1,172 research outputs found
Position Dependent Mass Schroedinger Equation and Isospectral Potentials : Intertwining Operator approach
Here we have studied first and second-order intertwining approach to generate
isospectral partner potentials of position-dependent (effective) mass
Schroedinger equation. The second-order intertwiner is constructed directly by
taking it as second order linear differential operator with position depndent
coefficients and the system of equations arising from the intertwining
relationship is solved for the coefficients by taking an ansatz. A complete
scheme for obtaining general solution is obtained which is valid for any
arbitrary potential and mass function. The proposed technique allows us to
generate isospectral potentials with the following spectral modifications: (i)
to add new bound state(s), (ii) to remove bound state(s) and (iii) to leave the
spectrum unaffected. To explain our findings with the help of an illustration,
we have used point canonical transformation (PCT) to obtain the general
solution of the position dependent mass Schrodinger equation corresponding to a
potential and mass function. It is shown that our results are consistent with
the formulation of type A N-fold supersymmetry [14,18] for the particular case
N = 1 and N = 2 respectively.Comment: Some references have been adde
Pseudo-Hermiticity and some consequences of a generalized quantum condition
We exploit the hidden symmetry structure of a recently proposed non-Hermitian
Hamiltonian and of its Hermitian equivalent one. This sheds new light on the
pseudo-Hermitian character of the former and allows access to a generalized
quantum condition. Special cases lead to hyperbolic and Morse-like potentials
in the framework of a coordinate-dependent mass model.Comment: 10 pages, no figur
Pseudo-Hermitian versus Hermitian position-dependent-mass Hamiltonians in a perturbative framework
We formulate a systematic algorithm for constructing a whole class of
Hermitian position-dependent-mass Hamiltonians which, to lowest order of
perturbation theory, allow a description in terms of PT-symmetric Hamiltonians.
The method is applied to the Hermitian analogue of the PT-symmetric cubic
anharmonic oscillator. A new example is provided by a Hamiltonian
(approximately) equivalent to a PT-symmetric extension of the one-parameter
trigonometric Poschl-Teller potential.Comment: 13 pages, no figure, modified presentation, 6 additional references,
published versio
A New Class of PT-symmetric Hamiltonians with Real Spectra
We investigate complex PT-symmetric potentials, associated with quasi-exactly
solvable non-hermitian models involving polynomials and a class of rational
functions. We also look for special solutions of intertwining relations of SUSY
Quantum Mechanics providing a partnership between a real and a complex
PT-symmetric potential of the kind mentioned above. We investigate conditions
sufficient to ensure the reality of the full spectrum or, for the quasi-exactly
solvable systems, the reality of the energy of the finite number of levels.Comment: 9 pages, Late
SWKB Quantization Rules for Bound States in Quantum Wells
In a recent paper by Gomes and Adhikari (J.Phys B30 5987(1997)) a matrix
formulation of the Bohr-Sommerfield quantization rule has been applied to the
study of bound states in one dimension quantum wells. Here we study these
potentials in the frame work of supersymmetric WKB (SWKB) quantization
approximation and find that SWKB quantization rule is superior to the modified
Bohr-Sommerfield or WKB rules as it exactly reproduces the eigenenergies.Comment: 8 page
Assessment of the State-of-the-Art of System-Wide Safety and Assurance Technologies
Since its initiation, the System-wide Safety Assurance Technologies (SSAT) Project has been focused on developing multidisciplinary tools and techniques that are verified and validated to ensure prevention of loss of property and life in NextGen and enable proactive risk management through predictive methods. To this end, four technical challenges have been listed to help realize the goals of SSAT, namely (i) assurance of flight critical systems, (ii) discovery of precursors to safety incidents, (iii) assuring safe human-systems integration, and (iv) prognostic algorithm design for safety assurance. The objective of this report is to provide an extensive survey of SSAT-related research accomplishments by researchers within and outside NASA to get an understanding of what the state-of-the-art is for technologies enabling each of the four technical challenges. We hope that this report will serve as a good resource for anyone interested in gaining an understanding of the SSAT technical challenges, and also be useful in the future for project planning and resource allocation for related research
Performance Evaluation of Staged Bosch Process for CO2 Reduction to Produce Life Support Consumables
Utilizing carbon dioxide to produce water and hence oxygen is critical for sustained manned missions in space, and to support both NASA's cabin Atmosphere Revitalization System (ARS) and In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) concepts. For long term missions beyond low Earth orbit, where resupply is significantly more difficult and costly, open loop ARS, like Sabatier, consume inputs such as hydrogen. The Bosch process, on the other hand, has the potential to achieve complete loop closure and is hence a preferred choice. However, current single stage Bosch reactor designs suffer from a large recycle penalty due to slow reaction rates and the inherent limitation in approaching thermodynamic equilibrium. Developmental efforts are seeking to improve upon the efficiency (hence reducing the recycle penalty) of current single stage Bosch reactors which employ traditional steel wool catalysts. Precision Combustion, Inc. (PCI), with support from NASA, has investigated the potential for utilizing catalysts supported over short-contact time Microlith substrates for the Bosch reaction to achieve faster reaction rates, higher conversions, and a reduced recycle flows. Proof-of-concept testing was accomplished for a staged Bosch process by splitting the chemistry in two separate reactors, first being the reverse water-gas-shift (RWGS) and the second being the carbon formation reactor (CFR) via hydrogenation and/or Boudouard. This paper presents the results from this feasibility study at various operating conditions. Additionally, results from two 70 hour durability tests for the RWGS reactor are discussed
DNA linkage based diagnosis of Wilson disease in asymptomatic siblings
Wilson disease (WD) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by defects in
ATP7B gene located in chromosome 13q14, and manifested as hepatolenticular degeneration as a
result of accumulation of copper. No information on the mutation in the ATP7B gene and haplotypes
using linked markers is available for WD patients in India. Hence, the present study was undetaken
to identify, by a PCR-based molecular diagnostic test, presymptomatic siblings of WD affected individuals
in families with multiple offspring.
Methods: Genomic DNA was prepared from the peripheral blood of the patients, siblings and his/her
first degree relatives. The repeat-markers flanking WD locus were amplified by PCR using fluorescent
labeled primers. Amplified DNA fragments were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in
ABI 377 DNA sequencing system. Genotypes of the samples were determined using Genescan software.
Haplotypes were determined based on segregation of the alleles in the families under study.
Results: Among 15 WD affected families with multiple children, 4 cases were identified where younger
siblings shared same genotype as the patient at all three markers analyzed. Further, eight different
haplotypes were detected in the four patients.
Interpretation & conclusion: The siblings of the WD patients carrying the same genotype at the markers
linked to WD locus were presymptomatically diagnosed individuals. Presence of eight different
haplotypes in the four patients suggested mutational heterogeneity at the WD locus. The test helps
clinicians for therapeutic intervention in suspect WD cases by copper chelating agents prior to
manifestation of overt clinical symptoms.
Key words ATP7B - genotype - haplotype - microsatellite -
Wilson disease (WD) is a genetic disorder, which
manifests as hepatolenticular degeneration as a result of
accumulation of copper in the brain, liver, kidney and cornea due to its deranged biliary excretion1. In 1912, a WD was described as a familial syndrome of progressive lenticular degeneration associated with cirrhosis of the liver2. The etiological role of copper in the pathogenesis of WD was recognized much late
New approach to (quasi)-exactly solvable Schrodinger equations with a position-dependent effective mass
By using the point canonical transformation approach in a manner distinct
from previous ones, we generate some new exactly solvable or quasi-exactly
solvable potentials for the one-dimensional Schr\"odinger equation with a
position-dependent effective mass. In the latter case, SUSYQM techniques
provide us with some additional new potentials.Comment: 11 pages, no figur
Isospectrality of conventional and new extended potentials, second-order supersymmetry and role of PT symmetry
We develop a systematic approach to construct novel completely solvable
rational potentials. Second-order supersymmetric quantum mechanics dictates the
latter to be isospectral to some well-studied quantum systems.
symmetry may facilitate reconciling our approach to the requirement that the
rationally-extended potentials be singularity free. Some examples are shown.Comment: 13 pages, no figure, some additions to introduction and conclusion, 4
more references; to be published in Special issue of Pramana - J. Phy
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