309 research outputs found
Strategic Review of Tropical Fisheries Management
This project addresses the constraints to tropical fisheries development with sustainable exploitation through a strategic assessment of tropical fisheries management with the following purposes: (1) To evaluate relevant research methods for the development of assessment models appropriate to the circumstances of tropical coastal fisheries; and (2) To evaluate the utility of existing strategies for the implementation of management advice. The report consists of three substantive chapters. Chapter 2 contains a detailed socio-economic assessment of various instruments and implementation strategies applicable to tropical capture fisheries. In Chapter 3, a detailed assessment of the fisheries for tropical large marine ecosystems has been conducted using a technique developed by FAO (Granger & Garcia 1996). The data used were the FAO statistics published regularly by FAO. This analysis has been conducted for each of the tropical large marine ecosystems and indicates that there is the potential for increased fishing in a number of these ecosystems. One of the clear requirements identified in Chapter 2 and implicit in Chapter 3, is that there is a significant need for simple and robust fisheries assessment methods which can estimate the potential of a particular resource, its capacity in terms of the level of fishing effort and its current status ie whether it is currently exploited sustainably or not. In Chapter 4, these problems are addressed directly and, using two approaches, significant simplification of fishery methods is developed. In the first approach, simple empirical relationships between the life history parameters of a species are used to develop models of potential yield which can be determined by a simple assessment of fish growth. In the second approach, optimal life history theory is applied to the key demographic parameters of exploited fish populations and using estimates of the Beverton & Holt invariants a significant simplifying of the basic stock assessment equations is developed
Leveraging Hamiltonian Simulation Techniques to Compile Operations on Bosonic Devices
Circuit QED enables the combined use of qubits and oscillator modes. Despite
a variety of available gate sets, many hybrid qubit-boson (i.e., oscillator)
operations are realizable only through optimal control theory (OCT) which is
oftentimes intractable and uninterpretable. We introduce an analytic approach
with rigorously proven error bounds for realizing specific classes of
operations via two matrix product formulas commonly used in Hamiltonian
simulation, the Lie--Trotter and Baker--Campbell--Hausdorff product formulas.
We show how this technique can be used to realize a number of operations of
interest, including polynomials of annihilation and creation operators, i.e.,
for integer . We show examples of this paradigm
including: obtaining universal control within a subspace of the entire Fock
space of an oscillator, state preparation of a fixed photon number in the
cavity, simulation of the Jaynes--Cummings Hamiltonian, simulation of the
Hong-Ou-Mandel effect and more. This work demonstrates how techniques from
Hamiltonian simulation can be applied to better control hybrid boson-qubit
devices.Comment: 48 pages, 5 figure
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Vibronic Dynamics of Photodissociating ICN from Simulations of Ultrafast X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy
Ultrafast UV-pump/soft-X-ray-probe spectroscopy is a subject of great interest since it can provide detailed information about dynamical photochemical processes with ultrafast resolution and atomic specificity. Here, we focus on the photodissociation of ICN in the 1Î 1 excited state, with emphasis on the transient response in the soft-X-ray spectral region as described by the ab initio spectral lineshape averaged over the nuclear wavepacket probability density. We find that the carbon K-edge spectral region reveals a rich transient response that provides direct insights into the dynamics of frontier orbitals during the IâCN bond cleavage process. The simulated UV-pump/soft-X-ray-probe spectra exhibit detailed dynamical information, including a time-domain signature for coherent vibration associated with the photogenerated CN fragment. © 2020 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Gmb
One-Parameter Homothetic Motion in the Hyperbolic Plane and Euler-Savary Formula
In \cite{Mul} one-parameter planar motion was first introduced and the
relations between absolute, relative, sliding velocities (and accelerations) in
the Euclidean plane were obtained. Moreover, the relations
between the Complex velocities one-parameter motion in the Complex plane were
provided by \cite{Mul}. One-parameter planar homothetic motion was defined in
the Complex plane, \cite{Kur}. In this paper, analogous to homothetic motion in
the Complex plane given by \cite{Kur}, one-parameter planar homothetic motion
is defined in the Hyperbolic plane. Some characteristic properties about the
velocity vectors, the acceleration vectors and the pole curves are given.
Moreover, in the case of homothetic scale identically equal to 1, the
results given in \cite{Yuc} are obtained as a special case. In addition, three
hyperbolic planes, of which two are moving and the other one is fixed, are
taken into consideration and a canonical relative system for one-parameter
planar hyperbolic homothetic motion is defined. Euler-Savary formula, which
gives the relationship between the curvatures of trajectory curves, is obtained
with the help of this relative system
Variational quantum iterative power algorithms for global optimization
We introduce a family of variational quantum algorithms called quantum
iterative power algorithms (QIPA) that outperform existing hybrid near-term
quantum algorithms of the same kind. We demonstrate the capabilities of QIPA as
applied to three different global-optimization numerical experiments: the
ground-state optimization of the molecular dissociation, search of the
transmon qubit ground-state, and biprime factorization. Since our algorithm is
hybrid, quantum/classical technologies such as error mitigation and adaptive
variational ansatzes can easily be incorporated into the algorithm. Due to the
shallow quantum circuit requirements, we anticipate large-scale implementation
and adoption of the proposed algorithm across current major quantum hardware.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Simulating Open Quantum System Dynamics on NISQ Computers with Generalized Quantum Master Equations
We present a quantum algorithm based on the Generalized Quantum Master
Equation (GQME) approach to simulate open quantum system dynamics on noisy
intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers. This approach overcomes the
limitations of the Lindblad equation, which assumes weak system-bath coupling
and Markovity, by providing a rigorous derivation of the equations of motion
for any subset of elements of the reduced density matrix. The memory kernel
resulting from the effect of the remaining degrees of freedom is used as input
to calculate the corresponding non-unitary propagator. We demonstrate how the
Sz.-Nagy dilation theorem can be employed to transform the non-unitary
propagator into a unitary one in a higher-dimensional Hilbert space, which can
then be implemented on quantum circuits of NISQ computers. We validate our
quantum algorithm as applied to the spin-boson benchmark model by analyzing the
impact of the quantum circuit depth on the accuracy of the results when the
subset is limited to the diagonal elements of the reduced density matrix. Our
findings demonstrate that our approach yields reliable results on NISQ IBM
computers.Comment: 47 pages, 10 figures, updated to the most current version of the
manuscrip
Challenging EGNOS in the Swiss Alps
In view of the operational validation of EGNOS, some early tests are being performed with the EGNOS System Test Bed (ESTB). This prototype has been broadcasting an EGNOS-like signal since early 2000. The performance of ESTB is reduced compared to the full deployed EGNOS, but it gives the opportunity to test EGNOS equipment and gain experience. Eurocontrol, skyguide and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) are active in data collection and analysis in order to study the signal-in-space performance for the civil aviation users. The objective of this work was to analyse the systemâs performance during flight tests in the Swiss Alps where the topography is a challenge for satellite-based navigation systems. Sion regional airport was selected for its location in a valley surrounded by very high mountains. Moreover, the use of EGNOS on regional places is expected to bring significant operational benefits. A new GNSS procedure including both the approach and a special missed-approach with a 89° turn in the valley was designed for these tests. A total of 13 approaches and missed-approaches were flown in November 2002 by a Dornier 128 belonging to the Technical University of Braunschweig (TUBS) and a King Air 100 belonging to SENASA (Sociedad para las Enseñanzas AeronĂĄuticas Civiles S.A.). Around 8 hours of data were recorded from different receivers on the ground and in the air. This paper shows that the accuracy and integrity obtained during the tests with the EGNOS System Test Bed fulfils the stringent requirements of civil aviation even in a difficult environment. However, some progress still has to be made on the availability and continuity parameters. This will be the case once the real EGNOS will be operational. It also demonstrates that EGNOS-based procedures are feasible and that it could bring important operational benefits to regional places with a limited ground navigation infrastructure
Characterization of multiple sclerosis lesions with distinct clinical correlates through quantitative diffusion MRI
Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging can reveal quantitative information about the tissue changes in multiple sclerosis. The recently developed multi-compartment spherical mean technique can map different microscopic properties based only on local diffusion signals, and it may provide specific information on the underlying microstructural modifications that arise in multiple sclerosis. Given that the lesions in multiple sclerosis may reflect different degrees of damage, we hypothesized that quantitative diffusion maps may help characterize the severity of lesions "in vivo" and correlate these to an individual's clinical profile. We evaluated this in a cohort of 59 multiple sclerosis patients (62% female, mean age 44.7Â years), for whom demographic and disease information was obtained, and who underwent a comprehensive physical and cognitive evaluation. The magnetic resonance imaging protocol included conventional sequences to define focal lesions, and multi-shell diffusion imaging was used with b-values of 1000, 2000 and 3000Â s/mm2 in 180 encoding directions. Quantitative diffusion properties on a macro- and micro-scale were used to discriminate distinct types of lesions through a k-means clustering algorithm, and the number and volume of those lesion types were correlated with parameters of the disease. The combination of diffusion tensor imaging metrics (fractional anisotropy and radial diffusivity) and multi-compartment spherical mean technique values (microscopic fractional anisotropy and intra-neurite volume fraction) differentiated two type of lesions, with a prediction strength of 0.931. The B-type lesions had larger diffusion changes compared to the A-type lesions, irrespective of their location (PÂ <Â 0.001). The number of A and B type lesions was similar, although in juxtacortical areas B-type lesions predominated (60%, PÂ <Â 0.001). Also, the percentage of B-type lesion volume was higher (64%, PÂ <Â 0.001), indicating that these lesions were larger. The number and volume of B-type lesions was related to the severity of disease evolution, clinical disability and cognitive decline (PÂ =Â 0.004, Bonferroni correction). Specifically, more and larger B-type lesions were correlated with a worse Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score, cerebellar function and cognitive performance. Thus, by combining several microscopic and macroscopic diffusion properties, the severity of damage within focal lesions can be characterized, further contributing to our understanding of the mechanisms that drive disease evolution. Accordingly, the classification of lesion types has the potential to permit more specific and better-targeted treatment of patients with multiple sclerosis
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