44,331 research outputs found
Color homography
We show the surprising result that colors across a change in viewing
condition (changing light color, shading and camera) are related by a
homography. Our homography color correction application delivers improved color
fidelity compared with the linear least-square.Comment: Accepted by Progress in Colour Studies 201
Bose-Einstein condensate of kicked rotators with time-dependent interaction
A modification of the quantum kicked rotator is suggested with a
time-dependent delta-kicked interaction parameter which can be realized by a
pulsed turn-on of a Feshbach resonance. The mean kinetic energy increases
exponentially with time in contrast to a merely diffusive or linear growth for
the first few kicks for the quantum kicked rotator with a constant interaction
parameter. A recursive relation is derived in a self-consistent random phase
approximation which describes this superdiffusive growth of the kinetic energy
and is compared with numerical simulations. Unlike in the case of the quantum
rotator with constant interaction, a Lax pair is not found. In general the
delta-kicked interaction is found to lead to strong chaotic behaviour.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Supersymmetric minisuperspace with non-vanishing fermion number
The Lagrangean of supergravity is dimensionally reduced to one
(time-like) dimension assuming spatial homogeneity of any Bianchi type within
class A of the classification of Ellis and McCallum. The algebra of the
supersymmetry generators, the Lorentz generators, the diffeomorphism generators
and the Hamiltonian generator is determined and found to close. In contrast to
earlier work, infinitely many physical states with non-vanishing even fermion
number are found to exist in these models, indicating that minisuperspace
models in supergravity may be just as useful as in pure gravity.Comment: 4 page
Dynamical preparation of EPR entanglement in two-well Bose-Einstein condensates
We propose to generate Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) entanglement between
groups of atoms in a two-well Bose-Einstein condensate using a dynamical
process similar to that employed in quantum optics. The local nonlinear S-wave
scattering interaction has the effect of creating a spin squeezing at each
well, while the tunneling, analogous to a beam splitter in optics, introduces
an interference between these fields that results in an inter-well
entanglement. We consider two internal modes at each well, so that the
entanglement can be detected by measuring a reduction in the variances of the
sums of local Schwinger spin observables. As is typical of continuous variable
(CV) entanglement, the entanglement is predicted to increase with atom number,
and becomes sufficiently strong at higher numbers of atoms that the EPR paradox
and steering non-locality can be realized. The entanglement is predicted using
an analytical approach and, for larger atom numbers, stochastic simulations
based on truncated Wigner function. We find generally that strong tunnelling is
favourable, and that entanglement persists and is even enhanced in the presence
of realistic nonlinear losses.Comment: 15 pages, 19 figure
Quantization of the Bianchi type-IX model in supergravity with a cosmological constant
Diagonal Bianchi type-IX models are studied in the quantum theory of supergravity with a cosmological constant. It is shown, by imposing the
supersymmetry and Lorentz quantum constraints, that there are no physical
quantum states in this model. The Friedmann model in supergravity
with cosmological constant does admit quantum states. However, the Bianchi
type-IX model provides a better guide to the behaviour of a generic state,
since more gravitino modes are available to be excited. These results indicate
that there may be no physical quantum states in the full theory of
supergravity with a non-zero cosmological constant. are available to be
excited. These results indicate that there may be no physical quantum states in
the full theory of supergravity with a non-zero cosmological
constant.Comment: 17 pages report DAMTP R93/3
The Structure of High Strehl Ratio Point-Spread Functions
We describe the symmetries present in the point-spread function (PSF) of an
optical system either located in space or corrected by an adaptive o to Strehl
ratios of about 70% and higher. We present a formalism for expanding the PSF to
arbitrary order in terms of powers of the Fourier transform of the residual
phase error, over an arbitrarily shaped and apodized entrance aperture. For
traditional unapodized apertures at high Strehl ratios, bright speckles pinned
to the bright Airy rings are part of an antisymmetric perturbation of the
perfect PSF, arising from the term that is first order in the residual phase
error. There are two symmetric second degree terms. One is negative at the
center, and, like the first order term, is modulated by the perfect image's
field strength -- it reduces to the Marechal approximation at the center of the
PSF. The other is non-negative everywhere, zero at the image center, and can be
responsible for an extended halo -- which limits the dynamic range of faint
companion detection in the darkest portions of the image. In regimes where one
or the other term dominates the speckles in an image, the symmetry of the
dominant term can be exploited to reduce the effect of those speckles,
potentially by an order of magnitude or more. We demonstrate the effects of
both secondary obscuration and pupil apodization on the structure of residual
speckles, and discuss how these symmetries can be exploited by appropriate
telescope and instrument design, observing strategies, and filter bandwidths to
improve the dynamic range of high dynamic range AO and space-based
observations. Finally, we show that our analysis is relevant to high dynamic
range coronagraphy.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 20 pages, 4 figure
Magnetoelectric Jones Dichroism in Atoms
The authors suggest that atomic experiments measuring the interference
between magnetic-dipole and electric-field-induced electric-dipole transition
amplitudes provide a valuable system to study magnetoelectric Jones effects.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
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