18,315 research outputs found
Reaction cured glass and glass coatings
The invention relates to reaction cured glass and glass coatings prepared by reacting a compound selected from the group consisting of silicon tetraboride, silicon hexaboride, other boron silicides, boron and mixtures with a reactive glass frit composed of a porous high silica borosilicate glass and boron oxide. The glassy composites of the present invention are useful as coatings on low density fibrous porous silica insulations used as heat shields and for articles such as reaction vessels that are subjected to high temperatures with rapid heating and cooling and that require resistance to temperature and repeated thermal shock at temperatures up to about 1482C (2700PF)
Seven Steps Towards the Classical World
Classical physics is about real objects, like apples falling from trees,
whose motion is governed by Newtonian laws. In standard Quantum Mechanics only
the wave function or the results of measurements exist, and to answer the
question of how the classical world can be part of the quantum world is a
rather formidable task. However, this is not the case for Bohmian mechanics,
which, like classical mechanics, is a theory about real objects. In Bohmian
terms, the problem of the classical limit becomes very simple: when do the
Bohmian trajectories look Newtonian?Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, uses latexsy
Bohmian Mechanics and Quantum Information
Many recent results suggest that quantum theory is about information, and
that quantum theory is best understood as arising from principles concerning
information and information processing. At the same time, by far the simplest
version of quantum mechanics, Bohmian mechanics, is concerned, not with
information but with the behavior of an objective microscopic reality given by
particles and their positions. What I would like to do here is to examine
whether, and to what extent, the importance of information, observation, and
the like in quantum theory can be understood from a Bohmian perspective. I
would like to explore the hypothesis that the idea that information plays a
special role in physics naturally emerges in a Bohmian universe.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure
Atom holography
We study the conditions under which atomic condensates can be used as a
recording media and then suggest a reading scheme which allows to reconstruct
an object with atomic reading beam. We show that good recording can be achieved
for flat condensate profiles and for negative detunings between atomic Bohr
frequency and optical field frequency. The resolution of recording dramatically
depends on the relation between the healing length of the condensate and the
spatial frequency contents of the optical fields involved.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Late
Using geomagnetic secular variation to separate remanent and induced sources of the crustal magnetic field
Magnetic fields originating from magnetized crustal rocks dominate the geomagnetic spectrum at wavelengths of 0.1-100 km. It is not known whether the magnetization is predominantly induced or remanent, and static surveys cannot discriminate between the two. Long-running magnetic observatories offer a chance, in principle, of separating the two sources because secular variation leads to a change in the main inducing field, which in turn causes a change in the induced part of the short-wavelength crustal field. We first argue that the induced crustal field, b(I)(t), is linearly related to the local core field, B(t), through a symmetric, trace-free matrix A: b(I)(t)=AB(t). We then subtract a core field model from the observatory annual means and invert the residuals for three components of the remanent field, b(R)(t), and the five independent elements of A. Applying the method to 20 European observatories, all of which have recorded for more than 50 years, shows that the most difficult task is to distinguish b(R) from the steady part of b(I). However, for nine observatories a time-dependent induced field fits the data better than a steady remanent field at the 99 per cent confidence level, suggesting the presence of a significant induced component to the magnetization
Dark states of dressed Bose-Einstein condensates
We combine the ideas of dressed Bose-Einstein condensates, where an
intracavity optical field allows one to design coupled, multicomponent
condensates, and of dark states of quantum systems, to generate a full quantum
entanglement between two matter waves and two optical waves. While the matter
waves are macroscopically populated, the two optical modes share a single
photon. As such, this system offers a way to influence the behaviour of a
macroscopic quantum system via a microscopic ``knob''.Comment: 6 pages, no figur
Helmholtz solitons in optical materials with a dual power-law refractive index
A nonlinear Helmholtz equation is proposed for modelling scalar optical beams in uniform planar waveguides whose refractive index exhibits a purely-focusing dual powerlaw
dependence on the electric field amplitude. Two families of exact analytical solitons, describing forward- and backward-propagating beams, are derived. These solutions are
physically and mathematically distinct from those recently discovered for related nonlinearities. The geometry of the new solitons is examined, conservation laws are reported,
and classic paraxial predictions are recovered in a simultaneous multiple limit. Conventional semi-analytical techniques assist in studying the stability of these nonparaxial solitons, whose propagation properties are investigated through extensive simulations
Possible potentials responsible for stable circular relativistic orbits
Bertrand's theorem in classical mechanics of the central force fields
attracts us because of its predictive power. It categorically proves that there
can only be two types of forces which can produce stable, circular orbits. In
the present article an attempt has been made to generalize Bertrand's theorem
to the central force problem of relativistic systems. The stability criterion
for potentials which can produce stable, circular orbits in the relativistic
central force problem has been deduced and a general solution of it is
presented in the article. It is seen that the inverse square law passes the
relativistic test but the kind of force required for simple harmonic motion
does not. Special relativistic effects do not allow stable, circular orbits in
presence of a force which is proportional to the negative of the displacement
of the particle from the potential center.Comment: 11 pages, Latex fil
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