14 research outputs found
Genuine Correlations of Like-Sign Particles in Hadronic Z0 Decays
Correlations among hadrons with the same electric charge produced in Z0
decays are studied using the high statistics data collected from 1991 through
1995 with the OPAL detector at LEP. Normalized factorial cumulants up to fourth
order are used to measure genuine particle correlations as a function of the
size of phase space domains in rapidity, azimuthal angle and transverse
momentum. Both all-charge and like-sign particle combinations show strong
positive genuine correlations. One-dimensional cumulants initially increase
rapidly with decreasing size of the phase space cells but saturate quickly. In
contrast, cumulants in two- and three-dimensional domains continue to increase.
The strong rise of the cumulants for all-charge multiplets is increasingly
driven by that of like-sign multiplets. This points to the likely influence of
Bose-Einstein correlations. Some of the recently proposed algorithms to
simulate Bose-Einstein effects, implemented in the Monte Carlo model PYTHIA,
are found to reproduce reasonably well the measured second- and higher-order
correlations between particles with the same charge as well as those in
all-charge particle multiplets.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to Phys. Lett.
Entanglement or separability: The choice of how to factorize the algebra of a density matrix
We discuss the concept of how entanglement changes with respect to different
factorizations of the total algebra which describes the quantum states.
Depending on the considered factorization a quantum state appears either
entangled or separable. For pure states we always can switch unitarily between
separability and entanglement, however, for mixed states a minimal amount of
mixedness is needed. We discuss our general statements in detail for the
familiar case of qubits, the GHZ states, Werner states and Gisin states,
emphasizing their geometric features. As theorists we use and play with this
free choice of factorization, which is naturally fixed for an experimentalist.
For theorists it offers an extension of the interpretations and is adequate to
generalizations, as we point out in the examples of quantum teleportation and
entanglement swapping.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures. Introduction, Conclusion and References have
been extended in v
Why rankings of biomedical image analysis competitions should be interpreted with care
International challenges have become the standard for validation of biomedical image analysis methods. Given their scientific impact, it is surprising that a critical analysis of common practices related to the organization of challenges has not yet been performed. In this paper, we present a comprehensive analysis of biomedical image analysis challenges conducted up to now. We demonstrate the importance of challenges and show that the lack of quality control has critical consequences. First, reproducibility and interpretation of the results is often hampered as only a fraction of relevant information is typically provided. Second, the rank of an algorithm is generally not robust to a number of variables such as the test data used for validation, the ranking scheme applied and the observers that make the reference annotations. To overcome these problems, we recommend best practice guidelines and define open research questions to be addressed in the future