129 research outputs found
Excessive alcohol consumption in young men: is there an association with their earlier family situation? A baseline-analysis of the C-SURF-study (Cohort Study on Substance Use Risk Factors).
AIMS: To determine whether parental factors earlier in life (parenting, single parent family, parental substance use problem) are associated with patterns of alcohol consumption among young men in Switzerland.
METHODS: This analysis of a population based sample from the Cohort Study on Substance Use Risk Factors (C-SURF) included 5,990 young men (mean age 19.51 years), all attending a mandatory recruitment process for the army. These conscripts reported on parental monitoring and rule-setting, parental behaviour and family structure. The alcohol use pattern was assessed through abstention, risky single occasion drinking (RSOD), volume drinking and dependence. Furthermore, the impact of age, family socio-economic status, educational level of the parents, language region and civil status was analysed.
RESULTS: A parental substance use problem was positively associated with volume drinking and alcohol dependence in young Swiss men. Active parenting corresponded negatively with RSOD, volume drinking and alcohol dependence. Single parent family was not associated with a different alcohol consumption pattern compared to standard family.
CONCLUSION: Parental influences earlier in life such as active parenting (monitoring, rule-setting and knowing the whereabouts) and perceived parental substance use problem are associated with alcohol drinking behaviour in young male adults. Therefore, health professionals should stress the importance of active parenting and parental substance use prevention in alcohol prevention strategies
Characterizing the spin state of an atomic ensemble using the magneto-optical resonance method
Quantum information protocols utilizing atomic ensembles require preparation
of a coherent spin state (CSS) of the ensemble as an important starting point.
We investigate the magneto-optical resonance method for characterizing a spin
state of cesium atoms in a paraffin coated vapor cell. Atoms in a constant
magnetic field are subject to an off-resonant laser beam and an RF magnetic
field. The spectrum of the Zeeman sub-levels, in particular the weak quadratic
Zeeman effect, enables us to measure the spin orientation, the number of atoms,
and the transverse spin coherence time. Notably the use of 894nm pumping light
on the D1-line, ensuring the state F=4, m_F=4 to be a dark state, helps us to
achieve spin orientation of better than 98%. Hence we can establish a CSS with
high accuracy which is critical for the analysis of the entangled states of
atoms.Comment: 12 pages ReVTeX, 6 figures, in v2 added ref. and corrected typo
Mapping a quantum state of light onto a long-lived atomic spin state: towards quantum memory
We report an experiment on mapping a quantum state of light onto the ground
state spin of an ensemble of Cs atoms with the life time of 2 milliseconds.
Quantum memory for one of the two quadrature phase operators of light is
demonstrated with vacuum and squeezed states of light. The sensitivity of the
mapping procedure at the level of approximately one photon/sec per Hz is shown.
The results pave the road towards complete (storing both quadrature phase
observables) quantum memory for Gaussian states of light. The experiment also
sheds new light on fundamental limits of sensitivity of the magneto-optical
resonance method.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Storing and releasing light in a gas of moving atoms
We propose a scheme of storing and releasing pulses or cw beams of light in a
moving atomic medium illuminated by two stationary and spatially separated
control lasers. The method is based on electromagnetically induced transparency
(EIT) but in contrast to previous schemes, storage and retrieval of the probe
pulse can be achieved at different locations and without switching off the
control laser.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revised versio
Narrowband frequency tunable light source of continuous quadrature entanglement
We report the observation of non-classical quantum correlations of continuous
light variables from a novel type of source. It is a frequency non-degenerate
optical parametric oscillator below threshold, where signal and idler fields
are separated by 740MHz corresponding to two free spectrum ranges of the
parametric oscillator cavity. The degree of entanglement observed, - 3.8 dB, is
the highest to-date for a narrowband tunable source suitable for atomic quantum
memory and other applications in atomic physics. Finally we use the latter to
visualize the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, LaTe
Reversibility of continuous-variable quantum cloning
We analyze a reversibility of optimal Gaussian quantum cloning of a
coherent state using only local operations on the clones and classical
communication between them and propose a feasible experimental test of this
feature. Performing Bell-type homodyne measurement on one clone and anti-clone,
an arbitrary unknown input state (not only a coherent state) can be restored in
the other clone by applying appropriate local unitary displacement operation.
We generalize this concept to a partial LOCC reversal of the cloning and we
show that this procedure converts the symmetric cloner to an asymmetric cloner.
Further, we discuss a distributed LOCC reversal in optimal Gaussian
cloning of coherent states which transforms it to optimal cloning for
. Assuming the quantum cloning as a possible eavesdropping attack on
quantum communication link, the reversibility can be utilized to improve the
security of the link even after the attack.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
A New Measurement of the 1S0 Neutron-Neutron Scattering Length using the Neutron-Proton Scattering Length as a Standard
The present paper reports high-accuracy cross-section data for the 2H(n,nnp)
reaction in the neutron-proton (np) and neutron-neutron (nn)
final-state-interaction (FSI) regions at an incident mean neutron energy of
13.0 MeV. These data were analyzed with rigorous three-nucleon calculations to
determine the 1S0 np and nn scattering lengths, a_np and a_nn. Our results are
a_nn = -18.7 +/- 0.6 fm and a_np = -23.5 +/- 0.8 fm. Since our value for a_np
obtained from neutron-deuteron (nd) breakup agrees with that from free np
scattering, we conclude that our investigation of the nn FSI done
simultaneously and under identical conditions gives the correct value for a_nn.
Our value for a_nn is in agreement with that obtained in pion-deuteron capture
measurements but disagrees with values obtained from earlier nd breakup
studies.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figure
Superfluid to Mott insulator transition in one, two, and three dimensions
We have created one-, two-, and three-dimensional quantum gases and study the
superfluid to Mott insulator transition. Measurements of the transition using
Bragg spectroscopy show that the excitation spectra of the low-dimensional
superfluids differ significantly from the three-dimensional case
Stable nondegenerate optical parametric oscillation at degenerate frequencies in Na:KTP
We report the realization of a light source specifically designed for the
generation of bright continuous-variable entangled beams and for
Heisenberg-limited inteferometry. The source is a nondegenerate, single-mode,
continuous-wave optical parametric oscillator in Na:KTP, operated at frequency
degeneracy and just above threshold, which is also of interest for the study of
critical fluctuations at the transition point. The residual
frequency-difference jitter is 150 kHz for a 3 MHz cold cavity half-width
at half maximum. We observe 4 dB of photon-number-difference squeezing at 200
kHz. The Na:KTP crystal is noncritically phase-matched for a 532 nm pump and
polarization crosstalk is therefore practically nonexistent
The Shadows of the Past
We examined associations between two orientations based on historical group trauma, a form of enduring group victimhood (Perpetual Ingroup Victimhood Orientation [PIVO]) and the belief that one’s group might itself become a victimizer (Fear of Victimizing [FOV]), and attitudes, cognitions, and emotions related to intergroup conflicts. PIVO was positively and FOV was negatively related to aggressive attitudes and emotions toward the outgroup (Studies 1a-1c, Israeli–Palestinian conflict), and to the attribution of responsibility for a series of hostilities to the outgroup (Study 3, Israeli–Palestinian conflict). PIVO was negatively and FOV positively related to support for forgiveness and reconciliation (Study 2, Northern Ireland conflict). In Experimental Study 4, FOV predicted greater accuracy in remembering harm, regardless of victims’ group identity, whereas PIVO was associated with reduced accuracy only when victims were Palestinians (outgroup members). Taken together, these findings indicate that both orientations have a significant impact on intergroup conflicts and their resolution
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