849 research outputs found

    Quantum reflection of atoms from a solid surface at normal incidence

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    We observed quantum reflection of ultracold atoms from the attractive potential of a solid surface. Extremely dilute Bose-Einstein condensates of ^{23}Na, with peak density 10^{11}-10^{12}atoms/cm^3, confined in a weak gravito-magnetic trap were normally incident on a silicon surface. Reflection probabilities of up to 20 % were observed for incident velocities of 1-8 mm/s. The velocity dependence agrees qualitatively with the prediction for quantum reflection from the attractive Casimir-Polder potential. Atoms confined in a harmonic trap divided in half by a solid surface exhibited extended lifetime due to quantum reflection from the surface, implying a reflection probability above 50 %.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. (December 2004)5 pages, 4 figure

    Dynamical Instability of a Doubly Quantized Vortex in a Bose-Einstein condensate

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    Doubly quantized vortices were topologically imprinted in ∣F=1>|F=1> 23^{23}Na condensates, and their time evolution was observed using a tomographic imaging technique. The decay into two singly quantized vortices was characterized and attributed to dynamical instability. The time scale of the splitting process was found to be longer at higher atom density.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Revealing the Superfluid Lambda Transition in the Universal Thermodynamics of a Unitary Fermi Gas

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    We have observed the superfluid phase transition in a strongly interacting Fermi gas via high-precision measurements of the local compressibility, density and pressure down to near-zero entropy. Our data completely determine the universal thermodynamics of strongly interacting fermions without any fit or external thermometer. The onset of superfluidity is observed in the compressibility, the chemical potential, the entropy, and the heat capacity. In particular, the heat capacity displays a characteristic lambda-like feature at the critical temperature of Tc/TF=0.167(13)T_c/T_F = 0.167(13). This is the first clear thermodynamic signature of the superfluid transition in a spin-balanced atomic Fermi gas. Our measurements provide a benchmark for many-body theories on strongly interacting fermions, relevant for problems ranging from high-temperature superconductivity to the equation of state of neutron stars.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure

    Psychological Safety and Norm Clarity in Software Engineering Teams

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    In the software engineering industry today, companies primarily conduct their work in teams. To increase organizational productivity, it is thus crucial to know the factors that affect team effectiveness. Two team-related concepts that have gained prominence lately are psychological safety and team norms. Still, few studies exist that explore these in a software engineering context. Therefore, with the aim of extending the knowledge of these concepts, we examined if psychological safety and team norm clarity associate positively with software developers' self-assessed team performance and job satisfaction, two important elements of effectiveness. We collected industry survey data from practitioners (N = 217) in 38 development teams working for five different organizations. The result of multiple linear regression analyses indicates that both psychological safety and team norm clarity predict team members' self-assessed performance and job satisfaction. The findings also suggest that clarity of norms is a stronger (30\% and 71\% stronger, respectively) predictor than psychological safety. This research highlights the need to examine, in more detail, the relationship between social norms and software development. The findings of this study could serve as an empirical baseline for such, future work.Comment: Submitted to CHASE'201

    Velocity Dispersion of Dissolving OB Associations Affected by External Pressure of Formation Environment

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    This paper presents a possible way to understand dissolution of OB associations (or groups). Assuming rapid escape of parental cloud gas from associations, we show that the shadow of the formation environment for associations can be partially imprinted on the velocity dispersion at their dissolution. This conclusion is not surprising as long as associations are formed in a multiphase interstellar medium, because the external pressure should suppress expansion caused by the internal motion of the parental clouds. Our model predicts a few km s−1^{-1} as the internal velocity dispersion. Observationally, the internal velocity dispersion is ∼1\sim 1 km s−1^{-1} which is smaller than our prediction. This suggests that the dissipation of internal energy happens before the formation of OB associations.Comment: 6 pages. AJ accepte

    Towards quantum magnetism with ultracold atoms

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    22nd International Conference on Atomic PhysicsAt ICAP we presented the efforts and progress at MIT towards using ultracold atoms for the realization of various forms of quantum magnetism. These efforts include a study of fermions with strong repulsive interactions in which we obtained evidence for a phase transition to itinerant ferromagnetism, the characterization of cold atom systems by noise measurements, and a new adiabatic gradient demagnetization cooling scheme which has enabled us to realize temperatures of less than 350 picokelvin and spin temperatures of less than 50 picokelvin in optical lattices. These are the lowest temperatures ever measured in any physical system

    Fifty Years of IMF Variation: The Intermediate-Mass Stars

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    I track the history of star count estimates of the Milky Way field star and open cluster IMFs, concentrating on the neglected mass range from 1 to 15 M⊙{_\odot}. The prevalent belief in a universal IMF appears to be without basis for this mass range. Two recent estimates of the field star IMF using different methods and samples give values of the average logarithmic slope Γ\Gamma between -1.7 and -2.1 in the mass range 1.1 to 4 M⊙{_\odot}. Two older estimates between 2 and 15 M⊙{_\odot} disagree severely; the field IMF in this range is essentially unknown from star counts. Variations in Γ\Gamma among open cluster IMFs in this mass range have not decreased despite numerous detailed studies, even for studies using homogeneous data and reduction procedures and including only clusters with a significant mass range. These cluster variations \textit{might} be due to the combined effects of sampling, systematic errors, stellar evolution uncertainties, dynamical evolution, and unresolved binaries. If so, then the cluster data are consistent with a universal IMF, but are also consistent with sizeable variations. The cluster data do not allow an estimate of an average IMF or Γ\Gamma because the average depends on the choice of weighting procedure and other effects. If the spread in cluster IMFs is in excess of the effects listed above, real IMF variations must occur that do not depend much on physical conditions explored so far. The complexity of the star formation process seen in observations and simulations suggests that large realization-to-realization differences might be expected, in which case an individual cluster IMF would be in part the product of evolutionary contingency in star formation, and the function of interest is the probability distribution of IMF parameters.Comment: 18 pages, including 4 figures: invited talk presented at the conference on "IMF@50: The Stellar Initial Mass Function Fifty Years Later" held at Abbazia di Spineto, Siena, Italy, May 2004; to be published by Kluwer Academic Publishers, edited by E. Corbelli, F. Palla, and H. Zinnecke
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