20,047 research outputs found
Gaussian processes, kinematic formulae and Poincar\'e's limit
We consider vector valued, unit variance Gaussian processes defined over
stratified manifolds and the geometry of their excursion sets. In particular,
we develop an explicit formula for the expectation of all the
Lipschitz--Killing curvatures of these sets. Whereas our motivation is
primarily probabilistic, with statistical applications in the background, this
formula has also an interpretation as a version of the classic kinematic
fundamental formula of integral geometry. All of these aspects are developed in
the paper. Particularly novel is the method of proof, which is based on a an
approximation to the canonical Gaussian process on the -sphere. The
limit, which gives the final result, is handled via recent
extensions of the classic Poincar\'e limit theorem.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AOP439 the Annals of
Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Rotation and scale space random fields and the Gaussian kinematic formula
We provide a new approach, along with extensions, to results in two important
papers of Worsley, Siegmund and coworkers closely tied to the statistical
analysis of fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) brain data. These
papers studied approximations for the exceedence probabilities of scale and
rotation space random fields, the latter playing an important role in the
statistical analysis of fMRI data. The techniques used there came either from
the Euler characteristic heuristic or via tube formulae, and to a large extent
were carefully attuned to the specific examples of the paper. This paper treats
the same problem, but via calculations based on the so-called Gaussian
kinematic formula. This allows for extensions of the Worsley-Siegmund results
to a wide class of non-Gaussian cases. In addition, it allows one to obtain
results for rotation space random fields in any dimension via reasonably
straightforward Riemannian geometric calculations. Previously only the
two-dimensional case could be covered, and then only via computer algebra. By
adopting this more structured approach to this particular problem, a solution
path for other, related problems becomes clearer.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-AOS1055 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Excursion sets of stable random fields
Studying the geometry generated by Gaussian and Gaussian- related random
fields via their excursion sets is now a well developed and well understood
subject. The purely non-Gaussian scenario has, however, not been studied at
all. In this paper we look at three classes of stable random fields, and obtain
asymptotic formulae for the mean values of various geometric characteristics of
their excursion sets over high levels.
While the formulae are asymptotic, they contain enough information to show
that not only do stable random fields exhibit geometric behaviour very
different from that of Gaussian fields, but they also differ significantly
among themselves.Comment: 35 pages, 1 figur
High level excursion set geometry for non-Gaussian infinitely divisible random fields
We consider smooth, infinitely divisible random fields ,
, with regularly varying Levy measure, and are
interested in the geometric characteristics of the excursion sets over high levels u. For a large class of such random fields, we
compute the asymptotic joint distribution of the numbers of
critical points, of various types, of X in , conditional on being
nonempty. This allows us, for example, to obtain the asymptotic conditional
distribution of the Euler characteristic of the excursion set. In a significant
departure from the Gaussian situation, the high level excursion sets for these
random fields can have quite a complicated geometry. Whereas in the Gaussian
case nonempty excursion sets are, with high probability, roughly ellipsoidal,
in the more general infinitely divisible setting almost any shape is possible.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-AOP738 the Annals of
Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
High transverse momentum suppression and surface effects in Cu+Cu and Au+Au collisions within the PQM model
We study parton suppression effects in heavy-ion collisions within the Parton
Quenching Model (PQM). After a brief summary of the main features of the model,
we present comparisons of calculations for the nuclear modification and the
away-side suppression factor to data in Au+Au and Cu+Cu collisions at 200 GeV.
We discuss properties of light hadron probes and their sensitivity to the
medium density within the PQM Monte Carlo framework.Comment: Comments: 6 pages, 8 figures. To appear in the proceedings of Hot
Quarks 2006: Workshop for Young Scientists on the Physics of
Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, Villasimius, Italy, 15-20 May
200
Billiard algebra, integrable line congruences, and double reflection nets
The billiard systems within quadrics, playing the role of discrete analogues
of geodesics on ellipsoids, are incorporated into the theory of integrable
quad-graphs. An initial observation is that the Six-pointed star theorem, as
the operational consistency for the billiard algebra, is equivalent to an
integrabilty condition of a line congruence. A new notion of the
double-reflection nets as a subclass of dual Darboux nets associated with
pencils of quadrics is introduced, basic properies and several examples are
presented. Corresponding Yang-Baxter maps, associated with pencils of quadrics
are defined and discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figure
Breaking quantum linearity: constraints from human perception and cosmological implications
Resolving the tension between quantum superpositions and the uniqueness of
the classical world is a major open problem. One possibility, which is
extensively explored both theoretically and experimentally, is that quantum
linearity breaks above a given scale. Theoretically, this possibility is
predicted by collapse models. They provide quantitative information on where
violations of the superposition principle become manifest. Here we show that
the lower bound on the collapse parameter lambda, coming from the analysis of
the human visual process, is ~ 7 +/- 2 orders of magnitude stronger than the
original bound, in agreement with more recent analysis. This implies that the
collapse becomes effective with systems containing ~ 10^4 - 10^5 nucleons, and
thus falls within the range of testability with present-day technology. We also
compare the spectrum of the collapsing field with those of known cosmological
fields, showing that a typical cosmological random field can yield an efficient
wave function collapse.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, 3 figure
Quaternions, octonions and Bell-type inequalities
Multipartite Bell-type inequalities are derived for general systems. They
involve up to eight observables with arbitrary spectra on each site. These
inequalities are closely related to the algebras of quaternions and octonions.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
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