10,208 research outputs found
Microwave Scattering and Noise Emission from Afterglow Plasmas in a Magnetic Field
The microwave reflection and noise emission (extraordinary mode) from cylindrical rare‐gas (He, Ne, Ar) afterglow plasmas in an axial magnetic field is described. Reflection and noise emission are measured as a function of magnetic field near electron cyclotron resonance (ω ≈ ω_c) with electron density as a parameter (ω_p < ω). A broad peak, which shifts to lower values of ω_c/ω) as electron density increases, is observed for (ω_c/ω) ≤ 1. For all values of electron density a second sharp peak is found very close to cyclotron resonance in reflection measurements. This peak does not occur in the emission data. Calculations of reflection and emission using a theoretical model consisting of a one‐dimensional, cold plasma slab with nonuniform electron density yield results in qualitative agreement with the observations. Both the experimental and theoretical results suggest that the broad, density‐dependent peak involves resonance effects at the upper hybrid frequency ((ω_h)^2 = (ω_c)^2 + (ω_p)^2) of the plasma
Bio-inspired swing leg control for spring-mass robots running on ground with unexpected height disturbance
We proposed three swing leg control policies for spring-mass running robots, inspired by experimental data from our recent collaborative work on ground running birds. Previous investigations suggest that animals may prioritize injury avoidance and/or efficiency as their objective function during running rather than maintaining limit-cycle stability. Therefore, in this study we targeted structural capacity (maximum leg force to avoid damage) and efficiency as the main goals for our control policies, since these objective functions are crucial to reduce motor size and structure weight. Each proposed policy controls the leg angle as a function of time during flight phase such that its objective function during the subsequent stance phase is regulated. The three objective functions that are regulated in the control policies are (i) the leg peak force, (ii) the axial impulse, and (iii) the leg actuator work. It should be noted that each control policy regulates one single objective function. Surprisingly, all three swing leg control policies result in nearly identical subsequent stance phase dynamics. This implies that the implementation of any of the proposed control policies would satisfy both goals (damage avoidance and efficiency) at once. Furthermore, all three control policies require a surprisingly simple leg angle adjustment: leg retraction with constant angular acceleration
A quantum protocol for cheat-sensitive weak coin flipping
We present a quantum protocol for the task of weak coin flipping. We find
that, for one choice of parameters in the protocol, the maximum probability of
a dishonest party winning the coin flip if the other party is honest is
1/sqrt(2). We also show that if parties restrict themselves to strategies
wherein they cannot be caught cheating, their maximum probability of winning
can be even smaller. As such, the protocol offers additional security in the
form of cheat sensitivity.Comment: 4 pages RevTex. Differs from the journal version only in that the
sentences: "The ordering of the authors on this paper was chosen by a coin
flip implemented by a trusted third party. TR lost." have not been remove
Resonant Processes in a Frozen Gas
We present a theory of resonant processes in a frozen gas of atoms
interacting via dipole-dipole potentials that vary as , where is
the interatomic separation. We supply an exact result for a single atom in a
given state interacting resonantly with a random gas of atoms in a different
state. The time development of the transition process is calculated both on-
and off-resonance, and the linewidth with respect to detuning is obtained as a
function of time . We introduce a random spin Hamiltonian to model a dense
system of resonators and show how it reduces to the previous model in the limit
of a sparse system. We derive approximate equations for the average effective
spin, and we use them to model the behavior seen in the experiments of Anderson
et al. and Lowell et al. The approach to equilibrium is found to be
proportional to ), where the constant is explicitly related to the system's parameters.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figure
The four-populations model: a new classification scheme for pre-planetesimal collisions
Within the collision growth scenario for planetesimal formation, the growth
step from centimetre sized pre-planetesimals to kilometre sized planetesimals
is still unclear. The formation of larger objects from the highly porous
pre-planetesimals may be halted by a combination of fragmentation in disruptive
collisions and mutual rebound with compaction. However, the right amount of
fragmentation is necessary to explain the observed dust features in late T
Tauri discs. Therefore, detailed data on the outcome of pre-planetesimal
collisions is required and has to be presented in a suitable and precise
format. We propose and apply a new classification scheme for pre-planetesimal
collisions based on the quantitative aspects of four fragment populations: the
largest and second largest fragment, a power-law population, and a
sub-resolution population. For the simulations of pre-planetesimal collisions,
we adopt the SPH numerical scheme with extensions for the simulation of porous
solid bodies. By means of laboratory benchmark experiments, this model was
previously calibrated and tested for the correct simulation of the compaction,
bouncing, and fragmentation behaviour of macroscopic highly porous silica dust
aggregates. It is shown that previous attempts to map collision data were much
too oriented on qualitatively categorising into sticking, bouncing, and
fragmentation events. We show that the four-populations model encompasses all
previous categorisations and in addition allows for transitions. This is
because it is based on quantitative characteristic attributes of each
population such as the mass, kinetic energy, and filling factor. As a
demonstration of the applicability and the power of the four-populations model,
we utilise it to present the results of a study on the influence of collision
velocity in head-on collisions of intermediate porosity aggregates.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables, to be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Security of Quantum Bit-String Generation
We consider the cryptographic task of bit-string generation. This is a
generalisation of coin tossing in which two mistrustful parties wish to
generate a string of random bits such that an honest party can be sure that the
other cannot have biased the string too much. We consider a quantum protocol
for this task, originally introduced in Phys. Rev. A {\bf 69}, 022322 (2004),
that is feasible with present day technology. We introduce security conditions
based on the average bias of the bits and the Shannon entropy of the string.
For each, we prove rigorous security bounds for this protocol in both noiseless
and noisy conditions under the most general attacks allowed by quantum
mechanics. Roughly speaking, in the absence of noise, a cheater can only bias
significantly a vanishing fraction of the bits, whereas in the presence of
noise, a cheater can bias a constant fraction, with this fraction depending
quantitatively on the level of noise. We also discuss classical protocols for
the same task, deriving upper bounds on how well a classical protocol can
perform. This enables the determination of how much noise the quantum protocol
can tolerate while still outperforming classical protocols. We raise several
conjectures concerning both quantum and classical possibilities for large n
cryptography. An experiment corresponding to the scheme analysed in this paper
has been performed and is reported elsewhere.Comment: 16 pages. No figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. A. A
corresponding experiment is reported in quant-ph/040812
Compression Behaviour of Porous Dust Agglomerates
The early planetesimal growth proceeds through a sequence of sticking
collisions of dust agglomerates. Very uncertain is still the relative velocity
regime in which growth rather than destruction can take place. The outcome of a
collision depends on the bulk properties of the porous dust agglomerates.
Continuum models of dust agglomerates require a set of material parameters that
are often difficult to obtain from laboratory experiments. Here, we aim at
determining those parameters from ab-initio molecular dynamics simulations. Our
goal is to improveon the existing model that describe the interaction of
individual monomers. We use a molecular dynamics approach featuring a detailed
micro-physical model of the interaction of spherical grains. The model includes
normal forces, rolling, twisting and sliding between the dust grains. We
present a new treatment of wall-particle interaction that allows us to perform
customized simulations that directly correspond to laboratory experiments. We
find that the existing interaction model by Dominik & Tielens leads to a too
soft compressive strength behavior for uni and omni-directional compression.
Upon making the rolling and sliding coefficients stiffer we find excellent
agreement in both cases. Additionally, we find that the compressive strength
curve depends on the velocity with which the sample is compressed. The modified
interaction strengths between two individual dust grains will lead to a
different behaviour of the whole dust agglomerate. This will influences the
sticking probabilities and hence the growth of planetesimals. The new parameter
set might possibly lead to an enhanced sticking as more energy can be stored in
the system before breakup.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Vacuum polarisation and the muon g-2 in lattice QCD
We measure the hadronic contribution to the vacuum polarisation tensor, and
use it to estimate the hadronic contribution to (g-2)_mu, the muon anomalous
magnetic moment.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Latex. Talk given by P.E.L. Rakow at
Lattice2003(matrix
Collisions of inhomogeneous pre-planetesimals
In the framework of the coagulation scenario, kilometre-sized planetesimals
form by subsequent collisions of pre-planetesimals of sizes from centimetre to
hundreds of metres. Pre-planetesimals are fluffy, porous dust aggregates, which
are inhomogeneous owing to their collisional history. Planetesimal growth can
be prevented by catastrophic disruption in pre-planetesimal collisions above
the destruction velocity threshold. We develop an inhomogeneity model based on
the density distribution of dust aggregates, which is assumed to be a Gaussian
distribution with a well-defined standard deviation. As a second input
parameter, we consider the typical size of an inhomogeneous clump. These input
parameters are easily accessible by laboratory experiments. For the simulation
of the dust aggregates, we utilise a smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) code
with extensions for modelling porous solid bodies. The porosity model was
previously calibrated for the simulation of silica dust, which commonly serves
as an analogue for pre-planetesimal material. The inhomogeneity is imposed as
an initial condition on the SPH particle distribution. We carry out collisions
of centimetre-sized dust aggregates of intermediate porosity. We vary the
standard deviation of the inhomogeneous distribution at fixed typical clump
size. The collision outcome is categorised according to the four-population
model. We show that inhomogeneous pre-planetesimals are more prone to
destruction than homogeneous aggregates. Even slight inhomogeneities can lower
the threshold for catastrophic disruption. For a fixed collision velocity, the
sizes of the fragments decrease with increasing inhomogeneity.
Pre-planetesimals with an active collisional history tend to be weaker. This is
a possible obstacle to collisional growth and needs to be taken into account in
future studies of the coagulation scenario.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 4 table
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