17,946 research outputs found
Bose-enhanced chemistry: Amplification of selectivity in the dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates
We study the photodissociation chemistry of a quantum degenerate gas of
bosonic triatomic molecules, assuming two open rearrangement channels
( or ). The equations of motion are equivalent to those of a
parametric multimode laser, resulting in an exponential buildup of macroscopic
mode populations. By exponentially amplifying a small differential in the
single-particle rate-coefficients, Bose stimulation leads to a nearly complete
selectivity of the collective -body process, indicating a novel type of
ultra-selective quantum degenerate chemistry.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The repeatability of the abbreviated (4-h) Oral Fat Tolerance Test and influence of prior acute aerobic exercise
© 2016 The Author(s) Purpose: The Oral Fat Tolerance Test (OFTT) is regarded as a repeatable measure used to assess postprandial triglyceride (TAG) levels, with higher levels observed in cardio-metabolic disorders. Acute aerobic exercise intervention before OFTT reduces the TAG response, but the repeatability of this effect is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the repeatability of the abbreviated 4-h OFTT with and without immediate prior aerobic exercise. Methods: On four separate days, healthy adult male participants underwent two 4-h OFTT (n = 10) and another two 4-h OFTT with 1-h of standardised moderate intensity aerobic exercise performed immediately before meal ingestion (n = 11). The OFTT meal composition included 75.4 g total fat, 21.7 g carbohydrate and 13.7 g protein. Venous blood was sampled at baseline and hourly up to 4 h after the OFTT meal ingestion, and TAG area under the curve (AUC) was calculated. Results: Nonparametric Bland–Altman analysis of 4-h TAG AUC revealed that 9 of 10 repeat measurements fell within ±15 % of the median TAG AUC for the OFTT. By contrast, two of 11 repeat measurements fell within ±15 % of the median TAG AUC for the OFTT undertaken with 1-h prior aerobic exercise. Conclusions: The 4-h OFTT is a repeatable test of postprandial TAG responses in healthy men. However, aerobic exercise performed immediately before OFTT considerably increases the variability of TAG AUC. These findings have implications for interpretation of research studies investigating exercise intervention performed immediately before OFTT. Future studies should also investigate the repeatability of exercise performed 8–24 h before OFTT
VELO Module Production - Module Assembly
This note describes in detail the procedures used in the gluing of sensors to hybrid and hybrid to pedestal for the LHCb VELO detector module assembly
Simulations of the angular dependence of the dipole-dipole interaction among Rydberg atoms
The dipole-dipole interaction between two Rydberg atoms depends on the
relative orientation of the atoms and on the change in the magnetic quantum
number. We simulate the effect of this anisotropy on the energy transport in an
amorphous many atom system subject to a homogeneous applied electric field. We
consider two experimentally feasible geometries and find that the effects
should be measurable in current generation imaging experiments. In both
geometries atoms of character are localized to a small region of space
which is immersed in a larger region that is filled with atoms of
character. Energy transfer due to the dipole-dipole interaction can lead to a
spread of character into the region initially occupied by atoms. Over
long timescales the energy transport is confined to the volume near the border
of the region which is suggestive of Anderson localization. We calculate a
correlation length of 6.3~m for one particular geometry.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, revised draf
Chaotic Free-Space Laser Communication over Turbulent Channel
The dynamics of errors caused by atmospheric turbulence in a
self-synchronizing chaos based communication system that stably transmits
information over a 5 km free-space laser link is studied experimentally.
Binary information is transmitted using a chaotic sequence of short-term pulses
as carrier. The information signal slightly shifts the chaotic time position of
each pulse depending on the information bit. We report the results of an
experimental analysis of the atmospheric turbulence in the channel and the
impact of turbulence on the Bit-Error-Rate (BER) performance of this chaos
based communication system.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Out of equilibrium: understanding cosmological evolution to lower-entropy states
Despite the importance of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, it is not
absolute. Statistical mechanics implies that, given sufficient time, systems
near equilibrium will spontaneously fluctuate into lower-entropy states,
locally reversing the thermodynamic arrow of time. We study the time
development of such fluctuations, especially the very large fluctuations
relevant to cosmology. Under fairly general assumptions, the most likely
history of a fluctuation out of equilibrium is simply the CPT conjugate of the
most likely way a system relaxes back to equilibrium. We use this idea to
elucidate the spacetime structure of various fluctuations in (stable and
metastable) de Sitter space and thermal anti-de Sitter space.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figure
Time-series Doppler images and surface differential rotation of the effectively-single rapidly-rotating K-giant KU Pegasi
According to most stellar dynamo theories, differential rotation (DR) plays a
crucial role for the generation of toroidal magnetic fields. Numerical models
predict surface differential rotation to be anti-solar for rapidly-rotating
giant stars, i.e., their surface angular velocity could increase with stellar
latitude. However, surface differential rotation has been derived only for a
handful of individual giant stars to date.
The spotted surface of the K-giant KU Pegasi is investigated in order to
detect its time evolution and quantify surface differential rotation.
We present altogether 11 Doppler images from spectroscopic data collected
with the robotic telescope STELLA between 2006--2011. All maps are obtained
with the surface reconstruction code iMap. Differential rotation is extracted
from these images by detecting systematic (latitude-dependent) spot
displacements. We apply a cross-correlation technique to find the best
differential rotation law.
The surface of KU Peg shows cool spots at all latitudes and one persistent
warm spot at high latitude. A small cool polar spot exists for most but not all
of the epochs. Re-identification of spots in at least two consecutive maps is
mostly possible only at mid and high latitudes and thus restricts the
differential-rotation determination mainly to these latitudes. Our
cross-correlation analysis reveals solar-like differential rotation with a
surface shear of , i.e., approximately five times weaker
than on the Sun. We also derive a more accurate and consistent set of stellar
parameters for KU Peg including a small Li abundance of ten times less than
solar.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Rigidity of cosmic acceleration in a class of k-essence cosmologies
We study the structural stability of a cosmic acceleration (inflation) in a
class of k-essence cosmologies against changes in the shape of the potential.
Those models may be viewed as generalized tachyon cosmologies and this analysis
extends previous results on the structural stability of cosmic acceleration in
tachyon cosmologies. The study considers both phantom and non-phantom cases.
The concepts of rigidity and fragility are defined through a condition on the
functional form of the Hubble factor. Given the known result of the existence
of inflationary (non-phantom) and super-inflationary (phantom) attractors we
formulate the question of their structural stability. We find that those
attractors are rigid in the sense that they never change as long as the
conditions for inflation or super-inflation are met.Comment: 10 page
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