1,208 research outputs found
Modeling of thermal neutrons channeling in nanotubes with surface circular currents
The numerical simulation of thermal neutron channeling in conical and curved nanotubes with large circular surface currents is carried out. The coordinate distribution of neutrons from the impact parameters and the surface current
density is obtained. It is demonstrated that thermal neutrons can be focused after they have left the tube end. The condition for the retention of a neutron along the curved nanotube is obtained. The dependence of the surface current J on the neutron velocity V is found to be described by the correlation J = 1.465 Ă 10â5 V
Superhyperfine interactions in Ce3+ doped LiYF4 crystal: ENDOR measurements
The first observation of the resolved Mims electron-nuclear double resonance
(ENDOR) spectra from the nearby and remote nuclei of 19F and 7Li nuclei on
impurity Ce3+ ions in LiYF4 crystal is reported. It shows that LiYF4:Ce3+
system can be exploited as a convenient matrix for performing spin
manipulations and adjusting quantum computation protocols while ENDOR technique
could be used for the investigation of electron-nuclear interaction with all
the nuclei of the system and exploited for the electron-nuclear spin
manipulations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 Table. Reported on Theor-2017 (Kazan, Russia)
Conferenc
Neck atonia with a focal stimulation-induced seizure arising from the SMA: pathophysiological considerations.
A 28-year-old patient with pharmacoresistant non-lesional right frontal epilepsy underwent extra-operative intracranial EEG recordings and electrical cortical stimulation (ECS) to map eloquent cortex. Right supplementary motor area (SMA) ECS induced a brief seizure with habitual symptoms involving neck tingling followed by asymmetric tonic posturing. An additional feature was neck atonia. During atonia and sensory aura, discharges were seen in the mesial frontal electrodes and precentral gyrus. Besides motor signs, atonia, although rare and not described in the neck muscles, and sensations have been reported with SMA stimulation. The mechanisms underlying neck atonia in seizures arising from the SMA can be explained by supplementary negative motor area (SNMA) - though this was not mapped in electrodes overlying the ictal onset zone in our patient - or primary sensorimotor cortex activation through rapid propagation. Given the broad spectrum of signs elicited by SMA stimulation and rapid spread of seizures arising from the SMA, caution should be taken to not diagnose these as non-epileptic, as had previously occurred in this patient
Effects of Vacuum Polarization in Strong Magnetic Fields with an Allowance Made for the Anomalous Magnetic Moments of Particles
Given the anomalous magnetic moments of electrons and positrons in the
one-loop approximation, we calculate the exact Lagrangian of an intense
constant magnetic field that replaces the Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian in
traditional quantum electrodynamics (QED). We have established that the derived
generalization of the Lagrangian is real for arbitrary magnetic fields. In a
weak field, the calculated Lagrangian matches the standard Heisenberg-Euler
formula. In extremely strong fields, the field dependence of the Lagrangian
completely disappears, and the Lagrangian tends to a constant determined by the
anomalous magnetic moments of the particles.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Compressed sensing quantum process tomography for superconducting quantum gates
We apply the method of compressed sensing (CS) quantum process tomography
(QPT) to characterize quantum gates based on superconducting Xmon and phase
qubits. Using experimental data for a two-qubit controlled-Z gate, we obtain an
estimate for the process matrix with reasonably high fidelity compared
to full QPT, but using a significantly reduced set of initial states and
measurement configurations. We show that the CS method still works when the
amount of used data is so small that the standard QPT would have an
underdetermined system of equations. We also apply the CS method to the
analysis of the three-qubit Toffoli gate with numerically added noise, and
similarly show that the method works well for a substantially reduced set of
data. For the CS calculations we use two different bases in which the process
matrix is approximately sparse, and show that the resulting estimates of
the process matrices match each ther with reasonably high fidelity. For both
two-qubit and three-qubit gates, we characterize the quantum process by not
only its process matrix and fidelity, but also by the corresponding standard
deviation, defined via variation of the state fidelity for different initial
states.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
Assessment of DDAH1 and DDAH2 Contributions to Psychiatric Disorders via In Silico Methods
The contribution of nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) to the pathophysiology of several neuropsychiatric disorders is recognized, but the role of their regulators, dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolases (DDAHs), is less understood. This studyâs objective was to estimate DDAH1 and DDAH2 associations with biological processes implicated in major psychiatric disorders using publicly accessible expression databases. Since co-expressed genes are more likely to be involved in the same biologic processes, we investigated co-expression patterns with DDAH1 and DDAH2 in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in psychiatric patients and control subjects. There were no significant differences in DDAH1 and DDAH2 expression levels in schizophrenia or bipolar disorder patients compared to controls. Meanwhile, the data suggest that in patients, DDAH1 and DDHA2 undergo a functional shift mirrored in changes in co-expressed gene patterns. This disarrangement appears in the loss of expression level correlations between DDAH1 or DDAH2 and genes associated with psychiatric disorders and reduced functional similarity of DDAH1 or DDAH2 co-expressed genes in the patient groups. Our findings evidence the possible involvement of DDAH1 and DDAH2 in neuropsychiatric disorder development, but the underlying mechanisms need experimental validation
PASTIS: Bayesian extrasolar planet validation II. Constraining exoplanet blend scenarios using spectroscopic diagnoses
The statistical validation of transiting exoplanets proved to be an efficient
technique to secure the nature of small exoplanet signals which cannot be
established by purely spectroscopic means. However, the spectroscopic diagnoses
are providing us with useful constraints on the presence of blended stellar
contaminants. In this paper, we present how a contaminating star affects the
measurements of the various spectroscopic diagnoses as function of the
parameters of the target and contaminating stars using the model implemented
into the PASTIS planet-validation software. We find particular cases for which
a blend might produce a large radial velocity signal but no bisector variation.
It might also produce a bisector variation anti-correlated with the radial
velocity one, as in the case of stellar spots. In those cases, the full width
half maximum variation provides complementary constraints. These results can be
used to constrain blend scenarios for transiting planet candidates or radial
velocity planets. We review all the spectroscopic diagnoses reported in the
literature so far, especially the ones to monitor the line asymmetry. We
estimate their uncertainty and compare their sensitivity to blends. Based on
that, we recommend the use of BiGauss which is the most sensitive diagnosis to
monitor line-profile asymmetry. In this paper, we also investigate the
sensitivity of the radial velocities to constrain blend scenarios and develop a
formalism to estimate the level of dilution of a blended signal. Finally, we
apply our blend model to re-analyse the spectroscopic diagnoses of HD16702, an
unresolved face-on binary which exhibits bisector variations.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Energy Level Shifts, Wave Functions and the Probability Current Distributions for the Bound Scalar and Spinor Particles Moving in a Uniform Magnetic Field
We discuss the equations for the bound one-active electron states based on
the analytic solutions of the Schrodinger and Pauli equations for a uniform
magnetic field and a single attractive -potential. It is vary
important that ground electron states in the magnetic field differ essentially
from the analogous state of spin-0 particles, whose binding energy was
intensively studied more than forty years ago. We show that binding energy
equations for spin-1/2 particles can be obtained without using the language of
boundary conditions in the -potential model developed in pioneering
works. We use the obtained equations to calculate the energy level
displacements analytically and demonstrate nonlinear dependencies on field
intensity. We show that the magnetic field indeed plays a stabilizing role in
considered systems in a case of the weak intensity, but the opposite occurs in
the case of strong intensity. These properties may be important for real
quantum mechanical fermionic systems in two and three dimensions. We also
analyze the exact solution of the Pauli equation for an electron moving in the
potential field determined by the three-dimensional -well in the
presence of a strong magnetic field. We obtain asymptotic expressions for this
solution for different values of the problem parameters. In addition, we
consider electron probability currents and their dependence on the magnetic
field. We show that including the spin in the framework of the nonrelativistic
approach allows correctly taking the effect of the magnetic field on the
electric current into account. The obtained dependencies of the current
distribution, which is an experimentally observable quantity, can be manifested
directly in scattering processes, for example.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figure
Automated system for diagnosing craniocerebral injury
A Russian national computing and communication system designed to assist non-specialized physicians in the diagnosis and treatment of craniocerebral injury is described
Out-of-Equilibrium Admittance of Single Electron Box Under Strong Coulomb Blockade
We study admittance and energy dissipation in an out-of-equlibrium single
electron box. The system consists of a small metallic island coupled to a
massive reservoir via single tunneling junction. The potential of electrons in
the island is controlled by an additional gate electrode. The energy
dissipation is caused by an AC gate voltage. The case of a strong Coulomb
blockade is considered. We focus on the regime when electron coherence can be
neglected but quantum fluctuations of charge are strong due to Coulomb
interaction. We obtain the admittance under the specified conditions. It turns
out that the energy dissipation rate can be expressed via charge relaxation
resistance and renormalized gate capacitance even out of equilibrium. We
suggest the admittance as a tool for a measurement of the bosonic distribution
corresponding collective excitations in the system
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