2,749 research outputs found
Collisional Plasma Models with APEC/APED: Emission Line Diagnostics of Hydrogen-like and Helium-like Ions
New X-ray observatories (Chandra and XMM-Newton) are providing a wealth of
high-resolution X-ray spectra in which hydrogen- and helium-like ions are
usually strong features. We present results from a new collisional-radiative
plasma code, the Astrophysical Plasma Emission Code (APEC), which uses atomic
data in the companion Astrophysical Plasma Emission Database (APED) to
calculate spectral models for hot plasmas. APED contains the requisite atomic
data such as collisional and radiative rates, recombination cross sections,
dielectronic recombination rates, and satellite line wavelengths. We compare
the APEC results to other plasma codes for hydrogen- and helium-like
diagnostics, and test the sensitivity of our results to the number of levels
included in the models. We find that dielectronic recombination with
hydrogen-like ions into high (n=6-10) principal quantum numbers affects some
helium-like line ratios from low-lying (n=2) transitions.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
Nuclear halo and the coherent nuclear interaction
The unusual structure of Li11, the first halo nucleus found, is analyzed by
the Preparata model of nuclear structure. By applying Coherent Nucleus Theory,
we obtain an interaction potential for the halo-neutrons that rightly
reproduces the fundamental state of the system.Comment: 9 pages Submitted to International Journal of Modern Physics E
(IJMPE
Optical implementation and entanglement distribution in Gaussian valence bond states
We study Gaussian valence bond states of continuous variable systems,
obtained as the outputs of projection operations from an ancillary space of M
infinitely entangled bonds connecting neighboring sites, applied at each of
sites of an harmonic chain. The entanglement distribution in Gaussian valence
bond states can be controlled by varying the input amount of entanglement
engineered in a (2M+1)-mode Gaussian state known as the building block, which
is isomorphic to the projector applied at a given site. We show how this
mechanism can be interpreted in terms of multiple entanglement swapping from
the chain of ancillary bonds, through the building blocks. We provide optical
schemes to produce bisymmetric three-mode Gaussian building blocks (which
correspond to a single bond, M=1), and study the entanglement structure in the
output Gaussian valence bond states. The usefulness of such states for quantum
communication protocols with continuous variables, like telecloning and
teleportation networks, is finally discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. To appear in Optics and Spectroscopy, special
issue for ICQO'2006 (Minsk). This preprint contains extra material with
respect to the journal versio
Imaginary Phases in Two-Level Model with Spontaneous Decay
We study a two-level model coupled to the electromagnetic vacuum and to an
external classic electric field with fixed frequency. The amplitude of the
external electric field is supposed to vary very slow in time. Garrison and
Wright [{\it Phys. Lett.} {\bf A128} (1988) 177] used the non-hermitian
Hamiltonian approach to study the adiabatic limit of this model and obtained
that the probability of this two-level system to be in its upper level has an
imaginary geometric phase. Using the master equation for describing the time
evolution of the two-level system we obtain that the imaginary phase due to
dissipative effects is time dependent, in opposition to Garrison and Wright
result. The present results show that the non-hermitian hamiltonian method
should not be used to discuss the nature of the imaginary phases in open
systems.Comment: 11 pages, new version, to appear in J. Phys.
Generalization of geometric phase to completely positive maps
We generalize the notion of relative phase to completely positive maps with
known unitary representation, based on interferometry. Parallel transport
conditions that define the geometric phase for such maps are introduced. The
interference effect is embodied in a set of interference patterns defined by
flipping the environment state in one of the two paths. We show for the qubit
that this structure gives rise to interesting additional information about the
geometry of the evolution defined by the CP map.Comment: Minor revision. 2 authors added. 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTex
Setting the stage: social-environmental and motivational predictors of optimal training engagement
In this paper, we will firstly explore the central tenets of SDT. Research that has examined the social-environmental and motivation-related correlates of optimal training, performance and health-related engagement through the theoretical lens of SDT will be reviewed. Drawing from SDT-driven work undertaken in educational, sport and dance settings, we will draw conclusions and suggest future directions from a research and applied perspective
The Hydrogen Atom in Combined Electric and Magnetic Fields with Arbitrary Mutual Orientations
For the hydrogen atom in combined magnetic and electric fields we investigate
the dependence of the quantum spectra, classical dynamics, and statistical
distributions of energy levels on the mutual orientation of the two external
fields. Resonance energies and oscillator strengths are obtained by exact
diagonalization of the Hamiltonian in a complete basis set, even far above the
ionization threshold. At high excitation energies around the Stark saddle point
the eigenenergies exhibit strong level repulsions when the angle between the
fields is varied. The large avoided crossings occur between states with the
same approximately conserved principal quantum number, n, and this
intramanifold mixing of states cannot be explained, not even qualitatively, by
conventional perturbation theory. However, it is well reproduced by an extended
perturbation theory which takes into account all couplings between the angular
momentum and Runge-Lenz vector. The large avoided crossings are interpreted as
a quantum manifestation of classical intramanifold chaos. This interpretation
is supported by both classical Poincar\'e surfaces of section, which reveal a
mixed regular-chaotic intramanifold dynamics, and the statistical analysis of
nearest-neighbor-spacingComment: two-column version, 10 pages, REVTeX, 10 figures, uuencoded,
submitted to Rhys. Rev.
Adiabatic response for Lindblad dynamics
We study the adiabatic response of open systems governed by Lindblad
evolutions. In such systems, there is an ambiguity in the assignment of
observables to fluxes (rates) such as velocities and currents. For the
appropriate notion of flux, the formulas for the transport coefficients are
simple and explicit and are governed by the parallel transport on the manifold
of instantaneous stationary states. Among our results we show that the response
coefficients of open systems, whose stationary states are projections, is given
by the adiabatic curvature.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figures, accepted versio
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