12,930 research outputs found
Optimal cloning of single photon polarization by coherent feedback of beam splitter losses
Light fields can be amplified by measuring the field amplitude reflected at a
beam splitter of reflectivity R and adding a coherent amplitude proportional to
the measurement result to the transmitted field. By applying the quantum
optical realization of this amplification scheme to single photon inputs, it is
possible to clone the polarization states of photons. We show that optimal
cloning of single photon polarization is possible when the gain factor of the
amplification is equal to the inverse squareroot of 1-R.Comment: 10 pages, including 1 figure, extended from letter to full paper, to
be published in New Journal of Physic
Computing Web-scale Topic Models using an Asynchronous Parameter Server
Topic models such as Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) have been widely used
in information retrieval for tasks ranging from smoothing and feedback methods
to tools for exploratory search and discovery. However, classical methods for
inferring topic models do not scale up to the massive size of today's publicly
available Web-scale data sets. The state-of-the-art approaches rely on custom
strategies, implementations and hardware to facilitate their asynchronous,
communication-intensive workloads.
We present APS-LDA, which integrates state-of-the-art topic modeling with
cluster computing frameworks such as Spark using a novel asynchronous parameter
server. Advantages of this integration include convenient usage of existing
data processing pipelines and eliminating the need for disk writes as data can
be kept in memory from start to finish. Our goal is not to outperform highly
customized implementations, but to propose a general high-performance topic
modeling framework that can easily be used in today's data processing
pipelines. We compare APS-LDA to the existing Spark LDA implementations and
show that our system can, on a 480-core cluster, process up to 135 times more
data and 10 times more topics without sacrificing model quality.Comment: To appear in SIGIR 201
Analytical design and simulation evaluation of an approach flight director system for a jet STOL aircraft
A program was undertaken to develop design criteria and operational procedures for STOL transport aircraft. As part of that program, a series of flight tests shall be performed in an Augmentor Wing Jet STOL Aircraft. In preparation for the flight test programs, an analytical study was conducted to gain an understanding of the characteristics of the vehicle for manual control, to assess the relative merits of the variety of manual control techniques available with attitude and thrust vector controllers, and to determine what improvements can be made over manual control of the bare airframe by providing the pilot with suitable command guidance information and by augmentation of the bare airframe dynamics. The objective of the study is to apply closed-loop pilot/vehicle analysis techniques to the analysis of manual flight control of powered-lift STOL aircraft in the landing approach and to the design and experimental verification of an advanced flight director display
Ultrafast circular polarization oscillations in spin-polarized vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser devices
Spin-polarized lasers offer new encouraging possibilities for future devices. We investigate the polarization dynamics of electrically pumped vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers after additional spin injection at room temperature. We find that the circular polarization degree exhibits faster dynamics than the emitted light. Moreover the experimental results demonstrate a strongly damped ultrafast circular polarization oscillation due to spin injection with an oscillation frequency of approximately 11GHz depending on the birefringence in the VCSEL device. We compare our experimental results with theoretical calculations based on rate-equations. This allows us to predict undamped long persisting ultrafast polarization oscillations, which reveal the potential of spin-VCSELs for ultrafast modulation applications
Birefringence controlled room-temperature picosecond spin dynamics close to the threshold of vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser devices
We analyze the spin-induced circular polarization dynamics at the threshold of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers at room-temperature using a hybrid excitation combining electrically pumping without spin preference and spin-polarized optical injection. After a short pulse of spin-polarized excitation, fast oscillations of the circular polarization degree (CPD) are observed within the relaxation oscillations. A theoretical investigation of this behavior on the basis of a rate equation model shows that these fast oscillations of CPD could be suppressed by means of a reduction of the birefringence of the laser cavity
Nonlinear soil-structure interaction calculations simulating the SIMQUAKE experiment using STEALTH 2D
Transient, nonlinear soil-structure interaction simulations of an Electric Power Research Institute, SIMQUAKE experiment were performed using the large strain, time domain STEALTH 2D code and a cyclic, kinematically hardening cap soil model. Results from the STEALTH simulations were compared to identical simulations performed with the TRANAL code and indicate relatively good agreement between all the STEALTH and TRANAL calculations. The differences that are seen can probably be attributed to: (1) large (STEALTH) vs. small (TRANAL) strain formulation and/or (2) grid discretization differences
Microscopic Model versus Systematic Low-Energy Effective Field Theory for a Doped Quantum Ferromagnet
We consider a microscopic model for a doped quantum ferromagnet as a test
case for the systematic low-energy effective field theory for magnons and
holes, which is constructed in complete analogy to the case of quantum
antiferromagnets. In contrast to antiferromagnets, for which the effective
field theory approach can be tested only numerically, in the ferromagnetic case
both the microscopic and the effective theory can be solved analytically. In
this way the low-energy parameters of the effective theory are determined
exactly by matching to the underlying microscopic model. The low-energy
behavior at half-filling as well as in the single- and two-hole sectors is
described exactly by the systematic low-energy effective field theory. In
particular, for weakly bound two-hole states the effective field theory even
works beyond perturbation theory. This lends strong support to the quantitative
success of the systematic low-energy effective field theory method not only in
the ferromagnetic but also in the physically most interesting antiferromagnetic
case.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figur
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