44,512 research outputs found
A strong law of large numbers for branching processes: almost sure spine events
We demonstrate a novel strong law of large numbers for branching processes,
with a simple proof via measure-theoretic manipulations and spine theory.
Roughly speaking, any sequence of events that eventually occurs almost surely
for the spine entails the almost sure convergence of a certain sum over
particles in the population.Comment: 6 page
Growth rates of the population in a branching Brownian motion with an inhomogeneous breeding potential
We consider a branching particle system where each particle moves as an
independent Brownian motion and breeds at a rate proportional to its distance
from the origin raised to the power , for . The asymptotic
behaviour of the right-most particle for this system is already known; in this
article we give large deviations probabilities for particles following
"difficult" paths, growth rates along "easy" paths, the total population growth
rate, and we derive the optimal paths which particles must follow to achieve
this growth rate.Comment: 56 pages, 1 figur
The Globular Cluster Systems in the Coma Ellipticals. III: The Unique Case of IC 4051
Using archival \hst WFPC2 data, we derive the metallicity distribution,
luminosity function, and spatial structure of the globular cluster system
around IC 4051, a giant E galaxy on the outskirts of the Coma cluster core. The
metallicity distribution derived from the (V-I) colors has a mean [Fe/H] =
-0.3, a near-complete lack of metal-poor clusters, and only a small metallicity
gradient with radius; it may, however, have two roughly equal metallicity
subcomponents, centered at [Fe/H] ~ 0.0 and -1.0. The luminosity distribution
(GCLF) has the Gaussian-like form observed in all other giant E galaxies, with
a peak (turnover) at V = 27.8, consistent with a Coma distance of 100 Mpc. The
radial profiles of both the GCS and the halo light show an unusually steep
falloff which may indicate that the halo of this galaxy has been tidally
truncated. Lastly, the specific frequency of the GCS is remarkably large: we
find S_N = 11 +- 2, resembling the central cD-type galaxies even though IC 4051
is not a cD or brightest cluster elliptical. A formation model consistent with
most of the observations would be that this galaxy was subjected to removal of
a large fraction of its protogalactic gas shortly after its main phase of
globular cluster formation, probably by its first passage through the Coma
core. Since then, no significant additions due to accretions or mergers have
taken place.Comment: 24 pp. plus 13 Figures. Postscript file for the complete paper can
also be downloaded from http://www.physun.mcmaster.ca/~harris/WEHarris.html.
Astron.J., in pres
Impact hazard protection efficiency by a small kinetic impactor
In this paper the ability of a small kinetic impactor spacecraft to mitigate an Earth-threatening asteroid is assessed by means of a novel measure of efficiency. This measure estimates the probability of a space system to deflect a single randomly-generated Earth-impacting object to a safe distance from the Earth. This represents a measure of efficiency that is not biased by the orbital parameters of a test-case object. A vast number of virtual Earth-impacting scenarios are investigated by homogenously distributing in orbital space a grid of 17,518 Earth impacting trajectories. The relative frequency of each trajectory is estimated by means Opik’s theory and Bottke’s near Earth objects model. A design of the entire mitigation mission is performed and the largest deflected asteroid computed for each impacting trajectory. The minimum detectable asteroid can also be estimated by an asteroid survey model. The results show that current technology would likely suffice against discovered airburst and local damage threats, whereas larger space systems would be necessary to reliably tackle impact hazard from larger threats. For example, it is shown that only 1,000 kg kinetic impactor would suffice to mitigate the impact threat of 27.1% of objects posing similar threat than that posed by Apophis
On a random walk with memory and its relation to Markovian processes
We study a one-dimensional random walk with memory in which the step lengths
to the left and to the right evolve at each step in order to reduce the
wandering of the walker. The feedback is quite efficient and lead to a
non-diffusive walk. The time evolution of the displacement is given by an
equivalent Markovian dynamical process. The probability density for the
position of the walker is the same at any time as for a random walk with
shrinking steps, although the two-time correlation functions are quite
different.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Laser cooling and control of excitations in superfluid helium
Superfluidity is an emergent quantum phenomenon which arises due to strong
interactions between elementary excitations in liquid helium. These excitations
have been probed with great success using techniques such as neutron and light
scattering. However measurements to-date have been limited, quite generally, to
average properties of bulk superfluid or the driven response far out of thermal
equilibrium. Here, we use cavity optomechanics to probe the thermodynamics of
superfluid excitations in real-time. Furthermore, strong light-matter
interactions allow both laser cooling and amplification of the thermal motion.
This provides a new tool to understand and control the microscopic behaviour of
superfluids, including phonon-phonon interactions, quantised vortices and
two-dimensional quantum phenomena such as the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless
transition. The third sound modes studied here also offer a pathway towards
quantum optomechanics with thin superfluid films, including femtogram effective
masses, high mechanical quality factors, strong phonon-phonon and phonon-vortex
interactions, and self-assembly into complex geometries with sub-nanometre
feature size.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary information attache
Minimum requirements for feedback enhanced force sensing
The problem of estimating an unknown force driving a linear oscillator is
revisited. When using linear measurement, feedback is often cited as a
mechanism to enhance bandwidth or sensitivity. We show that as long as the
oscillator dynamics are known, there exists a real-time estimation strategy
that reproduces the same measurement record as any arbitrary feedback protocol.
Consequently some form of nonlinearity is required to gain any advantage beyond
estimation alone. This result holds true in both quantum and classical systems,
with non-stationary forces and feedback, and in the general case of
non-Gaussian and correlated noise. Recently, feedback enhanced incoherent force
sensing has been demonstrated [Nat. Nano. \textbf{7}, 509 (2012)], with the
enhancement attributed to a feedback induced modification of the mechanical
susceptibility. As a proof-of-principle we experimentally reproduce this result
through straightforward filtering.Comment: 5 pages + 2 pages of Supplementary Informatio
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