35,237 research outputs found
Study of non-equilibrium effects and thermal properties of heavy ion collisions using a covariant approach
Non-equilibrium effects are studied using a full Lorentz-invariant formalism.
Our analysis shows that in reactions considered here, no global or local
equilibrium is reached. The heavier masses are found to be equilibrated more
than the lighter systems. The local temperature is extracted using hot Thomas
Fermi formalism generalized for the case of two interpenetrating pieces of
nuclear matter. The temperature is found to vary linearly with bombarding
energy and impact parameter whereas it is nearly independent of the mass of the
colliding nuclei. This indicates that the study of temperature with medium size
nuclei is also reliable. The maximum temperatures obtained in our approach are
in a nice agreement with earlier calculations of other approaches. A simple
parametrization of maximal temperature as a function of the bombarding energy
is also given.Comment: LaTex-file, 17 pages, 8 figures (available upon request), Journal of
Physics G20 (1994) 181
High-fidelity resonator-induced phase gate with single-mode squeezing
We propose to increase the fidelity of two-qubit resonator-induced phase
gates in circuit QED by the use of narrowband single-mode squeezed drive. We
show that there exists an optimal squeezing angle and strength that erases
qubit 'which-path' information leaking out of the cavity and thereby minimizes
qubit dephasing during these gates. Our analytical results for the gate
fidelity are in excellent agreement with numerical simulations of a cascaded
master equation that takes into account the dynamics of the source of squeezed
radiation. With realistic parameters, we find that it is possible to realize a
controlled-phase gate with a gate time of 200 ns and average infidelity of
Extent of sexual coercion among young female migrant carpet and garment factory workers in Nepal
This paper explores sexual coercion of young female migrant workers in the carpet and garment factories in the Kathmandu Valley. Information is drawn from 12 in-depth case histories and a sample survey of 550 respondents aged 14-19 years. The survey found that one in ten young women had ever experienced sexual harassment or coercion in their lifetime. Perpetrators included co-workers, boyfriends, employers and relatives. In-depth interviews revealed that the inability of young working women to communicate effectively with their peers and sex partners, lack of self esteem, job insecurity and other socio-economic problems made them vulnerable to these abuses. The results suggest the need for a range of factory-based interventions
On the participant-spectator matter and thermalization of neutron-rich systems in heavy-ion collisions
We study the participant-spectator matter at the energy of vanishing flow for
neutron-rich systems. Our study reveals similar behaviour of
articipant-spectator for neutron-rich systems as for stable systems and also
points towards nearly mass independence behaviour of participant-spectator
matter for neutron-rich systems at the energy of vanishing flow. We also study
the thermalization reached in the reactions of neutron-rich systems
Nuclear Dynamics at the Balance Energy
We study the mass dependence of various quantities (like the average and
maximum density, collision rate, participant-spectator matter, temperature as
well as time zones for higher density) by simulating the reactions at the
energy of vanishing flow. This study is carried out within the framework of
Quantum Molecular Dynamics model. Our findings clearly indicate an existence of
a power law in all the above quantities calculated at the balance energy. The
only significant mass dependence was obtained for the temperature reached in
the central sphere. All other quantities are rather either insensitive or
depend weakly on the system size at balance energy. The time zone for higher
density as well as the time of maximal density and collision rate follow a
power law inverse to the energy of vanishing flow.Comment: 9 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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