742 research outputs found
Learning Dictionaries with Bounded Self-Coherence
Sparse coding in learned dictionaries has been established as a successful
approach for signal denoising, source separation and solving inverse problems
in general. A dictionary learning method adapts an initial dictionary to a
particular signal class by iteratively computing an approximate factorization
of a training data matrix into a dictionary and a sparse coding matrix. The
learned dictionary is characterized by two properties: the coherence of the
dictionary to observations of the signal class, and the self-coherence of the
dictionary atoms. A high coherence to the signal class enables the sparse
coding of signal observations with a small approximation error, while a low
self-coherence of the atoms guarantees atom recovery and a more rapid residual
error decay rate for the sparse coding algorithm. The two goals of high signal
coherence and low self-coherence are typically in conflict, therefore one seeks
a trade-off between them, depending on the application. We present a dictionary
learning method with an effective control over the self-coherence of the
trained dictionary, enabling a trade-off between maximizing the sparsity of
codings and approximating an equiangular tight frame.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; IEEE Signal Processing Letters, vol. 19, no. 12,
201
Radial functions on compact support
In this paper, radial basis functions that are compactly supported and give rise to positive definite interpolation matrices for scattered data are discussed. They are related to the well-known thin plate spline radial functions which are highly useful in applications for gridfree approximation methods. Also, encouraging approximation results for the compactly supported radial functions are show
Cubic spline prewavelets on the four-directional mesh
In this paper, we design differentiable, two dimensional, piecewise polynomial cubic prewavelets of particularly small compact support. They are given in closed form, and provide stable, orthogonal decompositions of L^2(\RR^2). In particular, the splines we use in our prewavelet constructions give rise to stable bases of spline spaces that contain all cubic polynomials, whereas the more familiar box spline constructions cannot reproduce all cubic polynomials, unless resorting to a box spline of higher polynomial degree
Surface-induced heating of cold polar molecules
We study the rotational and vibrational heating of diatomic molecules placed
near a surface at finite temperature on the basis of macroscopic quantum
electrodynamics. The internal molecular evolution is governed by transition
rates that depend on both temperature and position. Analytical and numerical
methods are used to investigate the heating of several relevant molecules near
various surfaces. We determine the critical distances at which the surface
itself becomes the dominant source of heating and we investigate the transition
between the long-range and short-range behaviour of the heating rates. A simple
formula is presented that can be used to estimate the surface-induced heating
rates of other molecules of interest. We also consider how the heating depends
on the thickness and composition of the surface.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Ground-state van der Waals forces in planar multilayer magnetodielectrics
Within the frame of lowest-order perturbation theory, the van der Waals
potential of a ground-state atom placed within an arbitrary dispersing and
absorbing magnetodielectric multilayer system is given. Examples of an atom
situated in front of a magnetodielectric plate or between two such plates are
studied in detail. Special emphasis is placed on the competing attractive and
repulsive force components associated with the electric and magnetic matter
properties, respectively, and conditions for the formation of repulsive
potential walls are given. Both numerical and analytical results are presented.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, minor correction
Casimir force on amplifying bodies
Based on a unified approach to macroscopic QED that allows for the inclusion
of amplification in a limited space and frequency range, we study the Casimir
force as a Lorentz force on an arbitrary partially amplifying system of
linearly locally responding (isotropic) magnetoelectric bodies. We demonstrate
that the force on a weakly polarisable/magnetisable amplifying object in the
presence of a purely absorbing environment can be expressed as a sum over the
Casimir--Polder forces on the excited atoms inside the body. As an example, the
resonant force between a plate consisting of a dilute gas of excited atoms and
a perfect mirror is calculated
Non-Perturbative Theory of Dispersion Interactions
Some open questions exist with fluctuation-induced forces between extended
dipoles. Conventional intuition derives from large-separation perturbative
approximations to dispersion force theory. Here we present a full
non-perturbative theory. In addition we discuss how one can take into account
finite dipole size corrections. It is of fundamental value to investigate the
limits of validity of the perturbative dispersion force theory.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Van der Waals interaction and spontaneous decay of an excited atom in a superlens-type geometry
Within the framework of macroscopic quantum electrodynamics, the resonant van
der Waals potential experienced by an excited two-level atom near a planar
magneto-electric two-layer system consisting of a slab of left-handed material
and a perfect mirror is studied. It is shown that disregarding of material
absorption leads to unphysical results, with divergent values for the potential
away from the surface. Under appropriate conditions, the setup is found to
feature a barrier near the surface which can be employed to levitate particles
or used as a trapping or cooling mechanism. Finally, the problem of spontaneous
decay [J. K\"{a}stel and M. Fleischhauer, Phys. Rev. A \textbf{68}, 011804(R)
(2005)] is revisited. Disregarding of absorption is shown to drastically
falsify the dependence on the atomic position of the decay rate.Comment: 10 Pages, 6 figure
Matter-screened Casimir force and Casimir-Polder force in planar structures
Using a recently developed theory of the Casimir force (Raabe C and Welsch
D-G 2005 Phys. Rev. A 71 013814), we calculate the force that acts on a plate
in front of a planar wall and the force that acts on the plate in the case
where the plate is part of matter that fills the space in front of the wall. We
show that in the limit of a dielectric plate whose permittivity is close to
unity, the force obtained in the former case reduces to the ordinary, i.e.,
unscreened Casimir-Polder force acting on isolated atoms. In the latter case,
the theory yields the Casimir-Polder force that is screened by the surrounding
matter.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure -- published online at J. Opt. B on Nov 16 200
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