5,755 research outputs found
Baryon anomaly and strong color fields in Pb+Pb collisions at 2.76A TeV at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
With the HIJING/BBbar v2.0 heavy ion event generator, we explore the
phenomenological consequences of several high parton density dynamical effects
predicted in central Pb+Pb collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
energies. These include (1) jet quenching due to parton energy loss (dE/dx),
(2) strangeness and hyperon enhancement due to strong longitudinal color field
(SCF), and (3) enhancement of baryon-to-meson ratios due to baryon-anti-baryon
junctions (JJbar) loops and SCF effects. The saturation/minijet cutoff scale
p0(s)and effective string tension kappa(s,A) are constrained by our previous
analysis of LHC p+p data and recent data on the charged multiplicity for Pb+Pb
collisions reported by the ALICE collaboration. We predict the hadron flavor
dependence (mesons and baryons) of the nuclear modification factor RAA(pT)$ and
emphasize the possibility that the baryon anomaly could persist at the LHC up
to pT=10 GeV, well beyond the range observed in central Au+Au collisions at
RHIC energies.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, revtex4, text modifications, added references,
accepted for publication Phys. Rev. C (2011
BANKING EFFICIENCY AND EUROPEAN INTEGRATION. IMPLICATIONS OF THE BANKING REFORM IN ROMANIA
The aim of this study is to analyze the influence that the European integrationprocess has had over the banking efficiency levels in those countries which have recentlyexperienced more intensely the European integration process. For this purpose we haveanalyzed, using stochastic frontier models (SFA), applied to panel data, bank efficiency levelsof a sample of 240 banks from 12 countries during the period 2000 to 2008. The resultssustain the hypothesis that the European integration process has significantly improved theefficiency levels in these countries. However, the improvements haven‘t appeared simply bythe accession to the EU, but have appeared during the process. In order to illustrate the results, we have analyzed the banking system in Romania inthe context of the European integration, a country which because of the delay in the initiationof the reforms, despite belonging to the EU, it hasn‘t still recorded the essential improvementsin banking efficiency associated to this process that the other new members have alreadyexperienced.banking efficiency, European integration, stochastic models, banking reform.
Bistability in a Mesoscopic Josephson Junction Array Resonator
We present an experimental investigation of stochastic switching of a
bistable Josephson junctions array resonator with a resonance frequency in the
GHz range. As the device is in the regime where the anharmonicity is on the
order of the linewidth, the bistability appears for a pump strength of only a
few photons. We measure the dynamics of the bistability by continuously
observing the jumps between the two metastable states, which occur with a rate
ranging from a few Hz down to a few mHz. The switching rate strongly depends on
the pump strength, readout strength and the temperature, following Kramer's
law. The interplay between nonlinearity and coupling, in this little explored
regime, could provide a new resource for nondemolition measurements, single
photon switches or even elements for autonomous quantum error correction.Comment: main text: 6 pages, 4 figures; supplementary material: 9 pages, 9
figure
Analysis and Optimisation of Hierarchically Scheduled Multiprocessor Embedded Systems
We present an approach to the analysis and optimisation of heterogeneous multiprocessor embedded systems. The systems are heterogeneous not only in terms of hardware components, but also in terms of communication protocols and scheduling policies. When several scheduling policies share a resource, they are organised in a hierarchy. In this paper, we first develop a holistic scheduling and schedulability analysis that determines the timing properties of a hierarchically scheduled system. Second, we address design problems that are characteristic to such hierarchically scheduled systems: assignment of scheduling policies to tasks, mapping of tasks to hardware components, and the scheduling of the activities. We also present several algorithms for solving these problems. Our heuristics are able to find schedulable implementations under limited resources, achieving an efficient utilisation of the system. The developed algorithms are evaluated using extensive experiments and a real-life example. © 2007 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.</p
Experimental demonstration of Aharonov-Casher interference in a Josephson junction circuit
A neutral quantum particle with magnetic moment encircling a static electric
charge acquires a quantum mechanical phase (Aharonov-Casher effect). In
superconducting electronics the neutral particle becomes a fluxon that moves
around superconducting islands connected by Josephson junctions. The full
understanding of this effect in systems of many junctions is crucial for the
design of novel quantum circuits. Here we present measurements and quantitative
analysis of fluxon interference patterns in a six Josephson junction chain. In
this multi-junction circuit the fluxon can encircle any combination of charges
on five superconducting islands, resulting in a complex pattern. We compare the
experimental results with predictions of a simplified model that treats fluxons
as independent excitations and with the results of the full diagonalization of
the quantum problem. Our results demonstrate the accuracy of the fluxon
interference description and the quantum coherence of these arrays
Driving forbidden transitions in the fluxonium artificial atom
Atomic systems display a rich variety of quantum dynamics due to the
different possible symmetries obeyed by the atoms. These symmetries result in
selection rules that have been essential for the quantum control of atomic
systems. Superconducting artificial atoms are mainly governed by parity
symmetry. Its corresponding selection rule limits the types of quantum systems
that can be built using electromagnetic circuits at their optimal coherence
operation points ("sweet spots"). Here, we use third-order nonlinear coupling
between the artificial atom and its readout resonator to drive transitions
forbidden by the parity selection rule for linear coupling to microwave
radiation. A Lambda-type system emerges from these newly accessible
transitions, implemented here in the fluxonium artificial atom coupled to its
"antenna" resonator. We demonstrate coherent manipulation of the fluxonium
artificial atom at its sweet spot by stimulated Raman transitions. This type of
transition enables the creation of new quantum operations, such as the control
and readout of physically protected artificial atoms.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Quantization of inductively-shunted superconducting circuits
We present a method for calculating the energy levels of superconducting
circuits that contain highly anharmonic, inductively-shunted modes with
arbitrarily strong coupling. Our method starts by calculating the normal modes
of the linearized circuit and proceeds with numerical diagonalization in this
basis. As an example, we analyze the Hamiltonian of a fluxonium qubit
inductively coupled to a readout resonator. While elementary, this simple
example is nontrivial because it cannot be efficiently treated by the method
known as "black-box quantization," numerical diagonalization in the bare
harmonic oscillator basis, or perturbation theory. Calculated spectra are
compared to measured spectroscopy data, demonstrating excellent quantitative
agreement between theory and experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
- …
