61 research outputs found
Influence of phonons on exciton-photon interaction and photon statistics of a quantum dot
In this paper, we investigate, phonon effects on the optical properties of a
spherical quantum dot. For this purpose, we consider the interaction of a
spherical quantum dot with classical and quantum fields while the exciton of
quantum dot interacts with a solid state reservoir. We show that phonons
strongly affect the Rabi oscillations and optical coherence on first
picoseconds of dynamics. We consider the quantum statistics of emitted photons
by quantum dot and we show that these photons are anti-bunched and obey the
sub-Poissonian statistics. In addition, we examine the effects of detuning and
interaction of quantum dot with the cavity mode on optical coherence of energy
levels. The effects of detuning and interaction of quantum dot with cavity mode
on optical coherence of energy levels are compared to the effects of its
interaction with classical pulse
A single trapped ion in a finite range trap
This paper presents a method to describe dynamics of an ion confined in a
realistic finite range trap. We model this realistic potential with a solvable
one and we obtain dynamical variables (raising and lowering operators) of this
potential. We consider coherent interaction of this confined ion in a finite
range trap and we show that its center-of-mass motion steady state is a special
kind of nonlinear coherent states. Physical properties of this state and their
dependence on the finite range of potential are studied
Promoting Mental Health and Psychological Thriving in University Students: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Three Well-Being Interventions
This study aimed to address the decline in mental health on U.S. university campuses by
examining the effects of three interventions. University students suffer from high levels of
anxiety, depression, and suicide. Counseling centers on university campuses are
struggling to meet increased demand. The cost to students and universities could be
buffered by offering preventative, psychoeducational, and skill-building training programs
that promote mental health and psychological thriving. To date, the research literature has
not yielded systematically evaluated and recommendable preventative mental health and
well-being programs for university students. In a registered, randomized controlled trial,
131 university students were either placed in a non-intervention control group (N = 47) or
received training in one of three 30-hour, eight-week semester-long well-being programs:
SKY Campus Happiness (“SKY”; N = 29), Foundations of Emotional Intelligence (“EI”; N =
21) or Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (“MBSR”; N = 34). Compared to the control
group and controlling for variance of baseline measurements and multiple comparisons,
SKY Campus Happiness showed the greatest impact, benefiting six outcomes:
depression, stress, mental health, mindfulness, positive affect and social
connectedness. EI benefited one outcome: mindfulness. The MBSR group showed no
change. Delivering SKY or EI to university students may be a cost-effective and efficient
way to proactively and preventatively address mental health for university students and
reduce the financial strain on universities
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Promoting Mental Health and Psychological Thriving in University Students: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Three Well-Being Interventions.
This study aimed to address the decline in mental health on U.S. university campuses by examining the effects of three interventions. University students suffer from high levels of anxiety, depression, and suicide. Counseling centers on university campuses are struggling to meet increased demand. The cost to students and universities could be buffered by offering preventative, psychoeducational, and skill-building training programs that promote mental health and psychological thriving. To date, the research literature has not yielded systematically evaluated and recommendable preventative mental health and well-being programs for university students. In a registered, randomized controlled trial, 131 university students were either placed in a non-intervention control group (N = 47) or received training in one of three 30-hour, eight-week semester-long well-being programs: SKY Campus Happiness ("SKY"; N = 29), Foundations of Emotional Intelligence ("EI"; N = 21) or Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction ("MBSR"; N = 34). Compared to the control group and controlling for variance of baseline measurements and multiple comparisons, SKY Campus Happiness showed the greatest impact, benefiting six outcomes: depression, stress, mental health, mindfulness, positive affect and social connectedness. EI benefited one outcome: mindfulness. The MBSR group showed no change. Delivering SKY or EI to university students may be a cost-effective and efficient way to proactively and preventatively address mental health for university students and reduce the financial strain on universities
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