4,754 research outputs found
Experimental investigation of flow over a backward facing step-progress report
The sizes and arrangement of the wind tunnel used for the experimentation are described. The specifications for the cold-wire anemometers, hot-wire anemometers, cold-wire rakes, and miniature 3-wire probe are proveded. The results of the experiment are briefly discussed
PON1 status does not influence cholinesterase activity in Egyptian agricultural workers exposed to chlorpyrifos.
Animal studies have shown that paraoxonase 1 (PON1) genotype can influence susceptibility to the organophosphorus pesticide chlorpyrifos (CPF). However, Monte Carlo analysis suggests that PON1 genotype may not affect CPF-related toxicity at low exposure conditions in humans. The current study sought to determine the influence of PON1 genotype on the activity of blood cholinesterase as well as the effect of CPF exposure on serum PON1 in workers occupationally exposed to CPF. Saliva, blood and urine were collected from agricultural workers (n=120) from Egypt's Menoufia Governorate to determine PON1 genotype, blood cholinesterase activity, serum PON1 activity towards chlorpyrifos-oxon (CPOase) and paraoxon (POase), and urinary levels of the CPF metabolite 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol (TCPy). The PON1 55 (P≤0.05) but not the PON1 192 genotype had a significant effect on CPOase activity. However, both the PON1 55 (P≤0.05) and PON1 192 (P≤0.001) genotypes had a significant effect on POase activity. Workers had significantly inhibited AChE and BuChE after CPF application; however, neither CPOase activity nor POase activity was associated with ChE depression when adjusted for CPF exposure (as determined by urinary TCPy levels) and stratified by PON1 genotype. CPOase and POase activity were also generally unaffected by CPF exposure although there were alterations in activity within specific genotype groups. Together, these results suggest that workers retained the capacity to detoxify chlorpyrifos-oxon under the exposure conditions experienced by this study population regardless of PON1 genotype and activity and that effects of CPF exposure on PON1 activity are minimal
The Properties of the Radio-Selected 1Jy Sample of BL Lacertae Objects
We present new optical and near-IR spectroscopy as well as new high dynamic
range, arcsecond-resolution VLA radio maps of BL Lacs from the complete
radio-selected "1 Jansky" (1Jy) sample (RBLs) for which such data were not
previously available. Unlike BL Lacs from the complete X-ray-selected Einstein
Medium Sensitivity Survey (EMSS) sample (XBLs), most RBLs possess weak but
moderately luminous emission lines. And whereas nearly all XBLs have extended
power levels consistent with FR-1s, more than half of the RBLs have extended
radio power levels too luminous to be beamed FR-1 radio galaxies. In fact, we
find evidence for and examples of three distinct mechanisms for creating the BL
Lac phenomenon in the 1Jy sample: beamed FR-1s, beamed FR-2s and possibly a few
gravitationally-lensed quasars. The v/v_max determined for the 1Jy sample is
0.614+/-0.047, which is markedly different from the negative evolution seen in
the EMSS and other XBL samples. A correlation between logarithmic X-ray to
radio flux ratio and v/v_max is observed across the EMSS and 1Jy samples, from
negative evolution in the more extreme XBLs to positive evolution in the more
extreme RBLs. There is evidence that the selection criteria chosen by Stickel
et al. eliminates some BL Lac objects from the 1Jy sample, although how many is
unknown. And several objects currently in the sample have exhibited strong
emission lines in one or more epochs, suggesting they should be reclassified as
FSRQs. However these selection effects cannot account for the observed
discrepancy in XBL and RBL properties. From these observational properties we
conclude that RBLs and XBLs cannot be related by viewing angle alone, and that
RBLs are more closely related to FSRQs.Comment: 29 pages, 47 figures, accepted A
Entangled two atoms through different couplings and the thermal noise
The entanglement of two atoms is studied when the two atoms are coupled to a
single-mode thermal field with different couplings. The different couplings of
two atoms are in favor of entanglement preparation: it not only makes the case
of absence entanglement with same coupling appear entanglement, but also
enhances the entanglement with the increasing of the relative difference of two
couplings. We also show that the diversity of coupling can improved the
critical temperature. If the optical cavity is leaky during the time evolution,
the dissipative thermal environment is benefit to produce the entanglement.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Further Investigation of the Time Delay, Magnification Ratios, and Variability in the Gravitational Lens 0218+357
High precision VLA flux density measurements for the lensed images of
0218+357 yield a time delay of 10.1(+1.5-1.6)days (95% confidence). This is
consistent with independent measurements carried out at the same epoch (Biggs
et al. 1999), lending confidence in the robustness of the time delay
measurement. However, since both measurements make use of the same features in
the light curves, it is possible that the effects of unmodelled processes, such
as scintillation or microlensing, are biasing both time delay measurements in
the same way. Our time delay estimates result in confidence intervals that are
somewhat larger than those of Biggs et al., probably because we adopt a more
general model of the source variability, allowing for constant and variable
components. When considered in relation to the lens mass model of Biggs et al.,
our best-fit time delay implies a Hubble constant of H_o = 71(+17-23) km/s-Mpc
for Omega_o=1 and lambda_o=0 (95% confidence; filled beam). This confidence
interval for H_o does not reflect systematic error, which may be substantial,
due to uncertainty in the position of the lens galaxy. We also measure the flux
ratio of the variable components of 0218+357, a measurement of a small region
that should more closely represent the true lens magnification ratio. We find
ratios of 3.2(+0.3-0.4) (95% confidence; 8 GHz) and 4.3(+0.5-0.8) (15 GHz).
Unlike the reported flux ratios on scales of 0.1", these ratios are not
strongly significantly different. We investigate the significance of apparent
differences in the variability properties of the two images of the background
active galactic nucleus. We conclude that the differences are not significant,
and that time series much longer than our 100-day time series will be required
to investigate propagation effects in this way.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Light curve
data may be found at http://space.mit.edu/RADIO/papers.htm
On the experimental feasibility of continuous-variable optical entanglement distillation
Entanglement distillation aims at preparing highly entangled states out of a
supply of weakly entangled pairs, using local devices and classical
communication only. In this note we discuss the experimentally feasible schemes
for optical continuous-variable entanglement distillation that have been
presented in [D.E. Browne, J. Eisert, S. Scheel, and M.B. Plenio, Phys. Rev. A
67, 062320 (2003)] and [J. Eisert, D.E. Browne, S. Scheel, and M.B. Plenio,
Annals of Physics (NY) 311, 431 (2004)]. We emphasize their versatility in
particular with regards to the detection process and discuss the merits of the
two proposed detection schemes, namely photo-detection and homodyne detection,
in the light of experimental realizations of this idea becoming more and more
feasible.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, contribution to conference proceeding
Brokered Graph State Quantum Computing
We describe a procedure for graph state quantum computing that is tailored to
fully exploit the physics of optically active multi-level systems. Leveraging
ideas from the literature on distributed computation together with the recent
work on probabilistic cluster state synthesis, our model assigns to each
physical system two logical qubits: the broker and the client. Groups of
brokers negotiate new graph state fragments via a probabilistic optical
protocol. Completed fragments are mapped from broker to clients via a simple
state transition and measurement. The clients, whose role is to store the
nascent graph state long term, remain entirely insulated from failures during
the brokerage. We describe an implementation in terms of NV-centres in diamond,
where brokers and clients are very naturally embodied as electron and nuclear
spins.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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