77 research outputs found
A unified approach to quantum dynamical maps and gaussian Wigner distributions
The KLM conditions are conditions that are necessary and sufficient for a phase-space function to be a Wigner distribution function (WDF). We apply them here to discuss three questions that have arisen recently: (1) For which WDFs P0 will the map P→P0*P be a quantum dynamical map - i.e. a map that takes WDFs to WDFs? (2) What are necessary and sufficient conditions for a phase-space gaussian to be a WDF? (3) Are there non-gaussian, non-negative WDFs? © 1988
LensPerfect: Gravitational Lens Massmap Reconstructions Yielding Exact Reproduction of All Multiple Images
We present a new approach to gravitational lens massmap reconstruction. Our
massmap solutions perfectly reproduce the positions, fluxes, and shears of all
multiple images. And each massmap accurately recovers the underlying mass
distribution to a resolution limited by the number of multiple images detected.
We demonstrate our technique given a mock galaxy cluster similar to Abell 1689
which gravitationally lenses 19 mock background galaxies to produce 93 multiple
images. We also explore cases in which far fewer multiple images are observed,
such as four multiple images of a single galaxy. Massmap solutions are never
unique, and our method makes it possible to explore an extremely flexible range
of physical (and unphysical) solutions, all of which perfectly reproduce the
data given. Each reconfiguration of the source galaxies produces a new massmap
solution. An optimization routine is provided to find those source positions
(and redshifts, within uncertainties) which produce the "most physical" massmap
solution, according to a new figure of merit developed here. Our method imposes
no assumptions about the slope of the radial profile nor mass following light.
But unlike "non-parametric" grid-based methods, the number of free parameters
we solve for is only as many as the number of observable constraints (or
slightly greater if fluxes are constrained). For each set of source positions
and redshifts, massmap solutions are obtained "instantly" via direct matrix
inversion by smoothly interpolating the deflection field using a recently
developed mathematical technique. Our LensPerfect software is straightforward
and easy to use and is made publicly available via our website.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted by ApJ. Software and full-color
version of paper available at http://www.its.caltech.edu/~coe/LensPerfect
Kernel Based Quadrature on Spheres and Other Homogeneous Spaces
Quadrature formulas for spheres, the rotation group, and other compact, homogeneous manifolds are important in a number of applications and have been the subject of recent research. The main purpose of this paper is to study coordinate independent quadrature (or cubature) formulas associated with certain classes of positive definite and conditionally positive definite kernels that are invariant under the group action of the homogeneous manifold. In particular, we show that these formulas are accurate—optimally so in many cases—and stable under an increasing number of nodes and in the presence of noise, provided the set X of quadrature nodes is quasi-uniform. The stability results are new in all cases. In addition, we may use these quadrature formulas to obtain similar formulas for manifolds diffeomorphic to Sn, oblate spheroids for instance. The weights are obtained by solving a single linear system. For S2, and the restricted thin plate spline kernel r2log r, these weights can be computed for two-thirds of a million nodes, using a preconditioned iterative technique introduced by us
Spin Needlets for Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization Data Analysis
Scalar wavelets have been used extensively in the analysis of Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB) temperature maps. Spin needlets are a new form of
(spin) wavelets which were introduced in the mathematical literature by Geller
and Marinucci (2008) as a tool for the analysis of spin random fields. Here we
adopt the spin needlet approach for the analysis of CMB polarization
measurements. The outcome of experiments measuring the polarization of the CMB
are maps of the Stokes Q and U parameters which are spin 2 quantities. Here we
discuss how to transform these spin 2 maps into spin 2 needlet coefficients and
outline briefly how these coefficients can be used in the analysis of CMB
polarization data. We review the most important properties of spin needlets,
such as localization in pixel and harmonic space and asymptotic uncorrelation.
We discuss several statistical applications, including the relation of angular
power spectra to the needlet coefficients, testing for non-Gaussianity on
polarization data, and reconstruction of the E and B scalar maps.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Kernel Approximation on Manifolds II: The -norm of the -projector
This article addresses two topics of significant mathematical and practical
interest in the theory of kernel approximation: the existence of local and
stable bases and the L_p--boundedness of the least squares operator. The latter
is an analogue of the classical problem in univariate spline theory, known
there as the "de Boor conjecture". A corollary of this work is that for
appropriate kernels the least squares projector provides universal near-best
approximations for functions f\in L_p, 1\le p\le \infty.Comment: 25 pages; minor revision; new proof of Lemma 3.9; accepted for
publication in SIAM J. on Math. Ana
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