6,721 research outputs found

    Three-loop HTLpt thermodynamics at finite temperature and chemical potential

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    In this proceedings we present a state-of-the-art method of calculating thermodynamic potential at finite temperature and finite chemical potential, using Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory (HTLpt) up to next-to-next-leading-order (NNLO). The resulting thermodynamic potential enables us to evaluate different thermodynamic quantities including pressure and various quark number susceptibilities (QNS). Comparison between our analytic results for those thermodynamic quantities with the available lattice data shows a good agreement.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, conference proceedings of XXI DAE-BRNS HEP Symposium, IIT Guwahati, December 2014; to appear in 'Springer Proceedings in Physics Series

    Entanglement entropy in fermionic Laughlin states

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    We present analytic and numerical calculations on the bipartite entanglement entropy in fractional quantum Hall states of the fermionic Laughlin sequence. The partitioning of the system is done both by dividing Landau level orbitals and by grouping the fermions themselves. For the case of orbital partitioning, our results can be related to spatial partitioning, enabling us to extract a topological quantity (the `total quantum dimension') characterizing the Laughlin states. For particle partitioning we prove a very close upper bound for the entanglement entropy of a subset of the particles with the rest, and provide an interpretation in terms of exclusion statistics.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures. Minor changes in v

    Antibacterial and Cytotoxic Activities of Capparis zeylanica Linn Roots

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    Se analizaron extractos crudos y un ácido graso, ácido octadec-7-en-5-ynoic (1), de la corteza de la raíz de Capparis zeylanica Linn. (familia de las Capparidaceae) para observar sus actividades antibacterianas frente a la bacteria Gram positiva y Gram negativa. Entre los extractos crudos, el extracto de cloroformo mostró una buena actividad frente a todos los organismos de prueba. El ácido graso (1) aislado del extracto de cloroformo mostró actividades antibacterianas frente a todos los organismos de prueba, a excepción de E. coli. Las actividades se compararon con un antibiótico estándar: la kanamicina. Las concentraciones inhibitorias mínimas (CIH) de 1, determinadas mediante la técnica de dilución en serie, fueron 64 μg/ml frente a Bacillus subtilis y Shigella dysenteriae. Las actividades citotóxicas del extracto crudo y del ácido graso (1) se observaron mediante el bioensayo de gambas en salmuera y el valor de LC50 del compuesto fue 6,27 μg/mlCrude extracts and a fatty acid, octadec-7-en-5-ynoic acid (1), from the root bark of Capparis zeylanica Linn. (Fam. Capparidaceae) were screened for their antibacterial activities against Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria. Among the crude extracts, chloroform extract showed good activity against all test organisms. The fatty acid (1) isolated from chloroform extract exhibited antibacterial activities against test organisms except E. coli. The activities were compared to a standard antibiotic- kanamycin. The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of 1, determined by serial dilution technique, were found to be 64 μg/ml against Bacillus subtilis and Shigella dysenteriae. The cytotoxic activities of crude extract and fatty acid (1) were observed by brine shrimp biassay and LC50 value of the compound was found to be 6.27 μg/m

    Overlap distributions for quantum quenches in the anisotropic Heisenberg chain

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    The dynamics after a quantum quench is determined by the weights of the initial state in the eigenspectrum of the final Hamiltonian, i.e., by the distribution of overlaps in the energy spectrum. We present an analysis of such overlap distributions for quenches of the anisotropy parameter in the one-dimensional anisotropic spin-1/2 Heisenberg model (XXZ chain). We provide an overview of the form of the overlap distribution for quenches from various initial anisotropies to various final ones, using numerical exact diagonalization. We show that if the system is prepared in the antiferromagnetic N\'eel state (infinite anisotropy) and released into a non-interacting setup (zero anisotropy, XX point) only a small fraction of the final eigenstates gives contributions to the post-quench dynamics, and that these eigenstates have identical overlap magnitudes. We derive expressions for the overlaps, and present the selection rules that determine the final eigenstates having nonzero overlap. We use these results to derive concise expressions for time-dependent quantities (Loschmidt echo, longitudinal and transverse correlators) after the quench. We use perturbative analyses to understand the overlap distribution for quenches from infinite to small nonzero anisotropies, and for quenches from large to zero anisotropy.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure

    Extracting Norms from Contracts Via ChatGPT: Opportunities and Challenges

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    We investigate the effectiveness of ChatGPT in extracting norms from contracts. Norms provide a natural way to engineer multiagent systems by capturing how to govern the interactions between two or more autonomous parties. We extract norms of commitment, prohibition, authorization, and power, along with associated norm elements (the parties involved, antecedents, and consequents) from contracts. Our investigation reveals ChatGPT's effectiveness and limitations in norm extraction from contracts. ChatGPT demonstrates promising performance in norm extraction without requiring training or fine-tuning, thus obviating the need for annotated data, which is not generally available in this domain. However, we found some limitations of ChatGPT in extracting these norms that lead to incorrect norm extractions. The limitations include oversight of crucial details, hallucination, incorrect parsing of conjunctions, and empty norm elements. Enhanced norm extraction from contracts can foster the development of more transparent and trustworthy formal agent interaction specifications, thereby contributing to the improvement of multiagent systems.Comment: Accepted at COINE-AAMAS 202

    Entanglement entropy of a quantum unbinding transition and entropy of DNA

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    Two significant consequences of quantum fluctuations are entanglement and criticality. Entangled states may not be critical but a critical state shows signatures of universality in entanglement. A surprising result found here is that the entanglement entropy may become arbitrarily large and negative near the dissociation of a bound pair of quantum particles. Although apparently counter-intuitive, it is shown to be consistent and essential for the phase transition, by mapping to a classical problem of DNA melting. We associate the entanglement entropy to a subextensive part of the entropy of DNA bubbles, which is responsible for melting. The absence of any extensivity requirement in time makes this negative entropy an inevitable consequence of quantum mechanics in continuum. Our results encompass quantum critical points and first-order transitions in general dimensions.Comment: v2: 6 pages, 3 figures (title modified, more details and figures added

    Management of HCV peri-transplant recapitulates management of CMV

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    Conserved Density Fluctuation and Temporal Correlation Function in HTL Perturbation Theory

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    Considering recently developed Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory that takes into account the effect of the variation of the external field through the fluctuations of a conserved quantity we calculate the temporal component of the Euclidian correlation function in the vector channel. The results are found to be in good agreement with the very recent results obtained within the quenched approximation of QCD and small values of the quark mass (∼0.1T\sim 0.1T) on improved lattices of size 1283×Nτ128^3\times N_\tau at (Nτ=40, T=1.2TCN_\tau=40, \ T=1.2T_C), (Nτ=48, T=1.45TCN_\tau=48, \ T=1.45T_C), and (Nτ=16, T=2.98TCN_\tau=16, \ T=2.98T_C), where NτN_\tau is the temporal extent of the lattice. This suggests that the results from lattice QCD and Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory are in close proximity for a quantity associated with the conserved density fluctuation.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures; One para added in introduction, Fig 1 modified; Accepted in Phys. Rev.

    Victim Simulator for Victim Detection Radar

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    Testing of victim detection radars has traditionally used human subjects who volunteer to be buried in, or climb into a space within, a rubble pile. This is not only uncomfortable, but can be hazardous or impractical when typical disaster scenarios are considered, including fire, mud, or liquid waste. Human subjects are also inconsistent from day to day (i.e., they do not have the same radar properties), so quantitative performance testing is difficult. Finally, testing a multiple-victim scenario is difficult and expensive because of the need for multiple human subjects who must all be coordinated. The solution is an anthropomorphic dummy with dielectric properties that replicate those of a human, and that has motions comparable to human motions for breathing and heartbeat. Two airfilled bladders filled and drained by solenoid valves provide the underlying motion for vinyl bags filled with a dielectric gel with realistic properties. The entire assembly is contained within a neoprene wetsuit serving as a "skin." The solenoids are controlled by a microcontroller, which can generate a variety of heart and breathing patterns, as well as being reprogrammable for more complex activities. Previous electromagnetic simulators or RF phantoms have been oriented towards assessing RF safety, e.g., the measurement of specific absorption rate (SAR) from a cell phone signal, or to provide a calibration target for diagnostic techniques (e.g., MRI). They are optimized for precise dielectric performance, and are typically rigid and immovable. This device is movable and "positionable," and has motion that replicates the small-scale motion of humans. It is soft (much as human tissue is) and has programmable motions
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