20,947 research outputs found
Generalized quantum measurement
We overcome one of Bell's objections to `quantum measurement' by generalizing
the definition to include systems outside the laboratory. According to this
definition a {\sl generalized quantum measurement} takes place when the value
of a classical variable is influenced significantly by an earlier state of a
quantum system. A generalized quantum measurement can then take place in
equilibrium systems, provided the classical motion is chaotic. This paper deals
with this classical aspect of quantum measurement, assuming that the Heisenberg
cut between the quantum dynamics and the classical dynamics is made at a very
small scale. For simplicity, a gas with collisions is modelled by an `Arnold
gas'.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, no figures, title change
Theoretical Properties of the Overlapping Groups Lasso
We present two sets of theoretical results on the grouped lasso with overlap
of Jacob, Obozinski and Vert (2009) in the linear regression setting. This
method allows for joint selection of predictors in sparse regression, allowing
for complex structured sparsity over the predictors encoded as a set of groups.
This flexible framework suggests that arbitrarily complex structures can be
encoded with an intricate set of groups. Our results show that this strategy
results in unexpected theoretical consequences for the procedure. In
particular, we give two sets of results: (1) finite sample bounds on prediction
and estimation, and (2) asymptotic distribution and selection. Both sets of
results give insight into the consequences of choosing an increasingly complex
set of groups for the procedure, as well as what happens when the set of groups
cannot recover the true sparsity pattern. Additionally, these results
demonstrate the differences and similarities between the the grouped lasso
procedure with and without overlapping groups. Our analysis shows the set of
groups must be chosen with caution - an overly complex set of groups will
damage the analysis.Comment: 20 pages, submitted to Annals of Statistic
Ceiling-Floor Partition Separation: What Is It and Why Is It Occurring?
This publication is intended to increase the understanding of cracking or separation of finish materials occasionally found in light-frame wood construction. In many cases, the problem is caused by shrinking or swelling of the wood framing members due to changes in moisture content. Although unsightly, these cracks and separations are basically cosmetic and pose no structural problems. It is important to be able to differentiate between movement caused by the instability of wood and that caused by foundation movement or structural failure, which can cause major problems
Who\u27s Afraid of the Precautionary Principle?
The precautionary principle – the notion that lack of scientific certainty should not foreclose precautionary regulation – has become enormously popular in recent years, as reflected by its endorsement in many important international declarations and agreements. Despite its growing influence, the precautionary principle recently has come under fire by critics who argue that it is incoherent, potentially paralyzing, and that it will lead regulators to make bad choices. They maintain that society faces greater peril from overly costly regulations than from exposure to sources of environmental risks whose effect on human health and the environment is not fully understood at present. This paper argues that critics of the precautionary principle are attacking a straw man. It maintains that they are confusing the precautionary principle with the separate question of how precautionary regulatory policy should be. While precaution long has been an important element of much of U.S. environmental law, in practice, only in rare circumstances have activities that generate environmental risks been subjected to strict regulatory action when the risks they generate were entirely theoretical. Although such truly precautionary regulation is rare, the essential notion embodied in the precautionary principle -- that uncertainty should not be used as an excuse to eschew cost-effective preventive measures -- is fundamental to modern environmental law’s quest to transcend the limits of its common law legacy. It does not require that innovation come to a halt whenever any risks may be conjured. The paper argues that, properly understood, the precautionary principle is neither incoherent, paralyzing, nor a prescription for overregulation. Rather it cautions that regulatory policy should be pro-active in ferreting out potentially serious threats to human health and the environment, as confirmed by the history of human exposure to substances such as lead and asbestos
Quantum state diffusion, measurement and second quantization
Realistic dynamical theories of measurement based on the diffusion of quantum
states are nonunitary, whereas quantum field theory and its generalizations are
unitary. This problem in the quantum field theory of quantum state diffusion
(QSD) appears already in the Lagrangian formulation of QSD as a classical
equation of motion, where Liouville's theorem does not apply to the usual field
theory formulation. This problem is resolved here by doubling the number of
freedoms used to represent a quantum field. The space of quantum fields is then
a classical configuration space, for which volume need not be conserved,
instead of the usual phase space, to which Liouville's theorem applies. The
creation operator for the quantized field satisfies the QSD equations, but the
annihilation operator does not satisfy the conjugate eqation. It appears only
in a formal role.Comment: 10 page
Quantum transfer functions, weak nonlocality and relativity
The method of transfer functions is developed as a tool for studying Bell
inequalities, alternative quantum theories and the associated physical
properties of quantum systems. Non-negative probabilities for transfer
functions result in Bell-type inequalities. The method is used to show that all
realistic Lorentz-invariant quantum theories, which give unique results and
have no preferred frame, can be ruled out on the grounds that they lead to weak
backward causality.Comment: Plain TeX, 12 pages, no figures. To be submitted Physics Letters A
Derivation of Bell inequality corrected (14c) + minor change
Artificial Photosynthesis Would Unify the Electricity-Carbohydrate-Hydrogen Cycle for Sustainability
Sustainable development requires balanced integration of four basic human needs – air (O2/CO2), water, food, and energy. To solve key challenges, such as CO2 fixation, electricity storage, food production, transportation fuel production, water conservation or maintaining an ecosystem for space travel, we wish to suggest the electricity-carbohydrate-hydrogen (ECHo) cycle, where electricity is a universal energy carrier, hydrogen is a clean electricity carrier, and carbohydrate is a high-energy density hydrogen (14.8 H2 mass% or 11-14 MJ electricity output/kg)carrier plus a food and feed source. Each element of this cycle can be converted to the other reversibly & efficiently depending on resource availability, needs, and costs. In order to implement such cycle, here we propose to fix carbon dioxide by electricity or hydrogen to carbohydrate (starch) plus ethanol by cell-free synthetic biology approaches. According to knowledge in the literature, the proposed artificial photosynthesis must be operative. Therefore, collaborations are urgently needed to solve several technological bottlenecks before large-scale implementation
Disentangling star formation and merger growth in the evolution of luminous red galaxies
We introduce a novel technique for empirically understanding galaxy
evolution. We use empirically determined stellar evolution models to predict
the past evolution of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-II) Luminous Red
Galaxy (LRG) sample without any a-priori assumption about galaxy evolution. By
carefully contrasting the evolution of the predicted and observed number and
luminosity densities we test the passive evolution scenario for galaxies of
different luminosity, and determine minimum merger rates. We find that the LRG
population is not purely coeval, with some of galaxies targeted at z<0.23 and
at z>0.34 showing different dynamical growth than galaxies targeted throughout
the sample. Our results show that the LRG population is dynamically growing,
and that this growth must be dominated by the faint end. For the most luminous
galaxies, we find lower minimum merger rates than required by previous studies
that assume passive stellar evolution, suggesting that some of the dynamical
evolution measured previously was actually due to galaxies with non-passive
stellar evolution being incorrectly modelled. Our methodology can be used to
identify and match coeval populations of galaxies across cosmic times, over one
or more surveys.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, re-submitted to MNRAS after addressing referee's
report - clarifications and references added, sections expanded and typos
fixed. Conclusions unchange
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