5,479 research outputs found
Causation, Measurement Relevance and No-conspiracy in EPR
In this paper I assess the adequacy of no-conspiracy conditions employed in
the usual derivations of the Bell inequality in the context of EPR
correlations. First, I look at the EPR correlations from a purely
phenomenological point of view and claim that common cause explanations of
these cannot be ruled out. I argue that an appropriate common cause explanation
requires that no-conspiracy conditions are re-interpreted as mere common
cause-measurement independence conditions. In the right circumstances then,
violations of measurement independence need not entail any kind of conspiracy
(nor backwards in time causation). To the contrary, if measurement operations
in the EPR context are taken to be causally relevant in a specific way to the
experiment outcomes, their explicit causal role provides the grounds for a
common cause explanation of the corresponding correlations.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
A room temperature 19-channel magnetic field mapping device for cardiac signals
We present a multichannel cardiac magnetic field imaging system built in
Fribourg from optical double-resonance Cs vapor magnetometers. It consists of
25 individual sensors designed to record magnetic field maps of the beating
human heart by simultaneous measurements on a grid of 19 points over the chest.
The system is operated as an array of second order gradiometers using
sophisticated digitally controlled feedback loops.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Oxygen isotope effect on the in-plane penetration depth in underdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single crystals
We report measurements of the oxygen isotope effect (OIE) on the in-plane
penetration depth \lambda_{ab}(0) in underdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single
crystals. A highly sensitive magnetic torque sensor with a resolution of \Delta
\tau ~ 10^{-12} Nm was used for the magnetic measurements on microcrystals with
a mass of ~ 10 microg. The OIE on \lambda_{ab}^{-2}(0) is found to be -10(2)%
for x = 0.080 and -8(1)% for x = 0.086. It arises mainly from the oxygen mass
dependence of the in-plane effective mass m_{ab}*. The present results suggest
that lattice vibrations are important for the occurrence of high temperature
superconductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Reichenbach's Common Cause Principle in Algebraic Quantum Field Theory with Locally Finite Degrees of Freedom
In the paper it will be shown that Reichenbach's Weak Common Cause Principle
is not valid in algebraic quantum field theory with locally finite degrees of
freedom in general. Namely, for any pair of projections A and B supported in
spacelike separated double cones O(a) and O(b), respectively, a correlating
state can be given for which there is no nontrivial common cause (system)
located in the union of the backward light cones of O(a) and O(b) and commuting
with the both A and B. Since noncommuting common cause solutions are presented
in these states the abandonment of commutativity can modulate this result:
noncommutative Common Cause Principles might survive in these models
Isotope effects in underdoped cuprate superconductors: a quantum phenomenon
We show that the unusual doping dependence of the isotope effects on
transition temperature and zero temperature in - plane penetration depth
naturally follows from the doping driven 3D-2D crossover, the 2D quantum
superconductor to insulator transition (QSI) in the underdoped limit and the
change of the relative doping concentration upon isotope substitution. Close to
the QSI transition both, the isotope coefficient of transition temperature and
penetration depth approach the coefficient of the relative dopant
concentration, and its divergence sets the scale. These predictions are fully
consistent with the experimental data and imply that close to the underdoped
limit the unusual isotope effect on transition temperature and penetration
depth uncovers critical phenomena associated with the quantum superconductor to
insulator transition in two dimensions.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Quelques plats pour la m\'etrique de Hofer
We show, by an elementary and explicit construction, that the group of
Hamiltonian diffeomorphisms of certain symplectic manifolds, endowed with
Hofer's metric, contains subgroups quasi-isometric to Euclidean spaces of
arbitrary dimension.Comment: 9 pages, minor change
Parasite infections in a social carnivore: Evidence of their fitness consequences and factors modulating infection load
There are substantial individual differences in parasite composition and infection load in wildlife populations. Few studies have investigated the factors shaping this heterogeneity in large wild mammals or the impact of parasite infections on Darwinian fitness, particularly in juveniles. A host's parasite composition and infection load can be shaped by factors that determine contact with infective parasite stages and those that determine the host's resistance to infection, such as abiotic and social environmental factors, and age. Host–parasite interactions and synergies between coinfecting parasites may also be important. We test predictions derived from these different processes to investigate factors shaping infection loads (fecal egg/oocyte load) of two energetically costly gastrointestinal parasites: the hookworm Ancylostoma and the intracellular Cystoisospora, in juvenile spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) in the Serengeti National Park, in Tanzania. We also assess whether parasite infections curtail survival to adulthood and longevity. Ancylostoma and Cystoisospora infection loads declined as the number of adult clan members increased, a result consistent with an encounter‐reduction effect whereby adults reduced encounters between juveniles and infective larvae, but were not affected by the number of juveniles in a clan. Infection loads decreased with age, possibly because active immune responses to infection improved with age. Differences in parasite load between clans possibly indicate variation in abiotic environmental factors between clan den sites. The survival of juveniles (<365 days old) to adulthood decreased with Ancylostoma load, increased with age, and was modulated by maternal social status. High‐ranking individuals with low Ancylostoma loads had a higher survivorship during the first 4 years of life than high‐ranking individuals with high Ancylostoma loads. These findings suggest that high infection loads with energetically costly parasites such as hookworms during early life can have negative fitness consequences
A Poincar\'e-Birkhoff theorem for tight Reeb flows on
We consider Reeb flows on the tight -sphere admitting a pair of closed
orbits forming a Hopf link. If the rotation numbers associated to the
transverse linearized dynamics at these orbits fail to satisfy a certain
resonance condition then there exist infinitely many periodic trajectories
distinguished by their linking numbers with the components of the link. This
result admits a natural comparison to the Poincar\'e-Birkhoff theorem on
area-preserving annulus homeomorphisms. An analogous theorem holds on
and applies to geodesic flows of Finsler metrics on .Comment: 67 pages. To appear in Inventiones Mathematica
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