1,504 research outputs found
A multiple scales approach to sound generation by vibrating bodies
The problem of determining the acoustic field in an inviscid, isentropic fluid generated by a solid body whose surface executes prescribed vibrations is formulated and solved as a multiple scales perturbation problem, using the Mach number M based on the maximum surface velocity as the perturbation parameter. Following the idea of multiple scales, new 'slow' spacial scales are introduced, which are defined as the usual physical spacial scale multiplied by powers of M. The governing nonlinear differential equations lead to a sequence of linear problems for the perturbation coefficient functions. However, it is shown that the higher order perturbation functions obtained in this manner will dominate the lower order solutions unless their dependence on the slow spacial scales is chosen in a certain manner. In particular, it is shown that the perturbation functions must satisfy an equation similar to Burgers' equation, with a slow spacial scale playing the role of the time-like variable. The method is illustrated by a simple one-dimenstional example, as well as by three different cases of a vibrating sphere. The results are compared with solutions obtained by purely numerical methods and some insights provided by the perturbation approach are discussed
Limited measurement dependence in multiple runs of a Bell test
The assumption of free will - the ability of an experimentalist to make
random choices - is central to proving the indeterminism of quantum resources,
the primary tool in quantum cryptography. Relaxing the assumption in a Bell
test allows violation of the usual classical threshold by correlating the
random number generators used to select measurements with the devices that
perform them. In this paper, we examine not only these correlations, but those
across multiple runs of the experiment. This enables an explicit exposition of
the optimal cheating strategy and how the correlations manifest themselves
within this strategy. Similar to other recent results, we prove that there
remain Bell violations for a sufficiently high, yet non-maximal degree of free
will which cannot be simulated by a classical attack, regardless of how many
runs of the experiment those choices are correlated over.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Version 2 reflects the published paper in
Physical Review A, which among some minor additions/changes now includes
Section V discussing the numerical approach to Bell inequalities other than
CHS
Variant N=(1,1) Supergravity and (Minkowski)_4 x S^2 Vacua
We construct the fermionic sector and supersymmetry transformation rules of a
variant N=(1,1) supergravity theory obtained by generalized Kaluza-Klein
reduction from seven dimensions. We show that this model admits both
(Minkowski)_4 x S^2 and (Minkowski)_3 x S^3 vacua. We perform a consistent
Kaluza-Klein reduction on S^2 and obtain D=4, N=2 supergravity coupled to a
vector multiplet, which can be consistently truncated to give rise to D=4, N=1
supergravity with a chiral multiplet.Comment: Latex, 17 pages. Version appearing in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Bitwise Bell inequality violations for an entangled state involving 2N ions
Following on from previous work [J. A. Larsson, Phys. Rev. A 67, 022108
(2003)], Bell inequalities based on correlations between binary digits are
considered for a particular entangled state involving 2N trapped ions. These
inequalities involve applying displacement operations to half of the ions and
then measuring correlations between pairs of corresponding bits in the binary
representations of the number of centre-of-mass phonons of N particular ions.
It is shown that the state violates the inequalities and thus displays
nonclassical correlations. It is also demonstrated that it violates a Bell
inequality when the displacements are replaced by squeezing operations.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Recommended from our members
Survey to explore understanding of the principles of aseptic technique: Qualitative content analysis with descriptive analysis of confidence and training
BACKGROUND: In many countries, aseptic procedures are undertaken by nurses in the general ward setting, but variation in practice has been reported, and evidence indicates that the principles underpinning aseptic technique are not well understood.
METHODS: A survey was conducted, employing a brief, purpose-designed, self-reported questionnaire.
RESULTS: The response rate was 72%. Of those responding, 65% of nurses described aseptic technique in terms of the procedure used to undertake it, and 46% understood the principles of asepsis. The related concepts of cleanliness and sterilization were frequently confused with one another. Additionally, 72% reported that they not had received training for at least 5 years; 92% were confident of their ability to apply aseptic technique; and 90% reported that they had not been reassessed since their initial training. Qualitative analysis confirmed a lack of clarity about the meaning of aseptic technique.
CONCLUSION: Nurses' understanding of aseptic technique and the concepts of sterility and cleanliness is inadequate, a finding in line with results of previous studies. This knowledge gap potentially places patients at risk. Nurses' understanding of the principles of asepsis could be improved. Further studies should establish the generalizability of the study findings. Possible improvements include renewed emphasis during initial nurse education, greater opportunity for updating knowledge and skills post-qualification, and audit of practice
Bubbling AdS Black Holes
We explore the non-BPS analog of `AdS bubbles', which are regular spherically
symmetric 1/2 BPS geometries in type IIB supergravity. They have regular
horizons and can be thought of as bubbling generalizations of non-extremal AdS
black hole solutions in five-dimensional gauged supergravity. Due to the
appearance of the Heun equation even at the linearized level, various
approximation and numerical methods are needed in order to extract information
about this system. We study how the vacuum expectation value and mass of a
particular dimension two chiral primary operator depend on the temperature and
chemical potential of the thermal Yang-Mills theory. In addition, the mass of
the bubbling AdS black holes is computed. As is shown numerically, there are
also non-BPS solitonic bubbles which are completely regular and arise from
continuous deformations of BPS AdS bubbles.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figure
Varicella-zoster virus induces apoptosis in cell culture
peer reviewedaudience: researcherApoptosis is an active mechanism of cell death which can be initiated in response to various stimuli including virus infections. In this work, we demonstrate that lytic infection by varicella-zoster virus (VZV), a human herpesvirus, is characterized by nuclear fragmentation of DNA into oligonucleosomal fragments and by chromatin condensation. In vitro, VZV-induced cell death is actually mediated by apoptosis. The mechanisms developed by cells to protect themselves against apoptosis could be one of the parameters allowing the establishment of virus latency. In the case of VZV, which can remain latent in sensory ganglia, we have not yet identified a cellular or viral protein which could play this protective role, since the observed apoptosis mechanism seems to be independent from Bcl-2, the most frequently described inhibitor of apoptosis
Origins Survey Spectrometer (OSS): a far-IR discovery machine for the Origins Space Telescope
The OSS on the Origins Space Telescope is designed to decode the cosmic history of nucleosynthesis, star formation, and supermassive black hole growth with wide-area spatial-spectral 3-D surveys across the full 25 to 590 micron band. Six wideband grating modules combine to cover the full band at R=300, each couples a long slit with 60-190 beams on the sky. OSS will have a total of 120,000 background-limited detector pixels in the six 2-D arrays which provide spatial and spectral coverage. The suite of grating modules can be used for pointed observations of targets of interest, and are particularly powerful for 3-D spectral spectral surveys. To chart the transition from interstellar material, particularly water, to planetary systems, two high-spectral-resolution modes are included. The first incorporates a Fourier-transform spectrometer (FTS) in front of the gratings providing resolving power of 25,000 (δv = 12 km/s) at 179 µm to resolve water emission in protoplanetary disk spectra. The second boosts the FTS capability with an additional etalon (Fabry-Perot interferometer) to provide 2 km/s resolution in this line to enable detailed structural studies of disks in the various water and HD lines. Optical, thermal, and mechanical designs are presented, and the system approach to the detector readout enabling the large formats is described
The New Media Writing Prize Special Collection
This article introduces the New Media Writing Prize (NMWP) special collection (https://www.webarchive.org.uk/en/ukwa/collection/2912) created on behalf of the six UK Legal Deposit Libraries and hosted by the UK Web Archive. It is divided into two sections, presenting the perspectives of the archivists and the organizers of the prize respectively. The first section outlines the scope of the collection and how it fits within the wider collecting activities of the libraries. It explains the methodology and workflows behind building the collection, with a special focus on the quality assurance aspect of the process, and on what constitutes a ‘good copy’ in the context of complex digital narratives. Furthermore, it touches on the history of the collaborations between the British Library and digital writing communities, which resulted in numerous workshops, events, residencies and ultimately the creation of this collection. The second section presents the history of the Prize from the point of view of its organizers, highlighting its evolution through the years and plans for the future
- …