3,356 research outputs found
A Cloud Platform-as-a-Service for Multimedia Conferencing Service Provisioning
Multimedia conferencing is the real-time exchange of multimedia content
between multiple parties. It is the basis of a wide range of applications
(e.g., multimedia multiplayer game). Cloud-based provisioning of the
conferencing services on which these applications rely will bring benefits,
such as easy service provisioning and elastic scalability. However, it remains
a big challenge. This paper proposes a PaaS for conferencing service
provisioning. The proposed PaaS is based on a business model from the state of
the art. It relies on conferencing IaaSs that, instead of VMs, offer
conferencing substrates (e.g., dial-in signaling, video mixer and audio mixer).
The PaaS enables composition of new conferences from substrates on the fly.
This has been prototyped in this paper and, in order to evaluate it, a
conferencing IaaS is also implemented. Performance measurements are also made.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, IEEE ISCC 201
Generating Entangled Microwave Radiation Over Two Transmission Lines
Using a superconducting circuit, the Josephson mixer, we demonstrate the
first experimental realization of spatially separated two-mode squeezed states
of microwave light. Driven by a pump tone, a first Josephson mixer generates,
out of quantum vacuum, a pair of entangled fields at different frequencies on
separate transmission lines. A second mixer, driven by a -phase shifted
copy of the first pump tone, recombines and disentangles the two fields. The
resulting output noise level is measured to be lower than for vacuum state at
the input of the second mixer, an unambiguous proof of entanglement. Moreover,
the output noise level provides a direct, quantitative measure of entanglement,
leading here to the demonstration of 6 Mebit.s (Mega entangled bits per
second) generated by the first mixer.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary Information can be found here as an
ancillary fil
A V-shape superconducting artificial atom based on two inductively coupled transmons
Circuit quantum electrodynamics systems are typically built from resonators
and two-level artificial atoms, but the use of multi-level artificial atoms
instead can enable promising applications in quantum technology. Here we
present an implementation of a Josephson junction circuit dedicated to operate
as a V-shape artificial atom. Based on a concept of two internal degrees of
freedom, the device consists of two transmon qubits coupled by an inductance.
The Josephson nonlinearity introduces a strong diagonal coupling between the
two degrees of freedom that finds applications in quantum non-demolition
readout schemes, and in the realization of microwave cross-Kerr media based on
superconducting circuits.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dominantnost jezika dvojezicnih govornika talijanskog I hrvatskog jezika
Because of the high variability in any bilingual population, it is of a great importance to control for language
dominance in both research and language assessment. This control is crucial in research in order to form
unified groups of participants according to language dominance. In the language assessment of bilingual
children, determining language dominance should be a priority. Children exposed to two languages from an
early age may acquire them at a slower rate when compared to their monolingual piers. While this lag is
hardly noticeable in some children, for others it is significant. Without knowledge about the child\u2019s language
skills in the other, non-assessed language, it is impossible to determine if the results of language assessment
point to the dominance of one language over another or general language difficulties. In bilingual areas of
Croatia, such as Rijeka and Istria, this can be quite a challenge. While language dominance has generally been
measured using a large number of different methods, there is no universally accepted procedure. This
research uses the results of the Italian and Croatian versions of the TROG test to determine language
dominance. Participants were 56 preschool-aged children attending kindergartens with an Italian language
programme in Rijeka and Istria. Participants were preselected by their kindergarten teachers as children that
might be balanced bilinguals. Using the differences in results between both TROG tests, approximately 70%
of children were placed in a balanced bilinguals group. No differences were shown between groups of
participants from Rijeka and Istria
Widely tunable, non-degenerate three-wave mixing microwave device operating near the quantum limit
We present the first experimental realization of a widely frequency tunable,
non-degenerate three-wave mixing device for quantum signals at GHz frequency.
It is based on a new superconducting building-block consisting of a ring of
four Josephson junctions shunted by a cross of four linear inductances. The
phase configuration of the ring remains unique over a wide range of magnetic
fluxes threading the loop. It is thus possible to vary the inductance of the
ring with flux while retaining a strong, dissipation-free, and noiseless
non-linearity. The device has been operated in amplifier mode and its noise
performance has been evaluated by using the noise spectrum emitted by a voltage
biased tunnel junction at finite frequency as a test signal. The unprecedented
accuracy with which the crossover between zero-point-fluctuations and shot
noise has been measured provides an upper-bound for the noise and dissipation
intrinsic to the device.Comment: Accepted for Physical Review Letters. Supplementary material can be
found in the source packag
Dominantnost jezika dvojezicnih govornika talijanskog I hrvatskog jezika [Language dominance in bilingual speakers of Italian and Croatian language]
Because of the high variability in any bilingual population, it is of a great importance to control for language dominance in both research and language assessment. This control is crucial in research in order to form unified groups of participants according to language dominance. In the language assessment of bilingual children, determining language dominance should be a priority. Children exposed to two languages from an early age may acquire them at a slower rate when compared to their monolingual piers. While this lag is hardly noticeable in some children, for others it is significant. Without knowledge about the child\u2019s language skills in the other, non-assessed language, it is impossible to determine if the results of language assessment point to the dominance of one language over another or general language difficulties. In bilingual areas of Croatia, such as Rijeka and Istria, this can be quite a challenge. While language dominance has generally been measured using a large number of different methods, there is no universally accepted procedure. This research uses the results of the Italian and Croatian versions of the TROG test to determine language dominance. Participants were 56 preschool-aged children attending kindergartens with an Italian language programme in Rijeka and Istria. Participants were preselected by their kindergarten teachers as children that might be balanced bilinguals. Using the differences in results between both TROG tests, approximately 70% of children were placed in a balanced bilinguals group. No differences were shown between groups of participants from Rijeka and Istria
Reduced Gutzwiller formula with symmetry: case of a finite group
We consider a classical Hamiltonian on , invariant by a
finite group of symmetry , whose Weyl quantization is a
selfadjoint operator on . If is an irreducible
character of , we investigate the spectrum of its restriction
to the symmetry subspace of
coming from the decomposition of Peter-Weyl. We give
reduced semi-classical asymptotics of a regularised spectral density describing
the spectrum of near a non critical energy . If
is compact, assuming that periodic orbits are
non-degenerate in , we get a reduced Gutzwiller trace formula
which makes periodic orbits of the reduced space appear. The
method is based upon the use of coherent states, whose propagation was given in
the work of M. Combescure and D. Robert.Comment: 20 page
Non-linear spectroscopy of rubidium: An undergraduate experiment
In this paper, we describe two complementary non-linear spectroscopy methods
which both allow to achieve Doppler-free spectra of atomic gases. First,
saturated absorption spectroscopy is used to investigate the structure of the
transition in rubidium. Using a slightly
modified experimental setup, Doppler-free two-photon absorption spectroscopy is
then performed on the transition in
rubidium, leading to accurate measurements of the hyperfine structure of the
energy level. In addition, electric dipole selection rules of
the two-photon transition are investigated, first by modifying the polarization
of the excitation laser, and then by measuring two-photon absorption spectra
when a magnetic field is applied close to the rubidium vapor. All experiments
are performed with the same grating-feedback laser diode, providing an
opportunity to compare different high resolution spectroscopy methods using a
single experimental setup. Such experiments may acquaint students with quantum
mechanics selection rules, atomic spectra and Zeeman effect.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Changing the Support of a Spatial Covariate: A Simulation Study
Researchers are increasingly able to capture spatially referenced data on both a response and a covariate more frequently and in more detail. A combination of geostatisical models and analysis of covariance methods may be used to analyze such data. However, very basic questions regarding the effects of using a covariate whose support differs from that of the response variable must be addressed to utilize these methods most efficiently. In this experiment, a simulation study was conducted to assess the following: (i) the gain in efficiency when geostatistical models are used, (ii) the gain in efficiency when analysis of covariance methods are used, and (iii) the effects of including a covariate whose support differs from that of the response variable in the analysis. This study suggests that analyses which both account for spatial structure and exploit information from a covariate are most powerful. Also, the results indicate that the support of the covariate should be as close as possible to the support of the response variable to obtain the most accurate experimental results
Little “We’s”: how common identities improve behavior differently for ethnic majority and minority children
This field experiment tested whether inducing common inclusive representations (i.e., one group, dual identity) during contact influences intergroup relations differently for ethnic majority and minority children by changing their metaperceptions and intergroup emotions differently. White (N = 113) and Black (N = 111) 8- to 10-year-old children were exposed to interactive mixed-ethnicity sessions in schools emphasizing either categorization as one group (national group), dual identity (national group with ethnic subgroups), or two ethnic groups. Overall, as predicted, for White children, one-group, but not dual-identity perceptions, improved behavioral intentions by influencing metaperceptions. For Black children, dual-identity, but not one-group, perceptions improved behavioral intentions through metaperceptions. Contrary to the expected, both dual-identity and one-group perceptions were associated with White and Black children’s intergroup emotions.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
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