2,054 research outputs found
Optimal Pooling in Claims Resolution Facilities
A class of nonlinear stochastic processes satysfying a "Lipschitz-type strip condition" and supplied by a linear output equation, is considered. Robust asymptotic (high-gain) state estimation for nonlinear stochastic processes via differential neural networks is discussed. A new type learning law for the weight dynamics is suggested. By a stochastic Lyapunov-like analysis (with Ito formula implementation), the stability conditions for the state estimation error as well as for the neural network weights are established. The upper bound for this error is derived. The numerical example, dealing with "module"-type nonlinearities, illustrates the effectiveness of the suggested approach
Prescription for experimental determination of the dynamics of a quantum black box
We give an explicit prescription for experimentally determining the evolution
operators which completely describe the dynamics of a quantum mechanical black
box -- an arbitrary open quantum system. We show necessary and sufficient
conditions for this to be possible, and illustrate the general theory by
considering specifically one and two quantum bit systems. These procedures may
be useful in the comparative evaluation of experimental quantum measurement,
communication, and computation systems.Comment: 6 pages, Revtex. Submitted to J. Mod. Op
Spectral Line Removal in the LIGO Data Analysis System (LDAS)
High power in narrow frequency bands, spectral lines, are a feature of an
interferometric gravitational wave detector's output. Some lines are coherent
between interferometers, in particular, the 2 km and 4 km LIGO Hanford
instruments. This is of concern to data analysis techniques, such as the
stochastic background search, that use correlations between instruments to
detect gravitational radiation. Several techniques of `line removal' have been
proposed. Where a line is attributable to a measurable environmental
disturbance, a simple linear model may be fitted to predict, and subsequently
subtract away, that line. This technique has been implemented (as the command
oelslr) in the LIGO Data Analysis System (LDAS). We demonstrate its application
to LIGO S1 data.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, to be published in CQG GWDAW02 proceeding
Extracting dynamical equations from experimental data is NP-hard
The behavior of any physical system is governed by its underlying dynamical
equations. Much of physics is concerned with discovering these dynamical
equations and understanding their consequences. In this work, we show that,
remarkably, identifying the underlying dynamical equation from any amount of
experimental data, however precise, is a provably computationally hard problem
(it is NP-hard), both for classical and quantum mechanical systems. As a
by-product of this work, we give complexity-theoretic answers to both the
quantum and classical embedding problems, two long-standing open problems in
mathematics (the classical problem, in particular, dating back over 70 years).Comment: For mathematical details, see arXiv:0908.2128[math-ph]. v2: final
version, accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
The ACIGA Data Analysis programme
The Data Analysis programme of the Australian Consortium for Interferometric
Gravitational Astronomy (ACIGA) was set up in 1998 by the first author to
complement the then existing ACIGA programmes working on suspension systems,
lasers and optics, and detector configurations. The ACIGA Data Analysis
programme continues to contribute significantly in the field; we present an
overview of our activities.Comment: 10 pages, 0 figures, accepted, Classical and Quantum Gravity,
(Proceedings of the 5th Edoardo Amaldi Conference on Gravitational Waves,
Tirrenia, Pisa, Italy, 6-11 July 2003
Asymptotic inference in system identification for the atom maser
System identification is an integrant part of control theory and plays an
increasing role in quantum engineering. In the quantum set-up, system
identification is usually equated to process tomography, i.e. estimating a
channel by probing it repeatedly with different input states. However for
quantum dynamical systems like quantum Markov processes, it is more natural to
consider the estimation based on continuous measurements of the output, with a
given input which may be stationary. We address this problem using asymptotic
statistics tools, for the specific example of estimating the Rabi frequency of
an atom maser. We compute the Fisher information of different measurement
processes as well as the quantum Fisher information of the atom maser, and
establish the local asymptotic normality of these statistical models. The
statistical notions can be expressed in terms of spectral properties of certain
deformed Markov generators and the connection to large deviations is briefly
discussed.Comment: 20pages, 3 figure
Corrigendum: Failing to get the gist of what's being said: background noise impairs higher-order cognitive processing.
[This corrects the article on p. 548 in vol. 6, PMID: 26052289.]
Carbon isotope values of hazelnut shells: a new proxy for canopy density
Hazel (Corylus avellana) has been abundant in the vegetation of northern and central Europe since the early Holocene and has provided food and materials for humans ever since. Here we use stable carbon isotope (δ13 14 C) values of hazelnut shells to infer woodland openness based on the premise of the “canopy effect”. It is well established that plants growing in dense, shaded forests have lower carbon isotope (δ13C) values than plants growing in open areas. By measuring δ13 C values in hazelnuts collected from trees growing in different levels of light intensity, we show that the canopy effect is preserved in hazelnuts and that their δ13 C values can be used to infer woodland openness in the past. We apply the method to hazelnuts recovered from sites dated to between the Mesolithic and Iron Age (c. 7000 BCE to 1000 CE) in southern Sweden. Our results show that the nuts dated to the Mesolithic were harvested from hazels growing in a range of closed to open settings while nuts from subsequent periods were harvested from progressively more open environments. Given the abundance of hazelnuts recovered from many archaeological contexts, this method has the potential to reconstruct the microhabitats exploited by humans in the past and explore the impact of humans on their environment
Thermal diagnostic of the Optical Window on board LISA Pathfinder
Vacuum conditions inside the LTP Gravitational Reference Sensor must comply
with rather demanding requirements. The Optical Window (OW) is an interface
which seals the vacuum enclosure and, at the same time, lets the laser beam go
through for interferometric Metrology with the test masses. The OW is a
plane-parallel plate clamped in a Titanium flange, and is considerably
sensitive to thermal and stress fluctuations. It is critical for the required
precision measurements, hence its temperature will be carefully monitored in
flight. This paper reports on the results of a series of OW characterisation
laboratory runs, intended to study its response to selected thermal signals, as
well as their fit to numerical models, and the meaning of the latter. We find
that a single pole ARMA transfer function provides a consistent approximation
to the OW response to thermal excitations, and derive a relationship with the
physical processes taking place in the OW. We also show how system noise
reduction can be accomplished by means of that transfer function.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures; accepted for publication in Class. Quantum Gra
Variability in concentrations of potentially toxic elements in urban parks from six European cities
Use of a harmonised sampling regime has allowed comparison of concentrations of copper, chromium, nickel, lead and zinc in six urban parks located in different European cities differing markedly in their climate and industrial history. Wide concentrations ranges were found for copper, lead and zinc at most sites, but for chromium and nickel a wide range was only seen in the Italian park, where levels were also considerably greater than in other soils. As might be expected, the soils from older cities with a legacy of heavy manufacturing industry (Glasgow, Torino) were richest in potentially toxic elements (PTEs); soils from Ljubljana, Sevilla and Uppsala had intermediate metal contents, and soils from the most recently established park, in the least industrialised city (Aveiro), displayed lowest concentrations. When principal component analysis was applied to the data, associations were revealed between pH and organic carbon content; and between all five PTEs. When pH and organic carbon content were excluded from the PCA, a distinction became clear between copper, lead and zinc (the "urban" metals) on the one hand, and chromium and nickel on the other. Similar results were obtained for the surface (0-10 cm depth) and sub-surface (10-20 cm depth) samples. Comparisons with target or limit concentrations were limited by the existence of different legislation in different countries and the fact that few guidelines deal specifically with public-access urban soils intended for recreational use
- …