879,016 research outputs found
Normality of a non-linear transformation of AR parameters: application to reflection and cepstrum coefficients
Two sets of random vectors cannot both be Gaussian if they are nonlinearly related. Thus, Autoregressive (AR)parameters and reflection coefficient (resp. cepstrum coefficient) estimators cannot both be Gaussian for a finite number of samples. However, most estimators of AR parameters and reflection coefficients (resp. cepstrum coefficients) are Gaussian asymptotically. Thus, the distribution of AR parameter and reflection coefficient (resp. cepstrum coefficient) estimates are close to Gaussian for large samples. This paper studies the ``closeness'' between the Gaussian distribution and the ``non-linear transformation of Gaussian AR parameters'' distribution. A new distance is defined which is based on the Taylor expansion of the non-linear transformation. This ``Taylor'' distance called -distance is used to measure the deviations from the Gaussian distribution of reflection coefficient and cepstrum coefficient statistics. A comparison is presented between this distance and Kullback's divergence. The main advantage of the M-distance with respect to other distances is a very simple closed form expression of the deviations from normality. This closed form expression shows that the convergence of the reflection and cepstrum coefficient
distribution to its asymptotic Gaussian distribution (when the number of samples tends to infinity) depends on the position of AR model poles in the unit circle
Gaussian distribution of LMOV numbers
Recent advances in knot polynomial calculus allowed us to obtain a huge
variety of LMOV integers counting degeneracy of the BPS spectrum of topological
theories on the resolved conifold and appearing in the genus expansion of the
plethystic logarithm of the Ooguri-Vafa partition functions. Already the very
first look at this data reveals that the LMOV numbers are randomly distributed
in genus (!) and are very well parameterized by just three parameters depending
on the representation, an integer and the knot. We present an accurate
formulation and evidence in support of this new puzzling observation about the
old puzzling quantities. It probably implies that the BPS states, counted by
the LMOV numbers can actually be composites made from some still more
elementary objects.Comment: 23 page
Gaussian Entanglement Distribution via Satellite
In this work we analyse three quantum communication schemes for the
generation of Gaussian entanglement between two ground stations. Communication
occurs via a satellite over two independent atmospheric fading channels
dominated by turbulence-induced beam wander. In our first scheme the
engineering complexity remains largely on the ground transceivers, with the
satellite acting simply as a reflector. Although the channel state information
of the two atmospheric channels remains unknown in this scheme, the Gaussian
entanglement generation between the ground stations can still be determined. On
the ground, distillation and Gaussification procedures can be applied, leading
to a refined Gaussian entanglement generation rate between the ground stations.
We compare the rates produced by this first scheme with two competing schemes
in which quantum complexity is added to the satellite, thereby illustrating the
trade-off between space-based engineering complexity and the rate of
ground-station entanglement generation.Comment: Closer to published version (to appear in Phys. Rev. A) 13 pages, 6
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