11,184 research outputs found
Effects of surface crossing in chemical reactions - The H3/plus/ system
Potential energy surfaces for singlet states of H3/plus
A crossed beam study of the reaction N/plus/ plus O2 yields NO/plus/ plus O
Studying reaction N/plus/ plus O2 yields NO/plus/ plus O as function of collision energy using crossed beam
Nonadiabatic Dynamics in Open Quantum-Classical Systems: Forward-Backward Trajectory Solution
A new approximate solution to the quantum-classical Liouville equation is
derived starting from the formal solution of this equation in forward-backward
form. The time evolution of a mixed quantum-classical system described by this
equation is obtained in a coherent state basis using the mapping
representation, which expresses quantum degrees of freedom in a
2N-dimensional phase space. The solution yields a simple non-Hamiltonian
dynamics in which a set of coherent state coordinates evolve in forward and
backward trajectories while the bath coordinates evolve under the influence of
the mean potential that depends on these forward and backward trajectories. It
is shown that the solution satisfies the differential form of the
quantum-classical Liouville equation exactly. Relations to other mixed
quantum-classical and semi-classical schemes are discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 1 figur
Possible Local Spiral Counterparts to Compact Blue Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
We identify nearby disk galaxies with optical structural parameters similar
to those of intermediate-redshift compact blue galaxies. By comparing HI and
optical emission-line widths, we show that the optical widths substantially
underestimate the true kinematic widths of the local galaxies. By analogy,
optical emission-line widths may underrepresent the masses of intermediate-z
compact objects. For the nearby galaxies, the compact blue morphology is the
result of tidally-triggered central star formation: we argue that interactions
and minor mergers may cause apparently compact morphology at higher redshift.Comment: 5 pages, uses emulateapj5 and psfig. To appear in ApJ
Self-Regulated Growth of Supermassive Black Holes in Galaxies as the Origin of the Optical and X-ray Luminosity Functions of Quasars
We postulate that supermassive black-holes grow in the centers of galaxies
until they unbind the galactic gas that feeds them. We show that the
corresponding self-regulation condition yields a correlation between black-hole
mass (Mbh) and galaxy velocity dispersion (sigma) as inferred in the local
universe, and recovers the observed optical and X-ray luminosity functions of
quasars at redshifts up to z~6 based on the hierarchical evolution of galaxy
halos in a Lambda-CDM cosmology. With only one free parameter and a simple
algorithm, our model yields the observed evolution in the number density of
optically bright or X-ray faint quasars between 2<z<6 across 3 orders of
magnitude in bolometric luminosity and 3 orders of magnitude in comoving
density per logarithm of luminosity. The self-regulation condition identifies
the dynamical time of galactic disks during the epoch of peak quasar activity
(z~2.5) as the origin of the inferred characteristic quasar lifetime of ~10
million years. Since the lifetime becomes comparable to the Salpeter e-folding
time at this epoch, the model also implies that the Mbh-sigma relation is a
product of feedback regulated accretion during the peak of quasar activity. The
mass-density in black-holes accreted by that time is consistent with the local
black-hole mass density of ~(0.8-6.3) times 10^5 solar masses per cubic Mpc,
which we have computed by combining the Mbh-sigma relation with the measured
velocity dispersion function of SDSS galaxies (Sheth et al.~2003). Applying a
similar self-regulation principle to supernova-driven winds from starbursts, we
find that the ratio between the black hole mass and the stellar mass of
galactic spheroids increases with redshift as (1+z)^1.5 although the Mbh-sigma
relation is redshift-independent.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
Ehrenfest dynamics is purity non-preserving: a necessary ingredient for decoherence
We discuss the evolution of purity in mixed quantum/classical approaches to
electronic nonadiabatic dynamics in the context of the Ehrenfest model. As it
is impossible to exactly determine initial conditions for a realistic system,
we choose to work in the statistical Ehrenfest formalism that we introduced in
Ref. 1. From it, we develop a new framework to determine exactly the change in
the purity of the quantum subsystem along the evolution of a statistical
Ehrenfest system. In a simple case, we verify how and to which extent Ehrenfest
statistical dynamics makes a system with more than one classical trajectory and
an initial quantum pure state become a quantum mixed one. We prove this
numerically showing how the evolution of purity depends on time, on the
dimension of the quantum state space , and on the number of classical
trajectories of the initial distribution. The results in this work open new
perspectives for studying decoherence with Ehrenfest dynamics.Comment: Revtex 4-1, 14 pages, 2 figures. Final published versio
Coherent dynamics of photoinduced nucleation processes
We study the dynamics of initial nucleation processes of photoinduced
structural change of molecular crystals. In order to describe the nonadiabatic
transition in each molecule, we employ a model of localized electrons coupled
with a fully quantized phonon mode, and the time-dependent Schr\"odinger
equation for the model is numerically solved. We found a minimal model to
describe the nucleation induced by injection of an excited state of a single
molecule in which multiple types of intermolecular interactions are required.
In this model coherently driven molecular distortion plays an important role in
the successive conversion of electronic states which leads to photoinduced
cooperative phenomena.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
The Principal Axis of the Virgo Cluster
Using accurate distances to individual Virgo cluster galaxies obtained by the
method of Surface Brightness Fluctuations, we show that Virgo's brightest
ellipticals have a remarkably collinear arrangement in three dimensions. This
axis, which is inclined by 10 to 15 degrees from the line of sight, can be
traced to even larger scales where it appears to join a filamentary bridge of
galaxies connecting Virgo to the rich cluster Abell 1367. The orientations of
individual Virgo ellipticals also show some tendency to be aligned with the
cluster axis, as does the jet of the supergiant elliptical M87. These results
suggest that the formation of the Virgo cluster, and its brightest member
galaxies, have been driven by infall of material along the Virgo-A1367
filament.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Risk and protective factors for meningococcal disease in adolescents: matched cohort study
Objective: To examine biological and social risk factors for
meningococcal disease in adolescents.
Design: Prospective, population based, matched cohort study
with controls matched for age and sex in 1:1 matching.
Controls were sought from the general practitioner.
Setting: Six contiguous regions of England, which represent
some 65% of the country’s population.
Participants: 15-19 year olds with meningococcal disease
recruited at hospital admission in six regions (representing 65%
of the population of England) from January 1999 to June 2000,
and their matched controls.
Methods: Blood samples and pernasal and throat swabs were
taken from case patients at admission to hospital and from
cases and matched controls at interview. Data on potential risk
factors were gathered by confidential interview. Data were
analysed by using univariate and multivariate conditional
logistic regression.
Results: 144 case control pairs were recruited (74 male (51%);
median age 17.6). 114 cases (79%) were confirmed
microbiologically. Significant independent risk factors for
meningococcal disease were history of preceding illness
(matched odds ratio 2.9, 95% confidence interval 1.4 to 5.9),
intimate kissing with multiple partners (3.7, 1.7 to 8.1), being a
university student (3.4, 1.2 to 10) and preterm birth (3.7, 1.0 to
13.5). Religious observance (0.09, 0.02 to 0.6) and
meningococcal vaccination (0.12, 0.04 to 0.4) were associated
with protection.
Conclusions: Activities and events increasing risk for
meningococcal disease in adolescence are different from in
childhood. Students are at higher risk. Altering personal
behaviours could moderate the risk. However, the development
of further effective meningococcal vaccines remains a key
public health priority
Orientation isotope effect in ion–molecule reactions
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jcp/67/10/10.1063/1.434632.A simple kinematicmodel is proposed to account for the kinetic isotope effect (KIE) upon the reactions of simple ions X+ with HD. This model is based upon (1) the fact that the displacement of the center of polarizability from the center of mass in the HD molecule will affect the alignment of the reactants, (2) the fact that, for many ions X+, reaction must occur by a surface crossing mechanism, and (3) the assumption that the ratio XH+/(XH++XD+) equals the fraction of intimate collisions in which the H end of HD is oriented towards the ion at the moment the reactants pass over the centrifugal barrier in the effective radial potential (or cross over to the X–HD+ surface if the crossing occurs before the centrifugal barrier is reached). Use of the ion–induced dipole potential for the reactants permits the derivation of an analytic expression for the KIE. With no adjustable parameters, this model accounts quantitatively for the very different KIE’s observed in the reactions of Ar+ and Kr+ with HD at low collision energies
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