3,446 research outputs found
Contemporary medical television and crisis in the NHS
This article maps the terrain of contemporary UK medical television, paying particular attention to Call the Midwife as its centrepiece, and situating it in contextual relation to the current crisis in the NHS. It provides a historical overview of UK and US medical television, illustrating how medical television today has been shaped by noteworthy antecedents. It argues that crisis rhetoric surrounding healthcare leading up to the passing of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 has been accompanied by a renaissance in medical television. And that issues, strands and clusters have emerged in forms, registers and modes with noticeable regularity, especially around the value of affective labour, the cultural politics of nostalgia and the neoliberalisation of healthcare
Critical properties of two-dimensional Josephson junction arrays with zero-point quantum fluctuations
We present results from an extensive analytic and numerical study of a
two-dimensional model of a square array of ultrasmall Josephson junctions. We
include the ultrasmall self and mutual capacitances of the junctions, for the
same parameter ranges as those produced in the experiments. The model
Hamiltonian studied includes the Josephson, , as well as the charging,
, energies between superconducting islands. The corresponding quantum
partition function is expressed in different calculationally convenient ways
within its path-integral representation. The phase diagram is analytically
studied using a WKB renormalization group (WKB-RG) plus a self-consistent
harmonic approximation (SCHA) analysis, together with non-perturbative quantum
Monte Carlo simulations. Most of the results presented here pertain to the
superconductor to normal (S-N) region, although some results for the insulating
to normal (I-N) region are also included. We find very good agreement between
the WKB-RG and QMC results when compared to the experimental data. To fit the
data, we only used the experimentally determined capacitances as fitting
parameters. The WKB-RG analysis in the S-N region predicts a low temperature
instability i.e. a Quantum Induced Transition (QUIT). We carefully simulations
and carry out a finite size analysis of as a function of the
magnitude of imaginary time axis . We find that for some relatively
large values of (, the
limit does appear to give a {\it non-zero} , while
for , . We use the SCHA to analytically understand
the dependence of the QMC results with good agreement between them.
Finally, we also carried out a WKB-RG analysis in the I-N region and found no
evidence of a low temperature QUIT, up to lowest order in Comment: 39 pages, 18 postscript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Feedback-control of quantum systems using continuous state-estimation
We present a formulation of feedback in quantum systems in which the best
estimates of the dynamical variables are obtained continuously from the
measurement record, and fed back to control the system. We apply this method to
the problem of cooling and confining a single quantum degree of freedom, and
compare it to current schemes in which the measurement signal is fed back
directly in the manner usually considered in existing treatments of quantum
feedback. Direct feedback may be combined with feedback by estimation, and the
resulting combination, performed on a linear system, is closely analogous to
classical LQG control theory with residual feedback.Comment: 12 pages, multicol revtex, revised and extende
Electron spectral function and algebraic spin liquid for the normal state of underdoped high superconductors
We propose to describe the spin fluctuations in the normal state of
underdoped high superconductors as a manifestation of an algebraic spin
liquid. We have performed calculations within the slave-boson model to support
our proposal. Under the spin-charge separation picture, the normal state (the
spin-pseudogap phase) is described by massless Dirac fermions, charged bosons,
and a gauge field. We find that the gauge interaction is a marginal
perturbation and drives the mean-field free-spinon fixed point to a more
complicated spin-quantum-fixed-point -- the algebraic spin liquid, where
gapless excitations interact at low energies. The electron spectral function in
the normal state was found to have a Luttinger-liquid-like line shape as
observed in experiments. The spectral function obtained in the superconducting
state shows how a coherent quasiparticle peak appears from the incoherent
background as spin and charge recombine.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. published versio
Dynamics of conversion of supercurrents into normal currents, and vice versa
The generation and destruction of the supercurrent in a superconductor (S)
between two resistive normal (N) current leads connected to a current source is
computed from the source equation for the supercurrent density. This equation
relates the gradient of the pair potential's phase to electron and hole
wavepackets that create and destroy Cooper pairs in the N/S interfaces. Total
Andreev reflection and supercurrent transmission of electrons and holes are
coupled together by the phase rigidity of the non-bosonic Cooper-pair
condensate. The calculations are illustrated by snapshots from a computer film.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Temporal, Situational and Interactional Features of Women’s Violent Conflicts
This article examines contextual and situational influences on the processural development of women\u27s violent conflicts. Through close analysis of 3 women\u27s accounts of their disputes and associated violent behaviours, we provide a rich description of how such events evolved over time and how the interviewees managed this process. Drawing upon both criminological and feminist theories, our analysis highlights existing gaps in the literature, providing an exploratory discussion of the interaction of gender with situational elements and the production of assaultive events
C-axis Penetration Depth and Inter-layer Conductivity in the Thallium Based Cuprate Superconductors
The c-axis Josephson plasmon in optimally doped single-layer and bi-layer
high Tc cuprates Tl2201 and Tl2212 have been investigated using infrared
spectroscopy. We observed the plasma frequencies for these two compounds at
27.8 and 25.6 cm-1 respectively, which we interpret as a Josephson resonance
across the TlO blocking layers. No maximum in the temperature dependence of the
c-axis conductivity was observed below Tc, indicating that even in the
superconducting state a coherent quasi-particle contribution to the c-axis
conductivity is absent or very weak, in contrast to the behaviour of the
ab-plane conductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Free Energy of an Inhomogeneous Superconductor: a Wave Function Approach
A new method for calculating the free energy of an inhomogeneous
superconductor is presented. This method is based on the quasiclassical limit
(or Andreev approximation) of the Bogoliubov-de Gennes (or wave function)
formulation of the theory of weakly coupled superconductors. The method is
applicable to any pure bulk superconductor described by a pair potential with
arbitrary spatial dependence, in the presence of supercurrents and external
magnetic field. We find that both the local density of states and the free
energy density of an inhomogeneous superconductor can be expressed in terms of
the diagonal resolvent of the corresponding Andreev Hamiltonian, resolvent
which obeys the so-called Gelfand-Dikii equation. Also, the connection between
the well known Eilenberger equation for the quasiclassical Green's function and
the less known Gelfand-Dikii equation for the diagonal resolvent of the Andreev
Hamiltonian is established. These results are used to construct a general
algorithm for calculating the (gauge invariant) gradient expansion of the free
energy density of an inhomogeneous superconductor at arbitrary temperatures.Comment: REVTeX, 28 page
Josephson array of mesoscopic objects. Modulation of system properties through the chemical potential
The phase diagram of a two-dimensional Josephson array of mesoscopic objects
is examined. Quantum fluctuations in both the modulus and phase of the
superconducting order parameter are taken into account within a lattice boson
Hubbard model. Modulating the average occupation number of the sites in
the system leads to changes in the state of the array, and the character of
these changes depends significantly on the region of the phase diagram being
examined. In the region where there are large quantum fluctuations in the phase
of the superconducting order parameter, variation of the chemical potential
causes oscillations with alternating superconducting (superfluid) and normal
states of the array. On the other hand, in the region where the bosons interact
weakly, the properties of the system depend monotonically on . Lowering
the temperature and increasing the particle interaction force lead to a
reduction in the width of the region of variation in within which the
system properties depend weakly on the average occupation number. The phase
diagram of the array is obtained by mapping this quantum system onto a
classical two-dimensional XY model with a renormalized Josephson coupling
constant and is consistent with our quantum Path-Integral Monte Carlo
calculations.Comment: 12 pages, 8 Postscript figure
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