922 research outputs found
Using poststratification to improve abundance estimates from multispecies surveys: a study of juvenile flatfishes
Population assessments seldom incorporate habitat information or use previously observed distributions of fish density. Because habitat affects the spatial distribution of fish density and overall abundance, the use of habitat information and previous estimates of fish density can produce more precise and less biased
population estimates. In this study, we describe how poststratification can be applied as an unbiased estimator
to data sets that were collected under a probability sampling design, typical of many multispecies trawl surveys.
With data from a multispecies survey of juvenile flatfish, we show how poststratification can be applied to a data set that was not collected under a probability sampling design,
where both the precision and the bias are unknown. For each of four species, three estimates of total abundance were compared: 1) unstratified; 2) poststratified by habitat; and 3) poststratified by habitat and fish density (high fish density and low fish density) in nearby years. Poststratification by habitat gave more precise and (or) less design-biased estimates than an unstratified estimator for all species in all years. Poststratification by habitat and fish density produced the most precise and representative estimates when the sample size in the high fish-density and low fish-density strata were sufficient (in this study, n≥20 in the high fish-density stratum,
n≥9 in the low fish-density stratum). Because of the complexities of statistically testing the annual stratified
data, we compared three indices of abundance for determining statistically significant changes in annual
abundance. Each of the indices closely approximated the annual differences of the poststratified estimates. Selection of the most appropriate index was dependent upon the species’ density distribution within habitat and the
sample size in the different habitat areas. The methods used in this study are particularly useful for estimating
individual species abundance from multispecies surveys and for retrospective s
Experimental Violation of Two-Party Leggett-Garg Inequalities with Semi-weak Measurements
We generalize the derivation of Leggett-Garg inequalities to systematically
treat a larger class of experimental situations by allowing multi-particle
correlations, invasive detection, and ambiguous detector results. Furthermore,
we show how many such inequalities may be tested simultaneously with a single
setup. As a proof of principle, we violate several such two-particle
inequalities with data obtained from a polarization-entangled biphoton state
and a semi-weak polarization measurement based on Fresnel reflection. We also
point out a non- trivial connection between specific two-party Leggett-Garg
inequality violations and convex sums of strange weak values.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Deconfinement transition and dimensional crossover in the Bechgaard-Fabre salts: pressure- and temperature-dependent optical investigations
The infrared response of the organic conductor (TMTSF)PF and the Mott
insulator (TMTTF)PF are investigated as a function of temperature and
pressure and for the polarization parallel and perpendicular to the molecular
stacks. By applying external pressure on (TMTTF)PF, the Mott gap
rapidly diminishes until the deconfinement transition occurs when the gap
energy is approximately twice the interchain transfer integral. In its
deconfined state (TMTTF)PF exhibits a crossover from a
quasi-one-dimensional to a higher-dimensional metal upon reducing the
temperature. For (TMTSF)PF this dimensional crossover is observed
either with increase in external pressure or with decrease in temperature. We
quantitatively determine the dimensional crossover line in the
pressure-temperature diagram based on the degree of coherence in the optical
response perpendicular to the molecular stacks.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figure
Electronic properties of correlated metals in the vicinity of a charge order transition: optical spectroscopy of -(BEDT-TTF)Hg(SCN) ( = NH, Rb, Tl)
The infrared spectra of the quasi-two-dimensional organic conductors
-(BEDT-TTF)Hg(SCN) ( = NH, Rb, Tl) were measured in
the range from 50 to 7000 \cm down to low temperatures in order to explore the
influence of electronic correlations in quarter-filled metals. The
interpretation of electronic spectra was confirmed by measurements of pressure
dependant reflectance of -(BEDT-TTF)KHg(SCN) at T=300 K. The
signatures of charge order fluctuations become more pronounced when going from
the NH salt to Rb and further to Tl compounds. On reducing the temperature,
the metallic character of the optical response in the NH and Rb salts
increases, and the effective mass diminishes. For the Tl compound, clear
signatures of charge order are found albeit the metallic properties still
dominate. From the temperature dependence of the electronic scattering rate the
crossover temperature is estimated below which the coherent charge-carriers
response sets in. The observations are in excellent agreement with recent
theoretical predictions for a quarter-filled metallic system close to charge
order
Mobility gap in intermediate valent TmSe
The infrared optical conductivity of intermediate valence compound TmSe
reveals clear signatures for hybridization of light - and heavy f-electronic
states with m* ~ 1.6 m_0 and m* ~ 16 m_0, respectively. At moderate and high
temperatures, the metal-like character of the heavy carriers dominate the
low-frequency response while at low temperatures (T_N < T < 100 K) a gap-like
feature is observed in the conductivity spectra below 10 meV which is assigned
to be a mobility gap due to localization of electrons on local Kondo singlets,
rather than a hybridization gap in the density of states
Linear-in-frequency optical conductivity in GdPtBi due to transitions near the triple points
The complex optical conductivity of the half-Heusler compound GdPtBi is
measured in a frequency range from 20 to 22 000 cm (2.5 meV - 2.73 eV)
at temperatures down to 10 K in zero magnetic field. We find the real part of
the conductivity, , to be almost perfectly linear in
frequency over a broad range from 50 to 800 cm ( 6 - 100 meV) for
K. This linearity strongly suggests the presence of
three-dimensional linear electronic bands with band crossings (nodes) near the
chemical potential. Band-structure calculations show the presence of triple
points, where one doubly degenerate and one nondegenerate band cross each other
in close vicinity of the chemical potential. From a comparison of our data with
the optical conductivity computed from the band structure, we conclude that the
observed nearly linear originates as a cumulative effect
from all the transitions near the triple points.Comment: 5+ pages, 5 figures, band-structure and optical-conductivity
calculations adde
Power-recycled weak-value-based metrology
We improve the precision of the interferometric weak-value-based beam
deflection measurement by introducing a power recycling mirror, creating a
resonant cavity. This results in \emph{all} the light exiting to the detector
with a large deflection, thus eliminating the inefficiency of the rare
postselection. The signal-to-noise ratio of the deflection is itself magnified
by the weak value. We discuss ways to realize this proposal, using a transverse
beam filter and different cavity designs.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Two-channel conduction in YbPtBi
We investigated transport, magnetotransport, and broadband optical properties
of the half-Heusler compound YbPtBi. Hall measurements evidence two types of
charge carriers: highly mobile electrons with a temperature-dependent
concentration and low-mobile holes; their concentration stays almost constant
within the investigated temperature range from 2.5 to 300 K. The optical
spectra (10 meV - 2.7 eV) can be naturally decomposed into contributions from
intra- and interband absorption processes, the former manifesting themselves as
two Drude bands with very different scattering rates, corresponding to the
charges with different mobilities. These results of the optical measurements
allow us to separate the contributions from electrons and holes to the total
conductivity and to implement a two-channel-conduction model for description of
the magnetotransport data. In this approach, the electron and hole mobilities
are found to be around 50000 and 10 cm/Vs at the lowest temperatures (2.5
K), respectively.Comment: 6 page
Infrared study of valence transition compound YbInCu4 using cleaved surfaces
Optical reflectivity R(w) of YbInCu4 single crystals has been measured across
its first-order valence transition at T_v ~ 42 K, using both polished and
cleaved surfaces. R(w) measured on cleaved surfaces Rc(w) was found much lower
than that on polished surface Rp(w) over the entire infrared region. Upon
cooling through T_v, Rc(w) showed a rapid change over a temperature range of
less than 2 K, and showed only minor changes with further cooling. In contrast,
Rp(w) showed much more gradual and continuous changes across T_v, similarly to
previously reported data on polished surfaces. The present result on cleaved
surfaces demonstrates that the microscopic electronic structures of YbInCu4
observed with infrared spectroscopy indeed undergo a sudden change upon the
valence transition. The gradual temperature-evolution of Rp(w) is most likely
due to the compositional and/or Yb-In site disorders caused by polishing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Fig.1(a) correcte
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