82,478 research outputs found
High-Order Adiabatic Approximation for Non-Hermitian Quantum System and Complexization of Berry's Phase
In this paper the evolution of a quantum system drived by a non-Hermitian
Hamiltonian depending on slowly-changing parameters is studied by building an
universal high-order adiabatic approximation(HOAA) method with Berry's phase
,which is valid for either the Hermitian or the non-Hermitian cases. This
method can be regarded as a non-trivial generalization of the HOAA method for
closed quantum system presented by this author before. In a general situation,
the probabilities of adiabatic decay and non-adiabatic transitions are
explicitly obtained for the evolution of the non-Hermitian quantum system. It
is also shown that the non-Hermitian analog of the Berry's phase factor for the
non-Hermitian case just enjoys the holonomy structure of the dual linear bundle
over the parameter manifold. The non-Hermitian evolution of the generalized
forced harmonic oscillator is discussed as an illustrative examples.Comment: ITP.SB-93-22,17 page
Uniform attractors for non-autonomous wave equations with nonlinear damping
We consider dynamical behavior of non-autonomous wave-type evolutionary
equations with nonlinear damping, critical nonlinearity, and time-dependent
external forcing which is translation bounded but not translation compact
(i.e., external forcing is not necessarily time-periodic, quasi-periodic or
almost periodic). A sufficient and necessary condition for the existence of
uniform attractors is established using the concept of uniform asymptotic
compactness. The required compactness for the existence of uniform attractors
is then fulfilled by some new a priori estimates for concrete wave type
equations arising from applications. The structure of uniform attractors is
obtained by constructing a skew product flow on the extended phase space for
the norm-to-weak continuous process.Comment: 33 pages, no figur
Bayesian methods to overcome the winner's curse in genetic studies
Parameter estimates for associated genetic variants, report ed in the initial
discovery samples, are often grossly inflated compared to the values observed
in the follow-up replication samples. This type of bias is a consequence of the
sequential procedure in which the estimated effect of an associated genetic
marker must first pass a stringent significance threshold. We propose a
hierarchical Bayes method in which a spike-and-slab prior is used to account
for the possibility that the significant test result may be due to chance. We
examine the robustness of the method using different priors corresponding to
different degrees of confidence in the testing results and propose a Bayesian
model averaging procedure to combine estimates produced by different models.
The Bayesian estimators yield smaller variance compared to the conditional
likelihood estimator and outperform the latter in studies with low power. We
investigate the performance of the method with simulations and applications to
four real data examples.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AOAS373 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
X-ray Structure Analysis and the Intervalent Electron Transfer in Organic Mixed-Valence Crystals with Bridged Aromatic Cation Radicals
X-ray crystallography identifies the aromatic donor group D = 2,5-dimethoxy-4-methylphenyl to be a suitable redox center for the construction of organic mixed-valence crystals owing to its large structural change attendant upon 1e oxidation to the cationâradical (Dâ˘+). The combination of cyclic voltammetry, dynamic ESR line broadening, and electronic (NIR) spectroscopy allows the intervalence electron transfer between the redox centers in the mixed-valence system D-br-Dâ˘+ [where br can be an aliphatic trimethylene or an aromatic (poly)phenylene bridge] to be probed quantitatively. Independent measures of the electronic coupling matrix element (H) for D/Dâ˘+ electron exchange via MullikenâHush theory accord with the X-ray crystallographic databoth sufficient to consistently identify the various D-br-Dâ˘+ according to the RobinâDay classification. Thus, the directly coupled biaryl DâDâ˘+ is a completely delocalized cation in class III with the charge distributed equally over both redox centers. The trimethylene- and biphenylene-bridged cations D(CH2)3Dâ˘+ and D(ph)2Dâ˘+ with highly localized charge distributions are prototypical class II systems involving moderately coupled redox centers with H â 400 cm-1. The borderline region between class II/III is occupied by the phenylene-bridged cation D(ph)Dâ˘+; and the X-ray, CV, and NIR analyses yield ambivalent H values (which we believe to be) largely a result of an unusually asymmetric (20/80) charge distribution that is polarized between the D/Dâ˘+ redox centers
Intervalence (Charge-Resonance) Transitions in Organic Mixed-Valence Systems. Through-Space versus Through-Bond Electron Transfer between Bridged Aromatic (Redox) Centers
Intervalence absorption bands appearing in the diagnostic near-IR region are consistently observed in the electronic spectra of mixed-valence systems containing a pair of aromatic redox centers (Arâ˘+/Ar) that are connected by two basically different types of molecular bridges. The through-space pathway for intramolecular electron transfer is dictated by an o-xylylene bridge in the mixed-valence cation radical 3â˘+ with Ar = 2,5-dimethoxy-p-tolyl (T), in which conformational mobility allows the proximal syn disposition of planar Tâ˘+/T redox centers. Four independent experimental probes indicate the large through-space electronic interaction between such cofacial Arâ˘+/Ar redox centers from the measurements of (a) sizable potential splitting in the cyclic voltammogram, (b) quinonoidal distortion of Tâ˘+/T centers by X-ray crystallography, (c) âdoublingâ of the ESR hyperfine splittings, and (d) a pronounced intervalence charge-resonance band. The through (br)-bond pathway for intramolecular electron transfer is enforced in the mixed-valence cation radical 2aâ˘+ by the p-phenylene bridge which provides the structurally inflexible and linear connection between Arâ˘+/Ar redox centers. The direct comparison of intramolecular rates of electron transfer (kET) between identical Tâ˘+/T centers in 3â˘+ and 2aâ˘+indicates that through-space and through-bond mechanisms are equally effective, despite widely different separations between their redox centers. The same picture obtains for 3â˘+ and 2aâ˘+from theoretical computations of the first-order rate constants for intramolecular electron transfer from MarcusâHush theory using the electronic coupling elements evaluated from the diagnostic intervalence (charge-transfer) transitions. Such a strong coherence between theory and experiment also applies to the mixed-valence cation radical 7â˘+, in which the aromatic redox S center is sterically encumbered by annulation
Self-consistency in the Projected Shell Model
The Projected Shell Model is a shell model theory built up over a deformed
BCS mean field. Ground state and excited bands in even-even nuclei are obtained
through diagonalization of a pairing plus quadrupole Hamiltonian in an angular
momentum projected 0-, 2-, and 4-quasiparticle basis. The residual
quadrupole-quadrupole interaction strength is fixed self-consistently with the
deformed mean field and the pairing constants are the same used in constructing
the quasiparticle basis. Taking as an example, we calculate
low-lying states and compare them with experimental data. We exhibit the effect
of changing the residual interaction strengths on the spectra. It is clearly
seen that there are many bandheads whose energies can
only be reproduced using the self-consistent strengths. It is thus concluded
that the Projected Shell Model is a model essentially with no free parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Nuclear Physics
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