26,633 research outputs found
Mechanism of the photovoltaic effects in 2-4 compounds Progress report, 1 Apr. - 30 Sep. 1968
Current gain mechanism in copper sulfide-cadmium sulfide diode upon photoexcitation in presence of reverse bia
Cosmology on a Mesh
An adaptive multi grid approach to simulating the formation of structure from
collisionless dark matter is described. MLAPM (Multi-Level Adaptive Particle
Mesh) is one of the most efficient serial codes available on the cosmological
'market' today. As part of Swinburne University's role in the development of
the Square Kilometer Array, we are implementing hydrodynamics, feedback, and
radiative transfer within the MLAPM adaptive mesh, in order to simulate
baryonic processes relevant to the interstellar and intergalactic media at high
redshift. We will outline our progress to date in applying the existing MLAPM
to a study of the decay of satellite galaxies within massive host potentials.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The IGM/Galaxy
Connection - The Distribution of Baryons at z=0", ed. M. Putman & J.
Rosenber
Laser cooling of trapped ytterbium ions with an ultraviolet diode laser
We demonstrate an ultraviolet diode laser system for cooling of trapped
ytterbium ions. The laser power and linewidth are comparable to previous
systems based on resonant frequency doubling, but the system is simpler, more
robust, and less expensive. We use the laser system to cool small numbers of
ytterbium ions confined in a linear Paul trap. From the observed spectra, we
deduce final temperatures < 270 mK.Comment: submitted to Opt. Let
Texture of Yukawa coupling matrices in general two-Higgs-doublet model
We discuss possible parallel textures of the Yukawa coupling matrices in the
generaltwo-Higgs-doublet model (2HDM). In those textures the flavor changing
neutral currentsare naturally suppressed. Motivated by a phenomenologically
successful texturewith four texture zeros in the standard model, we propose a
predictive ansatz for the Yukawa coupling matrices with the same texture in the
general 2HDM. Compared with the six texture-zero based ansatz proposed by Cheng
and Sher, it is in a better agreement with the data of quark mixings and CP
violation. The four texture-zero based ansatz predicts a different hierarchy in
the Yukawa coupling matrix elements. As a consequence, in the lepton sector,
the related Yukawa couplings are less constrained by the experimental upper
bound of , which allows significantly larger predictions for
other processes. The contributions from neutral scalar interactions to the
lepton number violation decay modes are
calculated in both ansatz. It is shown that the predictions from the four
texture-zero based ansatz could be two order of magnitude greater than that
from the six texture-zero based one. The branching ratio of and
can reach and 1.3\tiems 10^{-10}
respectively. The predicted ratio of is also
larger and almost parameter independent. Those differences make the two ansatz
to be easily distinguished by the future experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Quantum state estimation and large deviations
In this paper we propose a method to estimate the density matrix \rho of a
d-level quantum system by measurements on the N-fold system. The scheme is
based on covariant observables and representation theory of unitary groups and
it extends previous results concerning the estimation of the spectrum of \rho.
We show that it is consistent (i.e. the original input state \rho is recovered
with certainty if N \to \infty), analyze its large deviation behavior, and
calculate explicitly the corresponding rate function which describes the
exponential decrease of error probabilities in the limit N \to \infty. Finally
we discuss the question whether the proposed scheme provides the fastest
possible decay of error probabilities.Comment: LaTex2e, 40 pages, 2 figures. Substantial changes in Section 4: one
new subsection (4.1) and another (4.2 was 4.1 in the previous version)
completely rewritten. Minor changes in Sect. 2 and 3. Typos corrected.
References added. Accepted for publication in Rev. Math. Phy
Asymptotically optimal quantum channel reversal for qudit ensembles and multimode Gaussian states
We investigate the problem of optimally reversing the action of an arbitrary
quantum channel C which acts independently on each component of an ensemble of
n identically prepared d-dimensional quantum systems. In the limit of large
ensembles, we construct the optimal reversing channel R* which has to be
applied at the output ensemble state, to retrieve a smaller ensemble of m
systems prepared in the input state, with the highest possible rate m/n. The
solution is found by mapping the problem into the optimal reversal of Gaussian
channels on quantum-classical continuous variable systems, which is here solved
as well. Our general results can be readily applied to improve the
implementation of robust long-distance quantum communication. As an example, we
investigate the optimal reversal rate of phase flip channels acting on a
multi-qubit register.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Connecting species’ geographical distributions to environmental variables: range maps versus observed points of occurrence
Connecting the geographical occurrence of a species with underlying environmental variables is fundamental for many analyses of life history evolution and for modeling species distributions for both basic and practical ends. However, raw distributional information comes principally in two forms: points of occurrence (specific geographical coordinates where a species has been observed), and expert-prepared range maps. Each form has potential short-comings: range maps tend to overestimate the true occurrence of a species, whereas occurrence points (because of their frequent non-random spatial distribution) tend to underestimate it. Whereas previous comparisons of the two forms have focused on how they may differ when estimating species richness, less attention has been paid to the extent to which the two forms actually differ in their representation of a species’ environmental associations. We assess such differences using the globally distributed avian order Galliformes (294 species). For each species we overlaid range maps obtained from IUCN and point-of-occurrence data obtained from GBIF on global maps of four climate variables and elevation. Over all species, the median difference in distribution centroids was 234 km, and median values of all five environmental variables were highly correlated, although there were a few species outliers for each variable. We also acquired species’ elevational distribution mid-points (mid-point between minimum and maximum elevational extent) from the literature; median elevations from point occurrences and ranges were consistently lower (median −420 m) than mid-points. We concluded that in most cases occurrence points were likely to produce better estimates of underlying environmental variables than range maps, although differences were often slight. We also concluded that elevational range mid-points were biased high, and that elevation distributions based on either points or range maps provided better estimates
CMS Optical Links: Lessons learned from Mass Production
The CMS Tracker will install over 40000 optical links in its data-readout and control system, representing an unprecedented deployment of this technology in a Particle Physics Experiment. After reviewing the Quality Process employed in this project, a summary of the performance data measured during production will be shown. The analysis of this data will then be used to illustrate how the performance of the installed system may be predicted, giving confidence that the specified functionality will be attained in the final system. Completion of the production has allowed reflection upon the processes used and improvements for future such projects will be given in the form of some lessons learned
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