1,681 research outputs found

    Classical phase-space descriptions of continuous-variable teleportation

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    The nonnegative Wigner function of all quantum states involved in teleportation of Gaussian states using the standard continuous-variable teleportation protocol means that there is a local realistic phase-space description of the process. This includes the coherent states teleported up to now in experiments. We extend the phase-space description to teleportation of non-Gaussian states using the standard protocol and conclude that teleportation of non-Gaussian states with fidelity of 2/3 is a "gold standard" for this kind of teleportation.Comment: New version contains minor changes requested by journal referee

    Coherent Quantum-Noise Cancellation for Optomechanical Sensors

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    Using a flowchart representation of quantum optomechanical dynamics, we design coherent quantum-noise-cancellation schemes that can eliminate the back-action noise induced by radiation pressure at all frequencies and thus overcome the standard quantum limit of force sensing. The proposed schemes can be regarded as novel examples of coherent feedforward quantum control.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, v2: accepted by Physical Review Letter

    DIRECTIONAL CONTROL IN TENNIS SERVES PERFORMED BY ELITE PLAYERS

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    This study quantified the pre-and post-impact 3-D kinematics of the ball and racquet during the serves that landed at different locations performed by five male and four female professional tennis players. Data were collected during competition using two high-speed cameras (200 Hz). Two first serves .-one landed near the center line and the other near the side line --were analyzed for each subject. A 2 x 2 ANOVA (0 < .05) was performed for each parameter. The results indicate that the males had significantly greater post-impact ball and racquet velocities than their female counterparts. Though not statistically significant, the ball tended to travel to the left less during the toss and have lower post-impact velocity for serves that landed near the side line. Altering the toss might be one of the strategies used by players to control ball direction in the serve

    Direct neutron capture of 48Ca at kT = 52 keV

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    The neutron capture cross section of 48Ca was measured relative to the known gold cross section at kT = 52 keV using the fast cyclic activation technique. The experiment was performed at the Van-de-Graaff accelerator, Universitaet Tuebingen. The new experimental result is in good agreement with a calculation using the direct capture model. The 1/v behaviour of the capture cross section at thermonuclear energies is confirmed, and the adopted reaction rate which is based on several previous experimental investigations remains unchanged.Comment: 9 pages (uses Revtex), 2 postscript figures, accepted for publication as Brief Report in Phys. Rev.

    WEB-BASED LABORATORY MODULES FOR LINEAR AND ANGULAR KINEMATICS

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    Two Web-based laboratory modules have been developed and implemented for reinforcing basic concepts in kinematics in the learning of biomechanics. In the linear kinematics module, students digitize the mid-hip, heel and toe on images showing the side views of sprinting, running and jogging and analyze the stride length and time and velocity alTlong these actions. For the angular kinematics module, students digitize the near shoulder, hip, and knee on images of one complete revolution of a forward giant swing of a gymnast and determine the hip angle, the angular velocity and acceleration of the trunk. Evaluations and feedback from biomechanics instructors and students in biomechanics courses have suggested that these modules have the potential to be effective educational tools

    Hypersensitivity to Perturbations in the Quantum Baker's Map

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    We analyze a randomly perturbed quantum version of the baker's transformation, a prototype of an area-conserving chaotic map. By numerically simulating the perturbed evolution, we estimate the information needed to follow a perturbed Hilbert-space vector in time. We find that the Landauer erasure cost associated with this information grows very rapidly and becomes much larger than the maximum statistical entropy given by the logarithm of the dimension of Hilbert space. The quantum baker's map thus displays a hypersensitivity to perturbations that is analogous to behavior found earlier in the classical case. This hypersensitivity characterizes ``quantum chaos'' in a way that is directly relevant to statistical physics.Comment: 8 pages, LATEX, 3 Postscript figures appended as uuencoded fil

    Hubble Space Telescope Evidence for an Intermediate-Mass Black Hole in the Globular Cluster M15: II. Kinematical Analysis and Dynamical Modeling

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    We analyze HST/STIS spectra (see Paper I) of the central region of the dense globular cluster M15. We infer the velocities of 64 individual stars, two-thirds of which have their velocity measured for the first time. This triples the number of stars with measured velocities in the central 1 arcsec of M15 and doubles the number in the central 2 arcsec. Combined with existing ground-based data we obtain the radial profiles of the projected kinematical quantities. The RMS velocity sigma_RMS rises to 14 km/s in the central few arcsec, somewhat higher than the values of 10-12 km/s inferred previously from ground-based data. To interpret the results we construct dynamical models based on the Jeans equation, which imply that M15 must have a central concentration of non-luminous material. If this is due to a single black hole, then its mass is M_BH = (3.9 +/- 2.2) x 10^3 solar masses. This is consistent with the relation between M_BH and sigma_RMS that has been established for galaxies. Also, the existence of intermediate-mass black holes in globular clusters is consistent with several scenarios for globular cluster evolution proposed in the literature. Therefore, these results may have important implications for our understanding of the evolution of globular clusters, the growth of black holes, the connection between globular cluster and galaxy formation, and the nature of the recently discovered `ultra-luminous' X-ray sources in nearby galaxies. Instead of a single black hole, M15 could have a central concentration of dark remnants (e.g., neutron stars) due to mass segregation. However, the best-fitting Fokker-Planck models that have previously been constructed for M15 do not predict a central mass concentration that is sufficient to explain the observed kinematics.[ABRIDGED]Comment: 43 pages, LaTeX, with 14 PostScript figures. Astronomical Journal, in press (Dec 2002). Please note that the results reported here are modified by the Addendum available at astro-ph/0210158 (Astronomical Journal, in press, Jan 2003). This second version submitted to astro-ph is identical to first, with the exception of the preceeding remar

    Direct Neutron Capture for Magic-Shell Nuclei

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    In neutron capture for magic--shell nuclei the direct reaction mechanism can be important and may even dominate. As an example we investigated the reaction 48^{48}Ca(n,γ)49\gamma)^{49}Ca for projectile energies below 250\,keV in a direct capture model using the folding procedure for optical and bound state potentials. The obtained theoretical cross sections are in agreement with the experimental data showing the dominance of the direct reaction mechanism in this case. The above method was also used to calculate the cross section for 50^{50}Ca(n,γ)51\gamma)^{51}Ca.Comment: REVTeX, 7 pages plus 3 uuencoded figures, the complete uuencoded postscript file is available at ftp://is1.kph.tuwien.ac.at/pub/ohu/calcium.u

    Desert Varnish - Preservation of Biofabrics/Implcations for Mars

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    Desert varnish is the orange to dark brown rind that accumulates on exposed rock surfaces in many arid environments. Samples from the Sonoran Desert of Arizona are composed predominantly of clays (illite, smectite) and Mn- and Fe- oxides (birnessite, hematite). Features that appear to be single organisms are found within the varnish and at the rock-varnish interface. Many of these features are embedded in films that strongly resemble the water-rich extracellular polysaccharides produced by diverse microorganisms. Most common are rod-shaped celllike objects, 0.5-2 microns in the longest dimension, located within the varnish coatings. Some of these objects are shown to contain amines by fluorescence microscopy. The rod-shaped objects are observed in various states of degradation, as indicated by C and S abundances. Rods with higher C and S abundances appear less degraded than those with lower concentrations of these two elements. Regions rich in apparent microbes are present, while other regions display Mn- and Fe-rich mineral fabrics with microbe-sized voids and no obvious cells. These textures are interpreted as biofabrics, preserved by the precipitation of Mn and Fe minerals. We are researching the preservation of biofabrics by desert varnish in Earth's geological record. Rock coatings may similarly preserve evidence of microbial life on the hyper-arid surface of Mars
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