14,152 research outputs found
BEC in Nonextensive Statistical Mechanics
We discuss the Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) for an ideal gas of bosons in
the framework of Tsallis's nonextensive statistical mechanics. We study the
corrections to the standard BEC formulas due to a weak nonextensivity of the
system. In particular, we consider three cases in the D-dimensional space: the
homogeneous gas, the gas in a harmonic trap and the relativistic homogenous
gas. The results show that small deviations from the extensive Bose statistics
produce remarkably large changes in the BEC transition temperature.Comment: LaTex, 7 pages, no figures, to be published in Mod. Phys. Lett. B;
corrected a typo in Eq. (2
On the exponential Diophantine equation
In this paper, we find all the solutions of the title Diophantine equation in positive integers (m, n, k, x), where P i is the i th term of the Pell sequenc
General criterion for the entanglement of two indistinguishable particles
We relate the notion of entanglement for quantum systems composed of two
identical constituents to the impossibility of attributing a complete set of
properties to both particles. This implies definite constraints on the
mathematical form of the state vector associated with the whole system. We then
analyze separately the cases of fermion and boson systems, and we show how the
consideration of both the Slater-Schmidt number of the fermionic and bosonic
analog of the Schmidt decomposition of the global state vector and the von
Neumann entropy of the one-particle reduced density operators can supply us
with a consistent criterion for detecting entanglement. In particular, the
consideration of the von Neumann entropy is particularly useful in deciding
whether the correlations of the considered states are simply due to the
indistinguishability of the particles involved or are a genuine manifestation
of the entanglement. The treatment leads to a full clarification of the subtle
aspects of entanglement of two identical constituents which have been a source
of embarrassment and of serious misunderstandings in the recent literature.Comment: 18 pages, Latex; revised version: Section 3.2 rewritten, new Theorems
added, reference [1] corrected. To appear on Phys.Rev.A 70, (2004
Localized and extended states in a disordered trap
We study Anderson localization in a disordered potential combined with an
inhomogeneous trap. We show that the spectrum displays both localized and
extended states, which coexist at intermediate energies. In the region of
coexistence, we find that the extended states result from confinement by the
trap and are weakly affected by the disorder. Conversely, the localized states
correspond to eigenstates of the disordered potential, which are only affected
by the trap via an inhomogeneous energy shift. These results are relevant to
disordered quantum gases and we propose a realistic scheme to observe the
coexistence of localized and extended states in these systems.Comment: Published versio
Minimizers with discontinuous velocities for the electromagnetic variational method
The electromagnetic two-body problem has \emph{neutral differential delay}
equations of motion that, for generic boundary data, can have solutions with
\emph{discontinuous} derivatives. If one wants to use these neutral
differential delay equations with \emph{arbitrary} boundary data, solutions
with discontinuous derivatives must be expected and allowed. Surprisingly,
Wheeler-Feynman electrodynamics has a boundary value variational method for
which minimizer trajectories with discontinuous derivatives are also expected,
as we show here. The variational method defines continuous trajectories with
piecewise defined velocities and accelerations, and electromagnetic fields
defined \emph{by} the Euler-Lagrange equations \emph{% on} trajectory points.
Here we use the piecewise defined minimizers with the Li{\'{e}}nard-Wierchert
formulas to define generalized electromagnetic fields almost everywhere (but on
sets of points of zero measure where the advanced/retarded velocities and/or
accelerations are discontinuous). Along with this generalization we formulate
the \emph{generalized absorber hypothesis} that the far fields vanish
asymptotically \emph{almost everywhere%} and show that localized orbits with
far fields vanishing almost everywhere \emph{must} have discontinuous
velocities on sewing chains of breaking points. We give the general solution
for localized orbits with vanishing far fields by solving a (linear) neutral
differential delay equation for these far fields. We discuss the physics of
orbits with discontinuous derivatives stressing the differences to the
variational methods of classical mechanics and the existence of a spinorial
four-current associated with the generalized variational electrodynamics.Comment: corrected minor typo: piecewise differentiable on closed instead of
open interval
Preparation and Comparison of Hydrolase-Coated Plastics
Polypropylene and polyethylene were coated with alpha-Chymotrypsin
(a-CT) or subtilisin Carlsberg (SubC) or Burkholderia
cepacia lipase (lipase BC) by different immobilization procedures,
such as physical adsorption and covalent linking. This
latter procedure was based on the chemical functionalization
of the plastic surface by oxygen gas plasma treatment. Immobilization
of the enzyme was carried out by using as cross-linking
agent i) glutaraldehyde (GA) or ii) Nâ-diisopropylcarbodiimide
(DIC) and N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS). The effects of duration
of the plasma treatment and the type of the immobilization
procedure on the transesterification activity of the enzyme
were investigated. In general polypropylene resulted a better
support than polyethylene. Moreover, a-CT showed higher
transesterification activity when immobilized with GA, while for
SubC, DIC and NHS were better cross-linking agents than GA.
No activity was observed with these enzymes when immobilization
was carried out by physical adsorption. On the contrary,
lipase BC immobilized by physical adsorption was even more
active than the free enzyme. Concerning thermal stability, immobilized
SubC was less stable than the free enzyme. Overall,
these results show that plastics endowed with biocatalytic
properties could be obtained by simple immobilization protocols
and that optimal immobilization conditions depend on the
type of starting plastic, plasma treatment, cross-linking method,
and the nature of the enzyme
An Interactive Tool to Explore and Improve the Ply Number of Drawings
Given a straight-line drawing of a graph , for every vertex
the ply disk is defined as a disk centered at where the radius of
the disk is half the length of the longest edge incident to . The ply number
of a given drawing is defined as the maximum number of overlapping disks at
some point in . Here we present a tool to explore and evaluate
the ply number for graphs with instant visual feedback for the user. We
evaluate our methods in comparison to an existing ply computation by De Luca et
al. [WALCOM'17]. We are able to reduce the computation time from seconds to
milliseconds for given drawings and thereby contribute to further research on
the ply topic by providing an efficient tool to examine graphs extensively by
user interaction as well as some automatic features to reduce the ply number.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
Analytic estimates and topological properties of the weak stability boundary
The weak stability boundary (WSB) is the transition region of the phase space where the change from gravitational escape to ballistic capture occurs. Studies on this complicated region of chaotic motion aim to investigate its unique, fuel saving properties to enlarge the frontiers of low energy transfers. This âfuzzy stabilityâ region is characterized by highly sensitive motion, and any analysis of it has been carried out almost exclusively using numerical methods. On the contrary this paper presents, for the planar circular restricted 3 body problem (PCR3BP), 1) an analytic definition of the WSB which is coherent with the known algorithmic definitions; 2) a precise description of the topology of the WSB; 3) analytic estimates on the âstable regionâ (nearby the smaller primary) whose boundary is, by definition, the WSB
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