4,981 research outputs found
Towards Persistent Storage and Retrieval of Domain Models using Graph Database Technology
We employ graph database technology to persistently store and retrieve robot
domain models.Comment: Presented at DSLRob 2015 (arXiv:1601.00877
Cooperative Relaying in a Poisson Field of Interferers: A Diversity Order Analysis
This work analyzes the gains of cooperative relaying in interference-limited
networks, in which outages can be due to interference and fading. A stochastic
model based on point process theory is used to capture the spatial randomness
present in contemporary wireless networks. Using a modification of the
diversity order metric, the reliability gain of selection decode-and-forward is
studied for several cases. The main results are as follows: the achievable
\emph{spatial-contention} diversity order (SC-DO) is equal to one irrespective
of the type of channel which is due to the ineffectiveness of the relay in the
MAC-phase (transmit diversity). In the BC-phase (receive diversity), the SC-DO
depends on the amount of fading and spatial interference correlation. In the
absence of fading, there is a hard transition between SC-DO of either one or
two, depending on the system parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To be presented at ISIT 201
Improvement of speech recognition by nonlinear noise reduction
The success of nonlinear noise reduction applied to a single channel
recording of human voice is measured in terms of the recognition rate of a
commercial speech recognition program in comparison to the optimal linear
filter. The overall performance of the nonlinear method is shown to be
superior. We hence demonstrate that an algorithm which has its roots in the
theory of nonlinear deterministic dynamics possesses a large potential in a
realistic application.Comment: see urbanowicz.org.p
Tunneling in the self-trapped regime of a two-well Bose-Einstein condensate
Starting from a mean-field model of the Bose-Einstein condensate dimer, we reintroduce classically forbidden tunneling through a Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization approach. We find closed-form approximations to the tunneling frequency more accurate than those previously obtained using different techniques. We discuss the central role that tunneling in the self-trapped regime plays in a quantitatively accurate model of a dissipative dimer leaking atoms to the environment. Finally, we describe the prospects of experimental observation of tunneling in the self-trapped regime, both with and without dissipation.We wish to thank Wolfgang Muessel, Markus Oberthaler, Kaspar Sakmann, Andrea Trombettoni, Stephanos Venakides, and Tilman Zibold for helpful discussions. We are also grateful for the hospitality of Joshua E. S. Socolar and the Duke University Physics Department. This work was supported in part by Boston University. D.W. acknowledges support from the Helmholtz Association (Grant No. VH-NG-1025). (Boston University; VH-NG-1025 - Helmholtz Association)First author draf
Interference and Throughput in Aloha-based Ad Hoc Networks with Isotropic Node Distribution
We study the interference and outage statistics in a slotted Aloha ad hoc
network, where the spatial distribution of nodes is non-stationary and
isotropic. In such a network, outage probability and local throughput depend on
both the particular location in the network and the shape of the spatial
distribution. We derive in closed-form certain distributional properties of the
interference that are important for analyzing wireless networks as a function
of the location and the spatial shape. Our results focus on path loss exponents
2 and 4, the former case not being analyzable before due to the stationarity
assumption of the spatial node distribution. We propose two metrics for
measuring local throughput in non-stationary networks and discuss how our
findings can be applied to both analysis and optimization.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. To appear in International Symposium on
Information Theory (ISIT) 201
Dismissal protection and worker flows in small establishments
"Based on a large employer-employee matched data set, the paper investigates the effects of variable enforcement of German dismissal protection legislation on the employment dynamics in small establishments. Specifically, using a difference-in-differences approach, we study the effect of changes in the threshold scale exempting small establishments from dismissal protection provisions on worker flows. In contrast to the predictions of the theory, our results indicate that there are no statistically significant effects of the dismissal protection legislation on worker turnover." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))Kleinbetrieb, Kündigungsschutz, IAB-Linked-Employer-Employee-Datensatz, zwischenbetriebliche Mobilität
Dynamics of entanglement in a dissipative Bose-Hubbard dimer
We study the connection between the semiclassical phase space of the Bose-Hubbard dimer and inherently quantum phenomena in this model, such as entanglement and dissipation-induced coherence. Near the semiclassical self-trapping fixed points, the dynamics of Einstein-Podolski-Rosen (EPR) entanglement and condensate fraction consists of beats among just three eigenstates. Since persistent EPR entangled states arise only in the neighborhood of these fixed points, our analysis explains essentially all of the entanglement dynamics in the system. We derive accurate analytical approximations by expanding about the strong-coupling limit; surprisingly, their realm of validity is nearly the entire parameter space for which the self-trapping fixed points exist. Finally, we show significant enhancement of entanglement can be produced by applying localized dissipation.We thank Luca d'Alessio, Pjotrs Gri. sons, and especially Anatoli Polkovnikov for helpful discussions. This work was supported in part by Boston University, by the US National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHYS-1066293, and by a grant of the Max Planck Society to the MPRG Network Dynamics. H. H. acknowledges support by the German Research Foundation under Grant No. HE 6312/1-1. We are also grateful for the hospitality of the Aspen Center for Physics. (Boston University; PHYS-1066293 - US National Science Foundation; Max Planck Society; HE 6312/1-1 - German Research Foundation)First author draf
Global Phase Space of Coherence and Entanglement in a double-well BEC
Ultracold atoms provide an ideal system for the realization of quantum
technologies, but also for the study of fundamental physical questions such as
the emergence of decoherence and classicality in quantum many-body systems.
Here, we study the global structure of the quantum dynamics of bosonic atoms in
a double-well trap and analyze the conditions for the generation of
many-particle entanglement and spin squeezing which have important applications
in quantum metrology. We show how the quantum dynamics is determined by the
phase space structure of the associated mean-field system and where true
quantum features arise beyond this `classical' approximation
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