14,173 research outputs found
Transport of ions in a segmented linear Paul trap in printed-circuit-board technology
We describe the construction and operation of a segmented linear Paul trap,
fabricated in printed-circuit-board technology with an electrode segment width
of 500 microns. We prove the applicability of this technology to reliable ion
trapping and report the observation of Doppler cooled ion crystals of Ca-40
with this kind of traps. Measured trap frequencies agree with numerical
simulations at the level of a few percent from which we infer a high
fabrication accuracy of the segmented trap. To demonstrate its usefulness and
versatility for trapped ion experiments we study the fast transport of a single
ion. Our experimental results show a success rate of 99.0(1)% for a transport
distance of 2x2mm in a round-trip time of T=20us, which corresponds to 4 axial
oscillations only. We theoretically and experimentally investigate the
excitation of oscillations caused by fast ion transports with error-function
voltage ramps: For a slightly slower transport (a round-trip shuttle within
T=30us) we observe non-adiabatic motional excitation of 0.89(15)meV.Comment: 16 page
The strong-CP question in SU(3)_c X SU(3)_L X U(1)_N models
We analyze two recent models based on the gauge group
SU(3)SU(3)U(1) where each generation is not
anomaly-free, but anomaly cancels when three generations are taken into
account. We show that the most general Yukawa couplings of these models admit
of a Peccei-Quinn symmetry. This symmetry can be extended to the entire
Lagrangian by using extra fields in a very elegant way so that the resulting
axion can be made invisible.Comment: Latex, 8 pages, no figure
Stormâtime configuration of the inner magnetosphere: LyonâFedderâMobarry MHD code, Tsyganenko model, and GOES observations
[1] We compare global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulation results with an empirical model and observations to understand the magnetic field configuration and plasma distribution in the inner magnetosphere, especially during geomagnetic storms. The physics-based Lyon-Fedder-Mobarry (LFM) code simulates Earth\u27s magnetospheric topology and dynamics by solving the equations of ideal MHD. Quantitative comparisons of simulated events with observations reveal strengths and possible limitations and suggest ways to improve the LFM code. Here we present a case study that compares the LFM code to both a semiempirical magnetic field model and to geosynchronous measurements from GOES satellites. During a magnetic cloud event, the simulation and model predictions compare well qualitatively with observations, except during storm main phase. Quantitative statistical studies of the MHD simulation shows that MHD field lines are consistently under-stretched, especially during storm time (Dst \u3c â20 nT) on the nightside, a likely consequence of an insufficient representation of the inner magnetosphere current systems in ideal MHD. We discuss two approaches for improving the LFM result: increasing the simulation spatial resolution and coupling LFM with a ring current model based on drift physics (i.e., the Rice Convection Model (RCM)). We show that a higher spatial resolution LFM code better predicts geosynchronous magnetic fields (not only the average Bz component but also higher-frequency fluctuations driven by the solar wind). An early version of the LFM/RCM coupled code, which runs so far only for idealized events, yields a much-improved ring current, quantifiable by decreased field strengths at all local times compared to the LFM-only code
Are animal models of addiction useful?
Background: Preclinical research involving non-human animals has made important contributions to our understanding of risk-factors for addiction, neuroadaptations that follow chronic drug exposure, and to the development of some efficacious pharmacotherapies for addiction. Despite these contributions, we argue that animal models of addiction have impeded progress in our understanding of addiction and its treatment in humans.
Argument: First of all, the majority of pharmacological treatments that were initially developed using animal models have failed to prove effective for the treatment of addiction in humans, resulting in a huge waste of resources. Secondly, we demonstrate that prevailing animal models that portray addiction as a disorder of compulsion and habit cannot be reconciled with observations that psychoactive drug use in humans is a goal-directed operant behaviour that remains under the control of its consequences, even in people who are addicted. Thirdly, addiction may be a uniquely human phenomenon that is dependent on language, which necessarily limits the validity of animal models. Finally, we argue that addicted brains must be understood as one component of broader networks of symptoms and environmental and social factors that are impossible to model in laboratory animals.
Conclusions: A case can be made that animal models of addiction have not served us well in understanding and treating addiction in humans. It is important to reconsider some widely-held beliefs about the nature of addictive behaviour in humans that have arisen from the zeal to translate observations of laboratory animals
Controlling fast transport of cold trapped ions
We realize fast transport of ions in a segmented micro-structured Paul trap.
The ion is shuttled over a distance of more than 10^4 times its groundstate
wavefunction size during only 5 motional cycles of the trap (280 micro meter in
3.6 micro seconds). Starting from a ground-state-cooled ion, we find an
optimized transport such that the energy increase is as low as 0.10 0.01
motional quanta. In addition, we demonstrate that quantum information stored in
a spin-motion entangled state is preserved throughout the transport. Shuttling
operations are concatenated, as a proof-of-principle for the shuttling-based
architecture to scalable ion trap quantum computing.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The Higgs Sector of the Minimal 3 3 1 Model Revisited
The mass spectrum and the eigenstates of the Higgs sector of the minimal 3 3
1 model are revisited in detail. There are discrepancies between our results
and previous results by another author.Comment: 20 pages, latex, two figures. One note and one reference are adde
Hanbury Brown and Twiss interferometry at a free-electron laser
We present measurements of second- and higher-order intensity correlation
functions (so-called Hanbury Brown and Twiss experiment) performed at the
free-electron laser (FEL) FLASH in the non-linear regime of its operation. We
demonstrate the high transverse coherence properties of the FEL beam with a
degree of transverse coherence of about 80% and degeneracy parameter of the
order 10^9 that makes it similar to laser sources. Intensity correlation
measurements in spatial and frequency domain gave an estimate of the FEL
average pulse duration of 50 fs. Our measurements of the higher-order
correlation functions indicate that FEL radiation obeys Gaussian statistics,
which is characteristic to chaotic sources.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, 40 reference
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