10,944 research outputs found
Entangling photons via the double quantum Zeno effect
We propose a scheme for entangling two photons via the quantum Zeno effect,
which describes the inhibition of quantum evolution by frequent measurements
and is based on the difference between summing amplitudes and probabilities.
For a given error probability , our scheme requires that the
one-photon loss rate and the two-photon absorption rate
in some medium satisfy , which is significantly improved in comparison to previous
approaches. Again based on the quantum Zeno effect, as well as coherent
excitations, we present a possibility to fulfill this requirement in an
otherwise linear optics set-up.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 figure
A Search for Intrinsic Polarization in O Stars with Variable Winds
New observations of 9 of the brightest northern O stars have been made with
the Breger polarimeter on the 0.9~m telescope at McDonald Observatory and the
AnyPol polarimeter on the 0.4~m telescope at Limber Observatory, using the
Johnson-Cousins UBVRI broadband filter system. Comparison with earlier
measurements shows no clearly defined long-term polarization variability. For
all 9 stars the wavelength dependence of the degree of polarization in the
optical range can be fit by a normal interstellar polarization law. The
polarization position angles are practically constant with wavelength and are
consistent with those of neighboring stars. Thus the simplest conclusion is
that the polarization of all the program stars is primarily interstellar.
The O stars chosen for this study are generally known from ultraviolet and
optical spectroscopy to have substantial mass loss rates and variable winds, as
well as occasional circumstellar emission. Their lack of intrinsic polarization
in comparison with the similar Be stars may be explained by the dominance of
radiation as a wind driving force due to higher luminosity, which results in
lower density and less rotational flattening in the electron scattering inner
envelopes where the polarization is produced. However, time series of
polarization measurements taken simultaneously with H-alpha and UV spectroscopy
during several coordinated multiwavelength campaigns suggest two cases of
possible small-amplitude, periodic short-term polarization variability, and
therefore intrinsic polarization, which may be correlated with the more widely
recognized spectroscopic variations.Comment: LaTeX2e, 22 pages including 11 tables; 12 separate gif figures; uses
aastex.cls preprint package; accepted by The Astronomical Journa
Parents' involvement in child care: do parental and work identities matter?
The current study draws on identity theory to explore mothers' and fathers' involvement in childcare. It examined the relationships between the salience and centrality of individuals’ parental and work-related identities and the extent to which they are involved in various forms of childcare. A sample of 148 couples with at least one child aged 6 years or younger completed extensive questionnaires. As hypothesized, the salience and centrality of parental identities were positively related to mothers' and fathers' involvement in childcare. Moreover, maternal identity salience was negatively related to fathers' hours of childcare and share of childcare tasks. Finally, work hours mediated the negative relationships between the centrality of work identities and time invested in childcare, and gender moderated this mediation effect. That is, the more central a mother's work identity, the more hours she worked for pay and the fewer hours she invested in childcare. These findings shed light on the role of parental identities in guiding behavioral choices, and attest to the importance of distinguishing between identity salience and centrality as two components of self-structure
Musical revitalisation of the schoolyard: results of a service-learning project
This research presents and discusses the results of a Service-Learning project developed by student teachers of Primary Education at the University of Valladolid during the academic years 2016/17, 2017/18, 2018/19, and 2019/20. The project aimed to revitalize recess through musical activities for children aged 6 to 12 in seven schools in Segovia (Spain). The results of the qualitative analysis show that the project has promoted the musical development of the children through singing, the experience of rhythm, and expression through movement, using a selected repertoire of popular children folk songs. In the university students, it helped foster commitment to primary school students through the promotion of co-education and socio-cultural diversity—values which have fostered the development of social and civic competences. The student teachers also achieved professional growth by obtaining through this project skills typical of Music Education teachers
Excitation of the 3.071mm Hyperfine Line in Li-Like 57-Fe in Astrophysical Plasmas
As noted first by Sunyaev & Churazov (1984), the 3.071 mm hyperfine line from
might be observable in astrophysical plasmas. We assess the
atomic processes which might contribute to the excitation of this line. We
determine the intensity of the hyperfine line from an isothermal, coronal
plasma in collisional ionization equilibrium and for a coronal plasma cooling
isobarically due to its own radiation. Comparisons of the hyperfine line to
other lines emitted by the same ion, Fe, are shown to be useful for
deriving the isotopic fraction of Fe. We calculate the ratios of the
hyperfine line to the 2s--2p EUV lines at 192 \AA and 255 \AA, and the 2s--3p
X-ray doublet at 10.6 \AA.Comment: 28 pages text+figures, Accepted to ApJ in Jan 98, also at
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~nld2n/research.htm
Topological network alignment uncovers biological function and phylogeny
Sequence comparison and alignment has had an enormous impact on our
understanding of evolution, biology, and disease. Comparison and alignment of
biological networks will likely have a similar impact. Existing network
alignments use information external to the networks, such as sequence, because
no good algorithm for purely topological alignment has yet been devised. In
this paper, we present a novel algorithm based solely on network topology, that
can be used to align any two networks. We apply it to biological networks to
produce by far the most complete topological alignments of biological networks
to date. We demonstrate that both species phylogeny and detailed biological
function of individual proteins can be extracted from our alignments.
Topology-based alignments have the potential to provide a completely new,
independent source of phylogenetic information. Our alignment of the
protein-protein interaction networks of two very different species--yeast and
human--indicate that even distant species share a surprising amount of network
topology with each other, suggesting broad similarities in internal cellular
wiring across all life on Earth.Comment: Algorithm explained in more details. Additional analysis adde
Additive-Assisted, Cerium-Based, Corrosion-Resistant e-coating
Corrosion resistance of metallic components such as stainless steel components of vehicles, and especially aluminum- based components of aircraft, is enhanced by application of an e-coat paint or primer which is enhanced by incorporation of cerium ions into the e-coat electrolytic bath. The resulting overall coating includes a cerium-based layer under a cerium-enhanced e-coat paint or primer layer
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Setting targets for HIV/AIDS-What lessons can be learned from other disease control programmes?
Our analysis of experience from programmes targeting malaria, leprosy and TB shows the importance of drawing broadly on research and implementation expertise, and civil society more broadly, when setting targets for HIV control. The engagement of stakeholders from the highest burden settings, including affected populations, is crucial, to ensure that disease control efforts uphold human rights and tackle HIV-related stigma and discrimination.
An appropriate balance is needed between ambitious, galvanising global targets that drive funding and political/public engagement, and targets that reflect the complexities and local epidemiological variations in disease profile. Ethical issues and unintended consequences need to be considered when setting targets—particularly around local effects and opportunity costs of having foregone other areas of disease control and public health. Intermediate and adaptable targets are needed that allow for course corrections to programmes.
Overly burdensome reporting requirements for individual local programmes and countries should be avoided, as well as potential for overlapping and sometimes conflicting targets both within and across vertical disease programmes. Process targets should be distinguished from outcome targets, which should be measurable and based on high-quality data.
Retention of expert healthcare worker skills and specialist services is vital, while moving towards integrated health systems if effective disease control programmes are to be maintained. Target development should seek areas of programme delivery where an opportunity to codevelop targets and integrate services exists. Global efforts to move to universal health coverage (UHC), for example, could be factored in when developing targets.
Sustaining investment and continuing political interest in the end phase of any elimination or eradication strategy, once incidence and prevalence are low, are critical to achieve success. Equity- and access-based service delivery targets become increasingly important as the elimination strategy nears its end and should be factored into planning.
Achieving disease elimination and/or eradication is only possible with sufficient investment in research to develop new prevention tools such as vaccines, point-of-care diagnostics, and treatments to counteract the effects of increasing drug resistance and the challenging latency period of diseases; public health infrastructure upgrades that address wider determinants of health; and health and surveillance systems that allow for equitable delivery and access to services
Additive-Assisted Cerium-Based Electrolytic Coating Process for Corrosion Protection of Aluminum Alloys
The corrosion resistance of an aluminum or aluminum alloy component is enhanced by immersing an aluminum alloy to act as a cathode and an oxygen-evolving anode in an electrolyte comprising water, cerium ions, and an additive selected from among animal gelatin, derivatives of animal gelatin, and amino acids, then passing an electrical current through the electrolyte to deposit a cerium-based coating onto the aluminum-based component
Reasoning algebraically about refinement on TSO architectures
The Total Store Order memory model is widely implemented by modern multicore architectures such as x86, where local buffers are used for optimisation, allowing limited forms of instruction reordering. The presence of buffers and hardware-controlled buffer flushes increases the level of non-determinism from the level specified by a program, complicating the already difficult task of concurrent programming. This paper presents a new notion of refinement for weak memory models, based on the observation that pending writes to a process' local variables may be treated as if the effect of the update has already occurred in shared memory. We develop an interval-based model with algebraic rules for various programming constructs. In this framework, several decomposition rules for our new notion of refinement are developed. We apply our approach to verify the spinlock algorithm from the literature
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