4,761 research outputs found
Breadth-first serialisation of trees and rational languages
We present here the notion of breadth-first signature and its relationship
with numeration system theory. It is the serialisation into an infinite word of
an ordered infinite tree of finite degree. We study which class of languages
corresponds to which class of words and,more specifically, using a known
construction from numeration system theory, we prove that the signature of
rational languages are substitutive sequences.Comment: 15 page
Commercial fire-retarded PET formulations - relationship between thermal degradation behaviour and fire-retardant action
Many types of fire-retardants are used in poly(ethylene terephthalate), PET, formulations, and two commercial fire retardants, Ukanol(TM) and Phosgard(TM), have been shown to improve significantly PET flame-retardancy when used as comonomers. Phosgard incorporates a phosphorus atom within the main chain whereas Ukanol incorporates a phosphorus atom as a pendent substituent. Despite their acknowledged effectiveness, the mode of action of these fire retardants remains unclear, and in this paper we present a comparison of the overall thermal degradation behaviour of PET and Ukanol and Phosgard fire retarded formulations. DSC and particularly TGA data show that both Ukanol and Phosgard have some stabilising influence on PET degradation, especially under oxidative conditions. TGA and pyrolysis experiments both clearly indicate that neither additive acts as a char promoter. Only the Phosgard formulation shows any release of volatile phosphorus species which could act in the gas phase. On the other hand, the most striking feature of the pyrolysis experiments is the macroscopic structure of the chars produced by the fire-retarded formulations, which hints at their fire-retardancy action - an open-cell charred foam was obtained upon charring at 400°C or 600°C. This foaming layer between the degrading melt and the flame would lower the amount of fuel available for combustion, and would also limit the feedback of heat to the condensed phase
Deformations of modules of differential forms
We study non-trivial deformations of the natural action of the Lie algebra
on the space of differential forms on . We calculate abstractions for integrability of infinitesimal
multi-parameter deformations and determine the commutative associative algebra
corresponding to the miniversal deformation in the sense of \cite{ff}.Comment: Published by JNMP at http://www.sm.luth.se/math/JNM
On sl(2)-equivariant quantizations
By computing certain cohomology of Vect(M) of smooth vector fields we prove
that on 1-dimensional manifolds M there is no quantization map intertwining the
action of non-projective embeddings of the Lie algebra sl(2) into the Lie
algebra Vect(M). Contrariwise, for projective embeddings sl(2)-equivariant
quantization exists.Comment: 09 pages, LaTeX2e, no figures; to appear in Journal of Nonlinear
Mathematical Physic
Simulation of the elementary evolution operator with the motional states of an ion in an anharmonic trap
Following a recent proposal of L. Wang and D. Babikov, J. Chem. Phys. 137,
064301 (2012), we theoretically illustrate the possibility of using the
motional states of a ion trapped in a slightly anharmonic potential to
simulate the single-particle time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation. The
simulated wave packet is discretized on a spatial grid and the grid points are
mapped on the ion motional states which define the qubit network. The
localization probability at each grid point is obtained from the population in
the corresponding motional state. The quantum gate is the elementary evolution
operator corresponding to the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation of the
simulated system. The corresponding matrix can be estimated by any numerical
algorithm. The radio-frequency field able to drive this unitary transformation
among the qubit states of the ion is obtained by multi-target optimal control
theory. The ion is assumed to be cooled in the ground motional state and the
preliminary step consists in initializing the qubits with the amplitudes of the
initial simulated wave packet. The time evolution of the localization
probability at the grids points is then obtained by successive applications of
the gate and reading out the motional state population. The gate field is
always identical for a given simulated potential, only the field preparing the
initial wave packet has to be optimized for different simulations. We check the
stability of the simulation against decoherence due to fluctuating electric
fields in the trap electrodes by applying dissipative Lindblad dynamics.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures. Revised version. New title, new figure and new
reference
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