38,798 research outputs found
Scaling and data collapse for the mean exit time of asset prices
We study theoretical and empirical aspects of the mean exit time of financial
time series. The theoretical modeling is done within the framework of
continuous time random walk. We empirically verify that the mean exit time
follows a quadratic scaling law and it has associated a pre-factor which is
specific to the analyzed stock. We perform a series of statistical tests to
determine which kind of correlation are responsible for this specificity. The
main contribution is associated with the autocorrelation property of stock
returns. We introduce and solve analytically both a two-state and a three-state
Markov chain models. The analytical results obtained with the two-state Markov
chain model allows us to obtain a data collapse of the 20 measured MET profiles
in a single master curve.Comment: REVTeX 4, 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, submitted for publicatio
Fighting Decoherence by Feedback-controlled Dissipation
Repeated closed-loop control operations acting as piecewise-constant
Liouville superoperators conditioned on the outcomes of regularly performed
measurements may effectively be described by a fixed-point iteration for the
density matrix. Even when all Liouville superoperators point to the completely
mixed state, feedback of the measurement result may lead to a pure state, which
can be interpreted as selective dampening of undesired states. Using a
microscopic model, we exemplify this for a single qubit, which can be purified
in an arbitrary single-qubit state by tuning the measurement direction and two
qubits that may be purified towards a Bell state by applying a special
continuous two-local measurement. The method does not require precise knowledge
of decoherence channels and works for large reservoir temperatures provided
measurement, processing, and control can be implemented in a continuous
fashion.Comment: to appear in PR
Mercury in the environs of the north slope of Alaska
The analysis of Greenland ice suggests that the flux of mercury from the continents
to the atmosphere has increased in recent times, perhaps partly as a result of the many of
man’s activities that effect an alteration of terrestrial surfaces. Upon the exposure of fresh
crustal matter, the natural outgassing of mercury vapor from the earth’s surface could be
enhanced.
Accordingly, mercury was measured in a variety of environmental materials gathered
from the North Slope of Alaska to provide background data prior to the anticipated increase
of activity in this environment. The materials were collected during the U. S. Coast Guard
WEBSEC 72-73 cruises as well as through the facilities provided by Naval Arctic Research
Laboratory in the spring of 1973.
The method of measurement depended upon radioactivation of mercury with neutrons
and the subsequent quantification of characteristic gamma radiations after radiochemical
purification.
Mercury concentrations in seawater at several locations in the vicinity of 151°W,
71°N averaged 20 parts per trillion. The waters from all stations east of this location showed
a significantly smaller concentration. This difference may relate to penetration o f Bering-
Chukchi Sea water into the southern Beaufort Sea to 151°W. Marine sediments on the shelf
and slope between 143°W and 153°W contained about 100 parts per billion mercury, except
for those on the continental shelf between Barter Island and the Canning River, where the
concentration was less than half this value. These results are consistent with sediment input
from the respective rivers when their mercury content and mineralogy are considered. The
mercury content of river waters was 18 ppt and in reasonable agreement with the average of
snow samples (13 ppt). The burden of mercury in plankton was 37 ppb.This work was supported by the office of Naval Research under grant N R 083-290
Ground state energy of a homogeneous Bose-Einstein condensate beyond Bogoliubov
The standard calculations of the ground-state energy of a homogeneous Bose
gas rely on approximations which are physically reasonable but difficult to
control. Lieb and Yngvason [Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 2504 (1998)] have proved
rigorously that the commonly accepted leading order term of the ground state
energy is correct in the zero-density-limit. Here, strong indications are given
that also the next to leading term is correct. It is shown that the first terms
obtained in a perturbative treatment provide contributions which are lost in
the Bogoliubov approach.Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication in Europhys. Lett.
http://www.epletters.ch
Integrability of a Generalized Ito System: the Painleve Test
It is shown that a generalized Ito system of four coupled nonlinear evolution
equations passes the Painleve test for integrability in five distinct cases, of
which two were introduced recently by Tam, Hu and Wang. A conjecture is
formulated on integrability of a vector generalization of the Ito system.Comment: LaTeX, 5 page
Pulsation models for the roAp star HD 134214
Precise time-series photometry with the MOST satellite has led to
identification of 10 pulsation frequencies in the rapidly oscillating Ap (roAp)
star HD 134214. We have fitted the observed frequencies with theoretical
frequencies of axisymmetric modes in a grid of stellar models with dipole
magnetic fields. We find that, among models with a standard composition of
and with suppressed convection, eigenfrequencies of a
model with and a polar
magnetic field strength of 4.1kG agree best with the observed frequencies. We
identify the observed pulsation frequency with the largest amplitude as a
deformed dipole () mode, and the four next-largest-amplitude
frequencies as deformed modes. These modes have a radial quasi-node
in the outermost atmospheric layers (). Although the model
frequencies agree roughly with observed ones, they are all above the acoustic
cut-off frequency for the model atmosphere and hence are predicted to be
damped. The excitation mechanism for the pulsations of HD 134214 is not clear,
but further investigation of these modes may be a probe of the atmospheric
structure in this magnetic chemically peculiar star.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Non-Markovian incoherent quantum dynamics of a two-state system
We present a detailed study of the non-Markovian two-state system dynamics
for the regime of incoherent quantum tunneling. Using perturbation theory in
the system tunneling amplitude , and in the limit of strong system-bath
coupling, we determine the short time evolution of the reduced density matrix
and thereby find a general equation of motion for the non-Markovian evolution
at longer times. We relate the nonlocality in time due to the non-Markovian
effects with the environment characteristic response time. In addition, we
study the incoherent evolution of a system with a double-well potential, where
each well consists several quantized energy levels. We determine the crossover
temperature to a regime where many energy levels in the wells participate in
the tunneling process, and observe that the required temperature can be much
smaller than the one associated with the system plasma frequency. We also
discuss experimental implications of our theoretical analysis.Comment: 10 pages, published versio
Escape of a Uniform Random Walk from an Interval
We study the first-passage properties of a random walk in the unit interval
in which the length of a single step is uniformly distributed over the finite
range [-a,a]. For a of the order of one, the exit probabilities to each edge of
the interval and the exit time from the interval exhibit anomalous properties
stemming from the change in the minimum number of steps to escape the interval
as a function of the starting point. As a decreases, first-passage properties
approach those of continuum diffusion, but non-diffusive effects remain because
of residual discreteness effectsComment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 2 column revtex4 forma
Beam spin asymmetry in deeply virtual production
An interpretation of the beam spin azimuthal asymmetries measured at JLAB in
deep exclusive electroproduction of charged and neutral pions is presented. The
model combines a Regge pole approach with the effect of nucleon resonances. The
- and -channel contributions are described using a dual Bloom-Gilman
connection between the exclusive form factors and inclusive deep inelastic
structure functions. The results are in agreement with data provided the
excitations of nucleon resonances are taken into account.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Talk at the 19th International Spin Physics
Symposium (SPIN2010), Sept.27-Oct.2, 2010, Juelich, German
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