2,844 research outputs found
The Effects of Amplification Bias in Gravitational Microlensing Experiments
Although a source star is fainter than the detection limit imposed by
crowding, it is still possible to detect an event if the star is located in the
seeing disk of a bright star is and gravitationally amplified: amplification
bias. Using a well-constrained luminosity function, I show that of
events detected toward the Galactic bulge are affected by amplification bias
and the optical depth might be overestimated by a factor . In
addition, I show that if one takes amplification bias into consideration, the
observed time scale distribution matches significantly better, especially in
the short time-scale region, with the distribution expected from a
mass-spectrum model in which lenses are composed of the known stellar
population plus an additional population of brown dwarfs than it is without the
effect of the amplification bias.Comment: 16 pages including 4 figures, ApJ, submitte
Analyses of the transmission of the disorder from a disturbed environment to a spin chain
We study spin chains submitted to disturbed kick trains described by
classical dynamical processes. The spin chains are described by Heisenberg and
Ising models. We consider decoherence, entanglement and relaxation processes
induced by the kick irregularity in the multipartite system (the spin chain).
We show that the different couplings transmit the disorder along the chain
differently and also to each spin density matrix with different efficiencies.
In order to analyze and to interpret the observed effects we use a
semi-classical analysis across the Husimi distribution. It consists to consider
the classical spin orientation movements. A possibility of conserving the order
into the spin chain is finally analyzed.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1402.241
Quantum chimera states
We study a theoretical model of closed quasi-hermitian chain of spins which
exhibits quantum analogues of chimera states, i.e. long life classical states
for which a part of an oscillator chain presents an ordered dynamics whereas
another part presents a disordered chaotic dynamics. For the quantum analogue,
the chimera behavior deals with the entanglement between the spins of the
chain. We discuss the entanglement properties, quantum chaos, quantum disorder
and semi-classical similarity of our quantum chimera system. The quantum
chimera concept is novel and induces new perspectives concerning the
entanglement of multipartite systems
Nonlocal resonances in weak turbulence of gravity-capillary waves
We report a laboratory investigation of weak turbulence of water surface
waves in the gravity-capillary crossover. By using time-space resolved
profilometry and a bicoherence analysis, we observe that the nonlinear
processes involve 3-wave resonant interactions. By studying the solutions of
the resonance conditions we show that the nonlinear interaction is dominantly
1D and involves collinear wave vectors. Furthermore taking into account the
spectral widening due to weak nonlinearity explains that nonlocal interactions
are possible between a gravity wave and high frequency capillary ones. We
observe also that nonlinear 3-wave coupling is possible among gravity waves and
we raise the question of the relevance of this mechanism for oceanic waves.Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Adiabatic theorem for bipartite quantum systems in weak coupling limit
We study the adiabatic approximation of the dynamics of a bipartite quantum
system with respect to one of the components, when the coupling between its two
components is perturbative. We show that the density matrix of the considered
component is described by adiabatic transport formulae exhibiting
operator-valued geometric and dynamical phases. The present results can be used
to study the quantum control of the dynamics of qubits and of open quantum
systems where the two components are the system and its environment. We treat
two examples, the control of an atomic qubit interacting with another one and
the control of a spin in the middle of a Heisenberg spin chain
Dance Movement Therapy with Adolescents in a Partial Hospital Program: A Method for Engagement
Therapeutic engagement during adolescence can be a major challenge in adolescent mental health. Research has indicated therapeutic techniques designed for engaging clients are often ineffective for adolescents because adolescents bring distinctive qualities to the therapy process that differentiate them from other therapy populations. There is also limited research showing effectiveness of Dance/Movement Therapy (DMT) with the adolescent population. This capstone will present an adaptable method utilizing dance/movement therapy interventions with participants ages 12-17 in a Partial Hospital Program. The objective of this project was to examine how DMT can improve engagement in treatment with adolescents in a partial hospital program through movement experiences and emotional content. The participants were asked to engage in a series of interventions such as movement exercises, body awareness, improvisation, writing, and processing emotions. The goal of the method was to bring awareness to dance movement therapyâs value, benefits, strength and creativity. To develop a better understanding of this topic, this writer designed and adapted four dance/movement therapy sessions for the adolescents. Based on pre and post emotional responses, motivation to attend group, positive engagement and positive responses, the DMT interventions had a positive effect and can benefit adolescents and younger populations
Dance Movement Therapy with Adolescents in a Partial Hospital Program: A Method for Engagement
Therapeutic engagement during adolescence can be a major challenge in adolescent mental health. Research has indicated therapeutic techniques designed for engaging clients are often ineffective for adolescents because adolescents bring distinctive qualities to the therapy process that differentiate them from other therapy populations. There is also limited research showing effectiveness of Dance/Movement Therapy (DMT) with the adolescent population. This capstone will present an adaptable method utilizing dance/movement therapy interventions with participants ages 12-17 in a Partial Hospital Program. The objective of this project was to examine how DMT can improve engagement in treatment with adolescents in a partial hospital program through movement experiences and emotional content. The participants were asked to engage in a series of interventions such as movement exercises, body awareness, improvisation, writing, and processing emotions. The goal of the method was to bring awareness to dance movement therapyâs value, benefits, strength and creativity. To develop a better understanding of this topic, this writer designed and adapted four dance/movement therapy sessions for the adolescents. Based on pre and post emotional responses, motivation to attend group, positive engagement and positive responses, the DMT interventions had a positive effect and can benefit adolescents and younger populations
Not enough stellar mass Machos in the Galactic halo
We present an update of results from the search for microlensing towards the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by EROS (Experience de Recherche d'Objets
Sombres). We have now monitored 25 million stars over three years. Because of
the small number of observed microlensing candidates (four), our results are
best presented as upper limits on the amount of dark compact objects in the
halo of our Galaxy. We discuss critically the candidates and the possible
location of the lenses, halo or LMC . We compare our results to those of the
MACHO group. Finally, we combine these new results with those from our search
towards the Small Magellanic Cloud as well as earlier ones from the EROS1 phase
of our survey. The combined data is sensitive to compact objects in the broad
mass range solar masses. The derived upper limit on the
abundance of stellar mass MACHOs rules out such objects as the dominant
component of the Galactic halo if their mass is smaller than 2 solar masses.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, presented at the XIX International Conference on
Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics, Sudbury, Canada, June 200
Unsupervised Classification for Tiling Arrays: ChIP-chip and Transcriptome
Tiling arrays make possible a large scale exploration of the genome thanks to
probes which cover the whole genome with very high density until 2 000 000
probes. Biological questions usually addressed are either the expression
difference between two conditions or the detection of transcribed regions. In
this work we propose to consider simultaneously both questions as an
unsupervised classification problem by modeling the joint distribution of the
two conditions. In contrast to previous methods, we account for all available
information on the probes as well as biological knowledge like annotation and
spatial dependence between probes. Since probes are not biologically relevant
units we propose a classification rule for non-connected regions covered by
several probes. Applications to transcriptomic and ChIP-chip data of
Arabidopsis thaliana obtained with a NimbleGen tiling array highlight the
importance of a precise modeling and the region classification
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