13,752 research outputs found
Disentanglement and decoherence in two-spin and three-spin systems under dephasing
We compare disentanglement and decoherence rates within two-spin and
three-spin entangled systems subjected to all possible combinations of local
and collective pure dephasing noise combinations. In all cases, the bipartite
entanglement decay rate is found to be greater than or equal to the
dephasing-decoherence rates and often significantly greater. This sharpens
previous results for two-spin systems [T. Yu and J. H. Eberly Phys. Rev. B 68,
165322 (2003)] and extends them to the three-spin context.Comment: 17 page
Electronic Books for Evangelical Libraries A Progress Report
In recent years, members of the Association of Christian Librarians (ACL) have clearly stated their interest in seeing publishers – especially those with evangelical affiliation – offer electronic book products in formats that are friendly to libraries. This subject has generated conversation at our business meetings and on our listserv. In the summer of 2006, some 100 members of ACL’s Christian Library Consortium purchased a collection of 400 religion-oriented electronic books from NetLibrary®. At the 2007 conference, which convened in Grand Rapids, Michigan, representatives of four local Christian publishers participated in a panel discussion that was dominated by the subject of electronic distribution
Are Drone Strikes Effective in Afghanistan and Pakistan? On the Dynamics of Violence between the United States and the Taliban
Strikes by unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, have been the primary weapon used by the United States to combat the Taliban and Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan. This paper examines the dynamics of violence involving drone strikes and the Taliban/Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan from January 2007 to December 2010. We find that drone strikes do not have any significant impact on terrorist violence in Afghanistan but that drone strikes do have a significant impact on Taliban/Al-Qaeda violence in Pakistan. We find that our results are robust to examining different time periods and lag structures. We also examine the impact of successful and unsuccessful drone strikes (which did or did not succeed in targeted killing of a militant leader) on terrorist attacks by the Taliban. We find strong negative impacts of unsuccessful drone strikes on Taliban violence in Pakistan, showing the deterrent effects are quite strong, while the incapacitation effects appear to be weak or non-existent.time series models, conflict
On the Sensitivity of Return to Schooling Estimates to Estimation Methods, Model Specification, and Influential Outliers If Identification Is Weak
We provide a comparison of return to schooling estimates based on an influential study by Angrist and Krueger (1991) using two stage least squares (TSLS), limited information maximum likelihood (LIML), jackknife (JIVE), and split sample instrumental variables (SSIV) estimation. We find that the estimated return to education is quite sensitive to the age controls used in the models as well as the estimation method used. In particular, we provide evidence that JIVE coefficients' standard errors are inflated by a group of extreme years of education observations, for which identification is especially weak. We propose to use Cook's Distance in order to identify influential outliers having substantial influence on first-stage JIVE coefficients and fitted values.Cook's Distance, heteroskedasticity, outliers, return to education, specification, weak instruments
Local-dephasing-induced entanglement sudden death in two-component finite-dimensional systems
Entanglement sudden death (ESD), the complete loss of entanglement in finite
time, is demonstrated to occur in a class of bipartite states of qu-d-it pairs
of any finite dimension d > 2, when prepared in so-called `isotropic states'
and subject to multi-local dephasing noise alone. This extends previous results
for qubit pairs [T. Yu, J. H. Eberly, Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 140403 (2006)] to
all qu-d-it pairs with d > 2.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Transforming mesoscale granular plasticity through particle shape
When an amorphous material is strained beyond the point of yielding it enters
a state of continual reconfiguration via dissipative, avalanche-like slip
events that relieve built-up local stress. However, how the statistics of such
events depend on local interactions among the constituent units remains
debated. To address this we perform experiments on granular material in which
we use particle shape to vary the interactions systematically. Granular
material, confined under constant pressure boundary conditions, is uniaxially
compressed while stress is measured and internal rearrangements are imaged with
x-rays. We introduce volatility, a quantity from economic theory, as a powerful
new tool to quantify the magnitude of stress fluctuations, finding systematic,
shape-dependent trends. For all 22 investigated shapes the magnitude of
relaxation events is well-fit by a truncated power law distribution , as has been proposed within the context of plasticity
models. The power law exponent for all shapes tested clusters around
1.5, within experimental uncertainty covering the range 1.3 - 1.7. The
shape independence of and its compatibility with mean field models
indicate that the granularity of the system, but not particle shape, modifies
the stress redistribution after a slip event away from that of continuum
elasticity. Meanwhile, the characteristic maximum event size changes by
two orders of magnitude and tracks the shape dependence of volatility. Particle
shape in granular materials is therefore a powerful new factor influencing the
distance at which an amorphous system operates from scale-free criticality.
These experimental results are not captured by current models and suggest a
need to reexamine the mechanisms driving mesoscale plastic deformation in
amorphous systems.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. v3 adds a new appendix and figure about event
rates and changes several parts the tex
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