5,104 research outputs found
Formation of plasma around a small meteoroid: 2. Implications for radar head echo
This paper calculates the spatial distribution of the plasma responsible for radar head echoes by applying the kinetic theory developed in the companion paper. This results in a set of analytic expressions for the plasma density as a function of distance from the meteoroid. It shows that at distances less than a collisional mean free path from the meteoroid surface, the plasma density drops in proportion to 1/R where R is the distance from the meteoroid center; and, at distances much longer than the meanâfreeâpath behind the meteoroid, the density diminishes at a rate proportional to 1/R2. The results of this paper should be used for modeling and analysis of radar head echoes.This work was supported by NSF grant AGS-1244842. (AGS-1244842 - NSF
Photoelectron-induced waves: A likely source of 150 km radar echoes and enhanced electron modes
VHF radars near the geomagnetic equator receive coherent reflections from plasma density irregularities between 130 and 160 km in altitude during the daytime. Though researchers first discovered these 150 km echoes over 50 years ago and use them to monitor vertical plasma drifts, the underlying mechanism that creates them remains a mystery. This paper uses largeâscale kinetic simulations to show that photoelectrons can drive electron waves, which then enhance ion density irregularities that radars could observe as 150 km echoes. This model explains why 150 km echoes exist only during the day and why they appear at their lowest altitudes near noon. It predicts the spectral structure observed by Chau (2004) and suggests observations that can further evaluate this mechanism. It also shows the types and strength of electron modes that photoelectronâwave interactions generate in a magnetized plasma.The authors would like to thank Juha Vierinen, David Hysell, Jorge Chau, and Roger Varney for their helpful discussions and suggestions. This material is based upon work supported by NASA under grant NNX14AI13G. This work used the XSEDE and TACC computational facilities, supported by National Science Foundation grant ACI-1053575. Simulation-produced data are archived at TACC and available upon request. (NNX14AI13G - NASA; ACI-1053575 - National Science Foundation
What is the probability of a thermodynamical transition?
If the second law of thermodynamics forbids a transition from one state to
another, then it is still possible to make the transition happen by using a
sufficient amount of work. But if we do not have access to this amount of work,
can the transition happen probabilistically? In the thermodynamic limit, this
probability tends to zero, but here we find that for finite-sized systems, it
can be finite. We compute the maximum probability of a transition or a
thermodynamical fluctuation from any initial state to any final state, and show
that this maximum can be achieved for any final state which is block-diagonal
in the energy eigenbasis. We also find upper and lower bounds on this
transition probability, in terms of the work of transition. As a bi-product, we
introduce a finite set of thermodynamical monotones related to the
thermo-majorization criteria which governs state transitions, and compute the
work of transition in terms of them. The trade-off between the probability of a
transition, and any partial work added to aid in that transition is also
considered. Our results have applications in entanglement theory, and we find
the amount of entanglement required (or gained) when transforming one pure
entangled state into any other.Comment: 15+6 pages, 7+1 figures V3: Added discussion on heralded probability
and relation to fluctuation theorems. V2: Emphasized that X can be any state
and that the achievability of our result in the full thermodynamics case,
holds only when the target state is block-diagonal in the energy eigenbasi
Statistics of statisticians: Critical mass of statistics and operational research groups in the UK
Using a recently developed model, inspired by mean field theory in
statistical physics, and data from the UK's Research Assessment Exercise, we
analyse the relationship between the quality of statistics and operational
research groups and the quantity researchers in them. Similar to other academic
disciplines, we provide evidence for a linear dependency of quality on quantity
up to an upper critical mass, which is interpreted as the average maximum
number of colleagues with whom a researcher can communicate meaningfully within
a research group. The model also predicts a lower critical mass, which research
groups should strive to achieve to avoid extinction. For statistics and
operational research, the lower critical mass is estimated to be 9 3. The
upper critical mass, beyond which research quality does not significantly
depend on group size, is about twice this value
Entanglement fluctuation theorems
Pure state entanglement transformations have been thought of as irreversible,
with reversible transformations generally only possible in the limit of many
copies. Here, we show that reversible entanglement transformations do not
require processing on the many copy level, but can instead be undertaken on
individual systems, provided the amount of entanglement which is produced or
consumed is allowed to fluctuate. We derive necessary and sufficient conditions
for entanglement manipulations in this case. As a corollary, we derive an
equation which quantifies the fluctuations of entanglement, which is formally
identical to the Jarzynski fluctuation equality found in thermodynamics. One
can also relate a forward entanglement transformation to its reverse process in
terms of the entanglement cost of such a transformation, in a manner equivalent
to the Crooks relation. We show that a strong converse theorem for entanglement
transformations is formally related to the second law of thermodynamics, while
the fact that the Schmidt rank of an entangled state cannot increase is related
to the third law of thermodynamics. Achievability of the protocols is done by
introducing an entanglement battery, a device which stores entanglement and
uses an amount of entanglement that is allowed to fluctuate but with an average
cost which is still optimal. This allows us to also solve the problem of
partial entanglement recovery, and in fact, we show that entanglement is fully
recovered. Allowing the amount of consumed entanglement to fluctuate also leads
to improved and optimal entanglement dilution protocols.Comment: comments welcome, v2 published versio
The second law of quantum thermodynamics as an equality
We investigate the connection between recent results in quantum
thermodynamics and fluctuation relations by adopting a fully quantum mechanical
description of thermodynamics. By including a work system whose energy is
allowed to fluctuate, we derive a set of equalities which all thermodynamical
transitions have to satisfy. This extends the condition for maps to be
Gibbs-preserving to the case of fluctuating work, providing a more general
characterisation of maps commonly used in the information theoretic approach to
thermodynamics. For final states, block diagonal in the energy basis, this set
of equalities are necessary and sufficient conditions for a thermodynamical
state transition to be possible. The conditions serves as a parent equation
which can be used to derive a number of results. These include writing the
second law of thermodynamics as an equality featuring a fine-grained notion of
the free energy. It also yields a generalisation of the Jarzynski fluctuation
theorem which holds for arbitrary initial states, and under the most general
manipulations allowed by the laws of quantum mechanics. Furthermore, we show
that each of these relations can be seen as the quasi-classical limit of three
fully quantum identities. This allows us to consider the free energy as an
operator, and allows one to obtain more general and fully quantum fluctuation
relations from the information theoretic approach to quantum thermodynamics.Comment: 11+3 pages. V4: Updated to match published version. Discussion of
thermo-majorization and implementing arbitary unitaries added. V3: Added
funding information. V2: Expanded discussion on relation to fluctuation
theorem
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