7,550 research outputs found
The Pacific Northwest story
The establishment of image analysis facilities for the operational utilization of LANDSAT data in Idaho, Oregon, and Washington is discussed. The hardware and software resources are described for each facility along with the range of services
On Matrix Product States for Periodic Boundary Conditions
The possibility of a matrix product representation for eigenstates with
energy and momentum zero of a general m-state quantum spin Hamiltonian with
nearest neighbour interaction and periodic boundary condition is considered.
The quadratic algebra used for this representation is generated by 2m operators
which fulfil m^2 quadratic relations and is endowed with a trace. It is shown
that {\em not} every eigenstate with energy and momentum zero can be written as
matrix product state. An explicit counter-example is given. This is in contrast
to the case of open boundary conditions where every zero energy eigenstate can
be written as a matrix product state using a Fock-like representation of the
same quadratic algebra.Comment: 7 pages, late
Efficient calculation of chiral three-nucleon forces up to N3LO for ab initio studies
We present a novel framework to decompose three-nucleon forces in a momentum
space partial-wave basis. The new approach is computationally much more
efficient than previous methods and opens the way to ab initio studies of
few-nucleon scattering processes, nuclei and nuclear matter based on
higher-order chiral 3N forces. We use the new framework to calculate matrix
elements of chiral three-nucleon forces at N2LO and N3LO in large basis spaces
and carry out benchmark calculations for neutron matter and symmetric nuclear
matter. We also study the size of the individual three-nucleon force
contributions for H. For nonlocal regulators, we find that the sub-leading
terms, which have been neglected in most calculations so far, provide important
contributions. All matrix elements are calculated and stored in a user-friendly
way, such that values of low-energy constants as well as the form of regulator
functions can be chosen freely.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Optical alignment and polarization conversion of neutral exciton spin in individual InAs/GaAs quantum dots
We investigate exciton spin memory in individual InAs/GaAs self-assembled
quantum dots via optical alignment and conversion of exciton polarization in a
magnetic field. Quasiresonant phonon-assisted excitation is successfully
employed to define the initial spin polarization of neutral excitons. The
conservation of the linear polarization generated along the bright exciton
eigenaxes of up to 90% and the conversion from circular- to linear polarization
of up to 47% both demonstrate a very long spin relaxation time with respect to
the radiative lifetime. Results are quantitatively compared with a model of
pseudo-spin 1/2 including heavy-to-light hole mixing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Role of the total isospin 3/2 component in three-nucleon reactions
We discuss the role of the three-nucleon isospin T=3/2 amplitude in elastic
neutron-deuteron scattering and in the deuteron breakup reaction. The
contribution of this amplitude originates from charge-independence breaking of
the nucleon-nucleon potential and is driven by the difference between
neutron-neutron (proton-proton) and neutron-proton forces. We study the
magnitude of that contribution to the elastic scattering and breakup
observables, taking the locally regularized chiral N4LO nucleon-nucleon
potential supplemented by the chiral N2LO three-nucleon force. For comparison
we employ also the Av18 nucleon-nucleon potential combined with the Urbana IX
three-nucleon force. We find that the isospin T=3/2 component is important for
the breakup reaction and the proper treatment of charge-independence breaking
in this case requires the inclusion of the 1S0 state with isospin T=3/2. For
neutron-deuteron elastic scattering the T=3/2 contributions are insignificant
and charge-independence breaking can be accounted for by using the effective
t-matrix generated with the so-called "2/3-1/3" rule.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, 3 Table
Universality properties of the stationary states in the one-dimensional coagulation-diffusion model with external particle input
We investigate with the help of analytical and numerical methods the reaction
A+A->A on a one-dimensional lattice opened at one end and with an input of
particles at the other end. We show that if the diffusion rates to the left and
to the right are equal, for large x, the particle concentration c(x) behaves
like As/x (x measures the distance to the input end). If the diffusion rate in
the direction pointing away from the source is larger than the one
corresponding to the opposite direction the particle concentration behaves like
Aa/sqrt(x). The constants As and Aa are independent of the input and the two
coagulation rates. The universality of Aa comes as a surprise since in the
asymmetric case the system has a massive spectrum.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX, including three postscript figures, to appear in J.
Stat. Phy
Concentration for One and Two Species One-Dimensional Reaction-Diffusion Systems
We look for similarity transformations which yield mappings between different
one-dimensional reaction-diffusion processes. In this way results obtained for
special systems can be generalized to equivalent reaction-diffusion models. The
coagulation (A + A -> A) or the annihilation (A + A -> 0) models can be mapped
onto systems in which both processes are allowed. With the help of the
coagulation-decoagulation model results for some death-decoagulation and
annihilation-creation systems are given. We also find a reaction-diffusion
system which is equivalent to the two species annihilation model (A + B ->0).
Besides we present numerical results of Monte Carlo simulations. An accurate
description of the effects of the reaction rates on the concentration in
one-species diffusion-annihilation model is made. The asymptotic behavior of
the concentration in the two species annihilation system (A + B -> 0) with
symmetric initial conditions is studied.Comment: 20 pages latex, uuencoded figures at the en
Investigating the genetic and environmental aetiologies of non-suicidal and suicidal self-harm: a twin study
BACKGROUND: Self-harm is a major health concern, not only as a signal of distress but also as a strong predictor of later suicide. Self-harm can be further refined into suicidal self-harm (SSH, i.e. suicide attempt) and non-suicidal self-harm (NSSH). Understanding the aetiologies of NSSH and SSH can help inform suicide prevention strategies. Using a twin design, we investigated the phenotypic and aetiological relationships between NSSH and SSH, and their aetiological overlap with mental health problems. METHODS: We analysed data from the Twins Early Development Study using structural equation modelling. At age 21 years, 9063 twins (62.4% female) answered questions related to self-harm. At age 16 years, 19 self- or parent-reported mental health measures were administered, including measures of internalising and externalising problems, psychotic-like experiences and substance abuse. RESULTS: Prevalences for NSSH and SSH were 21.9% and 10.5%, respectively. Additive genetic factors explained half of the variance in NSSH (55%) and SSH (50%), with the rest explained by non-shared environmental factors. Phenotypically, NSSH and SSH were strongly correlated (r = 0.87) with their correlation explained by genetic (57%) and non-shared environmental (43%) factors. We found no evidence that NSSH and SSH differed in their phenotypic and aetiological relationships with mental health measures. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest no aetiological difference between NSSH and SSH. NSSH and SSH should be regarded as two different ends of a continuum, rather than as two distinct categories
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