1,232 research outputs found
Evaporative Cooling of a Two-Component Degenerate Fermi Gas
We derive a quantum theory of evaporative cooling for a degenerate Fermi gas
with two constituents and show that the optimum cooling trajectory is
influenced significantly by the quantum statistics of the particles. The
cooling efficiency is reduced at low temperatures due to Pauli blocking of
available final states in each binary collision event. We compare the
theoretical optimum trajectory with experimental data on cooling a quantum
degenerate cloud of potassium-40, and show that temperatures as low as 0.3
times the Fermi temperature can now be achieved.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Embodied Knowledge: Writing Researchersâ Bodies Into Qualitative Health Research
After more than a decade of postpositivist health care research and an increase in narrative writing practices, social scientific, qualitative health research remains largely disembodied. The erasure of researchersâ bodies from conventional accounts of research obscures the complexities of knowledge production and yields deceptively tidy accounts of research. Qualitative health research could benefit significantly from embodied writing that explores the discursive relationship between the body and the self and the semantic challenges of writing the body by incorporating bodily details and experiences into research accounts. Researchers can represent their bodies by incorporating autoethnographic narratives, drawing on all of their senses, interrogating the connections between their bodily signifiers and research processes, and experimenting with the semantics of self and body. The author illustrates opportunities for embodiment with excerpts from an ethnography of a geriatric oncology team and explores implications of embodied writing for the practice of qualitative health research
Hard probes in heavy ion collisions at the LHC: PDFs, shadowing and collisions
This manuscript is the outcome of the subgroup ``PDFs, shadowing and
collisions'' from the CERN workshop ``Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions at
the LHC''. In addition to the experimental parameters for collisions at
the LHC, the issues discussed are factorization in nuclear collisions, nuclear
parton distributions (nPDFs), hard probes as the benchmark tests of
factorization in collisions at the LHC, and semi-hard probes as
observables with potentially large nuclear effects. Also, novel QCD phenomena
in collisions at the LHC are considered. The importance of the
program at the LHC is emphasized.Comment: The writeup of the working group "PDFs, shadowing and
collisions" for the CERN Yellow Report on Hard Probes in Heavy Ion Collisions
at the LHC, 121 pages. Subgroup convenors: K.J. Eskola, J.w. Qiu (theory) and
W. Geist (experiment). Editor: K.J. Eskol
Sympathetic cooling of an atomic Bose-Fermi gas mixture
Sympathetic cooling of an atomic Fermi gas by a Bose gas is studied by
solution of the coupled quantum Boltzmann equations for the confined gas
mixture. Results for equilibrium temperatures and relaxation dynamics are
presented, and some simple models developed. Our study illustrate that a
combination of sympathetic and forced evaporative cooling enables the Fermi gas
to be cooled to the degenerate regime where quantum statistics, and mean field
effects are important. The influence of mean field effects on the equilibrium
spatial distributions is discussed qualitatively.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.Let
Recommended from our members
Highly efficient separation of actinides from lanthanides by a phenanthroline-derived bis-triazine ligand
The synthesis, lanthanide complexation, and solvent ex- traction of actinide(III) and lanthanide(III) radiotracers from nitric acid solutions by a phenanthroline-derived quadridentate bis-triazine ligand are described. The ligand separates Am(III) and Cm(III) from the lanthanides with remarkably high efficiency, high selectivity, and fast extraction kinetics compared to its 2,2'-bipyridine counterpart. Structures of the 1:2 bis-complexes of the ligand with Eu(III) and Yb(III) were elucidated by X-ray crystallography and force field calculations, respec-tively. The Eu(III) bis-complex is the first 1:2 bis-complex of a quadridentate bis-triazine ligand to be characterized by crystallography. The faster rates of extraction were verified by kinetics measurements using the rotating membrane cell technique in several diluents. The improved kinetics of metal ion extraction are related to the higher surface activity of the ligand at the phase interface. The improvement in the ligand's properties on replacing the bipyridine unit with a phenanthroline unit far exceeds what was anticipated based on ligand design alone
Scattering of short laser pulses from trapped fermions
We investigate the scattering of intense short laser pulses off trapped cold
fermionic atoms. We discuss the sensitivity of the scattered light to the
quantum statistics of the atoms. The temperature dependence of the scattered
light spectrum is calculated. Comparisons are made with a system of classical
atoms who obey Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics. We find the total scattering
increases as the fermions become cooler but eventually tails off at very low
temperatures (far below the Fermi temperature). At these low temperatures the
fermionic degeneracy plays an important role in the scattering as it inhibits
spontaneous emission into occupied energy levels below the Fermi surface. We
demonstrate temperature dependent qualitative changes in the differential and
total spectrum can be utilized to probe quantum degeneracy of trapped Fermi gas
when the total number of atoms are sufficiently large . At smaller
number of atoms, incoherent scattering dominates and it displays weak
temperature dependence.Comment: updated figures and revised content, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Comparison between three-dimensional linear and nonlinear tsunami generation models
The modeling of tsunami generation is an essential phase in understanding
tsunamis. For tsunamis generated by underwater earthquakes, it involves the
modeling of the sea bottom motion as well as the resulting motion of the water
above it. A comparison between various models for three-dimensional water
motion, ranging from linear theory to fully nonlinear theory, is performed. It
is found that for most events the linear theory is sufficient. However, in some
cases, more sophisticated theories are needed. Moreover, it is shown that the
passive approach in which the seafloor deformation is simply translated to the
ocean surface is not always equivalent to the active approach in which the
bottom motion is taken into account, even if the deformation is supposed to be
instantaneous.Comment: 39 pages, 16 figures; Accepted to Theoretical and Computational Fluid
Dynamics. Several references have been adde
A Poincare-Covariant Parton Cascade Model for Ultrarelativistic Heavy-Ion Reactions
We present a new cascade-type microscopic simulation of nucleus-nucleus
collisions at RHIC energies. The basic elements are partons (quarks and gluons)
moving in 8N-dimensional phase space according to Poincare-covariant dynamics.
The parton-parton scattering cross sections used in the model are computed
within perturbative QCD in the tree-level approximation. The Q^2 dependence of
the structure functions is included by an implementation of the DGLAP mechanism
suitable for a cascade, so that the number of partons is not static, but varies
in space and time as the collision of two nuclei evolves. The resulting parton
distributions are presented, and meaningful comparisons with experimental data
are discussed.Comment: 30 pages. 11 figures. Submitted to Phys.Rev.
Leftovers:The presence of manufacture-derived aquatic lipids in Alaskan Pottery
Lipids preserved within the walls of ancient pottery vessels are routinely analysed to reveal their original contents. The provenience of aquatic lipids in pottery is generally connected to vessel function (e.g., for cooking or storing fish, shellfish and aquatic mammals). However, ethnographic reports from early historic Alaska mention the use of aquatic oils for waterproofing low-fired pottery. Results of lipid residue studies on Alaskan pottery reflect an exclusive function of pottery to process aquatic resources. However, can one be sure these residues are the product of vessel function and not a remnant of the manufacturing process? The study presents the results of an experiment where the preservation of aquatic lipids during the firing process at different temperatures was measured. It was found that nearly all lipids were removed at firing temperatures of ℠400°C. Petrographic analysis of Alaskan pottery samples indicates that firing temperatures were generally > 550°C but < 800°C. The contribution of pre-firing manufacture-derived lipids to samples fired at these temperatures may be regarded as negligible. While the possible presence of aquatic lipids from post-firing surface treatments cannot be excluded, such treatments appear unnecessary for well-fired pottery.</p
- âŠ