1,814 research outputs found
Asymmetric scattering and non-orthogonal mode patterns in optical micro-spirals
Quasi-bound states in an open system do in general not form an orthogonal and
complete basis. It is, however, expected that the non-orthogonality is weak in
the case of well-confined states except close to a so-called exceptional point
in parameter space. We present numerical evidence showing that for passive
optical microspiral cavities the parameter regime where the non-orthogonality
is significant is rather broad. Here we observe almost-degenerate pairs of
well-confined modes which are highly non-orthogonal. Using a non-Hermitian
model Hamiltonian we demonstrate that this interesting phenomenon is related to
the asymmetric scattering between clockwise and counterclockwise propagating
waves in the spiral geometry. Numerical simulations of ray dynamics reveal a
clear ray-wave correspondence.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
Growth rates of interface-feeding spionid polychaetes in simulated tidal currents
Most spionid polychaetes switch from surface deposit feeding to suspension feeding as current speed and the flux of suspended food increase. Previous experiments testing the effects of flow on the growth of facultative, interface feeders have been limited to very simplified flow regimes such as constant, unidirectional currents. To measure the growth of interface-feeding spionids in more realistic currents, we programmed two identical counter-rotating annular flumes to simulate two different semidiurnal tidal currents. Each regime included four speeds that varied in hourly steps. At 5 mm above bottom, speeds in the slower flow regime were 0, 2.5, 5, and 7.5 cm s−1. Speeds in the faster regime were 0, 4, 8, and 12 cm s−11. Every 6 h, after each hour at 0 cm s−11, the flume rotation was reversed to simulate the directional shift between ebb and flood currents. The 12-h periods were repeated over 96 h. The experiment included eight 4-d runs of paired slow- and fast-flow flumes. Field-collected sediment and a nonliving algal slurry were added to control deposited and suspended food. Individuals of four species were measured for body volumes before and after each 4-d run: Polydora cornuta, Streblospio benedicti, Pygospio elegans, and Spio setosa. Each species except S. setosa was divided a priori into two size classes. Both small and large P. cornuta grew significantly faster in the fast-flow regime. Large P. elegans grew significantly faster in the fast-flow regime, but the growth rates of small P. elegans did not differ between regimes. Neither size class of S. benedicti grew at significantly different rates between flow regimes, and the broad size class of S. setosa did not show significant flow-dependent growth. The significant growth responses of two of the four species to moderate differences in tidal flow over a short time period underscore the impact flow can have on the population dynamics of some interface-feeding spionids. The differences among species suggest that variability in tidal currents can influence the structure and dynamics of communities in which spionids are often important and abundant
An Efficient Algorithm for Optimizing Adaptive Quantum Metrology Processes
Quantum-enhanced metrology infers an unknown quantity with accuracy beyond
the standard quantum limit (SQL). Feedback-based metrological techniques are
promising for beating the SQL but devising the feedback procedures is difficult
and inefficient. Here we introduce an efficient self-learning
swarm-intelligence algorithm for devising feedback-based quantum metrological
procedures. Our algorithm can be trained with simulated or real-world trials
and accommodates experimental imperfections, losses, and decoherence
Sounds Like a Fit! Wording in Recruitment Advertisements and Recruiter Gender Affect Women’s Pursuit of Career Development Programs via Anticipated Belongingness
Following calls for research to increase gender equality, we investigated women's intentions to pursue career opportunities, in the form of career development programs. We built on lack of fit and signaling theory to argue that women's but not men's pursuit of career opportunities would be influenced by recruiter gender and gender‐stereotypical wording in recruitment advertisements. We conducted two studies in Germany. In Study 1 (video‐based experiment with 329 university students), we found that when a male recruiter used stereotypically masculine compared to feminine wording, female students anticipated lower belongingness, expected lower success of an application, and indicated lower application intentions for career opportunities. These differences in female students’ evaluations disappeared when the recruiter was female. While Study 2 (experimental vignette study with 545 employees) replicates the negative effects of masculine wording for female employees; the buffering effect of female recruiters was only replicated for younger, but not for older female employees. Women's anticipated belongingness mediated the relationship between advertisement wording and application intentions when the recruiter was male. Recruiter gender and wording had no effects on men. Our work contributes to a better understanding of when and why contextual characteristics in the recruitment process influence women's pursuit of career opportunities
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Impacts of global change on water-related sectors and society in a trans-boundary central European river basin – Part 2: From eco-hydrology to water demand management
This second part of the paper presents the details of the eco-hydrological model SWIM simulating the natural water supply and its coupling to WBalMo, a water management model.
Based on the climate scenarios of the STAR model, SWIM simulates the natural water and matter fluxes for the entire Elbe River area. All relevant processes are modelled for hydrotopes and the resulting discharges are accumulated in subbasins. The output data are input for the water management model WBalMo and the quality models Moneris and QSim.
WBalMo takes storage management, inputs and withdrawals into account and analyses how demands by industry, power plants and households will be met at changing natural supply conditions. Some of the first results shall be presented here
Exact Multifractal Spectra for Arbitrary Laplacian Random Walks
Iterated conformal mappings are used to obtain exact multifractal spectra of
the harmonic measure for arbitrary Laplacian random walks in two dimensions.
Separate spectra are found to describe scaling of the growth measure in time,
of the measure near the growth tip, and of the measure away from the growth
tip. The spectra away from the tip coincide with those of conformally invariant
equilibrium systems with arbitrary central charge , with related
to the particular walk chosen, while the scaling in time and near the tip
cannot be obtained from the equilibrium properties.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; references added, minor correction
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