25,374 research outputs found
A General Method for Complete Population Transfer in Degenerate Systems
A simple theoretical solution to the design of a control field that generates
complete population transfer from an initial state, via nondegenerate
intermediate states, to one arbitrary member of () degenerate
states is constructed. The full control field exploits an -node null
adiabatic state, created by designing the relative phases and amplitudes of the
component fields that together make up the full field. The solution found is
universal in the sense that it does not depend on the exact number of the
unwanted degenerate states or their properties. The results obtained suggest
that a class of multi-level quantum systems with degenerate states can be
completely controllable, even under extremely strong constraints, e.g., never
populating a Hilbert subspace that is only a few dimensions smaller than the
whole Hilbert space.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Disproportionation and electronic phase separation in parent manganite LaMnO_3
Nominally pure undoped parent manganite LaMnO_3 exhibits a puzzling behavior
inconsistent with a simple picture of an A-type antiferromagnetic insulator
(A-AFI) with a cooperative Jahn-Teller ordering. We do assign its anomalous
properties to charge transfer instabilities and competition between insulating
A-AFI phase and metallic-like dynamically disproportionated phase formally
separated by a first-order phase transition at T_{disp}=T_{JT}\approx 750 K.
The unconventional high-temperature phase is addressed to be a specific
electron-hole Bose liquid (EHBL) rather than a simple "chemically"
disproportionated R(Mn^{2+}Mn^{4+})O_3 phase. New phase does nucleate as a
result of the charge transfer (CT) instability and evolves from the
self-trapped CT excitons, or specific EH-dimers, which seem to be a precursor
of both insulating and metallic-like ferromagnetic phases observed in
manganites. We arrive at highly frustrated system of triplet (e_g^2)^3A_{2g}
bosons moving in a lattice formed by hole Mn^{4+} centers. Starting with
different experimental data we have reproduced a typical temperature dependence
of the volume fraction of high-temperature mixed-valent EHBL phase. We argue
that a slight nonisovalent substitution, photo-irradiation, external pressure
or magnetic field gives rise to an electronic phase separation with a
nucleation or an overgrowth of EH-droplets. Such a scenario provides a
comprehensive explanation of numerous puzzling properties observed in parent
and nonisovalently doped manganite LaMnO_3 including an intriguing
manifestation of superconducting fluctuations.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Bichromatically driven double well: parametric perspective of the strong-field control landscape reveals the influence of chaotic states
The aim of this work is to understand the influence of chaotic states in
control problems involving strong fields. Towards this end, we numerically
construct and study the strong field control landscape of a bichromatically
driven double well. A novel measure based on correlating the overlap
intensities between Floquet states and an initial phase space coherent state
with the parametric motion of the quasienergies is used to construct and
interpret the landscape features. "Walls" of no control, robust under
variations of the relative phase between the fields, are seen on the control
landscape and associated with multilevel interactions involving chaotic Floquet
states.Comment: 9 pages and 6 figures. Rewritten and expanded version of
arXiv:0707.4547 [nlin.CD]. Accepted for publication in J. Chem. Phys. (2008
'The risks of playing it safe': a prospective longitudinal study of response to reward in the adolescent offspring of depressed parents
BACKGROUND
Alterations in reward processing may represent an early vulnerability factor for the development of depressive disorder. Depression in adults is associated with reward hyposensitivity and diminished reward seeking may also be a feature of depression in children and adolescents. We examined the role of reward responding in predicting depressive symptoms, functional impairment and new-onset depressive disorder over time in the adolescent offspring of depressed parents. In addition, we examined group differences in reward responding between currently depressed adolescents, psychiatric and healthy controls, and also cross-sectional associations between reward responding and measures of positive social/environmental functioning. Method We conducted a 1-year longitudinal study of adolescents at familial risk for depression (n = 197; age range 10-18 years). Reward responding and self-reported social/environmental functioning were assessed at baseline. Clinical interviews determined diagnostic status at baseline and at follow-up. Reports of depressive symptoms and functional impairment were also obtained.
RESULTS
Low reward seeking predicted depressive symptoms and new-onset depressive disorder at the 1-year follow-up in individuals free from depressive disorder at baseline, independently of baseline depressive symptoms. Reduced reward seeking also predicted functional impairment. Adolescents with current depressive disorder were less reward seeking (i.e. bet less at favourable odds) than adolescents free from psychopathology and those with externalizing disorders. Reward seeking showed positive associations with social and environmental functioning (extra-curricular activities, humour, friendships) and was negatively associated with anhedonia. There were no group differences in impulsivity, decision making or psychomotor slowing.
CONCLUSIONS
Reward seeking predicts depression severity and onset in adolescents at elevated risk of depression. Adaptive reward responses may be amenable to change through modification of existing preventive psychological interventions
Near-infrared Variability among YSOs in the Star Formation Region Cygnus OB7
We present an analysis of near-infrared time-series photometry in J, H, and K
bands for about 100 epochs of a 1 square degree region of the Lynds 1003/1004
dark cloud in the Cygnus OB7 region. Augmented by data from the Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), we identify 96 candidate disk bearing young
stellar objects (YSOs) in the region. Of these, 30 are clearly Class I or
earlier. Using the Wide-Field imaging CAMera (WFCAM) on the United Kingdom
InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT), we were able to obtain photometry over three
observing seasons, with photometric uncertainty better than 0.05 mag down to J
~17. We study detailed light curves and color trajectories of ~50 of the YSOs
in the monitored field. We investigate the variability and periodicity of the
YSOs and find the data are consistent with all YSOs being variable in these
wavelengths on time scales of a few years. We divide the variability into four
observational classes: 1) stars with periodic variability stable over long
timescales, 2) variables which exhibit short-lived cyclic behavior, 3) long
duration variables, and 4) stochastic variables. Some YSO variability defies
simple classification. We can explain much of the observed variability as being
due to dynamic and rotational changes in the disk, including an asymmetric or
changing blocking fraction, changes to the inner disk hole size, as well as
changes to the accretion rate. Overall, we find that the Class I:Class II ratio
of the cluster is consistent with an age of < 1Myr, with at least one
individual, wildly varying, source ~ 100,000 yr old. We have also discovered a
Class II eclipsing binary system with a period of 17.87 days.Comment: ApJ accepted: 44 pages includes 5 tables and 16 figures. Some figures
condensed for Astro/p
Nonlinear optical response of wave packets on quantized potential energy surfaces
We calculated the dynamics of nuclear wave packets in coupled
electron-vibration systems and their nonlinear optical responses. We found that
the quantized nature of the vibrational modes is observed in pump-probe spectra
particularly in weakly interacting electron-vibration systems such as cyanine
dye molecules. Calculated results based on a harmonic potential model and
molecular orbital calculations are compared with experimental results, and we
also found that the materials parameters regarding with the geometrical
structure of potential energy surfaces are directly determined by accurate
measurement of time-resolved spectra.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Exploring the Origins of Earth's Nitrogen: Astronomical Observations of Nitrogen-bearing Organics in Protostellar Environments
It is not known whether the original carriers of Earth's nitrogen were
molecular ices or refractory dust. To investigate this question, we have used
data and results of Herschel observations towards two protostellar sources: the
high-mass hot core of Orion KL, and the low-mass protostar IRAS 16293-2422.
Towards Orion KL, our analysis of the molecular inventory of Crockett et al.
(2014) indicates that HCN is the organic molecule that contains by far the most
nitrogen, carrying of nitrogen-in-organics. Following this
evidence, we explore HCN towards IRAS 16293-2422, which we consider a solar
analog. Towards IRAS 16293-2422, we have reduced and analyzed Herschel spectra
of HCN, and fit these observations against "jump" abundance models of IRAS
16293-2422's protostellar envelope. We find an inner-envelope HCN abundance
and an outer-envelope HCN
abundance . We also find the
sublimation temperature of HCN to be ~K; this
measured enables us to predict an HCN binding energy
~K. Based on a comparison of the HCN/H2O ratio
in these protostars to N/H2O ratios in comets, we find that HCN (and, by
extension, other organics) in these protostars is incapable of providing the
total bulk N/H2O in comets. We suggest that refractory dust, not molecular
ices, was the bulk provider of nitrogen to comets. However, interstellar dust
is not known to have 15N enrichment, while high 15N enrichment is seen in both
nitrogen-bearing ices and in cometary nitrogen. This may indicate that these
15N-enriched ices were an important contributor to the nitrogen in
planetesimals and likely to the Earth.Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 21 pages, 4 figure
Engineering an all-optical route to ultracold molecules in their vibronic ground state
We propose an improved photoassociation scheme to produce ultracold molecules
in their vibronic ground state for the generic case where non-adiabatic effects
facilitating transfer to deeply bound levels are absent. Formation of molecules
is achieved by short laser pulses in a Raman-like pump-dump process where an
additional near-infrared laser field couples the excited state to an auxiliary
state. The coupling due to the additional field effectively changes the shape
of the excited state potential and allows for efficient population transfer to
low-lying vibrational levels of the electronic ground state. Repetition of many
pump-dump sequences together with collisional relaxation allows for
accumulation of molecules in v=0.Comment: Phys. Rev. A, in pres
Statistical mechanics of Floquet systems with regular and chaotic states
We investigate the asymptotic state of time-periodic quantum systems with
regular and chaotic Floquet states weakly coupled to a heat bath. The
asymptotic occupation probabilities of these two types of states follow
fundamentally different distributions. Among regular states the probability
decreases from the state in the center of a regular island to the outermost
state by orders of magnitude, while chaotic states have almost equal
probabilities. We derive an analytical expression for the occupations of
regular states of kicked systems, which depends on the winding numbers of the
regular tori and the parameters temperature and driving frequency. For a
constant winding number within a regular island it simplifies to Boltzmann-like
weights \exp(-\betaeff \Ereg_m), similar to time-independent systems. For
this we introduce the regular energies \Ereg_m of the quantizing tori and an
effective winding-number-dependent temperature 1/\betaeff, different from the
actual bath temperature. Furthermore, the occupations of other typical Floquet
states in a mixed phase space are studied, i.e. regular states on nonlinear
resonances, beach states, and hierarchical states, giving rise to distinct
features in the occupation distribution. Avoided crossings involving a regular
state lead to drastic consequences for the entire set of occupations. We
introduce a simplified rate model whose analytical solutions describe the
occupations quite accurately.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
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