396 research outputs found
Tree-body loss of of trapped ultracold Rb atoms due to a Feshbach resonance
The loss of ultracold trapped atoms in the vicinity of a Feshbach resonance
is treated as a two-stage reaction, using the Breit-Wigner theory. The first
stage is the formation of a resonant diatomic molecule, and the second one is
its deactivation by inelastic collisions with other atoms. This model is
applied to the analysis of recent experiments on Rb, leading to an
estimated value of cms for the deactivation rate
coefficient.Comment: LaTeX, 4 pages with 1 figures, uses REVTeX4, uses improved
experimental dat
Molecular analysis of fungal communities and laccase genes in decomposing litter reveals differences among forest types but no impact of nitrogen deposition
The fungal community of the forest floor was examined as the cause of previously reported increases in soil organic matter due to experimental N deposition in ecosystems producing predominantly high-lignin litter, and the opposite response in ecosystems producing low-lignin litter. The mechanism proposed to explain this phenomenon was that white-rot basidiomycetes are more important in the degradation of high-lignin litter than of low-lignin litter, and that their activity is suppressed by N deposition. We found that forest floor mass in the low-lignin sugar-maple dominated system decreased in October due to experimental N deposition, whereas forest floor mass of high-lignin oak-dominated ecosystems was unaffected by N deposition. Increased relative abundance of basidiomycetes in high-lignin forest floor was confirmed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and sequencing. Abundance of basidiomycete laccase genes, encoding an enzyme used by white-rot basidiomycetes in the degradation of lignin, was 5–10 times greater in high-lignin forest floor than in low-lignin forest floor. While the differences between the fungal communities in different ecosystems were consistent with the proposed mechanism, no significant effects of N deposition were detected on DGGE profiles, laccase gene abundance, laccase length heterogeneity profiles, or phenol oxidase activity. Our observations indicate that the previously detected accumulation of soil organic matter in the high-lignin system may be driven by effects of N deposition on organisms in the mineral soil, rather than on organisms residing in the forest floor. However, studies of in situ gene expression and temporal and spatial variability within forest floor communities will be necessary to further relate the ecosystem dynamics of organic carbon to microbial communities and atmospheric N deposition.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72825/1/j.1462-2920.2007.01250.x.pd
Dynamics of quantum quenching for BCS-BEC systems in the shallow BEC regime
The problem of coupled Fermi-Bose mixtures of an ultracold gas near a narrow
Feshbach resonance is approached through the time-dependent and complex
Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) theory. The dynamical system is constructed using
Ginzburg-Landau-Abrikosov-Gor'kov (GLAG) path integral methods with the single
mode approximation for the composite Bosons, and the equilibrium states are
obtained in the BEC regime for adiabatic variations of the Feshbach detuning
along the stationary solutions of the dynamical system. Investigations into the
rich superfluid dynamics of this system in the shallow BEC regime yields the
onset of multiple interference patterns in the dynamics as the system is
quenched from the deep-BEC regime. This results in a partial collapse and
revival of the coherent matter wave field of the BEC, whose temporal profile is
reported.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to European Journal of Physics Plu
Rape and respectability: ideas about sexual violence and social class
Women on low incomes are disproportionately represented among sexual violence survivors, yet feminist research on this topic has paid very little attention to social class. This article blends recent research on class, gender and sexuality with what we know about sexual violence. It is argued that there is a need to engage with classed distinctions between women in terms of contexts for and experiences of sexual violence, and to look at interactions between pejorative constructions of working-class sexualities and how complainants and defendants are perceived and treated. The classed division between the sexual and the feminine, drawn via the notion of respectability, is applied to these issues. This piece is intended to catalyse further research and debate, and raises a number of questions for future work on sexual violence and social class
Properties of a Dilute Bose Gas near a Feshbach Resonance
In this paper, properties of a homogeneous Bose gas with a Feshbach resonance
are studied in the dilute region at zero temperature. The stationary state
contains condensations of atoms and molecules. The ratio of the molecule
density to the atom density is . There are two types of excitations,
molecular excitations and atomic excitations. Atomic excitations are gapless,
consistent with the traditional theory of a dilute Bose gas. The molecular
excitation energy is finite in the long wavelength limit as observed in recent
experiments on Rb. In addition, the decay process of the condensate is
studied. The coefficient of the three-body recombination rate is about 140
times larger than that of a Bose gas without a Feshbach resonance, in
reasonably good agreement with the experiment on Na.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, comparison between the calculated three-body
recombination rate and the experimental data for Na system has been adde
Methane Flux in Cropland and Adjacent Riparian Buff ers with Different Vegetation Covers
While water quality functions of conservation buffers established adjacent to cropped fields have been widely documented, the relative contribution of these re-established perennial plant systems to greenhouse gases has not been completely documented. In the case of methane (CH(4)), these systems have the potential to serve as sinks of CH(4) or may provide favorable conditions for CH(4) production. This study quantifies CH(4) flux from soils of riparian buffer systems comprised of three vegetation types and compares these fluxes with those of adjacent crop fields. We measured soil properties and diel and seasonal variations of CH(4) flux in 7 to 17 yr-old re-established riparian forest buffers, warm-season and cool-season grass filters, and an adjacent crop field located in the Bear Creek watershed in central Iowa. Forest buffer and grass filter soils had significantly lower bulk density (P \u3c 0.01); and higher pH (P \u3c 0.01), total carbon (TC) (P \u3c 0.01), and total nitrogen (TN) (P \u3c 0.01) than crop field soils. There was no significant relationship between CH(4) flux and soil moisture or soil temperature among sites within the range of conditions observed. Cumulative CH(4) flux was -0.80 kg CH(4)-C ha(-1) yr(-1) in the cropped field, -0.46 kg CH(4)-C ha(-1) yr(-1) within the forest buffers, and 0.04 kg CH(4)-C ha(-1) yr(-1) within grass filters, but difference among vegetation covers was not significant. Results suggest that CH(4) flux was not changed after establishment of perennial vegetation on cropped soils, despite significant changes in soil properties
Control of an atom laser using feedback
A generalised method of using feedback to control Bose-Einstein condensates
is introduced. The condensates are modelled by the Gross-Pitaevskii equation,
so only semiclassical fluctations can be suppressed, and back-action from the
measurement is ignored. We show that for any available control, a feedback
scheme can be found to reduce the energy while the appropriate moment is still
dynamic. We demonstrate these schemes by considering a condensate trapped in a
harmonic potential that can be modulated in strength and position. The
formalism of our feedback scheme also allows the inclusion of certain types of
non-linear controls. If the non-linear interaction between the atoms can be
controlled via a Feshbach resonance, we show that the feedback process can
operate with a much higher efficiency.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Formation of a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate and an entangled atomic gas by Feshbach resonance
Processes of association in an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate, and
dissociation of the resulting molecular condensate, due to Feshbach resonance
in a time-dependent magnetic field, are analyzed incorporating non-mean-field
quantum corrections and inelastic collisions. Calculations for the Na atomic
condensate demonstrate that there exist optimal conditions under which about
80% of the atomic population can be converted to a relatively long-lived
molecular condensate (with lifetimes of 10 ms and more). Entangled atoms in
two-mode squeezed states (with noise reduction of about 30 dB) may also be
formed by molecular dissociation. A gas of atoms in squeezed or entangled
states can have applications in quantum computing, communications, and
measurements.Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages with 4 figures, uses REVTeX
Mean-field description of collapsing and exploding Bose-Einstein condensates
We perform numerical simulation based on the time-dependent mean-field
Gross-Pitaevskii equation to understand some aspects of a recent experiment by
Donley et al. on the dynamics of collapsing and exploding Bose-Einstein
condensates of Rb atoms. They manipulated the atomic interaction by an
external magnetic field via a Feshbach resonance, thus changing the repulsive
condensate into an attractive one and vice versa. In the actual experiment they
changed suddenly the scattering length of atomic interaction from positive to a
large negative value on a pre-formed condensate in an axially symmetric trap.
Consequently, the condensate collapses and ejects atoms via explosion. We find
that the present mean-field analysis can explain some aspects of the dynamics
of the collapsing and exploding Bose-Einstein condensates.Comment: 9 Latex pages, 10 ps and eps files, version accepted in Physical
Review A, minor changes mad
Barrier effects on the collective excitations of split Bose-Einstein condensates
We investigate the collective excitations of a single-species Bose gas at T=0
in a harmonic trap where the confinement undergoes some splitting along one
spatial direction. We mostly consider onedimensional potentials consisting of
two harmonic wells separated a distance 2 z_0, since they essentially contain
all the barrier effects that one may visualize in the 3D situation. We find,
within a hydrodynamic approximation, that regardless the dimensionality of the
system, pairs of levels in the excitation spectrum, corresponding to
neighbouring even and odd excitations, merge together as one increases the
barrier height up to the current value of the chemical potential. The
excitation spectra computed in the hydrodynamical or Thomas-Fermi limit are
compared with the results of exactly solving the time-dependent
Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We analyze as well the characteristics of the
spatial pattern of excitations of threedimensional boson systems according to
the amount of splitting of the condensate.Comment: RevTeX, 12 pages, 13 ps figure
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