2,764 research outputs found
Spin diffusion of correlated two-spin states in a dielectric crystal
Reciprocal space measurements of spin diffusion in a single crystal of
calcium fluoride (CaF) have been extended to dipolar ordered states. The
experimental results for the component of the spin diffusion parallel with the
external field are cm/s for the
[001] direction and cm/s for the
[111] direction. The diffusion rates for dipolar order are significantly faster
than those for Zeeman order and are considerably faster than predicted by
simple theoretical models. It is suggested that constructive interference in
the transport of the two spin state is responsible for this enhancement. As
expected the anisotropy in the diffusion rates is observed to be significantly
less for dipolar order compared to the Zeeman case.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Resubmitted to PRL - new figure added /
discussion expande
A computer program for plotting stress-strain data from compression, tension, and torsion tests of materials
A computer program for plotting stress-strain curves obtained from compression and tension tests on rectangular (flat) specimens and circular-cross-section specimens (rods and tubes) and both stress-strain and torque-twist curves obtained from torsion tests on tubes is presented in detail. The program is written in FORTRAN 4 language for the Control Data 6000 series digital computer with the SCOPE 3.0 operating system and requires approximately 110000 octal locations of core storage. The program has the capability of plotting individual strain-gage outputs and/or the average output of several strain gages and the capability of computing the slope of a straight line which provides a least-squares fit to a specified section of the plotted curve. In addition, the program can compute the slope of the stress-strain curve at any point along the curve. The computer program input and output for three sample problems are presented
Parameter scaling in the decoherent quantum-classical transition for chaotic systems
The quantum to classical transition has been shown to depend on a number of
parameters. Key among these are a scale length for the action, , a
measure of the coupling between a system and its environment, , and, for
chaotic systems, the classical Lyapunov exponent, . We propose
computing a measure, reflecting the proximity of quantum and classical
evolutions, as a multivariate function of and searching for
transformations that collapse this hyper-surface into a function of a composite
parameter . We report results
for the quantum Cat Map, showing extremely accurate scaling behavior over a
wide range of parameters and suggest that, in general, the technique may be
effective in constructing universality classes in this transition.Comment: Submitte
The Palomar Kernel Phase Experiment: Testing Kernel Phase Interferometry for Ground-based Astronomical Observations
At present, the principal limitation on the resolution and contrast of
astronomical imaging instruments comes from aberrations in the optical path,
which may be imposed by the Earth's turbulent atmosphere or by variations in
the alignment and shape of the telescope optics. These errors can be corrected
physically, with active and adaptive optics, and in post-processing of the
resulting image. A recently-developed adaptive optics post-processing
technique, called kernel phase interferometry, uses linear combinations of
phases that are self-calibrating with respect to small errors, with the goal of
constructing observables that are robust against the residual optical
aberrations in otherwise well-corrected imaging systems. Here we present a
direct comparison between kernel phase and the more established competing
techniques, aperture masking interferometry, point spread function (PSF)
fitting and bispectral analysis. We resolve the alpha Ophiuchi binary system
near periastron, using the Palomar 200-Inch Telescope. This is the first case
in which kernel phase has been used with a full aperture to resolve a system
close to the diffraction limit with ground-based extreme adaptive optics
observations. Excellent agreement in astrometric quantities is found between
kernel phase and masking, and kernel phase significantly outperforms PSF
fitting and bispectral analysis, demonstrating its viability as an alternative
to conventional non-redundant masking under appropriate conditions.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Hydrodynamic approach to coherent nuclear spin transport
We develop a linear response formalism for nuclear spin diffusion in a
dipolar coupled solid. The theory applies to the high-temperature,
long-wavelength regime studied in the recent experiments of Boutis et al.
[Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 137201 (2004)], which provided direct measurement of
interspin energy diffusion in such a system. A systematic expansion of Kubo's
formula in the flip-flop term of the Hamiltonian is used to calculate the
diffusion coefficients. We show that this approach is equivalent to the method
of Lowe and Gade [Phys. Rev. 156, 817 (1967)] and Kaplan [Phys. Rev. B 2, 4578
(1970)], but has several calculational and conceptual advantages. Although the
lowest orders in this expansion agree with the experimental results for
magnetization diffusion, this is not the case for energy diffusion. Possible
reasons for this disparity are suggested.Comment: 7 pages, REVTeX4; Published Versio
Seven exercises planned to stimulate the flow of ideas in creative composition
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Conditions for the Quantum to Classical Transition: Trajectories vs. Phase Space Distributions
We contrast two sets of conditions that govern the transition in which
classical dynamics emerges from the evolution of a quantum system. The first
was derived by considering the trajectories seen by an observer (dubbed the
``strong'' transition) [Bhattacharya, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 85: 4852
(2000)], and the second by considering phase-space densities (the ``weak''
transition) [Greenbaum, et al., Chaos 15, 033302 (2005)]. On the face of it
these conditions appear rather different. We show, however, that in the
semiclassical regime, in which the action of the system is large compared to
, and the measurement noise is small, they both offer an essentially
equivalent local picture. Within this regime, the weak conditions dominate
while in the opposite regime where the action is not much larger than Planck's
constant, the strong conditions dominate.Comment: 8 pages, 2 eps figure
- …