4,904 research outputs found
Vacuum fluctuations and the conditional homodyne detection of squeezed light
Conditional homodyne detection of quadrature squeezing is compared with
standard nonconditional detection. Whereas the latter identifies
nonclassicality in a quantitative way, as a reduction of the noise power below
the shot noise level, conditional detection makes a qualitative distinction
between vacuum state squeezing and squeezed classical noise. Implications of
this comparison for the realistic interpretation of vacuum fluctuations
(stochastic electrodynamics) are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, to appear in J. Opt. B: Quantum Semiclass. Op
Dataplane Specialization for High-performance OpenFlow Software Switching
OpenFlow is an amazingly expressive dataplane program-
ming language, but this expressiveness comes at a severe
performance price as switches must do excessive packet clas-
sification in the fast path. The prevalent OpenFlow software
switch architecture is therefore built on flow caching, but
this imposes intricate limitations on the workloads that can
be supported efficiently and may even open the door to mali-
cious cache overflow attacks. In this paper we argue that in-
stead of enforcing the same universal flow cache semantics
to all OpenFlow applications and optimize for the common
case, a switch should rather automatically specialize its dat-
aplane piecemeal with respect to the configured workload.
We introduce ES WITCH , a novel switch architecture that
uses on-the-fly template-based code generation to compile
any OpenFlow pipeline into efficient machine code, which
can then be readily used as fast path. We present a proof-
of-concept prototype and we demonstrate on illustrative use
cases that ES WITCH yields a simpler architecture, superior
packet processing speed, improved latency and CPU scala-
bility, and predictable performance. Our prototype can eas-
ily scale beyond 100 Gbps on a single Intel blade even with
complex OpenFlow pipelines
U-Pb zircon SHRIMP evidences of Cambrian volcanism in the Schistose Domain within the Galicia-Tras-os-Montes Zone (Variscan Orogen, NW Iberian Peninsula)
SHRIMP U–Pb zircon analyses have shown the complexity of dating volcanic rocks due to the presence of inner cores within zircon crystals. Using the cathodoluminescence studies assisting ion microprobe analyses allow us to conclude that: the two low-grade metavolcanic samples from the Schistose Domain of the Galicia-Trás-os-Montes Zone in the northeast limb of the Verín-Bragança synform (NW Spain and NE Portugal) yield ages of 488.7 ± 3.7Ma and 499.8 ± 3.7Ma (lowermost Ordovician-Upper Cambrian). The Schistose Domain had been traditionally considered as a parautochthonous tectonic unit, i.e. as the stratigraphic continuation of the autochthonous underlying rocks, only locally or moderately detached from them as a result of strong dragging forces from large allochthonous units above it. Current interpretation of the Schistose Domain suggests that this domain formed the outboard edge of the Iberian terrane. Important Arenig, felsic magmatism with similar geochemical signature to the volcanic bodies in the Schistose Domain of the Galicia-Trás-os-Montes Zone (GTMSD) series is present also in the adjacent Ollo de Sapo Domain of the Central Iberian Zone. This contemporary nature of magmatic events provides an additional argument to support the “Iberian” affinity of the Schistose Domain of the Galicia-Trás-osMontes Zone. However, the Cambro–Ordovician facies are very different in the Schistose Domain with respect to the autochthonous unit, the Central–Iberian Zone, suggesting that the Schistose Domain must be considered as a major allochthonous unit with a displacement of over several tens of kilometers
Two-bath model for activated surface diffusion of interacting adsorbates
The diffusion and low vibrational motions of adsorbates on surfaces can be
well described by a purely stochastic model, the so-called interacting single
adsorbate model, for low-moderate coverages (\theta \lesssim 0.12). Within this
model, the effects of thermal surface phonons and adsorbate-adsorbate
collisions are accounted for by two uncorrelated noise functions which arise in
a natural way from a two-bath model based on a generalization of the one-bath
Caldeira-Leggett Hamiltonian. As an illustration, the model is applied to the
diffusion of Na atoms on a Cu(001) surface with different coverages.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Linking tourism, retirement migration and social capital
A general trend in the study of international retirement migration has been the increased attention paid to the social contacts and network connections of the migrants in both the destination and the origin areas. These studies have examined the extent to which migrants build social relationships with their neighbours and the host society while also maintaining social links with their countries of origin, addressing the central role that leisure travel plays in sustaining increasingly dispersed social networks and maintaining the social capital of these networks and of the individuals involved in them. Using a case study approach to examine British retirement migration to Spain, we explore the relevance of transnational social networks in the context of international retirement migration, particularly the intensity of bidirectional visiting friends and relatives (VFR) tourism flows and the migrants' social contacts with friends and/or family back in their home country. Building on the concept of social capital and Putnam's distinction between bonding and bridging social capital, we propose a framework for the analysis of the migrants' international social networks. The results of a study conducted based on a sample of 365 British retirees living in the coast of Alicante (Spain) show both the strength of the retirees' international bonding social capital and the role of 'VFR's travel and communication technologies in sustaining the migrants' transnational social practices and, ultimately, their international bonding social capital. It also provides evidence for the reinforcing links between tourism-related mobility and amenity-seeking migration in later life. © 2013 © 2013 Taylor & Francis
Homogeneous Gold Catalysis through Relativistic Effects: Addition of Water to Propyne
In the catalytic addition of water to propyne the Au(III) catalyst is not
stable under non-relativistic conditions and dissociates into a Au(I) compound
and Cl2. This implies that one link in the chain of events in the catalytic
cycle is broken and relativity may well be seen as the reason why Au(III)
compounds are effective catalysts.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
System size resonance in coupled noisy systems and in the Ising model
We consider an ensemble of coupled nonlinear noisy oscillators demonstrating
in the thermodynamic limit an Ising-type transition. In the ordered phase and
for finite ensembles stochastic flips of the mean field are observed with the
rate depending on the ensemble size. When a small periodic force acts on the
ensemble, the linear response of the system has a maximum at a certain system
size, similar to the stochastic resonance phenomenon. We demonstrate this
effect of system size resonance for different types of noisy oscillators and
for different ensembles -- lattices with nearest neighbors coupling and
globally coupled populations. The Ising model is also shown to demonstrate the
system size resonance.Comment: 4 page
Counting defects with the two-point correlator
We study how topological defects manifest themselves in the equal-time
two-point field correlator. We consider a scalar field with Z_2 symmetry in 1,
2 and 3 spatial dimensions, allowing for kinks, domain lines and domain walls,
respectively. Using numerical lattice simulations, we find that in any number
of dimensions, the correlator in momentum space is to a very good approximation
the product of two factors, one describing the spatial distribution of the
defects and the other describing the defect shape. When the defects are
produced by the Kibble mechanism, the former has a universal form as a function
of k/n, which we determine numerically. This signature makes it possible to
determine the kink density from the field correlator without having to resort
to the Gaussian approximation. This is essential when studying field dynamics
with methods relying only on correlators (Schwinger-Dyson, 2PI).Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures
Review of recent experimental progresses in Foundations of Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Information obtained in Parametric Down Conversion Experiments at IENGF
We review some recent experimental progresses concerning Foundations of
Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Information obtained in Quantum Optics Laboratory
"Carlo Novero" at IENGF.
More in details, after a short presentation of our polarization entangled
photons source (based on precise superposition of two Type I PDC emission) and
of the results obtained with it, we describe an innovative double slit
experiment where two degenerate photons produced by PDC are sent each to a
specific slit. Beyond representing an interesting example of relation between
visibility of interference and "welcher weg" knowledge, this configuration has
been suggested for testing de Broglie-Bohm theory against Standard Quantum
Mechanics. Our results perfectly fit SQM results, but disagree with dBB
predictions.
Then, we discuss a recent experiment addressed to clarify the issue of which
wave-particle observables are really to be considered when discussing wave
particle duality. This experiments realises the Agarwal et al. theoretical
proposal, overcoming limitations of a former experiment.
Finally, we hint to the realization of a high-intensity
high-spectral-selected PDC source to be used for quantum information studies
A Nine-year series of daily oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition of precipitation at Concordia station, East Antarctica
The atmospheric processes determining the isotopic composition of precipitation on the Antarctic plateau are yet to be fully understood, as well as the post-depositional processes altering the snow pristine isotopic signal. Improving the comprehension of these physical mechanisms is of crucial importance for interpreting the isotopic records from ice cores drilled in the low accumulation area of Antarctica, e.g., the upcoming Beyond EPICA drilling at Little Dome C.
Up to now, few records of the isotopic composition of precipitation in Antarctica are available, most of them limited in time or sampling frequency. Here we present a 9-year long δ18O and δD record (2008-2016) of precipitation at Concordia base, East Antarctica. The snow is collected daily on a raised platform (1 m), positioned in the clean area of the station; the precipitation collection is still being carried out each year by the winter over personnel.
A significant positive correlation between isotopes in precipitation and 2-m air temperature is observed at both seasonal and interannual scale; the lowest temperature and isotopic values are usually recorded during winters characterized by a strongly positive Southern Annular Mode index.
To improve the understanding of the mechanisms governing the isotopic composition of precipitation, we compare the isotopic data of Concordia samples with on-site observations, meteorological data from the Dome C AWS of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as well as with high-resolution simulation results from the isotope-enabled atmospheric general circulation models ECHAM5-wiso and ECHAM6-wiso, nudged with the ERA-Interim and ERA5 reanalyses respectively
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