3,644 research outputs found
Efficiencies of Quantum Optical Detectors
We propose a definition for the efficiency that can be universally applied to
all classes of quantum optical detectors. This definition is based on the
maximum amount of optical loss that a physically plausible device can
experience while still replicating the properties of a given detector. We prove
that detector efficiency cannot be increased using linear optical processing.
That is, given a set of detectors, as well as arbitrary linear optical elements
and ancillary light sources, it is impossible to construct detection devices
that would exhibit higher efficiencies than the initial set.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Activity on the Edge of Lundenwic: Excavations at Parker House in the London Borough of Camden
In 2016 and 2017 Archaeology South-East undertook a series of investigations at Parker House, Parker Street, London Borough of Camden in advance of the redevelopment of the site for housing. The site lies within the Middle Saxon settlement of Lundenwic and the earliest features found on site date to this period. The activity primarily comprised gravel quarrying within an area demarcated by ditches and spans the later 8th and early 9th centuries AD, a period generally acknowledged as a time when Lundenwic was in decline. The earliest quarry pits were generally shallow and possibly within an enclosure. The later quarry pits, which were deeper and more extensive, were located within a probable rectilinear enclosure formed by two perpendicular ditches, one of which probably formed part of a defensive boundary surrounding Lundenwic in its latter years. The final phases of Saxon activity were characterised by refuse deposition. Industrial activity was evidenced by the presence of a probable mortar mixing pit.
The site then appears to have reverted to farmland until the 17th century when further gravel extraction and refuse dumping occurred. This took place as the local street network was being built and the gravel extracted may have been used in their construction. By 1682 the site was bisected by St Thomas’s Street, which was lined with terraced housing. The fragmentary remains of these houses and their back yards containing associated features were investigated. By 1893 these houses had been demolished, the street closed and Parker House constructed on the site
Mean Curvature Flow of Spacelike Graphs
We prove the mean curvature flow of a spacelike graph in of a map from a closed Riemannian
manifold with to a complete Riemannian manifold
with bounded curvature tensor and derivatives, and with
sectional curvatures satisfying , remains a spacelike graph,
exists for all time, and converges to a slice at infinity. We also show, with
no need of the assumption , that if , or if and
, constant, any map is trivially
homotopic provided where
, in case , and
in case . This largely extends some known results for
constant and compact, obtained using the Riemannian structure
of , and also shows how regularity theory on the mean
curvature flow is simpler and more natural in pseudo-Riemannian setting then in
the Riemannian one.Comment: version 5: Math.Z (online first 30 July 2010). version 4: 30 pages:
we replace the condition by the the weaker one .
The proofs are essentially the same. We change the title to a shorter one. We
add an applicatio
External Shear in Quadruply Imaged Lens Systems
We use publicly available N-body simulations and semi-analytic models of
galaxy formation to estimate the levels of external shear due to structure near
the lens in gravitational lens systems. We also describe two selection effects,
specific to four-image systems, that enhance the probability of observing
systems to have higher external shear. Ignoring additional contributions from
"cosmic shear" and assuming that lens galaxies are not significantly flattened,
we find that the mean shear at the position of a quadruple lens galaxy is 0.11,
the rms shear is roughly 0.15, and there is roughly a 45% likelihood of
external shear greater than 0.1. This is much larger than previous estimates
and in good agreement with typical measured external shear. The higher shear
primarily stems from the tendency of early-type galaxies, which are the
majority of lenses, to reside in overdense regions.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, ApJ in press, minor revision
Private Database Queries Using Quantum States with Limited Coherence Times
We describe a method for private database queries using exchange of quantum
states with bits encoded in mutually incompatible bases. For technology with
limited coherence time, the database vendor can announce the encoding after a
suitable delay to allow the user to privately learn one of two items in the
database without the ability to also definitely infer the second item. This
quantum approach also allows the user to choose to learn other functions of the
items, such as the exclusive-or of their bits, but not to gain more information
than equivalent to learning one item, on average. This method is especially
useful for items consisting of a few bits by avoiding the substantial overhead
of conventional cryptographic approaches.Comment: extended to generalized (POVM) measurement
Organic Rankine cycles in waste heat recovery: a comparative study
A theoretical study of organic Rankine cycles (ORCs) powered by three different waste heat sources is presented. The heat sources, all found in industrial processes, span a range of energy scales capable of powering ORCs from ∼10 kW to 10 MW. A novel method of pinch point analysis is presented, allowing variable heat input to the ORC. This study models the ORC over a range of operating conditions and with different working fluids for each heat source. Results from each source are compared to assess the influence of different heat source characteristics on optimal ORC design
Faint M-dwarfs and the structure of the Galactic disk
We use broadband photometry and low-resolution spectra of a complete sample
of late-K and M dwarfs brighter than I=22 in three fields at high galactic
latitude to study issues relating to galactic structure and large scale
abundance gradients in the Galaxy. The observed starcounts in each field are a
good match to the predictions of models based on deep starcount data in other
intermediate-latitude fields, and these models identify the late-type stars as
members of the Galactic disk. Abundances for these late type stars are
estimated via narrowband indices that measure the strength of the TiO and CaH
bands in their spectra. Our results show that the average abundance in the
Galactic disk remains close to solar even at heights of more than 2 kpc above
the Plane.Comment: to appear in PASP; 17 pages, including 7 embedded, postscript figures
and 1 embedded table; uses AAS LaTeX style files (not included); also
available at http://astro.caltech.edu/~map/map.bibliography.htm
The origin of the hot metal-poor gas in NGC1291: Testing the hypothesis of gas dynamics as the cause of the gas heating
In this paper we test the idea that the low-metallicity hot gas in the centre
of NGC 1291 is heated via a dynamical process. In this scenario, the gas from
the outer gas-rich ring loses energy through bar-driven shocks and falls to the
centre. Heating of the gas to X-ray temperatures comes from the high velocity
that it reaches ( 700 \kms) as it falls to the bottom of the potential
well. This would explain why the stellar metallicity in the bulge region is
around solar while the hot gas metallicity is around 0.1 solar. We carried out
an observational test to check this hypothesis by measuring the metallicity of
HII regions in the outer ring to check whether they matched the hot gas
metallicity. For this purpose we obtained medium resolution long slit
spectroscopy with FORS1 on the ESO VLT at Paranal and obtained the
metallicities using emission line ratio diagnostics. The obtained metallicities
are compatible with the bulge stellar metallicities but very different from the
hot-gas metallicity. However, when comparing the different time-scales, the gas
in the ring had time enough to get enriched through stellar processes,
therefore we cannot rule out the dynamical mechanism as the heating process of
the gas. However, the blue colours of the outer ring and the dust structures in
the bar region could suggest that the origin of the X-ray hot gas is due to the
infall of material from further out.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. A&A accepte
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