3,051 research outputs found
Upgrades of beam diagnostics in support of emittance-exchange experiments at the Fermilab A0 photoinjector
The possibility of using electron beam phase space manipulations to support a
free-electron laser accelerator design optimization has motivated our research.
An on-going program demonstrating the exchange of transverse horizontal and
longitudinal emittances at the Fermilab A0 photoinjector has benefited recently
from the upgrade of several of the key diagnostics stations. Accurate
measurements of these properties upstream and downstream of the exchanger
beamline are needed. Improvements in the screen resolution term and reduced
impact of the optical system's depth-of-focus by using YAG:Ce single crystals
normal to the beam direction will be described. The requirement to measure
small energy spreads (<10 keV) in the spectrometer and the exchange process
which resulted in bunch lengths less than 500 fs led to other diagnostics
performance adjustments and upgrades as well. A longitudinal to transverse
exchange example is also reported.Comment: 16 p
A constrained scheme for Einstein equations based on Dirac gauge and spherical coordinates
We propose a new formulation for 3+1 numerical relativity, based on a
constrained scheme and a generalization of Dirac gauge to spherical
coordinates. This is made possible thanks to the introduction of a flat
3-metric on the spatial hypersurfaces t=const, which corresponds to the
asymptotic structure of the physical 3-metric induced by the spacetime metric.
Thanks to the joint use of Dirac gauge, maximal slicing and spherical
components of tensor fields, the ten Einstein equations are reduced to a system
of five quasi-linear elliptic equations (including the Hamiltonian and momentum
constraints) coupled to two quasi-linear scalar wave equations. The remaining
three degrees of freedom are fixed by the Dirac gauge. Indeed this gauge allows
a direct computation of the spherical components of the conformal metric from
the two scalar potentials which obey the wave equations. We present some
numerical evolution of 3-D gravitational wave spacetimes which demonstrates the
stability of the proposed scheme.Comment: Difference w.r.t. v1: Major revision: improved presentation of the
tensor wave equation and addition of the first results from a numerical
implementation; w.r.t. v2: Minor changes: improved conclusion and figures;
w.r.t. v3: Minors changes, 1 figure added; 25 pages, 13 figures, REVTeX,
accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Bipartite quantum states and random complex networks
We introduce a mapping between graphs and pure quantum bipartite states and
show that the associated entanglement entropy conveys non-trivial information
about the structure of the graph. Our primary goal is to investigate the family
of random graphs known as complex networks. In the case of classical random
graphs we derive an analytic expression for the averaged entanglement entropy
while for general complex networks we rely on numerics. For large
number of nodes we find a scaling where both
the prefactor and the sub-leading O(1) term are a characteristic of
the different classes of complex networks. In particular, encodes
topological features of the graphs and is named network topological entropy.
Our results suggest that quantum entanglement may provide a powerful tool in
the analysis of large complex networks with non-trivial topological properties.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Characterization of high-quality MgB2(0001) epitaxial films on Mg(0001)
High-grade MgB2(0001) films were grown on Mg(0001) by means of
ultra-high-vacuum molecular beam epitaxy. Low energy electron diffraction and
x-ray diffraction data indicate that thick films are formed by epitaxially
oriented grains with MgB2 bulk structure. The quality of the films allowed
angle-resolved photoemission and polarization dependent x-ray absorption
measurements. For the first time, we report the band mapping along the Gamma-A
direction and the estimation of the electron-phonon coupling constant l ~ 0.55
for the surface state electrons.Comment: 15 text pages, 6 figures Submitted for publicatio
Comment on "Nucleon elastic form factors and local duality"
We comment on the papers "Nucleon elastic form factors and local duality"
[Phys. Rev. {\bf D62}, 073008 (2000)] and "Experimental verification of
quark-hadron duality" [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 85}, 1186 (2000)]. Our main
comment is that the reconstruction of the proton magnetic form factor, claimed
to be obtained from the inelastic scaling curve thanks to parton-hadron local
duality, is affected by an artifact.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
A fast stroboscopic spectral method for rotating systems in numerical relativity
We present a numerical technique for solving evolution equations, as the wave
equation, in the description of rotating astrophysical compact objects in
comoving coordinates, which avoids the problems associated with the light
cylinder. The technique implements a fast spectral matching between two domains
in relative rotation: an inner spherical domain, comoving with the sources and
lying strictly inside the light cylinder, and an outer inertial spherical
shell. Even though the emphasis is placed on spectral techniques, the matching
is independent of the specific manner in which equations are solved inside each
domain, and can be adapted to different schemes. We illustrate the strategy
with some simple but representative examples.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figure
Relativistic MHD Simulations of Jets with Toroidal Magnetic Fields
This paper presents an application of the recent relativistic HLLC
approximate Riemann solver by Mignone & Bodo to magnetized flows with vanishing
normal component of the magnetic field.
The numerical scheme is validated in two dimensions by investigating the
propagation of axisymmetric jets with toroidal magnetic fields.
The selected jet models show that the HLLC solver yields sharper resolution
of contact and shear waves and better convergence properties over the
traditional HLL approach.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
On the robustness of bucket brigade quantum RAM
We study the robustness of the bucket brigade quantum random access memory
model introduced by Giovannetti, Lloyd, and Maccone [Phys. Rev. Lett. 100,
160501 (2008)]. Due to a result of Regev and Schiff [ICALP '08 pp. 773], we
show that for a class of error models the error rate per gate in the bucket
brigade quantum memory has to be of order (where is the
size of the memory) whenever the memory is used as an oracle for the quantum
searching problem. We conjecture that this is the case for any realistic error
model that will be encountered in practice, and that for algorithms with
super-polynomially many oracle queries the error rate must be
super-polynomially small, which further motivates the need for quantum error
correction. By contrast, for algorithms such as matrix inversion [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 103, 150502 (2009)] or quantum machine learning [Phys. Rev. Lett. 113,
130503 (2014)] that only require a polynomial number of queries, the error rate
only needs to be polynomially small and quantum error correction may not be
required. We introduce a circuit model for the quantum bucket brigade
architecture and argue that quantum error correction for the circuit causes the
quantum bucket brigade architecture to lose its primary advantage of a small
number of "active" gates, since all components have to be actively error
corrected.Comment: Replaced with the published version. 13 pages, 9 figure
Spin networks, quantum automata and link invariants
The spin network simulator model represents a bridge between (generalized)
circuit schemes for standard quantum computation and approaches based on
notions from Topological Quantum Field Theories (TQFT). More precisely, when
working with purely discrete unitary gates, the simulator is naturally modelled
as families of quantum automata which in turn represent discrete versions of
topological quantum computation models. Such a quantum combinatorial scheme,
which essentially encodes SU(2) Racah--Wigner algebra and its braided
counterpart, is particularly suitable to address problems in topology and group
theory and we discuss here a finite states--quantum automaton able to accept
the language of braid group in view of applications to the problem of
estimating link polynomials in Chern--Simons field theory.Comment: LateX,19 pages; to appear in the Proc. of "Constrained Dynamics and
Quantum Gravity (QG05), Cala Gonone (Italy) September 12-16 200
A multidisciplinary expert opinion on CINV and RINV, unmet needs and practical real-life approaches
Introduction: A range of combination chemotherapy regimens are currently used in clinical practice. However, international antiemetic guidelines often only categorize the emetogenic potential of single agents rather than the emetogenicity of combination chemotherapy regimens. To manage the nausea and vomiting induced by antineoplastic combinations, guidelines suggest antiemetics that are appropriate for the component drug with the highest emetogenic potential. Furthermore, antiemetic guidelines generally do not consider the influence of other factors, including individual patient characteristics, on the emetic effects of cancer treatments. Similarly, the emetogenic potential of radiotherapy is stratified only according to the site of radiation, while other factors contributing to emetic risk are overlooked. Areas covered: An Expert Panel was convened to examine unresolved issues and summarize the current clinical research on managing nausea and vomiting associated with combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Expert opinion: The panel identified the incidence of nausea and vomiting induced by multi-drug combination therapies currently used to treat cancer at different anatomic sites and by radiotherapy in the presence of other risk factors. Based on these data and the clinical experience of panel members, several suggestions are made for a practical approach to prevent or manage nausea and vomiting due to chemotherapy regimens and radiation therapy
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