491 research outputs found
Quantum noise in optical interferometers
We study the photon counting noise in optical interferometers used for
gravitational wave detection. In order to reduce quantum noise a squeezed
vacuum is injected into the usually unused input port. It is investigated under
which conditions the gravitational wave signal may be amplified without
increasing counting noise concurrently. Such a possibility was suggested as a
consequence of the entanglement of the two output ports of a beam splitter. We
find that amplification without concurrent increase of noise is not possible
for reasonable squeezing parameters. Photon distributions for various beam
splitter angles and squeezing parameters are calculated.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Comment on "unique translation between Hamiltonian operators and functional integrals"
A comment on the letter by Tim Gollisch and Christof Wetterich, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 1 (2001).Michael Weyrauch, and Andreas W. Schreibe
A Theory of Legal Strategy
By the conventional view, case outcomes are largely the product of courts\u27 application of law to facts. Even when courts do not generate outcomes in this manner, prevailing legal theory casts them as the arbiters of those outcomes. In a competing strategic view, lawyers and parties construct legal outcomes in what amounts to a contest of skill. Though the latter view better explains the process, no theory has yet been propounded as to how lawyers can replace judges as arbiters. This article propounds such a theory. It classifies legal strategies into three types: those that require willing acceptance by judges, those that constrain the actions of judges, and those that entirely deprive judges of control. Strategies that depend upon the persuasion of judges are explained through a conception of law in which cases and statutes are almost wholly indeterminate and strategists infuse meaning into these empty rules in the process of argumentation. Such meaning derives from social norms, patterns of outcomes, local practices and understandings, informal rules of factual inference, systems imperatives, community expectations, and so-called public policies. Constraint strategies operate through case selection, record-making, legal planning, or media pressure. Strategists deprive judges of control by forum shopping, by preventing cases from reaching decision, or by causing them to be decided on issues other than the merits. The theory presented explains how superior lawyering can determine outcomes, why local legal cultures exist, how resources confer advantages in litigation, and one of the means by which law evolves
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