1,209 research outputs found
The Effect of Stochastic Noise on Quantum State Transfer
We consider the effect of classical stochastic noise on control laser pulses
used in a scheme for transferring quantum information between atoms, or quantum
dots, in separate optical cavities via an optical connection between cavities.
We develop a master equation for the dynamics of the system subject to
stochastic errors in the laser pulses, and use this to evaluate the sensitivity
of the transfer process to stochastic pulse shape errors for a number of
different pulse shapes. We show that under certain conditions, the sensitivity
of the transfer to the noise depends on the pulse shape, and develop a method
for determining a pulse shape that is minimally sensitive to specific errors.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Anoxic nitrification in marine sediments
Nitrate peaks are found in pore-water profiles in marine sediments at depths considerably
below the conventional zone of oxic nitrification. These have been interpreted to represent nonsteady-
state effects produced by the activity of nitrifying bacteria, and suggest that nitrification
occurs throughout the anoxic sediment region. In this study, ΣNO3 peaks and molecular analysis of
DNA and RNA extracted from anoxic sediments of Loch Duich, an organic-rich marine fjord, are consistent
with nitrification occurring in the anoxic zone. Analysis of ammonia oxidiser 16S rRNA gene
fragments amplified from sediment DNA indicated the abundance of autotrophic ammonia-oxidising
bacteria throughout the sediment depth sampled (40 cm), while RT-PCR analysis indicated their
potential activity throughout this region. A large non-steady-state pore-water ΣNO3 peak at ~21 cm
correlated with discontinuities in this ammonia-oxidiser community. In addition, a subsurface nitrate
peak at ~8 cm below the oxygen penetration depth, correlated with the depth of a peak in nitrification
rate, assessed by transformation of 15N-labelled ammonia. The source of the oxidant required to
support nitrification within the anoxic region is uncertain. It is suggested that rapid recycling of N is
occurring, based on a coupled reaction involving Mn oxides (or possibly highly labile Fe oxides)
buried during small-scale slumping events. However, to fully investigate this coupling, advances in
the capability of high-resolution pore-water techniques are required
Dissociation cross sections of ground-state and excited charmonia with light mesons in the quark model
We present numerical results for the dissociation cross sections of
ground-state, orbitally- and radially-excited charmonia in collisions with
light mesons. Our results are derived using the nonrelativistic quark model, so
all parameters are determined by fits to the experimental meson spectrum.
Examples of dissociation into both exclusive and inclusive final states are
considered. The dissociation cross sections of several C=(+) charmonia may be
of considerable importance for the study of heavy ion collisions, since these
states are expected to be produced more copiously than the J/psi. The relative
importance of the productions of ground-state and orbitally-excited charmed
mesons in a pion-charmonium collision is demonstrated through the -dependent charmonium dissociation cross sections.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Reply to "Comment on "Some implications of the quantum nature of laser fields for quantum computations''''
In this revised reply to quant-ph/0211165, I address the question of the
validity of my results in greater detail, by comparing my predictions to those
of the Silberfarb-Deutsch model, and I deal at greater length with the beam
area paradox. As before, I conclude that my previous results are an
(order-of-magnitude) accurate estimate of the error probability introduced in
quantum logical operations by the quantum nature of the laser field. While this
error will typically (for a paraxial beam) be smaller than the total error due
to spontaneous emission, a unified treatment of both effects reveals that they
lead to formally similar constraints on the minimum number of photons per pulse
required to perform an operation with a given accuracy; these constraints agree
with those I have derived elsewhere.Comment: A reply to quant-ph/0211165. Added more calculations and discussion,
removed some flippanc
Kaon-Nucleon Scattering Amplitudes and Z-Enhancements from Quark Born Diagrams
We derive closed form kaon-nucleon scattering amplitudes using the ``quark
Born diagram" formalism, which describes the scattering as a single interaction
(here the OGE spin-spin term) followed by quark line rearrangement. The low
energy I=0 and I=1 S-wave KN phase shifts are in reasonably good agreement with
experiment given conventional quark model parameters. For Gev
however the I=1 elastic phase shift is larger than predicted by Gaussian
wavefunctions, and we suggest possible reasons for this discrepancy. Equivalent
low energy KN potentials for S-wave scattering are also derived. Finally we
consider OGE forces in the related channels K, KN and K,
and determine which have attractive interactions and might therefore exhibit
strong threshold enhancements or ``Z-molecule" meson-baryon bound states.
We find that the minimum-spin, minimum-isospin channels and two additional
K channels are most conducive to the formation of bound states.
Related interesting topics for future experimental and theoretical studies of
KN interactions are also discussed.Comment: 34 pages, figures available from the authors, revte
Short-range repulsion and isospin dependence in the KN system
The short-range properties of the KN interaction are studied within the
meson-exchange model of the Juelich group. Specifically, dynamical explanations
for the phenomenological short-range repulsion, required in this model for
achieving agreement with the empirical KN data, are explored. Evidence is found
that contributions from the exchange of a heavy scalar-isovector meson
(a_0(980)) as well as from genuine quark-gluon exchange processes are needed.
Taking both mechanisms into account a satisfactory description of the KN phase
shifts can be obtained without resorting to phenomenological pieces.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figure
Relativistic Coulomb Sum Rules for
A Coulomb sum rule is derived for the response of nuclei to
scattering with large three-momentum transfers. Unlike the nonrelativistic
formulation, the relativistic Coulomb sum is restricted to spacelike
four-momenta for the most direct connection with experiments; an immediate
consequence is that excitations involving antinucleons, e.g., pair
production, are approximately eliminated from the sum rule. Relativistic recoil
and Fermi motion of target nucleons are correctly incorporated. The sum rule
decomposes into one- and two-body parts, with correlation information in the
second. The one-body part requires information on the nucleon momentum
distribution function, which is incorporated by a moment expansion method. The
sum rule given through the second moment (RCSR-II) is tested in the Fermi gas
model, and is shown to be sufficiently accurate for applications to data.Comment: 32 pages (LaTeX), 4 postscript figures available from the author
Roper Resonance and S_{11}(1535) from Lattice QCD
Using the constrained curve fitting method and overlap fermions with the
lowest pion mass at , we observe that the masses of the first
positive and negative parity excited states of the nucleon tend to cross over
as the quark masses are taken to the chiral limit. Both results at the physical
pion mass agree with the experimental values of the Roper resonance
() and (). This is seen for the first
time in a lattice QCD calculation. These results are obtained on a quenched
Iwasaki lattice with . We also extract the
ghost states (a quenched artifact) which are shown to decouple from
the nucleon interpolation field above . From the
quark mass dependence of these states in the chiral region, we conclude that
spontaneously broken chiral symmetry dictates the dynamics of light quarks in
the nucleon.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, revised version to appear in PL
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