8,568 research outputs found
Amplitude Analyses of D Decay Dalitz Plots
We describe Dalitz plots arising in studies of -meson decays, and what we
have learned from them in recent years. After some mention of technique and
history, we focus on decay of the and mesons to the
final state, and on decay to .
Some mention of other Dalitz plots involving -meson decays is also made.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of The 5th International Workshop on
Charm Physics (Charm 2012
Probing charge fluctuator correlations using quantum dot pairs
We study a pair of quantum dot exciton qubits interacting with a number of
fluctuating charges that can induce a Stark shift of both exciton transition
energies. We do this by solving the optical master equation using a numerical
transfer matrix method. We find that the collective influence of the charge
environment on the dots can be detected by measuring the correlation between
the photons emitted when each dot is driven independently. Qubits in a common
charge environment display photon bunching, if both dots are driven on
resonance or if the driving laser detunings have the same sense for both
qubits, and antibunching if the laser detunings have in opposite signs. We also
show that it is possible to detect several charges fluctuating at different
rates using this technique. Our findings expand the possibility of measuring
qubit dynamics in order to investigate the fundamental physics of the
environmental noise that causes decoherence.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
On the -- lifetime difference and decays
In this paper we discuss some aspects of inclusive decays of charmed mesons
and also decays of the lepton into . We find that phase
space effects are likely to explain the observed lifetime ratio = 1.17. In particular one need not appeal to a large annihilation
contribution in the inclusive decay which, being absent in decays
could also contribute to the enhanced decay rate relative to that of the
. Examining a separate problem, we find that the rate for is almost completely dominated by the tiny phase space for the
final eight particle state. Using an effective chiral Lagrangian to estimate
the matrix element yields a branching ratio into the channel of interest far
smaller than the present upper bound.Comment: No figure
Foam-like compression behavior of fibrin networks
The rheological properties of fibrin networks have been of long-standing
interest. As such there is a wealth of studies of their shear and tensile
responses, but their compressive behavior remains unexplored. Here, by
characterization of the network structure with synchronous measurement of the
fibrin storage and loss moduli at increasing degrees of compression, we show
that the compressive behavior of fibrin networks is similar to that of cellular
solids. A non-linear stress-strain response of fibrin consists of three
regimes: 1) an initial linear regime, in which most fibers are straight, 2) a
plateau regime, in which more and more fibers buckle and collapse, and 3) a
markedly non-linear regime, in which network densification occurs {{by bending
of buckled fibers}} and inter-fiber contacts. Importantly, the spatially
non-uniform network deformation included formation of a moving "compression
front" along the axis of strain, which segregated the fibrin network into
compartments with different fiber densities and structure. The Young's modulus
of the linear phase depends quadratically on the fibrin volume fraction while
that in the densified phase depends cubically on it. The viscoelastic plateau
regime corresponds to a mixture of these two phases in which the fractions of
the two phases change during compression. We model this regime using a
continuum theory of phase transitions and analytically predict the storage and
loss moduli which are in good agreement with the experimental data. Our work
shows that fibrin networks are a member of a broad class of natural cellular
materials which includes cancellous bone, wood and cork
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