374 research outputs found
Observation of Entanglement-Dependent Two-Particle Holonomic Phase
Holonomic phases---geometric and topological---have long been an intriguing
aspect of physics. They are ubiquitous, ranging from observations in particle
physics to applications in fault tolerant quantum computing. However, their
exploration in particles sharing genuine quantum correlations lack in
observations. Here we experimentally demonstrate the holonomic phase of two
entangled-photons evolving locally, which nevertheless gives rise to an
entanglement-dependent phase. We observe its transition from geometric to
topological as the entanglement between the particles is tuned from zero to
maximal, and find this phase to behave more resilient to evolution changes with
increasing entanglement. Furthermore, we theoretically show that holonomic
phases can directly quantify the amount of quantum correlations between the two
particles. Our results open up a new avenue for observations of holonomic
phenomena in multi-particle entangled quantum systems.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Bayesian astrostatistics: a backward look to the future
This perspective chapter briefly surveys: (1) past growth in the use of
Bayesian methods in astrophysics; (2) current misconceptions about both
frequentist and Bayesian statistical inference that hinder wider adoption of
Bayesian methods by astronomers; and (3) multilevel (hierarchical) Bayesian
modeling as a major future direction for research in Bayesian astrostatistics,
exemplified in part by presentations at the first ISI invited session on
astrostatistics, commemorated in this volume. It closes with an intentionally
provocative recommendation for astronomical survey data reporting, motivated by
the multilevel Bayesian perspective on modeling cosmic populations: that
astronomers cease producing catalogs of estimated fluxes and other source
properties from surveys. Instead, summaries of likelihood functions (or
marginal likelihood functions) for source properties should be reported (not
posterior probability density functions), including nontrivial summaries (not
simply upper limits) for candidate objects that do not pass traditional
detection thresholds.Comment: 27 pp, 4 figures. A lightly revised version of a chapter in
"Astrostatistical Challenges for the New Astronomy" (Joseph M. Hilbe, ed.,
Springer, New York, forthcoming in 2012), the inaugural volume for the
Springer Series in Astrostatistics. Version 2 has minor clarifications and an
additional referenc
Likelihood Analysis of Repeating in the BATSE Catalogue
I describe a new likelihood technique, based on counts-in-cells statistics,
that I use to analyze repeating in the BATSE 1B and 2B catalogues. Using the 1B
data, I find that repeating is preferred over non-repeating by 4.3:1 odds, with
a well-defined peak at 5-6 repetitions per source. I find that the post-1B data
are consistent with the repeating model inferred from the 1B data, after taking
into account the lower fraction of bursts with well-determined positions.
Combining the two data sets, I find that the odds favoring repeating over
non-repeating are almost unaffected at 4:1, with a narrower peak at 5
repetitions per source. I conclude that the data sets are consistent both with
each other and with repeating, and that for these data sets the odds favor
repeating.Comment: 5 pages including 3 encapsulated figures, as a uuencoded, gzipped,
Postscript file. To appear in Proc. of the 1995 La Jolla workshop ``High
Velocity Neutron Stars and Gamma-Ray Bursts'' eds. Rothschild, R. et al.,
AIP, New Yor
Bayesian Analysis of the (Generalized) Chaplygin Gas and Cosmological Constant Models using the 157 gold SNe Ia Data
The generalized Chaplygin gas model (GCGM) contains 5 free parameters, here,
they are constrained through the type Ia supernovae data, i.e., the ``gold
sample'' of 157 supernovae data. Negative and large positive values for
are taken into account. The analysis is made by employing the Bayesian
statistics and the prediction for each parameter is obtained by marginalizing
on the remained ones. This procedure leads to the following predictions:
, , , , , . Through the same
analysis the specific case of the ordinary Chaplygin gas model (CGM), for which
, is studied. In this case, there are now four free parameters and
the predictions for them are: , , , , . To complete the
analysis the CDM, with its three free parameters, is considered. For
all these models, particular cases are considered where one or two parameters
are fixed. The age of the Universe, the deceleration parameter and the moment
the Universe begins to accelerate are also evaluated. The quartessence
scenario, is favoured. A closed (and in some cases a flat) and accelerating
Universe is also preferred. The CGM case is far from been ruled
out, and it is even preferred in some particular cases. In most of the cases
the CDM is disfavoured with respect to GCGM and CGM.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX 2e, 6 tables, 38 EPS figures, uses graphic
Avoiding selection bias in gravitational wave astronomy
When searching for gravitational waves in the data from ground-based
gravitational wave detectors it is common to use a detection threshold to
reduce the number of background events which are unlikely to be the signals of
interest. However, imposing such a threshold will also discard some real
signals with low amplitude, which can potentially bias any inferences drawn
from the population of detected signals. We show how this selection bias is
naturally avoided by using the full information from the search, considering
both the selected data and our ignorance of the data that are thrown away, and
considering all relevant signal and noise models. This approach produces
unbiased estimates of parameters even in the presence of false alarms and
incomplete data. This can be seen as an extension of previous methods into the
high false rate regime where we are able to show that the quality of parameter
inference can be optimised by lowering thresholds and increasing the false
alarm rate.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
Bayesian Constraints on theta_{13} from Solar and KamLAND Neutrino Data
We present the results of a Bayesian analysis of solar and KamLAND neutrino
data in the framework of three-neutrino mixing. We adopt two approaches for the
prior probability distribution of the oscillation parameters Delta m^2_{21},
sin^2 theta_{12}, sin^2 theta_{13}: 1) a traditional flat uninformative prior;
2) an informative prior which describes the limits on sin^2 theta_{13} obtained
in atmospheric and long-baseline accelerator and reactor neutrino experiments.
In both approaches, we present the allowed regions in the sin^2 theta_{13} -
Delta m^2_{21} and sin^2 theta_{12} - sin^2 theta_{13} planes, as well as the
marginal posterior probability distribution of sin^2 theta_{13}. We confirm the
1.2 sigma hint of theta_{13} > 0 found in hep-ph/0806.2649 from the analysis of
solar and KamLAND neutrino data. We found that the statistical significance of
the hint is reduced to about 0.8 sigma by the constraints on sin^2 theta_{13}
coming from atmospheric and long-baseline accelerator and reactor neutrino
data, in agreement with arXiv:0808.2016.Comment: 21 pages. Final version published in Phys. Rev. D 80 (2009) 05300
Search for high-frequency periodicities in time-tagged event data from gamma ray bursts and soft gamma repeaters
We analyze the Time-Tagged Event (TTE) data from observations of gamma ray
bursts (GRBs) and soft gamma repeaters (SGRs) by the Burst and Transient Source
Experiment (BATSE). These data provide the best available time resolution for
GRBs and SGRs. We have performed an extensive search for weak periodic signals
in the frequency range 400 Hz to 2500 Hz using the burst records for 2203 GRBs
and 152 SGR flares. The study employs the Rayleigh power as a test statistic to
evaluate the evidence for periodic emissions. We find no evidence of periodic
emissions from these events at these frequencies. In all but a very few cases
the maximum power values obtained are consistent with what would be expected by
chance from a non-periodic signal. In those few instances where there is
marginal evidence for periodicity there are problems with the data that cast
doubt on the reality of the signal. For classical GRBs, the largest Rayleigh
power occurs in bursts whose TTE data appear to be corrupted. For SGRs, our
largest Rayleigh power, with a significance of 1%, occurs in one record for SGR
1900+14 (at 2497 Hz), and in no other outbursts associated with this source; we
thus consider it unlikely to represent detection of a real periodicity. From
simulations, we deduce that the Rayleigh test would have detected significant
oscillations with relative amplitude ~10% about half the time. Thus, we
conclude that high frequency oscillations, if present, must have small relative
amplitudes.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Ap
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