6,311 research outputs found
Systematic ranging and late warning asteroid impacts
We describe systematic ranging, an orbit determination technique especially
suitable to assess the near-term Earth impact hazard posed by newly discovered
asteroids. For these late warning cases, the time interval covered by the
observations is generally short, perhaps a few hours or even less, which leads
to severe degeneracies in the orbit estimation process. The systematic ranging
approach gets around these degeneracies by performing a raster scan in the
poorly-constrained space of topocentric range and range rate, while the plane
of sky position and motion are directly tied to the recorded observations. This
scan allows us to identify regions corresponding to collision solutions, as
well as potential impact times and locations. From the probability distribution
of the observation errors, we obtain a probability distribution in the orbital
space and then estimate the probability of an Earth impact. We show how this
technique is effective for a number of examples, including 2008 TC3 and 2014
AA, the only two asteroids to date discovered prior to impact
Energy Dependence of Scattering Ground State Polar Molecules
We explore the total cross section of ground state polar molecules in an
electric field at various energies, focusing on RbCs and RbK. An external
electric field polarizes the molecules and induces strong dipolar interactions
leading to non-zero partial waves contributing to the scattering even as the
collision energy goes to zero. This results in the need to compute scattering
problems with many different values of total M to converge the total cross
section. An accurate and efficient approximate total cross section is
introduced and used to study the low field temperature dependence. To
understand the scattering of the polar molecules we compare a semi-classical
cross section with quantum unitarity limit. This comparison leads to the
ability to characterize the scattering based on the value of the electric field
and the collision energy.Comment: Accepted PRA, 10 pages, 5 figure
Probabilistic learning on graphs via contextual architectures
We propose a novel methodology for representation learning on graph-structured data, in which a stack of Bayesian Networks learns different distributions of a vertex's neighbour- hood. Through an incremental construction policy and layer-wise training, we can build deeper architectures with respect to typical graph convolutional neural networks, with benefits in terms of context spreading between vertices. First, the model learns from graphs via maximum likelihood estimation without using target labels. Then, a supervised readout is applied to the learned graph embeddings to deal with graph classification and vertex classification tasks, showing competitive results against neural models for graphs. The computational complexity is linear in the number of edges, facilitating learning on large scale data sets. By studying how depth affects the performances of our model, we discover that a broader context generally improves performances. In turn, this leads to a critical analysis of some benchmarks used in literature
A Single Atom Transistor in a 1D Optical Lattice
We propose a scheme utilising a quantum interference phenomenon to switch the
transport of atoms in a 1D optical lattice through a site containing an
impurity atom. The impurity represents a qubit which in one spin state is
transparent to the probe atoms, but in the other acts as a single atom mirror.
This allows a single-shot quantum non-demolition measurement of the qubit spin.Comment: RevTeX 4, 5 Figures, 4 Page
Gluon propagator, triple gluon vertex and the QCD coupling constant
We study the UV-scaling of the flavorless gluon propagator in the Landau
gauge in an energy window up to 9 GeV. Dominant hypercubic lattice artifacts
are eliminated. A large set of renormalization schemes is used to test
asymptotic scaling. We compare with our results obtained directly from the
triple gluon vertex. We end-up with \Lambda_{\bar{\rm{MS}}} = 318(12)(5) MeV
and 292(5)(15) MeV respectively for these two methods, compatible which each
other but significantly above the Schrodinger method estimate.Comment: 3 pages, LaTeX with two figures; presented at LATTICE9
Weakly bound states of polar molecules in bilayers
We investigate a system of two polarized molecules in a layered trap. The
molecules reside in adjacent layers and interact purely via the dipole-dipole
interaction. We determine the properties of the ground state of the system as a
function of the dipole moment and polarization angle. A bound state is always
present in the system and in the weak binding limit the bound state extends to
a very large distance and shows universal behavior.Comment: Presented at the 21st European Conference on Few-Body Problems in
Physics, Salamanca, Spain, 30 August - 3 September 201
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