7,945 research outputs found
Second Order Inductive Logic and Wilmers' Principle
We extend the framework of Inductive Logic to Second Order languages and introduce Wilmers' Principle, a rational principle for probability functions on Second Order languages. We derive a representation theorem for functions satisfying this principle and investigate its relationship to the first order principles of Regularity and Super Regularity
Input-output relations for multiport ring cavities
Quantum input-output relations for a generic -port ring cavity are
obtained by modeling the ring as a cascade of interlinked beam splitters.
Cavity response to a beam impinging on one port is studied as a function of the
beam-splitter reflectivities and the internal phase-shifts. Interferometric
sensitivity and stability are analyzed as a function of the number of ports.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures (low-res
Non-divisibility vs backflow of information in understanding revivals of quantum correlations for continuous-variable systems interacting with fluctuating environments
We address the dynamics of quantum correlations for a bipartite
continuous-variable quantum system interacting with its fluctuating
environment. In particular, we consider two independent quantum oscillators
initially prepared in a Gaussian state, e.g. a squeezed thermal state, and
compare the dynamics resulting from local noise, i.e. oscillators coupled to
two independent external fields, to that originating from common noise, i.e.
oscillators interacting with a single common field. We prove non-Markovianity
(non-divisibility) of the dynamics in both regimes and analyze the connections
between non-divisibility, backflow of information and revivals of quantum
correlations. Our main results may be summarized as follows: (i) revivals of
quantumness are present in both scenarios, however, the interaction with a
common environment better preserves the quantum features of the system; (ii)
the dynamics is always non-divisible but revivals of quantum correlations are
present only when backflow of information is present as well. We conclude that
non-divisibility in its own is not a resource to preserve quantum correlations
in our system, i.e. it is not sufficient to observe recoherence phenomena.
Rather, it represents a necessary prerequisite to obtain backflow of
information, which is the true ingredient to obtain revivals of quantumness
Entanglement as a resource for discrimination of classical environments
We address extended systems interacting with classical fluctuating
environments and analyze the use of quantum probes to discriminate local noise,
described by independent fluctuating fields, from common noise, corresponding
to the interaction with a common one. In particular, we consider a bipartite
system made of two non interacting harmonic oscillators and assess
discrimination strategies based on homodyne detection, comparing their
performances with the ultimate bounds on the error probabilities of
quantum-limited measurements. We analyze in details the use of Gaussian probes,
with emphasis on experimentally friendly signals. Our results show that a joint
measurement of the position-quadrature on the two oscillators outperforms any
other homodyne-based scheme for any input Gaussian state
Elliptical instability of a rapidly rotating, strongly stratified fluid
The elliptical instability of a rotating stratified fluid is examined in the
regime of small Rossby number and order-one Burger number corresponding to
rapid rotation and strong stratification. The Floquet problem describing the
linear growth of disturbances to an unbounded, uniform-vorticity elliptical
flow is solved using exponential asymptotics. The results demonstrate that the
flow is unstable for arbitrarily strong rotation and stratification; in
particular, both cyclonic and anticyclonic flows are unstable. The instability
is weak, however, with growth rates that are exponentially small in the Rossby
number. The analytic expression obtained for the growth rate elucidates its
dependence on the Burger number and on the eccentricity of the elliptical flow.
It explains in particular the weakness of the instability of cyclonic flows,
with growth rates that are only a small fraction of those obtained for the
corresponding anticyclonic flows. The asymptotic results are confirmed by
numerical solutions of Floquet problem.Comment: 17 page
Growth of the Brownian forest
Trees in Brownian excursions have been studied since the late 1980s. Forests
in excursions of Brownian motion above its past minimum are a natural extension
of this notion. In this paper we study a forest-valued Markov process which
describes the growth of the Brownian forest. The key result is a composition
rule for binary Galton--Watson forests with i.i.d. exponential branch lengths.
We give elementary proofs of this composition rule and explain how it is
intimately linked with Williams' decomposition for Brownian motion with drift.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009117905000000422 in the
Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Superspace formulation of general massive gauge theories and geometric interpretation of mass-dependent BRST symmetries
A superspace formulation is proposed for the osp(1,2)-covariant Lagrangian
quantization of general massive gauge theories. The superalgebra os0(1,2) is
considered as subalgebra of sl(1,2); the latter may be considered as the
algebra of generators of the conformal group in a superspace with two
anticommuting coordinates. The mass-dependent (anti)BRST symmetries of proper
solutions of the quantum master equations in the osp(1,2)-covariant formalism
are realized in that superspace as invariance under translations combined with
mass-dependent special conformal transformations. The Sp(2) symmetry - in
particular the ghost number conservation - and the "new ghost number"
conservation are realized as invariance under symplectic rotations and
dilatations, respectively. The transformations of the gauge fields - and of the
full set of necessarily required (anti)ghost and auxiliary fields - under the
superalgebra sl(1,2) are determined both for irreducible and first-stage
reducible theories with closed gauge algebra.Comment: 35 pages, AMSTEX, precision of reference
Final state interaction contribution to the response of confined relativistic particles
We report studies of the response of a massless particle confined by a
potential. At large momentum transfer q it exhibits \tilde{y} or equivalently
Nachtmann \xi scaling, and acquires a constant width independent of q. This
width has a contribution from the final state interactions of the struck
particle, which persists in the q->\infty limit. The width of the response
predicted using plane wave impulse approximation is smaller because of the
neglect of final state interactions in that approximation. However, the exact
response may be obtained by folding the approximate response with a function
representing final state interaction effects. We also study the response
obtained from the momentum distribution assuming that the particle is on the
energy shell both before and after being struck. Quantitative results are
presented for the special case of a linear confining potential. In this case
the response predicted with the on-shell approximation has correct values for
the total strength, mean energy and width, however its shape is wrong.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Counterpart Principle of Analogical Support by Structural Similarity
We propose and investigate an Analogy Principle in the context of Unary Inductive Logic based on a notion of support by structural similarity which is often employed to motivate scientific conjectures
Generation of monochromatic electrostatic waves of large amplitude in a bounded beam-plasma system
Monochromatic electrostatic waves of large amplitude were excited by the interaction of an electron beam with a bounded plasma. These waves were identified as resonant beam modes, which are amplified by multiple reflexion in a cavity. Nonlinear effects, such as the generation of harmonies and sidebands, were observe
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