9,205 research outputs found
Quantum equilibration in finite time
It has recently been shown that small quantum subsystems generically
equilibrate, in the sense that they spend most of the time close to a fixed
equilibrium state. This relies on just two assumptions: that the state is
spread over many different energies, and that the Hamiltonian has
non-degenerate energy gaps. Given the same assumptions, it has also been shown
that closed systems equilibrate with respect to realistic measurements. We
extend these results in two important ways. First, we prove equilibration over
a finite (rather than infinite) time-interval, allowing us to bound the
equilibration time. Second, we weaken the non degenerate energy gaps condition,
showing that equilibration occurs provided that no energy gap is hugely
degenerate.Comment: 7 page
Equilibration of quantum systems and subsystems
We unify two recent results concerning equilibration in quantum theory. We
first generalise a proof of Reimann [PRL 101,190403 (2008)], that the
expectation value of 'realistic' quantum observables will equilibrate under
very general conditions, and discuss its implications for the equilibration of
quantum systems. We then use this to re-derive an independent result of Linden
et. al. [PRE 79, 061103 (2009)], showing that small subsystems generically
evolve to an approximately static equilibrium state. Finally, we consider
subspaces in which all initial states effectively equilibrate to the same
state.Comment: 5 page
Thermal expansion of graphite-epoxy between 116 K and 366 K
A Priest laser interferometer was developed to measure the thermal strain of composite laminates. The salient features of this interferometer are that: (1) it operates between 116 K and 366 K; (2) it is easy to operate; (3) minimum specimen preparation is required; (4) coefficients of thermal expansion in the range of 0-5 micro epsilon/K can be measured; and (5) the resolution of thermal strain is on the order of micro epsilon. The thermal response of quasi-isotropic, T300/5208, grahite-epoxy composite material was studied with this interferometer. The study showed that: (1) for the material tested, thermal cycling effects are negligible; (2) variability of thermal response from specimen to specimen may become significant at cryogenic temperatures; and (3) the thermal response of 0.6 cm and 2.5 cm wide specimens are the same above room temperature
Physics within a quantum reference frame
We investigate the physics of quantum reference frames. Specifically, we
study several simple scenarios involving a small number of quantum particles,
whereby we promote one of these particles to the role of a quantum observer and
ask what is the description of the rest of the system, as seen by this
observer? We highlight the interesting aspects of such questions by presenting
a number of apparent paradoxes. By unravelling these paradoxes we get a better
understanding of the physics of quantum reference frames.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. v2: Published versio
The development of a prototype intelligent user interface subsystem for NASA's scientific database systems
The National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) has initiated an Intelligent Data Management (IDM) research effort which has as one of its components the development of an Intelligent User Interface (IUI).The intent of the latter is to develop a friendly and intelligent user interface service that is based on expert systems and natural language processing technologies. The purpose is to support the large number of potential scientific and engineering users presently having need of space and land related research and technical data but who have little or no experience in query languages or understanding of the information content or architecture of the databases involved. This technical memorandum presents prototype Intelligent User Interface Subsystem (IUIS) using the Crustal Dynamics Project Database as a test bed for the implementation of the CRUDDES (Crustal Dynamics Expert System). The knowledge base has more than 200 rules and represents a single application view and the architectural view. Operational performance using CRUDDES has allowed nondatabase users to obtain useful information from the database previously accessible only to an expert database user or the database designer
Polarimetric Thermal to Visible Face Verification via Self-Attention Guided Synthesis
Polarimetric thermal to visible face verification entails matching two images
that contain significant domain differences. Several recent approaches have
attempted to synthesize visible faces from thermal images for cross-modal
matching. In this paper, we take a different approach in which rather than
focusing only on synthesizing visible faces from thermal faces, we also propose
to synthesize thermal faces from visible faces. Our intuition is based on the
fact that thermal images also contain some discriminative information about the
person for verification. Deep features from a pre-trained Convolutional Neural
Network (CNN) are extracted from the original as well as the synthesized
images. These features are then fused to generate a template which is then used
for verification. The proposed synthesis network is based on the self-attention
generative adversarial network (SAGAN) which essentially allows efficient
attention-guided image synthesis. Extensive experiments on the ARL polarimetric
thermal face dataset demonstrate that the proposed method achieves
state-of-the-art performance.Comment: This work is accepted at the 12th IAPR International Conference On
Biometrics (ICB 2019
Development of a Priest interferometer for measurement of the thermal expansion of a graphite epoxy in the temperature range 116-366 K
The thermal expansion behavior of graphite epoxy laminates between 116 and 366 degrees Kelvin was investigated using as implementation of the Priest interferometer concept. The design, construction and use of the interferometer along with the experimental results it was used to generate are described. The experimental program consisted of 25 tests on 25.4 mm and 6.35 mm wide, 8 ply pi/4 quasi-isotropic T300-5208 graphite/epoxy specimens and 3 tests on a 25.4 mm wide unidirectional specimen. Experimental results are presented for all tests along with a discussion of the interferometer's limitations and some possible improvements in its design
Ignition of thermally sensitive explosives between a contact surface and a shock
The dynamics of ignition between a contact surface and a shock wave is investigated using a
one-step reaction model with Arrhenius kinetics. Both large activation energy asymptotics and
high-resolution finite activation energy numerical simulations are employed. Emphasis is on comparing
and contrasting the solutions with those of the ignition process between a piston and a shock,
considered previously. The large activation energy asymptotic solutions are found to be qualitatively
different from the piston driven shock case, in that thermal runaway first occurs ahead of
the contact surface, and both forward and backward moving reaction waves emerge. These waves
take the form of quasi-steady weak detonations that may later transition into strong detonation
waves. For the finite activation energies considered in the numerical simulations, the results are
qualitatively different to the asymptotic predictions in that no backward weak detonation wave
forms, and there is only a weak dependence of the evolutionary events on the acoustic impedance
of the contact surface. The above conclusions are relevant to gas phase equation of state models.
However, when a large polytropic index more representative of condensed phase explosives is used,
the large activation energy asymptotic and finite activation energy numerical results are found to
be in quantitative agreement
Superconductivity and Cobalt Oxidation State in Metastable Na(x)CoO(2-delta)*yH2O (x ~ 1/3; y ~ 4x)
We report the synthesis and superconducting properties of a metastable form
of the known superconductor NaxCoO2*yH2O (x ~ 1/3, y ~ 4x). Instead of using
the conventional bromine-acetonitrile mixture for sodium deintercalation, we
use an aqueous bromine solution. Using this method, we oxidize the sample to a
point that the sodium cobaltate becomes unstable, leading to formation of other
products if not controlled. This compound has the same structure as the
reported superconductor, yet it exhibits a systematic variation of the
superconducting transition temperature (Tc) as a function of time. Immediately
after synthesis, this compound is not a superconductor, even though it contains
appropriate amounts of sodium and water. The samples become superconducting
with low Tc values after ~ 90 h. Tc continually increases until it reaches a
maximum value (4.5 K) after about 260 h. Then Tc drops drastically, becoming
non-superconducting approximately 100 h later. Corresponding time-dependent
neutron powder diffraction data shows that the changes in superconductivity
exhibited by the metastable cobaltate correspond to slow formation of oxygen
vacancies in the CoO2 layers. In effect, the formation of these defects
continually reduces the cobalt oxidation state causing the sample to evolve
through its superconducting life cycle. Thus, the dome-shaped superconducting
phase diagram is mapped as a function of cobalt oxidation state using a single
sample. The width of this dome based on the formal oxidation state of cobalt is
very narrow - approximately 0.1 valence units wide. Interestingly, the maximum
Tc in NaxCoO2*yH2O occurs when the cobalt oxidation state is near 3.5. Thus, we
speculate that the maximum Tc occurs near the charge ordered insulating state
that correlates with the average cobalt oxidation state of 3.5.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl
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