525 research outputs found
Dynamic entanglement in oscillating molecules and potential biological implications
We demonstrate that entanglement can persistently recur in an oscillating
two-spin molecule that is coupled to a hot and noisy environment, in which no
static entanglement can survive. The system represents a non-equilibrium
quantum system which, driven through the oscillatory motion, is prevented from
reaching its (separable) thermal equilibrium state. Environmental noise,
together with the driven motion, plays a constructive role by periodically
resetting the system, even though it will destroy entanglement as usual. As a
building block, the present simple mechanism supports the perspective that
entanglement can exist also in systems which are exposed to a hot environment
and to high levels of de-coherence, which we expect e.g. for biological
systems. Our results furthermore suggest that entanglement plays a role in the
heat exchange between molecular machines and environment. Experimental
simulation of our model with trapped ions is within reach of the current
state-of-the-art quantum technologies.Comment: Extended version, including supplementary information. 9 pages, 8
figure
Cricotracheal resection for laryngeal invasion by thyroid carcinoma: our experience.
Invasion of the laryngeal framework by thyroid carcinoma requires specific surgical techniques and carries a higher rate of complications that deserve to be highlighted. We reviewed our data from 1995 to 2012 and found six patients with laryngotracheal invasion by thyroid carcinoma. All underwent total thyroidectomy and single-stage cricotracheal resection, plus anterolateral neck dissection. Three had airway obstruction that necessitated prior endoscopic debulking. None of the patients needed a tracheotomy. There were four cases of papillary carcinoma, and two cases of undifferentiated carcinoma. One patient died of complications of the procedure (anastomotic dehiscence and tracheo-innominate artery fistula). Another died 2 months after the procedure from local recurrence and aspiration pneumonia. One case presented recurrence at 15 months, which was managed by re-excision and adjuvant radiotherapy; after 26 months of follow-up, he has no evidence of locoregional recurrence. The three other patients are alive without evidence of disease at 6, 18 and 41 months, respectively. Cricotracheal resection for subglottic invasion by thyroid carcinoma is an effective procedure, but carries significant risks of complications. This could be attributed to the devascularisation of the tracheal wall due to the simultaneous neck dissection, sacrifice of the strap muscles or of a patch of oesophageal muscle layer. We advocate a sternocleidomastoid flap to cover the anastomosis. Cricotracheal resection for subglottic invasion can be curative with good functional outcomes, even for the advanced stages of thyroid cancer. Endoscopic debulking of the airway prior to the procedure avoids tracheotomy
Uncertainties related to the representation of momentum transport in shallow convection
Convective momentum transport (CMT) has mostly been studied for deep convection, whereas little is known about its characteristics and importance in shallow convection. In this study, CMT by shallow convection is investigated by analyzing both data from large-eddy simulations (LESs) and reforecasts performed with the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). In addition, the central terms underlying the bulk mass-flux parametrization of CMT are evaluated offline. Further, the uncertainties related to the representation of CMT are explored by running the stochastically perturbed parametrizations (SPP) approach of the IFS. The analyzed cases exhibit shallow convective clouds developing within considerable low-level wind shear. Analysis of the momentum fluxes in the LES data reveals significant momentum transport by the convection in both cases, which is directed downgradient despite substantial organization of the cloud field. A detailed inspection of the convection parametrization reveals a very good representation of the entrainment and detrainment rates and an appropriate representation of the convective mass and momentum fluxes. To determine the correct values of mass-flux and in-cloud momentum at the cloud base in the parametrization yet remains challenging. The spread in convection-related quantities generated by the SPP is reasonable and addresses many of the identified uncertainties.ISSN:1942-246
The representation of the trade winds in ECMWF forecasts and reanalyses during EUREC4A
The characterization of systematic forecast errors in lower-tropospheric winds is an essential component of model improvement. This paper is motivated by a global, long-standing surface bias in the operational medium-range weather forecasts produced with the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). Over the tropical oceans, excessive easterly flow is found. A similar bias is found in the western North Atlantic trades, where the EUREC 4 A field campaign provides an unprecedented wealth of measurements. We analyze the wind bias in the IFS and ERA5 reanalysis throughout the entire lower troposphere during EUREC4 A. The wind bias varies greatly from day to day, resulting in root mean square errors (RMSEs) up to 2.5 m s(-1), with a mean wind speed bias up to -1 m s(-1) near and above the trade inversion in the forecasts and up to -0.5 m s(-1) in reanalyses. These biases are insensitive to the assimilation of sondes. The modeled zonal and meridional winds exhibit a diurnal cycle that is too strong, leading to a weak wind speed bias everywhere up to 5 km during daytime but a wind speed bias below 2 km at nighttime that is too strong. Removing momentum transport by shallow convection reduces the wind bias near the surface but leads to stronger easterly near cloud base. The update in moist physics in the newest IFS cycle (cycle 47r3) reduces the meridional wind bias, especially during daytime. Below 1 km, modeled friction due to unresolved physical processes appears to be too strong but is (partially) compensated for by the dynamics, making this a challenging coupled problem
Why is it so difficult to represent stably stratified conditions in numerical weather prediction (NWP) models?
In the 1990s, scientists at European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) suggested that artificially enhancing turbulent diffusion in stable conditions improves the representation of two important aspects of weather forecasts, i.e., near-surface temperatures and synoptic cyclones. Since then, this practice has often been used for tuning the large-scale performance of operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) models, although it is widely recognized to be detrimental for an accurate representation of stable boundary layers. Here we investigate why, 20 years on, such a compromise is still needed in the ECMWF model. We find that reduced turbulent diffusion in stable conditions improves the representation of winds in stable boundary layers, but it deteriorates the large-scale flow and the near-surface temperatures. This suggests that enhanced diffusion is still needed to compensate for errors caused by other poorly represented processes. Among these, we identify the orographic drag, which influences the large-scale flow in a similar way to the turbulence closure for stable conditions, and the strength of the land-atmosphere coupling, which partially controls the near-surface temperatures. We also take a closer look at the relationship between the turbulence closure in stable conditions and the large-scale flow, which was not investigated in detail with a global NWP model. We demonstrate that the turbulent diffusion in stable conditions affects the large-scale flow by modulating not only the strength of synoptic cyclones and anticyclones, but also the amplitude of the planetary-scale standing waves
Electronic and optical properties of beryllium chalcogenides/silicon heterostructures
We have calculated electronic and optical properties of
Si/BeSeTe heterostructures by a semiempirical
tight-binding method. Tight-binding parameters and band bowing of
BeSeTe are considered through a recent model for highly
mismatched semiconductor alloys. The band bowing and the measurements of
conduction band offset lead to a type II heterostucture for
Si/BeSeTe with conduction band minimum in the Si layer and
valence band maximum in the BeSeTe layer. The electronic
structure and optical properties of various (Si/(BeSeTe [001] superlattices have been considered. Two
bands of interface states were found within the bandgap of bulk Si. Our
calculations indicate that the optical edges are below the fundamental bandgap
of bulk Si and the transitions are optically allowed.Comment: 16 pager, 7 figure
The smallest refrigerators can reach maximal efficiency
We investigate whether size imposes a fundamental constraint on the
efficiency of small thermal machines. We analyse in detail a model of a small
self-contained refrigerator consisting of three qubits. We show analytically
that this system can reach the Carnot efficiency, thus demonstrating that there
exists no complementarity between size and efficiency.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. v2: published versio
On the quantum, classical and total amount of correlations in a quantum state
We give an operational definition of the quantum, classical and total amount
of correlations in a bipartite quantum state. We argue that these quantities
can be defined via the amount of work (noise) that is required to erase
(destroy) the correlations: for the total correlation, we have to erase
completely, for the quantum correlation one has to erase until a separable
state is obtained, and the classical correlation is the maximal correlation
left after erasing the quantum correlations.
In particular, we show that the total amount of correlations is equal to the
quantum mutual information, thus providing it with a direct operational
interpretation for the first time. As a byproduct, we obtain a direct,
operational and elementary proof of strong subadditivity of quantum entropy.Comment: 12 pages ReVTeX4, 2 eps figures. v2 has some arguments clarified and
references update
The Ithaca Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
I list several strong requirements for what I would consider a sensible
interpretation of quantum mechanics and I discuss two simple theorems. One, as
far as I know, is new; the other was only noted a few years ago. Both have
important implications for such a sensible interpretation. My talk will not
clear everything up; indeed, you may conclude that it has not cleared anything
up. But I hope it will provide a different perspective from which to view some
old and vexing puzzles (or, if you believe nothing needs to be cleared up, some
ancient verities.)Comment: 21 pages, plain TEX. Notes for a lecture given at the Golden Jubilee
Workshop on Foundations of Quantum Theory, Tata Institute, Bombay, September
9-12, 199
AB and Berry phases for a quantum cloud of charge
We investigate the phase accumulated by a charged particle in an extended
quantum state as it encircles one or more magnetic fluxons, each carrying half
a flux unit. A simple, essentially topological analysis reveals an interplay
between the Aharonov-Bohm phase and Berry's phase.Comment: 10 pages, TAUP 2110-93. Te
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