1,663 research outputs found
Continuous monitoring can improve indistinguishability of a single-photon source
A new engineering technique using continuous quantum measurement in
conjunction with feed-forward is proposed to improve indistinguishability of a
single-photon source. The technique involves continuous monitoring of the state
of the emitter, processing the noisy output signal with a simple linear
estimation algorithm, and feed forward to control a variable delay at the
output. In the weak coupling regime, the information gained by monitoring the
state of the emitter is used to reduce the time uncertainty inherent in photon
emission from the source, which improves the indistinguishability of the
emitted photons.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The Core, Periphery, and Beyond: Stock Market Comovements among EU and Non-EU Countries
We thank conference participants at the 2016 Financial Management Association and our discussant Fernando Moreira, and two anonymous referees for immensely helpful comments. We also thank Andrew Patton and James P. LeSage for sharing their MATLAB codes for computing quantile dependence. The authors of this paper are responsible for any errors or omissions. The Securities and Exchange Commission, as a matter of policy, disclaims responsibility for any private publication or statement by any of its employees. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or the authors\u27 colleagues on the staff of the Commission
Nanocrystalline TiO2 and halloysite clay mineral composite films prepared by sol-gel method:Synergistic effect and the case of silver modification to the photocatalytic degradation of basic blue- 41 azo dye in water
Tubular halloysite clay mineral and nanocrystalline TiO2 were incorporated in the preparation of nanocomposite films on glass substrates via sol-gel method at 450 °C. The synthesis involves a simple chemical method employing nonionic surfactant molecule as pore directing agent along with the acetic acid-based sol-gel route without addition of water molecules. Drying and thermal treatment of composite films ensure elimination of organic material and lead to the formation of TiO2 nanoparticles homogeneously distributed on the surface of the halloysite. Nanocomposite films without cracks of active anatase crystal phase and small crystallite size on halloysite nanotubes are characterized by microscopy techniques and porosimetry methods in order to examine their structural properties. The composite halloysite-TiO2 films with variable quantities of halloysite were examined as photocatalysts to the discoloration of Basic Blue 41 azo dye in water. These nanocomposite films proved to be very promising photocatalysts and highly effective to dye's discoloration in spite of small amount of halloysite/TiO2 catalyst immobilized onto glass substrates. It also has been shown that the efficiency of the halloysite/TiO2 films could be further improved when silver particles were deposited on their surface after successful adsorption from an aqueous solution of a silver salt and UV reduction of the adsorbed ions
Reply to Comment by Galapon on 'Almost-periodic time observables for bound quantum systems'
In a recent paper [1] (also at http://lanl.arxiv.org/abs/0803.3721), I made
several critical remarks on a 'Hermitian time operator' proposed by Galapon [2]
(also at http://lanl.arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0111061).
Galapon has correctly pointed out that remarks pertaining to 'denseness' of
the commutator domain are wrong [3]. However, the other remarks still apply,
and it is further noted that a given quantum system can be a member of this
domain only at a set of times of total measure zero.Comment: 3 page
Linear electric field frequency shift (important for next generation electric dipole moment searches) induced in confined gases by a magnetic field gradient
The search for particle electric dipole moments (edm) represents a most
promising way to search for physics beyond the standard model. A number of
groups are planning a new generation of experiments using stored gases of
various kinds. In order to achieve the target sensitivities it will be
necessary to deal with the systematic error resulting from the interaction of
the well-known field with
magnetic field gradients (often referred to as the geometric phase effect
(Commins, ED; Am. J. Phys. \QTR{bf}{59}, 1077 (1991), Pendlebury, JM
\QTR{em}{et al;} Phys. Rev. \QTR{bf}{A70}, 032102 (2004)). This interaction
produces a frequency shift linear in the electric field, mimicking an edm. In
this work we introduce an analytic form for the velocity auto-correlation
function which determines the velocity-position correlation function which in
turn determines the behavior of the frequency shift (Lamoreaux, SK and Golub,
R; Phys. Rev \QTR{bf}{A71}, 032104 (2005)) and show how it depends on the
operating conditions of the experiment. We also discuss some additional issues.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
Kernel method for nonlinear Granger causality
Important information on the structure of complex systems, consisting of more
than one component, can be obtained by measuring to which extent the individual
components exchange information among each other. Such knowledge is needed to
reach a deeper comprehension of phenomena ranging from turbulent fluids to
neural networks, as well as complex physiological signals. The linear Granger
approach, to detect cause-effect relationships between time series, has emerged
in recent years as a leading statistical technique to accomplish this task.
Here we generalize Granger causality to the nonlinear case using the theory of
reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces. Our method performs linear Granger causality
in the feature space of suitable kernel functions, assuming arbitrary degree of
nonlinearity. We develop a new strategy to cope with the problem of
overfitting, based on the geometry of reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces.
Applications to coupled chaotic maps and physiological data sets are presented.Comment: Revised version, accepted for publication on Physical Review Letter
The dynamics of developing Cooper pairing at finite temperatures
We study the time evolution of a system of fermions with pairing interactions
at a finite temperature. The dynamics is triggered by an abrupt increase of the
BCS coupling constant. We show that if initially the fermions are in a normal
phase, the amplitude of the BCS order parameter averaged over the Boltzman
distribution of initial states exhibits damped oscillations with a relatively
short decay time. The latter is determined by the temperature, the
single-particle level spacing, and the ground state value of the BCS gap for
the new coupling. In contrast, the decay is essentially absent when the system
was in a superfluid phase before the coupling increase.Comment: 4 pages, figure fixe
Multiscale 3D Shape Analysis using Spherical Wavelets
©2005 Springer. The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11566489_57DOI: 10.1007/11566489_57Shape priors attempt to represent biological variations within a population. When variations are global, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) can be used to learn major modes of variation, even from a limited training set. However, when significant local variations exist, PCA typically cannot represent such variations from a small training set. To address this issue, we present a novel algorithm that learns shape variations from data at multiple scales and locations using spherical wavelets and spectral graph partitioning. Our results show that when the training set is small, our algorithm significantly improves the approximation of shapes in a testing set over PCA, which tends to oversmooth data
A topological approach to neural complexity
Considerable efforts in modern statistical physics is devoted to the study of
networked systems. One of the most important example of them is the brain,
which creates and continuously develops complex networks of correlated
dynamics. An important quantity which captures fundamental aspects of brain
network organization is the neural complexity C(X)introduced by Tononi et al.
This work addresses the dependence of this measure on the topological features
of a network in the case of gaussian stationary process. Both anlytical and
numerical results show that the degree of complexity has a clear and simple
meaning from a topological point of view. Moreover the analytical result offers
a straightforward algorithm to compute the complexity than the standard one.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Transport Properties of Carbon Nanotube C Peapods
We measure the conductance of carbon nanotube peapods from room temperature
down to 250mK. Our devices show both metallic and semiconducting behavior at
room temperature. At the lowest temperatures, we observe single electron
effects. Our results suggest that the encapsulated C molecules do not
introduce substantial backscattering for electrons near the Fermi level. This
is remarkable given that previous tunneling spectroscopy measurements show that
encapsulated C strongly modifies the electronic structure of a nanotube
away from the Fermi level.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. This is one of two manuscripts replacing the one
orginally submitted as arXiv:cond-mat/0606258. The other one is
arXiv:0704.3641 [cond-mat
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