1,918 research outputs found
A model for single electron decays from a strongly isolated quantum dot
Recent measurements of electron escape from a non-equilibrium charged quantum
dot are interpreted within a 2D separable model. The confining potential is
derived from 3D self-consistent Poisson-Thomas-Fermi calculations. It is found
that the sequence of decay lifetimes provides a sensitive test of the confining
potential and its dependence on electron occupation.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Enhanced observability of quantum post-exponential decay using distant detectors
We study the elusive transition from exponential to post-exponential
(algebraic) decay of the probability density of a quantum particle emitted by
an exponentially decaying source, in one dimension. The main finding is that
the probability density at the transition time, and thus its observability,
increases with the distance of the detector from the source, up to a critical
distance beyond which exponential decay is no longer observed. Solvable models
provide explicit expressions for the dependence of the transition on resonance
and observational parameters, facilitating the choice of optimal conditions
Fragmented condensation in Bose-Hubbard trimers with tunable tunnelling
We consider a Bose-Hubbard trimer, i.e. an ultracold Bose gas populating
three quantum states. The latter can be either different sites of a triple-well
potential or three internal states of the atoms. The bosons can tunnel between
different states with variable tunnelling strength between two of them. This
will allow us to study; i) different geometrical configurations, i.e. from a
closed triangle to three aligned wells and ii) a triangular configuration with
a -phase, i.e. by setting one of the tunnellings negative. By solving the
corresponding three-site Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian we obtain the ground state of
the system as a function of the trap topology. We characterise the different
ground states by means of the coherence and entanglement properties. For small
repulsive interactions, fragmented condensates are found for the -phase
case. These are found to be robust against small variations of the tunnelling
in the small interaction regime. A low-energy effective many-body Hamiltonian
restricted to the degenerate manifold provides a compelling description of the
-phase degeneration and explains the low-energy spectrum as excitations of
discrete semifluxon states
Fast generation of spin-squeezed states in bosonic Josephson junctions
We describe methods for fast production of highly coherent-spin-squeezed
many-body states in bosonic Josephson junctions (BJJs). We start from the known
mapping of the two-site Bose-Hubbard (BH) Hamiltonian to that of a single
effective particle evolving according to a Schr\"odinger-like equation in Fock
space. Since, for repulsive interactions, the effective potential in Fock space
is nearly parabolic, we extend recently derived protocols for shortcuts to
adiabatic evolution in harmonic potentials to the many-body BH Hamiltonian. The
best scaling of the squeezing parameter for large number of atoms N is \xi^2_S
~ 1/N.Comment: Improved and enlarged version, accepted at Phys. Rev.
Brains versus Brawn: Labor Market Returns to Intellectual and Health Human Capital in a Poor Developing Country
Previous studies report that adult height has significant associations with wages even controlling for schooling. But schooling and height are imperfect measures of adult cognitive skills (âbrainsâ) and strength (âbrawnâ); further they are not exogenous. Analysis of rich Guatemalan longitudinal data over 35 years finds that proximate determinantsâadult reading comprehension skills and fat-free body massâhave significantly positive associations with wages, but only brains, and not brawn, is significant when both human capital measures are treated as endogenous. Even in a poor developing economy in which strength plausibly has rewards, labor market returns are increased by brains, not brawn.
Influence of morning maternal care on the behavioural responses of 8-week-old Beagle puppies to new environmental and social stimuli
In mammals, maternal care represents a major constituent of the early-life environment and its influence on individual development has been documented in rodents, non-human primates, humans and recently in adult dogs. The quality and quantity of mother-offspring interactions exerts a multilevel regulation upon the physiological, cognitive, and behavioural development of the offspring. For example, in rats variations in maternal behaviour, such as mother-pup body contact and the amount of licking towards pups in the nest during the early days after parturition, influences the endocrine, emotional, and behavioural responses to stress in the offspring. This produces long-term consequences, which may remain into adulthood and can be transmitted to subsequent generations. Literature about maternal care in dogs and its effect on puppy behaviour is still scarce, although the topic is receiving a growing interest. The aim of the present study was to determine the effects of morning maternal care on behavioural responses of puppies to new environmental and social stimuli. In order to achieve this, maternal care (licking, ano-genital licking, nursing and mother-puppy contact) was assessed in eight litters of domestic dogs living in standard rearing conditions during the first three weeks post-partum. Puppies were subjected to two behavioural tests (arena and isolation tests) at 58-60 days of age, and their behavioural responses were video recorded and analysed. Data was analysed using multivariate analyses (PCA, PLS).During the isolation test, a higher level of maternal care was associated with more exploration and a higher latency to emit the first yelp; on the contrary, a lower level of maternal care was associated with increased locomotion, distress vocalisations and destructive behaviours directed at the enclosure.These results, comparable to those reported in laboratory rat models and to some extent to those recently reported in dog literature, highlight the importance of maternal care on the behavioural development of domestic dog puppies
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