729 research outputs found
Path Integrals, Density Matrices, and Information Flow with Closed Timelike Curves
Two formulations of quantum mechanics, inequivalent in the presence of closed
timelike curves, are studied in the context of a soluable system. It
illustrates how quantum field nonlinearities lead to a breakdown of unitarity,
causality, and superposition using a path integral. Deutsch's density matrix
approach is causal but typically destroys coherence. For each of these
formulations I demonstrate that there are yet further alternatives in
prescribing the handling of information flow (inequivalent to previous
analyses) that have implications for any system in which unitarity or coherence
are not preserved.Comment: 25 pages, phyzzx, CALT-68-188
Simple Quantum Systems in Spacetimes with Closed Timelike Curves
Three simple examples illustrate properties of path integral amplitudes in
fixed background spacetimes with closed timelike curves: non-relativistic
potential scattering in the Born approximation is non-unitary, but both an
example with hard spheres and the exact solution of a totally discrete model
are unitary.Comment: 15 pages, CALT-68-180
Noise propagation issues in Belle II pixel detector power cable
The vertex detector used in the upgrade of High-Energy physics experiment Belle II includes DEPFET pixel detector (PXD) technology. In this complex topology the power supply units and the front-end electronics are connected through a PXD power cable bundle which may propagate the output noise from the power supplies to the vertex area. This paper presents a study of the propagation of noise caused by power converters in the PXD cable bundle based on Multi-conductor Transmission Line (MTL) theory. The work exposes the effect of the complex cable topology and shield connections on the noise propagation, which has an impact on the requirements of the power supplies. This analysis is part of the electromagnetic compatibility based design focused on functional safety to define the shield connections and power supply specifications required to ensure the successful integration of the detector and, specifically, to achieve the designed performance of the front-end electronics
The time travel paradox
We define the time travel paradox in physical terms and prove its existence
by constructing an explicit example. We argue further that in theories -- such
as general relativity -- where the spacetime geometry is subject to nothing but
differential equations and initial data no paradoxes arise.Comment: Minor changes + an explanatory note concerning the lions with the
same world line
The hydrostatic-to-lensing mass bias from resolved X-ray and optical-IR data
An accurate reconstruction of galaxy cluster masses is key to use this population of objects as a cosmological probe. In this work we present a study on the hydrostatic-to-lensing mass scaling relation for a sample of 53 clusters whose masses were reconstructed homogeneously in a redshift range between z = 0.05 and 1.07. The M500 mass for each cluster was indeed inferred from the mass profiles extracted from the X-ray and lensing data, without using a priori observable-mass scaling relations. We assessed the systematic dispersion of the masses estimated with our reference analyses with respect to other published mass estimates. Accounting for this systematic scatter does not change our main results, but enables the propagation of the uncertainties related to the mass reconstruction method or used dataset. Our analysis gives a hydrostatic-to-lensing mass bias of (1 â b) = 0.739+â00075070 and no evidence of evolution with redshift. These results are robust against possible subsample differences
2\u27-O-Methyl at 20-mer Guide Strand 3\u27 Termini May Negatively Affect Target Silencing Activity of Fully Chemically Modified siRNA
Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) have the potential to treat a broad range of diseases. siRNAs need to be extensively chemically modified to improve their bioavailability, safety, and stability in vivo. However, chemical modifications variably impact target silencing for different siRNA sequences, making the activity of chemically modified siRNA difficult to predict. Here, we systematically evaluated the impact of 3\u27 terminal modifications (2\u27-O-methyl versus 2\u27-fluoro) on guide strands of different length and showed that 3\u27 terminal 2\u27-O-methyl modification negatively impacts activity for \u3e60% of siRNA sequences tested but only in the context of 20- and not 19- or 21-nt-long guide strands. These results indicate that sequence, modification pattern, and structure may cooperatively affect target silencing. Interestingly, the introduction of an extra 2\u27-fluoro modification in the seed region at guide strand position 5, but not 7, may partially compensate for the negative impact of 3\u27 terminal 2\u27-O-methyl modification. Molecular modeling analysis suggests that 2\u27-O-methyl modification may impair guide strand interactions within the PAZ domain of argonaute-2, which may affect target recognition and cleavage, specifically when guide strands are 20-nt long. Our findings emphasize the complex nature of modified RNA-protein interactions and contribute to design principles for chemically modified siRNAs
The Quantum Propagator for a Nonrelativistic Particle in the Vicinity of a Time Machine
We study the propagator of a non-relativistic, non-interacting particle in
any non-relativistic ``time-machine'' spacetime of the type shown in Fig.~1: an
external, flat spacetime in which two spatial regions, at time and
at time , are connected by two temporal wormholes, one leading from
the past side of to t the future side of and the other from the
past side of to the future side of . We express the propagator
explicitly in terms of those for ordinary, flat spacetime and for the two
wormholes; and from that expression we show that the propagator satisfies
completeness and unitarity in the initial and final ``chronal regions''
(regions without closed timelike curves) and its propagation from the initial
region to the final region is unitary. However, within the time machine it
satisfies neither completeness nor unitarity. We also give an alternative proof
of initial-region-to-final-region unitarity based on a conserved current and
Gauss's theorem. This proof can be carried over without change to most any
non-relativistic time-machine spacetime; it is the non-relativistic version of
a theorem by Friedman, Papastamatiou and Simon, which says that for a free
scalar field, quantum mechanical unitarity follows from the fact that the
classical evolution preserves the Klein-Gordon inner product
Gravitational collapse to toroidal, cylindrical and planar black holes
Gravitational collapse of non-spherical symmetric matter leads inevitably to
non-static external spacetimes. It is shown here that gravitational collapse of
matter with toroidal topology in a toroidal anti-de Sitter background proceeds
to form a toroidal black hole. According to the analytical model presented, the
collapsing matter absorbs energy in the form of radiation (be it scalar,
neutrinos, electromagnetic, or gravitational) from the exterior spacetime. Upon
decompactification of one or two coordinates of the torus one gets collapsing
solutions of cylindrical or planar matter onto black strings or black
membranes, respectively. The results have implications on the hoop conjecture.Comment: 6 pages, Revtex, modifications in the title and in the interpretation
of some results, to appear in Physical Review
Time travel paradoxes, path integrals, and the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics
We consider two approaches to evading paradoxes in quantum mechanics with
closed timelike curves (CTCs). In a model similar to Politzer's, assuming pure
states and using path integrals, we show that the problems of paradoxes and of
unitarity violation are related; preserving unitarity avoids paradoxes by
modifying the time evolution so that improbable events bewcome certain. Deutsch
has argued, using the density matrix, that paradoxes do not occur in the "many
worlds interpretation". We find that in this approach account must be taken of
the resolution time of the device that detects objects emerging from a wormhole
or other time machine. When this is done one finds that this approach is viable
only if macroscopic objects traversing a wormhole interact with it so strongly
that they are broken into microscopic fragments.Comment: no figure
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