2,303 research outputs found
Note on clock synchronization and Edwards transformations
Edwards transformations relating inertial frames with arbitrary clock
synchronization are reminded and put in more general setting. Their group
theoretical context is described.Comment: 11 pages, no figures; final version, to appear in Foundations of
Physics Letter
Sideband cooling while preserving coherences in the nuclear spin state in group-II-like atoms
We propose a method for laser cooling group-II-like atoms without changing
the quantum state of their nuclear spins, thus preserving coherences that are
usually destroyed by optical pumping. As group-II-like atoms have a
closed-shell ground state, nuclear spin and electronic degrees of freedom are
decoupled, allowing for independent manipulation. The hyperfine interaction
that couples these degrees of freedom in excited states can be suppressed
through the application of external magnetic fields. Our protocol employs
resolved-sideband cooling on the forbidden clock transition, , with quenching via coupling to the rapidly decaying state,
deep in the Paschen-Back regime. This makes it possible to laser cool neutral
atomic qubits without destroying the quantum information stored in their
nuclear spins, as shown in two examples, Yb and Sr.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures v4: minor changes in text, changes in the
references, published versio
Noncommutative Common Cause Principles in Algebraic Quantum Field Theory
States in algebraic quantum field theory "typically" establish correlation
between spacelike separated events. Reichenbach's Common Cause Principle,
generalized to the quantum field theoretical setting, offers an apt tool to
causally account for these superluminal correlations. In the paper we motivate
first why commutativity between the common cause and the correlating events
should be abandoned in the definition of the common cause. Then we show that
the Noncommutative Weak Common Cause Principle holds in algebraic quantum field
theory with locally finite degrees of freedom. Namely, for any pair of
projections A, B supported in spacelike separated regions V_A and V_B,
respectively, there is a local projection C not necessarily commuting with A
and B such that C is supported within the union of the backward light cones of
V_A and V_B and the set {C, non-C} screens off the correlation between A and B
Uncertainties inherent in the decomposition of a Transformation
This contribution adds to the points on the <indeterminacy of special
relativity> made by De Abreu and Guerra. We show that the Lorentz
Transformation can be composed by the physical observations made in a frame K
of events in a frame K-prime viz i) objects in K-prime are moving at a speed v
relative to K, ii) distances and time intervals measured by K-prime are at
variance with those measured by K and iii) the concept of simultaneity is
different in K-prime compared to K. The order in which the composition is
executed determines the nature of the middle aspect (ii). This essential
uncertainty of the theory can be resolved only by a universal synchronicity as
discussed in [1] based on the unique frame in which the one way speed of light
is constant in all directions.Comment: 10 pages including an appendix. Published in the European Journal of
Physics as a Comment. Eur. J. Phys. 29 (2008) L13-L1
Comparison of the Effects of Early Pregnancy with Human Interferon, Alpha 2 (IFNA2), on Gene Expression in Bovine Endometrium
Interferon tau (IFNT), a type I IFN similar to alpha IFNs (IFNA), is the pregnancy recognition signal produced by the ruminant conceptus. To elucidate specific effects of bovine IFNT and of other conceptus-derived factors, endometrial gene expression changes during early pregnancy were compared to gene expression changes after intrauterine application of human IFNA2. In experiment 1, endometrial tissue samples were obtained on Day (D) 12, D15, and D18 postmating from nonpregnant or pregnant heifers. In experiment 2, heifers were treated from D14 to D16 of the estrous cycle with an intrauterine device releasing IFNA2 or, as controls, placebo lipid extrudates or PBS only. Endometrial biopsies were performed after flushing the uterus. All samples from both experiments were analyzed with an Affymetrix Bovine Genome Array. Experiment 1 revealed differential gene expression between pregnant and nonpregnant endometria on D15 and D18. In experiment 2, IFNA2 treatment resulted in differential gene expression in the bovine endometrium. Comparison of the data sets from both studies identified genes that were differentially expressed in response to IFNA2 but not in response to pregnancy on D15 or D18. In addition, genes were found that were differentially expressed during pregnancy but not after IFNA2 treatment. In experiment 3, spatiotemporal alterations in expression of selected genes were determined in uteri from nonpregnant and early pregnant heifers using in situ hybridization. The overall findings of this study suggest differential effects of bovine IFNT compared to human IFNA2 and that some pregnancy-specific changes in the endometrium are elicited by conceptus-derived factors other than IFNT
Simultaneity as an Invariant Equivalence Relation
This paper deals with the concept of simultaneity in classical and
relativistic physics as construed in terms of group-invariant equivalence
relations. A full examination of Newton, Galilei and Poincar\'e invariant
equivalence relations in is presented, which provides alternative
proofs, additions and occasionally corrections of results in the literature,
including Malament's theorem and some of its variants. It is argued that the
interpretation of simultaneity as an invariant equivalence relation, although
interesting for its own sake, does not cut in the debate concerning the
conventionality of simultaneity in special relativity.Comment: Some corrections, mostly of misprints. Keywords: special relativity,
simultaneity, invariant equivalence relations, Malament's theore
Cortical tracking of surprisal during continuous speech comprehension
Speech comprehension requires rapid online processing of a continuous acoustic signal to extract structure and meaning. Previous studies on sentence comprehension have found neural correlates of the predictability of a word given its context, as well as a of the precision of such a prediction. However, they have focussed on single sentences and on particular words in those sentences. Moreover, they compared neural responses to words with low and high predictability, as well as with low and high precision. However, in speech comprehension a listener hears many successive words whose predictability and precision vary over a large range. Here we show that cortical activity in different frequency bands tracks word surprisal in continuous natural speech, and that this tracking is modulated by precision. We obtain these results through quantifying surprisal and precision from naturalistic speech using a deep neural network, and through relating these speech features to electroencephalographic (EEG) responses of human volunteers acquired during auditory story comprehension. We find significant cortical tracking of surprisal at low frequencies including the delta band as well as in the higher-frequency beta and gamma bands, and observe that the tracking is modulated by the precision. Our results pave the way to further investigate the neurobiology of natural speech comprehension
Driven transport on parallel lanes with particle exclusion and obstruction
We investigate a driven two-channel system where particles on different lanes mutually obstruct each other's motion, extending an earlier model by Popkov and Peschel Phys. Rev. E 64, 026126 (2001)]. This obstruction may occur in biological contexts due to steric hinderance where motor proteins carry cargos by "walking" on microtubules. Similarly, the model serves as a description for classical spin transport where charged particles with internal states move unidirectionally on a lattice. Three regimes of qualitatively different behavior are identified, depending on the strength of coupling between the lanes. For small and large coupling strengths the model can be mapped to a one-channel problem, whereas a rich phase behavior emerges for intermediate ones. We derive an approximate but quantitatively accurate theoretical description in terms of a one-site cluster approximation, and obtain insight into the phase behavior through the current-density relations combined with an extremal-current principle. Our results are confirmed by stochastic simulations
Traffic jams induced by rare switching events in two-lane transport
We investigate a model for driven exclusion processes where internal states are assigned to the particles. The latter account for diverse situations, ranging from spin states in spintronics to parallel lanes in intracellular or vehicular traffic. Introducing a coupling between the internal states by allowing particles to switch from one to another induces an intriguing polarization phenomenon. In a mesoscopic scaling, a rich stationary regime for the density profiles is discovered, with localized domain walls in the density profile of one of the internal states being feasible. We derive the shape of the density profiles as well as resulting phase diagrams analytically by a mean-field approximation and a continuum limit. Continuous as well as discontinuous lines of phase transition emerge, their intersections induce multi-critical behaviour
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