1,749 research outputs found
Optimal molecular alignment and orientation through rotational ladder climbing
We study the control by electromagnetic fields of molecular alignment and
orientation, in a linear, rigid rotor model. With the help of a monotonically
convergent algorithm, we find that the optimal field is in the microwave part
of the spectrum and acts by resonantly exciting the rotation of the molecule
progressively from the ground state, i.e., by rotational ladder climbing. This
mechanism is present not only when maximizing orientation or alignment, but
also when using prescribed target states that simultaneously optimize the
efficiency of orientation/alignment and its duration. The extension of the
optimization method to consider a finite rotational temperature is also
presented.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
Internet access for disabled people: Understanding socio-relational factors in Europe
Access to the Internet has become a sine qua non-of everyday life. It also offers new routes to economic and social inclusion for disabled people. Research on the digital divide shows that social factors affect Internet access but disability status is often overlooked. This paper assesses the extent to which disability makes a difference and how it interacts with other social effects to produce distinctive forms of digital exclusion. The analysis uses survey data from 27 European countries to explore and model, statistically, the interactions between Internet access, disability status, age, gender, education, household financial situation and household composition. Multilevel analysis confirms that socio-demographic factors can explain much variance in outcomes but there is a distinctive disability effect. In particular, the adverse effects of financial constraint, aging and living alone are exacerbated among disabled people. New policies to strengthen e-accessibility, arising from the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and from the European Union, are important but cannot ignore those who are still excluded from the online revolution. Disabled people are over-represented in this group. The evidence suggests that both accessible technologies and appropriate supportive relationships are needed to address this
Fluctuations of noise and the low frequency cutoff paradox
Recent experiments on blinking quantum dots and weak turbulence in liquid
crystals reveal the fundamental connection between noise and power law
intermittency. The non-stationarity of the process implies that the power
spectrum is random -- a manifestation of weak ergodicity breaking. Here we
obtain the universal distribution of the power spectrum, which can be used to
identify intermittency as the source of the noise. We solve an outstanding
paradox on the non integrability of noise and the violation of Parseval's
theorem. We explain why there is no physical low frequency cutoff and therefore
cannot be found in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, supplementary material (4 pages
In praise of partially interpretable predictors
Often there is an uninterpretable model that is statistically as good as, if not better than, a successful interpretable model. Accordingly, if one restricts attention to interpretable models, then one may sacrifice predictive power or other desirable properties. A minimal condition for an interpretable, usually parametric, model to be better than another model is that the first should have smallermean-squared error or integratedmean-squared error.We show through a series of examples that this is often not the case and give the asymptotic forms of a variety of interpretable, partially interpretable, and noninterpretable methods. We find techniques that combine aspects of both interpretability and noninterpretability in models seem to give the best results
Slow equivariant lump dynamics on the two sphere
The low-energy, rotationally equivariant dynamics of n CP^1 lumps on S^2 is
studied within the approximation of geodesic motion in the moduli space of
static solutions. The volume and curvature properties of this moduli space are
computed. By lifting the geodesic flow to the completion of an n-fold cover of
the moduli space, a good understanding of nearly singular lump dynamics within
this approximation is obtained.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Processing Stamp Bags for Latent Prints: Impact of Rubric Selection and Gray-Scaling on Experimental Results
We report data on two open issues in our previous experimentation seeking an effective method for development of latent prints on glassine drug bags: (1) the choice of rubric to assess the quality of fingerprints and (2) the choice of whether to use color or gray-scale images. Two research projects were performed to evaluate the impact of the rubric choice and the color adjustments applied. The Dove rubric is preferable to the modified rubric previously used. Analysts report a more uniform application and a more thorough analysis resulting in an upward trend in scores. Although gray-scaling in experimentation is necessary to conceal which treatment was employed, native color images are preferable for casework. The results of this research quantitatively show the impact of native color as measured by the Dove rubric
Characterization of the Crab Pulsar's Timing Noise
We present a power spectral analysis of the Crab pulsar's timing noise,
mainly using radio measurements from Jodrell Bank taken over the period
1982-1989. The power spectral analysis is complicated by nonuniform data
sampling and the presence of a steep red power spectrum that can distort power
spectra measurement by causing severe power ``leakage''. We develop a simple
windowing method for computing red noise power spectra of uniformly sampled
data sets and test it on Monte Carlo generated sample realizations of red
power-law noise. We generalize time-domain methods of generating power-law red
noise with even integer spectral indices to the case of noninteger spectral
indices. The Jodrell Bank pulse phase residuals are dense and smooth enough
that an interpolation onto a uniform time series is possible. A windowed power
spectrum is computed revealing a periodic or nearly periodic component with a
period of about 568 days and a 1/f^3 power-law noise component with a noise
strength of 1.24 +/- 0.067 10^{-16} cycles^2/sec^2 over the analysis frequency
range 0.003 - 0.1 cycles/day. This result deviates from past analyses which
characterized the pulse phase timing residuals as either 1/f^4 power-law noise
or a quasiperiodic process. The analysis was checked using the Deeter
polynomial method of power spectrum estimation that was developed for the case
of nonuniform sampling, but has lower spectral resolution. The timing noise is
consistent with a torque noise spectrum rising with analysis frequency as f
implying blue torque noise, a result not predicted by current models of pulsar
timing noise. If the periodic or nearly periodic component is due to a binary
companion, we find a companion mass > 3.2 Earth masses.Comment: 53 pages, 9 figures, submitted to MNRAS, abstract condense
Error estimation and reduction with cross correlations
Besides the well-known effect of autocorrelations in time series of Monte
Carlo simulation data resulting from the underlying Markov process, using the
same data pool for computing various estimates entails additional cross
correlations. This effect, if not properly taken into account, leads to
systematically wrong error estimates for combined quantities. Using a
straightforward recipe of data analysis employing the jackknife or similar
resampling techniques, such problems can be avoided. In addition, a covariance
analysis allows for the formulation of optimal estimators with often
significantly reduced variance as compared to more conventional averages.Comment: 16 pages, RevTEX4, 4 figures, 6 tables, published versio
- …