41-1': 'Further comparisons of flows and Poynting fluxes in additional regions would be useful to characterize systematic effects.', '1402.4794-1-41-2': 'In the case studied by [CITATION], the SLCT and FLCT velocities and Poynting fluxes are again strongly correlated, with rank-order correlations for [MATH], and [MATH] of 0.75, 0.84, and 0.83, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-42-0': '## Dependence on Magnetic Structure', '1402.4794-1-43-0': 'The larger average Poynting flux from the plage region with larger area-averaged [MATH] motivates analysis of the dependence of the Poynting flux on magnetic properties of each plage region.', '1402.4794-1-43-1': 'For both regions, rank-order correlations between [MATH] and the magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] are all similar, and very near 0.8.', '1402.4794-1-43-2': 'For spatial derivatives of magnetic variables, in both regions, the correlation of [MATH] with the horizontal curl [MATH][MATH]<[MATH]) was slightly weaker than that with the horizontal divergence [MATH]).', '1402.4794-1-43-3': 'For flow properties, in both regions the correlation of [MATH] and: [MATH] was weak ([MATH][MATH]<[MATH]); [MATH] was negative and weak ([MATH][MATH]>[MATH]); [MATH] was positive but weak enough to be insignificant; [MATH] was negative but weak.', '1402.4794-1-44-0': 'These correlations of unsigned Poynting flux with field strengths suggest that stronger magnetic fields produce larger Poynting fluxes, which is perhaps unsurprising, given the product of field components in [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-44-1': 'To the extent that the presence of horizontal fields is correlated with the presence of vertical fields, this suggests an approximately quadratic scaling of [MATH] with [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-44-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show a scatter plot of [MATH] versus [MATH], and a least-squares linear fit to the logs, corresponding to a power law with [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-44-3': 'This fit accords with our expectation of a near-quadratic dependence.', '1402.4794-1-45-0': 'The dependence of the signed Poynting flux [MATH] on [MATH], and [MATH] is much weaker, with rank-order correlations the range of 0.1 - 0.2 for both plage regions.', '1402.4794-1-45-1': "For both regions, the correlation with [MATH] was slightly higher than with [MATH] , marginally beyond the [MATH] level for each of the correlation coefficients (computed with Fisher's z-transformation).", '1402.4794-1-45-2': 'A scatter plot (not shown) shows no clear trend, but a slight preponderance of positive Poynting fluxes is (barely) discernible.', '1402.4794-1-46-0': 'In addition to the signed Poynting fluxes given above, we can characterize signed energy input per unit of magnetic flux, by computing a ratio with units of luminosity per maxwell of [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-46-1': 'Among pixels that were tracked with FLCT, the mean ratios of signed energy input per maxwell are [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the plage region studied here and that studied by [CITATION], respectively.', '1402.4794-1-46-2': 'As with differences in field strengths and signed Poynting fluxes between the plage regions, these differ by [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-46-3': 'The median (energy input:magnetic flux) ratios for tracked pixels in the respective regions are much smaller, and their ordering is reversed: [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-1-46-4': 'Totaling the energy input and unsigned magnetic flux separately, and then dividing - so the ratio of sums instead of the sum of ratios used to compute the mean above - yields [MATH]% larger values for the whole-FOV energy input per maxwell in both regions, [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the plage region studied here and that studied by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-46-5': '(Again the regions differ by 1.3.)', '1402.4794-1-46-6': 'Cancellations within the sum of ratios used to compute the means above likely explain these larger whole-FOV values.', '1402.4794-1-47-0': 'These (energy input:magnetic flux) ratios values are relevant to a study of soft-X-ray (SXR) luminosity [MATH] in several hundred active regions by [CITATION], who investigated correlations between [MATH] and global magnetic properties of the regions (e.g., total unsigned flux, total unsigned vertical current, average field strength, etc.) from Haleakala Stokes Polarimeter vector magnetograms.', '1402.4794-1-47-1': "They found that the regions' luminosities depended more strongly on their total unsigned magnetic flux, [MATH], than any other global magnetic variable they considered, and, further, that [MATH] scaled as a power law in [MATH], with an index near one.", '1402.4794-1-47-2': '(See also Fludra and Ireland [2008], who investigated power laws between whole-AR EUV intensities and magnetic fluxes.)', '1402.4794-1-47-3': 'The lack of dependence on [MATH] reported by [CITATION] is not consistent with the mean and whole-FOV energy input per unit magnetic flux that we find, which appear to scale with average field strength within the plage region.', '1402.4794-1-47-4': 'Given the difference between mean and median energy inputs per unit magnetic flux, this could be due to random fluctuations in a few high-Poynting-flux regions (which would bias the mean and whole-FOV values).', '1402.4794-1-47-5': 'Also, several unknown physical processes are at work in the conversion of magnetic energy into thermal energy and radiation (see, e.g., Klimchuk 2006), so disagreement between one component of energy input and one component of energy output is not especially problematic.', '1402.4794-1-47-6': 'In addition, given our uncertainties and our small sample ([MATH] of just 2!)', '1402.4794-1-47-7': ', additional regions must be studied to clarify the scaling of energy input with magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-1-48-0': 'As we have seen, stronger-field pixels tend to have larger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-1-48-1': 'The tendency of strong fields to inhibit convection , however, also suggests that a turning point should be reached as field strength increases, where increasingly weak convective velocities produce a smaller convection-driven Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-1-48-2': 'This is a plausible explanation for the relative darkness of the corona in EUV and SXR images directly above sunspot umbrae.', '1402.4794-1-48-3': '(Note, however, that spatially coherent, large-scale flows, like those in rotating sunspots [e.g., Brown 2003], could still easily transport large amounts of magnetic energy across the photosphere in sunspot fields.)', '1402.4794-1-48-4': 'Do we see any evidence of this rollover in Poynting flux with field strength in our plage regions?', '1402.4794-1-48-5': 'To find out, we computed the average of signed Poynting fluxes in pixels above a set of increasing thresholds in field strength.', '1402.4794-1-48-6': 'Figure [REF] shows signed Poynting fluxes [MATH] averaged in pixels above a threshold in [MATH], as functions of the threshold value, for our plage region ([MATH]) and that studied by [CITATION] ([MATH]).', '1402.4794-1-48-7': 'The error bars show standard errors in the mean, and characterize variance in the Poynting flux more than observational uncertainties.', '1402.4794-1-48-8': 'While we do not observe a decrease in the average Poynting flux with increasing threshold, we do see a plateau in Poynting flux starting near 600 G, before fluctuations in the small number of above-threshold pixels (which have increasingly large unsigned Poynting fluxes) increase the variance substantially.', '1402.4794-1-49-0': 'Again, however, our uncertainties, small sample size, as well as our limited range of field strengths all preclude making definitive statements about the quenching of the convection-driven Poynting flux by strong fields.', '1402.4794-1-50-0': '## Comparison with Chromospheric Emission', '1402.4794-1-51-0': 'It is plausible that regions of enhanced magnetic energy flux across the photosphere would be brighter in some form of emission.', '1402.4794-1-51-1': '(It is also possible that the solar atmosphere above the photosphere could store injected magnetic energy, in the form of electric currents, for some time prior to its dissipation and consequent enhancement of emission.)', '1402.4794-1-52-0': 'The plage region we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by the BFI, so we briefly investigate correlations between the Poynting flux map and other photospheric magnetic variables and this emission.', '1402.4794-1-52-1': '(The region studied by Yeates 2014 was below the BFI FOV.)', '1402.4794-1-52-2': 'The closest image in time to the NFI velocity estimate was recorded at 20:30:16 UT on 2006/12/12, which we co-registered with [MATH] after downsampling from the BFI pixel size of 0.11 by a factor of three to approximately match the [MATH]-binned NFI pixel scale.', '1402.4794-1-52-3': 'In Figure [REF], we show [MATH] 125 and [MATH] 250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of NFI flux density (solid for negative, dashed for positive) overlain on the Ca II intensity in a ([MATH])-pixel area that encompasses our plage region.', '1402.4794-1-53-0': 'For magnetic variables, the spatial map of Ca II intensity exhibited the strongest rank-order correlation (0.53) with [MATH] and [MATH], and a weaker correlation (0.38) with [MATH].', '1402.4794-1-53-1': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were significant but much weaker, at 0.12 and 0.23, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-54-0': 'For the Poynting flux, the correlation of Ca II intensity with unsigned and signed Poynting fluxes was 0.43, and 0.16, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-54-1': 'The fact that the magnetic variables that enter the Poynting flux are more strongly correlated with Ca II emission than the Poynting flux suggests that the only additional information in the Poynting flux, from the FLCT flows, is unrelated to Ca II emission; and, indeed, the correlation of Ca II with [MATH] is significantly negative, at -0.10.', '1402.4794-1-54-2': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were also negative, at -0.16 and -0.13, respectively.', '1402.4794-1-54-3': 'We also checked the signed horizontal flow divergence, reasoning that converging flows might slightly compress the plasma and lead to heating.', '1402.4794-1-54-4': 'The correlation was also negative (i.e., converging motions are present slightly more often near brighter Ca II emission), but weak, at -0.10.', '1402.4794-1-54-5': 'This might be related to the concentration of magnetic flux in downflow lanes where horizontal flows converge.', '1402.4794-1-54-6': 'The negative correlation of the curl, however, is harder to understand.', '1402.4794-1-54-7': 'We conclude that flow information at the spatial and temporal scales that we study has relatively little bearing on Ca II emission, compared to magnetic variables.', '1402.4794-1-55-0': '# Summary Conclusions', '1402.4794-1-56-0': 'By combining LCT velocities estimated from a LOS magnetogram sequence with a vector magnetogram, both derived from Hinode/SOT observations of AR 10930, we estimated the ideal Poynting flux in a (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) plage region to be near [MATH] - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], depending upon whether FLCT or SLCT velocities were used.', '1402.4794-1-56-1': 'Errors in the magnetic fields likely produce smaller uncertainties in the Poynting flux than this.', '1402.4794-1-56-2': 'These Poynting fluxes are sufficient to explain the coronal energy demand estimated by [CITATION] ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]), as well as a significant fraction of the chromospheric energy demand they estimated ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]).', '1402.4794-1-57-0': 'Our energy flux is larger by a factor of [MATH] than that found in another plage region, observed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-1-57-1': 'The mean and median field strength in that region were lower by [MATH]% than the region we studied here, suggesting that signed Poynting flux might be higher in stronger-field regions.', '1402.4794-1-57-2': 'Within our plage region, we found that the unsigned Poynting flux from each pixel scaled as [MATH], i.e., nearly the quadratic scaling expected from the two components of [MATH] that enter the expression for the ideal Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-1-57-3': 'The signed Poynting flux also increased with field strength, but with a much weaker correlation ([MATH][MATH]<[MATH]), so we could not easily quantify this trend.', '1402.4794-1-57-4': 'We found the energy input per unit magnetic flux in both plage regions to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH], with a tendency for the mean (but not median!)', '1402.4794-1-57-5': 'input to increase with average field strength in the plage region.', '1402.4794-1-57-6': 'Our uncertainties are large and our sample size is small, but this result conflicts with the study of X-ray luminosity versus magnetic field properties by , who reported no dependence of magnetic field strength independent of the correlation with magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-1-57-7': 'We sought evidence that intense vertical fields might suppress convection and thereby limit the average signed Poynting flux from strong-field regions, but did not find clear evidence of this.', '1402.4794-1-58-0': 'We also compared our Poynting flux map with a Ca II intensity image, and found much stronger correlation of Ca II emission with the vertical magnetic field strength [MATH] than with vertical Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-1-58-1': 'We noted that the time interval [MATH] between images (eight minutes here) and windowing length scale [MATH] (4 pixels, [MATH] Mm) used in our tracking will likely filter out processes on shorter temporal and spatial scales.', '1402.4794-1-58-2': 'Such processes (e.g., waves) might play a key role in Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-1-58-3': 'Given that chromospheric and coronal length scales are shorter than the scales we resolve, observations with higher resolution in space and time (see below) would be useful to investigate Poynting flux - emission correlations further.', '1402.4794-1-59-0': 'We plan to conduct several related studies to extend the work here.', '1402.4794-1-59-1': 'We would like to analyze the same two plage regions with additional tracking methods (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) to better understand the model-dependence of flow estimates in determining Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-1-59-2': 'We would also like to analyze additional Hinode/SOT datasets, especially observations with simultaneous IRIS coverage of chromospheric, transition region, and coronal emission, to seek any evidence of spatial or temporal correlations between energy input via our estimated Poynting fluxes and energy dissipation in the outer solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-1-59-3': "In addition, we would like to analyze a region simultaneously observed with Hinode/SOT and the HMI instrument aboard SDO , to study the dependence of the estimated Poynting flux on both instrument resolution (SOT's is a factor of [MATH] better) and combined spectral sampling / field inversion.", '1402.4794-1-59-4': "Further, it is crucial that we increase our sample size, and HMI's large database of active region patches (greater than 1,000 at the time of this writing) should be ideal for this purpose.", '1402.4794-1-60-0': 'Within the larger context of the coronal heating problem, we suggest that a key strategic observational objective for understanding chromospheric and coronal heating should be construction of a detailed energy budget for the photosphere-to-corona system, with spatially and temporally resolved energy inputs correlated with energy release in all forms - radiation, kinetic energy in thermal and non-thermal particles and bulk motion, and gravitational potential energy.', '1402.4794-1-60-1': 'This will require high-resolution and high-cadence observations of the magnetic field and emission throughout the photosphere-to-corona system, for which both space-based observatories (e.g., SDO, IRIS, and the planned Solar-C satellite) and existing and planned ground-based observatories (NST [Goode 2010], GREGOR [Volkmer 2010], ATST [Rimmele 2010], and EST [Zuccarello and Zuccarello 2011]) will be essential.'}
{'1402.4794-2-0-0': 'Some models of coronal heating suppose that random (cf., coherent) convective motions at the photosphere shuffle the footpoints of coronal magnetic fields and thereby inject sufficient magnetic energy upward to account for observed coronal and chromospheric energy losses in active regions.', '1402.4794-2-0-1': 'Using high-resolution observations of plage magnetic fields made with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite, we observationally test this idea by estimating the upward transport of magnetic energy - the vertical Poynting flux, [MATH] - across the photosphere in a plage region.', '1402.4794-2-0-2': 'To do so, we combine: (i) estimates of photospheric horizontal velocities, [MATH], determined by local correlation tracking applied to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetic field maps from the Narrowband Filter Imager, with (ii) a vector magnetic field measurement from the SpectroPolarimeter.', '1402.4794-2-0-3': 'Plage fields are ideal observational targets for estimating energy injection by convection, because they are: (i) strong enough to be measured with relatively small uncertainties; (ii) not so strong that convection is heavily suppressed (as within umbrae); and (iii) unipolar, so [MATH] in plage is not influenced by mixed-polarity processes (e.g., flux emergence) that cannot explain steady heating in stable, active-region fields.', '1402.4794-2-0-4': 'In this and a previously analyzed plage region, we found that the average [MATH] varied between the regions, but was positive (upward) and sufficient to explain coronal heating, with values near [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-2-0-5': 'We find the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-2-0-6': 'A comparison of intensity in a Ca II image co-registered with one plage magnetogram shows stronger spatial correlation with unsigned vertical field, [MATH] than either [MATH] or horizontal flux density, [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1402.4794-2-2-0': 'How is the solar corona heated to temperatures of [MATH] MK, when the lower layers of the solar atmosphere are [MATH] K or less?', '1402.4794-2-2-1': 'Evidently, the energy needed to heat the Sun\'s atmosphere must cross the photosphere in some organized form before being converted into heat (disorganized, "thermalized" energy) in the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-2-2-2': 'Because the magnetic fields that permeate the corona are all anchored at the photosphere, they are natural candidates for energetic coupling between the solar interior and corona.', '1402.4794-2-2-3': "In the interior, motions in the Sun's gas are driven by convection, and some fraction of the kinetic energy in turbulent convective motions is thought to be converted into energy stored in magnetic fields that is later dissipated as heat.", '1402.4794-2-2-4': 'To be a viable coronal heating mechanism, the input energy must be commensurate with observed energy losses in active region (AR) fields, estimated by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the corona and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the chromosphere.', '1402.4794-2-2-5': 'Waves were thought once thought to be primarily responsible for coronal and chromospheric heating (see, e.g., Withbroe and Noyes 1977).', '1402.4794-2-2-6': 'While waves (e.g., Tomczyk 2007) and wave dissipation (e.g., Hahn 2012) have been reported in the corona, currently available observations have not demonstrated that they supply sufficient energy to heat the active-region corona.', '1402.4794-2-2-7': 'Other models posit that random (cf., coherent) convectively-driven motions could inject sufficient magnetic energy, which is the primary hypothesis that we explore here.', '1402.4794-2-3-0': 'There is a long history of modeling this convection-driven coronal energy input.', '1402.4794-2-3-1': 'Parker (1983a, 1983b) proposed that convection braids and twists the photospheric footpoints of coronal magnetic fields, and thereby injects energy into the corona.', '1402.4794-2-3-2': 'This energy is stored in current sheets, and is transiently dissipated in small bursts referred to as nanoflares , with typical energies of [MATH] erg, about [MATH] of the energies in very large flares.', '1402.4794-2-3-3': '[CITATION] modeled an idealization of this process by imposing shearing flows on the upper and lower boundaries of an initially uniform field in an MHD simulation, and found sufficient power to heat the corona.', '1402.4794-2-3-4': '[CITATION] imposed a more complex flow field, meant to mimic convective motions, on an MHD model of the coronal field and also found sufficient power, as well as morphology consistent with aspects of coronal observations.', '1402.4794-2-3-5': 'In the framework of reduced MHD, [CITATION], also found sufficient power, even though fields in their model were only weakly braided.', '1402.4794-2-3-6': 'More recently, [CITATION] also modeled this process in MHD with a detailed treatment of the energy equation and found heating that is transient in time and space, and concentrated in and near the modeled transition region.', '1402.4794-2-4-0': 'One promising observational approach to constraining models of coronal heating is to analyze time evolution of magnetic fields at the photosphere, where the magnetic field is precisely and routinely measured.', '1402.4794-2-4-1': 'Clear evidence of braiding or twisting motions would support the mechanism proposed by Parker.', '1402.4794-2-4-2': '[CITATION] proposed that continuous emergence and cancellation of small-scale fields in the quiet Sun\'s "magnetic carpet" leads to reconnection and heating, but [CITATION] used sequential potential models of quiet-Sun fields to argue that emergence and cancellation are not required: just reconnection between existing flux systems, as their photospheric footpoints move, should be sufficient.', '1402.4794-2-4-3': '[CITATION] recently directly incorporated magnetogram sequences into the lower boundary of a magnetofrictional model of quiet-sun coronal field evolution.', '1402.4794-2-5-0': '[CITATION] recently investigated analytic expressions for lower bounds on the upward-directed Poynting flux of magnetic energy in a region of plage fields in NOAA AR 10930, based upon observed photospheric magnetic and velocity fields.', '1402.4794-2-5-1': 'The flows they analyzed were estimated by [CITATION], who applied Fourier Local Correlation Tracking (FLCT; Fisher and Welsch 2008) to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetograms (magnetic field maps) of this active region.', '1402.4794-2-5-2': 'These "line-wing" magnetograms were observed with the Narrowband Filter Imager (NFI) instrument on the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite , with a cadence [MATH] s, over about 13 hours on 2006 December 12 - 13.', '1402.4794-2-6-0': '[CITATION] compared their lower bounds on the Poynting flux with a direct estimate of the Poynting flux, obtained with a procedure that we explain in detail here.', '1402.4794-2-6-1': 'First, they assumed that photospheric magnetic field, [MATH], is frozen to the plasma - a valid assumption in quite general circumstances (see, e.g., Parker 1984).', '1402.4794-2-6-2': 'Then the photospheric electric field, [MATH], is well approximated by [MATH], where [MATH] is the photospheric velocity.', '1402.4794-2-6-3': 'Then the (vector) Poynting flux of magnetic energy, [MATH] can be expressed in terms of [MATH] and [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-2-6-4': 'Approximating the photospheric surface as locally planar, we adopt Cartesian geometry, and use [MATH] and [MATH] to refer to vertical and horizontal directions, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-6-5': 'Then the vertical component of the Poynting flux is [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-2-6-6': 'This expression for total Poynting flux has been conceptually divided into an "emergence" term, which contains [MATH], and a "shear" term, which contains [MATH] .', '1402.4794-2-6-7': 'In fact, both terms involve the emergence of magnetized plasma across the photosphere.', '1402.4794-2-6-8': 'Since [CITATION] were primarily focused on heating in plage - regions of nearly-vertical field when new flux is not emerging - the shearing term should dominate, meaning [EQUATION] [CITATION] treated the flows estimated by FLCT as horizontal velocities.', '1402.4794-2-6-9': 'We note that there is some controversy about how to interpret of velocities determined by correlation tracking and other "optical flow" methods.', '1402.4794-2-6-10': '[CITATION] suggested that the apparently horizontal flows estimated by LCT are a linear combination of the horizontal velocity with the vertical velocity, with weighting determined by the ratio of horizontal to vertical field.', '1402.4794-2-6-11': '[CITATION], however, used synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations, in which the true flows are known, to show that optical flow methods essentially estimate the horizontal velocity, [MATH], although these estimates can be affected by vertical flows.', '1402.4794-2-7-0': 'The NFI line-wing magnetograms only provide estimates of the line-of-sight (LOS) field, [MATH], but the expressions for the Poynting flux given above all require knowledge of the vector magnetic field, [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-7-1': "Accordingly, [CITATION] co-registered the (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) region of the NFI field of view (FOV) that they studied with the corresponding sub-region of a vector magnetogram observed by SOT's SpectroPolarimeter (SP; Tsuneta 2008).", '1402.4794-2-7-2': 'This vector magnetogram was prepared by [CITATION] and is available online.', '1402.4794-2-7-3': 'The co-alignment procedure followed the approach used by [CITATION], described in their Appendix.', '1402.4794-2-8-0': 'By combining [MATH] estimated with FLCT with [MATH] from the SP magnetogram, [CITATION] estimated the average Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-2-8-1': 'This energy flux is sufficient to power coronal heating, but cannot fully satisfy chromospheric energy demand in active regions.', '1402.4794-2-8-2': 'Insufficient Poynting flux would indicate that processes on spatial or temporal scales that are unresolved in these photospheric observations (e.g., waves or smaller-scale footpoint shuffling) play a significant role in heating.', '1402.4794-2-9-0': 'Despite the central role of the Poynting flux in theories of coronal heating, to our knowledge, no observational estimates of Poynting flux in the context of coronal heating have were published prior to the work by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-9-1': '(We note that [CITATION] investigated a "proxy Poynting flux," [MATH] in more than 160 active regions, determined by applying LCT to LOS magnetograms, and found values in the range [MATH] - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-2-9-2': 'They used the LOS field alone because vector magnetic field measurements were unavailable.)', '1402.4794-2-9-3': 'How typical is the value reported by [CITATION]?', '1402.4794-2-9-4': 'How is the Poynting flux related to magnetic field structure?', '1402.4794-2-10-0': 'To address these and other questions, we report here an additional estimate of the Poynting flux from another plage region in the same active region, and investigate the properties of this energy flux.', '1402.4794-2-10-1': 'The remainder of this paper is organized as follows.', '1402.4794-2-10-2': 'In the next section, we briefly describe the magnetic field data and tracking methods we used to estimate [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-10-3': "In Section [REF], we first present our estimates of the Poynting flux in two plage regions of AR 10930, then analyze the Poynting fluxes' correlations with magnetic structure in the region.", '1402.4794-2-10-4': "The region of the NFI FOV that we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by SOT's Broadband Filter Imager (BFI; Tsuneta 2008), and in [REF] we compare this chromospheric emission with the spatial distributions of Poynting flux and magnetic field components.", '1402.4794-2-10-5': 'Finally, we conclude with a brief discussion of our results in Section [REF].', '1402.4794-2-11-0': '# Data Methods', '1402.4794-2-12-0': '## NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-2-13-0': 'Many aspects of the NFI magnetograms that we track to estimate [MATH] are described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-13-1': 'These Fe I 6302 AA(shuttered) magnetograms of AR 10930 have [MATH] pixels, and were created from the Stokes [MATH] ratio in Level 0 data.', '1402.4794-2-13-2': 'The data were recorded between 12-Dec-2006 at 14:00 and 13-Dec-2006 at 02:58, with a cadence of 121.4 [MATH] 1.2 s, except for three gaps of 10 minutes and two relatively small time steps of 26 s each.', '1402.4794-2-13-3': 'The USAF/NOAA Solar Region Summary issued at 24:00 UT on 12-Dec-2006 listed AR 10930 at S06W21, meaning it was relatively near disk center during the interval we study.', '1402.4794-2-13-4': 'Since the diffraction limit of SOT is near 0.32[MATH], we rebinned the magnetograms [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-13-5': 'During this era of the Hinode mission, a bubble present within the NFI instrument degraded image quality in the upper part of the NFI field of view; we ignore pixels from this region in our analyses.', '1402.4794-2-14-0': 'We converted the measured Stokes [MATH] and [MATH] signals into pixel-averaged flux densities, which we denote [MATH], using the approximate calibration employed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-14-1': 'While the linear scaling in this approach breaks down in umbrae, it should not be problematic for plage regions.', '1402.4794-2-14-2': 'Note that we use evolution in image structure in the NFI magnetograms to derive velocities, but do not use the estimated flux densities directly in any calculations; for correlation tracking, what matters is that the images capture the spatial structure of magnetic fields at each time in the sequence.', '1402.4794-2-14-3': '[CITATION] estimated the NFI noise level following [CITATION], by fitting the core of the distribution of flux densities ([MATH] Mx cm[MATH]) in each frame with a Gaussian.', '1402.4794-2-14-4': 'Based upon these fits, they adopted a uniform uncertainty estimate of [MATH] 15 Mx cm[MATH] for [MATH] over the 13-hour run.', '1402.4794-2-15-0': 'Prior to tracking these magnetograms, [CITATION] co-aligned them in time to remove spacecraft jitter and jumps from pointing changes.', '1402.4794-2-15-1': 'Spectral analysis showed some power at the orbital frequency, but no clear evidence of helioseismic p-mode leakage into the estimated magnetic flux densities.', '1402.4794-2-16-0': '## SP Vector Magnetograms', '1402.4794-2-17-0': 'As mentioned above, [CITATION] used SP data to estimate the vector magnetic field in AR 10930, and one of the two vector magnetograms they analyzed falls within our tracking interval, around 21:00 UT.', '1402.4794-2-17-1': 'The SP scan ran from 20:30 - 21:15, with [MATH] 0.3 pixels.', '1402.4794-2-17-2': 'For this study, we analyzed two versions of this magnetogram.', '1402.4794-2-17-3': 'In the first version, the field was derived as described by [CITATION], but was not reprojected.', '1402.4794-2-17-4': 'We refer to this plane-of-sky (POS) SP magnetogram as the POSSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-2-17-5': 'In the second version, the data were reprojected to represent the field on a Cartesian plane, and the data mapped onto a grid with a pixel scale of approximately 0.63 per pixel.', '1402.4794-2-17-6': '(This was done to reduce the array size for computational expediency in extrapolating coronal fields.)', '1402.4794-2-17-7': 'We will refer to this reduced-resolution SP magnetogram as the RRSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-2-17-8': '(The RRSP magnetogram produced by [CITATION] is online, in FITS format, at http://www.lmsal.com/[MATH]schryver/NLFFF/; file contents are described in the FITS header comment field.)', '1402.4794-2-17-9': 'As discussed below, our results for the Poynting flux are very similar for both versions of this magnetogram, demonstrating that minor changes in data handling (e.g., interpolations) do not introduce large uncertainties in our results.', '1402.4794-2-18-0': 'For the POSSP data, we adopt a locally Cartesian reference frame, and refer to the radial field as [MATH], the azimuthal field as [MATH], and [MATH] as [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-18-1': 'While this is somewhat inaccurate over the FOV of the whole active region, it is not problematic in the [MATH] pixel[MATH] area of plage that we study (about one heliocentric degree on a side).', '1402.4794-2-18-2': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] from the POSSP data in grayscale, with [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] overplotted (black for flux toward the observer, white for away).', '1402.4794-2-18-3': 'The plage region that is the focus of our study in the black box at lower left.', '1402.4794-2-18-4': 'In this image, the [MATH] coordinates for contours of [MATH] were stretched by 1.01 from the SP data, necessary to account for a small discrepancy between the 0.32 NFI pixels versus the data interpolated from [MATH] 0.3 SP raster steps.', '1402.4794-2-18-5': 'Rastering for the SP observation was left-to-right, and the observing duration was much longer for the SP data than for the NFI data, leading to some local discrepancies between the fields.', '1402.4794-2-18-6': 'The scan across our plage region took about three minutes, from 20:46:47 - 20:49:56.', '1402.4794-2-18-7': 'We used the NFI images timestamped 20:48:20.', '1402.4794-2-19-0': '[CITATION] described large-scale alignment of the RRSP magnetogram with the NFI field in detail.', '1402.4794-2-19-1': 'In their Figure 20, comparing panels (a) and (b) (or panels (b) and (d) in Fig. 1 of Schrijver 2008) reveals some stretching - primarily horizontal - of the morphology of AR 10930 in the SP data.', '1402.4794-2-19-2': 'Given the position of AR 10930 near S06W21, foreshortening is too small to account for the magnitude of this distortion, with about 300 RRSP pixels covering the same horizontal distance as 250 NFI pixels - a discrepancy of 20%.', '1402.4794-2-19-3': '[CITATION] and [CITATION] therefore used repeated Fourier interpolations to spatially interpolate the RRSP data onto each column of the 0.32 NFI grid (thereby oversampling the 0.63 RRSP pixels), an approach we also used here.', '1402.4794-2-19-4': 'In the process, we reduced the horizontal extent of RRSP pixels by 5%, chosen to maximize agreement between [MATH] and [MATH] from the SP data in the plage region that we analyze here.', '1402.4794-2-19-5': '(Welsch et al. [2012] found the stretching across the full FOV to be non-uniform, as would be expected for reprojection, but it appears locally linear in the horizontal direction.)', '1402.4794-2-19-6': 'Note that distortion by foreshortening in our plage region (17[MATH] from disk center) should be a 5% effect, and nearly uniform across the region.', '1402.4794-2-20-0': 'The plage region that we studied is a [MATH] pixel[MATH] area in the data with 0.32 pixels.', '1402.4794-2-20-1': 'In the [MATH]-binned NFI data, this corresponds to [MATH] and [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-20-2': 'We roughly co-aligned the SP data by hand to within a few pixels, and then computed the cross-correlation of the nearly-aligned images to find the whole-pixel shift at the maximum of the cross-correlation function.', '1402.4794-2-20-3': 'Residual shifts for the POSSP and RRSP data in [MATH] are (-0.03,0.66) and (-0.48,-0.05) pixels, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-20-4': 'To illustrate the co-alignment, we plot contours of [MATH] at [MATH] and [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] over a grayscale image of [MATH] from the POSSP data in the plage region in the left panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-2-20-5': 'In the right panel, we show a scatter plot of [MATH] from SP versus [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-20-6': 'The rank-order and linear correlation coefficients are 0.90 and 0.91, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-20-7': 'A fit of [MATH] to [MATH] from the POSSP data yields a slope near 0.66, implying weaker flux densities for [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-20-8': '(The POSSP data incorporates a filling factor estimate.)', '1402.4794-2-20-9': 'Discrepancies probably arise primarily from both the more accurate polarimetric inversion of the SP data and evolution in the fields while the SP was rastered.', '1402.4794-2-21-0': 'The mean and median vertical fields in this region are -434 G and -354 G, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-21-1': 'The mean unsigned [MATH] has the same magnitude as mean [MATH], so the region really is unipolar.', '1402.4794-2-21-2': 'The mean and median horizontal field strengths are 160 G and 121 G, respectively, and the mean and median inclination angles are 154[MATH] and 157[MATH], respectively - so 26[MATH] and 23[MATH] from vertical.', '1402.4794-2-22-0': 'Deriving error estimates for the vector field is not straightforward.', '1402.4794-2-22-1': 'We examined the histogram of line-of-sight field strengths over the full [MATH]-pixel SP FOV, but found the core exhibits an unexpected dearth of field values within about [MATH] 5 G of zero, so fitting the core would not be meaningful.', '1402.4794-2-22-2': 'Nonetheless, the shape of the histogram within [MATH] 20 G suggests that the FWHM of the distribution would be about 20 G; this is also the median unsigned line-of-sight field strength.', '1402.4794-2-22-3': 'This value might more accurately represent intrinsic variability in the line-of-sight field than measurement error, but we expect it is a good upper limit on the noise level in the line-of-sight field.', '1402.4794-2-22-4': 'Given the relatively strong vertical fields in our near-disk-center plage region, the fractional error in [MATH] is therefore likely to be small - about 5%.', '1402.4794-2-22-5': 'For the horizontal fields, the situation is less clear.', '1402.4794-2-22-6': 'The median transverse field strength over the whole FOV is only 8 G, and the FWHM of the histogram of transverse field values is about only 5 G. Almost exactly 1/3 of pixels have a transverse field stronger than 30 G; we suggest this is a good "1-[MATH]" level, since 2/3 of the distribution falls below it.', '1402.4794-2-22-7': 'This transverse-field uncertainty would imply fractional errors in horizontal fields in our plage region of about 25%.', '1402.4794-2-22-8': 'If errors in [MATH] and [MATH] were uncorrelated, then their combined impact on the Poynting flux would be negligible.', '1402.4794-2-22-9': 'Both the inversion process used to derive [MATH] and the reprojection of the magnetic vector from LOS/POS components into vertical/horizontal components, however, imply the errors are coupled.', '1402.4794-2-22-10': 'Nonetheless, we expect the impact of measurement errors in [MATH] on [MATH] to be relatively small in all summed results: since all the quantities that are summed are signed (from the product of [MATH] with the dot product of [MATH] with [MATH]), some cancellation should occur.', '1402.4794-2-23-0': '## Tracking the NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-2-24-0': 'Many tracking algorithms estimate spatial displacements of local structures in a pair of images separated in time by an interval [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-24-1': 'Tracking methods then typically have at least two free parameters: the size [MATH] of the local neighborhood (around each pixel for which a velocity is sought) in which structures between the two images are associated; and the time interval [MATH] between images.', '1402.4794-2-24-2': 'Accordingly, we briefly discuss our tracking parameters.', '1402.4794-2-25-0': 'In some cases, [MATH] is tightly constrained by the cadence of observations.', '1402.4794-2-25-1': 'If, however, cadences are relatively rapid compared to the expected time scale of evolution of image structures, then successive images are likely to differ only by the noise in each measurement .', '1402.4794-2-25-2': 'Consequently, using the highest possible cadence for a given sequence of observations might be unwise.', '1402.4794-2-25-3': '[CITATION] suggested that temporal stability in the reconstructed flow maps provides a useful constraint in determining the optimal [MATH]: two flow fields estimated at times [MATH] and [MATH] (from images pairs at [MATH] and [MATH], respectively) should be very similar if [MATH] is shorter than the time scale of evolution in the flow field.', '1402.4794-2-25-4': 'In the NFI dataset, [CITATION] found that successive flow maps were poorly correlated at the observing cadence ([MATH] s), so [MATH] should be larger.', '1402.4794-2-25-5': 'They also found worse agreement between successive flow maps estimated without first temporally averaging the input magnetograms.', '1402.4794-2-25-6': 'Accordingly, the flows we analyze here were derived with [MATH] = 8 min, and the initial and final magnetograms were computed by applying a five-step boxcar average to the NFI magnetograms.', '1402.4794-2-26-0': 'As noted above, the size [MATH] of the localization (or "apodization window" or "aperture") function applied to the input images prior to tracking is set by the user.', '1402.4794-2-26-1': 'Typical weighting functions are Gaussians or "top-hats" centered on each pixel for which a velocity estimate is sought.', '1402.4794-2-26-2': "In FLCT, [MATH] is set via the [MATH] parameter in FLCT's weighting function, [MATH], where [MATH] is the horizontal distance (in pixels) from each pixel for which a velocity is sought.", '1402.4794-2-27-0': 'The best procedure to select an optimal [MATH] is unclear.', '1402.4794-2-27-1': 'As noted by [CITATION], the estimated velocity can be used to reconstruct the observed evolution between the images; and as noted by [CITATION] and [CITATION], the windowing parameter can be chosen to optimize consistency of this reconstruction with observations.', '1402.4794-2-27-2': 'A perfectly consistent reconstruction (see, e.g., Welsch 2011), however, is undesirable: exact matching of observations is problematic because any noise or artifacts in the input images is propagated directly into the estimated electric fields .', '1402.4794-2-27-3': '[CITATION] also noted that a given choice of [MATH] implies averaging over dynamics on spatial scales smaller than [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-27-4': 'To fully exploit the spatial resolution of SOT, therefore, a smaller [MATH] would be better.', '1402.4794-2-27-5': '[CITATION] noted, however, that, in the presence of noise, information from several pixels is essential to prevent spurious fluctuations from noise from obscuring actual physical displacements.', '1402.4794-2-27-6': 'Consequently, selecting too small an [MATH] can increase susceptibility to noise, since not enough pixels are used in estimating each local displacement.', '1402.4794-2-27-7': "Indeed, [CITATION] found that relatively small [MATH]'s resulted in low correlations between successive flow maps, suggesting the influence of fluctuations from noise.", '1402.4794-2-27-8': 'Accordingly, we analyze flow maps derived with [MATH] pixels here, which balances preservation of spatial resolution with the need for significant frame-to-frame correlations in flows, to ensure robustness in our estimates.', '1402.4794-2-28-0': 'We also attempt to minimize confusion of fluctuations due to noise in the input magnetograms with bona fide magnetic evolution by not estimating velocities in pixels below the noise level.', '1402.4794-2-28-1': 'Accordingly, pixels with unsigned flux densities below the 15 Mx cm[MATH] noise level for the NFI images estimated by [CITATION] were not tracked.', '1402.4794-2-29-0': 'In Figure [REF], we plot both horizontal magnetic field vectors and FLCT flow vectors over a grayscale image of [MATH], for the flow map centered at 20:48:19.', '1402.4794-2-30-0': 'Velocities tend to be larger in field-free regions, consistent with the general tendency of strong vertical fields to suppress convection .', '1402.4794-2-30-1': 'The mean and median horizontal FLCT velocities, among pixels where estimates were made, are 0.17 km s[MATH] and 0.14 km s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-2-31-0': 'In addition, as a check upon our results, we have tracked the NFI data with a separate LCT code, one provided by Y.-J. Moon (private communication) that has been used in other published work (e.g., Moon 2002).', '1402.4794-2-31-1': 'While FLCT computes the cross-correlation function in Fourier space, this second tracking code computes the correlation function in regular space, following [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-31-2': 'Hence, we refer to it as Spatial LCT (SLCT), in contrast to Fourier LCT.', '1402.4794-2-31-3': 'We also only tracked pixels with absolute flux density above 15 Mx cm[MATH], with the same [MATH], but set [MATH] in this code to 3 pixels, since its weighting function includes a factor of 2 in the denominator of the exponential, [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-31-4': 'This routine returned either excessively large velocities in some pixels or even NaNs (in 4 of tracked pixels).', '1402.4794-2-31-5': 'Velocities in excess of 5 km s[MATH] of tracked pixels) or equal to NaN were set to zero.', '1402.4794-2-32-0': 'In the left panel of Figure [REF], we show SLCT velocities overlain on [MATH] from the POSSP data.', '1402.4794-2-32-1': 'Comparison of these flows with those in Figure [REF] shows rough agreement in many places, but also clear disagreements in others.', '1402.4794-2-32-2': "Rank-order correlation coefficients between these methods' [MATH] and [MATH] estimates are both 0.84 and 0.76, respectively.", '1402.4794-2-32-3': 'Consistent with this significant correlation, a scatter plot in the right panel of Figure [REF] shows that the flows are substantially correlated.', '1402.4794-2-33-0': 'The mean and median horizontal SLCT velocities, among pixels where estimates were made, are 0.17 km s[MATH] and 0.13 km s[MATH], respectively, quite close to the values for FLCT.', '1402.4794-2-34-0': '# Results', '1402.4794-2-35-0': '## Poynting Fluxes', '1402.4794-2-36-0': 'We combined the FLCT flows estimated from the NFI data with the co-registered vector magnetic field from SP in equation ([REF]) to compute the Poynting flux averaged over the plage region.', '1402.4794-2-36-1': 'Using the POSSP data, we find a net positive average Poynting flux, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], very similar to the [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] that we get using the RRSP data.', '1402.4794-2-36-2': 'The similar POSSP / RRSP values demonstrate that different interpolations of the SP data are not a significant source of error (perhaps unsurprising).', '1402.4794-2-36-3': 'In Figure [REF], we show a grayscale map of the Poynting flux, with saturation set to [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], overlain with -125 G and -250 G contours of [MATH] from the POSSP data.', '1402.4794-2-36-4': 'Regions with both positive and negative Poynting flux are visible, but the net Poynting flux is positive.', '1402.4794-2-37-0': 'Using the SLCT flows with the POSSP data, we also find a net positive Poynting flux, but estimate [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], about 3% larger than the FLCT result.', '1402.4794-2-37-1': 'The Poynting flux maps are significantly correlated, with a pixel-wise rank-order correlation of 0.69.', '1402.4794-2-37-2': 'Our simplistic estimate of uncertainties in the magnetic field ([REF] above) suggests that fractional errors in [MATH] could be larger, but are probably commensurate.', '1402.4794-2-37-3': 'Evidently, the flow estimation process is a source of at least a [MATH]% uncertainty in our estimates.', '1402.4794-2-37-4': 'Further study of this same data set, using a different tracking method (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-2-38-0': 'It is not surprising that different flow methods yield somewhat different results.', '1402.4794-2-38-1': '[CITATION] compared flows estimated by several methods using synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations of an emerging magnetic flux tube in the solar interior, in which the true velocities were known.', '1402.4794-2-38-2': 'Flows from most of the methods were significantly correlated with both each other and with the true flows.', '1402.4794-2-38-3': 'But flows from the various methods did not agree closely, and most of the methods only recovered a fraction of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-2-38-4': 'Results from the tests by [CITATION], however, are probably not applicable here, because the rising-flux-tube magnetic geometry in the MHD data they used is very different than our plage region: their field was primarily horizontal, and the Poynting flux was dominated by the emergence term, not the shearing term.', '1402.4794-2-38-5': 'For pixels in the upper 95% of the distribution in [MATH] (the criterion they used to determine the population they tracked), this can be seen in a number of statistical measures: the median horizontal field was five times stronger than the median vertical field; the mean and median inclination angles (from the vertical) were both larger than 65[MATH]; and the emergence term in the Poynting flux was largest in every pixel above their tracking 5% threshold (and in 99% of all pixels).', '1402.4794-2-39-0': 'Data from simulations by [CITATION] of a magnetic geometry similar to the plage region we study here have been obtained.', '1402.4794-2-39-1': 'He simulated magnetoconvection near the photosphere in the presence of a dynamically significant vertical magnetic field, with a detailed treatment of the energy equation.', '1402.4794-2-39-2': 'Tests using these data are planned, but a key challenge that must be addressed is the large disparity in temporal scales between the simulations and observations: in the simulations by [CITATION], the characteristic time step is a second or less, but observational cadences are about a factor of 100 or more slower.', '1402.4794-2-39-3': 'Many of the velocities in the simulations are, in fact, very short-lived, and do not cause substantial magnetic evolution.', '1402.4794-2-39-4': 'Hence, direct comparison of instantaneous velocities in such simulations with velocities obtained by tracking (or other methods, e.g., Fisher 2010, 2012) over an observationally realistic time interval [MATH] is problematic.', '1402.4794-2-39-5': 'Applying spatial and temporal averaging to the simulation data, however, might enable meaningful comparisons.', '1402.4794-2-40-0': 'It is illuminating to compare the average Poynting flux that we obtain for our plage region with that obtained for the plage region studied by [CITATION], both using FLCT flows: [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-2-40-1': 'Our flux is a factor of 1.6 larger than that reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-40-2': 'We note that the mean and median unsigned vertical fields in our plage region (434 G and 354 G, resp.)', '1402.4794-2-40-3': 'are larger than the corresponding values in the region studied by [CITATION] (365 G and 274 G, resp.)', '1402.4794-2-40-4': 'by factors of [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-40-5': 'We also used the SLCT flows to estimate the Poynting flux in the plage studied by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], about [MATH]% higher than the FLCT value.', '1402.4794-2-40-6': 'This disparity suggests that uncertainties in Poynting estimate due to uncertainties in the flow estimates could be larger than the few-percent disparity that we found for the plage region that is the focus of this paper.', '1402.4794-2-41-0': 'The occurrence of [MATH] for both cases might be a coincidence, or might indicate that SLCT returns systematically higher Poynting flux estimates than FLCT.', '1402.4794-2-41-1': 'Further comparisons of flows and Poynting fluxes in additional regions would be useful to characterize systematic effects.', '1402.4794-2-41-2': 'In the case studied by [CITATION], the SLCT and FLCT velocities and Poynting fluxes are again strongly correlated, with rank-order correlations for [MATH], and [MATH] of 0.76, 0.79, and 0.85, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-42-0': '## Dependence on Magnetic Structure', '1402.4794-2-43-0': 'The larger average Poynting flux from the plage region with larger area-averaged [MATH] motivates analysis of the dependence of the Poynting flux on magnetic properties of each plage region.', '1402.4794-2-43-1': 'For both regions, rank-order correlations between the unsigned Poynting flux, [MATH] (from FLCT), and the magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] are all similar, and very near 0.8.', '1402.4794-2-43-2': 'For spatial derivatives of magnetic variables, in both regions, the correlation of [MATH] with the horizontal curl [MATH][MATH]<[MATH]) was slightly weaker than that with the horizontal divergence [MATH]).', '1402.4794-2-43-3': 'Rank-order correlations between [MATH] and flow properties were less consistent between the regions: the correlation with [MATH] was insignificant in our plage region, but [MATH] for that of [CITATION]; the correlation with [MATH] was negative and weak ([MATH][MATH]>[MATH]) in both; [MATH] and [MATH] were either insignificantly different from zero in both regions or weakly negative.', '1402.4794-2-44-0': 'These correlations of unsigned Poynting flux with field strengths suggest that stronger magnetic fields produce larger Poynting fluxes, which is perhaps unsurprising, given the product of field components in [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-44-1': 'To the extent that the presence of horizontal fields is correlated with the presence of vertical fields, this suggests an approximately quadratic scaling of [MATH] with [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-44-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show a scatter plot of [MATH] versus [MATH], and a least-squares linear fit to the logs, corresponding to a power law with [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-44-3': 'This fit accords with our expectation of a near-quadratic dependence.', '1402.4794-2-45-0': 'The dependence of the signed Poynting flux [MATH] on [MATH], and [MATH] is much weaker, with rank-order correlations the range of 0.15 - 0.3 for both plage regions.', '1402.4794-2-45-1': "For both regions, the correlation with [MATH] was slightly higher than with [MATH], marginally beyond the [MATH] level for each of the correlation coefficients (computed with Fisher's z-transformation).", '1402.4794-2-45-2': 'A scatter plot of signed [MATH] with [MATH] (not shown) shows no clear trend, but a slight preponderance of positive Poynting fluxes is (barely) discernible.', '1402.4794-2-45-3': 'The correlations with [MATH] and [MATH] were weak but slightly positive in both regions.', '1402.4794-2-46-0': 'In addition to the signed Poynting fluxes given above, we can characterize signed energy input per unit of magnetic flux, by computing a ratio with units of luminosity per maxwell of [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-46-1': 'Among pixels that were tracked with FLCT, the mean ratios of signed energy input per maxwell are [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the plage region studied here and that studied by [CITATION], respectively.', '1402.4794-2-46-2': 'These are ordered with the differences in field strengths and signed Poynting fluxes between the plage regions, but differ by [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-46-3': 'The median (energy input:magnetic flux) ratios for tracked pixels in the respective regions are much smaller, but have the same ordering: [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-2-46-4': 'Totaling the energy input and unsigned magnetic flux separately, and then dividing - so the ratio of sums instead of the sum of ratios used to compute the mean above - yields significantly larger values for the whole-FOV energy input per maxwell in both regions, [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] and [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the plage region studied here and that studied by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-46-5': '(Again the regions differ by 1.3.)', '1402.4794-2-46-6': 'Cancellations within the sum of ratios used to compute the means above likely explain these larger whole-FOV values.', '1402.4794-2-47-0': 'These (energy input:magnetic flux) ratios values are relevant to a study of soft-X-ray (SXR) luminosity [MATH] in several hundred active regions by [CITATION], who investigated correlations between [MATH] and global magnetic properties of the regions (e.g., total unsigned flux, total unsigned vertical current, average field strength, etc.) from Haleakala Stokes Polarimeter vector magnetograms.', '1402.4794-2-47-1': "They found that the regions' luminosities depended more strongly on their total unsigned magnetic flux, [MATH], than any other global magnetic variable they considered, and, further, that [MATH] scaled as a power law in [MATH], with an index near one.", '1402.4794-2-47-2': '(See also Fludra and Ireland [2008], who investigated power laws between whole-AR EUV intensities and magnetic fluxes.)', '1402.4794-2-47-3': 'The lack of dependence on [MATH] reported by [CITATION] is not consistent with the mean and whole-FOV energy input per unit magnetic flux that we find, which appear to scale with average field strength within the plage region.', '1402.4794-2-47-4': 'Given the difference between mean and median energy inputs per unit magnetic flux, this could be due to random fluctuations in a few high-Poynting-flux regions (which would bias the mean and whole-FOV values).', '1402.4794-2-47-5': 'Also, several unknown physical processes are at work in the conversion of magnetic energy into thermal energy and radiation (see, e.g., Klimchuk 2006), so disagreement between one component of energy input and one component of energy output is not especially problematic.', '1402.4794-2-47-6': 'In addition, given our uncertainties and our small sample ([MATH] of just 2!)', '1402.4794-2-47-7': ', additional regions must be studied to clarify the scaling of energy input with magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-2-48-0': 'As we have seen, stronger-field pixels tend to have larger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-2-48-1': 'The tendency of strong fields to inhibit convection , however, also suggests that a turning point should be reached as field strength increases, where increasingly weak convective velocities produce a smaller convection-driven Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-2-48-2': 'This is a plausible explanation for the relative darkness of the corona in EUV and SXR images directly above sunspot umbrae.', '1402.4794-2-48-3': '(Note, however, that spatially coherent, large-scale flows, like those in rotating sunspots [e.g., Brown 2003], could still easily transport large amounts of magnetic energy across the photosphere in sunspot fields, though this energy might be more relevant to flares and CMEs than to coronal heating.)', '1402.4794-2-48-4': 'Do we see any evidence of this rollover in Poynting flux with field strength in our plage regions?', '1402.4794-2-48-5': 'To find out, we computed the average of signed Poynting fluxes in pixels above a set of increasing thresholds in field strength.', '1402.4794-2-48-6': 'Figure [REF] shows signed Poynting fluxes [MATH] averaged in pixels above a threshold in [MATH], as functions of the threshold value, for our plage region ([MATH]) and that studied by [CITATION] ([MATH]).', '1402.4794-2-48-7': 'The error bars show standard errors in the mean, and characterize variance in the Poynting flux more than observational uncertainties.', '1402.4794-2-48-8': 'For both regions, we see a gentle peak in the average Poynting flux with increasing threshold, near 700 - 800 G, before fluctuations in the small number of above-threshold pixels at higher field strengths (which have increasingly large unsigned Poynting fluxes) increase the variance substantially.', '1402.4794-2-49-0': 'Again, however, our uncertainties, small sample size, as well as our limited range of field strengths all preclude making definitive statements about the quenching of the convection-driven Poynting flux by strong fields.', '1402.4794-2-50-0': '## Comparison with Chromospheric Emission', '1402.4794-2-51-0': 'It is plausible that regions of enhanced magnetic energy flux across the photosphere would be brighter in some form of emission.', '1402.4794-2-51-1': '(It is also possible that the solar atmosphere above the photosphere could store injected magnetic energy, in the form of electric currents, for some time prior to its dissipation and consequent enhancement of emission.)', '1402.4794-2-52-0': 'The plage region we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by the BFI, so we briefly investigate correlations between the Poynting flux map and other photospheric magnetic variables and this emission.', '1402.4794-2-52-1': '(The region studied by Yeates 2014 was below the BFI FOV.)', '1402.4794-2-52-2': 'The closest image in time to the NFI velocity estimate was recorded at 20:48:16 UT on 2006/12/12, which we co-registered with [MATH] after downsampling from the BFI pixel size of 0.11 by a factor of three to approximately match the [MATH]-binned NFI pixel scale.', '1402.4794-2-52-3': 'In Figure [REF], we show [MATH] 125 and [MATH] 250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of NFI flux density (solid for negative, dashed for positive) overlain on the Ca II intensity in a ([MATH])-pixel area that encompasses our plage region.', '1402.4794-2-52-4': '(All quantities results discussed below, however, are still only within our [MATH])-pixel region.)', '1402.4794-2-53-0': 'For magnetic variables, the spatial map of Ca II intensity exhibited the strongest rank-order correlation (0.67) with [MATH] and [MATH], and a weaker correlation (0.46) with [MATH].', '1402.4794-2-53-1': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were significant but much weaker, at 0.12 and 0.26.', '1402.4794-2-54-0': 'For the Poynting flux, the correlation of Ca II intensity with unsigned and signed Poynting fluxes was 0.55, and 0.17, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-54-1': 'The fact that the magnetic variables that enter the Poynting flux are more strongly correlated with Ca II emission than the Poynting flux suggests that the only additional information in the Poynting flux, from the FLCT flows, is unrelated to Ca II emission; and, indeed, the correlation of Ca II with [MATH] is significantly negative, at -0.11.', '1402.4794-2-54-2': 'This anticorrelation probably arises because flow speeds are higher in weak-field regions, while the emission is brightest in strong-field regions.', '1402.4794-2-54-3': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were also negative, but marginally insignificant at -0.06 and -0.08, respectively.', '1402.4794-2-54-4': 'We also checked the signed horizontal flow divergence, reasoning that converging flows might slightly compress the plasma and lead to heating.', '1402.4794-2-54-5': 'The correlation was also negative (i.e., converging motions are present slightly more often near brighter Ca II emission), and stronger but still weak, at -0.12.', '1402.4794-2-54-6': 'This might be related to the concentration of magnetic flux in downflow lanes where horizontal flows converge.', '1402.4794-2-54-7': 'The negative correlation of the curl, however, is harder to understand.', '1402.4794-2-54-8': 'We conclude that flow information at the spatial and temporal scales that we study has relatively little bearing on Ca II emission, compared to magnetic variables.', '1402.4794-2-55-0': '# Summary Conclusions', '1402.4794-2-56-0': 'By combining LCT velocities estimated from a LOS magnetogram sequence with a vector magnetogram, both derived from Hinode/SOT observations of AR 10930, we estimated the ideal Poynting flux in a (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) plage region to be near [MATH] - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], depending upon whether FLCT or SLCT velocities were used.', '1402.4794-2-56-1': 'Errors in the magnetic fields likely produce smaller uncertainties in the Poynting flux than this.', '1402.4794-2-56-2': 'These Poynting fluxes are sufficient to explain the coronal energy demand estimated by [CITATION] ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]), as well as a significant fraction of the chromospheric energy demand they estimated ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]).', '1402.4794-2-57-0': 'Our energy flux is larger by a factor of [MATH] than that found in another plage region, observed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-2-57-1': 'The mean and median field strength in that region were lower by [MATH]% than the region we studied here, suggesting that signed Poynting flux might be higher in stronger-field regions.', '1402.4794-2-57-2': 'Within our plage region, we found that the unsigned Poynting flux from each pixel scaled as [MATH], i.e., nearly the quadratic scaling expected from the two (correlated) components of [MATH] that enter the expression for the ideal Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-2-57-3': 'The signed Poynting flux also increased with field strength, but with a much weaker correlation ([MATH]), so we could not easily quantify this trend.', '1402.4794-2-57-4': 'We found the energy input per unit magnetic flux in both plage regions to be on the order of a few times [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH], with higher values in the stronger-field plage region.', '1402.4794-2-57-5': 'Our uncertainties are large and our sample size is small, but this result conflicts with the study of X-ray luminosity versus magnetic field properties by , who reported no dependence of magnetic field strength independent of the correlation with magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-2-57-6': 'We sought evidence that intense vertical fields might suppress convection and thereby limit the average signed Poynting flux from strong-field regions, and found that average Poynting flux per pixel peaked when averaging pixels above 700 - 800 G.', '1402.4794-2-57-7': 'This suggests fields much stronger than this inhibit the convective Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-2-58-0': 'We also compared our Poynting flux map with a Ca II intensity image, and found much stronger correlation of Ca II emission with the vertical magnetic field strength [MATH] than with vertical Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-2-58-1': 'We noted that the time interval [MATH] between images (eight minutes here) and windowing length scale [MATH] (4 pixels, [MATH] Mm) used in our tracking will likely filter out processes on shorter temporal and spatial scales.', '1402.4794-2-58-2': 'Such processes (e.g., waves, or smaller-scale braiding) might play a key role in Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-2-58-3': 'Given that chromospheric and coronal length scales are shorter than the scales we resolve, observations with higher resolution in space and time (see below) would be useful to investigate Poynting flux - emission correlations further.', '1402.4794-2-59-0': 'We plan to conduct several related studies to extend the work here.', '1402.4794-2-59-1': 'We would like to analyze the same two plage regions with additional tracking methods (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) to better understand the model-dependence of flow estimates in determining Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-2-59-2': 'We would also like to analyze additional Hinode/SOT datasets, especially observations with simultaneous IRIS coverage of chromospheric, transition region, and coronal emission, to seek any evidence of spatial or temporal correlations between energy input via our estimated Poynting fluxes and energy dissipation in the outer solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-2-59-3': "In addition, we would like to analyze a region simultaneously observed with Hinode/SOT and the HMI instrument aboard SDO , to study the dependence of the estimated Poynting flux on both instrument resolution (SOT's is a factor of [MATH] better) and combined spectral sampling / field inversion.", '1402.4794-2-59-4': "Further, it is crucial that we increase our sample size, and HMI's large database of active region patches (greater than 1,000 at the time of this writing) should be ideal for this purpose.", '1402.4794-2-60-0': 'Within the larger context of the coronal heating problem, we suggest that a key strategic observational objective for understanding chromospheric and coronal heating should be construction of a detailed energy budget for the photosphere-to-corona system, with spatially and temporally resolved energy inputs correlated with energy release in all forms - radiation, kinetic energy in thermal and non-thermal particles and bulk motion, and gravitational potential energy.', '1402.4794-2-60-1': 'This will require high-resolution and high-cadence observations of the magnetic field and emission throughout the photosphere-to-corona system, for which both space-based observatories (e.g., SDO, IRIS, and the planned Solar-C satellite) and existing and planned ground-based observatories (NST [Goode 2010], GREGOR [Volkmer 2010], ATST [Rimmele 2010], and EST [Zuccarello and Zuccarello 2011]) will be essential.'}
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['1402.4794-1-17-1', '1402.4794-1-20-3', '1402.4794-1-31-0', '1402.4794-1-47-6', '1402.4794-1-47-7', '1402.4794-2-17-1', '1402.4794-2-20-3', '1402.4794-2-31-0', '1402.4794-2-47-6', '1402.4794-2-47-7', '1402.4794-3-18-1', '1402.4794-3-36-0', '1402.4794-4-20-1', '1402.4794-4-38-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '3': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '4': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1402.4794
{'1402.4794-3-0-0': 'Some models of coronal heating suppose that convective motions at the photosphere shuffle the footpoints of coronal magnetic fields and thereby inject sufficient magnetic energy upward to account for observed coronal and chromospheric energy losses in active regions.', '1402.4794-3-0-1': 'Using high-resolution observations of plage magnetic fields made with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite, we investigate this idea by estimating the upward transport of magnetic energy - the vertical Poynting flux, [MATH] - across the photosphere in a plage region.', '1402.4794-3-0-2': 'To do so, we combine: (i) estimates of photospheric horizontal velocities, [MATH], determined by local correlation tracking applied to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetic field maps from the Narrowband Filter Imager, with (ii) a vector magnetic field measurement from the SpectroPolarimeter.', '1402.4794-3-0-3': 'Plage fields are ideal observational targets for estimating energy injection by convection, because they are: (i) strong enough to be measured with relatively small uncertainties; (ii) not so strong that convection is heavily suppressed (as within umbrae); and (iii) unipolar, so [MATH] in plage is not influenced by mixed-polarity processes (e.g., flux emergence) that cannot explain steady heating in stable, active-region fields.', '1402.4794-3-0-4': 'In this plage region, we found that the average [MATH] varied in space, but was positive (upward) and sufficient to explain coronal heating, with values near [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and an uncertainty on the order of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-0-5': 'We find the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-0-6': 'A comparison of intensity in a Ca II image co-registered with one plage magnetogram shows stronger spatial correlations with both total field strength and unsigned vertical field, [MATH] than either [MATH] or horizontal flux density, [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-0-7': 'The observed Ca II brightness enhancement, however, probably contains a strong contribution from a near-photosphere hot-wall effect, which is unrelated to heating in the solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-3-1-0': '# Introduction', '1402.4794-3-2-0': 'How is the solar corona heated to temperatures of [MATH] MK, when the lower layers of the solar atmosphere are [MATH] K or less?', '1402.4794-3-2-1': 'Evidently, the energy needed to heat the Sun\'s atmosphere must cross the photosphere in some organized form before being converted into heat (disorganized, "thermalized" energy) in the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-3-2-2': 'Because the magnetic fields that permeate the corona are all anchored at the photosphere, they are natural candidates for energetic coupling between the solar interior and corona.', '1402.4794-3-2-3': "In the interior, motions in the Sun's gas are driven by convection, and some fraction of the kinetic energy in turbulent convective motions is thought to be converted into energy stored in electric currents flowing in coronal magnetic fields that is then dissipated as heat.", '1402.4794-3-2-4': 'These induced currents might be characterized as either steady or rapidly varying (e.g., wave-driven) relative to the timescales of the atmospheric response, and the dissipation of each has been referred to as "DC" (direct-current) or "AC" (alternating-current) heating, respectively (e.g., Klimchuk 2006).', '1402.4794-3-3-0': 'To be a viable coronal heating mechanism, the input energy must be commensurate with observed energy losses in active region (AR) fields, estimated by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the corona and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] sec[MATH] for the chromosphere.', '1402.4794-3-3-1': 'Waves were once thought to be primarily responsible for coronal and chromospheric heating (see, e.g., Withbroe and Noyes 1977).', '1402.4794-3-3-2': 'While waves (e.g., Tomczyk 2007) and wave dissipation (e.g., Hahn 2012) have been reported in the corona, currently available observations have not demonstrated that they supply sufficient energy to heat the active-region chromosphere, transition region, and corona.', '1402.4794-3-3-3': 'In contrast to models invoking dissipation of waves, other models posit that convective motions induce relatively long-lived, DC currents that are episodically dissipated to heat the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-3-3-4': 'We explore the latter hypothesis here.', '1402.4794-3-4-0': 'There is a long history of modeling this convection-driven coronal energy input.', '1402.4794-3-4-1': 'Parker (1983a, 1983b) proposed that convection braids and twists the photospheric footpoints of coronal magnetic fields, and thereby injects energy into the corona.', '1402.4794-3-4-2': 'This energy is stored in current sheets, and is transiently dissipated in small bursts referred to as nanoflares , with typical energies of [MATH] erg, about [MATH] of the energies in very large flares.', '1402.4794-3-4-3': '[CITATION] modeled an idealization of this process by imposing shearing flows on the upper and lower boundaries of an initially uniform field in an MHD simulation, and found sufficient power to heat the corona.', '1402.4794-3-4-4': '[CITATION] imposed a more complex flow field, meant to mimic convective motions, on an MHD model of the coronal field and also found sufficient power, as well as morphology consistent with aspects of coronal observations.', '1402.4794-3-4-5': 'In the framework of reduced MHD, [CITATION], also found sufficient power, even though fields in their model were only weakly braided.', '1402.4794-3-4-6': 'More recently, [CITATION] also modeled this process in MHD with a detailed treatment of the energy equation and found heating that is transient in time and space, and concentrated in and near the modeled transition region.', '1402.4794-3-5-0': 'One promising observational approach to constraining models of coronal heating is to analyze time evolution of magnetic fields at the photosphere, where the magnetic field is precisely and routinely measured.', '1402.4794-3-5-1': 'Clear evidence of braiding or twisting motions would support the mechanism proposed by Parker.', '1402.4794-3-5-2': '[CITATION] proposed that continuous emergence and cancellation of small-scale fields in the quiet Sun\'s "magnetic carpet" leads to reconnection and heating, but [CITATION] used sequential potential models of quiet-Sun fields to argue that emergence and cancellation are not required: just reconnection between existing flux systems, as their photospheric footpoints move, should be sufficient.', '1402.4794-3-5-3': '[CITATION] recently directly incorporated magnetogram sequences into the lower boundary of a magnetofrictional model of quiet-sun coronal field evolution, to investigate the dissipation of magnetic energy within the simulation.', '1402.4794-3-5-4': 'Aspects of energy dissipation in their model were qualitatively consistent with solar observations, although their total upward energy flux was smaller than the observationally estimated energy demand for the quiet-sun atmosphere.', '1402.4794-3-6-0': '[CITATION] recently investigated analytic expressions for lower bounds on the upward-directed Poynting flux of magnetic energy in a region of plage fields in NOAA AR 10930, based upon observed photospheric magnetic and velocity fields.', '1402.4794-3-6-1': 'The flows they analyzed were estimated by [CITATION], who applied Fourier Local Correlation Tracking (FLCT; Fisher and Welsch 2008) to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetograms (magnetic field maps) of this active region.', '1402.4794-3-6-2': 'These magnetograms were observed with the Narrowband Filter Imager (NFI) instrument on the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite , with a cadence [MATH] s, over about 13 hours on 2006 December 12 - 13.', '1402.4794-3-7-0': '[CITATION] compared their lower bounds on the Poynting flux with a direct estimate of the Poynting flux, obtained with a procedure that we explain in detail here.', '1402.4794-3-7-1': 'First, they assumed that the photospheric magnetic field, [MATH], is frozen to the plasma - a valid assumption in quite general circumstances (see, e.g., Parker 1984).', '1402.4794-3-7-2': 'Then the photospheric electric field, [MATH], is ideal, and equal to [MATH], where [MATH] is the photospheric velocity.', '1402.4794-3-7-3': 'Then the (vector) Poynting flux of magnetic energy, [MATH] can be expressed in terms of [MATH] and [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-3-7-4': 'Approximating the photospheric surface as locally planar, we adopt Cartesian geometry, and use [MATH] and [MATH] to refer to vertical and horizontal directions, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-7-5': 'Then the vertical component of the Poynting flux is [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-3-7-6': 'This expression for total Poynting flux has been conceptually divided into an "emergence" term, which contains [MATH], and a "shear" term, which contains [MATH] .', '1402.4794-3-7-7': 'In fact, a positive (upward) value for the shearing term also implies the emergence of magnetized plasma across the photosphere.', '1402.4794-3-7-8': 'This is because a positive value implies a non-zero component of the photospheric velocity perpendicular to [MATH] that is upward.', '1402.4794-3-7-9': '(We ignore flows parallel to [MATH] here, which cancel out in equation [REF].)', '1402.4794-3-7-10': 'Such upward transport of a tilted magnetic field does not increase the total unsigned magnetic flux threading the photosphere, in contrast to the emergence of new (or additional) magnetic flux, which must occur at a polarity inversion line.', '1402.4794-3-7-11': 'Since [CITATION] were primarily focused on heating in plage - regions of nearly-vertical field when new flux is not emerging - the shearing term should dominate, meaning [EQUATION] [CITATION] treated the flows estimated by FLCT as horizontal velocities.', '1402.4794-3-7-12': 'We note that there is some controversy about how to interpret of velocities determined by correlation tracking and other "optical flow" methods.', '1402.4794-3-7-13': '[CITATION] suggested that the apparently horizontal flows estimated by LCT are a linear combination of the horizontal velocity with the vertical velocity, with weighting determined by the ratio of horizontal to vertical magnetic field.', '1402.4794-3-7-14': 'To test the accuracy of velocities reconstructed from magnetogram sequences, [CITATION] compared flows estimated by several methods, including LCT, using synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations of an emerging magnetic flux tube in the solar interior in which the actual velocities were known.', '1402.4794-3-7-15': 'Using the same test data, [CITATION] subsequently argued that optical flow methods, such as LCT, essentially estimate the horizontal velocity, [MATH], although their estimates can be affected by vertical flows', '1402.4794-3-8-0': 'The NFI magnetograms only provide estimates of the line-of-sight (LOS) field, [MATH], but the expressions for the Poynting flux given above all require knowledge of the vector magnetic field, [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-8-1': "Accordingly, [CITATION] co-registered the (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) region of the NFI field of view (FOV) that they studied with the corresponding sub-region of a vector magnetogram observed by SOT's SpectroPolarimeter (SP; Lites 2013).", '1402.4794-3-8-2': 'A reprojected vector magnetogram based upon these observations was prepared by [CITATION] and is available online.', '1402.4794-3-8-3': 'The co-alignment procedure followed the approach used by [CITATION], described in their Appendix.', '1402.4794-3-9-0': 'By combining [MATH] estimated with FLCT with [MATH] from the SP magnetogram, [CITATION] estimated the average Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-9-1': 'This energy flux is less than the combined energy demand for the chromosphere and corona in active regions estimated by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-9-2': 'As discussed in greater detail below, however, this estimate did not account for the observationally estimated magnetic filling factors that had been applied to each magnetic field component in the vector magnetogram used by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-9-3': 'Insufficient Poynting flux would indicate that processes on spatial or temporal scales that are unresolved in these photospheric observations (e.g., waves or smaller-scale footpoint shuffling) play a significant role in heating.', '1402.4794-3-10-0': 'Despite the central role of the Poynting flux in theories of coronal heating, very few observational estimates of Poynting flux in the context of coronal heating have been published.', '1402.4794-3-10-1': '[CITATION] investigated a "proxy Poynting flux," [MATH] in more than 160 active regions, determined by applying LCT to LOS magnetograms, and found values in the range [MATH] - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-10-2': 'They used the LOS fields alone because sequences of vector magnetic field measurements were quite rare.', '1402.4794-3-10-3': 'More recently, [CITATION] estimated the work done by flows on the magnetic field, by parametrizing the expected deformation of coronal loop structure by surface flows.', '1402.4794-3-10-4': 'The expression they derive is inversely proportional to coronal loop length [MATH] Mm, and for LCT flows with typical magnitudes of 0.5 km[MATH] s[MATH], they estimate a Poynting flux of [MATH] erg s[MATH] cm[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-10-5': 'They also found typical flow speeds were lower in regions with higher magnetic filling factors.', '1402.4794-3-10-6': 'This is roughly an order of magnitude lower than the value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] cm[MATH] reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-10-7': 'Given this considerable variation in published Poynting flux estimates, further investigation of Poynting fluxes is warranted.', '1402.4794-3-11-0': 'Here, we report additional estimates of the Poynting flux from plage magnetic fields in the same active region studied by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-11-1': 'Our primary aim is to to investigate the properties of photospheric Poynting flux in greater detail than was done previously, including its dependence on photospheric magnetic field structure.', '1402.4794-3-11-2': 'The remainder of this paper is organized as follows.', '1402.4794-3-11-3': 'In the next section, we briefly describe the magnetic field data and tracking methods we used to estimate [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-11-4': "In Section [REF], we first present our estimates of the Poynting flux in another small region of plage in AR 10930, then analyze the Poynting flux's correlations with magnetic structure in the region.", '1402.4794-3-11-5': "The region of the NFI FOV that we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by SOT's Broadband Filter Imager (BFI; Tsuneta 2008), and in [REF] we compare this chromospheric emission with the spatial distributions of Poynting flux and magnetic field components.", '1402.4794-3-11-6': 'Finally, we conclude with a brief discussion of our results in Section [REF].', '1402.4794-3-12-0': '# Data Methods', '1402.4794-3-13-0': '## NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-3-14-0': 'Many aspects of the NFI magnetograms that we track to estimate [MATH] are described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-14-1': 'These Fe I 6302 AA(shuttered) magnetograms of AR 10930 have 0.16 pixels, and were created from the Stokes [MATH] ratio in Level 0 data.', '1402.4794-3-14-2': 'The data were recorded between 12-Dec-2006 at 14:00 and 13-Dec-2006 at 02:58, with a cadence of 121.4 [MATH] 1.2 s, except for three gaps of 10 minutes and two relatively small time steps of 26 s each.', '1402.4794-3-14-3': 'The USAF/NOAA Solar Region Summary issued at 24:00 UT on 12-Dec-2006 listed AR 10930 at S06W21, meaning it was relatively near disk center during the interval we study.', '1402.4794-3-14-4': 'Since the diffraction limit of SOT is near 0.32, we rebinned the NFI magnetograms [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-14-5': 'During this era of the Hinode mission, a bubble present within the NFI instrument degraded image quality in the upper part of the NFI field of view; we ignore pixels from this region in our analyses.', '1402.4794-3-15-0': 'We converted the measured Stokes [MATH] and [MATH] signals into pixel-averaged flux densities, which we denote [MATH], using the approximate calibration employed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-15-1': 'While the linear scaling in this approach breaks down in umbrae, it should not be problematic for plage regions.', '1402.4794-3-15-2': 'Note that we use evolution in image structure in the NFI magnetograms to derive velocities, but do not use the estimated flux densities directly in any calculations; for correlation tracking, what matters is that the images capture the spatial structure of magnetic fields at each time in the sequence.', '1402.4794-3-15-3': '[CITATION] estimated the NFI noise level following [CITATION], by fitting the core of the distribution of flux densities ([MATH] Mx cm[MATH]) in each frame with a Gaussian.', '1402.4794-3-15-4': 'Based upon these fits, they adopted a uniform uncertainty estimate of [MATH] 15 Mx cm[MATH] for [MATH] over the 13-hour run.', '1402.4794-3-16-0': 'Prior to tracking these magnetograms, [CITATION] co-aligned them in time to remove spacecraft jitter and jumps from pointing changes.', '1402.4794-3-16-1': 'Spectral analysis showed some power at the orbital frequency, but no clear evidence of helioseismic p-mode leakage into the estimated magnetic flux densities.', '1402.4794-3-17-0': '## SP Vector Magnetograms', '1402.4794-3-18-0': 'As mentioned above, [CITATION] used SP data to estimate the vector magnetic field in AR 10930, and one of the two vector magnetograms they analyzed falls within our tracking interval.', '1402.4794-3-18-1': 'The full SP scan ran from 20:30 - 21:33, with [MATH] 0.3 pixels.', '1402.4794-3-18-2': 'From these observations, LOS and transverse magnetic field strengths, azimuth and fill fraction were determined at each SP slit position, as described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-18-3': 'The data were then interpolated onto a uniform grid in the plane-of-the-sky, with 0.32 square pixels, multiplied by the fill fraction, and annealed to set the ambiguity resolution.', '1402.4794-3-18-4': 'Notably, in pixels with weak total polarization, the fill-fraction was set to 1.0.', '1402.4794-3-18-5': 'We refer to this plane-of-sky (POS) SP magnetogram as the POSSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-3-18-6': 'To produce the vector magnetogram used by both [CITATION] and [CITATION], the resulting fields were then reprojected to represent the magnetic field on a Cartesian plane and mapped onto a grid with a pixel scale of approximately 0.63 per pixel.', '1402.4794-3-18-7': '(This was done to reduce the array size for computational expediency in extrapolating coronal fields.)', '1402.4794-3-18-8': 'We refer to this reduced-resolution SP magnetogram as the RRSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-3-18-9': '(The RRSP magnetogram produced by [CITATION] is online, in FITS format, at http://www.lmsal.com/[MATH]schryver/NLFFF/; file contents are described in the FITS header comment field.)', '1402.4794-3-19-0': 'When fill fractions are estimated in the process of inverting spectropolarimetric data to infer the magnetic field, the form of equation ([REF]) should be modified to properly account for the filling factor, [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-3-19-1': 'That is, the product of intrinsic field strengths should be weighted by one factor of [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-19-2': 'Since each magnetic field component, [MATH], in both the POSSP and RRSP magnetograms was already weighted by [MATH], using these values in equation ([REF]) requires unweighting by multiplying by [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-19-3': 'Interpolation of the fill fraction array [MATH] in POS coordinates to the RRSP grid introduces enough inaccuracies into the resulting array that multiplying by [MATH] results in implausibly large values of magnetic field strengths and Poynting fluxes in some pixels.', '1402.4794-3-19-4': 'Consequently, we only report results from the POSSP data here.', '1402.4794-3-19-5': 'Throughout the remainder of the manuscript, values for magnetic fields given in units of Mx cm[MATH] refer to pixel-averaged flux densities, i.e., [MATH]-weighted, while values quoted in G refer to intrinsic field strengths.', '1402.4794-3-20-0': 'The SP raster across the central part of the active region that is most closely aligned with the NFI FOV took slightly more than half an hour.', '1402.4794-3-20-1': 'Since the NFI magnetogram cadence was about two minutes, no single NFI magnetogram or velocity field is co-temporal with the SP magnetic field measurements.', '1402.4794-3-20-2': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] from the SP data in grayscale, with [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] overplotted (black for flux toward the observer, white for away).', '1402.4794-3-20-3': 'Rastering for the SP observation was left-to-right, and the longer SP observing interval causes to some local discrepancies between the fields.', '1402.4794-3-20-4': '(In this image, the [MATH] coordinates for contours of [MATH] were stretched by 1.01 from the SP data, necessary to compensate for a small discrepancy [MATH] found between the NFI and interpolated SP pixel sizes.)', '1402.4794-3-21-0': 'To analyze approximately simultaneous velocity and magnetic field data, we restrict our attention to the [MATH] pixel[MATH] area of plage to the east of the main sunspots in the region.', '1402.4794-3-21-1': 'The plage region that is the focus of our study in the white box at lower left of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-3-21-2': 'The scan across our plage region took about three minutes, from 20:46:47 - 20:49:56.', '1402.4794-3-21-3': 'We used the NFI image time stamped 20:48:20.', '1402.4794-3-22-0': 'The SP magnetic field vectors in spherical coordinates [MATH] were approximated in a locally Cartesian coordinate system as [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-22-1': 'While this is somewhat inaccurate over the FOV of the whole active region, it is not problematic in the small area of plage that we study (about one heliocentric degree on a side).', '1402.4794-3-23-0': 'In the [MATH]-binned NFI data, the plage region that we studied corresponds to [MATH] and [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-23-1': 'We roughly co-aligned the SP data by hand to within a few pixels, and then computed the cross-correlation of the nearly-aligned images to find the whole-pixel shift at the maximum of the cross-correlation function.', '1402.4794-3-23-2': 'To avoid introducing artifacts from interpolation, we only co-registered the data to within a pixel.', '1402.4794-3-23-3': 'Residual shifts for the SP data in [MATH] are (-0.02,0.23) pixels, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-23-4': 'To illustrate the co-alignment, we plot contours of [MATH] at [MATH] and [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] over a grayscale image of [MATH]-weighted [MATH] from SP data in the plage region in the left panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-3-23-5': 'In the right panel, we show a scatter plot of filling-factor-weighted [MATH] from SP versus [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-23-6': 'The linear and rank-order correlation coefficients are both 0.93; the similarity between both measures of correlation implies that outliers in [MATH] and [MATH] do not play a major role in the correlation.', '1402.4794-3-24-0': 'A fit of [MATH] to the filling-factor-weighted [MATH] yields a slope near 0.69, implying weaker flux densities for [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-24-1': 'Discrepancies could have arisen from both the more accurate polarimetric inversion of the SP data and evolution in the fields while the SP was rastered.', '1402.4794-3-25-0': 'The mean and median vertical flux densities in this region are -434 Mx cm[MATH] and -354 Mx cm[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-25-1': 'The mean unsigned [MATH] has the same magnitude as mean [MATH], so the region really is unipolar.', '1402.4794-3-25-2': 'The mean and median horizontal [MATH]-weighted flux densities are 160 Mx cm[MATH] and 121 Mx cm[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-25-3': 'The larger values of the means compared to medians here imply that some field strengths are substantially larger than the bulk of the population.', '1402.4794-3-25-4': 'The mean and median inclination angles are similar, 154[MATH] and 157[MATH], respectively - so 26[MATH] and 23[MATH] from vertical - implying the field in the bulk of the population is nearly vertical.', '1402.4794-3-26-0': 'Error estimates for the vector magnetic field were derived by the ASP inversion code for the SP data in pixels at slit positions with sufficient polarization signal for reliable inversions, as described in [CITATION], and provided by B. Lites (private communication).', '1402.4794-3-26-1': 'In 139 of our 2601 pixels, error estimates were not made, corresponding to weak-field pixels (with mean and median [MATH] both equal to 32 G).', '1402.4794-3-26-2': 'In 40 pixels, error estimates were large, with errors in inclination and azimuth exceeding 180[MATH] and 360[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-26-3': 'These also correspond to relatively weak fields, with mean values for [MATH] of (45, 28, 132) gauss.', '1402.4794-3-26-4': 'Among the remaining 2422 pixels, the mean and standard deviation of uncertainties in field strength, inclination, and azimuth were [MATH] G, [MATH], and [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-26-5': 'We performed simple Monte Carlo simulations to estimate uncertainties in [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-26-6': "In each run, for pixels with valid uncertainties (i.e., not the 179 pixels discussed above) we multiplied each pixel's uncertainties in field strength, inclination, and azimuth by randomly generated, normally distributed coefficients (appropriately scaled to the estimated uncertainties), added the results to the original values, and projected the resulting vector into its [MATH] components.", '1402.4794-3-26-7': 'We then computed the mean of absolute differences between the perturbed and original values for that run.', '1402.4794-3-26-8': 'For 1000 runs, the uncertainties in [MATH] are (30, 36, 35) gauss, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-26-9': 'The relatively large uncertainty in [MATH] probably results from our approach, which averages absolute errors, even though these might be small in fractional terms for strong-field pixels [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-26-10': 'This approach also ignores errors in ambiguity resolutions and filling factors.', '1402.4794-3-27-0': 'We expect the impact of measurement errors in [MATH] on [MATH] to be relatively small in all summed results: since the quantities that are summed in equation ([REF]) are signed (from the product of [MATH] with the dot product of [MATH] with [MATH]), some cancellation should occur.', '1402.4794-3-28-0': '## Tracking the NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-3-29-0': 'Many tracking algorithms estimate spatial displacements of local structures between a pair of images separated in time by an interval [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-29-1': 'Tracking methods then typically have at least two free parameters: the time difference [MATH] between images; and the size [MATH] of the local neighborhood (around each pixel for which a velocity is sought) in which structures between the two images are associated.', '1402.4794-3-29-2': 'Accordingly, we briefly discuss our tracking parameters.', '1402.4794-3-30-0': 'In some cases, [MATH] is tightly constrained by the cadence of observations.', '1402.4794-3-30-1': 'If, however, cadences are relatively rapid compared to the expected time scale of evolution of image structures, then successive images are likely to differ only by the noise in each measurement, leading to propagation of noise into the velocity estimates .', '1402.4794-3-30-2': '[CITATION] suggested that temporal consistency in successive flow maps is a good indicator of robustness in the velocity estimates.', '1402.4794-3-30-3': 'This can be achieved by extending [MATH] until significant magnetic evolution has occurred.', '1402.4794-3-30-4': 'Accordingly, the flows we analyze here were derived by tracking the full NFI FOV with [MATH] = 8 min.', '1402.4794-3-30-5': 'Also, the initial and final magnetograms were computed by applying a five-step boxcar average to the NFI magnetograms.', '1402.4794-3-31-0': 'Tracking codes (or optical flow methods generally, including LCT, DAVE, and DAVE4VM; see Schuck 2008) typically estimate the flow in a given pixel using information about evolution in a "local" neighborhood - within a user-set length scale, [MATH], that describes the "apodization window" or "aperture" size - around that pixel.', '1402.4794-3-31-1': '[CITATION] noted that, in the presence of noise, information from several pixels is essential to prevent spurious fluctuations due to noise from obscuring actual physical displacements.', '1402.4794-3-31-2': 'Consequently, selecting too small a value for [MATH] can increase susceptibility to noise, since not enough pixels are used in estimating each local displacement.', '1402.4794-3-31-3': 'Flows smaller than a given scale [MATH] are, however, smoothed over by tracking codes.', '1402.4794-3-31-4': "We therefore chose to analyze flow maps derived with [MATH] 0.32 pixels (set by FLCT's [MATH] parameter, used in a Gaussian windowing function, [MATH]), which struck a balance between boosting correlations between successive flow maps (i.e., suggesting the flow estimates were robust) but not over-degrading the resolution of the magnetograms that were tracked.", '1402.4794-3-32-0': 'We also attempt to minimize confusion of fluctuations due to noise in the input magnetograms with bona fide magnetic evolution by not estimating velocities in pixels below the noise level.', '1402.4794-3-32-1': 'Accordingly, pixels in the NFI magnetograms with unsigned flux densities below the 15 Mx cm[MATH] noise level estimated by [CITATION] were not tracked.', '1402.4794-3-33-0': 'In Figure [REF], we plot both horizontal magnetic field vectors, [MATH], and FLCT flow vectors over a grayscale image of [MATH], for the flow map centered at 20:48:19.', '1402.4794-3-34-0': 'The mean and median horizontal FLCT speeds, in the 2,570 pixels in this field of view where estimates were made, are 0.17 km s[MATH] and 0.14 km s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-35-0': 'Velocities tend to be larger in weaker-field regions, consistent with the general tendency of strong vertical fields to suppress convection .', '1402.4794-3-35-1': '[CITATION] reported an anti-correlation between filling factor and the variance in flow speeds inferred from LCT.', '1402.4794-3-35-2': 'We also found such an anticorrelation in the plage region studied here: in the 2,414 pixels in which a speed was estimated and the fill fraction was not 1.0, linear and rank-order correlations between speeds and fill fractions were both -0.18.', '1402.4794-3-35-3': '(As noted in [REF] below, this value is statistically significant.)', '1402.4794-3-35-4': 'Anticorrelations were also found between speeds and each of intrinsic field strength, intrinsic [MATH], and intrinsic [MATH]; but the anticorrelations were weaker than that of speed with [MATH], suggesting that fill fraction is the principal correlated factor.', '1402.4794-3-36-0': 'As a check upon our results, we also tracked the full NFI FOV with a separate LCT code, one provided by Y.-J. Moon (private communication) that has been used in other published work (e.g., Moon 2002).', '1402.4794-3-36-1': 'While FLCT computes the cross-correlation function in Fourier space, this second tracking code computes the correlation function in regular space, following [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-36-2': 'Hence, we refer to it as Spatial LCT (SLCT), in contrast to Fourier LCT.', '1402.4794-3-36-3': 'We also only tracked pixels with absolute flux density above 15 Mx cm[MATH], with the same [MATH], but set [MATH] in this code to 3 pixels, since its weighting function includes a factor of 2 in the denominator of the exponential, [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-36-4': 'This routine returned either excessively large velocities in some pixels or even NaNs (in 4 of tracked pixels).', '1402.4794-3-36-5': 'Velocities in excess of 2 km s[MATH] of tracked pixels) or equal to NaN were set to zero.', '1402.4794-3-37-0': 'In the left panel of Figure [REF], we show SLCT velocities overlain on [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-37-1': 'Comparison of these flows with those in Figure [REF] shows rough agreement in many places, but also clear disagreements in others.', '1402.4794-3-37-2': "Rank-order correlation coefficients between these methods' [MATH] and [MATH] values in pixels where both methods made valid estimates were 0.85 and 0.77, respectively.", '1402.4794-3-37-3': 'Linear correlations were similar, at 0.85 and 0.63 for [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-37-4': 'Linear and rank-order correlations near 0.8 result from adding 10 random variation to a flow component and then correlating it with the unperturbed flow component.', '1402.4794-3-37-5': 'This suggests about [MATH]10 variability in estimated flows due to the LCT implementation.', '1402.4794-3-37-6': 'Consistent with these significant correlations, a scatter plot in the right panel of Figure [REF] shows that the flows are substantially correlated.', '1402.4794-3-38-0': 'The mean and median horizontal SLCT velocities, among pixels where valid estimates were made, are 0.15 km s[MATH] and 0.13 km s[MATH], respectively, quite close to the values for FLCT.', '1402.4794-3-39-0': '# Results', '1402.4794-3-40-0': '## Poynting Fluxes', '1402.4794-3-41-0': 'We combined the FLCT flows estimated from the NFI data with the co-registered vector magnetic field data and fill fraction from SP in equation ([REF]) to compute the Poynting flux averaged over the plage region.', '1402.4794-3-41-1': 'We find a net positive average Poynting flux, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] .', '1402.4794-3-41-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show a grayscale map of the Poynting flux, with saturation set to [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], overlain with -125 Mx cm[MATH] and -250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] from the SP data.', '1402.4794-3-41-3': 'Regions with both positive and negative Poynting flux are visible, but the net Poynting flux is positive.', '1402.4794-3-42-0': 'Using the SLCT flows, we also find a net positive Poynting flux, but estimate [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-42-1': 'This is about 12 larger than the FLCT result.', '1402.4794-3-42-2': 'The fractional difference between FLCT and SLCT results, compared to their average, is about 6.', '1402.4794-3-42-3': 'The Poynting flux maps are significantly correlated, with pixel-wise linear and rank-order correlations of 0.90 and 0.85 in pixels where both methods made estimates.', '1402.4794-3-42-4': 'Evidently, the flow estimation process is a source of at least a [MATH]% uncertainty in our estimates.', '1402.4794-3-42-5': 'Further study of this same data set, using a different tracking method (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-3-43-0': 'Based upon tests of flow reconstruction methods by [CITATION], it is not surprising that different flow methods yield somewhat different results.', '1402.4794-3-43-1': 'Flows from most of the methods tested by [CITATION] were significantly correlated with both each other and with the true flows.', '1402.4794-3-43-2': 'But flows from the various methods did not agree closely, and most of the methods only recovered a fraction of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-43-3': 'Results about Poynting fluxes from the tests by [CITATION], however, are probably not applicable here, because the rising-flux-tube magnetic geometry in the MHD data they used is very different than our plage region: their field was primarily horizontal, and the Poynting flux was dominated by the emergence term, not the shearing term.', '1402.4794-3-43-4': 'For pixels in the upper 95% of the distribution in [MATH] (the criterion they used to determine the population they tracked), this can be seen in a number of statistical measures: the median horizontal field was five times stronger than the median vertical field; the mean and median inclination angles (from the vertical) were both larger than 65[MATH]; and the emergence term in the Poynting flux was largest in every pixel above their tracking 5% threshold (and in 99% of all pixels).', '1402.4794-3-44-0': 'To characterize the uncertainty in our Poynting flux estimate due to uncertainties in the magnetic fields, we also employed the Monte Carlo approach described in [REF] above to calculate the effect of magnetic fields components perturbed by the inversion uncertainties on the Poynting flux computed via ([REF]).', '1402.4794-3-44-1': 'Excluding the 179 pixels with invalid error estimates from these Poynting flux calculations, in 1000 runs of randomly perturbed magnetic fields, we find the mean and standard deviation of the Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-44-2': 'If we use the same approach, but substitute the mean uncertainty estimates from all other pixels for the 179 pixels with excessive errors, then for 1000 runs we find a mean and standard deviation of the Poynting flux of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-44-3': 'This suggests that uncertainties in the estimated magnetic fields are a relatively small part of the overall uncertainty in the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-45-0': 'In Figure [REF], many values of the Poynting flux are much larger than the average value.', '1402.4794-3-45-1': 'Could the upward average energy be an accident, due simply to excess Poynting flux from a few pixels with large values?', '1402.4794-3-45-2': 'The distribution of Poynting flux values suggests that the net upward flux arises from a statistical predominance of upward fluxes in the high-Poynting-flux wings of the distribution.', '1402.4794-3-45-3': 'This can be seen in Figure [REF], where we plot histograms of the upward (solid) and downward (dotted) Poynting flux, taken from the map in the right panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-3-45-4': 'As may be seen, there is a prevalence of pixels with upward-directed Poynting fluxes at high-Poynting-flux values.', '1402.4794-3-46-0': 'The dependence of the mean Poynting flux on the wings of the distribution implies that the standard deviation of the Poynting flux values is not a good estimator of the standard error of the mean (i.e., the uncertainty in our estimate of the mean).', '1402.4794-3-46-1': 'To estimate the standard error in the mean, we computed [MATH] bootstrap samples , which had a mean Poynting flux of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and a standard deviation of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-46-2': '(Note that this mean is over the subset of pixels with non-zero Poynting flux estimates; the value of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] cited above is over the entire 2601 pixels in our plage region.)', '1402.4794-3-46-3': "It should be noted, however, that since FLCT's [MATH] was set to 4 pixels, the data are not strictly independent: the flows are correlated below this scale.", '1402.4794-3-46-4': 'The magnetic fields also exhibit structure on a similar scale.', '1402.4794-3-46-5': 'Consequently, the assumption of independent data points that underlies the bootstrap approach is probably violated here, since neighboring pixels tend to be similar.', '1402.4794-3-46-6': 'This test does, however, demonstrate that the mean Poynting flux we that report does not depend upon values in just a few pixels, because we found very similar mean values even when resampling the population of Poynting flux values.', '1402.4794-3-47-0': 'Considering the variation in estimated Poynting flux indicated by the differing tracking methods ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]) and the bootstrap runs (again, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]), we estimate the overall uncertainty level to be on the order of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-48-0': 'One aspect of the Poynting flux map in Figure [REF] is notable: upward and downward energy fluxes appear bipolar in some areas (e.g., near pixel coordinates [30,25], [30,45], and [45,45]).', '1402.4794-3-48-1': 'Inspection of the the same regions in Figure [REF] shows that these bipolar structures arise when horizontal magnetic fields change direction (e.g., converge) within an area of horizontal flows that are more uniform on the same spatial scale.', '1402.4794-3-48-2': 'Qualitatively, this does not accord with the simplistic picture of braiding of sub-resolution, elemental flux tubes proposed by [CITATION]: a substantial Poynting flux is spatially resolved, and we do not see fluxes winding about each other.', '1402.4794-3-48-3': '(We discuss vorticities in both the flow and magnetic fields in [REF], below).', '1402.4794-3-49-0': 'We note that the average Poynting flux that we obtain for this plage region is substantially larger than the value of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] obtained by [CITATION] for a different plage region.', '1402.4794-3-49-1': 'Inclusion of the [MATH] factor in our estimate certainly explains much of the difference.', '1402.4794-3-49-2': 'Without this factor, our average Poynting flux would be just [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], still a a factor of 1.6 larger than that reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-49-3': 'We note that the mean and median unsigned vertical fields in our plage region (434 Mx cm[MATH] and 354 Mx cm[MATH], resp.)', '1402.4794-3-49-4': 'are larger than the corresponding values in the region studied by [CITATION] (365 Mx cm[MATH] and 274 Mx cm[MATH], resp.)', '1402.4794-3-49-5': 'by factors of [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-49-6': 'So differing field strengths might explain some of the disparity.', '1402.4794-3-50-0': 'While magnetograms of the full NFI FOV were co-aligned prior to tracking , it is still possible that mean motion of the plage region we study here, combined with a mean horizontal magnetic field in the region, could produce the mean Poynting flux we find.', '1402.4794-3-50-1': 'To investigate this possibility, we computed a region-averaged Poynting flux, [MATH], given by [EQUATION] where the angle brackets denote averaging over the [MATH] pixel plage region, and fill-fraction-weighted magnetic field values (i.e., pixel-averaged values) were used in the averages.', '1402.4794-3-50-2': 'For FLCT and SLCT flows, we find [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-50-3': 'These region-averaged values are significantly smaller than and opposite in sign to the net Poynting fluxes we find above.', '1402.4794-3-51-0': '## Poynting Fluxes in Other Plage Regions', '1402.4794-3-52-0': 'Is the systematic prevalence of pixels with upward Poynting flux seen in Figure [REF] a fluke, or is it the norm?', '1402.4794-3-52-1': 'To settle this question, it would be helpful to analyze the Poynting flux in other plage regions.', '1402.4794-3-53-0': 'As noted above, however, the different cadences of the SP raster used to measure [MATH] and and the NFI magnetograms tracked to infer [MATH] imply that no single velocity measurement is simultaneous with the vector magnetic field measurement across the region.', '1402.4794-3-53-1': 'So we cannot simply apply equation ([REF]) across the active region.', '1402.4794-3-53-2': 'This motivated our focus, above, on a relatively small patch of plage, for which estimates of [MATH] and [MATH] were nearly simultaneous.', '1402.4794-3-54-0': 'To work around the simultaneity issue, "rastered" 2D arrays (in [MATH] and [MATH]) of [MATH] and [MATH] were constructed, by selecting each column of the 2D array for each velocity component from the time-slice of the 3D datacubes (in [MATH]) of velocities closest in time to when the SP measurement was made at the corresponding column.', '1402.4794-3-54-1': 'This enables estimating the Poynting flux from the shearing term over most of the active region (though data near the top of the FOV is excluded due to the "bubble" in NFI).', '1402.4794-3-55-0': 'Since our focus is on the shearing Poynting flux in plage regions, we define a mask of "plage-like" pixels.', '1402.4794-3-55-1': 'We set this 2D bitmap to 1 for all pixels with filling-factor-weighted [MATH] between 100 and 1500 Mx cm[MATH] and inclinations of less than 30 from the vertical, and for which fill fractions were less than the non-inverted value of 1.0.', '1402.4794-3-55-2': "(The field in non-inverted regions with significant Stokes' V signals was assumed vertical.)", '1402.4794-3-55-3': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] across most of the active region in grayscale, with contours of the plage-like pixel mask overplotted.', '1402.4794-3-56-0': 'We use the term "plage-like" because our criteria for plage identification are imperfect: a few small regions very near the positive and negative umbrae satisfy the plage-lake criteria, along with many very small isolated clumps of quiet-sun fields.', '1402.4794-3-56-1': 'Both of these classes of pixels would probably not be identified as plage by a human observer.', '1402.4794-3-56-2': 'Our approach does, however, capture the majority of plage magnetic field regions across the active region.', '1402.4794-3-56-3': 'Further, it is objective, meaning it can be systematically applied, whereas identifications made by human observers would be subjective.', '1402.4794-3-57-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the distributions of upward and downward Poynting fluxes for all plage-like pixels across AR 10930.', '1402.4794-3-57-1': 'As with the distributions from the [MATH] pixel[MATH] region shown in Figure [REF], the frequency of pixels with upward Poynting flux is systematically higher than that of pixels with downward Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-58-0': 'The systematic difference between upward and downward energy fluxes should correspond to losses of some kind, perhaps due to atmospheric heating processes.', '1402.4794-3-59-0': 'Given the sparse nature of the plage-like pixel mask, and the utility of closely examining dynamics and magnetic field structure in a sample plage region, we turn our attention again to the [MATH] pixel[MATH] region that has been our focus.', '1402.4794-3-60-0': '## Dependence on Magnetic Structure', '1402.4794-3-61-0': 'Investigating relationships between magnetic field and flow properties and the Poynting flux can improve our understanding of the physical processes that generate Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-3-61-1': 'In an analogous study relating magnetic field properties to the soft-X-ray (SXR) luminosity [MATH] in several hundred active regions, [CITATION] investigated correlations between [MATH] and global magnetic properties of the regions (e.g., total unsigned flux, total unsigned vertical electric current, average field strength, etc.) from Haleakala Stokes Polarimeter vector magnetograms.', '1402.4794-3-61-2': "Despite expectations that electric currents should play a role in the heating that powers coronal SXR emission, they found that the regions' luminosities depended more strongly on their total unsigned magnetic flux, [MATH], than any other global magnetic variable they considered.", '1402.4794-3-61-3': 'Further, they found that [MATH] scaled as a power law in [MATH], with an index near one.', '1402.4794-3-61-4': '[CITATION] then showed that the magnetic flux vs. soft X-ray luminosity correlation holds over a wide range of magnetic scales for the Sun - from X-ray bright points to whole active regions to the entire disk - and even other stars.', '1402.4794-3-61-5': '(See also Fludra and Ireland [2008], who found power laws between whole-AR EUV intensities and magnetic fluxes.)', '1402.4794-3-62-0': 'We now apply a similar approach here, but to energy input (the Poynting flux) as opposed to output (SXR and EUV radiation), and investigate relationships between magnetic field and flow structure and the Poynting flux, with the aim of better understanding how Poynting fluxes arise.', '1402.4794-3-62-1': 'For context when considering other variables, we first consider baseline correlations between the magnetic field and the Poynting flux in our the [MATH] pixel[MATH] box.', '1402.4794-3-62-2': 'For this, we only consider correlations for the 2560 pixels (of 2601 total) in which the velocity was estimated.', '1402.4794-3-62-3': "Uncertainties in correlation coefficients can be computed using Fisher's z-transformation, and the standard error scales like [MATH] for correlation coefficients that are not close to [MATH].", '1402.4794-3-62-4': 'For our sample, the standard error is about 0.02, so correlations larger than 0.06 in magnitude correspond to greater than [MATH] departures from the null hypothesis of zero correlation.', '1402.4794-3-62-5': 'Since large values for our variables can arise in our data through errors in the inferred [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], as well as co-registration, we give rank-order correlation coefficients, since these are more robust against outliers.', '1402.4794-3-63-0': 'Regarding the unsigned Poynting flux, we find stronger fields tend to produce stronger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-3-63-1': 'Correlations between [MATH] (from FLCT) and the intrinsic magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] were 0.65, 0.54, and 0.57, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-63-2': 'For pixel-averaged values (i.e., [MATH]-weighted) of the same variables, the correlations for all three were larger, 0.72, 0.73, and 0.70.', '1402.4794-3-63-3': 'The correlation with fill fraction was positive, at 0.22, suggesting that while flows might be suppressed in pixels with higher filling factor (as noted above), the stronger fields that tend to be present lead to larger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-3-64-0': 'What about correlations with the signed Poynting flux, [MATH]?', '1402.4794-3-64-1': 'The distributions of upward and downward Poynting fluxes in Figures [REF] and [REF] suggest that sites of unsigned Poynting flux should, statistically, tend have a residual upward flux, implying the variables above should still be correlated with [MATH], albeit more weakly than with [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-64-2': 'Consistent with this idea, we found correlations with the intrinsic magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] to be 0.12, 0.20, and 0.09, respectively, while correlations with the corresponding [MATH]-weighted variables were 0.18, 0.22, and 0.16, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-65-0': 'Compared to correlations with the magnetic field itself, correlations with the resolved spatial structure of the magnetic field were weak.', '1402.4794-3-65-1': "If energy were crossing the photosphere in regions of significant vertical electric currents, then there should be a strong correlation between the Poynting flux and the unsigned horizontal curl of the [MATH]-weighted horizontal photospheric field ([MATH], which is [MATH] by Ampere's law).", '1402.4794-3-65-2': 'The correlation with [MATH] that we found, however, was just 0.13 - while significant, this was much weaker than the baseline correlations with the magnetic field itself.', '1402.4794-3-65-3': 'The correlation of [MATH] with the unsigned, [MATH]-weighted horizontal divergence of the horizontal field ([MATH]) was significantly stronger at 0.28, but also relatively weak compared to the baseline magnetic correlations.', '1402.4794-3-65-4': '(This divergence should correspond to the magnetic field structure in "azimuth centers," albeit for centers on smaller scales than reported by Martinez-Pillet et al. 1997.)', '1402.4794-3-66-0': 'Perhaps unsurprisingly, the correlations between signed Poynting flux, [MATH], and these the unsigned horizontal curl and divergence of [MATH] were even weaker, at 0.04 and 0.07 - only marginally significant.', '1402.4794-3-67-0': 'What about correlations between flow properties and the Poynting flux?', '1402.4794-3-67-1': 'First, we found correlations of [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] of 0.13 and 0.06, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-67-2': 'The anti-correlation between filling factor and speed discussed above, and the dependence of the Poynting flux on the direction of [MATH] probably both contribute to this weak dependence on speed.', '1402.4794-3-68-0': 'Vortical motions could play a role in energy transport into the outer solar atmosphere (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014), but we also found relatively weak correlations between unsigned vorticity, [MATH], and [MATH] and [MATH] of -0.09 and 0.04, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-68-1': 'Hence, we find little evidence for resolved vortical flows playing a significant role in driving Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-3-68-2': 'It should be borne in mind, however, that the spatial scale of resolved by LCT methods is larger than that of the images that are tracked - [MATH]versus 0.32 in our case.', '1402.4794-3-69-0': 'It is also possible that converging (or diverging) flows might inject (or remove) magnetic energy by concentrating (or dispersing) magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-3-69-1': 'We checked this by correlating [MATH], which should be positive for converging flows, with [MATH] and [MATH]; both were basically insignificant at 0.03 and 0.02, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-69-2': 'Correlations with the unsigned horizontal divergence of [MATH] were not larger.', '1402.4794-3-70-0': 'It is also worthwhile to characterize the signed energy input per unit of magnetic flux, based upon the nearly linear scalings of energy output in SXR and EUV luminosities per unit magnetic flux reported by [CITATION], and [CITATION], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-70-1': 'Accordingly, we now compute quantities with units consistent with a ratio of luminosity per maxwell of [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-70-2': 'For each pixel that was tracked with FLCT, we computed the ratio of signed energy input per maxwell.', '1402.4794-3-70-3': 'The mean and median of the ratios in this set of pixels were [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] are [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-70-4': 'Totaling the energy input and unsigned magnetic flux separately, and then dividing - i.e., computing the ratio of sums instead of the sum of ratios used to compute the mean above - yields a value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the whole-FOV energy input per maxwell.', '1402.4794-3-70-5': '[CITATION] report SXR luminosities of roughly 10[MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-70-6': 'Order-of-magnitude estimates of SXR luminosity [MATH] as a fraction of total radiated energy from heating [MATH] suggest [MATH] .', '1402.4794-3-70-7': 'If the energy fluxes of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] that we find are fully thermalized, and these order-of-magnitude estimates are correct, then our results are approximately consistent with those of [CITATION].', '1402.4794-3-70-8': 'Studies of additional plage regions would be worthwhile, to determine if our value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] is typical.', '1402.4794-3-71-0': 'As we have seen, stronger-field pixels tend to have larger Poynting fluxes, although in the case of the signed Poynting flux, the correlation is relatively weak.', '1402.4794-3-71-1': 'The tendency of magnetic fields to inhibit convection might explain the this weak correlation: a turning point could be reached as field strength increases, beyond which increasingly weak convective velocities produce a smaller convection-driven Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-71-2': 'This is a plausible explanation for the relative darkness of the corona in EUV and SXR images directly above sunspot umbrae.', '1402.4794-3-71-3': '(Note, however, that spatially coherent, large-scale flows, like those in rotating sunspots [e.g., Brown 2003], could still easily transport large amounts of magnetic energy across the photosphere in sunspot fields, though this energy might be more relevant to flares and CMEs than to coronal heating.)', '1402.4794-3-71-4': 'These considerations raise two related questions.', '1402.4794-3-71-5': 'First, what is the average (signed) Poynting flux as a function of field strength?', '1402.4794-3-71-6': 'And second, since some field strengths are more common than others, which part of the field strength distribution contributes the bulk of the Poynting flux?', '1402.4794-3-71-7': 'To address these questions, we first created a histogram of vertical field strengths, shown in the top panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-3-71-8': 'A clear peak is seen near 1300 G in [MATH].', '1402.4794-3-71-9': 'We then computed the average and total (signed) Poynting fluxes in each bin (middle and bottom panels, respectively).', '1402.4794-3-71-10': 'From the bottom panel, it can be seen that the bulk of the total Poynting flux comes from pixels with vertical field strengths around the peak of the vertical field strength distribution.', '1402.4794-3-71-11': 'The middle panel shows, however, that weaker fields, on average, produce a similar Poynting flux, implying that their smaller contribution to the total energy flux is due to the relative dearth of such field strengths.', '1402.4794-3-71-12': 'Weaker fields might have average Poynting fluxes as high as stronger fields because higher velocities tend to be present in the former.', '1402.4794-3-72-0': '## Comparison with Chromospheric Emission', '1402.4794-3-73-0': 'It is plausible that regions of enhanced magnetic energy flux across the photosphere would be brighter in some form of emission.', '1402.4794-3-73-1': '(It is also possible that the solar atmosphere above the photosphere could store injected magnetic energy, in the form of electric currents, for some time prior to its dissipation and consequent enhancement of emission.', '1402.4794-3-73-2': 'Another possibility is that the energy might propagate away from the site of its introduction, to be dissipated elsewhere.)', '1402.4794-3-74-0': 'The plage region we analyze here was also observed in Ca II (H line) by the BFI, so we briefly investigate correlations between the Poynting flux map and other photospheric magnetic variables and this emission.', '1402.4794-3-74-1': 'The closest image in time to the NFI velocity estimate was recorded at 20:48:16 UT on 2006/12/12, which we co-registered with [MATH] after downsampling from the BFI pixel size of 0.11 by a factor of three to approximately match the 0.32 scale of our magnetic field and velocity arrays.', '1402.4794-3-74-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show [MATH] 125 and [MATH] 250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH]-weighted [MATH] flux density overlain on the Ca II intensity in our ([MATH])-pixel[MATH] plage region.', '1402.4794-3-75-0': 'We now investigate correlations between Ca II intensity and magnetic and velocity field properties, including the Poynting flux, to discover any interesting relationships.', '1402.4794-3-75-1': 'For magnetic variables, the spatial map of Ca II intensity exhibited the strongest correlations with [MATH] and [MATH], which were greater than 0.6 for both intrinsic and pixel-averaged field strengths.', '1402.4794-3-75-2': 'The correlation with [MATH] was significantly weaker, at 0.22 and 0.46 for intrinsic and pixel-averaged field strengths, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-75-3': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH]-weighted [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were statistically significant but much weaker, at 0.14 and 0.28.', '1402.4794-3-75-4': 'The lack of correlation with the curl suggests that electric current densities do not play a strong role in Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-3-75-5': 'We also found a significant correlation, 0.42, between Ca II and filling factor in the subset of inverted pixels.', '1402.4794-3-76-0': 'For the Poynting flux, the correlation of Ca II intensity with unsigned and signed [MATH]-weighted Poynting fluxes was 0.53, and 0.19, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-76-1': 'The fact that the magnetic variables that enter the Poynting flux are more strongly correlated with Ca II emission than the Poynting flux suggests that the only additional information in the Poynting flux, from the FLCT flows, is unrelated to Ca II emission; and, indeed, the correlation of Ca II with [MATH] is significantly negative, at -0.11.', '1402.4794-3-76-2': 'This anticorrelation probably arises because flow speeds are higher in weak-field regions, while the emission is brightest in strong-field regions.', '1402.4794-3-76-3': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were also negative, but marginally insignificant at -0.07 and -0.08, respectively.', '1402.4794-3-76-4': 'We also checked the signed horizontal flow divergence, reasoning that converging flows might slightly compress the plasma and lead to heating.', '1402.4794-3-76-5': 'The correlation was also negative (i.e., converging motions are present slightly more often near brighter Ca II emission), and stronger but still weak, at -0.12.', '1402.4794-3-76-6': 'This might be related to the concentration of magnetic flux in downflow lanes where horizontal flows converge.', '1402.4794-3-76-7': 'The weak correlation with the curl here implies that resolved braiding / vortical motions (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014) to not play a strong role in the generation of Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-3-76-8': 'The reason why the correlation with the curl is negative is hard to understand, but might be related to the presence of stronger flows in weaker-field regions.', '1402.4794-3-77-0': 'This analysis suggests that flow information at the spatial and temporal scales that we study has relatively little bearing on Ca II emission, compared to magnetic variables.', '1402.4794-3-77-1': 'Tarbell (private communication) notes that Ca II images from SOT like that which we analyzed here are "mostly photospheric" due to the relatively wide wavelength band, and suggests that enhanced emission in areas with strong photospheric fields arises from the hot-wall effect , not chromospheric heating.', '1402.4794-3-78-0': '# Summary Conclusions', '1402.4794-3-79-0': 'By combining LCT velocities estimated from a LOS magnetogram sequence with a vector magnetogram, both derived from Hinode/SOT observations of AR 10930, we estimated the Poynting flux, under the frozen-in-flux assumption, in a (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) plage region to be 4.9 - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], depending upon whether FLCT or SLCT velocities were used.', '1402.4794-3-79-1': 'Errors in the magnetic fields likely produce smaller uncertainties in the Poynting flux than this.', '1402.4794-3-79-2': 'These Poynting fluxes are greater than the chromospheric and coronal energy demands estimated by [CITATION], [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-3-80-0': 'We found that the Poynting flux varied in sign across the plage region that we studied.', '1402.4794-3-80-1': "By plotting the distribution of Poynting fluxes in this region's pixels, we found that the mean upward flux arose from a predominance of upward-flux pixels toward the high-Poynting-flux end of the distribution.", '1402.4794-3-80-2': 'We then identified "plage-like" pixels - those with nearly vertical flux densities in the range 100 - 1500 Mx cm[MATH], and sufficient polarization for the vector field to be estimated - across the rest of the active region.', '1402.4794-3-80-3': 'The distribution of Poynting fluxes in this set of plage-like pixels exhibited the same systematic prevalence of upward-flux pixels, suggesting that the plage region that is the focus of our study is not a special case.', '1402.4794-3-81-0': "In analogy with the study by [CITATION] relating active regions' soft X-ray luminosities to magnetic field properties, we investigated correlations between Poynting fluxes and properties of the magnetic and velocity fields.", '1402.4794-3-81-1': "We found that both the unsigned and signed Poynting fluxes typically increase with pixels' field strengths.", '1402.4794-3-81-2': 'Correlations between Poynting fluxes and both unsigned vertical electric current density and flow vorticity were relatively weak, suggesting braiding or vortical motions (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014) are not key aspects of the energy transport process.', '1402.4794-3-81-3': 'Building upon the work of [CITATION], [CITATION] found that soft X-ray luminosities for a range of magnetic regions on the Sun scaled nearly linearly with flux, with a relationship approximating [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-81-4': 'Here, we found the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-3-81-5': 'We found that fields with intrinsic vertical field strengths of [MATH] G supply the bulk of the net Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-82-0': 'We also compared our Poynting flux map with a Ca II intensity image, and found much stronger correlation of Ca II emission with the vertical magnetic field strength [MATH] than with vertical Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-82-1': 'We noted that this magnetic correlation might, however, arise from near-photospheric emission in the passband exhibiting the hot-wall effect in strong fields.', '1402.4794-3-83-0': 'The time interval [MATH] between images (eight minutes here) and windowing length scale [MATH] (4 pixels, [MATH] Mm) used in our tracking will likely filter out processes on shorter temporal and spatial scales.', '1402.4794-3-83-1': 'Such processes (e.g., waves, or smaller-scale braiding) might play key roles in chromospheric emission.', '1402.4794-3-83-2': 'Given that chromospheric and coronal length scales are shorter than the scales we resolve, observations with higher resolution in space and time (see below) would be useful to investigate Poynting flux - emission correlations further.', '1402.4794-3-83-3': 'It should be noted, however, that our energy flux is large enough that sub-resolution dynamics are not required to explain the observed coronal heating.', '1402.4794-3-84-0': 'This initial study leaves several questions unanswered, motivating related studies to extend the work here.', '1402.4794-3-84-1': 'Do other tracking methods yield similar results?', '1402.4794-3-84-2': 'The same plage region analyzed here could be tracked with other methods (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) to better understand the model-dependence of flow estimates in determining Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-3-84-3': 'How are photospheric Poynting fluxes related to emission from the overlying atmosphere?', '1402.4794-3-84-4': 'To address this question, it would be useful to analyze additional Hinode/SOT datasets, especially observations with simultaneous IRIS coverage of chromospheric, transition region, and coronal emission, to seek any evidence of spatial or temporal correlations between energy input via our estimated Poynting fluxes and energy dissipation in the outer solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-3-84-5': 'How rapidly does the spatial distribution of the Poynting flux vary in time?', '1402.4794-3-84-6': 'In contrast to the snapshot we analyze here, successive Poynting flux maps would be needed to address this question.', '1402.4794-3-84-7': 'While SP vector magnetograms are the best currently available, the the telemetry limitations of Hinode preclude long-duration runs of successive, rapid rasters over moderately large FOVs.', '1402.4794-3-84-8': 'Consequently, the HMI instrument aboard SDO could be used investigate the temporal variation of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-3-84-9': 'Unfortunately, HMI has both worse spatial resolution and poorer spectral sampling.', '1402.4794-3-84-10': "So a related question is: How sensitively do estimates of the Poynting flux depend upon a magnetograph's spatial and spectral resolution?", '1402.4794-3-84-11': 'Analysis of a region simultaneously observed with SOT and HMI would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-3-84-12': '(It is probable, in fact, that additional energy flux could be resolved with even higher-resolution observations, though the energy flux must begin to decrease at some limit, to avoid an ultraviolet catastrophe.', '1402.4794-3-84-13': 'This motivates studies with new, higher-resolution instruments, as discussed below.)', '1402.4794-3-85-0': 'Within the larger context of the coronal heating problem, we suggest that a key strategic observational objective for understanding chromospheric and coronal heating should be construction of a detailed energy budget for the photosphere-to-corona system, with spatially and temporally resolved energy inputs correlated with energy release in all forms - radiation, kinetic energy in thermal and non-thermal particles and bulk motion, and gravitational potential energy.', '1402.4794-3-85-1': 'This will require high-resolution and high-cadence observations of the magnetic field and emission throughout the photosphere-to-corona system, for which both space-based observatories (e.g., SDO, IRIS, and the planned Solar-C satellite) and existing and planned ground-based observatories (NST [Goode 2010], GREGOR [Volkmer 2010], ATST [Rimmele 2010], and EST [Zuccarello and Zuccarello 2011]) will be essential.'}
{'1402.4794-4-0-0': 'Some models of coronal heating suppose that convective motions at the photosphere shuffle the footpoints of coronal magnetic fields and thereby inject sufficient magnetic energy upward to account for observed coronal and chromospheric energy losses in active regions.', '1402.4794-4-0-1': 'Using high-resolution observations of plage magnetic fields made with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite, we investigate this idea by estimating the upward transport of magnetic energy - the vertical Poynting flux, [MATH] - across the photosphere in a plage region.', '1402.4794-4-0-2': 'To do so, we combine: (i) estimates of photospheric horizontal velocities, [MATH], determined by local correlation tracking applied to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetic field maps from the Narrowband Filter Imager, with (ii) a vector magnetic field measurement from the SpectroPolarimeter.', '1402.4794-4-0-3': 'Plage fields are ideal observational targets for estimating energy injection by convection, because they are: (i) strong enough to be measured with relatively small uncertainties; (ii) not so strong that convection is heavily suppressed (as within umbrae); and (iii) unipolar, so [MATH] in plage is not influenced by mixed-polarity processes (e.g., flux emergence) unrelated to heating in stable, active-region fields.', '1402.4794-4-0-4': 'In this plage region, we found that the average [MATH] varied in space, but was positive (upward) and sufficient to explain coronal heating, with values near [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-0-5': 'We find the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-0-6': 'A comparison of intensity in a Ca II image co-registered with one plage magnetogram shows stronger spatial correlations with both total field strength and unsigned vertical field, [MATH] than either [MATH] or horizontal flux density, [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-0-7': 'The observed Ca II brightness enhancement, however, probably contains a strong contribution from a near-photosphere hot-wall effect, which is unrelated to heating in the solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-4-1-0': '# Introduction', '1402.4794-4-2-0': 'How is the solar corona heated to temperatures of [MATH] MK, when the lower layers of the solar atmosphere are [MATH] K or less?', '1402.4794-4-2-1': 'Evidently, the energy needed to heat the Sun\'s atmosphere must cross the photosphere in some organized form before being converted into heat (disorganized, "thermalized" energy) in the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-4-2-2': 'Because the magnetic fields that permeate the corona are all anchored at the photosphere, they are natural candidates for energetic coupling between the solar interior and corona.', '1402.4794-4-2-3': "In the interior, motions in the Sun's gas are driven by convection, and some fraction of the kinetic energy in turbulent convective motions is thought to be converted into energy stored in electric currents flowing in coronal magnetic fields that is then dissipated as heat.", '1402.4794-4-2-4': 'These induced currents might be characterized as either steady or rapidly varying (e.g., wave-driven) relative to the timescales of the atmospheric response, and the dissipation of each has been referred to as "DC" (direct-current) or "AC" (alternating-current) heating, respectively (e.g., Klimchuk 2006).', '1402.4794-4-3-0': 'To be a viable coronal heating mechanism, the input energy must be commensurate with observed energy losses in active region (AR) fields, estimated by [CITATION] to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] for the corona and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] for the chromosphere.', '1402.4794-4-3-1': 'Waves were once thought to be primarily responsible for coronal and chromospheric heating (see, e.g., Withbroe and Noyes 1977).', '1402.4794-4-3-2': 'While waves (e.g., Tomczyk 2007) and wave dissipation (e.g., Hahn 2012) have been reported in the corona, currently available observations have not demonstrated that they supply sufficient energy to heat the active-region chromosphere, transition region, and corona.', '1402.4794-4-3-3': 'In contrast to models invoking dissipation of waves, other models posit that convective motions induce relatively long-lived, DC currents that are episodically dissipated to heat the chromosphere and corona.', '1402.4794-4-3-4': 'We explore the latter hypothesis here.', '1402.4794-4-4-0': 'There is a long history of modeling this convection-driven coronal energy input.', '1402.4794-4-4-1': 'Parker (1983a, 1983b) proposed that convection braids and twists the photospheric footpoints of coronal magnetic fields, and thereby injects energy into the corona.', '1402.4794-4-4-2': 'This energy is stored in current sheets, and is transiently dissipated in small bursts referred to as nanoflares , with typical energies of [MATH] erg, about [MATH] of the energies in very large flares.', '1402.4794-4-4-3': '[CITATION] modeled an idealization of this process by imposing shearing flows on the upper and lower boundaries of an initially uniform field in an MHD simulation, and found sufficient power to heat the corona.', '1402.4794-4-4-4': '[CITATION] imposed a more complex flow field, meant to mimic convective motions, on an MHD model of the coronal field and also found sufficient power, as well as morphology consistent with aspects of coronal observations.', '1402.4794-4-4-5': 'In the framework of reduced MHD, [CITATION], also found sufficient power, even though fields in their model were only weakly braided.', '1402.4794-4-4-6': 'More recently, [CITATION] also modeled this process in MHD with a detailed treatment of the energy equation and found heating that is transient in time and space, and concentrated in and near the modeled transition region.', '1402.4794-4-5-0': 'One promising observational approach to constraining models of coronal heating is to analyze time evolution of magnetic fields at the photosphere, where the magnetic field is precisely and routinely measured.', '1402.4794-4-5-1': 'Clear evidence of braiding or twisting motions would support the mechanism proposed by Parker.', '1402.4794-4-5-2': '[CITATION] proposed that continuous emergence and cancellation of small-scale fields in the quiet Sun\'s "magnetic carpet" leads to reconnection and heating, but [CITATION] used sequential potential models of quiet-Sun fields to argue that emergence and cancellation are not required: just reconnection between existing flux systems, as their photospheric footpoints move, should be sufficient.', '1402.4794-4-5-3': '[CITATION] recently directly incorporated magnetogram sequences into the lower boundary of a magnetofrictional model of quiet-sun coronal field evolution, to investigate the dissipation of magnetic energy within the simulation.', '1402.4794-4-5-4': 'Aspects of energy dissipation in their model were qualitatively consistent with solar observations, although their total upward energy flux was smaller than the observationally estimated energy demand for the quiet-sun atmosphere.', '1402.4794-4-6-0': '[CITATION] recently investigated analytic expressions for lower bounds on the upward-directed Poynting flux of magnetic energy in a region of plage fields in NOAA AR 10930, based upon observed photospheric magnetic and velocity fields.', '1402.4794-4-6-1': 'The flows they analyzed were estimated by [CITATION], who applied Fourier Local Correlation Tracking (FLCT; Fisher and Welsch 2008) to a sequence of line-of-sight magnetograms (magnetic field maps) of this active region.', '1402.4794-4-6-2': 'These magnetograms were observed with the Narrowband Filter Imager (NFI) instrument on the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite , with a cadence [MATH] s, over about 13 hours on 2006 December 12 - 13.', '1402.4794-4-7-0': '[CITATION] compared their lower bounds on the Poynting flux with a direct estimate of the Poynting flux, obtained with a procedure that we explain in detail here.', '1402.4794-4-7-1': 'First, they assumed that the photospheric magnetic field, [MATH], is frozen to the plasma - a valid assumption in quite general circumstances (see, e.g., Parker 1984).', '1402.4794-4-7-2': 'Then the photospheric electric field, [MATH], is ideal, and equal to [MATH], where [MATH] is the photospheric velocity.', '1402.4794-4-7-3': 'Then the (vector) Poynting flux of magnetic energy, [MATH] can be expressed in terms of [MATH] and [MATH] as [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-4-7-4': 'Approximating the photospheric surface as locally planar, we adopt Cartesian geometry, and use [MATH] and [MATH] to refer to vertical and horizontal directions, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-7-5': 'Then the vertical component of the Poynting flux is [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-4-7-6': 'This expression for total Poynting flux has been conceptually divided into an "emergence" term, which contains [MATH], and a "shear" term, which contains [MATH] .', '1402.4794-4-8-0': 'We digress for a moment to note that a positive (upward) value for the shearing term also implies the emergence of magnetized plasma across the photosphere.', '1402.4794-4-8-1': 'A clear example of this is the special case in which [MATH] is zero (so the emergence term vanishes), and the shearing term is positive.', '1402.4794-4-8-2': 'Then both [MATH] and [MATH] must be nonzero, implying [MATH] is tilted; and [MATH] must have a nonzero projection onto [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-8-3': 'We define the component of [MATH] along the horizontal field [MATH] to be [MATH], and then further decompose [MATH] into a component parallel to the total field [MATH], which we label [MATH], and a component perpendicular to [MATH], which we label [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-8-4': 'Since [MATH] is tilted, [MATH] must also be; and it must be tilted upward when the shearing term is positive.', '1402.4794-4-8-5': 'This upward tilt for [MATH] implies that this component of the flow advects the tilted magnetic flux upward.', '1402.4794-4-8-6': 'The parallel flow [MATH] neither advects magnetic field or produces a Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-8-7': 'The counter-intuitive result that a horizontal velocity can produce upward transport of magnetic fields arises because the total velocity included a component of the velocity parallel to [MATH], which is irrelevant for the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-8-8': '(In the special case that the parallel velocity is zero, then equation [[REF]] reduces to [MATH], and equation [[REF]] becomes [MATH].)', '1402.4794-4-9-0': 'Since [CITATION] were primarily focused on heating in plage - regions of nearly-vertical field when new flux is not emerging - the shearing term should dominate, meaning [EQUATION] [CITATION] treated the flows estimated by FLCT as horizontal velocities.', '1402.4794-4-9-1': 'We note that there is some controversy about how to interpret of velocities determined by correlation tracking and other "optical flow" methods.', '1402.4794-4-9-2': '[CITATION] suggested that the apparently horizontal flows estimated by LCT are a linear combination of the horizontal velocity with the vertical velocity, with weighting determined by the ratio of horizontal to vertical magnetic field.', '1402.4794-4-9-3': 'To test the accuracy of velocities reconstructed from magnetogram sequences, [CITATION] compared flows estimated by several methods, including LCT, using synthetic magnetograms extracted from MHD simulations of an emerging magnetic flux tube in the solar interior in which the actual velocities were known.', '1402.4794-4-9-4': 'Using the same test data, [CITATION] subsequently argued that optical flow methods, such as LCT, essentially estimate the horizontal velocity, [MATH], although their estimates can be affected by vertical flows.', '1402.4794-4-10-0': 'The NFI magnetograms only provide estimates of the line-of-sight (LOS) field, [MATH], but the expressions for the Poynting flux given above all require knowledge of the vector magnetic field, [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-10-1': "Accordingly, [CITATION] co-registered the (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) region of the NFI field of view (FOV) that they studied with the corresponding sub-region of a vector magnetogram observed by SOT's SpectroPolarimeter (SP; Lites 2013).", '1402.4794-4-10-2': 'A reprojected vector magnetogram based upon these observations was prepared by [CITATION] and is available online.', '1402.4794-4-10-3': 'The co-alignment procedure followed the approach used by [CITATION], described in their Appendix.', '1402.4794-4-11-0': 'By combining [MATH] estimated with FLCT with [MATH] from the SP magnetogram, [CITATION] estimated the average Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-11-1': 'This energy flux is less than the combined energy demand for the chromosphere and corona in active regions estimated by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-11-2': 'As discussed in greater detail below, however, this estimate did not account for the observationally estimated magnetic filling factors that had been applied to each magnetic field component in the vector magnetogram used by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-11-3': 'Insufficient Poynting flux would indicate that processes on spatial or temporal scales that are unresolved in these photospheric observations (e.g., waves or smaller-scale footpoint shuffling) play a significant role in heating.', '1402.4794-4-12-0': 'Despite the central role of the Poynting flux in theories of coronal heating, very few observational estimates of Poynting flux in the context of coronal heating have been published.', '1402.4794-4-12-1': '[CITATION] investigated a "proxy Poynting flux," [MATH] in more than 160 active regions, determined by applying LCT to LOS magnetograms, and found values in the range [MATH] - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-12-2': 'They used the LOS fields alone because sequences of vector magnetic field measurements were quite rare.', '1402.4794-4-12-3': 'More recently, [CITATION] estimated the work done by flows on the magnetic field, by parametrizing the expected deformation of coronal loop structure by surface flows.', '1402.4794-4-12-4': 'The expression they derive is inversely proportional to coronal loop length [MATH] Mm, and for LCT flows with typical magnitudes of 0.5 km s[MATH], they estimate a Poynting flux of [MATH] erg s[MATH] cm[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-12-5': 'They also found typical flow speeds were lower in regions with higher magnetic filling factors.', '1402.4794-4-12-6': 'This is roughly an order of magnitude lower than the value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] cm[MATH] reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-12-7': 'Given this considerable variation in published Poynting flux estimates, further investigation of Poynting fluxes is warranted.', '1402.4794-4-13-0': 'Here, we report additional estimates of the Poynting flux from plage magnetic fields in the same active region studied by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-13-1': 'Our primary aim is to investigate the properties of photospheric Poynting flux in greater detail than was done previously, including its dependence on photospheric magnetic field structure.', '1402.4794-4-13-2': 'The remainder of this paper is organized as follows.', '1402.4794-4-13-3': 'In the next section, we briefly describe the magnetic field data and tracking methods we used to estimate [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-13-4': "In Section [REF], we first present our estimates of the Poynting flux in another small region of plage in AR 10930, then analyze the Poynting flux's correlations with magnetic structure in the region.", '1402.4794-4-13-5': "The region of the NFI FOV that we analyze here was also observed in Ca II by SOT's Broadband Filter Imager (BFI; Tsuneta 2008), and in [REF] we compare this chromospheric emission with the spatial distributions of Poynting flux and magnetic field components.", '1402.4794-4-13-6': 'Finally, we conclude with a brief discussion of our results in Section [REF].', '1402.4794-4-14-0': '# Data Methods', '1402.4794-4-15-0': '## NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-4-16-0': 'Many aspects of the NFI magnetograms that we track to estimate [MATH] are described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-16-1': 'These Fe I 6302 AA(shuttered) magnetograms of AR 10930 have 0.16 pixels, and were created from the Stokes [MATH] ratio in Level 0 data.', '1402.4794-4-16-2': 'The data were recorded between 12-Dec-2006 at 14:00 and 13-Dec-2006 at 02:58, with a cadence of 121.4 [MATH] 1.2 s, except for three gaps of 10 minutes and two relatively small time steps of 26 s each.', '1402.4794-4-16-3': 'The USAF/NOAA Solar Region Summary issued at 24:00 UT on 12-Dec-2006 listed AR 10930 at S06W21, meaning it was relatively near disk center during the interval we study.', '1402.4794-4-16-4': 'Since the diffraction limit of SOT is near 0.32, we rebinned the NFI magnetograms [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-16-5': 'During this era of the Hinode mission, a bubble present within the NFI instrument degraded image quality in the upper part of the NFI field of view; we ignore pixels from this region in our analyses.', '1402.4794-4-17-0': 'We converted the measured Stokes [MATH] and [MATH] signals into pixel-averaged flux densities, which we denote [MATH], using the approximate calibration employed by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-17-1': 'While the linear scaling in this approach breaks down in umbrae, it should not be problematic for plage regions.', '1402.4794-4-17-2': 'Note that we use evolution in image structure in the NFI magnetograms to derive velocities, but do not use the estimated flux densities directly in any calculations; for correlation tracking, what matters is that the images capture the spatial structure of magnetic fields at each time in the sequence.', '1402.4794-4-17-3': '[CITATION] estimated the NFI noise level following [CITATION], by fitting the core of the distribution of flux densities ([MATH] Mx cm[MATH]) in each frame with a Gaussian.', '1402.4794-4-17-4': 'Based upon these fits, they adopted a uniform uncertainty estimate of [MATH] 15 Mx cm[MATH] for [MATH] over the 13-hour run.', '1402.4794-4-18-0': 'Prior to tracking these magnetograms, [CITATION] co-aligned them in time to remove spacecraft jitter and jumps from pointing changes.', '1402.4794-4-18-1': 'Spectral analysis showed some power at the orbital frequency, but no clear evidence of helioseismic p-mode leakage into the estimated magnetic flux densities.', '1402.4794-4-19-0': '## SP Vector Magnetograms', '1402.4794-4-20-0': 'As mentioned above, [CITATION] used SP data to estimate the vector magnetic field in AR 10930, and one of the two vector magnetograms they analyzed falls within our tracking interval.', '1402.4794-4-20-1': 'The full SP scan ran from 20:30 - 21:33, with [MATH] 0.3 pixels.', '1402.4794-4-20-2': 'From these observations, LOS and transverse magnetic field strengths, azimuth and fill fraction were determined at each SP slit position, as described by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-20-3': 'The data were then interpolated onto a uniform grid in the plane-of-the-sky, with 0.32 square pixels, multiplied by the fill fraction, and annealed to set the ambiguity resolution.', '1402.4794-4-20-4': 'Notably, in pixels with weak total polarization, the fill-fraction was set to 1.0.', '1402.4794-4-20-5': 'We refer to this plane-of-sky (POS) SP magnetogram as the POSSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-4-20-6': 'To produce the vector magnetogram used by both [CITATION] and [CITATION], the resulting fields were then reprojected to represent the magnetic field on a Cartesian plane and mapped onto a grid with a pixel scale of approximately 0.63 per pixel.', '1402.4794-4-20-7': '(This was done to reduce the array size for computational expediency in extrapolating coronal fields.)', '1402.4794-4-20-8': 'We refer to this reduced-resolution SP magnetogram as the RRSP magnetogram.', '1402.4794-4-20-9': '(The RRSP magnetogram produced by [CITATION] is online, in FITS format, at http://www.lmsal.com/[MATH]schryver/NLFFF/; file contents are described in the FITS header comment field.)', '1402.4794-4-21-0': 'When fill fractions are estimated in the process of inverting spectropolarimetric data to infer the magnetic field, the form of equation ([REF]) should be modified to properly account for the filling factor, [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1402.4794-4-21-1': 'That is, the product of intrinsic field strengths should be weighted by one factor of [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-21-2': 'Since each magnetic field component, [MATH], in both the POSSP and RRSP magnetograms was already weighted by [MATH], using these values in equation ([REF]) requires unweighting by multiplying by [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-21-3': 'Interpolation of the fill fraction array [MATH] in POS coordinates to the RRSP grid introduces enough inaccuracies into the resulting array that multiplying by [MATH] results in implausibly large values of magnetic field strengths and Poynting fluxes in some pixels.', '1402.4794-4-21-4': 'Consequently, we only report results from the POSSP data here.', '1402.4794-4-21-5': 'Throughout the remainder of the manuscript, values for magnetic fields given in units of Mx cm[MATH] refer to pixel-averaged flux densities, i.e., [MATH]-weighted, while values quoted in G refer to intrinsic field strengths.', '1402.4794-4-22-0': 'The SP raster across the central part of the active region that is most closely aligned with the NFI FOV took slightly more than half an hour.', '1402.4794-4-22-1': 'Since the NFI magnetogram cadence was about two minutes, no single NFI magnetogram or velocity field is co-temporal with the SP magnetic field measurements.', '1402.4794-4-22-2': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] from the SP data in grayscale, with [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] overplotted (black for flux toward the observer, white for away).', '1402.4794-4-22-3': 'Rastering for the SP observation was left-to-right, and the longer SP observing interval causes to some local discrepancies between the fields.', '1402.4794-4-22-4': '(In this image, the [MATH] coordinates for contours of [MATH] were stretched by 1.01 from the SP data, necessary to compensate for a small discrepancy [MATH] found between the NFI and interpolated SP pixel sizes.)', '1402.4794-4-23-0': 'To analyze approximately simultaneous velocity and magnetic field data, we restrict our attention to the [MATH] pixel[MATH] area of plage to the east of the main sunspots in the region.', '1402.4794-4-23-1': 'The plage region that is the focus of our study in the white box at lower left of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-4-23-2': 'The scan across our plage region took about three minutes, from 20:46:47 - 20:49:56.', '1402.4794-4-23-3': 'We used the NFI image time stamped 20:48:20.', '1402.4794-4-24-0': 'While the SP vector-field estimates are given at plane-of-sky pixel locations, the magnetic field vectors were expressed in spherical coordinates [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-24-1': 'We represent these vectors in a Cartesian coordinate system, with [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-24-2': 'While this representation is somewhat inaccurate over the FOV of the whole active region, it is not problematic in the small area of plage that we study (about one heliocentric degree on a side).', '1402.4794-4-25-0': 'In the [MATH]-binned NFI data, the plage region that we studied corresponds to [MATH] and [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-25-1': 'We roughly co-aligned the SP data by hand to within a few pixels, and then computed the cross-correlation of the nearly-aligned images to find the whole-pixel shift at the maximum of the cross-correlation function.', '1402.4794-4-25-2': 'To avoid introducing artifacts from interpolation, we only co-registered the data down to the pixel scale, and not smaller.', '1402.4794-4-25-3': 'Residual shifts for the SP data in [MATH] are (-0.02,0.23) pixels, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-25-4': 'To illustrate the co-alignment, we plot contours of [MATH] at [MATH] and [MATH] Mx cm[MATH] over a grayscale image of [MATH]-weighted [MATH] from SP data in the plage region in the left panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-4-25-5': 'In the right panel, we show a scatter plot of filling-factor-weighted [MATH] from SP versus [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-25-6': 'The linear and rank-order correlation coefficients are both 0.93; the similarity between both measures of correlation implies that outliers in [MATH] and [MATH] do not play a major role in the correlation.', '1402.4794-4-26-0': 'A fit of [MATH] to the filling-factor-weighted [MATH] yields a slope near 0.69, implying weaker flux densities for [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-26-1': 'Discrepancies could have arisen from both the more accurate polarimetric measurements in the SP data and evolution in the fields while the SP was rastered.', '1402.4794-4-27-0': 'The mean and median vertical flux densities in this region are -434 Mx cm[MATH] and -354 Mx cm[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-27-1': 'The mean unsigned [MATH] has the same magnitude as mean [MATH], so the region really is unipolar.', '1402.4794-4-27-2': 'The mean and median horizontal [MATH]-weighted flux densities are 160 Mx cm[MATH] and 121 Mx cm[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-27-3': 'The larger values of the means compared to medians here imply that some field strengths are substantially larger than the bulk of the population.', '1402.4794-4-27-4': 'The mean and median inclination angles are similar, 154[MATH] and 157[MATH], respectively - so 26[MATH] and 23[MATH] from vertical - implying the field in the bulk of the population is nearly vertical.', '1402.4794-4-28-0': 'Error estimates for the vector magnetic field were derived by the ASP inversion code for the SP data in pixels at slit positions with sufficient polarization signal for reliable inversions, as described in [CITATION], and provided by B. Lites (private communication).', '1402.4794-4-28-1': 'In 139 of our 2601 pixels, error estimates were not made, corresponding to weak-field pixels; these are shown in the left panel of Figure [REF] with [MATH] symbols.', '1402.4794-4-28-2': 'In 40 pixels, error estimates were large, with errors in inclination and azimuth exceeding 180[MATH] and 360[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-28-3': 'These are also shown in the left panel of Figure [REF], but with [MATH] symbols.', '1402.4794-4-28-4': 'Among the remaining 2422 pixels, the mean and standard deviation of uncertainties in field strength, inclination, and azimuth were [MATH] G, [MATH], and [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-28-5': 'We performed simple Monte Carlo simulations to estimate uncertainties in [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-28-6': "In each run, for pixels with valid uncertainties (i.e., not the 179 pixels discussed above) we multiplied each pixel's uncertainties in field strength, inclination, and azimuth by randomly generated, normally distributed coefficients (appropriately scaled to the estimated uncertainties), added the results to the original values, and projected the resulting vector into its [MATH] components.", '1402.4794-4-28-7': 'We then computed the mean of absolute differences between the perturbed and original values for that run.', '1402.4794-4-28-8': 'For 1000 runs, the uncertainties in [MATH] are (30, 36, 35) gauss, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-28-9': 'The relatively large uncertainty in [MATH] probably results from our approach, which averages absolute errors, even though these might be small in fractional terms for strong-field pixels [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-28-10': 'This approach also ignores errors in ambiguity resolutions and filling factors.', '1402.4794-4-29-0': 'We expect the impact of measurement errors in [MATH] on [MATH] to be relatively small in all summed results: since the quantities that are summed in equation ([REF]) are signed (from the product of [MATH] with the dot product of [MATH] with [MATH]), some cancellation should occur.', '1402.4794-4-30-0': '## Tracking the NFI Magnetograms', '1402.4794-4-31-0': '[CITATION] used a tracking code, FLCT , to estimate velocities for the NFI sequence we analyze here.', '1402.4794-4-31-1': 'Many tracking algorithms estimate spatial displacements of local structures between a pair of images separated in time by an interval [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-31-2': 'Tracking methods then typically have at least two free parameters: the time difference [MATH] between images; and the size [MATH] of the local neighborhood (around each pixel for which a velocity is sought) in which structures between the two images are associated.', '1402.4794-4-31-3': 'Accordingly, we briefly discuss our tracking parameters.', '1402.4794-4-32-0': 'In some cases, [MATH] is tightly constrained by the cadence of observations.', '1402.4794-4-32-1': 'If, however, cadences are relatively rapid compared to the expected time scale of evolution of image structures, then successive images are likely to differ only by the noise in each measurement, leading to propagation of noise into the velocity estimates .', '1402.4794-4-32-2': '[CITATION] suggested that temporal consistency in successive flow maps is a good indicator of robustness in the velocity estimates.', '1402.4794-4-32-3': 'This can be achieved by extending [MATH] until significant magnetic evolution has occurred.', '1402.4794-4-32-4': 'Accordingly, the flows we analyze here were derived by tracking the full NFI FOV with [MATH] = 8 min.', '1402.4794-4-32-5': 'Also, the initial and final magnetograms were computed by applying a five-step boxcar average to the NFI magnetograms.', '1402.4794-4-33-0': 'Tracking codes (or optical flow methods generally, including LCT, DAVE, and DAVE4VM; see Schuck 2008) typically estimate the flow in a given pixel using information about evolution in a "local" neighborhood - within a user-set length scale, [MATH], that describes the "apodization window" or "aperture" size - around that pixel.', '1402.4794-4-33-1': '[CITATION] noted that, in the presence of noise, information from several pixels is essential to prevent spurious fluctuations due to noise from obscuring actual physical displacements.', '1402.4794-4-33-2': 'Consequently, selecting too small a value for [MATH] can increase susceptibility to noise, since not enough pixels are used in estimating each local displacement.', '1402.4794-4-33-3': 'Flows smaller than a given scale [MATH] are, however, smoothed over by tracking codes.', '1402.4794-4-33-4': "We therefore chose to analyze flow maps derived with [MATH] 0.32 pixels (set by FLCT's [MATH] parameter, used in a Gaussian windowing function, [MATH]), which struck a balance between boosting correlations between successive flow maps (i.e., suggesting the flow estimates were robust) but not over-degrading the resolution of the magnetograms that were tracked.", '1402.4794-4-34-0': 'We also attempt to minimize confusion of fluctuations due to noise in the input magnetograms with bona fide magnetic evolution by not estimating velocities in pixels below the noise level.', '1402.4794-4-34-1': 'Accordingly, pixels in the NFI magnetograms with unsigned flux densities below the 15 Mx cm[MATH] noise level estimated by [CITATION] were not tracked.', '1402.4794-4-35-0': 'In Figure [REF], we plot both horizontal magnetic field vectors, [MATH], and FLCT flow vectors over a grayscale image of [MATH], for the flow map centered at 20:48:19.', '1402.4794-4-36-0': 'The mean and median horizontal FLCT speeds, in the 2,570 pixels in this field of view where estimates were made, are 0.17 km s[MATH] and 0.14 km s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-37-0': 'Velocities tend to be larger in weaker-field regions, consistent with the general tendency of strong vertical fields to suppress convection .', '1402.4794-4-37-1': '[CITATION] reported an anti-correlation between filling factor and the variance in flow speeds inferred from LCT.', '1402.4794-4-37-2': 'We also found such an anticorrelation in the plage region studied here: in the 2,414 pixels in which a speed was estimated and the fill fraction was not 1.0, linear and rank-order correlations between speeds and fill fractions were both -0.18.', '1402.4794-4-37-3': '(As noted in [REF] below, this value is statistically significant.)', '1402.4794-4-37-4': 'Anticorrelations were also found between speeds and each of intrinsic field strength, intrinsic [MATH], and intrinsic [MATH]; but the anticorrelations were weaker than that of speed with [MATH], suggesting that fill fraction is the principal correlated factor.', '1402.4794-4-38-0': 'As a check upon our results, we also tracked the full NFI FOV with a separate LCT code, one provided by Y.-J. Moon (private communication) that has been used in other published work (e.g., Moon 2002).', '1402.4794-4-38-1': 'While FLCT computes the cross-correlation function in Fourier space, this second tracking code computes the correlation function in regular space, following [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-38-2': 'Hence, we refer to it as Spatial LCT (SLCT), in contrast to Fourier LCT.', '1402.4794-4-38-3': 'We also only tracked pixels with absolute flux density above 15 Mx cm[MATH], with the same [MATH], but set [MATH] in this code to 3 pixels, since its weighting function includes a factor of 2 in the denominator of the exponential, [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-38-4': 'This routine returned either excessively large velocities in some pixels or even NaNs (in 4 of tracked pixels).', '1402.4794-4-38-5': 'Velocities in excess of 2 km s[MATH] of tracked pixels) or equal to NaN were set to zero.', '1402.4794-4-39-0': 'In the left panel of Figure [REF], we show SLCT velocities overlain on [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-39-1': 'Comparison of these flows with those in Figure [REF] shows rough agreement in many places, but also clear disagreements in others.', '1402.4794-4-39-2': "Rank-order correlation coefficients between these methods' [MATH] and [MATH] values in pixels where both methods made valid estimates were 0.85 and 0.77, respectively.", '1402.4794-4-39-3': 'Linear correlations were similar, at 0.85 and 0.63 for [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-39-4': 'Linear and rank-order correlations near 0.8 result from adding 10 random variation to a flow component and then correlating it with the unperturbed flow component.', '1402.4794-4-39-5': 'This suggests about [MATH]10 variability in estimated flows due to the LCT implementation.', '1402.4794-4-39-6': 'Consistent with these significant correlations, a scatter plot in the right panel of Figure [REF] shows that the flows are substantially correlated.', '1402.4794-4-40-0': 'The mean and median horizontal SLCT velocities, among pixels where valid estimates were made, are 0.15 km s[MATH] and 0.13 km s[MATH], respectively, quite close to the values for FLCT.', '1402.4794-4-41-0': '# Results', '1402.4794-4-42-0': '## Poynting Fluxes', '1402.4794-4-43-0': 'We combined the FLCT flows estimated from the NFI data with the co-registered vector magnetic field data and fill fraction from SP in equation ([REF]) to compute the Poynting flux averaged over the plage region.', '1402.4794-4-43-1': 'We find a net positive average Poynting flux, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] .', '1402.4794-4-43-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show a grayscale map of the Poynting flux, with saturation set to [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], overlain with -125 Mx cm[MATH] and -250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH] from the SP data.', '1402.4794-4-43-3': 'Regions with both positive and negative Poynting flux are visible, but the net Poynting flux is positive.', '1402.4794-4-44-0': 'Using the SLCT flows, we also find a net positive Poynting flux, but estimate [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-44-1': 'This is about 12 larger than the FLCT result.', '1402.4794-4-44-2': 'The fractional difference between FLCT and SLCT results, compared to their average, is about 6.', '1402.4794-4-44-3': 'The Poynting flux maps are significantly correlated, with pixel-wise linear and rank-order correlations of 0.90 and 0.85 in pixels where both methods made estimates.', '1402.4794-4-44-4': 'Evidently, the flow estimation process is a source of at least a [MATH]% uncertainty in our estimates.', '1402.4794-4-44-5': 'Further study of this same data set, using a different tracking method (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-4-45-0': 'Based upon tests of flow reconstruction methods by [CITATION], it is not surprising that different flow methods yield somewhat different results.', '1402.4794-4-45-1': 'Flows from most of the methods tested by [CITATION] were significantly correlated with both each other and with the true flows.', '1402.4794-4-45-2': 'But flows from the various methods did not agree closely, and most of the methods only recovered a fraction of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-45-3': 'Results about Poynting fluxes from the tests by [CITATION], however, are probably not applicable here, because the rising-flux-tube magnetic geometry in the MHD data they used is very different than our plage region: their field was primarily horizontal, and the Poynting flux was dominated by the emergence term, not the shearing term.', '1402.4794-4-45-4': 'For pixels in the upper 95% of the distribution in [MATH] (the criterion they used to determine the population they tracked), this can be seen in a number of statistical measures: the median horizontal field was five times stronger than the median vertical field; the mean and median inclination angles (from the vertical) were both larger than 65[MATH]; and the emergence term in the Poynting flux was largest in every pixel above their tracking 5% threshold (and in 99% of all pixels).', '1402.4794-4-46-0': 'To characterize the uncertainty in our Poynting flux estimate due to uncertainties in the magnetic fields, we also employed the Monte Carlo approach described in [REF] above to calculate the effect of magnetic fields components perturbed by the inversion uncertainties on the Poynting flux computed via ([REF]).', '1402.4794-4-46-1': 'Excluding the 179 pixels with invalid error estimates from these Poynting flux calculations, in 1000 runs of randomly perturbed magnetic fields, we find the mean and standard deviation of the Poynting flux to be [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-46-2': 'If we use the same approach, but substitute the mean uncertainty estimates from all other pixels for the 179 pixels with excessive errors, then for 1000 runs we find a mean and standard deviation of the Poynting flux of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-46-3': 'This suggests that uncertainties in the estimated magnetic fields are a relatively small part of the overall uncertainty in the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-47-0': 'In Figure [REF], many values of the Poynting flux are much larger than the average value.', '1402.4794-4-47-1': 'Could the upward average energy be an accident, due simply to excess Poynting flux from a few pixels with large values?', '1402.4794-4-47-2': 'The distribution of Poynting flux values suggests that the net upward flux arises from a statistical predominance of upward fluxes in the high-Poynting-flux wings of the distribution.', '1402.4794-4-47-3': 'This can be seen in Figure [REF], where we plot histograms of the upward (solid) and downward (dotted) Poynting flux, taken from the map in Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-4-47-4': 'As may be seen, there is a prevalence of pixels with upward-directed Poynting fluxes at high-Poynting-flux values.', '1402.4794-4-48-0': 'The dependence of the mean Poynting flux on the wings of the distribution implies that the standard deviation of the Poynting flux values is not a good estimator of the standard error of the mean (i.e., the uncertainty in our estimate of the mean).', '1402.4794-4-48-1': 'To estimate the standard error in the mean, we computed [MATH] bootstrap samples , which had a mean Poynting flux of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and a standard deviation of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-48-2': '(Note that this mean is over the subset of pixels with non-zero Poynting flux estimates; the value of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] cited above is over the entire 2601 pixels in our plage region.)', '1402.4794-4-48-3': "It should be noted, however, that since FLCT's [MATH] was set to 4 pixels, the data are not strictly independent: the flows are correlated below this scale.", '1402.4794-4-48-4': 'The magnetic fields also exhibit structure on a similar scale.', '1402.4794-4-48-5': 'Consequently, the assumption of independent data points that underlies the bootstrap approach is probably violated here, since neighboring pixels tend to be similar.', '1402.4794-4-48-6': 'This test does, however, demonstrate that the mean Poynting flux we that report does not depend upon values in just a few pixels, because we found very similar mean values even when resampling the population of Poynting flux values.', '1402.4794-4-49-0': 'Considering the variation in estimated Poynting flux indicated by the differing tracking methods ([MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]) and the bootstrap runs (again, [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH]), we estimate the overall uncertainty level to be on the order of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-50-0': 'One aspect of the Poynting flux map in Figure [REF] is notable: upward and downward energy fluxes appear bipolar in some areas (e.g., near pixel coordinates [30,25], [30,45], and [45,45]).', '1402.4794-4-50-1': 'Inspection of the same regions in Figure [REF] shows that these bipolar structures arise when horizontal magnetic fields change direction (e.g., converge) within an area of horizontal flows that are more uniform on the same spatial scale.', '1402.4794-4-50-2': 'Qualitatively, this does not accord with the simplistic picture of braiding of sub-resolution, elemental flux tubes proposed by [CITATION]: a substantial Poynting flux is spatially resolved, and we do not see fluxes winding about each other.', '1402.4794-4-50-3': '(We discuss vorticities in both the flow and magnetic fields in [REF], below).', '1402.4794-4-51-0': 'We note that the average Poynting flux that we obtain for this plage region is substantially larger than the value of [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] obtained by [CITATION] for a different plage region.', '1402.4794-4-51-1': 'Inclusion of the [MATH] factor in our estimate certainly explains much of the difference.', '1402.4794-4-51-2': 'Without this factor, our average Poynting flux would be just [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], still a a factor of 1.6 larger than that reported by [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-51-3': 'We note that the mean and median unsigned vertical fields in our plage region (434 Mx cm[MATH] and 354 Mx cm[MATH], resp.)', '1402.4794-4-51-4': 'are larger than the corresponding values in the region studied by [CITATION] (365 Mx cm[MATH] and 274 Mx cm[MATH], resp.)', '1402.4794-4-51-5': 'by factors of [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-51-6': 'So differing field strengths might explain some of the disparity.', '1402.4794-4-52-0': 'While magnetograms of the full NFI FOV were co-aligned prior to tracking , it is still possible that mean motion of the plage region we study here, combined with a mean horizontal magnetic field in the region, could produce the mean Poynting flux we find.', '1402.4794-4-52-1': 'To investigate this possibility, we computed a region-averaged Poynting flux, [MATH], given by [EQUATION] where the angle brackets denote averaging over the [MATH] pixel plage region, and fill-fraction-weighted magnetic field values (i.e., pixel-averaged values) were used in the averages.', '1402.4794-4-52-2': 'For FLCT and SLCT flows, we find [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-52-3': 'These region-averaged values are significantly smaller than and opposite in sign to the net Poynting fluxes we find above.', '1402.4794-4-53-0': '## Poynting Fluxes in Other Plage Regions', '1402.4794-4-54-0': 'Is the systematic prevalence of pixels with upward Poynting flux seen in Figure [REF] a fluke, or is it the norm?', '1402.4794-4-54-1': 'To settle this question, it would be helpful to analyze the Poynting flux in other plage regions.', '1402.4794-4-55-0': 'As noted above, however, the different cadences of the SP raster used to measure [MATH] and the NFI magnetograms tracked to infer [MATH] imply that no single velocity measurement is simultaneous with the vector magnetic field measurement across the region.', '1402.4794-4-55-1': 'So we cannot simply apply equation ([REF]) across the active region.', '1402.4794-4-55-2': 'This motivated our focus, above, on a relatively small patch of plage, for which estimates of [MATH] and [MATH] were nearly simultaneous.', '1402.4794-4-56-0': 'To work around the simultaneity issue, "rastered" 2D arrays (in [MATH] and [MATH]) of [MATH] and [MATH] were constructed, by selecting each column of the 2D array for each velocity component from the time-slice of the 3D datacubes (in [MATH]) of velocities closest in time to when the SP measurement was made at the corresponding column.', '1402.4794-4-56-1': 'This enables estimating the Poynting flux from the shearing term over most of the active region (though data near the top of the FOV is excluded due to the "bubble" in NFI).', '1402.4794-4-57-0': 'Since our focus is on the shearing Poynting flux in plage regions, we define a mask of "plage-like" pixels.', '1402.4794-4-57-1': 'We set this 2D bitmap to 1 for all pixels with filling-factor-weighted [MATH] between 100 and 1500 Mx cm[MATH] and inclinations of less than 30 from the vertical, and for which fill fractions were estimated.', '1402.4794-4-57-2': '(Inversions were not performed for all pixels; fill fractions were not estimated in non-inverted pixels.', '1402.4794-4-57-3': "The field in non-inverted regions with significant Stokes' V signals was assumed vertical.)", '1402.4794-4-57-4': 'Figure [REF] shows [MATH] across most of the active region in grayscale, with contours of the plage-like pixel mask overplotted.', '1402.4794-4-58-0': 'We use the term "plage-like" because our criteria for plage identification are imperfect: a few small regions very near the positive and negative umbrae satisfy the plage-lake criteria, along with many very small isolated clumps of quiet-sun fields.', '1402.4794-4-58-1': 'Both of these classes of pixels would probably not be identified as plage by a human observer.', '1402.4794-4-58-2': 'Our approach does, however, capture the majority of plage magnetic field regions across the active region.', '1402.4794-4-58-3': 'Further, it is objective, meaning it can be systematically applied, whereas identifications made by human observers would be subjective.', '1402.4794-4-59-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the distributions of upward and downward Poynting fluxes for all plage-like pixels across AR 10930.', '1402.4794-4-59-1': 'As with the distributions from the [MATH] pixel[MATH] region shown in Figure [REF], the frequency of pixels with upward Poynting flux is systematically higher than that of pixels with downward Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-60-0': 'The systematic difference between upward and downward energy fluxes should correspond to losses of some kind, perhaps due to atmospheric heating processes.', '1402.4794-4-61-0': 'Given the sparse nature of the plage-like pixel mask, and the utility of closely examining dynamics and magnetic field structure in a sample plage region, we turn our attention again to the [MATH] pixel[MATH] region that has been our focus.', '1402.4794-4-62-0': '## Dependence on Magnetic Structure', '1402.4794-4-63-0': 'Investigating relationships of magnetic field and flow properties with the Poynting flux can improve our understanding of the physical processes that generate Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-4-63-1': 'In analogous efforts to understand coronal heating, [CITATION] found a clear relationship between the presence of photospheric magnetic flux and coronal soft-X-ray (SXR) emission, and [CITATION] investigated relationships between SXR luminosity [MATH] and global properties of photospheric magnetic fields several hundred active regions in Haleakala Stokes Polarimeter vector magnetograms.', '1402.4794-4-63-2': 'Quantities they analyzed included total unsigned magnetic flux, total unsigned vertical electric current, and average field strength.', '1402.4794-4-63-3': "Despite expectations that electric currents should play a role in the heating that powers coronal SXR emission, they found that the regions' luminosities depended more strongly on their total unsigned magnetic flux, [MATH], than any other global magnetic variable they considered.", '1402.4794-4-63-4': 'Further, they found that [MATH] scaled as a power law in [MATH], with an index near one.', '1402.4794-4-63-5': '[CITATION] then showed that the magnetic flux vs. soft X-ray luminosity correlation holds over a wide range of magnetic scales for the Sun - from X-ray bright points to whole active regions to the entire disk - and even other stars.', '1402.4794-4-63-6': '(See also Fludra and Ireland [2008], who found power laws between whole-AR EUV intensities and magnetic fluxes.)', '1402.4794-4-64-0': 'We now apply a similar approach here, but to energy input (the Poynting flux) as opposed to output (SXR and EUV radiation), and investigate relationships of magnetic field and flow structure with the Poynting flux, with the aim of better understanding how Poynting fluxes arise.', '1402.4794-4-64-1': 'For context when considering other variables, we first consider baseline correlations between the magnetic field and the Poynting flux in our [MATH] pixel[MATH] box.', '1402.4794-4-64-2': 'For this, we only consider correlations for the 2560 pixels (of 2601 total) in which the velocity was estimated.', '1402.4794-4-64-3': "Uncertainties in correlation coefficients can be computed using Fisher's z-transformation, and the standard error scales like [MATH] for correlation coefficients that are not close to [MATH].", '1402.4794-4-64-4': 'For our sample, the standard error is about 0.02, so correlations larger than 0.06 in magnitude correspond to greater than [MATH] departures from the null hypothesis of zero correlation.', '1402.4794-4-64-5': 'Since atypical values for our variables can arise in our data through errors in the inferred [MATH], [MATH], and [MATH], as well as co-registration, we give rank-order correlation coefficients, since these are more robust against outliers.', '1402.4794-4-65-0': 'Regarding the unsigned Poynting flux, we find stronger fields tend to produce stronger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-4-65-1': 'Correlations between [MATH] (from FLCT) and the intrinsic magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] were 0.65, 0.54, and 0.57, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-65-2': 'For pixel-averaged values (i.e., [MATH]-weighted) of the same variables, the correlations for all three were larger, 0.72, 0.73, and 0.70.', '1402.4794-4-65-3': 'The correlation with fill fraction was positive, at 0.22, suggesting that while flows might be suppressed in pixels with higher filling factor (as noted above), the stronger fields that tend to be present lead to larger Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-4-66-0': 'What about correlations with the signed Poynting flux, [MATH]?', '1402.4794-4-66-1': 'Based upon the statistical imbalance in the distributions of upward versus downward Poynting fluxes, visible in Figures [REF] and [REF], any variables correlated with [MATH] (which is the parent distribution of the positive- and negative-Poynting-flux sub-populations) plausibly also exhibit some correlation with [MATH] (the dominant sub-population).', '1402.4794-4-66-2': 'This suggests that sites of larger unsigned Poynting flux should, statistically, tend have an upward flux, implying the variables above should also be correlated with [MATH], albeit more weakly than with [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-66-3': 'Consistent with this idea, we found correlations with the intrinsic magnetic variables [MATH], and [MATH] to be 0.12, 0.20, and 0.09, respectively, while correlations with the corresponding [MATH]-weighted variables were 0.18, 0.22, and 0.16, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-67-0': 'Compared to correlations with the magnetic field itself, correlations with the resolved spatial structure of the magnetic field were weak.', '1402.4794-4-67-1': "If energy were crossing the photosphere in regions of significant vertical electric currents, then there should be a strong correlation between the Poynting flux and the unsigned horizontal curl of the [MATH]-weighted horizontal photospheric field ([MATH], which is [MATH] by Ampere's law).", '1402.4794-4-67-2': 'The correlation with [MATH] that we found, however, was just 0.13 - while significant, this was much weaker than the baseline correlations with the magnetic field itself.', '1402.4794-4-67-3': 'The correlation of [MATH] with the unsigned, [MATH]-weighted horizontal divergence of the horizontal field ([MATH]) was significantly stronger at 0.28, but also relatively weak compared to the baseline magnetic correlations.', '1402.4794-4-67-4': '(This divergence should correspond to the magnetic field structure in "azimuth centers," albeit for centers on smaller scales than reported by Martinez-Pillet et al. 1997.)', '1402.4794-4-68-0': 'Perhaps unsurprisingly, the correlations between signed Poynting flux, [MATH], and these the unsigned horizontal curl and divergence of [MATH] were even weaker, at 0.04 and 0.07 - only marginally significant.', '1402.4794-4-69-0': 'What about correlations between flow properties and the Poynting flux?', '1402.4794-4-69-1': 'First, we found correlations of [MATH] with [MATH] and [MATH] of 0.13 and 0.06, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-69-2': 'The anti-correlation between filling factor and speed discussed above, and the dependence of the Poynting flux on the direction of [MATH] probably both contribute to this weak dependence on speed.', '1402.4794-4-70-0': 'We also present some of scatter plots relating some pairs of these quantities in Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-4-70-1': 'The scatter plots of [MATH] with intrinsic field strength (upper left), filling factor (upper right), and speed (bottom left) show a trend for increasing Poynting fluxes (regardless of sign) as each of these variables increases.', '1402.4794-4-70-2': 'Also, points with large, positive values of [MATH] tend to outnumber points with large, negative values of [MATH] as each of these variables increases.', '1402.4794-4-70-3': 'The scatter plot of speed as a function of fill fraction does show a tendency for higher-speed flows in pixels with lower fill fractions.', '1402.4794-4-71-0': 'Vortical motions could play a role in energy transport into the outer solar atmosphere (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014), but we also found relatively weak correlations between unsigned vorticity, [MATH], and [MATH] and [MATH] of -0.09 and 0.04, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-71-1': 'Hence, we find little evidence for resolved vortical flows playing a significant role in driving Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-4-71-2': 'It should be borne in mind, however, that the spatial scale of resolved by LCT methods is larger than that of the images that are tracked - [MATH]versus 0.32 in our case.', '1402.4794-4-72-0': 'It is also possible that converging (or diverging) flows might inject (or remove) magnetic energy by concentrating (or dispersing) magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-4-72-1': 'We checked this by correlating [MATH], which should be positive for converging flows, with [MATH] and [MATH]; both were basically insignificant at 0.03 and 0.02, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-72-2': 'Correlations with the unsigned horizontal divergence of [MATH] were not larger.', '1402.4794-4-73-0': 'It is also worthwhile to characterize the signed energy input per unit of magnetic flux, based upon the reported nearly linear scalings of energy output in SXR and EUV luminosities per unit magnetic flux.', '1402.4794-4-73-1': 'Accordingly, we now compute quantities with units consistent with a ratio of luminosity per maxwell of [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-73-2': 'For each pixel that was tracked with FLCT, we computed the ratio of signed energy input per maxwell.', '1402.4794-4-73-3': 'The mean and median of the ratios in this set of pixels were [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] are [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-73-4': 'Totaling the energy input and unsigned magnetic flux separately, and then dividing - i.e., computing the ratio of sums instead of the sum of ratios used to compute the mean above - yields a value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] for the whole-FOV energy input per maxwell.', '1402.4794-4-73-5': '[CITATION] report SXR luminosities of roughly 10[MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-73-6': 'Order-of-magnitude estimates of SXR luminosity [MATH] as a fraction of total radiated energy from heating [MATH] suggest [MATH] .', '1402.4794-4-73-7': 'If the energy fluxes of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] that we find are fully thermalized, and these order-of-magnitude estimates are correct, then our results are approximately consistent with those of [CITATION].', '1402.4794-4-73-8': 'Studies of additional plage regions would be worthwhile, to determine if our value of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH] is typical.', '1402.4794-4-74-0': 'As we have seen, stronger-field pixels tend to have larger Poynting fluxes, although in the case of the signed Poynting flux, the correlation is relatively weak.', '1402.4794-4-74-1': 'The tendency of magnetic fields to inhibit convection might explain the this weak correlation: a turning point could be reached as field strength increases, beyond which increasingly weak convective velocities produce a smaller convection-driven Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-74-2': 'This is a plausible explanation for the relative darkness of the corona in EUV and SXR images directly above sunspot umbrae.', '1402.4794-4-74-3': '(Note, however, that spatially coherent, large-scale flows, like those in rotating sunspots [e.g., Brown 2003], could still easily transport large amounts of magnetic energy across the photosphere in sunspot fields, though this energy might be more relevant to flares and CMEs than to coronal heating.)', '1402.4794-4-74-4': 'These considerations raise two related questions.', '1402.4794-4-74-5': 'First, what is the average (signed) Poynting flux as a function of field strength?', '1402.4794-4-74-6': 'And second, since some field strengths are more common than others, which part of the field strength distribution contributes the bulk of the Poynting flux?', '1402.4794-4-74-7': 'To address these questions, we first created a histogram of vertical field strengths, shown in the top panel of Figure [REF].', '1402.4794-4-74-8': 'A clear peak is seen near 1300 G in [MATH].', '1402.4794-4-74-9': 'We then computed the average and total (signed) Poynting fluxes in each bin (middle and bottom panels, respectively).', '1402.4794-4-74-10': 'From the bottom panel, it can be seen that the bulk of the total Poynting flux comes from pixels with vertical field strengths around the peak of the vertical field strength distribution.', '1402.4794-4-74-11': 'The middle panel shows, however, that weaker fields, on average, produce a similar Poynting flux, implying that their smaller contribution to the total energy flux is due to the relative dearth of such field strengths.', '1402.4794-4-74-12': 'Weaker fields might have average Poynting fluxes as high as stronger fields because higher velocities tend to be present in the former.', '1402.4794-4-75-0': '## Comparison with Chromospheric Emission', '1402.4794-4-76-0': 'It is plausible that regions of enhanced magnetic energy flux across the photosphere would be brighter in some form of emission.', '1402.4794-4-76-1': '(It is also possible that the solar atmosphere above the photosphere could store injected magnetic energy, in the form of electric currents, for some time prior to its dissipation and consequent enhancement of emission.', '1402.4794-4-76-2': 'Another possibility is that the energy might propagate away from the site of its introduction, to be dissipated elsewhere.)', '1402.4794-4-77-0': 'The plage region we analyze here was also observed in Ca II (H line) by the BFI, so we briefly investigate correlations of the Poynting flux map and other photospheric magnetic variables with this emission.', '1402.4794-4-77-1': 'The closest image in time to the NFI velocity estimate was recorded at 20:48:16 UT on 2006/12/12, which we co-registered with [MATH] after downsampling from the BFI pixel size of 0.11 by a factor of three to approximately match the 0.32 scale of our magnetic field and velocity arrays.', '1402.4794-4-77-2': 'In Figure [REF], we show [MATH] 125 and [MATH] 250 Mx cm[MATH] contours of [MATH]-weighted [MATH] flux density overlain on the Ca II intensity in our ([MATH])-pixel[MATH] plage region.', '1402.4794-4-78-0': 'We now investigate correlations of Ca II intensity with magnetic and velocity field properties, including the Poynting flux, to discover any interesting relationships.', '1402.4794-4-78-1': 'For magnetic variables, the spatial map of Ca II intensity exhibited the strongest correlations with [MATH] and [MATH], which were greater than 0.6 for both intrinsic and pixel-averaged field strengths.', '1402.4794-4-78-2': 'The correlation with [MATH] was significantly weaker, at 0.22 and 0.46 for intrinsic and pixel-averaged field strengths, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-78-3': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH]-weighted [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were statistically significant but much weaker, at 0.14 and 0.28.', '1402.4794-4-78-4': 'The lack of correlation with the curl suggests that electric current densities do not play a strong role in Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-4-78-5': 'We also found a significant correlation, 0.42, between Ca II and filling factor in the subset of pixels in which filling factors were estimated.', '1402.4794-4-79-0': 'For the Poynting flux, the correlation of Ca II intensity with unsigned and signed [MATH]-weighted Poynting fluxes was 0.53, and 0.19, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-79-1': 'The fact that the magnetic variables that enter the Poynting flux are more strongly correlated with Ca II emission than the Poynting flux suggests that the only additional information in the Poynting flux, from the FLCT flows, is unrelated to Ca II emission; and, indeed, the correlation of Ca II with [MATH] is significantly negative, at -0.11.', '1402.4794-4-79-2': 'This anticorrelation probably arises because flow speeds are higher in weak-field regions, while the emission is brightest in strong-field regions.', '1402.4794-4-79-3': 'Correlations with the horizontal curl of [MATH], [MATH], and its horizontal divergence, [MATH], were also negative, but marginally insignificant at -0.07 and -0.08, respectively.', '1402.4794-4-79-4': 'We also checked the signed horizontal flow divergence, reasoning that converging flows might slightly compress the plasma and lead to heating.', '1402.4794-4-79-5': 'The correlation was also negative (i.e., converging motions are present slightly more often near brighter Ca II emission), and stronger but still weak, at -0.12.', '1402.4794-4-79-6': 'This might be related to the concentration of magnetic flux in downflow lanes where horizontal flows converge.', '1402.4794-4-79-7': 'The weak correlation with the curl here implies that resolved braiding / vortical motions (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014) do not play a strong role in the generation of Ca II emission.', '1402.4794-4-79-8': 'The reason why the correlation with the curl is negative is hard to understand, but might be related to the presence of stronger flows in weaker-field regions.', '1402.4794-4-80-0': 'This analysis suggests that flow information at the spatial and temporal scales that we study has relatively little bearing on Ca II emission, compared to magnetic variables.', '1402.4794-4-80-1': 'Tarbell (private communication) notes that Ca II images from SOT like that which we analyzed here are "mostly photospheric" due to the relatively wide wavelength band, and suggests that enhanced emission in areas with strong photospheric fields arises from the hot-wall effect , not chromospheric heating.', '1402.4794-4-81-0': '# Summary Conclusions', '1402.4794-4-82-0': 'By combining LCT velocities estimated from a LOS magnetogram sequence with a vector magnetogram, both derived from Hinode/SOT observations of AR 10930, we estimated the Poynting flux, under the frozen-in-flux assumption, in a (12 Mm [MATH] 12 Mm) plage region to be 4.9 - [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], depending upon whether FLCT or SLCT velocities were used.', '1402.4794-4-82-1': 'Errors in the magnetic fields likely produce smaller uncertainties in the Poynting flux than this.', '1402.4794-4-82-2': 'These Poynting fluxes are greater than the chromospheric and coronal energy demands estimated by [CITATION], [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH] and [MATH] erg cm[MATH] s[MATH], respectively.', '1402.4794-4-83-0': 'We found that the Poynting flux varied in sign across the plage region that we studied.', '1402.4794-4-83-1': "By plotting the distribution of Poynting fluxes in this region's pixels, we found that the mean upward flux arose from a predominance of upward-flux pixels toward the high-Poynting-flux end of the distribution.", '1402.4794-4-83-2': 'We then identified "plage-like" pixels - those with nearly vertical flux densities in the range 100 - 1500 Mx cm[MATH], and sufficient polarization for the vector field to be estimated - across the rest of the active region.', '1402.4794-4-83-3': 'The distribution of Poynting fluxes in this set of plage-like pixels exhibited the same systematic prevalence of upward-flux pixels, suggesting that the plage region that is the focus of our study is not a special case.', '1402.4794-4-84-0': "In analogy with the study by [CITATION] relating active regions' soft X-ray luminosities to magnetic field properties, we investigated correlations of Poynting fluxes with properties of the magnetic and velocity fields.", '1402.4794-4-84-1': "We found that both the unsigned and signed Poynting fluxes typically increase with pixels' field strengths.", '1402.4794-4-84-2': 'Correlations of Poynting fluxes with both unsigned vertical electric current density and flow vorticity were relatively weak, suggesting braiding or vortical motions (e.g., Parker 1983, Kitiashvili et al. 2014) are not key aspects of the energy transport process.', '1402.4794-4-84-3': 'Building upon the work of [CITATION], [CITATION] found that soft X-ray luminosities for a range of magnetic regions on the Sun scaled nearly linearly with flux, with a relationship approximating [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-84-4': 'Here, we found the energy input per unit magnetic flux to be on the order of [MATH] erg s[MATH] Mx[MATH].', '1402.4794-4-84-5': 'We found that fields with intrinsic vertical field strengths of [MATH] G supply the bulk of the net Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-85-0': 'We also compared our Poynting flux map with a Ca II intensity image, and found much stronger correlation of Ca II emission with the vertical magnetic field strength [MATH] than with vertical Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-85-1': 'We noted that this magnetic correlation might, however, arise from near-photospheric emission in the passband exhibiting the hot-wall effect in strong fields.', '1402.4794-4-86-0': 'The time interval [MATH] between images (eight minutes here) and windowing length scale [MATH] (4 pixels, [MATH] Mm) used in our tracking will likely filter out processes on shorter temporal and spatial scales.', '1402.4794-4-86-1': 'Such processes (e.g., waves, or smaller-scale braiding) might play key roles in chromospheric emission.', '1402.4794-4-86-2': 'Given that chromospheric and coronal length scales are shorter than the scales we resolve, observations with higher resolution in space and time (see below) would be useful to investigate Poynting flux - emission correlations further.', '1402.4794-4-86-3': 'It should be noted, however, that our energy flux is large enough that sub-resolution dynamics are not required to explain the observed coronal heating.', '1402.4794-4-87-0': 'This initial study leaves several questions unanswered, motivating related studies to extend the work here.', '1402.4794-4-87-1': 'Do other tracking methods yield similar results?', '1402.4794-4-87-2': 'The same plage region analyzed here could be tracked with other methods (e.g., DAVE or DAVE4VM; Schuck 2006, Schuck 2008) to better understand the model-dependence of flow estimates in determining Poynting fluxes.', '1402.4794-4-87-3': 'How are photospheric Poynting fluxes related to emission from the overlying atmosphere?', '1402.4794-4-87-4': 'To address this question, it would be useful to analyze additional Hinode/SOT datasets, especially observations with simultaneous IRIS coverage of chromospheric, transition region, and coronal emission, to seek any evidence of spatial or temporal correlations between energy input via our estimated Poynting fluxes and energy dissipation in the outer solar atmosphere.', '1402.4794-4-87-5': 'How rapidly does the spatial distribution of the Poynting flux vary in time?', '1402.4794-4-87-6': 'In contrast to the snapshot we analyze here, successive Poynting flux maps would be needed to address this question.', '1402.4794-4-87-7': 'While SP vector magnetograms are the best currently available, the telemetry limitations of Hinode preclude long-duration runs of successive, rapid rasters over moderately large FOVs.', '1402.4794-4-87-8': 'Consequently, the HMI instrument aboard SDO could be used investigate the temporal variation of the Poynting flux.', '1402.4794-4-87-9': 'Unfortunately, HMI has both worse spatial resolution and poorer spectral sampling.', '1402.4794-4-87-10': "So a related question is: How sensitively do estimates of the Poynting flux depend upon a magnetograph's spatial and spectral resolution?", '1402.4794-4-87-11': 'Analysis of a region simultaneously observed with SOT and HMI would be worthwhile.', '1402.4794-4-87-12': '(It is probable, in fact, that additional energy flux could be resolved with even higher-resolution observations, though the energy flux must begin to decrease at some limit, to avoid an ultraviolet catastrophe.', '1402.4794-4-87-13': 'This motivates studies with new, higher-resolution instruments, as discussed below.)', '1402.4794-4-88-0': 'Within the larger context of the coronal heating problem, we suggest that a key strategic observational objective for understanding chromospheric and coronal heating should be construction of a detailed energy budget for the photosphere-to-corona system, with spatially and temporally resolved energy inputs correlated with energy release in all forms - radiation, kinetic energy in thermal and non-thermal particles and bulk motion, and gravitational potential energy.', '1402.4794-4-88-1': 'This will require high-resolution and high-cadence observations of the magnetic field and emission throughout the photosphere-to-corona system, for which both space-based observatories (e.g., SDO, IRIS, and the planned Solar-C satellite) and existing and planned ground-based observatories (NST [Goode 2010], GREGOR [Volkmer 2010], ATST [Rimmele 2010], and EST [Zuccarello and Zuccarello 2011]) will be essential.'}
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1001.5023
{'1001.5023-1-0-0': 'Entering a new era of high-energy gamma-ray experiments, there is an exciting quest for the first detection of gamma-ray emission from clusters of galaxies.', '1001.5023-1-0-1': 'To complement these observational efforts, we use high-resolution simulations of a broad sample of galaxy clusters, and follow self-consistent cosmic ray (CR) physics using an improved spectral description.', '1001.5023-1-0-2': 'We study CR proton spectra as well as the different contributions of the pion decay and inverse Compton emission to the total flux and present spectral index maps.', '1001.5023-1-0-3': 'We find a universal spectrum of the CR component in clusters with surprisingly little scatter across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-1-0-4': 'In addition, the spatial CR distribution also shows approximate universality; it depends however on the cluster mass.', '1001.5023-1-0-5': 'This enables us to derive a reliable semi-analytic model for both, the distribution of CRs and the pion-decay gamma-ray emission that results from hadronic CR interactions with ambient gas protons.', '1001.5023-1-0-6': 'In addition, we are now in the position to predict neutrino fluxes as well as the secondary radio emission from clusters.', '1001.5023-1-0-7': 'Combining the complete sample of the brightest X-ray clusters observed by ROSAT with our gamma-ray scaling relations, we identify the brightest clusters for Fermi and current imaging air Cerenkov telescopes.', '1001.5023-1-0-8': 'We reproduce the result in [CITATION], but provide somewhat more conservative predictions for the fluxes in the energy regimes of Fermi and imaging air Cerenkov telescopes (MAGIC, HESS, VERITAS) when accounting for the bias of artificial galaxies in cosmological simulations.', '1001.5023-1-0-9': 'We find that it will be challenging to detect cluster gamma-ray emission with Fermi after the first year but this mission has the potential of constraining interesting values of the shock acceleration efficiency after several years of surveying.', '1001.5023-1-0-10': 'Comparing the predicted emission from our semi-analytic model to that obtained by means of our scaling relations, we find that the gamma-ray scaling relations underpredict, by up to an order of magnitude, the flux from cool core clusters.', '1001.5023-1-1-0': '# Introduction', '1001.5023-1-2-0': '## General background', '1001.5023-1-3-0': 'In the cold dark matter (CDM) universe, large scale structure grows hierarchically through merging and accretion of smaller systems into larger ones, and clusters are the latest and most massive objects that had time to virialise.', '1001.5023-1-3-1': 'This process leads to collisionless shocks propagating through the intra-cluster medium (ICM), accelerating both protons and electrons to highly relativistic energies .', '1001.5023-1-3-2': 'High resolution X-ray observations by the Chandra and XMM-Newton satellites confirmed this picture, with most clusters displaying evidence for significant substructures, shocks, and contact discontinuities (e.g., [CITATION]).', '1001.5023-1-3-3': 'In addition, observations of radio halos and radio relics demonstrate the presence of synchrotron emitting electrons with energies reaching [MATH] 10 GeV in more than 50 clusters , although their precise origin in radio halos is still unclear.', '1001.5023-1-3-4': 'Similar populations of electrons may radiate [MATH]-rays efficiently via inverse Compton (IC) upscattering of the cosmic microwave background photons giving rise to a fraction of the diffuse [MATH]-ray background observed by EGRET .', '1001.5023-1-3-5': 'Although there is no clear observational evidence yet for a relativistic proton population in clusters of galaxies, these objects are expected to contain significant populations of relativistic protons originating from different sources, such as structure formation shocks, radio galaxies, and supernovae driven galactic winds.', '1001.5023-1-3-6': 'The ICM gas should provide ample target matter for inelastic collisions of relativistic protons leading to [MATH]-rays as well as secondary electron injection .', '1001.5023-1-3-7': 'These hadronic collision processes should illuminate the presence of these elusive particles through pion production and successive decay into the following channels: [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-3-8': 'This reaction can only unveil those cosmic ray protons (CRs) which have a total energy that exceeds the kinematic threshold of the reaction of [MATH] GeV.', '1001.5023-1-3-9': "The magnetic fields play another crucial role by confining non-thermal protons within the cluster volume for longer than a Hubble time, i.e. any protons injected into the ICM accumulates throughout the cluster's history .", '1001.5023-1-3-10': 'Hence, CRs can diffuse away from the production site, establishing a smooth distribution throughout the entire ICM which serves as efficient energy reservoir for these non-gravitational processes .', '1001.5023-1-4-0': 'There is only little known theoretically about the spectral shape of the CR population in the ICM.', '1001.5023-1-4-1': 'It is an interesting question whether it correlates with injection processes or is significantly modified by transport and re-acceleration processes of CRs through interactions with magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) waves.', '1001.5023-1-4-2': 'The most important processes shaping the CR spectrum are (1) acceleration by structure formation shock waves , MHD turbulence, supernova driven galactic winds , or Active Galactic Nuclei, (2) adiabatic and non-adiabatic transport processes, in particular anisotropic diffusion, and (3) loss processes such as CR thermalization by Coulomb interactions with ambient electrons and catastrophic losses by hadronic interactions.', '1001.5023-1-4-3': 'The spectral distribution of CRs that are accelerated at structure formation shocks should be largely described by a power-law with a spectral index of the one-dimensional distribution given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the shock compression factor.', '1001.5023-1-4-4': 'Strong (high Mach number) shocks that inject a hard CR population occur either at high redshift during the formation of the proto-clusters or today at the boundary where matter collapses from voids onto filaments or super-cluster regions.', '1001.5023-1-4-5': 'In contrast, merger shocks show weak to intermediate strength with typical Mach numbers in the range of [MATH] .', '1001.5023-1-4-6': 'Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) or supernova remnants are expected to inject CRs with rather flat spectra, [MATH] , but it is not clear whether they are able to build up a homogeneous population of significant strength.', '1001.5023-1-5-0': 'The CRs offer a unique window to probe the process of structure formation due to its long cooling times.', '1001.5023-1-5-1': 'While the thermal plasma quickly dissipates and erases the information about its past history, the CR distribution keeps the fossil record of violent structure formation which manifests itself through the spectrum that is shaped by acceleration and transport processes.', '1001.5023-1-5-2': 'The cluster [MATH]-ray emission is crucial in this respect as it potentially provides the unique and unambitious evidence of a CR population in clusters through observing the pion bump in the [MATH]-ray spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-5-3': 'This knowledge enables determining the CR pressure and whether secondary electrons could contribute to the radio halo emission.', '1001.5023-1-5-4': 'In the [MATH]-ray regime, there are two main observables, the morphological appearance of the emission and the spectrum as a function of position relative to the cluster center.', '1001.5023-1-5-5': 'The morphology of the pion induced [MATH]-ray emission should follow that seen in thermal X-rays albeit with a slightly larger extent .', '1001.5023-1-5-6': 'The primary electrons that are accelerated directly at the structure formation shocks should be visible as an irregular shaped IC morphology, most pronounced in the cluster periphery .', '1001.5023-1-6-0': '## The [MATH]-ray spectrum of a galaxy cluster', '1001.5023-1-7-0': 'How do the spectral electron and proton distributions map onto the [MATH]-ray spectrum?', '1001.5023-1-7-1': 'We show the CR spectrum within the virial radius of a simulated Coma-like galaxy cluster in the upper part of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-7-2': 'It is shaped by diffusive shock acceleration at structure formation shocks, adiabatic transport and the relevant CR loss processes.', '1001.5023-1-7-3': 'Three distinct features are visible in the spectrum: a cutoff close to the proton rest mass at [MATH] GeV, a concave shape for proton energies above [MATH] and a steepening due to diffusive losses at energies [MATH], where [MATH] is the value of the diffusion coefficient at 1 GeV.', '1001.5023-1-7-4': 'The dotted lines represents different values of the diffusion coefficient which is varied by a factor two from its fiducial value.', '1001.5023-1-7-5': 'The low energy cutoff is due to a balance of Coulomb and hadronic losses at energies around a GeV .', '1001.5023-1-7-6': 'As shown in the present paper and in an upcoming work by Pinzke Pfrommer (in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-7-7': ', the concave curvature is a unique shape that is caused by the cosmic Mach number distribution in combination with adiabatic transport processes.', '1001.5023-1-7-8': 'These features are mapped onto the pion decay [MATH]-ray emission spectra as a consequence of hadronic CR interactions.', '1001.5023-1-8-0': 'This can be seen in the lower part of Fig. [REF], where the arrows indicate the spectral mapping from the CR spectrum to the photon spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-8-1': 'In a hadronic interaction, CRs produce pions that decay into photons with an energy that is on average smaller by a factor eight compare to the original CR energy (see Section [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-8-2': 'At CR energies that are larger than the hadronic reaction threshold, the CR power-law behavior is linearly mapped onto the pion decay induced [MATH]-ray spectrum (solid blue).', '1001.5023-1-8-3': 'This emission component clearly dominates the total photon spectrum and therefore shapes the total emission characteristics in the central parts of the cluster, where the densities are high.', '1001.5023-1-8-4': 'Note that this spectrum is an intrinsic spectrum emitted at the cluster position and converted to a flux while assuming a distance of 100 Mpc without taking into account photon propagation effects.', '1001.5023-1-8-5': 'Depending on the cluster redshift, the finite mean free path of high-energy [MATH]-rays to [MATH]-pair production on infra red (IR) and optical photons limits the observable part of the spectrum to energies [MATH] TeV for clusters with redshifts [MATH], and smaller energies for higher redshift objects .', '1001.5023-1-9-0': 'Secondary CR electrons and positrons up-scatter cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons through the IC process into the [MATH]-ray regime, the so-called secondary inverse Compton emission (sIC).', '1001.5023-1-9-1': 'This emission component originates from the flat high-energy part of the CR spectrum and produces a rather flat sIC spectrum up to the Klein-Nishina regime.', '1001.5023-1-9-2': 'The sIC emission is suppressed relative to the pion decay by a factor of [MATH] which can be understood by considering hadronic decay physics and the fact that the CR energy spectrum, [MATH], is decreasing as a function of proton momentum (see Section [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-9-3': 'At large electron energies, we enter the Klein-Nishina regime of IC scattering where the electron recoil effect has to be taken into account.', '1001.5023-1-9-4': 'It implies less efficient energy transfer in such an elastic scattering event compared to the Thomson regime and leads to a dramatic steepening of the sIC spectrum at [MATH]-ray energies around 100 TeV (solid red line).', '1001.5023-1-9-5': 'The dash-dotted red line shows the hypothetical sIC spectrum in the absence of the Klein-Nishina effect (which is never realized in Nature).', '1001.5023-1-9-6': 'However, it clearly shows that the diffusive CR break is not observable in the sIC component for large clusters (while it can move to energies below the Klein-Nishina break for small enough clusters, causing a faster steepening there).', '1001.5023-1-9-7': 'The spectrum shown in green color represents the energy weighted photon spectrum resulting from the IC process due to electrons accelerated at structure formation and merger shocks, the primary inverse Compton emission (pIC).', '1001.5023-1-9-8': 'The exponential cutoff is due to synchrotron and IC losses which lead to a maximum energy of the shock-accelerated electrons.', '1001.5023-1-9-9': 'The green pIC band shows the effect of the maximum electron injection efficiency, where we use an optimistic value of [MATH] (see e.g. ) in the top and a value of [MATH] at the bottom.', '1001.5023-1-9-10': 'This more realistic value is suggested to be the theoretically allowed upper limit for the injection efficiency that is consistent with the non-thermal radiation of young supernova remnants .', '1001.5023-1-10-0': 'This work studies the spectral and morphological emission characteristics of the different CR populations in the [MATH]-ray regime.', '1001.5023-1-10-1': 'We concentrate on observationally motivated high-energy [MATH]-ray bands.', '1001.5023-1-10-2': '(1) The energy regime accessible to the Fermi [MATH]-ray space telescope with a particular focus on [MATH] and (2) the energy regime accessible to imaging air Cerenkov telescopes (IACTs) assuming a lower energy limit of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-10-3': 'In Section [REF] we describe the setup of our simulations, explain our methodology and relevant radiative processes considered in this work.', '1001.5023-1-10-4': 'In Section [REF], we study emission profiles and maps, as well as spectral index maps.', '1001.5023-1-10-5': 'We then present the CR spectrum and spatial distribution and show its universality across our simulated cluster sample in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-10-6': 'This allows us to derive a semi-analytic framework for the cluster [MATH]-ray emission in Section [REF] which we demonstrate on the Perseus and Coma galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-10-7': 'Furthermore, we study the mass-to-luminosity scaling relations (Section [REF]) and predict the [MATH]-ray flux from a large sample of galaxy clusters for the GeV and TeV energy regimes in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-10-8': 'We compare our work to previous papers in this field and point out limitations of our approach in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-10-9': 'We conclude our findings in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-10-10': 'Throughout this work we use a Hubble constant of [MATH], which is a compromise between the value found by the Hubble key project and from that one inferred from baryonic acoustic oscillation measurements .', '1001.5023-1-11-0': '# Setup and formalism', '1001.5023-1-12-0': 'We follow the CR proton pressure dynamically in our simulations while taking into account all relevant CR injection and loss terms in the ICM, except for a possible proton production from AGN.', '1001.5023-1-12-1': 'In contrast, we model the CR electron population in a post-processing step because it does not modify the hydrodynamics owing to its negligible pressure contribution.', '1001.5023-1-12-2': 'We use a novel CR formalism that allows us to study the spectral properties of the CR population more accurately.', '1001.5023-1-13-0': '## Adopted cosmology and cluster sample', '1001.5023-1-14-0': 'The simulations were performed in a [MATH]CDM universe using the cosmological parameters: [MATH], and [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-14-1': 'Here, [MATH] denotes the total matter density in units of the critical density for geometrical closure today, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-14-2': '[MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] denote the densities of baryons, dark matter, and the cosmological constant at the present day.', '1001.5023-1-14-3': 'The Hubble constant at the present day is parametrized as [MATH], while [MATH] denotes the spectral index of the primordial power-spectrum, and [MATH] is the rms linear mass fluctuation within a sphere of radius [MATH]Mpc extrapolated to [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-15-0': 'Our simulations were carried out with an updated and extended version of the distributed-memory parallel TreeSPH code GADGET-2 .', '1001.5023-1-15-1': 'Gravitational forces were computed using a combination of particle-mesh and tree algorithms.', '1001.5023-1-15-2': 'Hydrodynamic forces are computed with a variant of the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) algorithm that conserves energy and entropy where appropriate, i.e. outside of shocked regions .', '1001.5023-1-15-3': 'Our simulations follow the radiative cooling of the gas, star formation, supernova feedback, and a photo-ionizing background .', '1001.5023-1-16-0': 'The clusters have originally been selected from a low-resolution dark-matter-only simulation .', '1001.5023-1-16-1': "Using the 'zoomed initial conditions' technique , the clusters have been re-simulated with higher mass and force resolution by adding short-wavelength modes within the Lagrangian regions in the initial conditions that will evolve later-on into the structures of interest.", '1001.5023-1-16-2': 'We analyzed the clusters with a halo-finder based on spherical overdensity followed by a merger tree analysis in order to get the mass accretion history of the main progenitor.', '1001.5023-1-16-3': 'The spherical overdensity definition of the virial mass of the cluster is given by the material lying within a sphere centered on a local density maximum, whose radial extend [MATH] is defined by the enclosed threshold density condition [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-16-4': 'We chose the threshold density [MATH] to be a multiple [MATH] of the critical density of the universe [MATH] and assume a constant [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-16-5': 'In the remaining of the paper, we use the terminology [MATH] instead of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-16-6': 'Our sample of simulated galaxy clusters consists of 14 clusters that span a mass range from [MATH] to [MATH] where the dynamical stages range from relaxed cool core clusters to violent merging clusters (cf. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-16-7': 'Each individual cluster is resolved by [MATH] to [MATH] particles, depending on its final mass.', '1001.5023-1-16-8': 'The SPH densities were computed from the closest 48 neighbors, with a minimum smoothing length set to half the softening length.', '1001.5023-1-16-9': 'The Plummer equivalent softening length is [MATH] in physical units after [MATH], implying a minimum gas resolution of approximately [MATH] .', '1001.5023-1-17-0': '## Modelling of CR protons and induced radiative processes', '1001.5023-1-18-0': 'Our simulations follow cosmic ray physics in a self-consistent way .', '1001.5023-1-18-1': 'We model the adiabatic CR transport process such as compression and rarefaction, and a number of physical source and sink terms which modify the cosmic ray pressure of each CR population separately.', '1001.5023-1-18-2': 'The most important source considered for acceleration is diffusive shock acceleration at cosmological structure formation shocks, while the primary sinks are thermalization by Coulomb interactions, and catastrophic losses by hadronization.', '1001.5023-1-18-3': 'Collisionless structure formation shocks are able to accelerate ions and electrons in the high-energy tail of their Maxwellian distribution functions through diffusive shock acceleration .', '1001.5023-1-18-4': 'In the test particle picture, this process injects a CR distribution with a power-law in momentum and a slope that depends on the instantaneous sonic Mach number of the shock.', '1001.5023-1-18-5': 'The overall normalization of the injected CR distribution depends on the adopted sub-resolution model of diffusive shock acceleration ; in particular it depends on the maximum acceleration efficiency [MATH] which is the maximum ratio of CR energy density that can be injected relative to the total dissipated energy density at the shock.', '1001.5023-1-18-6': 'Following recent observations at supernova remnants as well as theoretical studies , we adopt a realistic value of this parameter and assume that 50 per cent of the dissipated energy at strong shocks is injected into cosmic ray protons.', '1001.5023-1-18-7': 'This efficiency rapidly decreases for weaker shocks (decreasing Mach number) and eventually smoothly approaches zero for sonic waves .', '1001.5023-1-18-8': 'We note however that to date it is not clear whether these high efficiencies apply in an average sense to strong collisionless shocks or whether they are realized for structure formation shocks at higher redshifts.', '1001.5023-1-18-9': 'Our paper aims at providing a quantitative prediction of the [MATH]-ray flux and hence the associated CR flux that we expect in a cluster depending on our adopted acceleration model.', '1001.5023-1-18-10': 'Non-detection of our predicted emission will limit the CR acceleration efficiency and help in answering these profound plasma astrophysics questions about particle acceleration efficiencies.', '1001.5023-1-19-0': 'We significantly revised the CR methodology and allow for multiple non-thermal cosmic ray populations of every fluid element (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-19-1': 'Each CR population [MATH] is a power-law in particle momentum, [EQUATION] characterized by a fixed slope [MATH], a low-momentum cutoff [MATH], and an amplitude [MATH] that is a function of the position of each SPH particle through the variable [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-19-2': 'For this paper we have chosen five CR populations with the spectral index distribution [MATH] for each fluid element (a convergence study on the number of CR populations is presented in the appendix [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-19-3': 'This approach allows a more accurate spectral description as the superposition of power-law spectra enables a concave curvature of the composite spectrum in logarithmic representation.', '1001.5023-1-19-4': 'Physically, more complicated spectral features such as bumps can arise from the finite lifetime and length scale of the process of diffusive shock acceleration or incomplete confinement of CRs to the acceleration region.', '1001.5023-1-19-5': 'These effects imprint an upper cutoff to the CR population locally that might vary spatially and which translates into a convex curvature in projection.', '1001.5023-1-19-6': 'Additionally, interactions of pre-existing CRs with MHD waves can yield to more complex spectral features.', '1001.5023-1-19-7': 'Future work will be dedicated to study these topics.', '1001.5023-1-20-0': 'In addition to the spectral features mentioned above, we model the effect of high-energy CR protons that are no longer confined to a galaxy cluster as these are able to diffuse into the ambient warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM).', '1001.5023-1-20-1': 'Assuming particle scattering off magnetic irregularities with the Kolmogorov spectrum, we obtain the characteristic scaling of the diffusion coefficient [MATH], where we normalize [MATH] at [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-20-2': 'One can estimate the characteristic proton energy [MATH] at which the spectrum steepens , [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-20-3': 'For the reminder, we adopt a value of the diffusivity that is scaled to [MATH] for each cluster, as this volume is expected to fall within the virialised part of the cluster past the accretion shock region and traps CRs in a cluster for time scales longer than a Hubble time.', '1001.5023-1-20-4': 'This choice also has the property that the diffusion break is at energies [MATH] GeV; hence it does not interfere with the pion decay as well as secondary IC emission in the energy regime accessible to IACTs as we will show in the following.', '1001.5023-1-20-5': 'The momentum of a photon that results from pion decay is given by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-20-6': 'This approximate relation is derived using the inelasticity [MATH] and multiplicity [MATH] for the [MATH] channel together with the two photons in the final state.', '1001.5023-1-20-7': 'Secondary electrons that are injected in hadronic CR interactions Compton up-scatter CMB photons.', '1001.5023-1-20-8': 'A break in the parent CR spectrum would imprint itself in the sIC spectrum if there are no other effects that modify the spectrum at lower energies.', '1001.5023-1-20-9': 'Compared to the pion decay emission, this break manifests at slightly higher energies (for parameters adopted in Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-20-10': 'The momentum of the electrons [MATH] depends on the proton momentum [MATH] through the relation given by hadronic physics [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-20-11': 'Here we used the [MATH] channel together with the four particles in the final state of the charged pion decay ([MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH]).', '1001.5023-1-20-12': 'Combining the classical inverse Compton formulae from CR electrons with energies [MATH] [EQUATION] with the energy relation in equation ([REF]) we obtain a break in the sIC spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-20-13': "This steepening of the CR spectrum take place at high photon energies [MATH] where we choose CMB photons with the energy [MATH] meV as source for the inverse Compton emission using Wien's displacement law.", '1001.5023-1-20-14': 'It turns out that these energies are deeply in the Klein-Nishina regime.', '1001.5023-1-20-15': 'This means that in the rest frame of the energetic electron, the Lorentz boosted photon energy is comparable to or larger than the electron rest mass, [MATH], so that the scattering event becomes elastic.', '1001.5023-1-20-16': 'This implies a less efficient energy transfer to the photon and manifests itself in a break in the resulting IC spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-20-17': 'While the emissivity scales as [MATH] in the Thomson-limit for [MATH] TeV, it steepens significantly to [MATH] in the extreme KN-limit for [MATH] TeV, where [MATH] is the spectral index of the (cooled) CR electron distribution .', '1001.5023-1-21-0': '## Magnetic fields', '1001.5023-1-22-0': 'High energy CR electrons with [MATH] loose their energy by means of IC scattering off CMB photons as well as through interactions with cluster magnetic fields which results in synchrotron emission.', '1001.5023-1-22-1': 'The relative importance of these two emission mechanisms depends on the rms magnetic field strength, [MATH], relative to the equivalent field strength of the CMB, [MATH], where [MATH] denotes the redshift.', '1001.5023-1-22-2': 'In the peripheral cluster regions, where [MATH], the CR electrons loose virtually all their energy by means of IC emission.', '1001.5023-1-22-3': 'In the central cluster regions, in particular in the dense centers of cool cores, the magnetic energy density is probably comparable or even larger than the energy density of the CMB , [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-22-4': "Hence in these regions, the radio synchrotron emission carries away a fraction of the CR electrons' energy losses; an effect that reduces the level of IC emission.", '1001.5023-1-22-5': 'We model the strength and morphology of the magnetic fields in the post-processing and scale the magnetic energy density field [MATH] by the thermal energy density [MATH] through the relation [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the core values.', '1001.5023-1-22-6': 'If not mentioned otherwise, we use the magnetic decline [MATH] and the central magnetic field [MATH] throughout this paper.', '1001.5023-1-22-7': 'The central thermal energy density [MATH], is calculated by fitting the modified [MATH]-model [EQUATION] to the radial pressure [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-22-8': 'The parametrization in equation ([REF]) is motivated by both cosmological MHD SPH simulations and radiative adaptive mesh refinement MHD simulations .', '1001.5023-1-22-9': 'Rather than applying a densities scaling as those simulations suggest, we use a scaling with thermal gas energy density which is not affected by the over-cooled centers in radiative simulations that do not take into account AGN feedback.', '1001.5023-1-23-0': '## CR electron acceleration and inverse Compton emission', '1001.5023-1-24-0': '### Modeling diffusive shock acceleration', '1001.5023-1-25-0': 'Collisionless cluster shocks are able to accelerate ions and electrons through diffusive shock acceleration .', '1001.5023-1-25-1': 'Neglecting non-linear shock acceleration and cosmic ray modified shock structure, the process of diffusive shock acceleration uniquely determines the spectrum of the freshly injected relativistic electron population in the post-shock region that cools and finally diminishes as a result of loss processes.', '1001.5023-1-25-2': 'The [MATH]-ray inverse Compton emitting electron population cools on such a short time scale [MATH] yrs (compared to the long dynamical time scale [MATH] Gyr) that we can describe this by instantaneous cooling.', '1001.5023-1-25-3': 'In this approximation, there is no steady-state electron population and we would have to convert the energy from the electrons to inverse Compton (IC) and synchrotron radiation.', '1001.5023-1-25-4': 'Instead, we introduce a virtual electron population that lives in the SPH-broadened shock volume only; this is defined to be the volume where energy dissipation takes place.', '1001.5023-1-25-5': 'Within this volume, which is co-moving with the shock, we can use the steady-state solution for the distribution function of relativistic electrons and we assume no relativistic electrons in the post-shock volume, where no energy dissipation occurs.', '1001.5023-1-25-6': 'Thus, the cooled CR electron equilibrium spectrum can be derived from balancing the shock injection with the IC/synchrotron cooling: above a GeV it is given by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-25-7': 'Here, we introduced the dimensionless electron momentum [MATH], where [MATH] is the electron momentum.', '1001.5023-1-25-8': '[MATH] is the spectral index of the equilibrium electron spectrum, [MATH] is the gas density, [MATH] is the magnetic energy density, and [MATH] denotes the photon energy density, taken to be that of CMB photons.', '1001.5023-1-25-9': 'A more detailed description of our approach can be found in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-25-10': 'The inverse Compton source density [MATH] in units of produced photons per unit time interval and volume for a power-law spectrum of CRes scales as [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-26-0': 'When the energy of the accelerated electrons reach a certain value, radiative losses from IC and synchrotron radiation start to impact the steady-state electron power-law spectrum (equation [REF]), causing a super-exponential cutoff .', '1001.5023-1-26-1': 'The continuous losses cause the cutoff to move to lower energies as the electrons are transported advectively with the flow downstream.', '1001.5023-1-26-2': 'Integration over the post-shock volume causes the cutoffs to add up to a new power-law that is steeper by unity (equation [REF]) compared to the injection power-law.', '1001.5023-1-26-3': 'The distribution function shows an ultimate cutoff that is determined from the magnetic field strength and the properties of the diffusion of the electron in the shock.', '1001.5023-1-26-4': 'The fact that we observe X-ray synchrotron emission at shocks of young supernova remnants necessarily requires the existence of high-energy CR electrons with [MATH] TeV.', '1001.5023-1-26-5': 'The non-thermal synchrotron emission generated by CR electrons with energies [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH]TeV) and magnetic fields of order [MATH]G are required to reach X-ray energies of order 10 keV.', '1001.5023-1-27-0': 'To keep the highly relativistic electrons from being advected downstream requires efficient diffusion so that they can diffuse back upstream crossing the shock front again.', '1001.5023-1-27-1': 'We therefore use the most effective diffusion, refereed to as Bohm diffusion limit, as the electron propagation model at the shock.', '1001.5023-1-27-2': 'Balancing Bohm diffusion with synchrotron/IC cooling of electrons enables us to derive a maximum energy of the accelerated CR electrons at the position of the shock surface [EQUATION] where diffusion parallel to the magnetic field has been assumed.', '1001.5023-1-27-3': 'Here [MATH] denotes the flow velocity in the inertial frame of the shock ([MATH]), and the electron loss time scale due to synchrotron and inverse-Compton losses reads [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the Thompson cross-section.', '1001.5023-1-27-4': '[MATH] denotes the shock compression and is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the sonic Mach number.', '1001.5023-1-27-5': 'Inserting typical numbers for different cluster regions show that the electron cutoff energy, [MATH], only varies within a factor two inside [MATH] (Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-27-6': 'The equivalent cutoff energy in the IC spectrum can easily be derived from equation ([REF]), yielding [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-28-0': '### IC emission of primary CRes', '1001.5023-1-29-0': 'Following [CITATION], we calculate the inverse Compton emission from the primary electrons that up-scatter CMB photons in the vicinity of the shock.', '1001.5023-1-29-1': 'However, the simple analytic power-law spectrum is modified due to the competition between radiative cooling and diffusive acceleration of electrons in the shock region.', '1001.5023-1-29-2': 'We model this effect by adding a super-exponential cutoff, [MATH], to the cooled isotropic electron distribution (equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-29-3': 'We follow [CITATION] to derive the effective integrated source function (see equation [REF]) [EQUATION] where Bohm diffusion has been assumed.', '1001.5023-1-29-4': 'The normalization constants [MATH] and [MATH] depends on the cluster environment and are derived in equations ([REF]) and ([REF]), respectively.', '1001.5023-1-29-5': 'Following recent work that carefully models the non-thermal radiation of young supernova remnants , we typically adopt a maximum electron injection efficiency of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-29-6': 'We note that this value seems to be at the upper envelope of theoretically allowed values that match the supernova data.', '1001.5023-1-30-0': '## Multiphase structure of the ICM', '1001.5023-1-31-0': 'The ICM is a multiphase medium consisting of a hot phase which attained its entropy through structure formation shock waves dissipating gravitational energy associated with hierarchical clustering into thermal energy.', '1001.5023-1-31-1': 'The dense, cold phase consists of the true ISM within galaxies and at the cluster center as well as the ram-pressure stripped ISM that has not yet dissociated into the ICM .', '1001.5023-1-31-2': 'All of these phases contribute to the [MATH]-ray emission from a cluster.', '1001.5023-1-31-3': 'Physically, the stripped ISM should dissociate after a time scale that depends on many unknowns such as details of magnetic draping of ICM fields on galaxies or the viscosity of the ICM.', '1001.5023-1-31-4': 'Due to insufficient numerical resolution, this dissociation process is suppressed or happens only incompletely in our simulations leaving compact galactic-sized point sources that potentially biases the total [MATH]-ray luminosity high.', '1001.5023-1-31-5': 'On the other hand, once these stripped compact point sources dissociate, the CRs diffuse out in the bulk of the ICM, and produce [MATH]-rays by interacting with protons of the hot dilute phase.', '1001.5023-1-31-6': 'This flux, however, is negligible since [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-31-7': 'In the second step we accounted for the adiabatic expansion that these CRs would experience as they diffused out of their dense ISM environment.', '1001.5023-1-31-8': 'In the last step we assumed [MATH], i.e. that the CR luminosity of all compact galactic sources in a cluster is of the same order as the CR luminosity in the diffuse ICM; a property that is at least approximately true in our simulations as we will show later on.', '1001.5023-1-31-9': 'Leaving all gaseous point sources would definitively be too optimistic, removing all of them would be too conservative since cluster spiral galaxies should contribute to the total [MATH]-ray emission (which defines our so-called optimistic and conservative models).', '1001.5023-1-31-10': 'Hence, we perform our analysis with both limiting cases, bracketing the realistic case.', '1001.5023-1-31-11': 'In practice, we cut multiphase particles with an electron fraction [MATH] and a gas density above the star forming threshold [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-31-12': 'If nothing else is stated, we use our conservative model without galaxies throughout the paper.', '1001.5023-1-32-0': '# Characteristics of [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-1-33-0': 'From surface brightness [MATH] maps that are obtained by line-of-sight integration of the source functions, we study the [MATH]-ray emission to characterize the morphology of clusters.', '1001.5023-1-33-1': 'Additionally, we use emission profiles to compare pIC, sIC, and pion decay induced emission for different clusters.', '1001.5023-1-34-0': '## Morphology of [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-1-35-0': 'The left side of Fig. [REF] shows the morphology of the [MATH]-ray emission above [MATH] that results from hadronic CR interactions with ambient gas protons.', '1001.5023-1-35-1': 'The right side shows the primary and secondary IC emission for the post-merger cluster g72a.', '1001.5023-1-35-2': 'The comparison of the two panels shows that the central parts are dominated by the pion induced [MATH]-ray emission.', '1001.5023-1-35-3': 'It has a very regular morphology that traces the gas distribution.', '1001.5023-1-35-4': 'There is a transition to the pIC emission as the dominant emission mechanism outside the cluster in the WHIM at a level depending on the dynamical state of the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-35-5': 'The pIC emission is very inhomogeneous which can be easily understood since it derives from primary CR electrons that are directly accelerated at structure formation shocks.', '1001.5023-1-35-6': 'Structure formation is not a steady process, it rather occurs intermittently.', '1001.5023-1-35-7': 'The morphology of the [MATH]-ray emission above [MATH] for g72a was investigated in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-35-8': 'It shows a very similar morphology, indicating a similar power-law CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-36-0': 'We define the projected energy dependent photon index through [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the surface brightness of [MATH]-rays with energies [MATH] at the projected radius [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-36-1': 'Using [MATH] maps, such as the ones in Fig. [REF], we can extract the photon index between the energies [MATH] to [MATH], [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-36-2': 'Close to the pion bump (see Fig. [REF]) at [MATH] (energy of a photon originating from a decaying [MATH] at the threshold of the hadronic p-p reaction) the photon spectrum has a convex shape.', '1001.5023-1-36-3': 'This is characterized by a flatter photon index compared to the asymptotic limit, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-36-4': 'Calculating [MATH] at two discrete energies results in a slightly steeper value for [MATH] than its continuous counterpart [MATH] at [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-37-0': 'Since we are interested in comparing the morphology of clusters to spectra, we calculate the projected photon index for g72a (see Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-37-1': 'We compare [MATH] for an energy regime accessible to the Fermi space telescope of [MATH] (left panel) to [MATH] accessible for IACTs (right panel).', '1001.5023-1-37-2': 'In the Fermi regime, we find a median value of [MATH] in the central regions of the cluster and a value [MATH] in the periphery.', '1001.5023-1-37-3': 'The reason is that the total emission in the central regions of the cluster is dominated by the pion decay emission at 100 MeV with a lower spectral index than pIC due to the pion bump.', '1001.5023-1-37-4': 'In the periphery and the WHIM, where the pIC contributes substantially to the total emission, intermediate shocks with [MATH] are typical .', '1001.5023-1-37-5': 'Using the spectral index of the electron equilibrium spectrum, [MATH], where [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH], results in the observed steepening of [MATH] in the periphery.', '1001.5023-1-38-0': 'We now turn to the energy region important for IACTs with the photon index [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-38-1': 'In the central regions the photon index traces the proton spectral index [MATH] since this spatial region is dominated by the asymptotic regime of the pion emission.', '1001.5023-1-38-2': 'Moving towards the periphery, [MATH] flattens since strong external shocks as well as accretion shocks become important.', '1001.5023-1-38-3': 'Increasing the energy or the distance from the cluster furthermore results in a steeper photon index in this region because of the exponentially suppressed pIC due to fast cooling electrons at the energy [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-39-0': '## Emission profiles', '1001.5023-1-40-0': 'The profiles of different non-thermal [MATH]-ray emission processes without galaxies are shown in Fig. [REF] for, a large CC cluster (g8a, left) and large post-merging cluster (g72a, right).', '1001.5023-1-40-1': 'The secondary IC emission traces the dominating pion decay emission because to zeroth order, both components depend on [MATH], where [MATH] is the gas number density and [MATH] the CR number density.', '1001.5023-1-40-2': 'This would be exactly true if the magnetic field was smaller than [MATH]G.', '1001.5023-1-40-3': 'In this case, the CRe population would exclusively cool by means of IC emission.', '1001.5023-1-40-4': 'Since we assume the central magnetic field to be larger than [MATH], a fraction of the CRe energy is radiated through synchrotron emission into the radio, causing a larger discrepancy of the sIC emission compared to the pion emission in the center.', '1001.5023-1-41-0': 'In contrast to the centrally peaked secondary emission components, the average primary IC emission shows a rather flat surface brightness profile which can be nicely seen in our cool core cluster g8a.', '1001.5023-1-41-1': 'This is because we see the strong accretion shocks that efficiently accelerate CRes (in terms of the injected energy density) in projection.', '1001.5023-1-41-2': 'There are noticeable exceptions in the centers of both clusters: accreting small sub-clumps dissipate their gravitational energy through weak shocks in the larger core regions of clusters.', '1001.5023-1-41-3': 'However, once these weak shock waves encounter the (over-cooled) centers of our simulated clusters they transform into strong (high Mach number) shock waves.', '1001.5023-1-41-4': 'These inject a hard population of primary CR electrons which causes the centrally peaked and bright pIC emission.', '1001.5023-1-41-5': 'We also observe an excess pIC emission at a radius of [MATH] Mpc in g72a.', '1001.5023-1-41-6': 'This can be traced back to a prominent merger shock wave with a Mach number up to [MATH] that accelerates primary CRes (see also Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-42-0': 'The total emission flattens out in the cluster exterior close to [MATH] because of two reasons: (1) there the pIC emission contributes significantly to the total emission because of strong merger shocks as well as accretion shocks, and (2) subhalos in the periphery that have not yet merged with the larger halo contribute to the pion decay induced emission.', '1001.5023-1-42-1': 'In this regime, the halo-halo correlation term starts to dominate the average density profile of a cluster with its characteristic flattening .', '1001.5023-1-42-2': 'This naturally translates to the pion emission profile that tightly correlates with the gas density distribution.', '1001.5023-1-43-0': 'The ratio between pion decay and sIC emission can be estimated analytically by calorimetric considerations.', '1001.5023-1-43-1': 'To this end we compare the CR energy spectrum, [MATH], at the respective CR energies which give rise to [MATH]-ray emission at some specific photon energy, say [MATH] GeV.', '1001.5023-1-43-2': 'Additionally we have to include a factor, [MATH], that accounts for the possibility that the CRes do not only emit IC [MATH]-rays but also radio synchrotron radiation.', '1001.5023-1-43-3': 'Using the hadronic branching ratios for the production of pions, [MATH] and [MATH], as well as the multiplicities for the decay products in the respective decay channels, [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-43-4': 'Here [MATH] is the CR proton spectral index between the CR energy [MATH] that give rise to pion decay flux at 1 GeV and the CR energy [MATH] that gives rise to sIC flux at 1 GeV.', '1001.5023-1-43-5': 'The [MATH]-ray source function for pion decay and sIC () is denoted by [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1001.5023-1-43-6': 'Finally, the factor [MATH], for magnetic fields much smaller than the CMB equivalent magnetic field, otherwise [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-43-7': 'In the region close to [MATH], the magnetic field is about 2.4 [MATH] in our model (Table [REF]), which implies an emission ratio of about 50.', '1001.5023-1-43-8': 'For smaller photon energies than 1 GeV, the pion decay [MATH]-ray emission falls below the asymptotic power-law due to the characteristic pion bump.', '1001.5023-1-43-9': 'This effect implies a lower ratio of about 40 (instead of the expected ratio of about 100) for the emission above 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-44-0': 'We also show the total surface brightness profile with galaxies in Fig. [REF] (grey line).', '1001.5023-1-44-1': 'The resulting profile shows a boosted emission by about a factor two compared to the one where we exclude galaxies from the surface brightness.', '1001.5023-1-44-2': 'The entire population of these galaxies takes up only a negligible volume so that the volume weighted CR pressure is almost the same in either case, when taking these galaxies into account or not.', '1001.5023-1-44-3': "We note that this bias needs to be addressed when deriving average CR pressure contributions from the cluster's [MATH]-ray emission .", '1001.5023-1-44-4': 'Especially in the inner parts, the profile is very inhomogeneous.', '1001.5023-1-44-5': 'Since galaxies follow an approximate Poisson distribution and since the inner radial bins of the profile sample only few galaxies, we naturally obtain a larger Poissonian scatter across the inner radial bins.', '1001.5023-1-45-0': '## Emission spectra from the cluster core and WHIM', '1001.5023-1-46-0': 'The central parts of clusters are characterized by high gas and CR densities, and magnetic fields - at least compared to average values of the ICM.', '1001.5023-1-46-1': 'Even though the cluster core region only makes up a fraction of the total volume of the ICM, the high densities result in a significant [MATH]-ray flux contribution to the total flux from the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-46-2': 'In contrast to the cluster center, the WHIM is characterized by on average low gas and CR densities, and magnetic fields.', '1001.5023-1-46-3': 'The low densities cause a smaller total [MATH]-ray flux from this region compared to the cluster core regions.', '1001.5023-1-46-4': 'However, the WHIM of the super-cluster region contains a large number of galaxies and groups that are accreted onto the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-46-5': 'This generates more shocks compared to the cluster core region.', '1001.5023-1-46-6': 'The cluster characteristics in the two regions give rise to different normalizations of the individual [MATH]-ray emission components, but with a similar shape.', '1001.5023-1-46-7': 'The shape of the emission components from the different regions agrees with that of the entire cluster as shown in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-46-8': 'The emission can be summarized as follows.', '1001.5023-1-46-9': 'The [MATH]-decay is characterized by the so-called pion bump followed by a concave curvature and a diffusive break.', '1001.5023-1-46-10': 'The pIC emission component shows a power-law followed by an exponential cutoff while the sIC component has a power-law with similar index that is however followed by the Klein-Nishina break.', '1001.5023-1-47-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show the [MATH]-ray number flux weighted by photon energy from different regions of our Coma-like cluster g72a that we place at the distance of 100 Mpc.', '1001.5023-1-47-1': 'The left figure shows the [MATH]-ray number flux within the core region ([MATH]), where the [MATH]-decay dominates over the sIC component that itself is sub-dominant to the pIC component.', '1001.5023-1-47-2': 'The surface brightness profile of the [MATH]-decay is sufficiently flat in the core region so that the [MATH]-ray flux is dominated by the outer scale around [MATH] where most of the volume is.', '1001.5023-1-47-3': 'Hence the [MATH]-decay flux is largely insensitive to numerical inaccuracies of our modeling of the physics at the very center of the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-47-4': 'Both the pIC and sIC emission components have a larger [MATH]-ray flux in our models with weak central magnetic fields ([MATH], [MATH]) compared to our models with strong central magnetic fields ([MATH], [MATH]).', '1001.5023-1-47-5': 'The sIC emission with [MATH] is characterized by [MATH] on scales around the core radius which dominate the flux.', '1001.5023-1-47-6': 'We obtain a ratio between the pion decay induced emission to the sIC emission of about 60 at 1 GeV which is in line with our expectations (see equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-47-7': 'Even though the pIC emission component is sub-dominant, it shows a rather flat spectral index.', '1001.5023-1-47-8': 'This implies only a few strong shocks that are responsible for the electron acceleration.', '1001.5023-1-47-9': 'These merging shock waves are traversing the cooling core region in the cluster center.', '1001.5023-1-47-10': 'We caution the reader that the over-cooling of the cluster centers in our simulations possibly overestimates the true shock strengths and numbers which also results in an artificially enhanced pIC emission.', '1001.5023-1-47-11': 'At high energies, the electron cooling time is smaller than the time scale for diffusive shock acceleration which causes an exponential cutoff in the electron spectrum which is passed on to the pIC spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-47-12': 'The energy scale of the cutoff [MATH] (combining equations [REF] and [REF]) scales with the magnetic field which causes the low magnetic field model to turn down faster than the large magnetic field model.', '1001.5023-1-47-13': 'Note that the second cutoff in the figure for the small central magnetic fields is caused by a small fraction of the particles that have unusually high electron energy cutoff.', '1001.5023-1-47-14': 'The lower panel shows the photon spectral index defined in equation ([REF]), where [MATH] for the [MATH]-decay emission after the pion bump that slowly flattens out with energy.', '1001.5023-1-47-15': 'For both the pIC and sIC emission the photon spectral index [MATH] above the GeV regime up to at least TeV energies.', '1001.5023-1-47-16': 'The reason for the flat spectra is that the pIC emission is generated by a few strong shocks in the center, while the sIC emission is caused by protons in the flat high energy part of CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-48-0': 'Now we turn to the [MATH]-ray spectra in the WHIM which are shown in the right panel of Fig. [REF] for our g72a cluster.', '1001.5023-1-48-1': 'Here we define the WHIM by the emission in the region [MATH] as seen in 2D projection of the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-48-2': 'We see that the pion decay and sIC are suppressed by a factor that is larger than 10 compared to the flux within the core region since the emission correlates with the CR- and gas densities.', '1001.5023-1-48-3': 'The suppression of [MATH]-ray flux emitted by the intergalactic medium is expected to be much greater due to the large density decrease.', '1001.5023-1-48-4': 'The presence of small groups in the super-cluster region with densities that are much larger than the average density in the WHIM partially counteracts the flux suppression.', '1001.5023-1-48-5': 'Contrary to the pion decay and sIC component, the pIC emission is boosted by a factor of a few compared to the center because of the larger spatial region in the WHIM that contains a greater number of shocks.', '1001.5023-1-48-6': 'This leads to comparable flux from the pIC and pion decay emission above the energy of the pion bump in the super-cluster region.', '1001.5023-1-48-7': 'Note however, that this flux is still sub-dominant compared to the pion decay flux emitted by the cluster core region.', '1001.5023-1-48-8': 'The different central magnetic fields do not play any significant role in the power-law regime in the WHIM since [MATH], which implies that the CRes mainly cool through IC emission.', '1001.5023-1-48-9': 'However, note that the pIC cutoff is shifted towards lower energies for these smaller magnetic fields.', '1001.5023-1-48-10': 'In the lower panel we show that the photon spectral index is steeper in the WHIM for all three emission components compared to the core region.', '1001.5023-1-48-11': 'The photon index is about 1.3 for both pIC and sIC below 10 GeV and about 1.4 for the pion decay above the energy of the pion bump.', '1001.5023-1-48-12': 'The reason for the steeper pIC is because most of the energy that is injected into primary electrons comes from multiple intermediate-strength shocks (accretion shocks), while in the cluster center the pIC emission is build up from a few strong shocks in the over-cooled center (merger shocks).', '1001.5023-1-48-13': 'The steeper sIC and pion decay photon indices are caused by the slightly steeper CR spectrum present in the WHIM of the g72a cluster (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-49-0': '# The CR proton distribution', '1001.5023-1-50-0': 'In this section we investigate the CR proton spectrum that we obtain from our simulations and discuss the relevant physics that gives rise to it.', '1001.5023-1-50-1': 'We explore the variance of the spectrum across our cluster sample and within individual clusters and show that it obeys a universal spectral shape.', '1001.5023-1-50-2': 'In addition, we study the spatial profile of the CRs within a cluster as well as across our cluster sample and find it to be approximately universal.', '1001.5023-1-50-3': 'This universal behavior enables us to construct a semi-analytic CR spectrum and to compute the [MATH]-ray spectrum as well as other secondary decay spectra (electrons, neutrinos) semi-analytically.', '1001.5023-1-51-0': '## A universal CR spectrum', '1001.5023-1-52-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show the median CR spectrum of all 14 galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-52-1': 'The CR spectrum of every cluster, [MATH], has been obtained by volume weighting the individual spectra of our SPH particles which have been normalized at the dimensionless proton momentum [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-52-2': 'Before discussing the spectral shape we note that it shows a remarkably small variance across our cluster sample which indicates a universal CR spectrum for galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-52-3': 'There are three important features in the spectra.', '1001.5023-1-53-0': 'The spectrum shows a low-momentum cutoff due to efficient Coulomb cooling at these low momenta with [MATH]: the CR energy is transferred into the thermal energy reservoir through individual electron scatterings in the Coulomb field of the CR particle .', '1001.5023-1-53-1': 'The Coulomb time scale of a mono-energetic CR population is very short, [MATH], where we show a momentum scaling that is valid only for the relevant non-relativistic regime.', '1001.5023-1-53-2': 'The Coulomb time scale for a power-law population of CRs can be significantly longer, [MATH], where we assumed a low-momentum cutoff [MATH] and [MATH] .', '1001.5023-1-53-3': 'This, however, is still short compared to the dynamical time scale [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-53-4': 'Hence, we expect the formation of an equilibrium cutoff of our CR spectrum around [MATH] for the typical number densities [MATH] that we encounter at the cluster cores.', '1001.5023-1-53-5': 'In the momentum range between [MATH], the spectrum has a concave shape in double-logarithmic representation.', '1001.5023-1-53-6': 'This is a consequence of the cosmological Mach number distribution that is mapped onto the CR spectrum .', '1001.5023-1-53-7': 'This mapping depends on the shock acceleration efficiency as a function of shock strength as well as on the property of the transport of CRs into galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-53-8': 'Nevertheless, we can easily understand the qualitative features: the typical shocks responsible for CR acceleration are stronger at higher redshift since they encounter the cold unshocked inter-galactic medium.', '1001.5023-1-53-9': 'This implies the build-up of a hard CR population.', '1001.5023-1-53-10': 'Since the forming objects have been smaller in a hierarchically growing Universe, their gravity sources smaller accretion velocities which results in smaller shock velocities, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-53-11': 'Hence the energy flux through the shock surfaces, [MATH], that will be dissipated is much smaller than for shocks today.', '1001.5023-1-53-12': 'This causes a lower normalization of this hard CR population.', '1001.5023-1-53-13': 'With increasing cosmic time, more energy is dissipated in weaker shocks which results in a softer injection spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-53-14': 'Despite the lower acceleration efficiency, the normalization of the injected CR population is larger that that of the older flat CR population which yields an overall concave spectral curvature.', '1001.5023-1-53-15': 'We will study the details of the CR acceleration and transport that leads to that particular spectrum in a forthcoming paper (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-53-16': 'There is a diffusive break in the spectrum at high momenta where the spectral index steepens by 0.3.', '1001.5023-1-53-17': 'The CRs above these energies can diffusively escape from the cluster within a Hubble time.', '1001.5023-1-53-18': 'The particular value of the steepening assumes that the CRs scatter off Kolmogorov turbulence.', '1001.5023-1-53-19': 'Using twice the virial radius of each cluster, we find that the diffusive break varies between the momenta [MATH], dependent on the characteristic size of a cluster (equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-54-0': 'We now turn to the question on how universal is our CR spectrum within a cluster.', '1001.5023-1-54-1': 'In Fig. [REF] we find that the intrinsic scatter of our CR spectra within a cluster is larger than the scatter among clusters.', '1001.5023-1-54-2': 'The reason being that formation shocks are intermittent, hence there is a high intrinsic variance of the CR spectrum for similar fluid elements that end up in the same galaxy cluster.', '1001.5023-1-54-3': 'However, averaging over all fluid elements that accrete onto a galaxy cluster results in a very similar spectrum since different galaxy cluster experience on average the same formation history.', '1001.5023-1-54-4': 'We note that the spectral variance of g72a is representative for all the CR spectra in our sample.', '1001.5023-1-55-0': 'We study the radial dependence of the CR spectrum for g72a at the bottom of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-55-1': 'Inside the cluster, the spectral shape does not strongly depend on the radius.', '1001.5023-1-55-2': 'This is a crucial finding as it enables us to separate the spectral and the spatial part of the CR distribution.', '1001.5023-1-55-3': 'The level of particle-by-particle variance is similar to that of the total cluster spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-55-4': 'Also noticeable is the increasing low-momentum cutoff [MATH] as we approach the denser cluster center.', '1001.5023-1-55-5': 'This is due to enhanced Coulomb losses and to a lesser extent increased adiabatic compression that the CR distribution experienced when it was transported there.', '1001.5023-1-55-6': 'Outside the cluster g72a, for radii [MATH], we observe a considerably steeper CR spectrum at CR energies of [MATH]>[MATH] TeV compared to the cluster region.', '1001.5023-1-55-7': 'We note that this behavior is not universal and we observe a large scatter of the CR spectral indices among our cluster sample at these large radii.', '1001.5023-1-55-8': 'This behavior might be caused by the recent dynamical activity of the cluster under consideration but a detailed characterization goes beyond the scope of this work and will be postponed (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-56-0': '## The spatial distribution of CRs', '1001.5023-1-57-0': 'We have shown that the CR spectrum is separable in a spectral and spatial part.', '1001.5023-1-57-1': 'To this end, we quantify the spatial part of the CR spectrum by taking the volume weighted CR spectrum in each radial bin [MATH] (see Section [REF] in the appendix for derivation), [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-57-2': 'Here the subscripts M and V denote mass- and volume weighted quantities, respectively, and we introduced the dimensionless normalization of the CR spectrum, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the CR number density.', '1001.5023-1-57-3': 'We now have to take into account physical effects that shape the profile of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-57-4': 'Those include acceleration of CRs at structure formation shocks, the subsequent adiabatic transport of CRs during the formation of the halos as well as non-adiabatic CR cooling processes; primarily hadronic interactions.', '1001.5023-1-57-5': 'At the same time we have to consider the assembly of the thermal plasma and CRs within the framework of structure formation that is dominated by CDM.', '1001.5023-1-57-6': 'Hierarchical structure formation predicts a difference in the halo formation time depending on the halo mass, i.e. smaller halos form earlier when the average mass density of the Universe was higher.', '1001.5023-1-57-7': 'This leads to more concentrated density profiles for smaller halo masses; an effect that breaks the scale invariance of the dark matter halo profile .', '1001.5023-1-57-8': 'The central core part is assembled in a regime of fast accretion .', '1001.5023-1-57-9': 'This violent formation epoch should have caused the CRs to be adiabatically compressed.', '1001.5023-1-57-10': 'In the further evolution, some cluster have been able to develop a cool core which additionally could have caused the CRs to be adiabatically contracted.', '1001.5023-1-57-11': 'On larger scales, the gas distribution follows that of dark matter (at least in the absence of violent merging events that could separate both components for time scales that are of order of the dynamical time).', '1001.5023-1-57-12': 'On these scales, the CR number density roughly traces the gas distribution .', '1001.5023-1-57-13': 'Overall, we expect the spatial CR density profile relative to that of the gas density to scale with the cluster mass.', '1001.5023-1-57-14': 'If non-adiabatic CR transport processes have a sufficiently weak impact, these considerations would predict flatter [MATH]-profiles in larger halos as these halos are less concentrated.', '1001.5023-1-58-0': 'Our goal is to characterize the trend of [MATH]-profiles with cluster mass and to test whether we can dissect a universal spatial CR profile.', '1001.5023-1-58-1': 'To this end, we adopt a phenomenological profile that allows for enough freedom to capture these features as accurately as possible.', '1001.5023-1-58-2': 'Hence, we parametrize [MATH] with shape parameters that include a flat central region given by [MATH], a transition region where the location is denoted by [MATH] and the steepness by [MATH], and finally a flat outer region denoted by [MATH], through the equation [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-58-3': 'The core regions in our radiative simulations show too much cooling, and we possibly lack of important CR physics such as anisotropic CR diffusion that could smooth out any strong inhomogeneity at the center.', '1001.5023-1-58-4': 'Hence we adopt a conservative limit of the central profile value of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-59-0': 'In the top panel of Fig. [REF] we show the mean of the [MATH] profiles from the cluster simulation sample.', '1001.5023-1-59-1': 'We subdivide or sample in two different mass intervals: large mass clusters (top red), and small mass clusters (bottom blue), in the mass range [MATH], and [MATH], respectively.', '1001.5023-1-59-2': 'The error-bars show the standard deviation from sample mean and the solid lines the best fit that will be discussed in more detail in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-59-3': 'The [MATH] profile of our large mass clusters is almost flat and shows only a very weak radial dependence.', '1001.5023-1-59-4': 'In contrast, the [MATH] profile of our small clusters has a rather steep and long transition region and is increasing towards the center.', '1001.5023-1-59-5': 'The difference in normalization, transition width, and transition radius between low-mass and large-mass clusters indeed suggests that [MATH] scales with the cluster mass in a way that we anticipated.', '1001.5023-1-59-6': 'We quantify the mass scaling of these shape parameters by a power-law fit to the small and large clusters in the three lower panels of Fig. [REF]: the value of [MATH] in the asymptotically flat regime in the cluster periphery, [MATH] (top); the transition radius, [MATH] (middle); and the steepness of the transition, [MATH] (bottom).', '1001.5023-1-59-7': 'As expected, we find that all three quantities increase slowly with mass.', '1001.5023-1-59-8': 'We additionally show the values of [MATH] at [MATH] for each cluster (black crosses).', '1001.5023-1-59-9': 'Within the scatter, these values are consistent with the mass scaling found by the profile fits in our two cluster mass bins.', '1001.5023-1-59-10': 'We have unambiguously shown that there exists an almost universal spatial CR profile after taking into account the weak trends of the [MATH] profile with cluster mass.', '1001.5023-1-59-11': 'Note that the particle-by-particle variance of the spatial CR profile within a cluster (that we address in Section [REF] in the appendix) additionally supports the conclusion of a universal spatial CR profile.', '1001.5023-1-60-0': '## A semi-analytic model for the spatial and spectral CR distribution', '1001.5023-1-61-0': 'In our simulations we use a CR spectral description which follows five different CR proton populations; each being represented by a single power-law.', '1001.5023-1-61-1': 'The CR populations are chosen such that we accurately can capture the total CR spectrum in the entire momentum space (a convergence study on the number of CR populations is presented in the appendix [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-61-2': 'We want to model this spectrum analytically with as few CR populations as possible, but at the same time preserve the functional form of a power-law of each population.', '1001.5023-1-61-3': 'In that way we can easily obtain the total CR spectrum by superposition and apply a simple analytic formula to estimate the induced radiative processes.', '1001.5023-1-62-0': 'In detail, we use a total CR proton spectrum [MATH] that is obtained by summing over the individual CR populations [MATH] (equation [REF]); each being a power-law in particle momentum with the total CR amplitude [MATH], [EQUATION] where we assume universal spectral shape throughout the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-62-1': 'The normalization of [MATH] depends on maximum shock acceleration efficiency [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] (functional will be studied in Pfrommer in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-62-2': 'Denoting the amplitude of each CR population by [MATH], where the number of spectral bins might be different from the five chosen in the simulations, we construct the relative normalization for each CR population [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-62-3': 'Here we have assumed that [MATH] is only a weak function of radius.', '1001.5023-1-62-4': 'This is explicitly shown in Fig. [REF], where the functional form is almost independent of the radius.', '1001.5023-1-62-5': 'The two energy breaks in the CR spectrum are represented by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-62-6': 'The first term in equation ([REF]) ensures the low-momentum slope [MATH] as appropriate from the phase space volume that is populated by CRs and the last term accounts for diffusive losses of CRs that steepen the spectrum by [MATH] assuming Kolmogorov turbulence.', '1001.5023-1-62-7': 'The shape parameter [MATH] determines the size of the transition in momentum space Our choice of [MATH] ensures a fast transition from one regime to the other.', '1001.5023-1-62-8': 'The low-momentum break [MATH] is determined to [MATH] from Fig. [REF], and the high-momentum break [MATH] is derived from equation ([REF]).', '1001.5023-1-63-0': 'To capture the spectral universality of our cluster sample, we fit in Fig. [REF] the median of our cluster sample of the CR spectrum with a triple power-law function.', '1001.5023-1-63-1': 'Because we normalize the spectrum at [MATH], this ensures that the normalized spectrum [MATH] becomes independent of radius (cf. equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-63-2': 'The triple power law fit represented by the blue line in the upper panel of Fig. [REF] resulted in [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-63-3': 'The data from the simulation is denoted by black crosses, together with the 68 percentiles spread shown by the light blue area.', '1001.5023-1-63-4': 'In the lower panel, we show the relative difference between the simulation and the fit which indicates a difference of less than two percent from the GeV to PeV energy regime.', '1001.5023-1-64-0': 'The spatial part of the CR spectrum is derived from the fit to the mean [MATH] in the top panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-64-1': 'The solid lines show the best fit to [MATH] using equation ([REF]).', '1001.5023-1-64-2': 'We find that the central value [MATH] is the most conservative value that still provides a good fit for both mass intervals.', '1001.5023-1-64-3': 'Note that there is a large uncertainty in this value due to insufficient data in the center, implying that it should be treated as a lower limit.', '1001.5023-1-64-4': 'However, the gamma-ray flux depends only weakly on the exact value of [MATH] since most of the flux reside from the region outside the transition region.', '1001.5023-1-64-5': 'The mass dependence of [MATH] is quantified in the three lower panels of Fig. [REF], where we we fit a power-law in mass for the normalization [MATH] (top), the transition radius [MATH] (middle), and the steepness of the transition region [MATH] (bottom).', '1001.5023-1-64-6': 'We obtain the following relations, [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-65-0': '# Semi-analytic model for the [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-1-66-0': 'In this section we derive a semi-analytic formula for the integrated [MATH]-ray source function that is based on our semi-analytic CR distribution.', '1001.5023-1-66-1': 'Using the gas density profile of the cluster along with its virial radius and mass, this formula enables us to predict the dominating [MATH]-decay induced [MATH]-ray emission from that cluster.', '1001.5023-1-66-2': 'The density profiles can either be inferred from simulations or from X-ray data.', '1001.5023-1-66-3': 'To test the semi-analytic source function, we use density profiles from our cluster simulations.', '1001.5023-1-66-4': 'We also make [MATH]-ray flux predictions for the Coma and Perseus cluster using their true density profiles as inferred from X-ray observations.', '1001.5023-1-67-0': '## Schematic overview and semi-analytic formulae', '1001.5023-1-68-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show a schematic overview of the simulated CR spectrum and the integrated source function together with the mapping to our semi-analytic model.', '1001.5023-1-68-1': 'From the cluster simulations we derive the CR spectrum [MATH] describing the phase space density of CRs.', '1001.5023-1-68-2': 'When taking the spherical (volume weighted) average of [MATH], we obtain [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-3': 'We fit the spectral and spatial part of this function separately.', '1001.5023-1-68-4': 'The semi-analytic model for the CR distribution in clusters that we provide in equation ([REF]) can now be used to predict the secondary radio synchrotron emission and the hadronically induced neutrino and [MATH]-ray emission from galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-68-5': 'Following the formalism in [CITATION], we obtain the volume weighted and energy integrated [MATH]-ray source function due to pion decay, [EQUATION] where the sum extends over our three CR populations, [MATH] is given by equations ([REF]), ([REF]) - ([REF]), while [MATH] and [MATH] are provided by equation ([REF]) and we introduced an auxiliary variable [MATH] for dimensional reasons to ensure that [MATH] is dimensionless.', '1001.5023-1-68-6': 'In equation ([REF]) we have used that the number density of target nucleons is the sum of hydrogen [MATH] and helium [MATH] number densities, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-7': 'The shape parameter [MATH] allows us to accurately predict the emission close to the pion bump in combination with the effective inelastic cross-section for proton-proton interactions, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-8': 'In addition we have a term, similar to equation ([REF]) that describes the diffusive CR losses due to escaping protons from the cluster at the equivalent photon energy for the break, [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-9': 'It is derived from [MATH] of equation ([REF]), [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-10': 'Finally we note that the semi-analytic [MATH]-ray model is derived within [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-68-11': 'Applying the model to the region outside [MATH], but within [MATH], would increase the [MATH]-ray flux by less than [MATH] for small mass clusters and less than [MATH] for large mass clusters (cf. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-69-0': '## Comparing our semi-analytic model to simulations', '1001.5023-1-70-0': 'To test our semi-analytic [MATH]-ray model we contrast it with numerically calculated radial profiles and spectra.', '1001.5023-1-70-1': 'In the upper panel of Fig. [REF], we compare the radial profile of our semi-analytic [MATH]-ray source function (equation [REF]) at 100 MeV to a numerical emission profile for two representative clusters, a large post-merging cluster g72a, and a small CC cluster g914.', '1001.5023-1-70-2': 'The numerical profile has been obtained by means of calculating the [MATH]-ray source function [MATH] of every SPH particle and volume weighting the resulting radial profile.', '1001.5023-1-70-3': 'The overall shape of the radial profiles of [MATH] for different clusters are quite similar.', '1001.5023-1-70-4': 'This is because the main spatial dependence originates from the gas density, that enters with a square in [MATH] and has a small scatter across the cluster sample.', '1001.5023-1-70-5': 'The different behavior in the cluster centers stems from the steeper profile of [MATH] for low mass clusters.', '1001.5023-1-70-6': 'We show the difference between the integrated source functions from our simulations and the semi-analytic model in more detail in the lower panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-70-7': 'In both clusters, we see an excellent agreement with differences amounting to less than 20-30 percent at any radius.', '1001.5023-1-70-8': 'Since these are fluctuating differences, they average partly away when we perform the volume integral.', '1001.5023-1-70-9': 'Hence we obtain an agreement of the total flux within the virial radius - obtained directly from the simulations and in our semi-analytic model - that is better than 5 per cent for the two representative clusters that are shown.', '1001.5023-1-70-10': 'This indicates that our semi-analytic description manages to capture the CR physics, that is important for [MATH]-ray emission from clusters, surprisingly well.', '1001.5023-1-71-0': 'We show the [MATH]-ray spectrum of the [MATH]-decay emission weighted by energy for g72a and g914 in the upper panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-71-1': 'Both clusters have very similar spectra with the exception of the diffusive steepening that is inherited from the proton spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-71-2': 'Since the break of the proton spectrum scales as [MATH] with the virial mass of the cluster (equation [REF]), the break in the pion decay spectrum is reduced by a factor of [MATH] for the smaller cluster g914.', '1001.5023-1-71-3': 'The solid and dotted lines contrast the simulated spectrum to that obtained from our semi-analytic model.', '1001.5023-1-71-4': 'The difference between these two approaches amounts to less than 20 percent for both clusters in the GeV and TeV band (shown in the lower panel).', '1001.5023-1-71-5': 'The flux differences between our semi-analytic model and the simulations for individual clusters are about a factor two smaller compared to the scatter in the the mass-luminosity scaling relations for a given cluster (see e.g. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-71-6': 'The reason for the more accurate predictions within our semi-analytic formalism is a direct consequence of the essential additional spatial information of the gas and CR density that we account for.', '1001.5023-1-72-0': '## Predicting the [MATH]-ray emission from Perseus and Coma', '1001.5023-1-73-0': 'Here we demonstrate how our semi-analytic formalism can be applied to predict the [MATH]-ray flux and surface brightness from real clusters using their electron density profile as inferred from X-ray measurements.', '1001.5023-1-73-1': 'The predicted flux and surface brightness are then compared to current upper limits and previous work.', '1001.5023-1-74-0': 'The two clusters that we investigate are two of the brightest X-ray clusters in the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue - a sample of the brightest X-ray clusters observed by ROSAT - namely Coma and Perseus.', '1001.5023-1-74-1': 'Both Coma and Perseus are well studied clusters, where Coma is a large post-merging cluster while Perseus is a somewhat smaller cluster that hosts a massive cooling flow and is the brightest X-ray cluster known .', '1001.5023-1-74-2': 'In Table [REF] we show the data for respective cluster.', '1001.5023-1-74-3': 'Using the electron number density profile, we can calculate the gas density profile of the cluster through [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-74-4': 'Here denote [MATH] the primordial hydrogen (H) mass fraction, and the ratio of electron and hydrogen number densities in the fully ionized ICM is given by [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-74-5': 'For sufficiently small angular scales, the [MATH]-ray flux within the radius [MATH] of a disk of angular radius [MATH] (measured in radians and centered at [MATH]) is calculated by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is given by equation ([REF]) and we introduced the definition for the [MATH]-ray surface brightness [MATH] in the last step.', '1001.5023-1-74-6': 'As a consistency check, we compare the flux ratios from X-rays [MATH] to that of [MATH]-rays as predicted by our semi-analytic model, [MATH] and find excellent agreement within one percent.', '1001.5023-1-75-0': '### Comparison to upper limits in the GeV/TeV regime', '1001.5023-1-76-0': 'We calculate the [MATH]-ray fluxes for Coma and Perseus above 100 MeV and 100 GeV that is emitted within [MATH] (see Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-76-1': 'Comparing the 100 MeV-flux in our model to the EGRET upper limit on the Coma (Perseus) cluster , we find that it falls short of our semi-analytic prediction by a factor of about 9 (2.5).', '1001.5023-1-76-2': 'With the two-year data by Fermi, this upper limit on Coma will improve considerably and is expected to become competitive with our predictions.', '1001.5023-1-76-3': 'With this at hand, we will be able to put important constraints on the adopted CR physics in our simulations.', '1001.5023-1-76-4': 'In particular, we can test our assumptions about the maximum shock acceleration efficiency at structure formation shocks.', '1001.5023-1-76-5': 'Since Fermi detected [MATH]-rays from the central cD galaxy in Perseus, NGC1275, at a level that is about five times higher than the EGRET upper limits, this indicates that the source is variable on time scales of years to decades .', '1001.5023-1-76-6': 'Hence it restricts and complicates the detectability of the extended pion-day emission that might be buried underneath.', '1001.5023-1-77-0': 'In the TeV regime, we integrate our model prediction within a solid angle that is comparable to the point-spread function of IACTs.', '1001.5023-1-77-1': 'The best current upper limit for Coma () falls short of our semi-analytic prediction by a factor 20.', '1001.5023-1-77-2': 'The best current upper flux limit for Perseus (using a spectral index of -2.2, ) is only a factor of two larger than our flux prediction and clearly within reach of future deeper TeV observations.', '1001.5023-1-77-3': 'This demonstrates the huge potential of nearby CC clusters to detect non-thermal [MATH]-ray emission as suggested by [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-78-0': '### Surface brightness profile', '1001.5023-1-79-0': 'To explain the large difference in flux between Coma and Perseus we show the surface brightness as a function of the viewing angle [MATH] in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-79-1': 'The dense cooling core region of Perseus provides ample target material for two-body interactions such as bremsstrahlung or hadronic CR interactions which boosts the luminosities likewise.', '1001.5023-1-79-2': 'This results in a large increase in flux compared to the average cluster of similar mass that are characterized by mass-luminosity scaling relations (see e.g. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-79-3': 'Assigning a flux to a cluster that is consistent with the scaling relations should be a very conservative approach for CC clusters.', '1001.5023-1-79-4': 'The half flux radius for Perseus (Coma) is [MATH] deg (0.18 deg).', '1001.5023-1-79-5': 'It is shown with dotted lines in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-79-6': 'Since these [MATH] values are comparable to the angular scale of the point spread functions of IACTs (0.1-0.2 degrees) both clusters are suitable candidate sources.', '1001.5023-1-79-7': 'The dashed and dotted-dashed lines are obtained by using the semi-analytic formalism from [CITATION] to predict the surface brightness from the Coma cluster above the energy 100 MeV and 100 GeV, respectively.', '1001.5023-1-79-8': 'See Section [REF] for a detailed comparison to their result.', '1001.5023-1-80-0': '## CR-to-thermal pressure and temperature profile in Perseus and Coma', '1001.5023-1-81-0': 'A quantity that is of great theoretical interest is the CR pressure relative to the thermal pressure, [MATH] as it directly assesses the CR bias of hydrostatic cluster masses since the CR pressure enters in the equation of motion.', '1001.5023-1-81-1': 'Noting that [MATH] in the external cluster regions, we have to accurately model the temperature profile of our clusters.', '1001.5023-1-81-2': 'We model the central regions of Coma and Perseus according to X-ray observations by [CITATION] and [CITATION], respectively.', '1001.5023-1-81-3': 'These observations are not sensitive to the outer temperature profile due to the high particle background for XMM-Newton and Chandra.', '1001.5023-1-81-4': 'X-ray observations of somewhat more distant cluster sample show a universal declining temperature profile outside the cooling core region up to [MATH] .', '1001.5023-1-81-5': 'We model this behavior of the temperature profiles towards the cluster periphery according to cosmological cluster simulations by [CITATION] and obtain a function [MATH] that accounts for the decreasing temperature profile outside the core region.', '1001.5023-1-81-6': 'It is unity in the center and then smoothly decreases until the virial radius beyond which we expect the spherical approximation to break down and where the cluster accretion shocks should introduce breaks in the temperature profile.', '1001.5023-1-81-7': 'This function can be multiplied to existing central temperature profiles and yields the correct temperature profile over the entire range of the cluster .', '1001.5023-1-81-8': 'Hence we arrive at the temperature profiles for Coma and Perseus, [EQUATION] where [MATH] can be obtained from Table [REF].', '1001.5023-1-81-9': 'The density and temperature profiles for Coma and Perseus are shown in the first two panels of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-82-0': 'In the previous sections, we have seen that the [MATH]-ray surface brightness is a radially declining function and so is the CR pressure.', '1001.5023-1-82-1': 'In contrast, outside the central cooling core regions, the CR-to-thermal pressure [MATH] increases with radius as can be seen in the bottom panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-82-2': 'This increase is entirely driven by the decreasing temperature profile.', '1001.5023-1-82-3': 'The two [MATH]-profiles for Coma and Perseus show our expectations for a typical non-CC and CC cluster.', '1001.5023-1-82-4': 'The [MATH]-profile in a CC cluster shows an additional enhancement towards the cluster center which results from the centrally enhanced CR number density due to adiabatic contraction during the formation of the cooling flow.', '1001.5023-1-82-5': 'During this process, the thermal gas cools on a short time scale compared to that of the CRs which causes an increase in density and hence adiabatic compression of the CRs.', '1001.5023-1-82-6': 'We note that the overall normalization of [MATH] depends on the normalization of the CR distribution that itself is set by the maximum shock acceleration efficiency.', '1001.5023-1-82-7': 'The overall shape of [MATH], however, should remain invariant since CRs are adiabatically transported into the cluster (, Pfrommer in prep.)', '1001.5023-1-83-0': 'While the overall characteristics of [MATH] in our semi-analytical model is similar to that obtained in cosmological simulations , there are some noticeable differences particularly in the central cooling core region around the cD galaxy of these clusters.', '1001.5023-1-83-1': 'Again this can be traced back to known short-comings of modeling the physics in the central regions correctly in current simulations such as to include AGN feedback and anisotropic conduction in combination with magneto-hydrodynamics.', '1001.5023-1-83-2': 'This also leads to different simulated temperature profiles in the center compared to those inferred from X-ray observations and explains the discrepancy in the [MATH]-profiles.', '1001.5023-1-83-3': 'The volume average of the CR-to-thermal pressure for Coma and Perseus is [MATH], dominated by the region around the virial radius.', '1001.5023-1-83-4': 'These values assume an optimistic saturation value of the shock acceleration efficiency of [MATH] and decrease accordingly if this value is not realized at the relevant structure formation shocks responsible for the CRs in clusters.', '1001.5023-1-84-0': '# High-energy scaling relations', '1001.5023-1-85-0': 'We now discuss the scaling relations of the numerical [MATH]-ray emission from clusters and analyze their dependence on dynamical state, emission region and address the bias of galaxies to the total luminosity.', '1001.5023-1-85-1': 'The cluster scaling relations are derived by integrating the surface brightness map of each cluster.', '1001.5023-1-85-2': 'By fitting the total [MATH]-ray emission of the 14 clusters in our cluster sample with a power-law, we determine the mass-to-luminosity scaling.', '1001.5023-1-86-0': 'In the preceding sections we have shown that the pion decay emission dominates the total [MATH]-ray emission but we have not addressed the question, which radii contribute most to the luminosity?', '1001.5023-1-86-1': 'To answer this, we have to consider the [MATH]-ray luminosity resulting from pion decay within a radius [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-86-2': 'For the purpose of this simple argument, we neglected the very weak spatial dependence of the CR distribution which is described by [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-86-3': 'The [MATH]-ray luminosity [MATH] is dominated by the region around the scale radius [MATH] which can be seen by considering the contribution to [MATH] per logarithmic radius, [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-1-86-4': 'Here we assumed a central plateau of the density profile which steepens beyond the scale radius [MATH] and approaches the asymptotic slope of [MATH] of the dark matter profile that shapes the gas distribution at large radii .', '1001.5023-1-86-5': 'This radial behavior makes the simulated [MATH]-ray luminosity only weakly dependent on uncertainties from the incomplete physical modelling of feedback processes in the cluster cores.', '1001.5023-1-87-0': '## Contribution of different [MATH]-ray emission processes', '1001.5023-1-88-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the scaling relations of the IC and pion decay emission for two different energy scales of interest to the Fermi [MATH]-ray space telescope and imaging air Cerenkov telescopes.', '1001.5023-1-88-1': 'We compare the total emission and the contribution from the individual emission components of each cluster.', '1001.5023-1-88-2': 'The very similar slopes of the mass-to-luminosity scaling relation at both energies (Table [REF]) is a consequence of the small variance in the proton spectrum (Fig [REF]) among different galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-88-3': 'The individual emission processes also show similar slopes, with small scatter for the pion decay emission and sIC component.', '1001.5023-1-88-4': 'Contrary, the pIC emission has a larger scatter than the secondary emission components due to the different dynamical states: the presence of strong merger or accretion shocks is critical for the generation of primary CR electrons and the associated radiative emission.', '1001.5023-1-89-0': 'The ratio of the pion decay to the pIC emission in the 100 MeV and 100 GeV regime is very similar.', '1001.5023-1-89-1': 'This is partly a coincidence and owed to our particular choice of the two energy bands: the effective spectral index of the pion decay between these two energies is flattened due the pion bump.', '1001.5023-1-89-2': 'It happens to be similar to the power-law index of the pIC component which itself is unaffected by the energy cutoff of the electron spectrum at these energies.', '1001.5023-1-89-3': 'If we chose a smaller (larger) value than 100 MeV for the lower energy band, we would obtain a lower (higher) pion-to-pIC ratio due to the steeper intrinsic spectrum of the CR protons at lower energies (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-90-0': '## [MATH]-ray emission from individual galaxies', '1001.5023-1-91-0': 'We investigate the bias of galaxies to the scaling relation of the [MATH]-ray luminosity above 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-91-1': 'The top panel shows the total [MATH]-ray emission, where the presence of galaxies biases smaller mass clusters slightly more compared to their larger analogues, with an average bias of about a factor two across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-1-91-2': 'Masking galaxies reduces the overall scatter in the scaling relations, particularly at low masses.', '1001.5023-1-91-3': 'In the lower panel, we show the contribution from individual emission components.', '1001.5023-1-91-4': 'The largest bias originates from the pion decay (blue triangles) and the sIC emission (green circles), while the pIC component (red diamonds) is barely affected by this masking procedure since it does not scale with density.', '1001.5023-1-92-0': '## [MATH]-ray emission from the cluster periphery and WHIM', '1001.5023-1-93-0': 'In this section we study the dependence of the accretion region around clusters on [MATH]-ray scaling relations.', '1001.5023-1-93-1': 'Specifically, we compare the total [MATH]-ray emission within [MATH] to the emission within [MATH] which hosts the WHIM and individual satellite galaxies (and groups) that have not yet accreted onto the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-94-0': 'From Fig. [REF] it is clear that the WHIM in less massive clusters contributes [MATH] to the total luminosity while for the larger cluster the effect is only of the order ten percent.', '1001.5023-1-94-1': 'This stems from the fact that the emission of low-mass systems with smaller potential wells is easier to perturb - through accreting clumps of matter or nearby satellite systems.', '1001.5023-1-94-2': 'The pIC component contributes a factor [MATH] more in the WHIM than within [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-94-3': 'The reason being that especially for merging systems, the pIC profile is rather flat (see Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-94-4': 'Hence it contributes substantially to WHIM luminosity, whereas the density dependent secondary components in the WHIM are negligible due to the low gas densities.', '1001.5023-1-94-5': 'Only satellite systems within the WHIM contribute at a low level to the secondary components.', '1001.5023-1-94-6': 'This effect is especially pronounced when galaxies are excluded and implies that the pIC component becomes comparable to the pion decay emission for a few low mass clusters.', '1001.5023-1-94-7': 'Note that in the TeV regime, the pIC is considerably suppressed due to the limited maximum energy of the primary CR electrons which reduces that effect in the WHIM.', '1001.5023-1-95-0': '# Prediction of the [MATH]-ray emission from nearby galaxy clusters', '1001.5023-1-96-0': 'We use the mass-to-luminosity scaling relations as derived in Section [REF] in combinations with the virial masses of galaxy clusters of the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue - the "HIghest X-ray FLUx Galaxy Cluster Sample" from the ROSAT all-sky survey - to predict their [MATH]-ray emission.', '1001.5023-1-96-1': 'In Fig. [REF], we show the [MATH]-ray flux for radii [MATH] and energies above 100 MeV and 100 GeV, as a function of the identifier (ID) in the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue.', '1001.5023-1-96-2': 'We specifically name those clusters that have a flux (in our optimistic model) which is larger than the sensitivity of the Fermi all-sky survey after two years of data taking.', '1001.5023-1-96-3': 'We find that the brightest clusters in [MATH]-rays are Virgo, Ophiuchus, Coma, Perseus and Fornax.', '1001.5023-1-97-0': 'Figure [REF] should serve as a starting point to identify promising sources for the [MATH]-ray experiment in question.', '1001.5023-1-97-1': 'In a realistic setting, we would have to include the instrumental response and the point-spread function to obtain the predicted detection significance for the model in question.', '1001.5023-1-97-2': 'We note that this procedure of using scaling relations does not take into account deviations of individual systems from the mean [MATH]-ray flux at a given cluster mass.', '1001.5023-1-97-3': 'One would rather have to model each system separately along the lines presented in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-1-98-0': 'To address the effect of source extension on the detection significance of Fermi, we compute the [MATH]-ray flux of each cluster within the Fermi equivalent angular resolution at 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-98-1': 'To this end, we interpolate the scaling relations in Table [REF] to the radius corresponding to the angular resolution of 3.5 deg.', '1001.5023-1-98-2': 'We limit the size of each source to [MATH] since there is negligible additional flux beyond this radius.', '1001.5023-1-98-3': 'For most clusters the flux is very similar to what we found in Fig. [REF] because of the similar mass to luminosity scaling relations for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-99-0': '# Discussion and comparison to previous work', '1001.5023-1-100-0': '## Comparison to previous work on [MATH]-ray emission from clusters', '1001.5023-1-101-0': 'In support of the new instrumental capabilities in [MATH]-ray astronomy, several pioneering papers have appeared that simulate the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission from clusters.', '1001.5023-1-101-1': 'Here we make a comparison to some of those papers.', '1001.5023-1-102-0': 'Comparison to Pfrommer et al. - In the series of papers [CITATION] and [CITATION] simulate the same cluster sample as we do.', '1001.5023-1-102-1': 'In fact, our work represents an extension of these earlier works.', '1001.5023-1-102-2': 'Overall, our results are in continuity with their results.', '1001.5023-1-102-3': 'The differences emerge from the details of the CR physics, where they adopted a simplified description using a single CR population with a spectral index of 2.3.', '1001.5023-1-102-4': 'Hence they concentrated on the non-thermal radio emission as well as the [MATH]-ray emission at energies [MATH] MeV that depend only weakly on the particular value or even a running of the CR spectral index (as long as it is close to the true one).', '1001.5023-1-102-5': 'For the primary electron populations, a maximum electron injection efficiency of [MATH] was assumed.', '1001.5023-1-102-6': 'In addition, the bias from anomalous galaxies was not addressed.', '1001.5023-1-103-0': 'Comparing profiles of the total surface brightness above 100 MeV in our optimistic model with galaxies, shown in grey in Fig. [REF], to the brightness profiles in [CITATION], we find only very small differences.', '1001.5023-1-103-1': "These differences are caused by a combination of different binning and Poisson noise in the galaxies' spatial distribution which have a different realization due to our slightly modified CR description that changes the hydrodynamics.", '1001.5023-1-103-2': 'The largest difference is seen for the pIC component in the periphery of merging clusters and a consequence of the different values for the injection efficiency [MATH] adopted.', '1001.5023-1-103-3': 'In addition, we compare the mass to luminosity scaling relation above 100 MeV in our optimistic model (see Table [REF]) and find that they agree to the percent level with what was found in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-104-0': 'Comparison to Miniati et al. - There have been a series of pioneering papers simulating the non-thermal emission from clusters by numerically modelling discretized CR proton and electron spectra on top of Eulerian grid-based cosmological simulations .', '1001.5023-1-104-1': 'In contrast to our approach, these models neglected the hydrodynamic pressure of the CR component, were quite limited in their adaptive resolution capability, and they neglected dissipative gas physics including radiative cooling, star formation, and supernova feedback.', '1001.5023-1-104-2': 'Comparing the [MATH]-ray emission characteristics of the IC emission from primary CR electrons and hadronically generated secondary CR electrons as well as the pion decay [MATH]-rays, we confirm the qualitative picture of the emission characteristics of the different [MATH]-ray components put forward by these authors.', '1001.5023-1-104-3': 'However, we find important differences on smaller scales especially in cluster cores, the emission strength of the individual components and their spectra.', '1001.5023-1-105-0': 'We confirm that the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission ([MATH] MeV) from cluster cores is dominated by pion decays while at lower energies, the IC emission of secondary CR electrons takes over .', '1001.5023-1-105-1': 'We reproduce their finding that the [MATH]-ray emission in the virial regions of clusters and beyond in super-cluster regions is very inhomogeneous and stems in part from the IC emission of primary shock accelerated electrons.', '1001.5023-1-105-2': 'Contrarily to these authors, we find that the surface brightness of this emission component remains sub-dominant in projection compared to the hadronically induced emission components in the cluster core and that the pion decay completely dominates the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission of clusters above a few MeV (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-1-105-3': 'In addition we predict a pIC spectrum that is somewhat steeper with a photon index of [MATH] which resembles a steeper primary electron spectrum in our simulations compared to theirs.', '1001.5023-1-105-4': 'This points to on average weaker shocks that are responsible for the acceleration of primary CR electrons that dominate the pIC emission.', '1001.5023-1-105-5': 'This discrepancy of the pIC spectral index causes the discrepancy of the pIC flux at high [MATH]-ray energies.', '1001.5023-1-106-0': 'In the WHIM we find that the pIC emission dominates the total [MATH]-ray spectrum below about 100 MeV, and a comparable flux level of [MATH]-decay and pIC between 100 MeV and 1 TeV, where the [MATH]-decay takes over.', '1001.5023-1-106-1': 'This is in stark contrast to the finding of [CITATION], where the pIC is dominating the pion decay emission by a factor of about 10 or more over the entire [MATH]-ray energy band.', '1001.5023-1-106-2': 'We note that our [MATH]-ray fluxes from clusters are typically a factor of two smaller than the estimates given in [CITATION] which has important implications for the detectability of clusters by Fermi.', '1001.5023-1-107-0': 'There are several factors contributing to the mentioned discrepancies.', '1001.5023-1-107-1': '(1) Our simulations are Lagrangian in nature and hence adaptively resolve denser structures with a peak resolution of [MATH] kpc.', '1001.5023-1-107-2': 'In contrast, the cosmological simulations of [CITATION] have a fixed spatial resolution of [MATH] kpc which is too coarse to resolve the observationally accessible, dense central regions of clusters in this grid-based approach and underestimates CR cooling processes such as Coulomb and hadronic losses.', '1001.5023-1-107-3': 'It also cannot resolve the adiabatic compression of CRs into the core.', '1001.5023-1-107-4': '(2) [CITATION] identified shocks with Mach numbers in the range [MATH] as the most important in thermalizing the plasma.', '1001.5023-1-107-5': 'In contrast, [CITATION], [CITATION], and [CITATION] found that the Mach number distribution peaks in the range [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-107-6': 'This finding seems to be robust as different computational methods have been used which range from fixed and adaptive Eulerian grid codes to Lagrangian Tree-SPH codes.', '1001.5023-1-107-7': 'Since diffusive shock acceleration of CRs depends sensitively on the Mach number, this implies a more efficient CR injection in the simulations by [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-107-8': 'It also results in a flatter CR electron and CR ion spectrum compared to ours shown in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-1-107-9': 'Hence, the pIC emission of [CITATION] has a flatter photon index and a boosted flux.', '1001.5023-1-107-10': '(3) For the CR ion spectrum, [CITATION] uses only four momentum bins which is not enough to resolve the pion bump accurately.', '1001.5023-1-107-11': 'The large pion decay plateau which he found indicates a constant CR ion spectral index in this energy range.', '1001.5023-1-107-12': 'This is in contradiction to the concavely shaped CR spectrum that our cluster simulations show, where the shape is a consequence of the Mach number statistics and the adiabatic transport.', '1001.5023-1-107-13': 'The difference in the CR spectral shape is especially important for CR energies above 1 GeV, since those CRs give rise to the [MATH]-decay emission at energies above the pion bump.', '1001.5023-1-108-0': 'Comparison to Kushnir et al. - [CITATION] use a simple analytic model to follow the evolution of ICM CRs, accelerated in strong accretion shocks.', '1001.5023-1-108-1': 'Interestingly, their approach predicts similar characteristics for the pion decay emission, in particular its flux agrees with our prediction within a factor two.', '1001.5023-1-108-2': 'In contrast, their model predicts a high-energy [MATH]-ray flux of the pIC component that is approximately a factor of [MATH] larger than ours due to over-simplifications of the spectral description of their analytic approach (compare our Fig. [REF] with Fig. 3 in ).', '1001.5023-1-108-3': 'This finding let them to the contradicting conclusion that the expected overall [MATH]-ray emission would be much more extended.', '1001.5023-1-108-4': 'We believe that their model would over-predict the amount of observed radio relic emission in clusters, in particular when considering magnetic field amplification at accretion shocks on a level that is only a fraction of what is observed in supernova remnant shocks .', '1001.5023-1-108-5': 'It can be easily seen that the different power-law indices are indeed the reason for the flux discrepancies by comparing the energy flux of electrons at 170 GeV which are responsible for IC photons at 100 MeV (assuming the up-scattering of CMB photons).', '1001.5023-1-108-6': 'Adopting our effective spectral injection index of primary electrons of [MATH] and assuming a post-shock temperature at a typical accretion shock of [MATH] keV, we find a flux ratio between their model and ours of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-109-0': 'We would like to compare their model predictions for the pion decay emission in more detail.', '1001.5023-1-109-1': 'To this end, we use a proton injection efficiency in their model of [MATH] for the comparison.', '1001.5023-1-109-2': 'In our simulations we use a maximum proton injection efficiency of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-109-3': 'The proton injection efficiency in our simulations is dynamical, and depends on the strength of the shocks.', '1001.5023-1-109-4': 'Since the cluster evolves with time and the majority of CRs are injected at higher redshift during the formation of clusters, the final CR pressure depends on the interesting interplay of the actual value of the shock injection efficiency and the successive CR transport.', '1001.5023-1-109-5': 'Using results from , we estimate an effective injection efficiency of approximately [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-109-6': 'We note, however, that their baseline model assumes [MATH], which will suppress the flux by a factor 10 in their model.', '1001.5023-1-109-7': 'We now contrast the [MATH]-ray flux predictions of the Coma and Perseus cluster of our semi-analytic model to the one worked out in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-109-8': 'First we study the [MATH]-ray flux from Coma within [MATH] above 100 MeV where we find with their model a flux [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-109-9': 'This flux is only a factor two lower than what we predict for the pion decay emission from Coma.', '1001.5023-1-109-10': 'Turning to pIC, which play a much more important role for the total [MATH]-ray flux than the [MATH]-decay emission in their model, results in the flux [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-109-11': 'This is only a factor two below the EGRET upper limit and can be readily tested with the one-year data from Fermi.', '1001.5023-1-110-0': 'Studying fluxes in the TeV [MATH]-ray regime is also of great importance since it compares the spectral representation of the models.', '1001.5023-1-110-1': 'Using the analytic model of [CITATION], results in the flux [MATH] within [MATH] deg that is comparable to the upper limit for Coma set by HESS.', '1001.5023-1-110-2': 'However, this result is most probably flawed by their too simplistic assumption for the CR spectral index of [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-110-3': 'If we use our universal concave shaped spectrum instead of their flat CR spectrum, we can show that their flux would decrease by a factor [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-111-0': 'Finally we study the surface brightness profiles from Coma and Perseus predicted by our semi-analytic model and compare it to theirs.', '1001.5023-1-111-1': 'The dashed and dotted-dashed lines in Fig. [REF] show their predictions for the Coma cluster above the energy 100 MeV and 100 GeV, respectively.', '1001.5023-1-111-2': 'Using their formalism we find a surface brightness above 100 MeV that is about a factor two smaller than what we predict.', '1001.5023-1-111-3': 'However, above 100 GeV our predictions are in better agreement.', '1001.5023-1-112-0': '## Limitations and future work', '1001.5023-1-113-0': 'The ideal CR formalism would trace the spectral energy evolution and well as the spatial evolution of CRs, and at the same time time keep track of the dynamical non-liner coupling with magneto-hydrodynamics.', '1001.5023-1-113-1': 'In order to make cosmological simulations less expensive in computational power, we are forced to make compromises.', '1001.5023-1-113-2': 'The simplifying assumptions chosen, enable us to run cosmological simulations of the formation of galaxy clusters with the necessary resolution to resolve their cores.', '1001.5023-1-113-3': 'At the same time, these assumptions enable us to follow the CR physics self-consistently on top of the radiative gas physics.', '1001.5023-1-113-4': 'Here we outline our most severe limitations for computing the [MATH]-ray emission from clusters.', '1001.5023-1-114-0': 'In our simulations we neglect the effect of microscopic CR diffusion.', '1001.5023-1-114-1': 'The collisionless plasma forces CRs to stay predominantly on a given field line and to diffuse along it.', '1001.5023-1-114-2': 'The random walk of field lines cause initially closely confined CRs to be transported to larger scales which can be described as a diffusion process.', '1001.5023-1-114-3': 'In our model we assume the magnetic field to be tangled on scales smaller than those we are interested in, [MATH] kpc in the center and even larger scales outside.', '1001.5023-1-114-4': 'Hence, CRs are magnetically coupled to the thermal gas and advected alongside it.', '1001.5023-1-114-5': 'The diffusivity can be rewritten into a macroscopic advection term that we fully resolve in our Lagrangian SPH simulations by construction and a microscopic diffusivity.', '1001.5023-1-114-6': 'The advection term dominates over microscopic term, as the following estimate for the diffusivities shows: [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-114-7': 'Further work is needed to study microscopic anisotropic diffusion, in combination with self-consistent modelling of the magnetic fields.', '1001.5023-1-114-8': 'We also did not account for the injection of CRs by AGN where the additional CRs would diffuses out of AGN-inflated bubbles.', '1001.5023-1-114-9': 'In addition we do not account for the feedback processes by AGN despite their importance for understanding the nature of the very X-ray luminous cool cores found in many clusters of galaxies.', '1001.5023-1-114-10': 'For further details we refer the reader to [CITATION].', '1001.5023-1-114-11': 'We postpone the study of the potential contribution of a population of re-accelerated electrons to the IC [MATH]-ray emission throughout this work: strong merger shocks and shear motions at the cluster periphery might inject hydrodynamic turbulence that cascades to smaller scales, feeds the MHD turbulence and eventually might be able to re-accelerate an aged CR electron population.', '1001.5023-1-114-12': 'Due to non-locality and intermittency of turbulence, this could partly smooth the very inhomogeneous primary emission component predominantly in the virial regions of clusters where simulations indicate a higher energy density in random motions.', '1001.5023-1-114-13': 'However, to study these effects, high-resolution AMR simulations are required that refine not only on the mass but also on some tracer for turbulence such as the dimensionless vorticity parameter .', '1001.5023-1-114-14': 'Our model for the diffusive shock acceleration assumes a featureless power-law for both, the proton and the electron acceleration, that is injected from the thermal distribution.', '1001.5023-1-114-15': 'The complete theoretical understanding of this mechanism is currently an active research topic that includes non-linear effects and magnetic field amplification .', '1001.5023-1-114-16': 'Phenomenologically, we believe that there are strong indications for the diffusive shock acceleration mechanism to be at work which come from observations of supernova remnants over a wide range of wavelengths from the radio, X-rays into the TeV [MATH]-rays as well as the bow shock of the Earth .', '1001.5023-1-114-17': 'Theoretical work suggests that the spectrum of CRs which is injected at strong shocks shows an intrinsic concave curvature: the feedback of the freshly accelerated and dynamically important CR pressure to the shock structure results in a weaker sub-shock that is proceeded by a smooth CR precursor extending into the upstream.', '1001.5023-1-114-18': 'Hence low-energy protons are only shock-compressed at the weaker sub-shock and experience a smaller density jump which results in a steeper low-energy spectrum (compared to the canonical value [MATH] from linear theory).', '1001.5023-1-114-19': 'In contrast, the Larmor radii of high-energy protons also sample the CR precursor and experience a much larger density contrast that results in a flatter high-energy spectrum with [MATH] .', '1001.5023-1-114-20': 'The low-energy part of the CR spectrum in clusters (as found in this work) should be unaffected since a softer population of CRs dominate there with [MATH] and non-linear effects are presumably negligible in this regime.', '1001.5023-1-114-21': 'However the high-energy part of the CR spectrum in clusters could become harder compared to what we found due to these non-linear effects.', '1001.5023-1-114-22': 'Future work will be dedicated to improve our model and to incorporate more elaborate plasma physical models and to study the uncertainty of our results with respect to the saturated value of our CR acceleration efficiency .', '1001.5023-1-115-0': '# Conclusions', '1001.5023-1-116-0': 'In this paper we have simulated 14 galaxy clusters spanning two orders of magnitude in mass and a broad range of dynamical stages.', '1001.5023-1-116-1': 'The simulations follow self-consistent CR physics on top of the dissipative gas physics including radiative cooling and star formation.', '1001.5023-1-116-2': 'We have simulated high-energy [MATH]-ray emission maps, profiles and spectra of various emission components.', '1001.5023-1-116-3': 'These include the inverse Compton emission from primary, shock-accelerated electrons (pIC) and secondary electrons that result from hadronic interactions of CR protons with ambient gas protons (sIC), as well as [MATH]-rays from neutral pion decay that are also generated in these hadronic reactions.', '1001.5023-1-117-0': 'We would like to emphasize that we focus on the intrinsic spectrum emitted at the cluster position without taking into account photon propagation effects to highlight the various physical process that shape the emission spectra.', '1001.5023-1-117-1': 'Depending on the cluster redshift, these spectra attain a high-energy cutoff due to [MATH]-pair production on IR and optical photons which can be easily derived from the photon-photon opacity .', '1001.5023-1-117-2': 'We also caution the reader that we assume an optimistic value for the maximum shock injection efficiency (based on data from supernova remnant studies by ); smaller values would reduce the resulting [MATH]-ray emission accordingly.', '1001.5023-1-117-3': 'To date it is not clear whether these high efficiencies apply in an average sense to strong collisionless shocks or whether they are realized for structure formation shocks at higher redshifts.', '1001.5023-1-117-4': 'Hence the goal of this work is to establish a thorough framework and to predict the level of [MATH]-ray emission that we expect for this efficiency.', '1001.5023-1-117-5': 'We note that one cannot lower the acceleration efficiency infinitely if one wants to explain radio (mini-)halos in the hadronic model of CR interactions.', '1001.5023-1-117-6': 'For clusters that host such a large, unpolarized, and centrally peaked radio halo emission that resembles the thermal X-ray surface brightness, one can derive a minimum [MATH]-ray flux.', '1001.5023-1-117-7': 'The idea is based on the fact that a steady state distribution of CR electrons loses all its energy to synchrotron radiation for strong magnetic fields ([MATH]) so that the ratio of [MATH]-ray to synchrotron flux becomes independent of the spatial distribution of CRs and thermal gas.', '1001.5023-1-117-8': 'Lowering the magnetic field would require an increase in the energy density of CR electrons to reproduce the observed synchrotron luminosity and thus increase the associated [MATH]-ray flux .', '1001.5023-1-118-0': 'According to our simulations, clusters have very similar morphology in the [MATH] Fermi band, and in the [MATH] Cerenkov band.', '1001.5023-1-118-1': 'This is due to the power-law spectra of the dominating pion decay emission (which show a slowly running spectral index) and ultimately inherited by the parent CR proton distribution.', '1001.5023-1-118-2': 'The emission from the central parts of clusters are dominated by [MATH]-rays from pion decay, while the periphery of the ICM and the WHIM have a considerable contribution from pIC, which is especially pronounced in merging clusters.', '1001.5023-1-118-3': 'The energy dependent photon index for 100 MeV to 1 GeV has a median value of [MATH] due to pion decay induced emission in the central parts of the clusters, while that in the periphery shows a slightly higher value of [MATH] which is due to the substantial contribution from pIC.', '1001.5023-1-118-4': 'In the energy range from 100 GeV to 1 TeV, the photon index steepens to [MATH] in the central regions, while it slightly flattens out in the cluster periphery due to intermediate shocks.', '1001.5023-1-118-5': 'The spectral steepening in the cluster center is due to the convex curvature of the pion bump around 100 MeV causing a steepening in the asymptotic [MATH]-ray spectrum at higher energies.', '1001.5023-1-118-6': 'The small concave curvature at higher energies is not able to compensate for this effect.', '1001.5023-1-118-7': 'At energies [MATH] TeV, the photon index in the cluster outskirts attain a much higher value due to a super-exponential cutoff of the primary IC spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-118-8': 'This emission component contributes substantially to the total [MATH]-ray emission there.', '1001.5023-1-118-9': 'At these energies, the electron cooling time is smaller than the time scale for diffusive shock acceleration which causes this cutoff in the electron spectrum and which is passed on to the pIC spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-119-0': 'The simulated CR proton spectra show an approximate power-law in momentum with a few additional features; a cutoff at [MATH], a concave shape between [MATH], and a steepening by [MATH] between [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-119-1': 'The overall shape of the spectrum shows only little variance between the clusters, indicating a universal CR spectrum of galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-1-119-2': 'The radial dependence of the spectrum within the virial radius is negligible to first order.', '1001.5023-1-119-3': 'This allowed us to construct a semi-analytic model of the median CR proton spectrum across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-1-119-4': 'Using the semi-analytic CR spectrum we derive a semi-analytic formula for the [MATH]-ray flux from the pion decay induced emission that dominate the total [MATH]-ray spectrum above 100 MeV.', '1001.5023-1-119-5': 'We apply this formalism to the Perseus and Coma clusters, using their density profiles as inferred from X-ray measurements and predict that the flux from Perseus is close to the recent upper limits obtained by the MAGIC collaboration .', '1001.5023-1-120-0': 'The mass-to-luminosity scaling for the 100 MeV, 1 GeV, and 100 GeV regimes show very similar slopes for both the total [MATH]-ray luminosity and all the components, which is due to the small variance in the CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-1-120-1': 'Masking galaxies decreases the total [MATH]-ray emission by a factor of 2-3.', '1001.5023-1-120-2': 'The cut has a larger effect on smaller mass clusters since the emission of low-mass systems with smaller potential wells are easier to perturb - through accreting clumps of matter or nearby satellite systems.', '1001.5023-1-120-3': 'We also found that the presence of galaxies considerably increases the scatter in the [MATH]-ray scaling relation.', '1001.5023-1-120-4': 'The region outside [MATH] only contributes marginally (of order ten per cent) to the total [MATH]-ray emission for massive clusters while it contributes significantly to the total [MATH]-ray luminosity of low-mass clusters with a factor [MATH].', '1001.5023-1-120-5': 'This is again mostly due to the pion decay emission from satellite systems that have not yet accreted on the cluster.', '1001.5023-1-120-6': 'The flux of the pIC component is increased by a factor of [MATH] when the WHIM is included.', '1001.5023-1-120-7': 'This can be explained by the rather flat spatial profiles of the pIC emission.', '1001.5023-1-121-0': 'Combining our [MATH]-ray scaling relations with the virial masses of galaxy clusters of the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue, we predict a detection of a few galaxy clusters above 100 MeV with Fermi after two years, where Virgo, Ophiuchus, Coma, Perseus and Fornax are expected to be the brightest clusters in [MATH]-rays (barring uncertainties in the injection efficiency).', '1001.5023-1-121-1': 'Since Fermi already discovered the central AGN in Virgo/M87 and Perseus/NGC1275 the detection of the somewhat more extended and dimmer pion decay component will be very challenging in these clusters and requires careful variability studies to subtract the AGN component.', '1001.5023-1-121-2': 'For energies above 100 GeV, the flux of these clusters as determined by our scaling relation is more than [MATH] times lower.', '1001.5023-1-121-3': 'This provides a challenge for current Cerenkov telescopes as it is almost an order magnitude lower than the 50 h sensitivities.', '1001.5023-1-121-4': 'However, future upgrades of IACTs or the CTA telescope might considerably change the expectations.', '1001.5023-1-121-5': 'We note however that these estimates are too conservative for cool core clusters, which are known to show enhanced X-ray fluxes by a factor of up to ten relative to clusters on the X-ray luminosity scaling relation.', '1001.5023-1-121-6': 'Since we expect the X-ray luminosity to tightly correlate with the [MATH]-ray luminosity, this sub-class of clusters should provide very rewarding targets due to the ample target matter for inelastic collisions of relativistic protons leading to [MATH]-rays.', '1001.5023-1-121-7': 'Applying our semi-analytic model for the [MATH]-ray emission, we identify Perseus among the best suited clusters to target for the current IACT experiments.'}
{'1001.5023-2-0-0': 'Entering a new era of high-energy [MATH]-ray experiments, there is an exciting quest for the first detection of [MATH]-ray emission from clusters of galaxies.', '1001.5023-2-0-1': 'To complement these observational efforts, we use high-resolution simulations of a broad sample of galaxy clusters, and follow self-consistent cosmic ray (CR) physics using an improved spectral description.', '1001.5023-2-0-2': 'We study CR proton spectra as well as the different contributions of the pion decay and inverse Compton emission to the total flux and present spectral index maps.', '1001.5023-2-0-3': 'We find a universal spectrum of the CR component in clusters with surprisingly little scatter across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-2-0-4': 'When CR diffusion is neglected, the spatial CR distribution also shows approximate universality; it depends however on the cluster mass.', '1001.5023-2-0-5': 'This enables us to derive a semi-analytic model for both, the distribution of CRs as well as the pion-decay [MATH]-ray emission and the secondary radio emission that results from hadronic CR interactions with ambient gas protons.', '1001.5023-2-0-6': 'In addition, we provide an analytic framework for the inverse Compton emission that is produced by shock-accelerated CR electrons and valid in the full [MATH]-ray energy range.', '1001.5023-2-0-7': 'Combining the complete sample of the brightest X-ray clusters observed by ROSAT with our [MATH]-ray scaling relations, we identify the brightest clusters for the [MATH]-ray space telescope Fermi and current imaging air Cerenkov telescopes (MAGIC, HESS, VERITAS).', '1001.5023-2-0-8': "We reproduce the result in [CITATION], but provide somewhat more conservative predictions for the fluxes in the energy regimes of Fermi and imaging air Cerenkov telescopes when accounting for the bias of 'artificial galaxies' in cosmological simulations.", '1001.5023-2-0-9': 'We find that it will be challenging to detect cluster [MATH]-ray emission with Fermi after the second year but this mission has the potential of constraining interesting values of the shock acceleration efficiency after several years of surveying.', '1001.5023-2-0-10': 'Comparing the predicted emission from our semi-analytic model to that obtained by means of our scaling relations, we find that the [MATH]-ray scaling relations underpredict, by up to an order of magnitude, the flux from cool core clusters.', '1001.5023-2-1-0': '# Introduction', '1001.5023-2-2-0': '## General background', '1001.5023-2-3-0': 'In the cold dark matter (CDM) universe, large scale structure grows hierarchically through merging and accretion of smaller systems into larger ones, and clusters are the latest and most massive objects that had time to virialise.', '1001.5023-2-3-1': 'This process leads to collisionless shocks propagating through the intra-cluster medium (ICM), accelerating both protons and electrons to highly relativistic energies .', '1001.5023-2-3-2': 'High resolution X-ray observations by the Chandra and XMM-Newton satellites confirmed this picture, with most clusters displaying evidence for significant substructures, shocks, and contact discontinuities (e.g., [CITATION]).', '1001.5023-2-3-3': 'In addition, observations of radio halos and radio relics demonstrate the presence of synchrotron emitting electrons with energies reaching [MATH] 10 GeV in more than 50 clusters , although their precise origin in radio halos is still unclear.', '1001.5023-2-3-4': 'Similar populations of electrons may radiate [MATH]-rays efficiently via inverse Compton (IC) upscattering of the cosmic microwave background photons giving rise to a fraction of the diffuse [MATH]-ray background observed by EGRET .', '1001.5023-2-3-5': 'Although there is no clear observational evidence yet for a relativistic proton population in clusters of galaxies, these objects are expected to contain significant populations of relativistic protons originating from different sources, such as structure formation shocks, radio galaxies, and supernovae driven galactic winds.', '1001.5023-2-3-6': 'The ICM gas should provide ample target matter for inelastic collisions of relativistic protons leading to [MATH]-rays as well as secondary electron injection .', '1001.5023-2-3-7': 'These hadronic collision processes should illuminate the presence of these elusive particles through pion production and successive decay into the following channels: [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-3-8': 'This reaction can only unveil those cosmic ray protons (CRs) which have a total energy that exceeds the kinematic threshold of the reaction of [MATH] GeV.', '1001.5023-2-3-9': "The magnetic fields play another crucial role by confining non-thermal protons within the cluster volume for longer than a Hubble time, i.e. any protons injected into the ICM accumulates throughout the cluster's history .", '1001.5023-2-3-10': 'Hence, CRs can diffuse away from the production site, establishing a smooth distribution throughout the entire ICM which serves as efficient energy reservoir for these non-gravitational processes .', '1001.5023-2-4-0': 'There is only little known theoretically about the spectral shape of the CR population in the ICM.', '1001.5023-2-4-1': 'It is an interesting question whether it correlates with injection processes or is significantly modified by transport and re-acceleration processes of CRs through interactions with magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) waves.', '1001.5023-2-4-2': 'The most important processes shaping the CR spectrum as a function of cluster radius are (1) acceleration by structure formation shock waves , MHD turbulence, supernova driven galactic winds , or active galactic nuclei (AGN), (2) adiabatic and non-adiabatic transport processes, in particular anisotropic diffusion, and (3) loss processes such as CR thermalization by Coulomb interactions with ambient electrons and catastrophic losses by hadronic interactions.', '1001.5023-2-4-3': 'The spectral distribution of CRs that are accelerated at structure formation shocks should be largely described by a power-law with a spectral index of the one-dimensional distribution given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the shock compression factor.', '1001.5023-2-4-4': 'Strong (high Mach number) shocks that inject a hard CR population occur either at high redshift during the formation of the proto-clusters or today at the boundary where matter collapses from voids onto filaments or super-cluster regions.', '1001.5023-2-4-5': 'In contrast, merger shocks show weak to intermediate strength with typical Mach numbers in the range of [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-4-6': 'AGNs or supernova remnants are expected to inject CRs with rather flat spectra, [MATH] , but it is not clear whether they are able to build up a homogeneous population of significant strength.', '1001.5023-2-5-0': 'The CRs offer a unique window to probe the process of structure formation due to its long cooling times.', '1001.5023-2-5-1': 'While the thermal plasma quickly dissipates and erases the information about its past history, the CR distribution keeps the fossil record of violent structure formation which manifests itself through the spectrum that is shaped by acceleration and transport processes.', '1001.5023-2-5-2': 'The cluster [MATH]-ray emission is crucial in this respect as it potentially provides the unique and unambiguous evidence of a CR population in clusters through observing the pion bump in the [MATH]-ray spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-5-3': 'This knowledge enables determining the CR pressure and whether secondary electrons could contribute to the radio halo emission.', '1001.5023-2-5-4': 'In the [MATH]-ray regime, there are two main observables, the morphological appearance of the emission and the spectrum as a function of position relative to the cluster center.', '1001.5023-2-5-5': 'The morphology of the pion induced [MATH]-ray emission should follow that seen in thermal X-rays albeit with a slightly larger extent .', '1001.5023-2-5-6': 'The primary electrons that are accelerated directly at the structure formation shocks should be visible as an irregular shaped IC morphology, most pronounced in the cluster periphery .', '1001.5023-2-6-0': '## The [MATH]-ray spectrum of a galaxy cluster', '1001.5023-2-7-0': 'How do the spectral electron and proton distributions map onto the [MATH]-ray spectrum?', '1001.5023-2-7-1': 'We show the CR spectrum within the virial radius of a simulated Coma-like galaxy cluster in the upper part of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-7-2': 'It is shaped by diffusive shock acceleration at structure formation shocks, adiabatic transport and the relevant CR loss processes.', '1001.5023-2-7-3': 'Three distinct features are visible in the spectrum: a cutoff close to the proton rest mass at [MATH] GeV, a concave shape for proton energies above [MATH] and a steepening due to diffusive losses at energies [MATH], where [MATH] is the value of the diffusion coefficient at 1 GeV.', '1001.5023-2-7-4': 'The dotted lines represents different values of the diffusion coefficient which is varied by a factor two from its fiducial value.', '1001.5023-2-7-5': 'The low energy cutoff is due to a balance of Coulomb and hadronic losses at energies around a GeV .', '1001.5023-2-7-6': 'As shown in the present paper and in an upcoming work by Pinzke Pfrommer (in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-7-7': ', the concave curvature is a unique shape that is caused by the cosmic Mach number distribution in combination with adiabatic transport processes.', '1001.5023-2-7-8': 'These features are mapped onto the pion decay [MATH]-ray emission spectra as a consequence of hadronic CR interactions.', '1001.5023-2-8-0': 'This can be seen in the lower part of Fig. [REF], where the arrows indicate the spectral mapping from the CR spectrum to the photon spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-8-1': 'In a hadronic interaction, CRs produce pions that decay into photons with an energy that is on average smaller by a factor eight compare to the original CR energy (see Section [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-8-2': 'At CR energies that are larger than the hadronic reaction threshold, the CR power-law behavior is linearly mapped onto the pion decay induced [MATH]-ray spectrum (solid blue).', '1001.5023-2-8-3': 'This emission component clearly dominates the total photon spectrum and therefore shapes the total emission characteristics in the central parts of the cluster, where the densities are high.', '1001.5023-2-8-4': 'Note that this spectrum is an intrinsic spectrum emitted at the cluster position and converted to a flux while assuming a distance of 100 Mpc without taking into account photon propagation effects.', '1001.5023-2-8-5': 'Depending on the cluster redshift, the finite mean free path of high-energy [MATH]-rays to [MATH]-pair production on infra red (IR) and optical photons limits the observable part of the spectrum to energies [MATH] TeV for clusters with redshifts [MATH], and smaller energies for higher redshift objects .', '1001.5023-2-9-0': 'Secondary CR electrons and positrons up-scatter cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons through the IC process into the [MATH]-ray regime, the so-called secondary inverse Compton emission (sIC).', '1001.5023-2-9-1': 'This emission component originates from the flat high-energy part of the CR spectrum and produces a rather flat sIC spectrum up to the Klein-Nishina (KN) regime.', '1001.5023-2-9-2': 'At large electron energies, we enter the KN regime of IC scattering where the electron recoil effect has to be taken into account.', '1001.5023-2-9-3': 'It implies less efficient energy transfer in such an elastic scattering event compared to the Thomson regime and leads to a dramatic steepening of the sIC spectrum at [MATH]-ray energies around 100 TeV (solid red line).', '1001.5023-2-9-4': 'The dash-dotted red line shows the hypothetical sIC spectrum in the absence of the KN effect (which is never realized in Nature).', '1001.5023-2-9-5': 'However, it clearly shows that the diffusive CR break is not observable in the sIC component for large clusters (while it can move to energies below the KN break for small enough clusters, causing a faster steepening there).', '1001.5023-2-9-6': 'The spectrum shown in green color represents the energy weighted photon spectrum resulting from the IC process due to electrons accelerated at structure formation and merger shocks, the primary inverse Compton emission (pIC).', '1001.5023-2-9-7': 'The exponential cutoff is due to synchrotron and IC losses which lead to a maximum energy of the shock-accelerated electrons.', '1001.5023-2-9-8': 'The green pIC band shows the effect of the maximum electron injection efficiency, where we use an optimistic value of [MATH] (see e.g. ) in the top and a value of [MATH] at the bottom.', '1001.5023-2-9-9': 'This more realistic value is suggested to be the theoretically allowed upper limit for the injection efficiency that is consistent with the non-thermal radiation of young supernova remnants .', '1001.5023-2-10-0': 'This work studies the spectral and morphological emission characteristics of the different CR populations in the [MATH]-ray regime.', '1001.5023-2-10-1': 'We concentrate on observationally motivated high-energy [MATH]-ray bands.', '1001.5023-2-10-2': '(1) The energy regime accessible to the Fermi [MATH]-ray space telescope with a particular focus on [MATH] and (2) the energy regime accessible to imaging air Cerenkov telescopes (IACTs) assuming a lower energy limit of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-10-3': 'In Section [REF] we describe the setup of our simulations, explain our methodology and relevant radiative processes considered in this work.', '1001.5023-2-10-4': 'In Section [REF], we study emission profiles and maps, as well as spectral index maps.', '1001.5023-2-10-5': 'We then present the CR spectrum and spatial distribution and show its universality across our simulated cluster sample in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-10-6': 'This allows us to derive a semi-analytic framework for the cluster [MATH]-ray emission in Section [REF] which we demonstrate on the Perseus and Coma galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-10-7': 'Furthermore, we study the mass-to-luminosity scaling relations (Section [REF]) and predict the [MATH]-ray flux from a large sample of galaxy clusters for the GeV and TeV energy regimes in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-10-8': 'We compare our work to previous papers in this field and point out limitations of our approach in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-10-9': 'We conclude our findings in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-10-10': 'Throughout this work we use a Hubble constant of [MATH], which is a compromise between the value found by the Hubble key project and from that one inferred from baryonic acoustic oscillation measurements .', '1001.5023-2-11-0': '# Setup and formalism', '1001.5023-2-12-0': 'We follow the CR proton pressure dynamically in our simulations while taking into account all relevant CR injection and loss terms in the ICM, except for a possible proton production from AGN and supernova remnants.', '1001.5023-2-12-1': 'In contrast, we model the CR electron population in a post-processing step because it does not modify the hydrodynamics owing to its negligible pressure contribution.', '1001.5023-2-12-2': 'We use a novel CR formalism that allows us to study the spectral properties of the CR population more accurately.', '1001.5023-2-13-0': '## Adopted cosmology and cluster sample', '1001.5023-2-14-0': 'The simulations were performed in a [MATH]CDM universe using the cosmological parameters: [MATH], and [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-14-1': 'Here, [MATH] denotes the total matter density in units of the critical density for geometrical closure today, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-14-2': '[MATH], [MATH] and [MATH] denote the densities of baryons, dark matter, and the cosmological constant at the present day.', '1001.5023-2-14-3': 'The Hubble constant at the present day is parametrized as [MATH], while [MATH] denotes the spectral index of the primordial power-spectrum, and [MATH] is the rms linear mass fluctuation within a sphere of radius [MATH]Mpc extrapolated to [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-15-0': 'Our simulations were carried out with an updated and extended version of the distributed-memory parallel TreeSPH code GADGET-2 .', '1001.5023-2-15-1': 'Gravitational forces were computed using a combination of particle-mesh and tree algorithms.', '1001.5023-2-15-2': 'Hydrodynamic forces are computed with a variant of the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) algorithm that conserves energy and entropy where appropriate, i.e. outside of shocked regions .', '1001.5023-2-15-3': 'Our simulations follow the radiative cooling of the gas, star formation, supernova feedback, and a photo-ionizing background .', '1001.5023-2-16-0': 'The clusters have originally been selected from a low-resolution dark-matter-only simulation .', '1001.5023-2-16-1': "Using the 'zoomed initial conditions' technique , the clusters have been re-simulated with higher mass and force resolution by adding short-wavelength modes within the Lagrangian regions in the initial conditions that will evolve later-on into the structures of interest.", '1001.5023-2-16-2': 'We analyzed the clusters with a halo-finder based on spherical overdensity followed by a merger tree analysis in order to get the mass accretion history of the main progenitor.', '1001.5023-2-16-3': 'The spherical overdensity definition of the virial mass of the cluster is given by the material lying within a sphere centered on a local density maximum, whose radial extend [MATH] is defined by the enclosed threshold density condition [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-16-4': 'We chose the threshold density [MATH] to be a constant multiple [MATH] of the critical density of the universe [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-16-5': 'In the remaining of the paper, we use the terminology [MATH] instead of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-16-6': 'Our sample of simulated galaxy clusters consists of 14 clusters that span a mass range from [MATH] to [MATH] where the dynamical stages range from relaxed cool core clusters to violent merging clusters (cf. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-16-7': 'Each individual cluster is resolved by [MATH] to [MATH] particles, depending on its final mass.', '1001.5023-2-16-8': 'The SPH densities were computed from the closest 48 neighbors, with a minimum smoothing length ([MATH]) set to half the softening length.', '1001.5023-2-16-9': 'The Plummer equivalent softening length is [MATH] in physical units after [MATH], implying a minimum gas resolution of approximately [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-17-0': '## Modeling of CR protons and induced radiative processes', '1001.5023-2-18-0': 'Our simulations follow cosmic ray physics in a self-consistent way .', '1001.5023-2-18-1': 'We model the adiabatic CR transport process such as compression and rarefaction, and a number of physical source and sink terms which modify the cosmic ray pressure of each CR population separately.', '1001.5023-2-18-2': 'The most important source considered for acceleration is diffusive shock acceleration at cosmological structure formation shocks, while the primary sinks are thermalization by Coulomb interactions, and catastrophic losses by hadronization.', '1001.5023-2-18-3': 'Collisionless structure formation shocks are able to accelerate ions and electrons in the high-energy tail of their Maxwellian distribution functions through diffusive shock acceleration .', '1001.5023-2-18-4': 'In the test particle picture, this process injects a CR distribution with a power-law in momentum and a slope that depends on the instantaneous sonic Mach number of the shock.', '1001.5023-2-18-5': 'The overall normalization of the injected CR distribution depends on the adopted sub-resolution model of diffusive shock acceleration ; in particular it depends on the maximum acceleration efficiency [MATH] which is the maximum ratio of CR energy density that can be injected relative to the total dissipated energy density at the shock.', '1001.5023-2-18-6': 'We assume that in the saturated regime of shock acceleration, 50 percent of the dissipated energy at strong shocks is injected into cosmic ray protons.', '1001.5023-2-18-7': 'While there are indications from supernova remnant observations of one rim region as well as theoretical studies that support such high efficiencies, to date it is not clear whether these efficiencies apply in an average sense to strong collisionless shocks or whether they are realized for structure formation shocks at higher redshifts.', '1001.5023-2-18-8': 'This high efficiency rapidly decreases for weaker shocks (decreasing Mach number) and eventually smoothly approaches zero for sonic waves .', '1001.5023-2-18-9': 'Our paper aims at providing a quantitative prediction of the [MATH]-ray flux and hence the associated CR flux that we expect in a cluster depending on our adopted acceleration model.', '1001.5023-2-18-10': 'Non-detection of our predicted emission will limit the CR acceleration efficiency and help in answering these profound plasma astrophysics questions about particle acceleration efficiencies.', '1001.5023-2-19-0': 'We significantly revised the CR methodology and allow for multiple non-thermal cosmic ray populations of every fluid element (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-19-1': 'Each CR population [MATH] is a power-law in particle momentum, [EQUATION] characterized by a fixed slope [MATH], a low-momentum cutoff [MATH], and an amplitude [MATH] that is a function of the position of each SPH particle through the variable [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-19-2': 'For this paper we have chosen five CR populations with the spectral index distribution [MATH] for each fluid element (a convergence study on the number of CR populations is presented in the appendix [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-19-3': 'This approach allows a more accurate spectral description as the superposition of power-law spectra enables a concave curvature of the composite spectrum in logarithmic representation.', '1001.5023-2-19-4': 'Physically, more complicated spectral features such as bumps can arise from the finite lifetime and length scale of the process of diffusive shock acceleration or incomplete confinement of CRs to the acceleration region.', '1001.5023-2-19-5': 'These effects imprint an upper cutoff to the CR population locally that might vary spatially and which translates into a convex curvature in projection.', '1001.5023-2-19-6': 'Additionally, interactions of pre-existing CRs with MHD waves can yield to more complex spectral features.', '1001.5023-2-19-7': 'Future work will be dedicated to study these topics.', '1001.5023-2-20-0': 'In addition to the spectral features mentioned above, we model in the post-processing the effect of high-energy CR protons that are no longer confined to a galaxy cluster as these are able to diffuse into the ambient warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM).', '1001.5023-2-20-1': 'In this paper we define WHIM to be the region within [MATH], which is a subset of the entire WHIM .', '1001.5023-2-20-2': 'Assuming particle scattering off magnetic irregularities with the Kolmogorov spectrum, we obtain the characteristic scaling of the diffusion coefficient [MATH], where we normalize [MATH] at [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-20-3': 'One can estimate the characteristic proton energy [MATH] at which the spectrum steepens , [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-20-4': 'For the reminder, we adopt a value of the diffusivity that is scaled to [MATH] for each cluster, as this volume is expected to fall within the virialised part of the cluster past the accretion shock region and traps CRs in a cluster for time scales longer than a Hubble time.', '1001.5023-2-20-5': 'This choice also has the property that the diffusion break is at energies [MATH] GeV; hence it does not interfere with the pion decay as well as secondary IC emission in the energy regime accessible to IACTs as we will show in the following.', '1001.5023-2-20-6': 'The momentum of a photon that results from pion decay is given by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-20-7': 'This approximate relation is derived using the inelasticity [MATH] and multiplicity [MATH] for the [MATH] channel together with the two photons in the final state.', '1001.5023-2-20-8': 'Secondary electrons that are injected in hadronic CR interactions Compton up-scatter CMB photons.', '1001.5023-2-20-9': 'A break in the parent CR spectrum would imprint itself in the sIC spectrum if there are no other effects that modify the spectrum at lower energies.', '1001.5023-2-20-10': 'Compared to the pion decay emission, this break manifests at slightly higher energies (for parameters adopted in Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-20-11': 'The momentum of the electrons [MATH] depends on the proton momentum [MATH] through the relation given by hadronic physics [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-20-12': 'Here we used the [MATH] channel together with the four particles in the final state of the charged pion decay ([MATH], [MATH], [MATH], [MATH]).', '1001.5023-2-20-13': 'Combining the classical inverse Compton formulae from CR electrons with energies [MATH] [EQUATION] with the energy relation in equation ([REF]) we obtain a break in the sIC spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-20-14': "This steepening of the CR spectrum take place at high photon energies [MATH] where we choose CMB photons with the energy [MATH] meV as source for the inverse Compton emission using Wien's displacement law.", '1001.5023-2-20-15': 'It turns out that these energies are deeply in the Klein-Nishina regime.', '1001.5023-2-20-16': 'This means that in the rest frame of the energetic electron, the Lorentz boosted photon energy is comparable to or larger than the electron rest mass, [MATH], so that the scattering event becomes elastic.', '1001.5023-2-20-17': 'This implies a less efficient energy transfer to the photon and manifests itself in a break in the resulting IC spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-20-18': 'While the number flux scales as [MATH] in the Thomson-limit for [MATH] TeV, it steepens significantly to [MATH] in the extreme KN-limit for [MATH] TeV, where [MATH] is the spectral index of the (cooled) CR electron distribution .', '1001.5023-2-21-0': '## Magnetic fields', '1001.5023-2-22-0': 'High energy CR electrons with [MATH] loose their energy by means of IC scattering off CMB photons as well as through interactions with cluster magnetic fields which results in synchrotron emission.', '1001.5023-2-22-1': 'The relative importance of these two emission mechanisms depends on the rms magnetic field strength, [MATH], relative to the equivalent field strength of the CMB, [MATH], where [MATH] denotes the redshift.', '1001.5023-2-22-2': 'In the peripheral cluster regions, where [MATH], the CR electrons loose virtually all their energy by means of IC emission.', '1001.5023-2-22-3': 'In the central cluster regions, in particular in the dense centers of cool cores, the magnetic energy density is probably comparable or even larger than the energy density of the CMB , [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-22-4': "Hence in these regions, the radio synchrotron emission carries away a fraction of the CR electrons' energy losses; an effect that reduces the level of IC emission.", '1001.5023-2-22-5': 'We model the strength and morphology of the magnetic fields in the post-processing and scale the magnetic energy density field [MATH] by the thermal energy density [MATH] through the relation [EQUATION] where [MATH] and [MATH] denote the core values.', '1001.5023-2-22-6': 'If not mentioned otherwise, we use the magnetic decline [MATH] and the central magnetic field [MATH] throughout this paper.', '1001.5023-2-22-7': 'The central thermal energy density [MATH], is calculated by fitting the modified [MATH]-model [EQUATION] to the radial pressure [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-22-8': 'The parametrization in equation ([REF]) is motivated by both cosmological MHD SPH simulations and radiative adaptive mesh refinement MHD simulations .', '1001.5023-2-22-9': 'Rather than applying a densities scaling as those simulations suggest, we use a scaling with thermal gas energy density which is not affected by the over-cooled centers in radiative simulations that do not take into account AGN feedback.', '1001.5023-2-23-0': '## CR electron acceleration and inverse Compton emission', '1001.5023-2-24-0': '### Modeling diffusive shock acceleration', '1001.5023-2-25-0': 'Collisionless cluster shocks are able to accelerate ions and electrons through diffusive shock acceleration .', '1001.5023-2-25-1': 'Neglecting non-linear shock acceleration and cosmic ray modified shock structure, the process of diffusive shock acceleration uniquely determines the spectrum of the freshly injected relativistic electron population in the post-shock region that cools and finally diminishes as a result of loss processes.', '1001.5023-2-25-2': 'The [MATH]-ray inverse Compton emitting electron population cools on such a short time scale [MATH] yrs (compared to the long dynamical time scale [MATH] Gyr) that we can describe this by instantaneous cooling.', '1001.5023-2-25-3': 'In this approximation, there is no steady-state electron population and we would have to convert the energy from the electrons to inverse Compton and synchrotron radiation.', '1001.5023-2-25-4': 'Instead, we introduce a virtual electron population that lives in the SPH-broadened shock volume only; this is defined to be the volume where energy dissipation takes place.', '1001.5023-2-25-5': 'Within this volume, which is co-moving with the shock, we can use the steady-state solution for the distribution function of relativistic electrons and we assume no relativistic electrons in the post-shock volume, where no energy dissipation occurs.', '1001.5023-2-25-6': 'Thus, the cooled CR electron equilibrium spectrum can be derived from balancing the shock injection with the IC/synchrotron cooling: above a GeV it is given by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-25-7': 'Here, we introduced the dimensionless electron momentum [MATH], where [MATH] is the electron momentum, [MATH] is the spectral index of the equilibrium electron spectrum, [MATH] is the gas density, [MATH] is the magnetic energy density, and [MATH] denotes the photon energy density, taken to be that of CMB photons.', '1001.5023-2-25-8': 'The primary CRe distribution in equation ([REF]) is calculated in the post-processing with a spectrum reflecting the current Mach number of the shock (without the assumption of spectral bins).', '1001.5023-2-25-9': 'Superposing the individual spectra of a large number of SPH particles, each with a spectrum reflecting the accelerating shock, produces a well defined total spectrum with a running index in general.', '1001.5023-2-25-10': 'A more detailed discussion of this simplified approach can be found in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-26-0': 'Once the radiative cooling time due IC and synchrotron emission becomes comparable to the diffusive acceleration time scale, the injection spectrum experiences a high-energy cutoff .', '1001.5023-2-26-1': 'The electrons start to pile-up at this critical energy; the super-exponential term describing the maximum energy of electrons reached in this process, however, effectively cancels this pile-up feature which results in a prolonged power-law up to the electron cutoff momentum [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-26-2': 'We account for this effect by using the following parametrization of the shock injected electron spectrum, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the distance from the shock surface, [MATH] and [MATH] describe the characteristic momentum and shape of the pile-up region.', '1001.5023-2-26-3': 'The continuous losses cause the cutoff to move to lower energies as the electrons are transported advectively with the flow downstream.', '1001.5023-2-26-4': 'Integration over the post-shock volume causes the cutoffs to add up to a new power-law that is steeper by unity compared to the injection power-law (equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-26-5': 'Hence, the shock-integrated distribution function - as defined in equation ([REF]) and displayed in Fig. [REF] - shows three regimes: (1) at low energies (but large enough in order not to be affected by Coulomb losses) the original injected power-law spectrum, (2) followed by the cooled power-law that is steeper by unity, [MATH], and (3) an ultimate cutoff that is determined from the magnetic field strength and the properties of the diffusion of the electron in the shock (we refer the reader to Section [REF] for a detailed discussion).', '1001.5023-2-26-6': 'Note that only the last two regimes are important for [MATH]-ray IC emission.', '1001.5023-2-27-0': 'The fact that we observe X-ray synchrotron emission at shocks of young supernova remnants necessarily requires the existence of high-energy CR electrons with [MATH] TeV.', '1001.5023-2-27-1': 'The non-thermal synchrotron emission generated by CR electrons with energies [MATH] is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH]TeV) and magnetic fields of order [MATH]G are required to reach X-ray energies of order 10 keV.', '1001.5023-2-27-2': 'To keep the highly relativistic electrons from being advected downstream requires efficient diffusion so that they can diffuse back upstream crossing the shock front again.', '1001.5023-2-27-3': 'We therefore use the most effective diffusion, refereed to as Bohm diffusion limit, as the electron propagation model at the shock.', '1001.5023-2-27-4': 'Balancing Bohm diffusion with synchrotron/IC cooling of electrons enables us to derive a maximum energy of the accelerated CR electrons at the position of the shock surface [EQUATION] where diffusion parallel to the magnetic field has been assumed.', '1001.5023-2-27-5': 'Here [MATH] denotes the flow velocity in the inertial frame of the shock ([MATH]), and the electron loss time scale due to synchrotron and inverse-Compton losses reads [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the Thompson cross-section.', '1001.5023-2-27-6': '[MATH] denotes the shock compression and is given by [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the sonic Mach number.', '1001.5023-2-27-7': 'Inserting typical numbers for different cluster regions show that the electron cutoff energy, [MATH], only varies within a factor two inside [MATH] (Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-27-8': 'The equivalent cutoff energy in the IC spectrum can easily be derived from equation ([REF]), yielding [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-28-0': '### IC emission', '1001.5023-2-29-0': 'Following [CITATION], we calculate the inverse Compton emission from electrons that up-scatter CMB photons.', '1001.5023-2-29-1': 'It should be noted that we neglect the inverse Compton emission induced by starlight and dust, which might contribute significantly in the inner 10 kpc of the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-29-2': 'The inverse Compton source density [MATH] in units of produced photons per unit time interval and volume for a simple power-law spectrum of CRes (equation [REF]) scales as [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-29-3': 'When we account for the competition between radiative cooling and diffusive acceleration of electrons in the shock region, the shape of [MATH] in the high-energy regime changes.', '1001.5023-2-29-4': 'Using the cooled electron distribution of equation ([REF]), we construct an effective integrated source function for primary inverse Compton emission (see Section [REF] for a self-consistent and extensive description), [EQUATION] where Bohm diffusion has been assumed.', '1001.5023-2-29-5': 'The normalization constants [MATH] and [MATH] are derived in equations ([REF]) and ([REF]), respectively.', '1001.5023-2-29-6': 'The KN suppression of the IC spectrum is captured by [MATH] (equation [REF]), and the shape of the transition region from the Thompson to the KN regime is given by [MATH] (equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-29-7': 'Following recent work that carefully models the non-thermal radiation of young supernova remnants , we typically adopt a maximum electron injection efficiency of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-29-8': 'We note that this value seems to be at the upper envelope of theoretically allowed values that match the supernova data.', '1001.5023-2-30-0': '## Multiphase structure of the ICM', '1001.5023-2-31-0': 'The ICM is a multiphase medium consisting of a hot phase which attained its entropy through structure formation shock waves dissipating gravitational energy associated with hierarchical clustering into thermal energy.', '1001.5023-2-31-1': 'The dense, cold phase consists of the true interstellar medium (ISM) within galaxies and at the cluster center as well as the ram-pressure stripped ISM that has not yet dissociated into the ICM .', '1001.5023-2-31-2': 'All of these phases contribute to the [MATH]-ray emission from a cluster.', '1001.5023-2-31-3': 'Physically, the stripped ISM should dissociate after a time scale that depends on many unknowns such as details of magnetic draping of ICM fields on galaxies or the viscosity of the ICM.', '1001.5023-2-31-4': 'In SPH simulations, this dissociation process is suppressed or happens only incompletely in our simulations leaving compact galactic-sized point sources that potentially biases the total [MATH]-ray luminosity high.', '1001.5023-2-31-5': 'On the other hand, once these stripped compact point sources dissociate, the CRs diffuse out in the bulk of the ICM, and produce [MATH]-rays by interacting with protons of the hot dilute phase.', '1001.5023-2-31-6': 'This flux, however, is negligible since [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-31-7': 'Here [MATH]) denotes the gas number density in the ICM (ISM), [MATH] the CR number density in the ISM, and [MATH] the CR number density of the CRs that diffused out of their dense ISM environment into the ambient ICM that is in pressure equilibrium with the ISM.', '1001.5023-2-31-8': 'In the second step of equation ([REF]) we accounted for the adiabatic expansion that these CRs would experience as they diffused out.', '1001.5023-2-31-9': 'In the last step we assumed [MATH], i.e. that the CR luminosity of all compact galactic sources in a cluster is of the same order as the CR luminosity in the diffuse ICM; a property that is at least approximately true in our simulations as we will show later on.', '1001.5023-2-31-10': 'Leaving all gaseous point sources would definitively be too optimistic, removing all of them would be too conservative since cluster spiral galaxies should contribute to the total [MATH]-ray emission (which defines our so-called optimistic and conservative models).', '1001.5023-2-31-11': 'Hence, we perform our analysis with both limiting cases, bracketing the realistic case.', '1001.5023-2-31-12': 'The effect from the gaseous point sources is largest in low mass clusters, where they constitute a few percent of the total ICM mass.', '1001.5023-2-31-13': 'For high-mass clusters this fraction is lower, and constitutes only about one percent.', '1001.5023-2-31-14': 'In practice, we cut multiphase particles with an electron fraction [MATH] and a gas density above the star forming threshold [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-31-15': 'If nothing else is stated, we use our conservative model without galaxies throughout the paper.', '1001.5023-2-32-0': '# Characteristics of [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-2-33-0': 'From surface brightness [MATH] maps that are obtained by line-of-sight integration of the source functions, we study the [MATH]-ray emission to characterize the morphology of clusters.', '1001.5023-2-33-1': 'Additionally, we use emission profiles to compare pIC, sIC, and pion decay induced emission for different clusters.', '1001.5023-2-34-0': '## Morphology of [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-2-35-0': 'The left side of Fig. [REF] shows the morphology of the [MATH]-ray emission above [MATH] that results from hadronic CR interactions with ambient gas protons.', '1001.5023-2-35-1': 'The right side shows the primary and secondary IC emission for the post-merger cluster g72a.', '1001.5023-2-35-2': 'The comparison of the two panels shows that the central parts are dominated by the pion induced [MATH]-ray emission.', '1001.5023-2-35-3': 'It has a very regular morphology that traces the gas distribution.', '1001.5023-2-35-4': 'There is a transition to the pIC emission as the dominant emission mechanism outside the cluster in the WHIM at a level depending on the dynamical state of the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-35-5': 'The pIC emission is very inhomogeneous which can be easily understood since it derives from primary CR electrons that are directly accelerated at structure formation shocks.', '1001.5023-2-35-6': 'Structure formation is not a steady process, it rather occurs intermittently.', '1001.5023-2-35-7': 'The morphology of the [MATH]-ray emission above [MATH] for g72a was investigated in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-35-8': 'It shows a very similar morphology, indicating a similar power-law CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-36-0': 'The projected energy dependent photon index is a well defined continuous quantity as it is defined through [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the surface brightness of [MATH]-rays with energies [MATH] at the projected radius [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-36-1': 'Using [MATH] maps, such as the ones in Fig. [REF], we can extract the photon index [MATH] between the energies [MATH] to [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-36-2': 'Close to the pion bump (see Fig. [REF]) at [MATH] (energy of a photon originating from a decaying [MATH] at the threshold of the hadronic p-p reaction) the photon spectrum has a convex shape.', '1001.5023-2-36-3': 'This is characterized by a flatter photon index compared to the asymptotic limit, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-36-4': 'Calculating [MATH] at two discrete energies results in a slightly steeper value for [MATH] than its continuous counterpart [MATH] at [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-37-0': 'Since we are interested in comparing the morphology of clusters to spectra, we calculate the projected photon index for g72a (see Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-37-1': 'We compare [MATH] for an energy regime accessible to the Fermi space telescope of [MATH] (left panel) to [MATH] accessible for IACTs (right panel).', '1001.5023-2-37-2': 'In the Fermi regime, we find a median value of [MATH] in the central regions of the cluster and a value [MATH] in the periphery.', '1001.5023-2-37-3': 'The reason is that the total emission in the central regions of the cluster is dominated by the pion decay emission at 100 MeV with a lower spectral index than pIC due to the pion bump.', '1001.5023-2-37-4': 'In the periphery and the WHIM, where the pIC contributes substantially to the total emission, intermediate shocks with [MATH] are typical .', '1001.5023-2-37-5': 'Using the spectral index of the electron equilibrium spectrum, [MATH], where [MATH] for [MATH] and [MATH], results in the observed steepening of [MATH] in the periphery.', '1001.5023-2-38-0': 'We now turn to the energy region important for IACTs with the photon index [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-38-1': 'In the central regions the photon index traces the proton spectral index [MATH] since this spatial region is dominated by the asymptotic regime of the pion emission.', '1001.5023-2-38-2': 'Moving towards the periphery, the photon index steepens to [MATH], despite the presence of strong external shocks as well as accretion shocks that efficiently accelerate electrons on these large scales.', '1001.5023-2-38-3': 'The reason for this steepening is the exponential cutoff in the pIC emission.', '1001.5023-2-38-4': 'Increasing the energy or the distance from the cluster results in an even steeper photon index.', '1001.5023-2-39-0': '## Emission profiles', '1001.5023-2-40-0': 'The profiles of different non-thermal [MATH]-ray emission processes without galaxies are shown in Fig. [REF] for, a large CC cluster (g8a, left) and large post-merging cluster (g72a, right).', '1001.5023-2-40-1': 'The secondary IC emission traces the dominating pion decay emission because to zeroth order, both components depend on [MATH], where [MATH] is the gas number density and [MATH] the CR number density.', '1001.5023-2-40-2': 'This would be exactly true if the magnetic field was smaller than [MATH]G.', '1001.5023-2-40-3': 'In this case, the CRe population would exclusively cool by means of IC emission.', '1001.5023-2-40-4': 'Since we assume the central magnetic field to be larger than [MATH], a fraction of the CRe energy is radiated through synchrotron emission into the radio, causing a larger discrepancy of the sIC emission compared to the pion emission in the center.', '1001.5023-2-41-0': 'In contrast to the centrally peaked secondary emission components, the average primary IC emission shows a rather flat surface brightness profile which can be nicely seen in our cool core cluster g8a.', '1001.5023-2-41-1': 'This is because we see the strong accretion shocks that efficiently accelerate CRes (in terms of the injected energy density) in projection.', '1001.5023-2-41-2': 'There are noticeable exceptions in the centers of both clusters: accreting small sub-clumps dissipate their gravitational energy through weak shocks in the larger core regions of clusters.', '1001.5023-2-41-3': 'However, once these weak shock waves encounter the (over-cooled) centers of our simulated clusters they transform into strong (high Mach number) shock waves.', '1001.5023-2-41-4': 'These inject a hard population of primary CR electrons which causes the centrally peaked and bright pIC emission.', '1001.5023-2-41-5': 'We also observe an excess pIC emission at a radius of [MATH] Mpc in g72a.', '1001.5023-2-41-6': 'This can be traced back to a prominent merger shock wave with a Mach number up to [MATH] that accelerates primary CRes (see also Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-42-0': 'The total emission flattens out in the cluster exterior close to [MATH] because of two reasons: (1) there the pIC emission contributes significantly to the total emission because of strong merger shocks as well as accretion shocks, and (2) subhalos in the periphery that have not yet merged with the larger halo contribute to the pion decay induced emission.', '1001.5023-2-42-1': 'In this regime, the halo-halo correlation term starts to dominate the average density profile of a cluster with its characteristic flattening .', '1001.5023-2-42-2': 'This naturally translates to the pion emission profile that tightly correlates with the gas density distribution.', '1001.5023-2-43-0': 'The ratio between pion decay and sIC emission can be estimated analytically by calorimetric considerations.', '1001.5023-2-43-1': 'To this end we compare the CR energy spectrum, [MATH], at the respective CR energies which give rise to [MATH]-ray emission at some specific photon energy, say [MATH] GeV.', '1001.5023-2-43-2': 'Additionally we have to include a factor, [MATH], that accounts for the possibility that the CRes do not only emit IC [MATH]-rays but also radio synchrotron radiation.', '1001.5023-2-43-3': 'Using the hadronic branching ratios for the production of pions, [MATH] and [MATH], as well as the multiplicities for the decay products in the respective decay channels, [MATH] and [MATH], we obtain [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-43-4': 'Here [MATH] is the CR proton spectral index between the CR energy [MATH] that give rise to pion decay flux at 1 GeV and the CR energy [MATH] that gives rise to sIC flux at 1 GeV.', '1001.5023-2-43-5': 'The [MATH]-ray source function for pion decay and sIC () is denoted by [MATH] and [MATH], respectively.', '1001.5023-2-43-6': 'Finally, the factor [MATH], for magnetic fields much smaller than the CMB equivalent magnetic field, otherwise [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-43-7': 'In the region close to [MATH], the magnetic field is about 2.4 [MATH] in our model (Table [REF]), which implies an emission ratio of about 50.', '1001.5023-2-43-8': 'For smaller photon energies than 1 GeV, the pion decay [MATH]-ray emission falls below the asymptotic power-law due to the characteristic pion bump.', '1001.5023-2-43-9': 'This effect implies a lower ratio of about 40 (instead of the expected ratio of about 100) for the emission above 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-44-0': 'We also show the total surface brightness profile with galaxies in Fig. [REF] (grey line).', '1001.5023-2-44-1': 'The resulting profile shows a boosted emission by about a factor two compared to the one where we exclude galaxies from the surface brightness.', '1001.5023-2-44-2': 'The entire population of these galaxies takes up only a negligible volume so that the volume weighted CR pressure is almost the same in either case, when taking these galaxies into account or not.', '1001.5023-2-44-3': "We note that this bias needs to be addressed when deriving average CR pressure contributions from the cluster's [MATH]-ray emission .", '1001.5023-2-44-4': 'Especially in the inner parts, the profile is very inhomogeneous.', '1001.5023-2-44-5': 'Since galaxies follow an approximate Poisson distribution and since the inner radial bins of the profile sample only few galaxies, we naturally obtain a larger Poissonian scatter across the inner radial bins.', '1001.5023-2-45-0': '## Emission spectra from the cluster core and WHIM', '1001.5023-2-46-0': 'The central parts of clusters are characterized by high gas and CR densities, and magnetic fields - at least compared to average values of the ICM.', '1001.5023-2-46-1': 'Even though the cluster core region only makes up a fraction of the total volume of the ICM, the high densities result in a significant [MATH]-ray flux contribution to the total flux from the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-46-2': 'In contrast to the cluster center, the WHIM is characterized by on average low gas and CR densities, and magnetic fields.', '1001.5023-2-46-3': 'The low densities cause a smaller total [MATH]-ray flux from this region compared to the cluster core regions.', '1001.5023-2-46-4': 'However, the WHIM of the super-cluster region contains a large number of galaxies and groups that are accreted onto the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-46-5': 'This generates more shocks compared to the cluster core region.', '1001.5023-2-46-6': 'The cluster characteristics in the two regions give rise to different normalizations of the individual [MATH]-ray emission components, but with a similar shape.', '1001.5023-2-46-7': 'The shape of the emission components from the different regions agrees with that of the entire cluster as shown in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-46-8': 'The emission can be summarized as follows.', '1001.5023-2-46-9': 'The [MATH]-decay is characterized by the so-called pion bump followed by a concave curvature and a diffusive break.', '1001.5023-2-46-10': 'The pIC emission component shows a power-law followed by an exponential cutoff while the sIC component has a power-law with similar index that is however followed by the Klein-Nishina break.', '1001.5023-2-47-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show the [MATH]-ray number flux weighted by photon energy from different regions of our Coma-like cluster g72a that we place at the distance of 100 Mpc.', '1001.5023-2-47-1': 'The left figure shows the [MATH]-ray number flux within the core region ([MATH]), where the [MATH]-decay dominates over the sIC component that itself is sub-dominant to the pIC component.', '1001.5023-2-47-2': 'The surface brightness profile of the [MATH]-decay is sufficiently flat in the core region so that the [MATH]-ray flux is dominated by the outer scale around [MATH] where most of the volume is.', '1001.5023-2-47-3': 'Hence the [MATH]-decay flux is largely insensitive to numerical inaccuracies of our modeling of the physics at the very center of the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-47-4': 'Both the pIC and sIC emission components have a larger [MATH]-ray flux in our models with weak central magnetic fields ([MATH], [MATH]) compared to our models with strong central magnetic fields ([MATH], [MATH]).', '1001.5023-2-47-5': 'The sIC emission with [MATH] is characterized by [MATH] on scales around the core radius which is the region that dominate the flux.', '1001.5023-2-47-6': 'Relative to the pion decay emission, the sIC is suppressed by a factor of [MATH] which can be understood by considering hadronic decay physics and the fact that the CR energy spectrum, [MATH], is decreasing as a function of proton energy (see equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-47-7': 'Even though the pIC emission component is sub-dominant, it shows a rather flat spectral index.', '1001.5023-2-47-8': 'This implies only a few strong shocks that are responsible for the electron acceleration.', '1001.5023-2-47-9': 'These merging shock waves are traversing the cooling core region in the cluster center.', '1001.5023-2-47-10': 'We caution the reader that the over-cooling of the cluster centers in our simulations possibly overestimates the true shock strengths and numbers which also results in an artificially enhanced pIC emission.', '1001.5023-2-47-11': 'At high energies, the electron cooling time is smaller than the time scale for diffusive shock acceleration which causes an exponential cutoff in the electron spectrum which is passed on to the pIC spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-47-12': 'The energy scale of the cutoff [MATH] (combining equations [REF] and [REF]) scales with the magnetic field which causes the low magnetic field model to turn down faster than the large magnetic field model.', '1001.5023-2-47-13': 'Note that the second cutoff in the figure for the small central magnetic fields is caused by a small fraction of the particles that have unusually high electron energy cutoff.', '1001.5023-2-47-14': 'The lower panel shows the photon spectral index defined in equation ([REF]), where [MATH] for the [MATH]-decay emission after the pion bump that slowly flattens out with energy.', '1001.5023-2-47-15': 'For both the pIC and sIC emission the photon spectral index [MATH] above the MeV regime up to at about 100 GeV.', '1001.5023-2-47-16': 'The reason for the flat spectra is that the pIC emission is generated by a few strong shocks in the center, while the sIC emission is caused by protons in the flat high energy part of CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-48-0': 'Now we turn to the [MATH]-ray spectra in the WHIM which are shown in the right panel of Fig. [REF] for our g72a cluster.', '1001.5023-2-48-1': 'Here we define the WHIM by the emission in the region [MATH] as seen in 2D projection of the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-48-2': 'We see that the pion decay and sIC are suppressed by a factor that is larger than 10 compared to the flux within the core region since the emission correlates with the CR- and gas densities.', '1001.5023-2-48-3': 'The suppression of [MATH]-ray flux emitted by the intergalactic medium is expected to be much greater due to the large density decrease.', '1001.5023-2-48-4': 'The presence of small groups in the super-cluster region with densities that are much larger than the average density in the WHIM partially counteracts the flux suppression.', '1001.5023-2-48-5': 'Contrary to the pion decay and sIC component, the pIC emission is boosted by a factor of a few compared to the center because of the larger spatial region in the WHIM that contains a greater number of shocks.', '1001.5023-2-48-6': 'This leads to comparable flux from the pIC and pion decay emission above the energy of the pion bump in the super-cluster region.', '1001.5023-2-48-7': 'Note however, that this flux is still sub-dominant compared to the pion decay flux emitted by the cluster core region.', '1001.5023-2-48-8': 'The different central magnetic fields do not play any significant role in the power-law regime in the WHIM since [MATH], which implies that the CRes mainly cool through IC emission.', '1001.5023-2-48-9': 'However, note that the pIC cutoff is shifted towards lower energies for these smaller magnetic fields since [MATH] (as derived by combining equations [REF] and [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-48-10': 'In the lower panel we show that the photon spectral index is steeper in the WHIM for all three emission components compared to the core region.', '1001.5023-2-48-11': 'The photon index is about 1.3 for both pIC and sIC below 10 GeV and about 1.4 for the pion decay above the energy of the pion bump.', '1001.5023-2-48-12': 'The reason for the steeper pIC is because most of the energy that is injected into primary electrons comes from multiple intermediate-strength shocks (accretion shocks), while in the cluster center the pIC emission is build up from a few strong shocks in the over-cooled center (merger shocks).', '1001.5023-2-48-13': 'The steeper sIC and pion decay photon indices are caused by the slightly steeper CR spectrum present in the WHIM of the g72a cluster (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-49-0': '# The CR proton distribution', '1001.5023-2-50-0': 'In this section we investigate the CR proton spectrum that we obtain from our simulations and discuss the relevant physics that gives rise to it.', '1001.5023-2-50-1': 'We explore the variance of the spectrum across our cluster sample and within individual clusters and show that it obeys a universal spectral shape.', '1001.5023-2-50-2': 'In addition, we study the spatial profile of the CRs within a cluster as well as across our cluster sample and find it to be approximately universal.', '1001.5023-2-50-3': 'This universal behavior enables us to construct a semi-analytic CR spectrum and to compute the [MATH]-ray spectrum as well as other secondary decay spectra (electrons, neutrinos) semi-analytically.', '1001.5023-2-51-0': '## A universal CR spectrum', '1001.5023-2-52-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show the median CR spectrum of all 14 galaxy clusters as well as the associated spectral index alpha.', '1001.5023-2-52-1': 'The CR spectrum of every cluster, [MATH], has been obtained by volume weighting the individual spectra of our SPH particles which have been normalized at the dimensionless proton momentum [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-52-2': 'Before discussing the spectral shape we note that it shows a remarkably small variance across our cluster sample which indicates a universal CR spectrum for galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-52-3': 'There are three important features in the spectra.', '1001.5023-2-53-0': 'The spectrum shows a low-momentum cutoff due to efficient Coulomb cooling at these low momenta with [MATH]: the CR energy is transferred into the thermal energy reservoir through individual electron scatterings in the Coulomb field of the CR particle .', '1001.5023-2-53-1': 'The Coulomb time scale of a mono-energetic CR population is very short, [MATH], where we show a momentum scaling that is valid only for the relevant non-relativistic regime.', '1001.5023-2-53-2': 'The Coulomb time scale for a power-law population of CRs can be significantly longer, [MATH], where we assumed a low-momentum cutoff [MATH] and [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-53-3': 'This, however, is still short compared to the dynamical time scale [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-53-4': 'Hence, we expect the formation of an equilibrium cutoff of our CR spectrum around [MATH] for the typical number densities [MATH] that we encounter at the cluster cores.', '1001.5023-2-53-5': 'Note that in the presence of cooling processes only, the equilibrium cutoff [MATH] is determined from the competition between Coulomb cooling and hadronic losses and converges around q = 1.685 if the cooling time is sufficiently short (see [CITATION] for a detailed discussion).', '1001.5023-2-53-6': 'The reason for that is that Coulomb cooling shifts the cutoff to higher momenta, as the CRs with low momenta are transferred to the thermal reservoir.', '1001.5023-2-53-7': 'At high momenta, the cooling time due to hadronic interactions is shorter than the Coulomb cooling time.', '1001.5023-2-53-8': 'Hadronic cooling effectively removes the CRs with high energy and moves the cutoff towards lower momenta.', '1001.5023-2-53-9': 'In the momentum range between [MATH], the spectrum has a concave shape in double-logarithmic representation, i.e. it is a decreasing function with energy in the GeV/TeV energy regime.', '1001.5023-2-53-10': 'This is quantified by the momentum dependent spectral index (shown in the lower panel of Fig. [REF]) which ranges from [MATH] at energies above a GeV to [MATH] around 100 TeV.', '1001.5023-2-53-11': 'This spectral shape is a consequence of the cosmological Mach number distribution that is mapped onto the CR spectrum .', '1001.5023-2-53-12': 'This mapping depends on the shock acceleration efficiency as a function of shock strength as well as on the property of the transport of CRs into galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-53-13': 'Nevertheless, we can easily understand the qualitative features: the typical shocks responsible for CR acceleration are stronger at higher redshift since they encounter the cold unshocked inter-galactic medium.', '1001.5023-2-53-14': 'This implies the build-up of a hard CR population.', '1001.5023-2-53-15': 'Since the forming objects have been smaller in a hierarchically growing Universe, their gravity sources smaller accretion velocities which results in smaller shock velocities, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-53-16': 'Hence the energy flux through the shock surfaces, [MATH], that will be dissipated is much smaller than for shocks today.', '1001.5023-2-53-17': 'This causes a lower normalization of this hard CR population.', '1001.5023-2-53-18': 'With increasing cosmic time, more energy is dissipated in weaker shocks which results in a softer injection spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-53-19': 'Despite the lower acceleration efficiency, the normalization of the injected CR population is larger that that of the older flat CR population which yields an overall concave spectral curvature.', '1001.5023-2-53-20': 'We will study the details of the CR acceleration and transport that leads to that particular spectrum in a forthcoming paper (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-53-21': 'There is a diffusive break in the spectrum at high momenta where the spectral index steepens by 0.3.', '1001.5023-2-53-22': 'The CRs above these energies can diffusively escape from the cluster within a Hubble time.', '1001.5023-2-53-23': 'The particular value of the steepening assumes that the CRs scatter off Kolmogorov turbulence.', '1001.5023-2-53-24': 'Using twice the virial radius of each cluster, we find that the diffusive break varies between the momenta [MATH], dependent on the characteristic size of a cluster (equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-54-0': 'We now turn to the question on how universal is our CR spectrum within a cluster.', '1001.5023-2-54-1': 'In Fig. [REF] we find that the intrinsic scatter of our CR spectra within a cluster is larger than the scatter among clusters.', '1001.5023-2-54-2': 'The reason being that formation shocks are intermittent as mass is accreted in clumps an not continuously.', '1001.5023-2-54-3': 'Hence there is a high intrinsic variance of the CR spectrum for similar fluid elements that end up in the same galaxy cluster.', '1001.5023-2-54-4': 'However, averaging over all fluid elements that accrete onto a galaxy cluster results in a very similar spectrum since different galaxy cluster experience on average the same formation history.', '1001.5023-2-54-5': 'We note that the spectral variance of g72a is representative for all the CR spectra in our sample.', '1001.5023-2-55-0': 'We study the radial dependence of the CR spectrum for g72a at the bottom of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-55-1': 'Inside the cluster, the spectral shape does not strongly depend on the radius.', '1001.5023-2-55-2': 'This is a crucial finding as it enables us to separate the spectral and the spatial part of the CR distribution.', '1001.5023-2-55-3': 'The level of particle-by-particle variance is similar to that of the total cluster spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-55-4': 'Also noticeable is the increasing low-momentum cutoff [MATH] as we approach the denser cluster center.', '1001.5023-2-55-5': 'This is due to enhanced Coulomb losses and to a lesser extent increased adiabatic compression that the CR distribution experienced when it was transported there.', '1001.5023-2-55-6': 'Outside the cluster g72a, for radii [MATH], we observe a considerably steeper CR spectrum at CR energies of [MATH]>[MATH] TeV compared to the cluster region.', '1001.5023-2-55-7': 'We note that this behavior is not universal and we observe a large scatter of the CR spectral indices among our cluster sample at these large radii.', '1001.5023-2-55-8': 'This behavior might be caused by the recent dynamical activity of the cluster under consideration but a detailed characterization goes beyond the scope of this work and will be postponed (Pinzke Pfrommer, in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-56-0': '## The spatial distribution of CRs', '1001.5023-2-57-0': 'We have shown that the CR spectrum is separable in a spectral and spatial part.', '1001.5023-2-57-1': 'To this end, we quantify the spatial part of the CR spectrum by taking the volume weighted CR spectrum in each radial bin [MATH] (see Section [REF] in the appendix for derivation), [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-57-2': 'Here we assume [MATH], the subscripts M and V denote mass- and volume weighted quantities, respectively, and we introduced the dimensionless normalization of the CR spectrum, [EQUATION] where [MATH] is the CR number density.', '1001.5023-2-57-3': 'We now have to take into account physical effects that shape the profile of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-57-4': 'Those include acceleration of CRs at structure formation shocks, the subsequent adiabatic transport of CRs during the formation of the halos as well as non-adiabatic CR cooling processes; primarily hadronic interactions.', '1001.5023-2-57-5': 'At the same time we have to consider the assembly of the thermal plasma and CRs within the framework of structure formation that is dominated by CDM.', '1001.5023-2-57-6': 'Hierarchical structure formation predicts a difference in the halo formation time depending on the halo mass, i.e. smaller halos form earlier when the average mass density of the Universe was higher.', '1001.5023-2-57-7': 'This leads to more concentrated density profiles for smaller halo masses; an effect that breaks the scale invariance of the dark matter halo profile .', '1001.5023-2-57-8': 'The central core part is assembled in a regime of fast accretion .', '1001.5023-2-57-9': 'This violent formation epoch should have caused the CRs to be adiabatically compressed.', '1001.5023-2-57-10': 'In the further evolution, some cluster have been able to develop a cool core which additionally could have caused the CRs to be adiabatically contracted.', '1001.5023-2-57-11': 'On larger scales, the gas distribution follows that of dark matter (at least in the absence of violent merging events that could separate both components for time scales that are of order of the dynamical time).', '1001.5023-2-57-12': 'On these scales, the CR number density roughly traces the gas distribution .', '1001.5023-2-57-13': 'Overall, we expect the spatial CR density profile relative to that of the gas density to scale with the cluster mass.', '1001.5023-2-57-14': 'If non-adiabatic CR transport processes have a sufficiently weak impact, these considerations would predict flatter [MATH]-profiles in larger halos as these halos are less concentrated.', '1001.5023-2-58-0': 'Our goal is to characterize the trend of [MATH]-profiles with cluster mass and to test whether we can dissect a universal spatial CR profile.', '1001.5023-2-58-1': 'To this end, we adopt a phenomenological profile that allows for enough freedom to capture these features as accurately as possible.', '1001.5023-2-58-2': 'Hence, we parametrize [MATH] with shape parameters that include a flat central region given by [MATH], a transition region where the location is denoted by [MATH] and the steepness by [MATH], and finally a flat outer region denoted by [MATH], through the equation [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-58-3': 'The core regions in our radiative simulations show too much cooling, and we possibly lack of important CR physics such as anisotropic CR diffusion that could smooth out any strong inhomogeneity at the center.', '1001.5023-2-58-4': 'Hence we adopt a conservative limit of the central profile value of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-59-0': 'In the top panel of Fig. [REF] we show the mean of the [MATH] profiles from the cluster simulation sample.', '1001.5023-2-59-1': 'We subdivide or sample in two different mass intervals: large mass clusters (top red), and small mass clusters (bottom blue), in the mass range [MATH], and [MATH], respectively.', '1001.5023-2-59-2': 'The error-bars show the standard deviation from sample mean and the solid lines the best fit that will be discussed in more detail in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-59-3': 'The [MATH] profile of our large mass clusters is almost flat and shows only a very weak radial dependence.', '1001.5023-2-59-4': 'In contrast, the [MATH] profile of our small clusters has a rather steep and long transition region and is increasing towards the center.', '1001.5023-2-59-5': 'The difference in normalization, transition width, and transition radius between low mass and large mass clusters indeed suggests that [MATH] scales with the cluster mass in a way that we anticipated.', '1001.5023-2-59-6': 'We quantify the mass scaling of these shape parameters by a power-law fit to the small and large clusters in the three lower panels of Fig. [REF]: the value of [MATH] in the asymptotically flat regime in the cluster periphery, [MATH] (top); the transition radius, [MATH] (middle); and the steepness of the transition, [MATH] (bottom).', '1001.5023-2-59-7': 'As expected, we find that all three quantities increase slowly with mass.', '1001.5023-2-59-8': 'We additionally show the values of [MATH] at [MATH] for each cluster (black crosses).', '1001.5023-2-59-9': 'Within the scatter, these values are consistent with the mass scaling found by the profile fits in our two cluster mass bins.', '1001.5023-2-59-10': 'We have shown that there exists an almost universal spatial CR profile after taking into account the weak trends of the [MATH] profile with cluster mass.', '1001.5023-2-59-11': 'Note that the particle-by-particle variance of the spatial CR profile within a cluster (that we address in Section [REF] in the appendix) additionally supports the conclusion of a universal spatial CR profile.', '1001.5023-2-60-0': '## A semi-analytic model for the spatial and spectral CR distribution', '1001.5023-2-61-0': 'In our simulations we use a CR spectral description which follows five different CR proton populations; each being represented by a single power-law.', '1001.5023-2-61-1': 'The CR populations are chosen such that we accurately can capture the total CR spectrum in the entire momentum space (a convergence study on the number of CR populations is presented in the appendix [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-61-2': 'We want to model this spectrum analytically with as few CR populations as possible, but at the same time preserve the functional form of a power-law of each population.', '1001.5023-2-61-3': 'In that way we can easily obtain the total CR spectrum by superposition and apply a simple analytic formula to estimate the induced radiative processes.', '1001.5023-2-62-0': 'In detail, we use a total CR proton spectrum [MATH] that is obtained by summing over the individual CR populations [MATH] (equation [REF]); each being a power-law in particle momentum with the total CR amplitude [MATH], [EQUATION] where we assume universal spectral shape throughout the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-62-1': 'The normalization of [MATH] depends on maximum shock acceleration efficiency [MATH], where [MATH] and [MATH] (functional will be studied in Pfrommer in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-62-2': 'Denoting the amplitude of each CR population by [MATH], where the number of spectral bins might be different from the five chosen in the simulations, we construct the relative normalization for each CR population [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-62-3': 'Here we have assumed that [MATH] is only a weak function of radius.', '1001.5023-2-62-4': 'This is explicitly shown in Fig. [REF], where the functional form is almost independent of the radius.', '1001.5023-2-62-5': 'The two energy breaks in the CR spectrum are represented by [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-62-6': 'The first term in equation ([REF]) ensures the low-momentum slope [MATH] as appropriate from the phase space volume that is populated by CRs and the last term accounts for diffusive losses of CRs that steepen the spectrum by [MATH] assuming Kolmogorov turbulence.', '1001.5023-2-62-7': 'The shape parameter [MATH] determines the size of the transition in momentum space.', '1001.5023-2-62-8': 'Our choice of [MATH] ensures a fast transition from one regime to the other.', '1001.5023-2-62-9': 'The low-momentum break [MATH] is determined to [MATH] from Fig. [REF], and the high-momentum break [MATH] is derived from equation ([REF]).', '1001.5023-2-63-0': 'To capture the spectral universality of our cluster sample, we fit in Fig. [REF] the median of our cluster sample of the CR spectrum with a triple power-law function.', '1001.5023-2-63-1': 'Because we normalize the spectrum at [MATH], this ensures that the normalized spectrum [MATH] becomes independent of radius (cf. equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-63-2': 'The triple power-law fit represented by the blue line in the upper panel of Fig. [REF] resulted in [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-63-3': 'The data from the simulation is denoted by black crosses, together with the 68 percentiles spread shown by the light blue area.', '1001.5023-2-63-4': 'In the lower panel, we show the relative difference between the simulation and the fit which indicates a difference of less than two percent from the GeV to PeV energy regime.', '1001.5023-2-64-0': 'The spatial part of the CR spectrum is derived from the fit to the mean [MATH] in the top panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-64-1': 'The solid lines show the best fit to [MATH] using equation ([REF]).', '1001.5023-2-64-2': 'We find that the central value [MATH] is the most conservative value that still provides a good fit for both mass intervals.', '1001.5023-2-64-3': 'Note that there is a large uncertainty in this value due to insufficient data in the center, implying that it should be treated as a lower limit.', '1001.5023-2-64-4': 'However, the gamma-ray flux depends only weakly on the exact value of [MATH] since most of the flux reside from the region outside the transition region.', '1001.5023-2-64-5': 'The mass dependence of [MATH] is quantified in the three lower panels of Fig. [REF], where we fit a power-law in mass for the normalization [MATH] (top), the transition radius [MATH] (middle), and the steepness of the transition region [MATH] (bottom).', '1001.5023-2-64-6': 'We obtain the following relations, [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-65-0': '# Semi-analytic model for the [MATH]-ray emission', '1001.5023-2-66-0': 'In this section we derive a semi-analytic formula for the integrated [MATH]-ray source function that is based on our semi-analytic CR distribution.', '1001.5023-2-66-1': 'Using the gas density profile of the cluster along with its virial radius and mass, this formula enables us to predict the dominating [MATH]-decay induced [MATH]-ray emission from that cluster.', '1001.5023-2-66-2': 'The density profiles can either be inferred from simulations or from X-ray data.', '1001.5023-2-66-3': 'To test the semi-analytic source function, we use density profiles from our cluster simulations.', '1001.5023-2-66-4': 'We also make [MATH]-ray flux predictions for the Coma and Perseus cluster using their true density profiles as inferred from X-ray observations.', '1001.5023-2-67-0': '## Schematic overview and semi-analytic formulae', '1001.5023-2-68-0': 'In Fig. [REF] we show a schematic overview of the simulated CR spectrum and the integrated source function together with the mapping to our semi-analytic model.', '1001.5023-2-68-1': 'From the cluster simulations we derive the CR spectrum [MATH] describing the phase space density of CRs.', '1001.5023-2-68-2': 'When taking the spherical (volume weighted) average of [MATH], we obtain [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-3': 'We fit the spectral and spatial part of this function separately.', '1001.5023-2-68-4': 'The semi-analytic model for the CR distribution in clusters that we provide in equation ([REF]) can now be used to predict the secondary radio synchrotron emission and the hadronically induced neutrino and [MATH]-ray emission from galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-68-5': 'Following the formalism in [CITATION], we obtain the volume weighted and energy integrated and omnidirectional (i.e integrated over the [MATH] solid angle) [MATH]-ray source function due to pion decay, [EQUATION] where the sum extends over our three CR populations, [MATH] is given by equations ([REF]), ([REF]) - ([REF]), while [MATH] and [MATH] are provided by equation ([REF]) and we introduced an auxiliary variable [MATH] for dimensional reasons to ensure that [MATH] is dimensionless.', '1001.5023-2-68-6': 'In equation ([REF]) we have also have introduced the abbreviation [EQUATION] where [MATH] denotes the incomplete Beta-function, we have used that the number density of target nucleons is the sum of hydrogen [MATH] and helium [MATH] number densities, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-7': 'The shape parameter [MATH] allows us to accurately predict the emission close to the pion bump in combination with the effective inelastic cross-section for proton-proton interactions, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-8': 'In addition we have a term, similar to equation ([REF]) that describes the diffusive CR losses due to escaping protons from the cluster at the equivalent photon energy for the break, [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-9': 'It is derived from [MATH] of equation ([REF]), [EQUATION] where [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-10': 'Finally we note that the semi-analytic [MATH]-ray model is derived within [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-68-11': 'Applying the model to the region outside [MATH], but within [MATH], would increase the [MATH]-ray flux by less than [MATH] for small mass clusters and less than [MATH] for large mass clusters (cf. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-69-0': 'For convenience and completeness, we provide here the differential [MATH]-ray source function for pion decay , [EQUATION] where [MATH] (see equation [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-69-1': 'The exact shape of [MATH] depends on the detailed physics of CR diffusion and the characteristics of turbulence and is subject to future studies.', '1001.5023-2-69-2': 'We note, however, that the break does not interfere with the energy range of current [MATH]-ray observatories.', '1001.5023-2-70-0': '## Comparing our semi-analytic model to simulations', '1001.5023-2-71-0': 'To test our semi-analytic [MATH]-ray model we contrast it with numerically calculated radial profiles and spectra.', '1001.5023-2-71-1': 'In the upper panel of Fig. [REF], we compare the radial profile of our semi-analytic [MATH]-ray source function (equation [REF]) at 100 MeV to a numerical emission profile for two representative clusters, a large post-merging cluster g72a, and a small CC cluster g914.', '1001.5023-2-71-2': 'The numerical profile has been obtained by means of calculating the [MATH]-ray source function [MATH] of every SPH particle and volume weighting the resulting radial profile.', '1001.5023-2-71-3': 'The overall shape of the radial profiles of [MATH] for different clusters are quite similar.', '1001.5023-2-71-4': 'This is because the main spatial dependence originates from the gas density, that enters with a square in [MATH] and has a small scatter across the cluster sample.', '1001.5023-2-71-5': 'The different behavior in the cluster centers stems from the steeper profile of [MATH] for low mass clusters.', '1001.5023-2-71-6': 'We show the difference between the integrated source functions from our simulations and the semi-analytic model in more detail in the lower panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-71-7': 'In both clusters, we see an excellent agreement with differences amounting to less than 20-30 percent at any radius.', '1001.5023-2-71-8': 'These differences are representative for our cluster sample, which is indicated by the median difference across our cluster sample together with the 68 percentiles that show a spread similar to the difference in these two clusters.', '1001.5023-2-71-9': 'Since these are fluctuating differences, they average partly away when we perform the volume integral.', '1001.5023-2-71-10': 'Hence we obtain an agreement of the total flux within the virial radius - obtained directly from the simulations and in our semi-analytic model - that is better than 5 per cent for the two representative clusters that are shown.', '1001.5023-2-71-11': 'This indicates that our semi-analytic description manages to capture the CR physics, that is important for [MATH]-ray emission from clusters, surprisingly well.', '1001.5023-2-72-0': 'We show the [MATH]-ray spectrum of the [MATH]-decay emission weighted by energy for g72a and g914 in the upper panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-72-1': 'Both clusters have very similar spectra with the exception of the diffusive steepening that is inherited from the proton spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-72-2': 'Since the break of the proton spectrum scales as [MATH] with the virial mass of the cluster (equation [REF]), the break in the pion decay spectrum is reduced by a factor of [MATH] for the smaller cluster g914.', '1001.5023-2-72-3': 'The solid and dotted lines contrast the simulated spectrum to that obtained from our semi-analytic model.', '1001.5023-2-72-4': 'The difference between these two approaches amounts to less than 20 percent for both clusters in the GeV and TeV band (shown in the lower panel).', '1001.5023-2-72-5': 'The flux differences between our semi-analytic model and the simulations for individual clusters are about a factor two smaller compared to the scatter in the the mass-luminosity scaling relations for a given cluster (see e.g. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-72-6': 'The reason for the more accurate predictions within our semi-analytic formalism is a direct consequence of the essential additional spatial information of the gas and CR density that we account for.', '1001.5023-2-73-0': '## Predicting the [MATH]-ray emission from Perseus and Coma', '1001.5023-2-74-0': 'Here we demonstrate how our semi-analytic formalism can be applied to predict the [MATH]-ray flux and surface brightness from real clusters using their electron density profile as inferred from X-ray measurements.', '1001.5023-2-74-1': 'The predicted flux and surface brightness are then compared to current upper limits and previous work.', '1001.5023-2-75-0': 'The two clusters that we investigate are two of the brightest X-ray clusters in the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue - a sample of the brightest X-ray clusters observed by ROSAT - namely Coma and Perseus.', '1001.5023-2-75-1': 'Both Coma and Perseus are well studied clusters, where Coma is a large post-merging cluster while Perseus is a somewhat smaller cluster that hosts a massive cooling flow and is the brightest X-ray cluster known .', '1001.5023-2-75-2': 'In Table [REF] we show the data for respective cluster.', '1001.5023-2-75-3': 'Using the electron number density profile, we can calculate the gas density profile of the cluster through [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-75-4': 'Here denote [MATH] the primordial hydrogen (H) mass fraction, and the ratio of electron and hydrogen number densities in the fully ionized ICM is given by [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-75-5': 'For sufficiently small angular scales, the [MATH]-ray flux within the radius [MATH] of a disk of angular radius [MATH] (measured in radians and centered at [MATH]) is calculated by [EQUATION] where [MATH] is given by equation ([REF]) and we introduced the definition for the [MATH]-ray surface brightness [MATH] in the last step.', '1001.5023-2-75-6': 'As a consistency check, we compare the flux ratios from X-rays [MATH] to that of [MATH]-rays as predicted by our semi-analytic model, [MATH] and find excellent agreement within one percent.', '1001.5023-2-76-0': '### Comparison to upper limits in the GeV/TeV regime', '1001.5023-2-77-0': 'We calculate the [MATH]-ray fluxes for Coma and Perseus above 100 MeV and 100 GeV that is emitted within [MATH] (see Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-77-1': 'Comparing the 100 MeV-flux in our model to the EGRET upper limit on the Coma (Perseus) cluster , we find that it falls short of our semi-analytic prediction by a factor of about 9 (2.5).', '1001.5023-2-77-2': 'With the two-year data by Fermi, this upper limit on Coma will improve considerably and is expected to become competitive with our predictions.', '1001.5023-2-77-3': 'With this at hand, we will be able to put important constraints on the adopted CR physics in our simulations.', '1001.5023-2-77-4': 'In particular, we can test our assumptions about the maximum shock acceleration efficiency at structure formation shocks.', '1001.5023-2-77-5': 'Since Fermi detected [MATH]-rays from the central cD galaxy in Perseus, NGC1275, at a level that is about five times higher than the EGRET upper limits, this indicates that the source is variable on time scales of years to decades .', '1001.5023-2-77-6': 'Hence it restricts and complicates the detectability of the extended pion-day emission that might be buried underneath.', '1001.5023-2-78-0': 'In the TeV regime, we integrate our model prediction within a solid angle that is comparable to the point-spread function of IACTs.', '1001.5023-2-78-1': 'The best current upper limit for Coma () falls short of our semi-analytic prediction by a factor 20.', '1001.5023-2-78-2': 'The best current upper flux limit for Perseus (using a spectral index of -2.2, ) is only a factor of two larger than our flux prediction and clearly within reach of future deeper TeV observations.', '1001.5023-2-78-3': 'This demonstrates the huge potential of nearby CC clusters to detect non-thermal [MATH]-ray emission as suggested by [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-79-0': '### Surface brightness profile', '1001.5023-2-80-0': 'To explain the large difference in flux between Coma and Perseus we show the surface brightness as a function of the viewing angle [MATH] in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-80-1': 'The dense cooling core region of Perseus provides ample target material for two-body interactions such as bremsstrahlung or hadronic CR interactions which boosts the luminosities likewise.', '1001.5023-2-80-2': 'This results in a large increase in flux compared to the average cluster of similar mass that are characterized by mass-luminosity scaling relations (see e.g. Table [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-80-3': 'Assigning a flux to a cluster that is consistent with the scaling relations should be a very conservative approach for CC clusters.', '1001.5023-2-80-4': 'The half flux radius for Perseus (Coma) is [MATH] deg (0.18 deg).', '1001.5023-2-80-5': 'It is shown with dotted lines in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-80-6': 'Since these [MATH] values are comparable to the angular scale of the point spread functions of IACTs (0.1-0.2 degrees) both clusters are suitable candidate sources.', '1001.5023-2-80-7': 'The dashed and dotted-dashed lines are obtained by using the semi-analytic formalism from [CITATION] to predict the surface brightness from the Coma cluster above the energy 100 MeV and 100 GeV, respectively.', '1001.5023-2-80-8': 'See Section [REF] for a detailed comparison to their result.', '1001.5023-2-81-0': '## CR-to-thermal pressure and temperature profile in Perseus and Coma', '1001.5023-2-82-0': 'A quantity that is of great theoretical interest is the CR pressure relative to the thermal pressure, [MATH] as it directly assesses the CR bias of hydrostatic cluster masses where the CR pressure enters in the equation of motion.', '1001.5023-2-82-1': 'Since [MATH] in the external cluster regions, we have to accurately model the temperature profile of our clusters.', '1001.5023-2-82-2': 'Note, however, that this relation should only hold for regions with long thermal cooling times compared to the dynamical time scale.', '1001.5023-2-82-3': 'In particular it breaks down towards the center of a cooling flow cluster where the thermal gas cools on a shorter time scale such that the forming cooling flow causes adiabatic contraction of the CR population.', '1001.5023-2-82-4': 'We model the central regions of Coma and Perseus according to X-ray observations by [CITATION] and [CITATION], respectively.', '1001.5023-2-82-5': 'These observations are not sensitive to the outer temperature profile due to the high particle background for XMM-Newton and Chandra.', '1001.5023-2-82-6': 'X-ray observations of somewhat more distant cluster sample show a universal declining temperature profile outside the cooling core region up to [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-82-7': 'We model this behavior of the temperature profiles towards the cluster periphery according to cosmological cluster simulations by [CITATION] and obtain a function [MATH] that accounts for the decreasing temperature profile outside the core region.', '1001.5023-2-82-8': 'It is unity in the center and then smoothly decreases until the virial radius beyond which we expect the spherical approximation to break down and where the cluster accretion shocks should introduce breaks in the temperature profile.', '1001.5023-2-82-9': 'This function can be multiplied to existing central temperature profiles to yield the temperature profiles for Coma and Perseus, [EQUATION] where [MATH] can be obtained from Table [REF].', '1001.5023-2-82-10': 'The density and temperature profiles for Coma and Perseus are shown in the first two panels of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-83-0': 'In the previous sections, we have seen that the [MATH]-ray surface brightness is a radially declining function and so is the CR pressure.', '1001.5023-2-83-1': 'In contrast, outside the central cooling core regions, the CR-to-thermal pressure [MATH] increases with radius as can be seen in the bottom panel of Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-83-2': 'This increase is entirely driven by the decreasing temperature profile.', '1001.5023-2-83-3': 'The two [MATH]-profiles for Coma and Perseus show our expectations for a typical non-CC and CC cluster.', '1001.5023-2-83-4': 'The [MATH]-profile in a CC cluster shows an additional enhancement towards the cluster center which results from the centrally enhanced CR number density due to adiabatic contraction during the formation of the cooling flow.', '1001.5023-2-83-5': 'During this process, the thermal gas cools on a short time scale compared to that of the CRs which causes an increase in density and hence adiabatic compression of the CRs.', '1001.5023-2-83-6': 'We note that the overall normalization of [MATH] depends on the normalization of the CR distribution that itself is set by the maximum shock acceleration efficiency.', '1001.5023-2-83-7': 'The overall shape of [MATH], however, should remain invariant since CRs are adiabatically transported into the cluster (, Pfrommer in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-84-0': 'While the overall characteristics of [MATH] in our semi-analytical model is similar to that obtained in cosmological simulations , there are some noticeable differences particularly in the central cooling core region around the cD galaxy of these clusters.', '1001.5023-2-84-1': 'Again this can be traced back to known short-comings of modeling the physics in the central regions correctly in current simulations such as to include AGN feedback and anisotropic conduction in combination with magneto-hydrodynamics.', '1001.5023-2-84-2': 'This also leads to different simulated temperature profiles in the center compared to those inferred from X-ray observations and explains the discrepancy in the [MATH]-profiles.', '1001.5023-2-84-3': 'The volume average of the CR-to-thermal pressure for Coma and Perseus is [MATH], dominated by the region around the virial radius.', '1001.5023-2-84-4': 'These values assume an optimistic saturation value of the shock acceleration efficiency of [MATH] and decrease accordingly if this value is not realized at the relevant structure formation shocks responsible for the CRs in clusters.', '1001.5023-2-85-0': '# High-energy scaling relations', '1001.5023-2-86-0': 'We now discuss the scaling relations of the numerical [MATH]-ray emission from clusters and analyze their dependence on dynamical state, emission region and address the bias of galaxies to the total luminosity.', '1001.5023-2-86-1': 'The cluster scaling relations are derived by integrating the surface brightness map of each cluster.', '1001.5023-2-86-2': 'By fitting the total [MATH]-ray emission of the 14 clusters in our cluster sample with a power-law, we determine the mass-to-luminosity scaling.', '1001.5023-2-87-0': 'In the preceding sections we have shown that the pion decay emission dominates the total [MATH]-ray emission but we have not addressed the question, which radii contribute most to the luminosity?', '1001.5023-2-87-1': 'To answer this, we have to consider the [MATH]-ray luminosity resulting from pion decay within a radius [MATH], [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-87-2': 'For the purpose of this simple argument, we neglected the very weak spatial dependence of the CR distribution which is described by [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-87-3': 'The [MATH]-ray luminosity [MATH] is dominated by the region around the scale radius [MATH] which can be seen by considering the contribution to [MATH] per logarithmic radius, [EQUATION]', '1001.5023-2-87-4': 'Here we assumed a central plateau of the density profile which steepens beyond the scale radius [MATH] and approaches the asymptotic slope of [MATH] of the dark matter profile that shapes the gas distribution at large radii .', '1001.5023-2-87-5': 'This radial behavior makes the simulated [MATH]-ray luminosity only weakly dependent on uncertainties from the incomplete physical modelling of feedback processes in the cluster cores.', '1001.5023-2-88-0': '## Contribution of different [MATH]-ray emission processes', '1001.5023-2-89-0': 'Figure [REF] shows the scaling relations of the IC and pion decay emission for two different energy scales of interest to the Fermi [MATH]-ray space telescope and imaging air Cerenkov telescopes.', '1001.5023-2-89-1': 'We compare the total emission and the contribution from the individual emission components of each cluster.', '1001.5023-2-89-2': 'The very similar slopes of the mass-to-luminosity scaling relation at both energies (Table [REF]) is a consequence of the small variance in the proton spectrum (Fig [REF]) among different galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-89-3': 'The individual emission processes also show similar slopes, with small scatter for the pion decay emission and sIC component.', '1001.5023-2-89-4': 'Contrary, the pIC emission has a larger scatter than the secondary emission components due to the different dynamical states: the presence of strong merger or accretion shocks is critical for the generation of primary CR electrons and the associated radiative emission.', '1001.5023-2-90-0': 'The ratio of the pion decay to the pIC emission in the 100 MeV and 100 GeV regime is very similar.', '1001.5023-2-90-1': 'This is partly a coincidence and owed to our particular choice of the two energy bands: the effective spectral index of the pion decay between these two energies is flattened due the pion bump.', '1001.5023-2-90-2': 'It happens to be similar to the power-law index of the pIC component which itself is unaffected by the energy cutoff of the electron spectrum at these energies.', '1001.5023-2-90-3': 'If we chose a smaller (larger) value than 100 MeV for the lower energy band, we would obtain a lower (higher) pion-to-pIC ratio due to the steeper intrinsic spectrum of the CR protons at lower energies (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-91-0': '## [MATH]-ray emission from individual galaxies', '1001.5023-2-92-0': 'We investigate the bias of galaxies to the scaling relation of the [MATH]-ray luminosity above 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-92-1': 'The top panel shows the total [MATH]-ray emission, where the presence of galaxies biases smaller mass clusters slightly more compared to their larger analogues, with an average bias of about a factor two across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-2-92-2': 'Masking galaxies reduces the overall scatter in the scaling relations, particularly at low masses.', '1001.5023-2-92-3': 'In the lower panel, we show the contribution from individual emission components.', '1001.5023-2-92-4': 'The largest bias originates from the pion decay (blue triangles) and the sIC emission (green circles), while the pIC component (red diamonds) is barely affected by this masking procedure since it does not scale with density.', '1001.5023-2-93-0': '## [MATH]-ray emission from the cluster periphery and WHIM', '1001.5023-2-94-0': 'In this section we study the dependence of the accretion region around clusters on [MATH]-ray scaling relations.', '1001.5023-2-94-1': 'Specifically, we compare the total [MATH]-ray emission within [MATH] to the emission within [MATH] which hosts the WHIM and individual satellite galaxies (and groups) that have not yet accreted onto the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-95-0': 'From Fig. [REF] it is clear that the total luminosity is dominated from the region inside [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-95-1': 'For small clusters, the flux-correction from the WHIM is of the order of 30 percent which the correction is smaller for massive systems - below 10 percent.', '1001.5023-2-95-2': 'This stems from the fact that the emission of low mass systems with smaller potential wells is easier to perturb - through accreting clumps of matter or nearby satellite systems.', '1001.5023-2-95-3': 'The pIC component contributes a factor [MATH] more in the WHIM than within [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-95-4': 'The reason being that especially for merging systems, the pIC profile is rather flat (see Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-95-5': 'Hence it contributes substantially to WHIM luminosity, whereas the density dependent secondary components in the WHIM are negligible due to the low gas densities.', '1001.5023-2-95-6': 'Only satellite systems within the WHIM contribute at a low level to the secondary components.', '1001.5023-2-95-7': 'This effect is especially pronounced when galaxies are excluded and implies that the pIC component becomes comparable to the pion decay emission for a few low mass clusters.', '1001.5023-2-95-8': 'Note that in the TeV regime, the pIC is considerably suppressed due to the limited maximum energy of the primary CR electrons which reduces that effect in the WHIM.', '1001.5023-2-96-0': '# Prediction of the [MATH]-ray emission from nearby galaxy clusters', '1001.5023-2-97-0': 'We use the mass-to-luminosity scaling relations as derived in Section [REF] in combinations with the virial masses of galaxy clusters of the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue - the "HIghest X-ray FLUx Galaxy Cluster Sample" from the ROSAT all-sky survey - to predict their [MATH]-ray emission.', '1001.5023-2-97-1': 'In Fig. [REF], we show the [MATH]-ray flux for radii [MATH] and energies above 100 MeV and 100 GeV, as a function of the identifier (ID) in the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue.', '1001.5023-2-97-2': 'We specifically name those clusters that have a flux (in our optimistic model) which is larger than the sensitivity of the Fermi all-sky survey after two years of data taking.', '1001.5023-2-97-3': 'We find that the brightest clusters in [MATH]-rays are Virgo, Ophiuchus, Coma, Perseus and Fornax.', '1001.5023-2-97-4': 'This result agrees well with previous [MATH]-ray studies using galaxy clusters from the HIFLUGCS sample .', '1001.5023-2-98-0': 'Figure [REF] should serve as a starting point to identify promising sources for the [MATH]-ray experiment in question.', '1001.5023-2-98-1': 'In a realistic setting, we would have to include the instrumental response and the point-spread function to obtain the predicted detection significance for the model in question.', '1001.5023-2-98-2': 'We note that this procedure of using scaling relations does not take into account deviations of individual systems from the mean [MATH]-ray flux at a given cluster mass.', '1001.5023-2-98-3': 'One would rather have to model each system separately along the lines presented in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-99-0': 'To address the effect of source extension on the detection significance of Fermi, we compute the [MATH]-ray flux of each cluster within the Fermi equivalent angular resolution at 100 MeV in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-99-1': 'To this end, we interpolate the scaling relations in Table [REF] to the radius corresponding to the angular resolution of 3.5 deg.', '1001.5023-2-99-2': 'We limit the size of each source to [MATH] since there is negligible additional flux beyond this radius.', '1001.5023-2-99-3': 'For most clusters the flux is very similar to what we found in Fig. [REF] because of the similar mass to luminosity scaling relations for [MATH] and [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-100-0': '# Discussion and comparison to previous work', '1001.5023-2-101-0': '## Comparison to previous work on [MATH]-ray emission from clusters', '1001.5023-2-102-0': 'In support of the new instrumental capabilities in [MATH]-ray astronomy, several pioneering papers have appeared that simulate the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission from clusters.', '1001.5023-2-102-1': 'Here we make a comparison to some of those papers.', '1001.5023-2-103-0': 'Comparison to Pfrommer et al. - In the series of papers [CITATION] and [CITATION] simulate the same cluster sample as we do.', '1001.5023-2-103-1': 'In fact, our work represents an extension of these earlier works.', '1001.5023-2-103-2': 'Overall, our results are in continuity with their results.', '1001.5023-2-103-3': 'The differences emerge from the details of the CR physics, where they adopted a simplified description using a single CR population with a spectral index of 2.3.', '1001.5023-2-103-4': 'Hence they concentrated on the non-thermal radio emission as well as the [MATH]-ray emission at energies [MATH] MeV that depend only weakly on the particular value or even a running of the CR spectral index (as long as it is close to the true one).', '1001.5023-2-103-5': 'For the primary electron populations, a maximum electron injection efficiency of [MATH] was assumed.', '1001.5023-2-103-6': 'In addition, the bias from anomalous galaxies was not addressed.', '1001.5023-2-104-0': 'Comparing profiles of the total surface brightness above 100 MeV in our optimistic model with galaxies, shown in grey in Fig. [REF], to the brightness profiles in [CITATION], we find only very small differences.', '1001.5023-2-104-1': "These differences are caused by a combination of different binning and Poisson noise in the galaxies' spatial distribution which have a different realization due to our slightly modified CR description that changes the hydrodynamics.", '1001.5023-2-104-2': 'The largest difference is seen for the pIC component in the periphery of merging clusters and a consequence of the different values for the injection efficiency [MATH] adopted.', '1001.5023-2-104-3': 'In addition, we compare the mass to luminosity scaling relation above 100 MeV in our optimistic model (see Table [REF]) and find that they agree to the percent level with what was found in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-105-0': 'Comparison to Miniati et al. - There have been a series of pioneering papers simulating the non-thermal emission from clusters by numerically modelling discretized CR proton and electron spectra on top of Eulerian grid-based cosmological simulations .', '1001.5023-2-105-1': 'In contrast to our approach, these models neglected the hydrodynamic pressure of the CR component, were quite limited in their adaptive resolution capability, and they neglected dissipative gas physics including radiative cooling, star formation, and supernova feedback.', '1001.5023-2-105-2': 'Comparing the [MATH]-ray emission characteristics of the IC emission from primary CR electrons and hadronically generated secondary CR electrons as well as the pion decay [MATH]-rays, we confirm the qualitative picture of the emission characteristics of the different [MATH]-ray components put forward by these authors.', '1001.5023-2-105-3': 'However, we find important differences on smaller scales especially in cluster cores, the emission strength of the individual components and their spectra.', '1001.5023-2-106-0': 'We confirm that the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission ([MATH] MeV) from cluster cores is dominated by pion decays while at lower energies, the IC emission of secondary CR electrons takes over .', '1001.5023-2-106-1': 'We reproduce their finding that the [MATH]-ray emission in the virial regions of clusters and beyond in super-cluster regions is very inhomogeneous and stems in part from the IC emission of primary shock accelerated electrons.', '1001.5023-2-106-2': 'Contrarily to these authors, we find that the surface brightness of this emission component remains sub-dominant in projection compared to the hadronically induced emission components in the cluster core and that the pion decay completely dominates the high-energy [MATH]-ray emission of clusters above a few MeV (cf. Fig. [REF]).', '1001.5023-2-106-3': 'In addition we predict a pIC spectrum that is somewhat steeper with a photon index of [MATH] which resembles a steeper primary electron spectrum in our simulations compared to theirs.', '1001.5023-2-106-4': 'This points to on average weaker shocks that are responsible for the acceleration of primary CR electrons that dominate the pIC emission.', '1001.5023-2-106-5': 'This discrepancy of the pIC spectral index causes the discrepancy of the pIC flux at high [MATH]-ray energies.', '1001.5023-2-107-0': 'In the WHIM we find that the pIC emission dominates the total [MATH]-ray spectrum below about 100 MeV, and a comparable flux level of [MATH]-decay and pIC between 100 MeV and 1 TeV, where the [MATH]-decay takes over.', '1001.5023-2-107-1': 'This is in stark contrast to the finding of [CITATION], where the pIC is dominating the pion decay emission by a factor of about 10 or more over the entire [MATH]-ray energy band.', '1001.5023-2-107-2': 'We note that our [MATH]-ray fluxes from clusters are typically a factor of two smaller than the estimates given in [CITATION] which has important implications for the detectability of clusters by Fermi.', '1001.5023-2-108-0': 'There are several factors contributing to the mentioned discrepancies.', '1001.5023-2-108-1': '(1) Our simulations are Lagrangian in nature and hence adaptively resolve denser structures with a peak resolution of [MATH] kpc.', '1001.5023-2-108-2': 'In contrast, the cosmological simulations of [CITATION] have a fixed spatial resolution of [MATH] kpc which is too coarse to resolve the observationally accessible, dense central regions of clusters in this grid-based approach and underestimates CR cooling processes such as Coulomb and hadronic losses.', '1001.5023-2-108-3': 'It also cannot resolve the adiabatic compression of CRs into the core.', '1001.5023-2-108-4': '(2) [CITATION] identified shocks with Mach numbers in the range [MATH] as the most important in thermalizing the plasma.', '1001.5023-2-108-5': 'In contrast, [CITATION], [CITATION], and [CITATION] found that the Mach number distribution peaks in the range [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-108-6': 'This finding seems to be robust as different computational methods have been used which range from fixed and adaptive Eulerian grid codes to Lagrangian Tree-SPH codes.', '1001.5023-2-108-7': 'Since diffusive shock acceleration of CRs depends sensitively on the Mach number, this implies a more efficient CR injection in the simulations by [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-108-8': 'It also results in a flatter CR electron and CR ion spectrum compared to ours shown in Fig. [REF].', '1001.5023-2-108-9': 'Hence, the pIC emission of [CITATION] has a flatter photon index and a boosted flux.', '1001.5023-2-108-10': '(3) For the CR ion spectrum, [CITATION] uses only four momentum bins which is not enough to resolve the pion bump accurately.', '1001.5023-2-108-11': 'The large pion decay plateau which he found indicates a constant CR ion spectral index in this energy range.', '1001.5023-2-108-12': 'This is in contradiction to the concavely shaped CR spectrum that our cluster simulations show, where the shape is a consequence of the Mach number statistics and the adiabatic transport.', '1001.5023-2-108-13': 'The difference in the CR spectral shape is especially important for CR energies above 1 GeV, since those CRs give rise to the [MATH]-decay emission at energies above the pion bump.', '1001.5023-2-109-0': 'Comparison to Kushnir et al. - [CITATION] use a simple analytic model to follow the evolution of ICM CRs, accelerated in strong accretion shocks.', '1001.5023-2-109-1': 'Interestingly, their approach predicts similar characteristics for the pion decay emission, in particular its flux agrees with our prediction within a factor two.', '1001.5023-2-109-2': 'In contrast, their model predicts a high-energy [MATH]-ray flux of the pIC component that is approximately a factor of [MATH] larger than ours due to a different spectral description where they adopted a spectral index of 2.', '1001.5023-2-109-3': 'This, however, is in conflict with our simulated average spectral index of 2.3 that is a consequence of cluster assembly history (compare our Fig. [REF] with Fig. 3 in ).', '1001.5023-2-109-4': 'This finding, together with different adopted values for the electron injection efficiency and CR-to-thermal ratio, led them to the contradicting conclusion that the expected overall [MATH]-ray emission would be much more extended.', '1001.5023-2-109-5': 'We believe that their model would over-predict the amount of observed radio relic emission in clusters, in particular when considering magnetic field amplification at accretion shocks on a level that is only a fraction of what is observed in supernova remnant shocks .', '1001.5023-2-109-6': 'It can be easily seen that the different power-law indices are indeed the reason for the flux discrepancies by comparing the energy flux of electrons at 170 GeV which are responsible for IC photons at 100 MeV (assuming the up-scattering of CMB photons).', '1001.5023-2-109-7': 'Adopting our effective spectral injection index of primary electrons of [MATH] and assuming a post-shock temperature at a typical accretion shock of [MATH] keV, we find a flux ratio between their model and ours of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-110-0': 'We would like to compare their model predictions for the pion decay emission in more detail.', '1001.5023-2-110-1': 'To this end, we use a proton injection efficiency in their model of [MATH] for the comparison.', '1001.5023-2-110-2': 'In our simulations we use a maximum proton injection efficiency of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-110-3': 'The proton injection efficiency in our simulations is dynamical, and depends on the strength of the shocks.', '1001.5023-2-110-4': 'Since the cluster evolves with time and the majority of CRs are injected at higher redshift during the formation of clusters, the final CR pressure depends on the interesting interplay of the actual value of the shock injection efficiency and the successive CR transport.', '1001.5023-2-110-5': 'Using results from , we estimate an effective injection efficiency of approximately [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-110-6': 'We note, however, that their baseline model assumes [MATH], which will suppress the flux by a factor 10 in their model.', '1001.5023-2-110-7': 'We now contrast the [MATH]-ray flux predictions of the Coma and Perseus cluster of our semi-analytic model to the one worked out in [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-110-8': 'First we study the [MATH]-ray flux from Coma within [MATH] above 100 MeV where we find with their model a flux [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-110-9': 'This flux is only a factor two lower than what we predict for the pion decay emission from Coma.', '1001.5023-2-110-10': 'Turning to pIC, which play a much more important role for the total [MATH]-ray flux than the [MATH]-decay emission in their model, results in the flux [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-110-11': 'This is only a factor two below the EGRET upper limit and can be readily tested with the one-year data from Fermi.', '1001.5023-2-111-0': 'Studying fluxes in the TeV [MATH]-ray regime is also of great importance since it compares the spectral representation of the models.', '1001.5023-2-111-1': 'Using the analytic model of [CITATION], results in the flux [MATH] within [MATH] deg that is about a factor 10 below the upper limit for Coma set by HESS and only a factor two larger than the flux we predict for Coma.', '1001.5023-2-111-2': 'However, their result is most probably flawed by their too simplistic assumption for the CR spectral index of [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-111-3': 'If we use our universal concave shaped spectrum instead of their flat CR spectrum, we can show that their flux would decrease by a factor [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-112-0': 'Finally we study the surface brightness profiles from Coma and Perseus predicted by our semi-analytic model and compare it to theirs.', '1001.5023-2-112-1': 'The dashed and dotted-dashed lines in Fig. [REF] show their predictions for the Coma cluster above the energy 100 MeV and 100 GeV, respectively.', '1001.5023-2-112-2': 'Using their formalism we find a surface brightness above 100 MeV that is about a factor two smaller than what we predict.', '1001.5023-2-112-3': 'However, above 100 GeV our predictions are in better agreement.', '1001.5023-2-113-0': '## Limitations and future work', '1001.5023-2-114-0': 'The ideal CR formalism would trace the spectral energy evolution, as well as the spatial evolution of CRs, and at the same time time keep track of the dynamical non-liner coupling with magneto-hydrodynamics.', '1001.5023-2-114-1': 'In order to make cosmological simulations less expensive in computational power, we are forced to make compromises.', '1001.5023-2-114-2': 'The simplifying assumptions chosen, enable us to run cosmological simulations of the formation of galaxy clusters with the necessary resolution to resolve their cores.', '1001.5023-2-114-3': 'At the same time, these assumptions enable us to follow the CR physics self-consistently on top of the radiative gas physics.', '1001.5023-2-114-4': 'Here we outline our most severe limitations for computing the [MATH]-ray emission from clusters.', '1001.5023-2-115-0': 'In our simulations we neglect the effect of microscopic CR diffusion and CR streaming.', '1001.5023-2-115-1': 'The collisionless plasma forces CRs to stay predominantly on a given field line and to diffuse along it.', '1001.5023-2-115-2': 'The random walk of field lines cause initially closely confined CRs to be transported to larger scales which can be described as a diffusion process.', '1001.5023-2-115-3': 'In our model we assume the magnetic field to be tangled on scales smaller than those we are interested in, [MATH] kpc in the center and even larger scales outside.', '1001.5023-2-115-4': 'Hence, CRs are magnetically coupled to the thermal gas and advected alongside it.', '1001.5023-2-115-5': 'The diffusivity can be rewritten into a macroscopic advection term that we fully resolve in our Lagrangian SPH simulations by construction and a microscopic diffusivity.', '1001.5023-2-115-6': 'The advection term dominates over microscopic term, as the following estimate for the diffusivities shows: [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-115-7': 'Further work is needed to study microscopic anisotropic diffusion, in combination with self-consistent modelling of the magnetic fields.', '1001.5023-2-115-8': 'We also did not account for the injection of CRs by AGN or supernova remnants where the additional CRs would diffuses out of AGN-inflated bubbles or drive starburst winds that enrich the IGM.', '1001.5023-2-115-9': 'In addition we do not account for the feedback processes by AGN despite their importance for understanding the nature of the very X-ray luminous cool cores found in many clusters of galaxies.', '1001.5023-2-115-10': 'For further details we refer the reader to [CITATION].', '1001.5023-2-115-11': 'We postpone the study of the potential contribution of a population of re-accelerated electrons to the IC [MATH]-ray emission throughout this work: strong merger shocks and shear motions at the cluster periphery might inject hydrodynamic turbulence that cascades to smaller scales, feeds the MHD turbulence and eventually might be able to re-accelerate an aged CR electron population.', '1001.5023-2-115-12': 'Due to non-locality and intermittency of turbulence, this could partly smooth the very inhomogeneous primary emission component predominantly in the virial regions of clusters where simulations indicate a higher energy density in random motions.', '1001.5023-2-115-13': 'However, to study these effects, high-resolution AMR simulations are required that refine not only on the mass but also on some tracer for turbulence such as the dimensionless vorticity parameter .', '1001.5023-2-115-14': 'Our model for the diffusive shock acceleration assumes a featureless power-law for both, the proton and the electron acceleration, that is injected from the thermal distribution.', '1001.5023-2-115-15': 'The complete theoretical understanding of this mechanism is currently an active research topic that includes non-linear effects and magnetic field amplification .', '1001.5023-2-115-16': 'Phenomenologically, we believe that there are strong indications for the diffusive shock acceleration mechanism to be at work which come from observations of supernova remnants over a wide range of wavelengths from the radio, X-rays into the TeV [MATH]-rays as well as the bow shock of the Earth .', '1001.5023-2-115-17': 'Theoretical work suggests that the spectrum of CRs which is injected at strong shocks shows an intrinsic concave curvature: the feedback of the freshly accelerated and dynamically important CR pressure to the shock structure results in a weaker sub-shock that is proceeded by a smooth CR precursor extending into the upstream.', '1001.5023-2-115-18': 'Hence low-energy protons are only shock-compressed at the weaker sub-shock and experience a smaller density jump which results in a steeper low-energy spectrum (compared to the canonical value [MATH] from linear theory).', '1001.5023-2-115-19': 'In contrast, the Larmor radii of high-energy protons also sample the CR precursor and experience a much larger density contrast that results in a flatter high-energy spectrum with [MATH] .', '1001.5023-2-115-20': 'The low-energy part of the CR spectrum in clusters (as found in this work) should be unaffected since a softer population of CRs dominate there with [MATH] and non-linear effects are presumably negligible in this regime.', '1001.5023-2-115-21': 'However the high-energy part of the CR spectrum in clusters could become harder compared to what we found due to these non-linear effects.', '1001.5023-2-115-22': 'Future work will be dedicated to improve our model and to incorporate more elaborate plasma physical models and to study the uncertainty of our results with respect to the saturated value of our CR acceleration efficiency .', '1001.5023-2-115-23': 'An artificial surface tension effect limits the ability of SPH (in its standard conservative form) to follow the growth of boundary instabilities such as the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability at the interface of a dense and under-dense phase accurately, i.e. on the predicted linear growth time .', '1001.5023-2-115-24': 'In the context of galaxy cluster simulations, this only occurs at the interface of the ISM of individual galaxies and the ICM.', '1001.5023-2-115-25': 'This causes an unphysically long survival time of dense gaseous point sources after they got ram pressure/tidally stripped from their galactic halo - for simplicity, we call them "galaxies" and describe the physics in detail in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-115-26': 'In our paper, we decided to show our result for an optimistic model that includes all galaxies and one conservative model that cuts all galaxies.', '1001.5023-2-115-27': 'This is meant to bracket the realistic case.', '1001.5023-2-115-28': 'Also, the main result is based on our conservative model where we cut out the galaxies.', '1001.5023-2-115-29': 'In this way we circumvent these issues.', '1001.5023-2-116-0': '## Impact of these limitations on our results', '1001.5023-2-117-0': 'Generally, we acknowledge that the CR spatial distribution is more uncertain than the spectrum due to the details outlined in Section [REF].', '1001.5023-2-117-1': 'Below, we detail our considerations why we believe that the spectrum that we found is robust even when considering uncertainties such as additional CRs injected from AGN, re-acceleration of CRs at MHD turbulence, CR diffusion, and non-linear shock acceleration.', '1001.5023-2-117-2': 'We outline here the reasons in detail:', '1001.5023-2-118-0': 'Additional CRs injected from AGN.', '1001.5023-2-118-1': 'It is very uncertain whether AGN jets are powered hadronically or though Poynting flux .', '1001.5023-2-118-2': 'Irrespectively, the energetics of AGN are insufficient to account for a majority of CRs in clusters - in particular for the most massive systems (Thompson Pfrommer in prep.)', '1001.5023-2-119-0': 'CR re-acceleration through MHD turbulence.', '1001.5023-2-119-1': 'The involved physics is currently very uncertain such as the level and nature of turbulence in the ICM, how CRs exactly interact with plasma waves, how efficient this accelerates CRs, and whether a power-law extrapolation between the gyro radius of a CR, [MATH], and the scales accessible to current simulations with peak resolution of a few kpc is justified.', '1001.5023-2-119-2': 'Hence it appears that is is impossible to constrain the impact of turbulent re-acceleration on the CR spectrum in clusters self-consistently from first principles.', '1001.5023-2-119-3': 'However, in our Milky Way, we are able to understand the observed CR spectrum on Earth with [MATH] fairly well in terms of injection and transport.', '1001.5023-2-119-4': "CRs with an injected spectrum of [MATH] experience momentum dependent diffusion so that the more energetic particles can leave the system in a so-called 'leaky-box model'; an effect that accounts for the observed steepening .", '1001.5023-2-119-5': 'This leaves little room for spectral modifications through turbulent re-acceleration.', '1001.5023-2-119-6': 'Hypothesizing that the fundamental interactions of plasma waves with particles should not be very different in the ISM and ICM, we believe that we are safe to neglect this process to first order.', '1001.5023-2-119-7': 'Note, however, that this argument neglects possible important CR transport processes that might become important in the cluster environment due to the much longer CR life time compared to the ISM in our Galaxy.', '1001.5023-2-120-0': 'Spatial diffusion of CRs.', '1001.5023-2-120-1': 'If spatial CR diffusion is momentum dependent it will introduce a radial dependence in the shape of the CR spectrum since high energy CRs can diffuse out of the central regions faster.', '1001.5023-2-120-2': 'This, in turn, will affect the observed morphology and spectrum of all relevant non-thermal emission components, including gamma-rays from pion decay, IC from secondaries, and synchrotron emission.', '1001.5023-2-121-0': 'Non-linear shock acceleration.', '1001.5023-2-121-1': 'Since the CR spectrum at GeV-to-TeV energies is sufficiently steep, intermediate Mach number shocks are responsible for the acceleration of these CRs - with efficiencies there are modest (not in the saturated regime) so that the non-linear back-reaction is expected to be small or even negligible.', '1001.5023-2-122-0': 'Over-cooling problem.', '1001.5023-2-122-1': 'Due to the over-cooling problem, the modeling of cluster cores with radiative cooling but without any significant feedback process produces an unphysically high stellar mass fraction.', '1001.5023-2-122-2': 'This is not expected to impact the CR spectrum significantly.', '1001.5023-2-122-3': 'However, the effect on the CR morphology might be substantial and might depend on the details of the required feedback process.', '1001.5023-2-122-4': 'This can potentially impact the non-thermal cluster observables.', '1001.5023-2-122-5': 'Future work is needed to solve this problem.', '1001.5023-2-123-0': '# Conclusions', '1001.5023-2-124-0': 'In this paper we have simulated 14 galaxy clusters spanning two orders of magnitude in mass and a broad range of dynamical stages.', '1001.5023-2-124-1': 'The simulations follow self-consistent CR physics on top of the dissipative gas physics including radiative cooling and star formation.', '1001.5023-2-124-2': 'We have simulated high-energy [MATH]-ray emission maps, profiles and spectra of various emission components.', '1001.5023-2-124-3': 'These include the inverse Compton emission from primary, shock-accelerated electrons (pIC) and secondary electrons that result from hadronic interactions of CR protons with ambient gas protons (sIC), as well as [MATH]-rays from neutral pion decay that are also generated in these hadronic reactions.', '1001.5023-2-125-0': 'We would like to emphasize that we focus on the intrinsic spectrum emitted at the cluster position without taking into account photon propagation effects to highlight the various physical process that shape the emission spectra.', '1001.5023-2-125-1': 'Depending on the cluster redshift, these spectra attain a high-energy cutoff due to [MATH]-pair production on IR and optical photons which can be easily derived from the photon-photon opacity .', '1001.5023-2-125-2': 'We also caution the reader that we assume an optimistic value for the maximum shock injection efficiency (based on data from supernova remnant studies by ); smaller values would reduce the resulting [MATH]-ray emission accordingly.', '1001.5023-2-125-3': 'To date it is not clear whether these high efficiencies apply in an average sense to strong collisionless shocks or whether they are realized for structure formation shocks at higher redshifts.', '1001.5023-2-125-4': 'Hence the goal of this work is to establish a thorough framework and to predict the level of [MATH]-ray emission that we expect for this efficiency.', '1001.5023-2-125-5': 'We note that one cannot lower the acceleration efficiency infinitely if one wants to explain radio (mini-)halos in the hadronic model of CR interactions.', '1001.5023-2-125-6': 'For clusters that host such a large, unpolarized, and centrally peaked radio halo emission that resembles the thermal X-ray surface brightness, one can derive a minimum [MATH]-ray flux.', '1001.5023-2-125-7': 'The idea is based on the fact that a steady state distribution of CR electrons loses all its energy to synchrotron radiation for strong magnetic fields ([MATH]) so that the ratio of [MATH]-ray to synchrotron flux becomes independent of the spatial distribution of CRs and thermal gas.', '1001.5023-2-125-8': 'Lowering the magnetic field would require an increase in the energy density of CR electrons to reproduce the observed synchrotron luminosity and thus increase the associated [MATH]-ray flux .', '1001.5023-2-126-0': 'According to our simulations, clusters have very similar morphology in the [MATH] Fermi band, and in the [MATH] Cerenkov band.', '1001.5023-2-126-1': 'This is due to the power-law spectra of the dominating pion decay emission (which show a slowly running spectral index) and ultimately inherited by the parent CR proton distribution.', '1001.5023-2-126-2': 'The emission from the central parts of clusters are dominated by [MATH]-rays from pion decay, while the periphery of the ICM and the WHIM have a considerable contribution from pIC, which is especially pronounced in merging clusters.', '1001.5023-2-126-3': 'The energy dependent photon index for 100 MeV to 1 GeV has a median value of [MATH] due to pion decay induced emission in the central parts of the clusters, while that in the periphery shows a slightly higher value of [MATH] which is due to the substantial contribution from pIC.', '1001.5023-2-126-4': 'In the energy range from 100 GeV to 1 TeV, the photon index steepens to [MATH] in the central regions.', '1001.5023-2-126-5': 'This spectral steepening in the cluster center is due to the convex curvature of the pion bump around 100 MeV causing a steepening in the asymptotic [MATH]-ray spectrum at higher energies.', '1001.5023-2-126-6': 'The small concave curvature at higher energies is not able to compensate for this effect.', '1001.5023-2-126-7': 'At energies [MATH] TeV, the photon index in the cluster outskirts attain a much higher value due to a super-exponential cutoff of the primary IC spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-126-8': 'This emission component contributes substantially to the total [MATH]-ray emission there.', '1001.5023-2-126-9': 'At these energies, the electron cooling time is smaller than the time scale for diffusive shock acceleration which causes this cutoff in the electron spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-126-10': 'We used a semi-analytic formula for the injected electrons from which we derive the cooled electron distribution with the characteristic super-exponential cutoff.', '1001.5023-2-126-11': 'The shape of this spectrum is passed on to the pIC spectrum and we capture this shape with a fit that is valid both in the low-energy Thomson regime as well as in the high-energy Klein-Nishina regime.', '1001.5023-2-127-0': 'The simulated CR proton spectra show an approximate power-law in momentum with a few additional features; a cutoff at [MATH], a concave shape between [MATH], and a steepening by [MATH] between [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-127-1': 'The overall shape of the spectrum shows only little variance between the clusters, indicating a universal CR spectrum of galaxy clusters.', '1001.5023-2-127-2': 'The radial dependence of the spectrum within the virial radius is negligible to first order.', '1001.5023-2-127-3': 'This allowed us to construct a semi-analytic model of the median CR proton spectrum across our cluster sample.', '1001.5023-2-127-4': 'Using the semi-analytic CR spectrum we derive a semi-analytic formula for the [MATH]-ray flux from the pion decay induced emission that dominate the total [MATH]-ray spectrum above 100 MeV.', '1001.5023-2-127-5': 'We apply this formalism to the Perseus and Coma clusters, using their density profiles as inferred from X-ray measurements and predict that the flux from Perseus is close to the recent upper limits obtained by the MAGIC collaboration .', '1001.5023-2-128-0': 'The mass-to-luminosity scaling for the 100 MeV, 1 GeV, and 100 GeV regimes show very similar slopes for both the total [MATH]-ray luminosity and all the components, which is due to the small variance in the CR spectrum.', '1001.5023-2-128-1': 'Masking galaxies decreases the total [MATH]-ray emission by a factor of 2-3.', '1001.5023-2-128-2': 'The cut has a larger effect on smaller mass clusters since the emission of low mass systems with smaller potential wells are easier to perturb - through accreting clumps of matter or nearby satellite systems.', '1001.5023-2-128-3': 'We also found that the presence of galaxies considerably increases the scatter in the [MATH]-ray scaling relation.', '1001.5023-2-128-4': 'The region outside [MATH] only contributes marginally (of order ten per cent) to the total [MATH]-ray emission for massive clusters while it contributes significantly to the total [MATH]-ray luminosity of low mass clusters with a factor [MATH].', '1001.5023-2-128-5': 'This is again mostly due to the pion decay emission from satellite systems that have not yet accreted on the cluster.', '1001.5023-2-128-6': 'The flux of the pIC component is increased by a factor of [MATH] when the WHIM is included.', '1001.5023-2-128-7': 'This can be explained by the rather flat spatial profiles of the pIC emission.', '1001.5023-2-129-0': 'Combining our [MATH]-ray scaling relations with the virial masses of galaxy clusters of the extended HIFLUGCS catalogue, we predict a detection of a few galaxy clusters above 100 MeV with Fermi after two years, where Virgo, Ophiuchus, Coma, Perseus and Fornax are expected to be the brightest clusters in [MATH]-rays (barring uncertainties in the injection efficiency).', '1001.5023-2-129-1': 'Since Fermi already discovered the central AGN in Virgo/M87 and Perseus/NGC1275 the detection of the somewhat more extended and dimmer pion decay component will be very challenging in these clusters and requires careful variability studies to subtract the AGN component.', '1001.5023-2-129-2': 'For energies above 100 GeV, the flux of these clusters as determined by our scaling relation is more than [MATH] times lower.', '1001.5023-2-129-3': 'This provides a challenge for current Cerenkov telescopes as it is almost an order magnitude lower than the 50 h sensitivities.', '1001.5023-2-129-4': 'However, future upgrades of IACTs or the CTA telescope might considerably change the expectations.', '1001.5023-2-129-5': 'We note however that these estimates are too conservative for cool core clusters, which are known to show enhanced X-ray fluxes by a factor of up to ten relative to clusters on the X-ray luminosity scaling relation.', '1001.5023-2-129-6': 'Since we expect the X-ray luminosity to tightly correlate with the [MATH]-ray luminosity, this sub-class of clusters should provide very rewarding targets due to the ample target matter for inelastic collisions of relativistic protons leading to [MATH]-rays.', '1001.5023-2-129-7': 'Applying our semi-analytic model for the [MATH]-ray emission, we identify Perseus among the best suited clusters to target for the current IACT experiments.'}
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[['1001.5023-1-53-6', '1001.5023-2-53-11'], ['1001.5023-1-54-2', '1001.5023-2-54-3'], ['1001.5023-1-36-0', '1001.5023-2-36-0'], ['1001.5023-1-36-1', '1001.5023-2-36-1'], ['1001.5023-1-120-2', '1001.5023-2-128-2'], ['1001.5023-1-120-4', '1001.5023-2-128-4'], ['1001.5023-1-64-5', '1001.5023-2-64-5'], ['1001.5023-1-113-0', '1001.5023-2-114-0'], ['1001.5023-1-16-4', '1001.5023-2-16-4'], ['1001.5023-1-16-8', '1001.5023-2-16-8'], ['1001.5023-1-29-4', '1001.5023-2-29-5'], ['1001.5023-1-4-2', '1001.5023-2-4-2'], ['1001.5023-1-4-6', '1001.5023-2-4-6'], ['1001.5023-1-114-0', '1001.5023-2-115-0'], ['1001.5023-1-31-1', '1001.5023-2-31-1'], ['1001.5023-1-31-4', '1001.5023-2-31-4'], ['1001.5023-1-5-2', '1001.5023-2-5-2'], ['1001.5023-1-20-0', '1001.5023-2-20-0'], ['1001.5023-1-20-17', '1001.5023-2-20-18'], ['1001.5023-1-59-5', '1001.5023-2-59-5'], ['1001.5023-1-59-10', '1001.5023-2-59-10'], ['1001.5023-1-0-0', '1001.5023-2-0-0'], ['1001.5023-1-0-5', '1001.5023-2-0-5'], ['1001.5023-1-0-7', '1001.5023-2-0-7'], ['1001.5023-1-0-8', '1001.5023-2-0-8'], ['1001.5023-1-0-9', '1001.5023-2-0-9'], ['1001.5023-1-0-10', '1001.5023-2-0-10'], ['1001.5023-1-18-7', '1001.5023-2-18-8'], ['1001.5023-1-25-3', '1001.5023-2-25-3'], ['1001.5023-1-25-8', '1001.5023-2-25-7'], ['1001.5023-1-26-2', '1001.5023-2-26-4'], ['1001.5023-1-9-1', '1001.5023-2-9-1'], ['1001.5023-1-9-3', '1001.5023-2-9-2'], ['1001.5023-1-9-5', '1001.5023-2-9-4'], ['1001.5023-1-9-6', '1001.5023-2-9-5'], ['1001.5023-1-12-0', '1001.5023-2-12-0'], ['1001.5023-1-57-2', '1001.5023-2-57-2'], ['1001.5023-1-118-5', '1001.5023-2-126-5'], ['1001.5023-1-118-9', '1001.5023-2-126-9'], ['1001.5023-1-81-0', '1001.5023-2-82-0'], ['1001.5023-1-81-1', '1001.5023-2-82-1'], ['1001.5023-1-63-2', '1001.5023-2-63-2'], ['1001.5023-1-68-5', '1001.5023-2-68-5'], ['1001.5023-1-47-5', '1001.5023-2-47-5'], ['1001.5023-1-94-1', '1001.5023-2-95-2'], ['1001.5023-1-110-2', '1001.5023-2-111-2']]
[]
[['1001.5023-1-53-5', '1001.5023-2-53-9'], ['1001.5023-1-38-2', '1001.5023-2-38-2'], ['1001.5023-1-38-3', '1001.5023-2-38-4'], ['1001.5023-1-29-0', '1001.5023-2-29-0'], ['1001.5023-1-29-1', '1001.5023-2-29-3'], ['1001.5023-1-29-3', '1001.5023-2-29-4'], ['1001.5023-1-114-8', '1001.5023-2-115-8'], ['1001.5023-1-31-7', '1001.5023-2-31-8'], ['1001.5023-1-0-4', '1001.5023-2-0-4'], ['1001.5023-1-18-6', '1001.5023-2-18-6'], ['1001.5023-1-18-8', '1001.5023-2-18-7'], ['1001.5023-1-25-9', '1001.5023-2-25-10'], ['1001.5023-1-26-0', '1001.5023-2-26-0'], ['1001.5023-1-26-3', '1001.5023-2-26-5'], ['1001.5023-1-108-2', '1001.5023-2-109-2'], ['1001.5023-1-108-3', '1001.5023-2-109-4'], ['1001.5023-1-118-4', '1001.5023-2-126-4'], ['1001.5023-1-52-0', '1001.5023-2-52-0'], ['1001.5023-1-81-7', '1001.5023-2-82-9'], ['1001.5023-1-81-8', '1001.5023-2-82-9'], ['1001.5023-1-48-9', '1001.5023-2-48-9'], ['1001.5023-1-68-6', '1001.5023-2-68-6'], ['1001.5023-1-62-7', '1001.5023-2-62-7'], ['1001.5023-1-62-7', '1001.5023-2-62-8'], ['1001.5023-1-47-15', '1001.5023-2-47-15'], ['1001.5023-1-110-1', '1001.5023-2-111-1']]
[]
['1001.5023-1-7-6', '1001.5023-1-7-7', '1001.5023-2-7-6', '1001.5023-2-7-7', '1001.5023-2-117-2', '1001.5023-2-121-0', '1001.5023-2-122-0']
{'1': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/', '2': 'http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/'}
https://arxiv.org/abs/1001.5023
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