401 research outputs found
Determinantal Processes and Independence
We give a probabilistic introduction to determinantal and permanental point
processes. Determinantal processes arise in physics (fermions, eigenvalues of
random matrices) and in combinatorics (nonintersecting paths, random spanning
trees). They have the striking property that the number of points in a region
is a sum of independent Bernoulli random variables, with parameters which
are eigenvalues of the relevant operator on . Moreover, any
determinantal process can be represented as a mixture of determinantal
projection processes. We give a simple explanation for these known facts, and
establish analogous representations for permanental processes, with geometric
variables replacing the Bernoulli variables. These representations lead to
simple proofs of existence criteria and central limit theorems, and unify known
results on the distribution of absolute values in certain processes with
radially symmetric distributions.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/154957806000000078 in the
Probability Surveys (http://www.i-journals.org/ps/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Eigenvalue variance bounds for Wigner and covariance random matrices
This work is concerned with finite range bounds on the variance of individual
eigenvalues of Wigner random matrices, in the bulk and at the edge of the
spectrum, as well as for some intermediate eigenvalues. Relying on the GUE
example, which needs to be investigated first, the main bounds are extended to
families of Hermitian Wigner matrices by means of the Tao and Vu Four Moment
Theorem and recent localization results by Erd\"os, Yau and Yin. The case of
real Wigner matrices is obtained from interlacing formulas. As an application,
bounds on the expected 2-Wasserstein distance between the empirical spectral
measure and the semicircle law are derived. Similar results are available for
random covariance matrices
Edge scaling limits for a family of non-Hermitian random matrix ensembles
A family of random matrix ensembles interpolating between the GUE and the
Ginibre ensemble of matrices with iid centered complex Gaussian
entries is considered. The asymptotic spectral distribution in these models is
uniform in an ellipse in the complex plane, which collapses to an interval of
the real line as the degree of non-Hermiticity diminishes. Scaling limit
theorems are proven for the eigenvalue point process at the rightmost edge of
the spectrum, and it is shown that a non-trivial transition occurs between
Poisson and Airy point process statistics when the ratio of the axes of the
supporting ellipse is of order . In this regime, the family of
limiting probability distributions of the maximum of the real parts of the
eigenvalues interpolates between the Gumbel and Tracy-Widom distributions.Comment: 44 page
Non-stoichiometric silicon nitride for future gravitational wave detectors
Silicon nitride thin films were deposited at room temperature employing a custom ion beam deposition (IBD) system. The stoichiometry of these films was tuned by controlling the nitrogen gas flow through the ion source and a process gas ring. A correlation is established between the process parameters, such as ion beam voltage and ion current, and the optical and mechanical properties of the films based on post-deposition heat treatment. The results show that with increasing heat treatment temperature, the mechanical loss of these materials as well as their optical absorption decreases producing films with an extinction coefficient as low as k = 6.2(±0.5) × 10−7 at 1064 nm for samples annealed at 900°C. This presents the lowest value for IBD SiNx within the context of gravitational wave detector applications. The mechanical loss of the films was measured to be Φ = 2.1(±0.6) × 10−4 once annealed post deposition to 900°C
Non-stoichiometric silicon nitride for future gravitational wave detectors
Silicon nitride thin films were deposited at room temperature employing a custom ion beam deposition (IBD) system. The stoichiometry of these films was tuned by controlling the nitrogen gas flow through the ion source and a process gas ring. A correlation is established between the process parameters, such as ion beam voltage and ion current, and the optical and mechanical properties of the films based on post-deposition heat treatment. The results show that with increasing heat treatment temperature, the mechanical loss of these materials as well as their optical absorption decreases producing films with an extinction coefficient as low as k=6.2(±0.5)×10−7 at 1064 nm for samples annealed at 900 ∘C. This presents the lowest value for IBD SiN x within the context of gravitational wave detector applications. The mechanical loss of the films was measured to be ϕ=2.1(±0.6)×10−4 once annealed post deposition to 900 ∘C
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