999 research outputs found
Quantum eigenstate tomography with qubit tunneling spectroscopy
Measurement of the energy eigenvalues (spectrum) of a multi-qubit system has
recently become possible by qubit tunneling spectroscopy (QTS). In the standard
QTS experiments, an incoherent probe qubit is strongly coupled to one of the
qubits of the system in such a way that its incoherent tunneling rate provides
information about the energy eigenvalues of the original (source) system. In
this paper, we generalize QTS by coupling the probe qubit to many source
qubits. We show that by properly choosing the couplings, one can perform
projective measurements of the source system energy eigenstates in an arbitrary
basis, thus performing quantum eigenstate tomography. As a practical example of
a limited tomography, we apply our scheme to probe the eigenstates of a kink in
a frustrated transverse Ising chain.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Inelastic cotunneling induced decoherence and relaxation, charge and spin currents in an interacting quantum dot under a magnetic field
We present a theoretical analysis of several aspects of nonequilibirum
cotunneling through a strong Coulomb-blockaded quantum dot (QD) subject to a
finite magnetic field in the weak coupling limit. We carry this out by
developing a generic quantum Heisenberg-Langevin equation approach leading to a
set of Bloch dynamical equations which describe the nonequilibrium cotunneling
in a convenient and compact way. These equations describe the time evolution of
the spin variables of the QD explicitly in terms of the response and
correlation functions of the free reservoir variables. This scheme not only
provides analytical expressions for the relaxation and decoherence of the
localized spin induced by cotunneling, but it also facilitates evaluations of
the nonequilibrium magnetization, the charge current, and the spin current at
arbitrary bias-voltage, magnetic field, and temperature. We find that all
cotunneling events produce decoherence, but relaxation stems only from {\em
inelastic} spin-flip cotunneling processes. Moreover, our specific calculations
show that cotunneling processes involving electron transfer (both spin-flip and
non-spin-flip) contribute to charge current, while spin-flip cotunneling
processes are required to produce a net spin current in the asymmetric coupling
case. We also point out that under the influence of a nonzero magnetic field,
spin-flip cotunneling is an energy-consuming process requiring a sufficiently
strong external bias-voltage for activation, explaining the behavior of
differential conductance at low temperature: in particular, the splitting of
the zero-bias anomaly in the charge current and a broad zero-magnitude "window"
of differential conductance for the spin current near zero-bias-voltage.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, published version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
A Young Globular Cluster in the Galaxy NGC 6946
A globular cluster ~15 My old that contains 5x10^5 Msun of stars inside an 11
pc radius has been found in the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 6946, surrounded by
clouds of dust and smaller young clusters inside a giant circular bubble 300 pc
in radius. At the edge of the bubble is an arc of regularly-spaced clusters
that could have been triggered during the bubble's formation. The region is at
the end of a spiral arm, suggesting an origin by the asymmetric collapse of
spiral arm gas. The globular is one of the nearest examples of a cluster that
is similar to the massive old globulars in the Milky Way. We consider the
energetics of the bubble and possible formation mechanisms for the globular
cluster, including the coalescence of smaller clusters.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, accepted for Astrophysical Journal Vol 535, June
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Diffusion-controlled generation of a proton-motive force across a biomembrane
Respiration in bacteria involves a sequence of energetically-coupled electron
and proton transfers creating an electrochemical gradient of protons (a
proton-motive force) across the inner bacterial membrane. With a simple kinetic
model we analyze a redox loop mechanism of proton-motive force generation
mediated by a molecular shuttle diffusing inside the membrane. This model,
which includes six electron-binding and two proton-binding sites, reflects the
main features of nitrate respiration in E. coli bacteria. We describe the time
evolution of the proton translocation process. We find that the electron-proton
electrostatic coupling on the shuttle plays a significant role in the process
of energy conversion between electron and proton components. We determine the
conditions where the redox loop mechanism is able to translocate protons
against the transmembrane voltage gradient above 200 mV with a thermodynamic
efficiency of about 37%, in the physiologically important range of temperatures
from 250 to 350 K.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures. A similar model is used in arXiv:0806.3233 for a
different biological system. Minor changes in the Acknowledgements sectio
Comparison of the Halpha equivalent width of HII regions in a flocculent and a grand design galaxy: possible evidences for IMF variations
We present here a study of the Halpha equivalent widths of the flocculent
galaxy NGC 4395 and the grand design galaxy NGC 5457. A difference between the
mean values of the Halpha equivalent widths for the two galaxies has been
found. Several hypotheses are presented in order to explain this difference:
differences in age, metallicity, star formation rate, photon leakage and
initial mass function. Various tests and Monte Carlo models are used to find
out the most probable cause of this difference. The resultsshow that the
possible cause for the difference could be a variation in the initial mass
function. This difference is such that it seems to favor a fraction of more
massive stars in the grand design galaxy when compared with the flocculent
galaxy. This could be due to a change of the environmental conditions due to a
density wave.Comment: 29 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
On the origin of the neutral hydrogen supershells: the ionized progenitors and the limitations of the multiple supernovae hypothesis
Here we address the question whether the ionized shells associated with giant
HII regions can be progenitors of the larger HI shell-like objects found in the
Milky Way and other spiral and dwarf irregular galaxies. We use for our
analysis a sample of 12 HII shells presented recently by Rela\~no et al. (2005,
2007). We calculate the evolutionary tracks that these shells would have if
their expansion is driven by multiple supernovae explosions from the parental
stellar clusters. We find, contrary to Rela\~no et al. (2007), that the
evolutionary tracks of their sample HII shells are inconsistent with the
observed parameters of the largest and most massive neutral hydrogen
supershells. We conclude that HII shells found inside giant HII regions may
represent the progenitors of small or intermediate HI shells, however they
cannot evolve into the largest HI objects unless, aside from the multiple
supernovae explosions, an additional energy source contributes to their
expansion.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, tentatively scheduled for the ApJ
July 1, 2008, v681n1 issue. 19 pages, 4 figure
CP Violation and the Width
We discuss the effect of CP-violating , and
couplings on the width . The
presence of such couplings leads in a natural way to an increase of this width
relative to the prediction of the standard model. Various strategies of a
direct search for such CP-violating couplings by using CP-odd observables are
outlined. The number of bosons required to obtain significant information
on the couplings in this way is well within the reach of present LEP
experiments.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, no figure
Kinetics of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase
We propose a simple model of cytochrome c oxidase, including four redox
centers and four protonable sites, to study the time evolution of
electrostatically coupled electron and proton transfers initiated by the
injection of a single electron into the enzyme. We derive a system of master
equations for electron and proton state probabilities and show that an
efficient pumping of protons across the membrane can be obtained for a
reasonable set of parameters. All four experimentally observed kinetic phases
appear naturally from our model. We also calculate the dependence of the
pumping efficiency on the transmembrane voltage at different temperatures and
discuss a possible mechanism of the redox-driven proton translocation.Comment: 32 pages, 4 figures; references added. Minor changes in the
Acknowledgements sectio
Interaction of Radiation and a Relativistic Electron in Motion in a Constant Magnetic Field
The work examines the effect of multiple photon emission on the quantum
mechanical state of an electron emitting synchrotron radiation and on the
intensity of that radiation. Calculations are done with the variant of
perturbation theory based on the use of extended coherent states. A general
formula is derived for the number of emitted photons, which allows for taking
into account their mutual interaction. A model problem is used to demonstrate
the absence of the infrared catastrophe in the modified perturbation theory.
Finally, the electron density matrix is calculated, and the analysis of this
matrix makes it possible to conclude that the degree of the elecron's spatial
localization increases with the passage of time if the electron is being
accelerated.Comment: 29 pages, no figure
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