149 research outputs found
Spin-orbit excitations of quantum wells
Confinement asymmetry effects on the photoabsorption of a quantum well are
discussed by means of a sum-rules approach using a Hamiltonian including a
Rashba spin-orbt coupling. We show that while the strength of the excitation is
zero when the spin-orbit coupling is neglected, the inclusion of the spin-orbit
interaction gives rise to a non zero strength and mean excitation energy in the
far-infrared region. A simple expression for these quantities up to the second
order in the Rashba parameter was derived. The effect of two-body Coulomb
interaction is then studied by means of a Quantum Monte Carlo calculation,
showing that electron-electron correlations induce only a small deviation from
the independent particle model result
Living under threat: psychosocial effects on victims of terrorism.
The fact of being under terrorist threats, such as death threats or intimidations, has psychosocial effects and impacts on victimâs psychosocial functioning. However, little attention has been paid to the study of threatened people through an evidence-based research. This study analyses quantitatively the experience of threatened people within a context of terrorism. Specifically, we want to gain insight into victimsâ perceptions of their threatening situation, through participants who were under threat by the Euskadi ta Askatasuna (ETA) (Basque Homeland and Freedom) terrorist group in the Basque Country, Spain. Through a cross-sectional study and Principal component analysis, 87 victims of the ETA terrorist group in the Basque Country were surveyed, during the period of violence. The findings suggested six main psychosocial effects on threatened individuals, comprising issues such as (1) Thought processes and risk perception; (2) Emotional reactions; (3) Circles of vulnerability; (4) Suspicion/distrust; (5) Social interactions and (6) Safety and freedom of movement. In addition, victimâs perception of control was negatively related to the psychosocial effects, in factors 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, respectively. The article discusses and shows implications of the power of threats, along with their effects, as a psychosocial coercion instrument
Universal quantum computation with the Orbital Angular Momentum of a single photon
We prove that a single photon with quantum data encoded in its orbital
angular momentum can be manipulated with simple optical elements to provide any
desired quantum computation. We will show how to build any quantum unitary
operator using beamsplitters, phase shifters, holograms and an extraction gate
based on quantum interrogation. The advantages and challenges of these approach
are then discussed, in particular the problem of the readout of the results.Comment: First version. Comments welcom
Taxonomy and hierarchy of psychological abuse strategies in intimate partner relationships
This study focuses on the analysis from of a psychosocial perspective of the components of psychological abuse in intimate partner relationships. Following a review of studies on the subject, the main objective that emerged was the need for a new taxonomy of strategies of psychological abuse accompanied by the corresponding operational definitions. After the proposal of this new classification, a second objective emerged that consisted of submitting it for evaluation by a group of experts through a Delphi study, in which thirty-two experts from the academic and professional worlds participated. These experts were asked to assess the suitability of the system categories, and to grade quantitatively the severity of the impact made by each of the strategies on the global phenomenon of psychological abuse in couples. The results show that the experts ratified the new classification of strategies and their operational definitions, thus endorsing their content and construct validity. In addition, they classified the strategies based on their degree of severity; those of an emotional nature were considered the severest, followed by those related to the immediate context, with those of a cognitive type in third place, and lastly, the behavioural ones. Finally, we discuss the results, and their implications.
Este estudio se centra en analizar los componentes del abuso psicolĂłgico en la violencia de pareja adulta y contra la mujer desde un enfoque psicosocial. Tras realizar una revisiĂłn de los estudios sobre el tema, se plantea como primer objetivo el proponer una nueva taxonomĂa de estrategias de abuso psicolĂłgico, acompañadas de sus respectivas definiciones operativas. A partir de esta nueva clasificaciĂłn, se traza un segundo objetivo que se centra en someter esta clasificaciĂłn al juicio de un grupo de expertos a travĂ©s de un estudio Delphi, en el que han participado 32 expertos de los ĂĄmbitos acadĂ©mico - universitario y profesional. Estos expertos debĂan juzgar la adecuaciĂłn del sistema de categorĂas, ademĂĄs de evaluar cuantitativamente la severidad que aporta cada una de las estrategias al fenĂłmeno global del abuso psicolĂłgico en la pareja. Los resultados muestran que los expertos ratifican la nueva clasificaciĂłn de estrategias y sus definiciones operativas, avalando asĂ su validez de contenido y constructo. AdemĂĄs, jerarquizaron las estrategias de abuso, atribuyendo mayor severidad a las de tipo emocional, seguidas de las relacionadas con el contexto cercano, de las de tipo cognitivo y las de carĂĄcter conductual. Se discuten los resultados, sus limitaciones y las implicaciones que pueden derivarse de ellos
Nonlinear Bloch modes, optical switching and Bragg solitons in tightly coupled micro-ring resonator chains
We study nonlinear wave phenomena in coupled ring resonator optical
waveguides in the tight coupling regime. A discrete model for the system
dynamics is put forward and its steady state nonlinear Bloch modes are derived.
The switching behavior of the transmission system is addressed numerically and
the results are explained in the light of this analytical result. We also
present a numerical study on the spontaneous generation of Bragg solitons from
a continuous-wave input.Comment: Final versio
Tectonic structure, evolution, and the nature of oceanic core complexes and their detachment fault zones (13°20âČN and 13°30âČN, Mid Atlantic Ridge)
Microbathymetry data, in situ observations, and sampling along the 138200N and 138200N oceanic
core complexes (OCCs) reveal mechanisms of detachment fault denudation at the seafloor, links between tectonic
extension and mass wasting, and expose the nature of corrugations, ubiquitous at OCCs. In the initial
stages of detachment faulting and high-angle fault, scarps show extensive mass wasting that reduces their
slope. Flexural rotation further lowers scarp slope, hinders mass wasting, resulting in morphologically complex
chaotic terrain between the breakaway and the denuded corrugated surface. Extension and drag along the fault
plane uplifts a wedge of hangingwall material (apron). The detachment surface emerges along a continuous
moat that sheds rocks and covers it with unconsolidated rubble, while local slumping emplaces rubble ridges
overlying corrugations. The detachment fault zone is a set of anostomosed slip planes, elongated in the alongextension
direction. Slip planes bind fault rock bodies defining the corrugations observed in microbathymetry
and sonar. Fault planes with extension-parallel stria are exposed along corrugation flanks, where the rubble cover
is shed. Detachment fault rocks are primarily basalt fault breccia at 138200N OCC, and gabbro and peridotite
at 138300N, demonstrating that brittle strain localization in shallow lithosphere form corrugations, regardless of
lithologies in the detachment zone. Finally, faulting and volcanism dismember the 138300N OCC, with widespread
present and past hydrothermal activity (Semenov fields), while the Irinovskoe hydrothermal field at the
138200N core complex suggests a magmatic source within the footwall. These results confirm the ubiquitous
relationship between hydrothermal activity and oceanic detachment formation and evolution
Recognizing detachment-mode seafloor spreading in the deep geological past.
Large-offset oceanic detachment faults are a characteristic of slow- and ultraslow-spreading ridges, leading to the formation of oceanic core complexes (OCCs) that expose upper mantle and lower crustal rocks on the seafloor. The lithospheric extension accommodated by these structures is now recognized as a fundamentally distinct âdetachment-modeâ of seafloor spreading compared to classical magmatic accretion. Here we demonstrate a paleomagnetic methodology that allows unequivocal recognition of detachment-mode seafloor spreading in ancient ophiolites and apply this to a potential Jurassic detachment fault system in the Mirdita ophiolite (Albania). We show that footwall and hanging wall blocks either side of an inferred detachment have significantly different magnetizations that can only be explained by relative rotation during seafloor spreading. The style of rotation is shown to be identical to rolling hinge footwall rotation documented recently in OCCs in the Atlantic, confirming that detachment-mode spreading operated at least as far back as the Jurassic
Globally aligned photomosaic of the Lucky Strike hydrothermal vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 37°18.5âČN) : release of georeferenced data, mosaic construction, and viewing software
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 9 (2008): Q12009, doi:10.1029/2008GC002204.We present a georeferenced photomosaic of the Lucky Strike hydrothermal vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 37°18âČN). The photomosaic was generated from digital photographs acquired using the ARGO II seafloor imaging system during the 1996 LUSTRE cruise, which surveyed a âŒ1 km2 zone and provided a coverage of âŒ20% of the seafloor. The photomosaic has a pixel resolution of 15 mm and encloses the areas with known active hydrothermal venting. The final mosaic is generated after an optimization that includes the automatic detection of the same benthic features across different images (feature-matching), followed by a global alignment of images based on the vehicle navigation. We also provide software to construct mosaics from large sets of images for which georeferencing information exists (location, attitude, and altitude per image), to visualize them, and to extract data. Georeferencing information can be provided by the raw navigation data (collected during the survey) or result from the optimization obtained from image matching. Mosaics based solely on navigation can be readily generated by any user but the optimization and global alignment of the mosaic requires a case-by-case approach for which no universally software is available. The Lucky Strike photomosaics (optimized and navigated-only) are publicly available through the Marine Geoscience Data System (MGDS, http://www.marine-geo.org). The mosaic-generating and viewing software is available through the Computer Vision and Robotics Group Web page at the University of Girona (http://eia.udg.es/âŒrafa/mosaicviewer.html).This work has been supported by the EU Marie Curie
RTNs MOMARNet (OD, RG, JE, LN, JF, NG) and FREESUBNet
(RG, NG, XC), the Spanish Ministry of Science and
Innovation (grant CTM2007â64751; RG, JE), CNRS and
ANR (grant ANR NT05â3_42212, JE), ICREA (LN), and
by the Generalitat de Catalunya (JE, RG). JF has been funded
by MICINN under FPI grant BES-2006-12733 and NG has
been supported by MICINN under the ââRamon y Cajalââ
program
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