2,899 research outputs found
Surface Energy in Cold Asymmetrical Fermion Superfluids
We derive the energy of the surface between the normal and superfluid
components of a mixed phase of a system composed of two particle species with
different densities. The surface energy is obtained by the integration of the
free energy density in the interface between the two phases. We show that the
mixed phase remains as the favored ground state over the gapless phase in weak
coupling. We find that the surface energy effects emerge only at strong
coupling.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, typos corrected, published versio
Soft gluon radiation and energy dependence of total hadronic cross-sections
An impact parameter representation for soft gluon radiation is applied to
obtain both the initial decrease of the total cross-section ()
for proton-proton collisions as well as the later rise of with
energy for both and . The non-perturbative soft part of the
eikonal includes only limited low energy gluon emission and leads to the
initial decrease in the proton-proton cross- section. On the other hand, the
rapid rise in the hard, perturbative jet part of the eikonal is tamed into the
experimentally observed mild increase by soft gluon radiation whose maximum
energy rises slowly with energy.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures. Version accepted for publication in Physical
Review D. Additional section with explanatory material added making the paper
more self contained and two figures changed to have a complete summary of the
available accelerator dat
Surface effects in magnetic superconductors with a spiral magnetic structure
We consider a magnetic superconductor MS with a spiral magnetic structure. On
the basis of generalized Eilenberger and Usadel equations we show that near the
boundary of the MS with an insulator or vacuum the condensate (Gor'kov's)
Green's functions are disturbed by boundary conditions and differ essentially
from their values in the bulk. Corrections to the bulk quasiclassical Green's
functions oscillate with the period of the magnetic spiral, , and
decay inside the superconductor over a length of the order (ballistic
limit) or (diffusive limit). We calculate the dc Josephson
current in an MS/I/MS tunnel junction and show that the critical Josephson
current differs substantially from that obtained with the help of the tunnel
Hamiltonian method and bulk Green's functions.Comment: 10 pages 3 Figs; some misprints in fromulae corrected; submitted to
Phys. Rev.
Skin effect with arbitrary specularity in Maxwellian plasma
The problem of skin effect with arbitrary specularity in maxwellian plasma
with specular--diffuse boundary conditions is solved. A new analytical method
is developed that makes it possible to to obtain a solution up to an arbitrary
degree of accuracy. The method is based on the idea of symmetric continuation
not only the electric field, but also electron distribution function. The
solution is obtained in a form of von Neumann series.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Slow group velocity and Cherenkov radiation
We theoretically study the effect of ultraslow group velocities on the
emission of Vavilov-Cherenkov radiation in a coherently driven medium. We show
that in this case the aperture of the group cone on which the intensity of the
radiation peaks is much smaller than that of the usual wave cone associated
with the Cherenkov coherence condition. We show that such a singular behaviour
may be observed in a coherently driven ultracold atomic gas.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Deformed quantum mechanics and q-Hermitian operators
Starting on the basis of the non-commutative q-differential calculus, we
introduce a generalized q-deformed Schr\"odinger equation. It can be viewed as
the quantum stochastic counterpart of a generalized classical kinetic equation,
which reproduces at the equilibrium the well-known q-deformed exponential
stationary distribution. In this framework, q-deformed adjoint of an operator
and q-hermitian operator properties occur in a natural way in order to satisfy
the basic quantum mechanics assumptions.Comment: 10 page
Assessing Professionalism: A theoretical framework for defining clinical rotation assessment criteria
Although widely accepted as an important graduate competence, professionalism is a challenging outcome to define and assess. Clinical rotations provide an excellent opportunity to develop student professionalism through the use of experiential learning and effective feedback, but without appropriate theoretical frameworks, clinical teachers may find it difficult to identify appropriate learning outcomes. The adage “I know it when I see it” is unhelpful in providing feedback and guidance for student improvement, and criteria that are more specifically defined would help students direct their own development. This study sought first to identify how clinical faculty in one institution currently assess professionalism, using retrospective analysis of material obtained in undergraduate teaching and faculty development sessions. Subsequently, a faculty workshop was held in which a round-table type discussion sought to develop these ideas and identify how professionalism assessment could be improved. The output of this session was a theoretical framework for teaching and assessing professionalism, providing example assessment criteria and ideas for clinical teaching. This includes categories such as client and colleague interaction, respect and trust, recognition of limitations, and understanding of different professional identities. Each category includes detailed descriptions of the knowledge, skills, and behaviors expected of students in these areas. The criteria were determined by engaging faculty in the development of the framework, and therefore they should represent a focused development of criteria already used to assess professionalism, and not a novel and unfamiliar set of assessment guidelines. The faculty-led nature of this framework is expected to facilitate implementation in clinical teaching
Model for initiation of quality factor degradation at high accelerating fields in superconducting radio-frequency cavities
A model for the onset of the reduction in SRF cavity quality factor, the
so-called Q-drop, at high accelerating electric fields is presented. Breakdown
of the surface barrier against magnetic flux penetration at the cavity equator
is considered to be the critical event that determines the onset of Q-drop. The
worst case of triangular grooves with low field of first flux penetration Hp,
as analyzed previously by Buzdin and Daumens, [1998 Physica C 294: 257], was
adapted. This approach incorporates both the geometry of the groove and local
contamination via the Ginzburg-Landau parameter kappa, so the proposed model
allows new comparisons of one effect in relation to the other. The model
predicts equivalent reduction of Hp when either roughness or contamination were
varied alone, so smooth but dirty surfaces limit cavity performance about as
much as rough but clean surfaces do. When in combination, contamination
exacerbates the negative effects of roughness and vice-versa. To test the model
with actual data, coupons were prepared by buffered chemical polishing and
electropolishing, and stylus profilometry was used to obtain distributions of
angles. From these data, curves for surface resistance generated by simple flux
flow as a function of magnetic field were generated by integrating over the
distribution of angles for reasonable values of kappa. This showed that
combined effects of roughness and contamination indeed reduce the Q-drop onset
field by ~30%, and that that contamination contributes to Q-drop as much as
roughness. The latter point may be overlooked by SRF cavity research, since
access to the cavity interior by spectroscopy tools is very difficult, whereas
optical images have become commonplace. The model was extended to fit cavity
test data, which indicated that reduction of the superconducting gap by
contaminants may also play a role in Q-drop.Comment: 15 pages with 7 figure
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