978 research outputs found
Complementary weak-value amplification with concatenated postselections
We measure a transverse momentum kick in a Sagnac interferometer using
weak-value amplification with two postselections. The first postselection is
controlled by a polarization dependent phase mismatch between both paths of a
Sagnac interferometer and the second postselection is controlled by a polarizer
at the exit port. By monitoring the darkport of the interferometer, we study
the complementary amplification of the concatenated postselections, where the
polarization extinction ratio is greater than the contrast of the spatial
interference. In this case, we find an improvement in the amplification of the
signal of interest by introducing a second postselection to the system
Can Anomalous Amplification be Attained Without Postselection?
We present a parameter estimation technique based on performing joint
measurements of a weak interaction away from the weak-value-amplification
approximation. Two detectors are used to collect full statistics of the
correlations between two weakly entangled degrees of freedom. Without the need
of postselection, the protocol resembles the anomalous amplification of an
imaginary-weak-value-like response. The amplification is induced in the
difference signal of both detectors allowing robustness to different sources of
technical noise, and offering in addition the advantages of balanced signals
for precision metrology. All of the Fisher information about the parameter of
interest is collected, and a phase controls the amplification response. We
experimentally demonstrate the proposed technique by measuring polarization
rotations in a linearly polarized laser pulse. The effective sensitivity and
precision of a split detector is increased when compared to a conventional
continuous-wave balanced detection technique
Diffusion-Based Density-Equalizing Maps: an Interdisciplinary Approach to Visualizing Homicide Rates and Other Georeferenced Statistical Data
In every country, public and private agencies allocate extensive funding to
collect large-scale statistical data, which in turn are studied and analyzed in
order to determine local, regional, national, and international policies
regarding all aspects relevant to the welfare of society. One important aspect
of that process is the visualization of statistical data with embedded
geographical information, which most often relies on archaic methods such as
maps colored according to graded scales. In this work, we apply non-standard
visualization techniques based on physical principles. We illustrate the method
with recent statistics on homicide rates in Brazil and their correlation to
other publicly available data. This physics-based approach provides a novel
tool that can be used by interdisciplinary teams investigating statistics and
model projections in a variety of fields such as economics and gross domestic
product research, public health and epidemiology, socio-demographics, political
science, business and marketing, and many others.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. To appear in Vol. 42 of Braz. J. Phy
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