4,383 research outputs found
Bell-CHSH function approach to quantum phase transitions in matrix product systems
Recently, nonlocality and Bell inequalities have been used to investigate
quantum phase transitions (QPTs) in low-dimensional quantum systems.
Nonlocality can be detected by the Bell-CHSH function (BCF). In this work, we
extend the study of BCF to the QPTs in matrix product systems (MPSs). In this
kind of QPTs, the ground-state energy keeps analytical in the vicinity of the
QPT points, and is usually called the MPS-QPTs. For several typical models, our
results show that BCF can signal the MPS-QPTs very well. In addition, we find
BCF can capture signal of QPTs in unentangled states and classical states, for
which other measures of quantum correlation (quantum entanglement and quantum
discord) fail. Furthermore, we find that in these MPSs, there exists some kind
of quantum correlation which cannot be characterized by entanglement, or by
nonlocality.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
states and their open-charm decays with the complex scaling method
A partial width formula is proposed using the analytical extension of the
wave function in momentum space. The distinction of the Riemann sheets is
explained from the perspective of the Schrodinger equation. The analytical form
in coordinate space and the partial width are derived subsequently. Then a
coupled-channel analysis is performed to investigate the open-charm branching
ratios of the states, involving the contact interactions and
one-pion-exchange potential with the three-body effects. The low energy
constants are fitted using the experimental masses and widths as input. The
is found to decay mainly to , while the
branching ratios of the and in different channels are
comparable. Under the reasonable assumption that the off-diagonal contact
interactions are small, the quantum numbers of the and the
prefer and respectively. Three
additional states at 4380 MeV, 4504 MeV and 4516 MeV, together with their
branching ratios, are predicted. A deduction of the revised one-pion-exchange
potential involving the on-shell three-body intermediate states is performed.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
, and states under the complex scaling method
We investigate the , and states within the chiral
effective field theory framework and the -wave single channel molecule
picture. With the complex scaling method, we accurately solve the Schr\"odinger
equation in momentum space. Our analysis reveals that the ,
, and states are the resonances composed of
the wave , ,
and , respectively.
Furthermore, although the and states exhibit a
significant difference in width, these two resonances may originate from the
same channel, the wave .
Additionally, we find two resonances in the wave channel,
corresponding to the and states that await
experimental confirmation.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Cucumber vs Ants: a Case Against the Myth of the Uses of Plant Extracts in Insect Pest Management
An accumulation of questionable scientific reports on the use of natural plant extracts to control household pest insects, using biologically irrelevant experimental designs and extremely high concentrations, has resulted in a publication bias: “promising” studies claiming readily available plants can repel various insects, including social insects, despite no usable data to judge cost-effectiveness or sustainability in a realistic situation. The Internet provides a further torrent of untested claims, generating a background noise of misinformation. An example is the belief that cucumbers are “natural” ant repellent, widely reported in such informal literature, despite no direct evidence for or against this claim. We tested this popular assertion using peel extracts of cucumber and the related bitter melon as olfactory and gustatory repellents against ants. Extracts of both fruit peels in water, methanol, or hexane were statistically significant but effectively weak gustatory repellents. Aqueous cucumber peel extract has a significant but mild olfactory repellent effect: about half of the ants were repelled relative to none in a control. While the myth may have a grain of truth to it, as cucumber does have a mild but detectable effect on ants in an artificial setup, its potential impact on keeping ants out of a treated perimeter would be extremely short-lived and not cost-effective. Superior ant management strategies are currently available. The promotion of “natural” products must be rooted in scientific evidence of a successful and cost-effective implementation prospect
Context Does Matter: End-to-end Panoptic Narrative Grounding with Deformable Attention Refined Matching Network
Panoramic Narrative Grounding (PNG) is an emerging visual grounding task that
aims to segment visual objects in images based on dense narrative captions. The
current state-of-the-art methods first refine the representation of phrase by
aggregating the most similar image pixels, and then match the refined text
representations with the pixels of the image feature map to generate
segmentation results. However, simply aggregating sampled image features
ignores the contextual information, which can lead to phrase-to-pixel
mis-match. In this paper, we propose a novel learning framework called
Deformable Attention Refined Matching Network (DRMN), whose main idea is to
bring deformable attention in the iterative process of feature learning to
incorporate essential context information of different scales of pixels. DRMN
iteratively re-encodes pixels with the deformable attention network after
updating the feature representation of the top- most similar pixels. As
such, DRMN can lead to accurate yet discriminative pixel representations,
purify the top- most similar pixels, and consequently alleviate the
phrase-to-pixel mis-match substantially.Experimental results show that our
novel design significantly improves the matching results between text phrases
and image pixels. Concretely, DRMN achieves new state-of-the-art performance on
the PNG benchmark with an average recall improvement 3.5%. The codes are
available in: https://github.com/JaMesLiMers/DRMN.Comment: Accepted by ICDM 202
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