10,524 research outputs found
Universal efficiency at optimal work with Bayesian statistics
If the work per cycle of a quantum heat engine is averaged over an
appropriate prior distribution for an external parameter , the work becomes
optimal at Curzon-Ahlborn efficiency. More general priors of the form yield optimal work at an efficiency which stays close to
CA value, in particular near equilibrium the efficiency scales as one-half of
the Carnot value. This feature is analogous to the one recently observed in
literature for certain models of finite-time thermodynamics. Further, the use
of Bayes' theorem implies that the work estimated with posterior probabilities
also bears close analogy with the classical formula. These findings suggest
that the notion of prior information can be used to reveal thermodynamic
features in quantum systems, thus pointing to a new connection between
thermodynamic behavior and the concept of information.Comment: revtex4, 5 pages, abstract changed and presentation improved; results
unchanged. New result with Bayes Theorem adde
Nitrogen metabolism of the isolated tissues of the rat
Little study has been devoted to the anabolic aspects of nitrogen metabolism in animals. The reason, of course, has been the difficulty of obtaining experimental conditions in which these can be observed, measured, and analyzed. The experiments of Krebs and Henseleit (1) on the formation of urea from ammonia with Warburgâs method of surviving slices of liver suggested that this method might be useful in a direct attack on a number of problems of nitrogen anabolism in animals; i.e., it might be possible to observe reactions in which there is a gain in free energy. It appears that for these reactions the intact cell structure is necessary
The Oral Background of Byzantine Popular Poetry
The popular poetry of Byzantium first appears in the form of consistent surviving texts of some size in the middle of the twelfth century, at the courts of the emperors John Komnenos (1118-1143) and Manuel Komnenos (1143-1180).1 Little or no such poetry seems to survive from the thirteenth century, when Byzantine energies were occupied in the reconquest of Constantinople and other parts of the empire from the forces of the Fourth Crusade. The next preserved examples seem to date from early in the fourteenth century, and the popular poetic tradition then continues through to the end of Byzantium in 1453 and beyond. Insofar as evidence permits us to speak about the places in which this material was composed and written down, it seems that the westernruled states surviving from the Crusades on Greek lands were at least as fertile ground for its production as the area ruled by Byzantium, under the last dynasty of the Palaiologoi. The total volume is not large, but it covers a number of genres. We shall discuss in the conclusion of this paper the difficult question of the continuity of this tradition in Greece under Turkish rule.--Page 504.Elizabeth and Michael Jeffreys (University of Sydney) often work as a team in their investigations of Byzantine popular poetry, studies which regularly treat the oral tradition out of which these works emerged. Some of their numerous articles in this field are gathered together in Popular Literature in Byzantium (1983)
Expected Behavior of Quantum Thermodynamic Machines with Prior Information
We estimate the expected behavior of a quantum model of heat engine when we
have incomplete information about external macroscopic parameters, like
magnetic field controlling the intrinsic energy scales of the working medium.
We explicitly derive the prior probability distribution for these unknown
parameters, . Based on a few simple assumptions, the prior is
found to be of the form . By calculating the expected
values of various physical quantities related to this engine, we find that the
expected behavior of the quantum model exhibits thermodynamic-like features.
This leads us to a surprising proposal that incomplete information quantified
as appropriate prior distribution can lead us to expect classical thermodynamic
behavior in quantum models.Comment: Revtex, 13 pages, 3 figures, revised version, new results added,
accepted for Phys. Rev.
Development of a laser Doppler system for the detection and monitoring of atmospheric disturbances
A Scanning Laser Doppler Velocimeter System (SLDVS) capable of detecting and monitoring atmospheric disturbances, including wake vortices of landing aircraft and vertical wind profiles in the atmosphere was developed. The SLDVS is a focused, continuous wave, CO2 system that determines the line-of-sight velocities of particles in the focal volume by measuring the Doppler shift created by these particles. At present, the SLDVS is designed to have a range coverage of approximately 2000 ft with a vertical angle coverage of approximately 60 deg. It is also designed to detect Doppler velocities of up to 200 ft/sec with a velocity resolution of approximately 1.8 ft/sec. A complete velocity spectrum is provided by the SLDVS at each point in space at which it is focused. The overall operation and performance of the system and the description of its individual components and data handling capabilities were given
PC-based aviation training devices (PCATDs): research, development and certification
This paper examines the development of two PCATDâs (one
helicopter, one fixed-wing) and their eventual certification by CAA.
Certification has demonstrated the potential these devices have for aviation
training in New Zealand. Traditionally FTDâs and PCATDâs have been
sourced from foreign companies, and they represent a considerable financial
investment for large flying training organisations. The procurement of these
simulator types is generally beyond the financial resources of most small to
medium sized flying schools. Aviation training in NZ is facing significant
financial constraints as well as an increasing demand to simulate complex
glass cockpit systems that are now installed in most new General Aviation
(GA) aircraft. The development, utilisation and certification of this type of
PCATD technology could solve these difficult challenges
Estimation of Upper Limits Using a Poisson Statistic
Bayesian, classical, and extended maximum likelihood approaches to estimation
of upper limits in experiments with small numbers of signal events are
surveyed. The discussion covers only experiments whose outcomes are well
described by a Poisson statistic. A new approach, based on the statistical
significance of a signal rather than on the number of events in the signal
region, is proposed. A toy model and an example of a recent search for the
lepton number violating decay are used to illustrate
application of the discussed techniques.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figure
Translocal celebrity activism: shark-protection campaigns in mainland China
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Shanghai-born Yao Ming, a retired star player with the American National Basketball Association, is the celebrity face of translocal conservation campaigns to stop the consumption of shark-fin soup in Chinese restaurants worldwide. The standard justification for such communication practices is that they will generate media publicity and save shark populations, by encouraging increasingly affluent Chinese consumers to stop eating a luxury food item based on cruel and unsustainable practices. To date, there has been limited research on the nature of shark-protection campaigns in mainland China, the proclaimed major future market for shark fin. This paper fills that gap. It contends that these campaigns have missed their target, being heavily influenced by communication strategies used in international campaigns and providing incoherent local framing. Declining demand for shark fin demonstrates instead that government austerity measures have had a greater impact on luxury consumption practices, inadvertently highlighting the potential of âauthoritarian environmentalism.
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