5,401 research outputs found
Dietary variations in three co-occurring rockfish species off the Pacific Northwest during anomalous oceanographic events in 1998 and 1999
Stomach samples from three rockfish species, yellowtail
(Sebastes f lavidus), widow (S. entomelas), and canary (S. pinniger) rockfish, seasonally collected off the Pacific Northwest in 1998 and 1999, provided quantitative information on the food habits of these species during and after the 1997–98 El Niño event. Although euphausiids were the most common major prey of all three predators, gelatinous zooplankton and fishes were the most commonly
consumed prey items during some seasonal quarters. The influence of the El Niño event was evident in the diets. Anomalous prey items, including the southern euphausiid species Nyctiphanes simplex and juveniles of Pacific whiting (Merluccius productus) frequently appeared in the diets in the spring and summer of 1998. The results of stomach contents analyses, based on 905 stomach samples from 49 trawl hauls during seven commercial fishing trips and from 56 stations during research surveys, were consistent with the timing of occurrence and the magnitude of change in biomass of some zooplankton species reported
from zooplankton studies in the northern California Current during the 1997–98 El Niño. Our findings indicate that the observed variations of prey groups in some rockfish diets
may be a function of prey variability related to climate and environment changes
Balance between information gain and reversibility in weak measurement
We derive a tight bound between the quality of estimating a quantum state by
measurement and the success probability of undoing the measurement in arbitrary
dimensional systems, which completely describes the tradeoff relation between
the information gain and reversibility. In this formulation, it is clearly
shown that the information extracted from a weak measurement is erased through
the reversing process. Our result broadens the information-theoretic
perspective on quantum measurement as well as provides a standard tool to
characterize weak measurements and reversals.Comment: 5 pages, final versio
Quantum phase estimation using path-symmetric entangled states
We study the sensitivity of phase estimation using a generic class of
path-symmetric entangled states
, where an arbitrary state
occupies one of two modes in quantum superposition. This
class of states includes the previously considered states, i.e. states
and entangled coherent states, as special cases. With its generalization, we
identify the practical limit of phase estimation under energy constraint that
is characterized by the photon statistics of the component state
. We first show that quantum Cramer-Rao bound (QCRB) can be
lowered with super-Poissonianity of the state . By introducing
a component state of the form
, we particularly show
that an arbitrarily small QCRB can be achieved even with a finite energy in an
ideal situation. For practical measurement schemes, we consider a parity
measurement and a full photon-counting method to obtain phase-sensitivity.
Without photon loss, the latter scheme employing any path-symmetric states
achieves the QCRB over the
entire range of unknown phase shift whereas the former does
so in a certain confined range of . We find that the case of
provides the most
robust resource against loss among the considered entangled states over the
whole range of input energy. Finally we also propose experimental schemes to
generate these path-symmetric entangled states.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Increasing and decreasing entanglement characteristics for continuous variables by a local photon subtraction
We investigate how the entanglement characteristics of a non-Gaussian
entangled state are increased or decreased by a local photon subtraction
operation. The non-Gaussian entangled state is generated by injecting a
single-mode non-Gaussian state and a vacuum state into a 50:50 beam splitter.
We consider a photon-added coherent state and an odd coherent state as a
single-mode non-Gaussian state. In the regime of small amplitude, we show that
the performance of quantum teleportation and the second-order
Einstein-Podolsky- Rosen-type correlation can both be enhanced, whereas the
degree of entanglement decreases, for the output state when a local photon
subtraction operation is applied to the non-Gaussian entangled state. The
counterintuitive effect is more prominent in the limit of nearly zero
amplitude.Comment: Published version, 7 pages, 3 figure
Technical Efficiency in the Iron and Steel Industry: A Stochastic Frontier Approach
In this paper we examine the technical efficiency of firms in the iron and steel industry and try to identify the factors contributing to the industry's efficiency growth, using a time-varying stochastic frontier model. Based on our findings, which pertain to 52 iron and steel firms over the period of 1978-1997, POSCO and Nippon Steel were the most efficient firms, with their production, on average, exceeding 95 percent of their potential output. Our findings also shed light on possible sources of efficiency growth in the industry. If a firm is government-owned, its privatization is likely to improve its technical efficiency to a great extent. A firm's technical efficiency also tends to be positively related to its production level as measured by a share of the total world production of crude steel. Another important source of efficiency growth identified by our empirical findings is adoption of new technologies and equipment. Our findings clearly indicate that continued efforts to update technologies and equipment are critical in pursuit of efficiency in the iron and steel industry.
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