6,969 research outputs found
On the spontaneous emission of electromagnetic radiation in the CSL model
Spontaneous photon emission in the Continuous Spontaneous Localization (CSL)
model is studied one more time. In the CSL model each particle interacts with a
noise field that induces the collapse of its wave function. As a consequence of
this interaction, when the particle is electrically charged, it radiates. As
discussed in [1], the formula for the emission rate, to first perturbative
order, contains two terms: One is proportional to the Fourier component of the
noise field at the same frequency as that of the emitted photon and one is
proportional to the zero Fourier component of the noise field. As discussed in
previous works, this second term seems unphysical. In [1], it was shown that
the unphysical term disappears when the noises is confined to a bounded region
and the final particle's state is a wave packet. Here we investigate the origin
of the unphysical term and why it vanishes according to the previous
prescription. For this purpose, the electrodynamic part of the equation of
motion is solved exactly while the part due to the noise is treated
perturbatively. We show that the unphysical term is connected to exponentially
decaying function of time which dies out in the large time limit, however,
approximates to 1 in the first perturbative order in the electromagnetic field.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, LaTe
On the Electromagnetic Properties of Matter in Collapse Models
We discuss the electromagnetic properties of both a charged free particle,
and a charged particle bounded by an harmonic potential, within collapse
models. By choosing a particularly simple, yet physically relevant, collapse
model, and under only the dipole approximation, we are able to solve the
equation of motion exactly. In this way, both the finite time and large time
behavior can be analyzed accurately. We discovered new features, which did not
appear in previous works on the same subject. Since, so far, the spontaneous
photon emission process places the strongest upper bounds on the collapse
parameters, our results call for a further analysis of this process for those
atomic systems which can be employed in experimental tests of collapse models,
as well as of quantum mechanics.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, updated version with minor change
Collapse models with non-white noises
We set up a general formalism for models of spontaneous wave function
collapse with dynamics represented by a stochastic differential equation driven
by general Gaussian noises, not necessarily white in time. In particular, we
show that the non-Schrodinger terms of the equation induce the collapse of the
wave function to one of the common eigenstates of the collapsing operators, and
that the collapse occurs with the correct quantum probabilities. We also
develop a perturbation expansion of the solution of the equation with respect
to the parameter which sets the strength of the collapse process; such an
approximation allows one to compute the leading order terms for the deviations
of the predictions of collapse models with respect to those of standard quantum
mechanics. This analysis shows that to leading order, the ``imaginary'' noise
trick can be used for non-white Gaussian noise.Comment: Latex, 20 pages;references added and minor revisions; published as J.
Phys. A: Math. Theor. {\bf 40} (2007) 15083-1509
Reply to Comments of Bassi, Ghirardi, and Tumulka on the Free Will Theorem
We show that the authors in the title have erred in claiming that our axiom
FIN is false by conflating it with Bell locality. We also argue that the
predictions of quantum mechanics, and in particular EPR, are fully Lorentz
invariant, whereas the Free Will Theorem shows that theories with a mechanism
of reduction, such as GRW, cannot be made fully invariant.Comment: We sharpen our theorem by replacing axiom FIN by a weaker axiom MIN
to answer the above authors' objection
Simulation and analysis of solenoidal ion sources
We present a detailed analysis and simulation of solenoidal, magnetically confined electron bombardment ion sources, aimed at molecular beam detection. The aim is to achieve high efficiency for singly ionized species while minimizing multiple ionization. Electron space charge plays a major role and we apply combined ray tracing and finite element simulations to determine the properties of a realistic geometry. The factors controlling electron injection and ion extraction are discussed. The results from simulations are benchmarked against experimental measurements on a prototype source
Kinin-B1 receptors in ischaemia-induced pancreatitis: Functional importance and cellular localisation
In this study we compare the role of kininB1 and B2 receptors during ischaemia/reperfusion of rat pancreas. Our investigations were prompted by the observation that infusion of a kininB2 receptor antagonist produced significant improvement in acute experimental pancreatitis. In an acute model with two hours of ischaemia/two hours of reperfusion, application of the kininB1 receptor antagonist (CP-0298) alone, or in combination with kininB2 receptor antagonist (CP-0597), significantly reduced the number of adherent leukocytes in postcapillary venules. In a chronic model with five days of reperfusion, the continuous application of kininB1 receptor antagonist or a combination of kininB1 and B2 receptor antagonists markedly reduced the survival rate. In kininreceptor binding studies kininB1 receptor showed a 22-fold increase in expression during the time of ischaemia/ reperfusion. Carboxypeptidase M activity was upregulated 10-fold following two hours of ischaemia and two hours of reperfusion, provided the appropriate specific ligand, desArg10-kallidin and/or desArg9-bradykinin, was used. The occurrence of kininB1 receptor binding sites on acinar cell membranes was demonstrated by microautoradiography. With a specific antibody, the localisation of kininB1 receptor protein was confirmed at the same sites. In conclusion, we have demonstrated the upregulation of the pancreatic acinar cell kininB1 receptors during ischaemia/reperfusion. The novel functional finding was that antagonism of the kininB1 receptors decreased the survival rate in an experimental model of pancreatitis
Consciousness and the Wigner's friend problem
It is generally agreed that decoherence theory is, if not a complete answer,
at least a great step forward towards a solution of the quantum measurement
problem. It is shown here however that in the cases in which a sentient being
is explicitly assumed to take cognizance of the outcome the reasons we have for
judging this way are not totally consistent, so that the question has to be
considered anew. It is pointed out that the way the Broglie-Bohm model solves
the riddle suggests a possible clue, consisting in assuming that even very
simple systems may have some sort of a proto-consciousness, but that their
``internal states of consciousness'' are not predictive. It is, next, easily
shown that if we imagine the systems get larger, in virtue of decoherence their
internal states of consciousness progressively gain in predictive value. So
that, for macro-systems, they may be identified (in practice) with the
predictive states of consciousness on which we ground our observational
predictions. The possibilities of carrying over this idea to standard quantum
mechanics are then investigated. Conditions of conceptual consistency are
considered and found rather strict, and, finally, two solutions emerge,
differing conceptually very much from one another but in both of which the,
possibly non-predictive, generalized internal states of consciousness play a
crucial role
Bulk Cr tips for scanning tunneling microscopy and spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy
A simple, reliable method for preparation of bulk Cr tips for Scanning
Tunneling Microscopy (STM) is proposed and its potentialities in performing
high-quality and high-resolution STM and Spin Polarized-STM (SP-STM) are
investigated. Cr tips show atomic resolution on ordered surfaces. Contrary to
what happens with conventional W tips, rest atoms of the Si(111)-7x7
reconstruction can be routinely observed, probably due to a different
electronic structure of the tip apex. SP-STM measurements of the Cr(001)
surface showing magnetic contrast are reported. Our results reveal that the
peculiar properties of these tips can be suited in a number of STM experimental
situations
Insolubility Theorems and EPR Argument
I wish to thank in particular Arthur Fine for very perceptive comments on a previous draft of this paper. Many thanks also to Theo Nieuwenhuizen for inspiration, to Max Schlosshauer for correspondence, to two anonymous referees for shrewd observations, and to audiences at Aberdeen, Cagliari and Oxford (in particular to Harvey Brown, Elise Crull, Simon Saunders, Chris Timpson and David Wallace) for stimulating questions. This paper was written during my tenure of a Leverhulme Grant on ‘The Einstein Paradox’: The Debate on Nonlocality and Incompleteness in 1935 (Project Grant nr. F/00 152/AN), and it was revised for publication during my tenure of a Visiting Professorship in the Doctoral School of Philosophy and Epistemology, University of Cagliari (Contract nr. 268/21647).Peer reviewedPostprin
A PRELIMINARY APPROACH TO ASSESS PEACH FRUIT TEXTURE BY TIME-RESOLVED SPECTROSCOPY (TRS)
Most fruits can be modeled for their internal composition as a diffusive medium at visible and near-infrared wavelengths. The low absorption in this spectral range allows exploiting VIS/NIR spectroscopic techniques to probe non-destructively the internal food properties. Time-resolved reflectance spectroscopy (TRS), in particular, allows the separate, but simultaneous estimation of absorption and scattering coefficients. Absorption and scattering properties give very different information about the medium investigated. The possibility of applying TRS to assess the texture type of peach fruit was tested. To this purpose, an instrument for TRS developed at Politecnico di Milano-Department of Physics, was exploited. At least two cultivars for each peach flesh phenotype (melting, non-melting, stony hard and slow melting) and a total of 30 fruits for each cultivar were analyzed over the spectral range 540-940 nm. The absorption spectra exhibit high values around 550 nm due to the anthocyanins' absorption features. Furthermore, an absorption peak is visible at 670 nm, linked to the chlorophyll a content and then gives an idea about the fruit ripeness (a high chlorophyll content corresponds to a less ripe fruit). With the exception of the cultivar 'Iride', particularly rich in anthocyanins, and 'Ghiaccio', anthocyaninless, the absorption spectra of all of the samples were similar. Concerning the scattering properties of peaches, by considering the equivalent density and the scatter power Mie parameters, it was possible to discriminate between three out of four texture types (melting, slow melting and stony hard). Further improvements may lead to a full discrimination in the future
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