5,294 research outputs found
On the Acquisition of Universal and Parameterised Goal Accessibility Constraints by Japanese Learners of English
This paper reports on how adult Japanese Learners of English/JLEs acquire universal and parameterised constraints which regulate the accessibility of Goals to Wh-Movement, and which determine whether subordinate or superordinate material is pied-piped or stranded when a wh-word is moved. We present evidence that universal constraints on Goal Accessibility operate in early JLE grammars, and that learners initially transfer setting for parameterised constraints from L1 to L2, concluding that our overall findings are broadly consistent with the Full Transfer Full Access model of L2 acquisition developed in Schwarz and Sprouse (1994, 1996). We show that JLEs are able to reset some parameterised constraints (e.g. the P-Stranding Constraint) but not others (e.g. the Left Branch Condition), and argue that they are only able to re-set learnable parameterised constraints (i.e. those whose setting can be learned solely on the basis of positive evidence from input), not unlearnable parameterised constraints (i.e. those whose settings cannot be learned solely on the basis of positive input)
Solutions of polynomial Pell's equation
AbstractLet D=F2+2G be a monic quartic polynomial in Z[x], where degG<degF. Then for F/G∈Q[x], a necessary and sufficient condition for the solution of the polynomial Pell's equation X2−DY2=1 in Z[x] has been shown. Also, the polynomial Pell's equation X2−DY2=1 has nontrivial solutions X,Y∈Q[x] if and only if the values of period of the continued fraction of D are 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 14, 18, and 22 has been shown. In this paper, for the period of the continued fraction of D is 4, we show that the polynomial Pell's equation has no nontrivial solutions X,Y∈Z[x]
Vanishing Thermal Mass in the Strongly Coupled QCD/QED medium
In this paper we perform a nonperturbative analysis of a thermal quasifermion
in thermal QCD/QED by studying its self-energy function through the
Dyson-Schwinger equation with the hard-thermal-loop resummed improved ladder
kernel. Our analysis reveals several interesting results, some of which may
force us to change the image of the thermal quasifermion: (1) The thermal mass
of a quasifermion begins to decrease as the coupling gets stronger and finally
disappears in the strong coupling region,(2) the imaginary part of the chiral
invariant mass function (i.e., the decay width of the quasifermion) persists to
have behavior. Present results suggest that in the
recently produced strongly coupled quark-gluon-plasma, the thermal mass of a
quasifermion should vanish. We also briefly comment on evidence of the
existence of a massless, or an ultrasoft mode.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, Published versio
Locking Local Oscillator Phase to the Atomic Phase via Weak Measurement
We propose a new method to reduce the frequency noise of a Local Oscillator
(LO) to the level of white phase noise by maintaining (not destroying by
projective measurement) the coherence of the ensemble pseudo-spin of atoms over
many measurement cycles. This scheme uses weak measurement to monitor the phase
in Ramsey method and repeat the cycle without initialization of phase and we
call, "atomic phase lock (APL)" in this paper. APL will achieve white phase
noise as long as the noise accumulated during dead time and the decoherence are
smaller than the measurement noise. A numerical simulation confirms that with
APL, Allan deviation is averaged down at a maximum rate that is proportional to
the inverse of total measurement time, tau^-1. In contrast, the current atomic
clocks that use projection measurement suppress the noise only down to the
level of white frequency, in which case Allan deviation scales as tau^-1/2.
Faraday rotation is one of the possible ways to realize weak measurement for
APL. We evaluate the strength of Faraday rotation with 171Yb+ ions trapped in a
linear rf-trap and discuss the performance of APL. The main source of the
decoherence is a spontaneous emission induced by the probe beam for Faraday
rotation measurement. One can repeat the Faraday rotation measurement until the
decoherence become comparable to the SNR of measurement. We estimate this
number of cycles to be ~100 cycles for a realistic experimental parameter.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Leaky Lamb Wave Along VCR Magnetic Tapes
High recording density with the home-use digital VCRs requires the use of narrow tracks, short recording wavelength, and thin magnetic tapes. Knowledge of Young’s modulus of the tape is essential for the precise positioning of the tape on the rotating drums and then a stable tape-to-head interface. The magnetic tapes usually show different Young’s moduli for the machine direction (MD) and the transverse direction (TD) [1]. The anisotropy develops mainly in the base film of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) through the partial crystallization and the crystallite orientation alignment during the stretching process on the tapes [2], while the original PET sheet, from which the tapes are cut, shows much less anisotropy. This situation requires the determination of Young’s moduli for both MD and TD of the tape. The tapes on play are straightened by tensile loads, which should be controlled with Young’s modulus for the MD. Too much load may distort the recorded tracks or damage the tape. Besides, the vertical load is applied onto both edges of the running tape by the guiding rollers. Again, too much load may induce the tape buckling. Critical load is proportional to the Young’s modulus in the TD. Large moduli are desirable for both directions
Ensiling Characteristics of Sudangrass Silage Treated with Green Tea Leaf Waste or Green Tea Polyphenols
Green tea waste (GTW), emitted from beverage companies manufacturing tea drinks, contains high crude protein (CP) and polyphenols. Kondo et al. (2004) showed that GTW addition to forage ensiling enhanced lactic acid fermentation and decreased pH value. Ishihara et al. (2001) showed that high counts of Lactobacillus species were maintained and the counts of clostridia were decreased in the intestinal microflora of animals fed the diet containing green tea polyphenols (GTP). It is hypothesised that GTP might activate lactic acid bacteria and enhance silage fermentation. This study was conducted to evaluate the potential of GTW and GTP as silage additives and explored the mechanisms of enhanced lactic acid fermentation by GTW
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