15,821 research outputs found
Investigation of sputtering effects on the moon's surface Eleventh quarterly status report, 25 Oct. 1965 - 24 Jan. 1966
Implications of Lunar 9 moon probe, sputtering yield reduction due to surface roughness, water formation by solar wind bombardment, photometric function of moon, and chemical sputterin
On the Preparation of Pure States in Resonant Microcavities
We consider the time evolution of the radiation field (R) and a two-level
atom (A) in a resonant microcavity in terms of the Jaynes-Cummings model with
an initial general pure quantum state for the radiation field. It is then
shown, using the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality and also a Poisson resummation
technique, that {\it perfect} coherence of the atom can in general never be
achieved. The atom and the radiation field are, however, to a good
approximation in a pure state in the middle of what
has been traditionally called the ``collapse region'', independent of the
initial state of the atoms, provided that the initial pure state of the
radiation field has a photon number probability distribution which is
sufficiently peaked and phase differences that do not vary significantly around
this peak. An approximative analytic expression for the quantity
\Tr[\rho^2_{A}(t)], where is the reduced density matrix for the
atom, is derived. We also show that under quite general circumstances an
initial entangled pure state will be disentangled to the pure state .Comment: 14 pages and 3 figure
Spectra and positions of galactic gamma-ray sources
The UCSD/MIT Hard X-Ray and Low Energy Gamma-Ray Experiment aboard HEAO-1 scanned the galactic center region during three epochs in 1977 and 1978 from 13 to 180 keV. The results are presented from the scanning epoch of 1978 September. Twenty-two known 2 to 10 keV source positions were necessary for an acceptable fit to the data. The spectra of the 16 strongest, least confused sources are all consistent with power laws with photon spectral indices ranging from 2.1 to 7.2. Acceptable fits to thermal bremsstrahlung models are also possible for most sources. No one source in this survey can be extrapolated to higher energy to match the intensity of the gamma-ray continuum as measured by HEAO-1 large field of view detectors, which implies that the continuum is a composite of contributions from a number of sources
Dynamics of a two-level system strongly coupled to a high-frequency quantum oscillator
Recent experiments on quantum behavior in microfabricated solid-state systems
suggest tantalizing connections to quantum optics. Several of these experiments
address the prototypical problem of cavity quantum electrodynamics: a two-level
system coupled to a quantum harmonic oscillator. Such devices may allow the
exploration of parameter regimes outside the near-resonance and weak-coupling
assumptions of the ubiquitous rotating-wave approximation (RWA), necessitating
other theoretical approaches. One such approach is an adiabatic approximation
in the limit that the oscillator frequency is much larger than the
characteristic frequency of the two-level system. A derivation of the
approximation is presented and the time evolution of the two-level-system
occupation probability is calculated using both thermal- and coherent-state
initial conditions for the oscillator. Closed-form evaluation of the time
evolution in the weak-coupling limit provides insight into the differences
between the thermal- and coherent-state models. Finally, potential experimental
observations in solid-state systems, particularly the Cooper-pair
box--nanomechanical resonator system, are discussed and found to be promising.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures; revised abstract; some text revisions; added
two figures and combined others; added references. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
A noninvasive method for measuring mammary apoptosis and epithelial cell activation in dairy animals using microparticles extracted from milk
AbstractMilk production from dairy animals has been described in terms of 3 processes: the increase in secretory cell numbers in late pregnancy and early lactation, secretion rate of milk per cell, and the decline in cell numbers as lactation progresses. This latter process is thought to be determined by the level of programmed cell death (apoptosis) found in the animal. Until now, apoptosis has been measured by taking udder biopsies, using magnetic resonance imaging scans, or using animals postmortem. This paper describes an alternative, noninvasive method for estimating apoptosis by measuring microparticles in milk samples. Microparticles are the product of several processes in dairy animals, including apoptosis. Milk samples from 12 Holstein cows, at or past peak lactation, were collected at 5 monthly samplings. The samples (n=57) were used to measure the number of microparticles and calculate microparticle density for 4 metrics: annexin V positive and merocyanine 540 dye positive, for both and total particles, in both whole milk (WM) and spun milk. Various measures of milk production were also recorded for the 12 cows, including daily milk yield, fat and protein percentage in the milk, somatic cell count, and the days in milk when the samples were taken. A high correlation was found between the 4 WM microparticle densities and days in milk (0.46 to 0.64), and a moderate correlation between WM microparticle densities and daily milk yield (−0.33 to −0.44). No significant relationships were found involving spun milk samples, somatic cell count, or fat and protein percentage. General linear model analyses revealed differences between cows for both level of microparticle density and its rate of change in late lactation. Persistency of lactation was also found to be correlated with the WM microparticle traits (−0.65 to −0.32). As apoptosis is likely to be the major contributor to microparticle numbers in late lactation, this work found a noninvasive method for estimating apoptosis that gave promising results. Further investigation is required to find out the factors affecting microparticle production and how it changes throughout lactation
Video data modulation study, volume 1 Final report
Video data modulation technique
Measurement-induced localization of relative degrees of freedom
Published versio
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