1,277 research outputs found
Trotter-Kato product formulae in Dixmier ideal
It is shown that for a certain class of the Kato functions the Trotter-Kato
product formulae converge in Dixmier ideal C 1, in topology, which is
defined by the 1,-norm. Moreover, the rate of convergence in
this topology inherits the error-bound estimate for the corresponding
operator-norm convergence. 1 since [24], [14]. Note that a subtle point of this
program is the question about the rate of convergence in the corresponding
topology. Since the limit of the Trotter-Kato product formula is a strongly
continuous semigroup, for the von Neumann-Schatten ideals this topology is the
trace-norm 1 on the trace-class ideal C 1 (H). In this case the limit
is a Gibbs semigroup [25]. For self-adjoint Gibbs semigroups the rate of
convergence was estimated for the first time in [7] and [9]. The authors
considered the case of the Gibbs-Schr{\"o}dinger semigroups. They scrutinised
in these papers a dependence of the rate of convergence for the (exponential)
Trotter formula on the smoothness of the potential in the Schr{\"o}dinger
generator. The first abstract result in this direction was due to [19]. In this
paper a general scheme of lifting the operator-norm rate convergence for the
Trotter-Kato product formulae was proposed and advocated for estimation the
rate of the trace-nor
Scattering Theory for Open Quantum Systems
Quantum systems which interact with their environment are often modeled by
maximal dissipative operators or so-called Pseudo-Hamiltonians. In this paper
the scattering theory for such open systems is considered. First it is assumed
that a single maximal dissipative operator in a Hilbert space \sH is
used to describe an open quantum system. In this case the minimal self-adjoint
dilation of can be regarded as the Hamiltonian of a closed
system which contains the open system \{A_D,\sH\}, but since
is necessarily not semibounded from below, this model is difficult to interpret
from a physical point of view. In the second part of the paper an open quantum
system is modeled with a family of maximal dissipative operators
depending on energy , and it is shown that the open system can be embedded
into a closed system where the Hamiltonian is semibounded. Surprisingly it
turns out that the corresponding scattering matrix can be completely recovered
from scattering matrices of single Pseudo-Hamiltonians as in the first part of
the paper. The general results are applied to a class of Sturm-Liouville
operators arising in dissipative and quantum transmitting
Schr\"{o}dinger-Poisson systems
VLBI2010 - The TWIN radio telescope project at Wettzell, Germany
The Twin Telescope Wettzell (TTW) Project is funded to be exec
uted during the period of 2008-2011. The design of the TTW was based on the VLBI2010 vision of the corresponding IVS Working Group. In the first two project years the design passed the simulations with respect to its specifications and was approved for production. At the Geodetic Observatory Wettzell a thorough soil analysis was made in order to define the sites for the towers of the new radio telescopes. Meanwhile the construction work has begun and acceptance tests of several telescope parts, e.g. azimuth bearings, took place. The full assembly of the radio telescopes is scheduled for the next two years. In parallel to the construction work at the Wettzell site, the design work for the different feed options progressed
Statistical Physics of Self-Replication
Self-replication is a capacity common to every species of living thing, and
simple physical intuition dictates that such a process must invariably be
fueled by the production of entropy. Here, we undertake to make this intuition
rigorous and quantitative by deriving a lower bound for the amount of heat that
is produced during a process of self-replication in a system coupled to a
thermal bath. We find that the minimum value for the physically allowed rate of
heat production is determined by the growth rate, internal entropy, and
durability of the replicator, and we discuss the implications of this finding
for bacterial cell division, as well as for the pre-biotic emergence of
self-replicating nucleic acids.Comment: 4+ pages, 1 figur
Soil Contamination due to Arsenic-Enriched Irrigation Water - Impact of Irrigation Practices
Increasing irrigation with arsenic (As) contaminated groundwater represents a growing problem in the densely populated delta and floodplain regions of SE Asia. The overarching aim of this study was to evaluate retention and mobility of As in soils in dependence of the irrigation practice. Irrigation of calcareous agricultural soils was simulated in a green-house experiment, in which artificial anoxic groundwater enriched in dissolved AsIII (10 mg/L) was applied regularly. We compared the following three different irrigation scenarios: permanently flooded, promoting reducing conditions (R); alternating flood irrigation, characterized by frequent changes in water saturation (RO); and sprinkler irrigation, maintaining permanently oxic conditions (O). Several wet chemical extraction procedures were carried out to characterize soil As storage pools at the end of the experiment. Pore water analysis reflected strongly reducing redox conditions (up to 42.9 mg/L dissolved Fe) for the R treatment, while less reducing conditions developed in the RO scenario (Fe max. 0.14 mg/L). Furthermore, As concentrations in pore water increased steadily to 1.34 (R) and 0.39 mg/L (O), respectively, with 20% (R) and 80% (RO) being present in the oxidized form AsV. The addition of As by irrigation water resulted in surprisingly similar depth distributions being independent of the irrigation treatment. Highest As contents (R: 52.2, RO: 49.6 and O: 43.9 mg/kg) occurred within the top 0-2 cm and decreased rapidly to values close the initial content (11.5 mg/kg) below 4 cm depth. This reflects a generally high sorption capacity of the soil for As. Even reductive dissolution of Fe-phases and the accompanying loss of sorption sites (R treatment) did not affect the As sorption behavior in general. However, pore water As concentrations and sequential extraction results point at a higher As mobility in case of the R treatment. This can be explained by the higher proportion of AsIII in the pore water, which is more mobile than AsV at the prevailing conditions. In sum, the three irrigation practices did not result in differences regarding the vertical distribution of As, but permanent flooding clearly increased the mobility of As as compared to the other treatments. The comparison of different wet chemical extraction procedures further emphasizes that protocol and sample treatment should be selected with caution, especially when redox conditions in the soil vary
Mean field approaches to the totally asymmetric exclusion process with quenched disorder and large particles
The process of protein synthesis in biological systems resembles a one
dimensional driven lattice gas in which the particles (ribosomes) have spatial
extent, covering more than one lattice site. Realistic, nonuniform gene
sequences lead to quenched disorder in the particle hopping rates. We study the
totally asymmetric exclusion process with large particles and quenched disorder
via several mean field approaches and compare the mean field results with Monte
Carlo simulations. Mean field equations obtained from the literature are found
to be reasonably effective in describing this system. A numerical technique is
developed for computing the particle current rapidly. The mean field approach
is extended to include two-point correlations between adjacent sites. The
two-point results are found to match Monte Carlo simulations more closely
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