6,086 research outputs found
The environmental distribution of late proterozoic organisms
Along present day coast lines, the environmental distributions of prokaryotic and protistan populations are often sharply delimited. Realized habitat ranges are generally narrower than those circumscribed by physiological tolerances, suggesting the importance of organism-organism interactions in the determination of population distributions. Microfossil populations preserved in silicified carbonates, dolomites, and shales of the 700-800 Ma old Akademikerbreen Group, Svalbard, and elsewhere indicate that the environmental distributions were defined equally clearly during the Proterozoic Eon. The Draken Conglomerate Formation is a tidal flat/lagoonal complex in which we have distinguished five principle biofacies containing a total of 42 taxa. Supratidal to subtidal gradients include the increasing abundance and diversity of both mat dweller microbenthos and allochthonous (principally planktonic) organisms, as well as a taphonomically important pattern of decreasing sheath thickness among mat builder microorganisms. The seaward barriers of Akademikerbreen lagoons were oolitic shoals, and these contain about a dozen endolithic and epilithic species not observed elsewhere in the group. Subtidal environments below fair weather wave base are represented by mudstones of the Svanbergfjellet Formation. These contain abundant and diverse cyanobacteria-like fossils generally similar to but specifically different from those found in tidal flat sediments, as well as diverse unicellular protists (some of impressive morphological complexity) and at least half a dozen cellularly preserved metaphyte populations. In all, more than 80 species are distributed among Akademikerbreen lithologies. Fossil assemblages from Svalbard and elsewhere illustrate the potential for a much finer paleoecological, biostratigraphic, and, hence, evolutionary resolution of the early fossil record
Vehicle infrastructure cooperative localization using Factor Graphs
Highly assisted and Autonomous Driving is dependent on the accurate localization of both the vehicle and other targets within the environment. With increasing traffic on roads and wider proliferation of low cost sensors, a vehicle-infrastructure cooperative localization scenario can provide improved performance over traditional mono-platform localization. The paper highlights the various challenges in the process and proposes a solution based on Factor Graphs which utilizes the concept of topology of vehicles. A Factor Graph represents probabilistic graphical model as a bipartite graph. It is used to add the inter-vehicle distance as constraints while localizing the vehicle. The proposed solution is easily scalable for many vehicles without increasing the execution complexity. Finally simulation indicates that incorporating the topology information as a state estimate can improve performance over the traditional Kalman Filter approac
Remote state preparation of a photonic quantum state via quantum teleportation
We demonstrate an experimental realization of remote state preparation via
the quantum teleportation algorithm, using an entangled photon pair in the
polarization degree of freedom as the quantum resource. The input state is
encoded on the path of one of the photons from the pair. The improved
experimental scheme allows us to control the preparation and teleportation of a
state over the entire Bloch sphere with a resolution of the degree of mixture
given by the coherence length of the photon pair. Both the preparation of the
input state and the implementation of the quantum gates are performed in a pair
of chained displaced Sagnac interferometers, which contribute to the overall
robustness of the setup. An average fidelity above 0.9 is obtained for the
remote state preparation process. This scheme allows for a prepared state to be
transmitted on every repetition of the experiment, thus giving an intrinsic
success probability of 1.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Applied Physics
B:Lasers and Optic
Recommended from our members
A novel approach to the design of DSP systems using minimum complexity Finite State Machines
The paper presents a new and different approach to the design and realisation of Digital Signal Processing (DSP)systems by utilising Finite State Machines (FSM). The DSP system is modelled by mapping all its potential states into an FSM, whose complexity is usually very high. The FSM mirrors the complete functionality of the system and thus describes its behaviour in full detail. Examples for FSMs of first and second order digital recursive filters are provided and the current version of the software simulating the FSM corresponding to any linear time-invariant DSP system is described. The potential of this approach including state reduction techniques as well as the inclusion of non-linear DSP systems is also outlined, and further future research intentions are briefly explored
Noisy quantum teleportation: An experimental study on the influence of local environments
We report experimental results on the action of selected local environments
on the fidelity of the quantum teleportation protocol, taking into account
non-ideal, realistic entangled resources. Different working conditions are
theoretically identified, where a noisy protocol can be made almost insensitive
to further addition of noise. We put to test these conditions on a photonic
implementation of the quantum teleportation algorithm, where two polarization
entangled qubits act as the entangled resource and a path qubit on Alice
encodes the state to be teleported. Bob's path qubit is used to implement a
local environment, while the environment on Alice's qubit is simulated as a
weighed average of different pure states. We obtain a good agreement with the
theoretical predictions, we experimentally recreate the conditions to obtain a
noise-induced enhancement of the protocol fidelity, and we identify parameter
regions of increased insensibility to interactions with specific noisy
environments.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Recommended from our members
Controls on development and diversity of Early Archean stromatolites
The ≈3,450-million-year-old Strelley Pool Formation in Western Australia contains a reef-like assembly of laminated sedimentary accretion structures (stromatolites) that have macroscale characteristics suggestive of biological influence. However, direct microscale evidence of biology—namely, organic microbial remains or biosedimentary fabrics—has to date eluded discovery in the extensively-recrystallized rocks. Recently-identified outcrops with relatively good textural preservation record microscale evidence of primary sedimentary processes, including some that indicate probable microbial mat formation. Furthermore, we find relict fabrics and organic layers that covary with stromatolite morphology, linking morphologic diversity to changes in sedimentation, seafloor mineral precipitation, and inferred microbial mat development. Thus, the most direct and compelling signatures of life in the Strelley Pool Formation are those observed at the microscopic scale. By examining spatiotemporal changes in microscale characteristics it is possible not only to recognize the presence of probable microbial mats during stromatolite development, but also to infer aspects of the biological inputs to stromatolite morphogenesis. The persistence of an inferred biological signal through changing environmental circumstances and stromatolite types indicates that benthic microbial populations adapted to shifting environmental conditions in early oceans
Optimal operating conditions and characteristics of acetone/CaF_2 detector for inverse photoemission spectroscopy
Performance and characteristics of a band-pass photon detector using acetone
gas and CaF_2 window (acetone/CaF_2) have been studied and compared with an
ethanol/MgF_2 detector. The optimal operating conditions are found to be 4 mbar
acetone pressure and 745+/-20 V anode voltage. The count rate obtained by us is
about a factor of 3 higher than what has been reported earlier for the acetone
detector. Unlike other gas filled detectors, this detector works in the
proportional region with very small dead time (4 micro sec). A detector
band-pass of 0.48+/-0.01 eV FWHM is obtained.Comment: Review of Scientific Instruments 76, 066102 (2005
- …