615 research outputs found

    Nonequilibrium Quantum Phase Transitions in the Dicke Model

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    We establish a set of nonequilibrium quantum phase transitions in the Dicke model by considering a monochromatic nonadiabatic modulation of the atom-field coupling. For weak driving the system exhibits a set of sidebands which allow the circumvention of the no-go theorem which otherwise forbids the occurence of superradiant phase transitions. At strong driving we show that the system exhibits a rich multistable structure and exhibits both first- and second-order nonequilibrium quantum phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Figures, and supplementary material. This new version contains corrected typos, new references and new versions of the figures. Published by Physical Review Letter

    Electrochemical characterization of organic coatings for protection of historic steel artefacts

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    Figuras en el archivo zipElectrochemical techniques are mainly known in the field of cultural heritage conservation as a tool for the elimination of corrosion layers or the removal of chlorides. However, these techniques are also a valuable tool for assessing the anti-corrosive efficiency of protective coatings. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of different coatings for their use in metallic heritage conservation using polarization resistance (Rp) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Carbon steel samples were prepared to simulate the surface composition and morphology of historic steel artefacts, and coated by a conservator-restorer following the common practices in conservation treatments. Three commercial organic coatings have been studied: a microcrystalline wax (RenaissanceTM) and a methyl acrylate/ethyl methacrylate copolymer resin (ParaloidTM B-72) dissolved in acetone –both them commonly used in conservation and restoration treatments– and a ethylene copolymer wax emulsion in water (PoligenTM ES- 91009), that has not been used so far for this purposes. Four commercial corrosion inhibitor additives were added to the ParaloidTM B-72 resin and PoligenTM ES-91009 wax. The additives were commercial preparations with the following known active components: a blend of triazoles (M435), an ammonium salt of tricarboxylic acid (M370), a calcium sulphonate (M109), and a bis-oxazoline (Alkaterge-TTM). Rp and EIS results showed that the best protection of the steel specimens was afforded by PoligenTM ES-91009 when applied in thick layers. None of the additives have shown a clear improvement of the protection properties of the coatings, and one of them impaired the barrier effect of the coating.Acknowledgements The authors express their gratitude to the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission for financial support of PROMET Project (Contract 509126). D.M. Bastidas expresses his gratitude to the CSIC of Spain for his contract under the I3P Programme, co-financed by the European Social Fund.Peer reviewe

    Reservoir-assisted energy migration through multiple spin domains

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    The transfer of energy through a network of nodes is fundamental to how both nature and current technology operate. Traditionally, we think of the nodes in a network being coupled to channels that connect them, in which energy is passed from node to channel to node until it reaches its targeted site. Here we introduce an alternate approach to this, where our channels are replaced by collective environments (or, actually, reservoirs) which interact with pairs of nodes. We show how energy initially located at a specific node can arrive at a target node-even though that environment may be at zero temperature. Further, we show that such a migration occurs on much faster timescales than the damping rate associated with a single spin coupled to the reservoir. Our approach shows the power of being able to tailor both the system and environment and the symmetries associated with them to provide new directions for future quantum technologies

    Interaction of threat expressions and eye gaze: an event-related potential study

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    he current study examined the interaction of fearful, angry, happy, and neutral expressions with left, straight, and right eye gaze directions. Human participants viewed faces consisting of various expression and eye gaze combinations while event-related potential (ERP) data were collected. The results showed that angry expressions modulated the mean amplitude of the P1, whereas fearful and happy expressions modulated the mean amplitude of the N170. No influence of eye gaze on mean amplitudes for the P1 and N170 emerged. Fearful, angry, and happy expressions began to interact with eye gaze to influence mean amplitudes in the time window of 200–400 ms. The results suggest early processing of expression influence ERPs independent of eye gaze, whereas expression and gaze interact to influence later ERPs
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