5,324 research outputs found
Casimir Energy and Entropy between perfect metal Spheres
We calculate the Casimir energy and entropy for two perfect metal spheres in
the large and short separation limit. We obtain nonmonotonic behavior of the
Helmholtz free energy with separation and temperature, leading to parameter
ranges with negative entropy, and also nonmonotonic behavior of the entropy
with temperature and with the separation between the spheres. The appearance of
this anomalous behavior of the entropy is discussed as well as its
thermodynamic consequences.Comment: 10 pages and 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the Proceedings
of the tenth conference on Quantum Field Theory under the influence of
external conditions - QFEXT'1
Sequential resonant tunneling in quantum cascade lasers
A model of sequential resonant tunneling transport between two-dimensional
subbands that takes into account explicitly elastic scattering is investigated.
It is compared to transport measurements performed on quantum cascade lasers
where resonant tunneling processes are known to be dominating. Excellent
agreement is found between experiment and theory over a large range of current,
temperature and device structures
Addressing student models of energy loss in quantum tunnelling
We report on a multi-year, multi-institution study to investigate student
reasoning about energy in the context of quantum tunnelling. We use ungraded
surveys, graded examination questions, individual clinical interviews, and
multiple-choice exams to build a picture of the types of responses that
students typically give. We find that two descriptions of tunnelling through a
square barrier are particularly common. Students often state that tunnelling
particles lose energy while tunnelling. When sketching wave functions, students
also show a shift in the axis of oscillation, as if the height of the axis of
oscillation indicated the energy of the particle. We find inconsistencies
between students' conceptual, mathematical, and graphical models of quantum
tunnelling. As part of a curriculum in quantum physics, we have developed
instructional materials to help students develop a more robust and less
inconsistent picture of tunnelling, and present data suggesting that we have
succeeded in doing so.Comment: Originally submitted to the European Journal of Physics on 2005 Feb
10. Pages: 14. References: 11. Figures: 9. Tables: 1. Resubmitted May 18 with
revisions that include an appendix with the curriculum materials discussed in
the paper (4 page small group UW-style tutorial
QPSK coherent state discrimination via a hybrid receiver
We propose and experimentally demonstrate a near-optimal discrimination
scheme for the quadrature phase shift keying protocol (QPSK). We show in theory
that the performance of our hybrid scheme is superior to the standard scheme -
heterodyne detection - for all signal amplitudes and underpin the predictions
with our experimental results. Furthermore, our scheme provides the hitherto
best performance in the domain of highly attenuated signals. The discrimination
is composed of a quadrature measurement, a conditional displacement and a
threshold detector
Preliminary results of passive microwave snow experiment during February and March 1978
The purpose of the experiment was to determine if remote microwave sensing of snowpack data could be used to predict runoff, thereby allowing more efficient management of the water supply. A four-frequency microwave radiometer system was attached to a truck-mounted aerial lift and was used to gather data on snowpacks at three different sites in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Ground truth data measurements (density, temperature, grain size, hardness, and free-liquid water content) were taken at each site corresponding to each microwave scan
Using resource graphs to represent conceptual change
We introduce resource graphs, a representation of linked ideas used when
reasoning about specific contexts in physics. Our model is consistent with
previous descriptions of resources and coordination classes. It can represent
mesoscopic scales that are neither knowledge-in-pieces or large-scale concepts.
We use resource graphs to describe several forms of conceptual change:
incremental, cascade, wholesale, and dual construction. For each, we give
evidence from the physics education research literature to show examples of
each form of conceptual change. Where possible, we compare our representation
to models used by other researchers. Building on our representation, we
introduce a new form of conceptual change, differentiation, and suggest several
experimental studies that would help understand the differences between
reform-based curricula.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures, no tables. Submitted for publication to the
Physical Review Special Topics Physics Education Research on March 8, 200
Probabilistic Cloning of Coherent States without a Phase Reference
We present a probabilistic cloning scheme operating independently of any
phase reference. The scheme is based solely on a phase-randomized displacement
and photon counting, omitting the need for non-classical resources and
non-linear materials. In an experimental implementation, we employ the scheme
to clone coherent states from a phase covariant alphabet and demonstrate that
the cloner is capable of outperforming the hitherto best-performing
deterministic scheme. An analysis of the covariances between the output states
shows that uncorrelated clones can be approached asymptotically. An intriguing
feature is that the trade-off between success rate and achieved fidelity can be
optimized even after the cloning procedure
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