4,951 research outputs found
The trouble with orbits: the Stark effect in the old and the new quantum theory
The old quantum theory and Schr\"odinger's wave mechanics (and other forms of
quantum mechanics) give the same results for the line splittings in the
first-order Stark effect in hydrogen, the leading terms in the splitting of the
spectral lines emitted by a hydrogen atom in an external electric field. We
examine the account of the effect in the old quantum theory, which was hailed
as a major success of that theory, from the point of view of wave mechanics.
First, we show how the new quantum mechanics solves a fundamental problem one
runs into in the old quantum theory with the Stark effect. It turns out that,
even without an external field, it depends on the coordinates in which the
quantum conditions are imposed which electron orbits are allowed in a hydrogen
atom. The allowed energy levels and hence the line splittings are independent
of the coordinates used but the size and eccentricity of the orbits are not. In
the new quantum theory, this worrisome non-uniqueness of orbits turns into the
perfectly innocuous non-uniqueness of bases in Hilbert space. Second, we review
how the so-called WKB (Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin) approximation method for
solving the Schr\"odinger equation reproduces the quantum conditions of the old
quantum theory amended by some additional half-integer terms. These extra terms
remove the need for some arbitrary extra restrictions on the allowed orbits
that the old quantum theory required over and above the basic quantum
condition
Pascual Jordan's resolution of the conundrum of the wave-particle duality of light
In 1909, Einstein derived a formula for the mean square energy fluctuation in
black-body radiation. This formula is the sum of a wave term and a particle
term. In a key contribution to the 1925 Dreimaennerarbeit with Born and
Heisenberg, Jordan showed that one recovers both terms in a simple model of
quantized waves. So the two terms do not require separate mechanisms but arise
from a single consistent dynamical framework. Several authors have argued that
various infinities invalidate Jordan's conclusions. In this paper, we defend
Jordan's argument against such criticism. In particular, we note that the
fluctuation in a narrow frequency range, which is what Jordan calculated, is
perfectly finite. We also note, however, that Jordan's argument is incomplete.
In modern terms, Jordan calculated the quantum uncertainty in the energy of a
subsystem in an energy eigenstate of the whole system, whereas the thermal
fluctuation is the average of this quantity over an ensemble of such states.
Still, our overall conclusion is that Jordan's argument is basically sound and
that he deserves credit for resolving a major conundrum in the development of
quantum physics.Comment: This paper was written as part of a joint project in the history of
quantum physics of the Max Planck Institut fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte and
the Fritz Haber Institut in Berli
Weak lensing of the CMB
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) represents a unique source for the
study of gravitational lensing. It is extended across the entire sky, partially
polarized, located at the extreme distance of z=1100, and is thought to have
the simple, underlying statistics of a Gaussian random field. Here we review
the weak lensing of the CMB, highlighting the aspects which differentiate it
from the weak lensing of other sources, such as galaxies. We discuss the
statistics of the lensing deflection field which remaps the CMB, and the
corresponding effect on the power spectra. We then focus on methods for
reconstructing the lensing deflections, describing efficient quadratic
maximum-likelihood estimators and delensing. We end by reviewing recent
detections and observational prospects.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures. Invited review for GRG special issue on
gravitational lensin
Seeing the light – finding the poetic content of design objects
This paper presents the process and initial results of a research through design project attempting to understand the poetic qualities of design objects. This exploration forms part of a PhD study addressing design artefacts as poetic objects - objects that both embed and conjure memory, association and imagination. The research examines the ways in which design objects can be poetic and how designers actively and knowingly use objects to poetic effect.
It is proposed that the poetic content of design artefacts can be located on a continuum ranging from the experiential - relating to how we perceive things - to the reflective and cultural. What unites these levels is the capacity of design objects to reveal and change our way of looking at things.
The practice uses the design of lighting as a vehicle for exploring the poetic meaning of designed objects more generally. Starting with the notion that lights do more than provide light, the current phase of practice examines the ways in which luminaires can mediate how we perceive and experience light and explores, in particular, the more nuanced and ephemeral qualities of light that escape conscious attention
CMB temperature lensing power reconstruction
We study reconstruction of the lensing potential power spectrum from CMB
temperature data, with an eye to the Planck experiment. We work with the
optimal quadratic estimator of Okamoto and Hu, which we characterize thoroughly
in application to reconstruction of the lensing power spectrum. We find that at
multipoles L<250 our current understanding of this estimator is biased at the
15% level by beyond-gradient terms in the Taylor expansion of lensing effects.
We present the full lensed trispectrum to fourth order in the lensing potential
to explain this effect. We show that the low-L bias, as well as a previously
known bias at high-L, is relevant to the determination of cosmology and must be
corrected for in order to avoid significant parameter errors. We also
investigate the covariance of the reconstructed power, finding broad
correlations of ~0.1%. Finally, we discuss several small improvements which may
be made to the optimal estimator to mitigate these problems.Comment: straightforward bias mitigation on pg. 14, matches version accepted
by PR
On the joint analysis of CMB temperature and lensing-reconstruction power spectra
Gravitational lensing provides a significant source of cosmological
information in modern CMB parameter analyses. It is measured in both the power
spectrum and trispectrum of the temperature fluctuations. These observables are
often treated as independent, although as they are both determined from the
same map this is impossible. In this paper, we perform a rigorous analysis of
the covariance between lensing power spectrum and trispectrum analyses. We find
two dominant contributions coming from: (i) correlations between the
disconnected noise bias in the trispectrum measurement and sample variance in
the temperature power spectrum; and (ii) sample variance of the lenses
themselves. The former is naturally removed when the dominant N0 Gaussian bias
in the reconstructed deflection spectrum is dealt with via a partially
data-dependent correction, as advocated elsewhere for other reasons. The
remaining lens-cosmic-variance contribution is easily modeled but can safely be
ignored for a Planck-like experiment, justifying treating the two observable
spectra as independent. We also test simple likelihood approximations for the
deflection power spectrum, finding that a Gaussian with a parameter-independent
covariance performs well.Comment: 25+11 pages, 14 figure
Asymmetric Beams and CMB Statistical Anisotropy
Beam asymmetries result in statistically-anisotropic cosmic microwave
background (CMB) maps. Typically, they are studied for their effects on the CMB
power spectrum, however they more closely mimic anisotropic effects such as
gravitational lensing and primordial power asymmetry. We discuss tools for
studying the effects of beam asymmetry on general quadratic estimators of
anisotropy, analytically for full-sky observations as well as in the analysis
of realistic data. We demonstrate this methodology in application to a
recently-detected 9 sigma quadrupolar modulation effect in the WMAP data,
showing that beams provide a complete and sufficient explanation for the
anomaly.Comment: updated to match PRD version + typo correction in Eq. B
Solar rejection in laser based underwater communication systems
This article provides a numerical study of the expected improvements in an underwater optical system given by a single-mode laser diode operating within a Fraunhofer line in a coastal water type. The system performance is examined for a silicon PIN direct-detection receiver in the euphotic zone. The solar irradiance, modelled as white noise, is evaluated when using a lithium niobate interference and a birefringent filter with different field-of-view (FOV) characteristics in a clear sky situation. The results of this analysis show the inverse dependence of the signal-to-noise (SNR) on the FOV, along with the significant improvement in the receiver sensitivity given by a narrow optical bandpass filter (OBPF)
Masses and Decay Constants of Heavy-Light Mesons Using the Multistate Smearing Technique
We present results for f_B and masses of low-lying heavy-light mesons.
Calculations were performed in the quenched approximation using multistate
smearing functions generated from a spinless relativistic quark model
Hamiltonian. Beta values range from 5.7 to 6.3, and light quark masses
corresponding to pion masses as low as 300 MeV are computed at each value. We
use the 1P--1S charmonium splitting to set the overall scale.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, and 5 tables as a single 193K compressed and
uuencoded Postscript file, FERMILAB--CONF--93/376-
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