243 research outputs found
Spontaneous emission of a nanoscopic emitter in a strongly scattering disordered medium
Fluorescence lifetimes of nitrogen-vacancy color centers in individual
diamond nanocrystals were measured at the interface between a glass substrate
and a strongly scattering medium. Comparison of the results with values
recorded from the same nanocrystals at the glass-air interface revealed
fluctuations of fluorescence lifetimes in the scattering medium. After
discussing a range of possible systematic effects, we attribute the observed
lengthening of the lifetimes to the reduction of the local density of states.
Our approach is very promising for exploring the strong three-dimensional
localization of light directly on the microscopic scale.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
New Results for Diffusion in Lorentz Lattice Gas Cellular Automata
New calculations to over ten million time steps have revealed a more complex
diffusive behavior than previously reported, of a point particle on a square
and triangular lattice randomly occupied by mirror or rotator scatterers. For
the square lattice fully occupied by mirrors where extended closed particle
orbits occur, anomalous diffusion was still found. However, for a not fully
occupied lattice the super diffusion, first noticed by Owczarek and Prellberg
for a particular concentration, obtains for all concentrations. For the square
lattice occupied by rotators and the triangular lattice occupied by mirrors or
rotators, an absence of diffusion (trapping) was found for all concentrations,
except on critical lines, where anomalous diffusion (extended closed orbits)
occurs and hyperscaling holds for all closed orbits with {\em universal}
exponents and . Only one point on these critical lines can be related to a
corresponding percolation problem. The questions arise therefore whether the
other critical points can be mapped onto a new percolation-like problem, and of
the dynamical significance of hyperscaling.Comment: 52 pages, including 18 figures on the last 22 pages, email:
[email protected]
Resonances in a spring-pendulum: algorithms for equivariant singularity theory
A spring-pendulum in resonance is a time-independent Hamiltonian model system for formal reduction to one degree of freedom, where some symmetry (reversibility) is maintained. The reduction is handled by equivariant singularity theory with a distinguished parameter, yielding an integrable approximation of the Poincaré map. This makes a concise description of certain bifurcations possible. The computation of reparametrizations from normal form to the actual system is performed by Gröbner basis techniques.
The Elliptic Billiard: Subtleties of Separability
Some of the subtleties of the integrability of the elliptic quantum billiard
are discussed. A well known classical constant of the motion has in the quantum
case an ill-defined commutator with the Hamiltonian. It is shown how this
problem can be solved. A geometric picture is given revealing why levels of a
separable system cross. It is shown that the repulsions found by Ayant and
Arvieu are computational effects and that the method used by Traiber et al. is
related to the present picture which explains the crossings they find. An
asymptotic formula for the energy-levels is derived and it is found that the
statistical quantities of the spectrum P(s) and \Delta(L) have the form
expected for an integrable system.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 3 Figures (postscript). Submitted to European
Journal of Physic
The effect of intrathecal bupivacaine/morphine on quality of recovery in robot-assisted radical prostatectomy: a randomised controlled trial
Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy causes discomfort in the immediate postoperative period. This randomised controlled trial investigated if intrathecal bupivacaine/morphine, in addition to general anaesthesia, could be beneficial for the postoperative quality of recovery. One hundred and fifty-five patients were randomly allocated to an intervention group that received intrathecal 12.5 mg bupivacaine/300 Όg morphine (20% dose reduction in patients > 75 years) or a control group receiving a subcutaneous sham injection and an intravenous loading dose of 0.1 mg.kgâ1 morphine. Both groups received standardised general anaesthesia and the same postoperative analgesic regimen. The primary outcome was a decrease in the Quality of Recovery-15 (QoR-15) questionnaire score on postoperative day 1. The intervention group (n = 76) had less reduction in QoR-15 on postoperative day 1; median (IQR [range]) 10% (1â8 [â60% to 50%]) vs. 13% (5â24 [â6% to 50%]), p = 0.019, and used less morphine during the admission; 2 mg (1â7 [0â41 mg]) vs. 15 mg (12â20 [8â61 mg]), p < 0.001. Furthermore, they perceived lower pain scores during exertion; numeric rating scale (NRS) 3 (1â6 [0â9]) vs. 5 (3â7 [0â9]), p = 0.001; less bladder spasms (NRS 1 (0â2 [0â10]) vs. 2 (0â5 [0â10]), p = 0.001 and less sedation; NRS 2 (0â3 [0â10]) vs. 3 (2â6 [0â10]), p = 0.005. Moreover, the intervention group used less rescue medication. Pruritus was more severe in the intervention group; NRS 4 (1â7 [0â10]) vs. 0 (0â1 [0â10]), p = 0.000. We conclude that despite a modest increase in the incidence of pruritus, multimodal pain management with intrathecal bupivacaine/morphine remains a viable option for robot-assisted radical prostatectomy
An Intersecting Loop Model as a Solvable Super Spin Chain
In this paper we investigate an integrable loop model and its connection with
a supersymmetric spin chain. The Bethe Ansatz solution allows us to study some
properties of the ground state. When the loop fugacity lies in the physical
regime, we conjecture that the central charge is for integer .
Low-lying excitations are examined, supporting a superdiffusive behavior for
. We argue that these systems are interesting examples of integrable
lattice models realizing conformal field theories.Comment: latex file, 7 page
Motor crosslinking augments elasticity in active nematics
In active materials, uncoordinated internal stresses lead to emergent
long-range flows. An understanding of how the behavior of active materials
depends on mesoscopic (hydrodynamic) parameters is developing, but there
remains a gap in knowledge concerning how hydrodynamic parameters depend on the
properties of microscopic elements. In this work, we combine experiments and
multiscale modeling to relate the structure and dynamics of active nematics
composed of biopolymer filaments and molecular motors to their microscopic
properties, in particular motor processivity, speed, and valency. We show that
crosslinking of filaments by both motors and passive crosslinkers not only
augments the contributions to nematic elasticity from excluded volume effects
but dominates them. By altering motor kinetics we show that a competition
between motor speed and crosslinking results in a nonmonotonic dependence of
nematic flow on motor speed. By modulating passive filament crosslinking we
show that energy transfer into nematic flow is in large part dictated by
crosslinking. Thus motor proteins both generate activity and contribute to
nematic elasticity. Our results provide new insights for rationally engineering
active materials
Metastable states in glassy systems
Truly stable metastable states are an artifact of the mean-field
approximation or the zero temperature limit. If such appealing concepts in
glass theory as configurational entropy are to have a meaning beyond these
approximations, one needs to cast them in a form involving states with finite
lifetimes.
Starting from elementary examples and using results of Gaveau and Schulman,
we propose a simple expression for the configurational entropy and revisit the
question of taking flat averages over metastable states. The construction is
applicable to finite dimensional systems, and we explicitly show that for
simple mean-field glass models it recovers, justifies and generalises the known
results. The calculation emphasises the appearance of new dynamical order
parameters.Comment: 4 fig., 20 pages, revtex; added references and minor change
Structuring Stress for Active Materials Control
Active materials are capable of converting free energy into mechanical work
to produce autonomous motion, and exhibit striking collective dynamics that
biology relies on for essential functions. Controlling those dynamics and
transport in synthetic systems has been particularly challenging. Here, we
introduce the concept of spatially structured activity as a means to control
and manipulate transport in active nematic liquid crystals consisting of actin
filaments and light-sensitive myosin motors. Simulations and experiments are
used to demonstrate that topological defects can be generated at will, and then
constrained to move along specified trajectories, by inducing local stresses in
an otherwise passive material. These results provide a foundation for design of
autonomous and reconfigurable microfluidic systems where transport is
controlled by modulating activity with light
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