670 research outputs found
Fifteen new species of Sonoma Casey from the eastern United States and a description of the male of Sonoma tolulae (LeConte) (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Pselaphinae)
Fifteen new species of faronine pselaphines in the genus Sonoma Casey are described: S. baylessae; S. brasstownensis; S. chouljenkoi; S. cygnus; S. gilae; S. gimmeli; S. holmesi; S. mayori; S. nicholsae; S. parkorum; S. nhunguyeni; S. sokolovi; S. streptophorophallus; S. tishechkini; S. tridens. Male specimens of Sonoma tolulae (LeConte) were collected from the type locality and this species is redescribed. These species bring the total diversity of the genus to 43 species. The genus is divided into four species groups based on characters of the male genitalia. Sonoma corticina Casey was not included in the genus when it was described, thus it cannot be the type species of the genus. We here designate Sonoma tolulae (LeConte) as the type species of the genus Sonoma. A key is provided that will allow discrimination of all eastern species. Life history, habitat, and collection techniques are discussed
Quantum limits on post-selected, probabilistic quantum metrology
Probabilistic metrology attempts to improve parameter estimation by
occasionally reporting an excellent estimate and the rest of the time either
guessing or doing nothing at all. Here we show that probabilistic metrology can
never improve quantum limits on estimation of a single parameter, both on
average and asymptotically in number of trials, if performance is judged
relative to mean-square estimation error. We extend the result by showing that
for a finite number of trials, the probability of obtaining better estimates
using probabilistic metrology, as measured by mean-square error, decreases
exponentially with the number of trials. To be tight, the performance bounds we
derive require that likelihood functions be approximately normal, which in turn
depends on how rapidly specific distributions converge to a normal distribution
with number of trials.Comment: V1:8 pages, 1 figure. V2: 9 pages, 1 figure, revised text. V3: 11
pages, 1 figure, revised text; V4 published version, revised title ;-
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