393 research outputs found
Dynamical instability and dispersion management of an attractive condensate in an optical lattice
We investigate the stability of an attractive Bose-Einstein condensate in a
moving 1D optical lattice in the presence of transverse confinement. By means
of a Bogoliubov linear stability analysis we find that the system is
dynamically unstable for low quasimomenta and becomes stable near the band
edge, in a specular fashion with respect to the repulsive case. For low
interactions the instability occurs via long wavelength excitations that are
not sufficient for spoiling the condensate coherence, producing instead an
oscillating density pattern both in real and momentum space. This behaviour is
illustrated by simulations for the expansion of the condensate in a moving
lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Beyond Perrault's experiments: repeatability, didactics and complexity
Abstract. The naturalistic and philosophical studies conducted in the second half of the 17th century were crucial both for the birth of modern hydrological science and modern epistemology.
Thanks to quantitative observations and to the new experiment-based scientific approach, the Sun was about to be fully recognized as the engine of the hydrological cycle.
In this context of great vitality and rapid cultural changes, Pierre Perrault published his classical opus De l'origine des fontaines (On the origin of springs) in 1674.
The opus presents a discussion on the origin of springs and contains the report of a set of experiments of water flow through a soil column, which may be considered the first of modern hydrology. In assessing the importance of Perrault's opus, we will discuss his epistemological relevance by looking at the novelty of his approach, at the repeatability of the experiments, at the intriguing didactic aspects for the modern teaching of hydrology and at his attitude in facing the complexity of hydrological processes. Perrault places himself in the context of a novel experimental epistemology.
On the basis of our analyses he seems to be aware that the processes involved in the hydrological cycle and in soil hydrology are hardly reproducible by means of a controlled laboratory model.
This circumstance put the modern scientific approach to a severe test at its very beginning.
It is suggested that some of Perrault's epistemological and methodological reflections are precursors of the modern epistemology of complexity.
Thus even if Perrault's conclusions followed an ancient opinion, his work is not only seminal for hydrology, but also helps to enlighten some features of the scientific revolution of the 17th century
Estimate of turbulent fluxes with eddy-covariance technique in a complex topography: A case study in the Italian Alps
A sensitivity analysis to different eddy—covariance data processing algorithms is presented for a dataset collected in an
Alpine environment with complex topography. In Summer 2012 a micrometeorological station was installed at Cividate
Camuno (274 m a.s.l., Oglio river basin, Central Italian Alps), in a flat and rectangular grass-covered lawn. The grass was
0.6 m tall during most of the field campaign. The station is equipped with traditional devices, four multiplexed TDR
probes, and an eddy--covariance apparatus sampling at 20 Hz (Gill WindMaster Sonic Anemometer and Licor Li7500 Gas
Analyzer), at about 3 m above the ground. The local winds regime is strongly affected by the morphology of the valley,
and the topography is complex also due to the heterogeneity of the surrounding-areas land—cover. Using EddyPro
software, the sensitivity of the turbulent fluxes estimate was assessed addressing three major issues of the data processing
procedure, i.e. the choice of the computational averaging period, of the axis rotation method and of the data detrending
criterion. Once identified three test periods of consecutive days without rainfall, the fluxes of momentum, sensible heat
and latent heat were computed at the averaging period of 30, 60 and 120 min respectively. At each averaging period, both
the triple rotation method, the double rotation method and the planar fit method were applied. Particularly the latter was
applied both fitting a unique plane for all the wind directions and fitting multiple planes, one for each sector of the wind
rose. Regarding the detrending criteria, data were processed with a block average and a linear detrend, the latter with
time constant of 5, 30, 60 and 120 min respectively. Therefore, for each test period about 50 estimates of the fluxes were
provided. As a result the obtained fluxes were compared. Even if with different flux quality, their pattern is quite stable
with regard to the applied estimate procedures, but with sensitively different average values
Universality in Three- and Four-Body Bound States of Ultracold Atoms
Under certain circumstances, three or more interacting particles may form
bound states. While the general few-body problem is not analytically solvable,
the so-called Efimov trimers appear for a system of three particles with
resonant two-body interactions. The binding energies of these trimers are
predicted to be universally connected to each other, independent of the
microscopic details of the interaction. By exploiting a Feshbach resonance to
widely tune the interactions between trapped ultracold lithium atoms, we find
evidence for two universally connected Efimov trimers and their associated
four-body bound states. A total of eleven precisely determined three- and
four-body features are found in the inelastic loss spectrum. Their relative
locations on either side of the resonance agree well with universal theory,
while a systematic deviation from universality is found when comparing features
across the resonance.Comment: 16 pages including figures and Supplementary Online Materia
Development and demonstration of an HBIM framework for the preventive conservation of cultural heritage
Building Information Modelling (BIM) methodology is becoming widespread with many potential uses, such as facility and asset management for new buildings. Recently, it has also been applied for the maintenance of built heritage, within the so-called Historical BIM (HBIM) field. A BIM model, empowered by detailed embedded information, is an excellent tool to monitor and infer on the behaviour, performance, and deterioration of heritage buildings, collecting and classifying diverse data that can co-exist in an asset model. However, three main issues must be tackled: lack of standardization, insufficient interoperability and inherent complexity of the information. It is essential to balance model’s geometrical and non-geometrical features, such as the level of detail accuracy and the quantity of linked information, to make the methodology cost-effective and hence more attractive
for end-users. The present work focuses on the development of easy-to-implement strategy to report
and monitor damage evolution over time. Standardization and simplification of the procedures are pursued by using Product Data Templates (PDTs) and focusing on interoperability of information through specific provisions of export/import definitions for Industry Foundation Classes (IFC). The developed methodology is tested on the Ducal Palace in Guimarães, Portugal, one of the most prominent monuments of the country.This work was partly financed by the HeritageCare project (Interreg-Sudoe/FEDER, SOE1/P5/P0258), with FEDER funds through the Competitivity Factors Operational Programme -COMPETE and by national funds through FCT Foundation for Science and Technology within the scope of the project POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007633. This work was also partly financed by FCT/MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC) under the R&D Unit Institute for Sustainability and Innovation in Structural Engineering (ISISE), under reference UIDB / 04029/2020. The authors acknowledge the support of the Northern Regional Directorate of Culture through Dr.
Isabel Fernandes, Director of the Ducal Palace of Bragança, for making accessible all parts of the
Palace and for kindly sharing her knowledge about the building. The authors would like also to
acknowledge Nuno Moreira (TopArcos) for carrying out the laser scanner survey
Entropy exchange in a mixture of ultracold atoms
We investigate experimentally the entropy transfer between two
distinguishable atomic quantum gases at ultralow temperatures. Exploiting a
species-selective trapping potential, we are able to control the entropy of one
target gas in presence of a second auxiliary gas. With this method, we drive
the target gas into the degenerate regime in conditions of controlled
temperature by transferring entropy to the auxiliary gas. We envision that our
method could be useful both to achieve the low entropies required to realize
new quantum phases and to measure the temperature of atoms in deep optical
lattices. We verified the thermalization of the two species in a 1D lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Resonant Atom-Dimer Relaxation in Ultracold Atoms
Three-body systems with large scattering length display universal phenomena
associated with a discrete scaling symmetry. These phenomena include resonant
enhancement of three-body loss rates when an Efimov three-body resonance is at
the scattering threshold. In particular, there can be resonant peaks in the
atom-dimer relaxation rate for large positive scattering length. We improve
upon earlier studies and calculate the atom-dimer relaxation rate as a function
of temperature using a Bose-Einstein distribution for the thermal average. As
input, we use calculations of the atom-dimer scattering phase shifts from
effective field theory.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, published version, minor change in result
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