7,834 research outputs found
Interference, reduced action, and trajectories
Instead of investigating the interference between two stationary, rectilinear
wave functions in a trajectory representation by examining the two rectilinear
wave functions individually, we examine a dichromatic wave function that is
synthesized from the two interfering wave functions. The physics of
interference is contained in the reduced action for the dichromatic wave
function. As this reduced action is a generator of the motion for the
dichromatic wave function, it determines the dichromatic wave function's
trajectory. The quantum effective mass renders insight into the behavior of the
trajectory. The trajectory in turn renders insight into quantum nonlocality.Comment: 12 pages text, 5 figures. Typos corrected. Author's final submission.
A companion paper to "Welcher Weg? A trajectory representation of a quantum
Young's diffraction experiment", quant-ph/0605121. Keywords: interference,
nonlocality, trajectory representation, entanglement, dwell time, determinis
The high energy limit of the trajectory representation of quantum mechanics
The trajectory representation in the high energy limit (Bohr correspondence
principle) manifests a residual indeterminacy. This indeterminacy is compared
to the indeterminacy found in the classical limit (Planck's constant to 0)
[Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 15, 1363 (2000)] for particles in the classically allowed
region, the classically forbiden region, and near the WKB turning point. The
differences between Bohr's and Planck's principles for the trajectory
representation are compared with the differences between these correspondence
principles for the wave representation. The trajectory representation in the
high energy limit is shown to go to neither classical nor statistical
mechanics. The residual indeterminacy is contrasted to Heisenberg uncertainty.
The relationship between indeterminacy and 't Hooft's information loss and
equivalence classes is investigated.Comment: 12 pages of LaTeX. No figures. Incorporated into the "Proceedings of
the Seventh International Wigner Symposium" (ed. M. E. Noz), 24-29 August
2001, U. of Maryland. Proceedings available at
http://www.physics.umd.edu/robo
An Assessment of an Experimental Surgery Scheme in General Practice
A study of aspects of the work and of the opinions of patients and staff was made at times over a period of two years before and one year after the opening of an experimental surgery tmit specially designed for a particular way of organising the doctor/nurse team in general practice. The investigation took place in a busy group practice of three doctors caring between them for over
9000 patients living in a London borough
Social Capital and Violence across Racial and Ethnic Samples of Adolescents
Using a national sample of adolescents, results of this study demonstrate the important role family and school social capital plays in protecting both White and selected non- White students against violent outcomes. For example, parent-child relationship was associated with reduced violence for Black and White adolescents but not for Hispanics. School affiliation was significant in models for Hispanic and White adolescents but not in models for Black students. Sports participation was associated with greater violence among Hispanics and Whites, but not Blacks. Interestingly, club participation was significant for Whites, but, like sports, it was associated with greater violence. Parental monitoring and religious participation were significant only for Whites while neighbor involvement was significant only for Blacks
Generalized vegetation map of north Merrit Island based on a simplified multispectral analysis
A simplified system for classification of multispectral data was used for making a generalized map of ground features of North Merritt Island. Subclassification of vegetation within broad categories yielded promising results which led to a completely automatic method and to the production of satisfactory detailed maps. Changes in an area north of Happy Hammocks are evidently related to water relations of the soil and are not associated with the last winter freeze-damage which affected mainly the mangrove species, likely to reestablish themselves by natural processes. A supplementary investigation involving reflectance studies in the laboratory has shown that the reflectance by detached citrus leaves, of wavelengths lying between 400 microns and 700 microns, showed some variation over a period of seven days during which the leaves were kept in a laboratory atmosphere
- …