879 research outputs found
Geometric observation for the Bures fidelity between two states of a qubit
In this Brief Report, we present a geometric observation for the Bures
fidelity between two states of a qubit.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, RevTex, Accepted by Phys. Rev.
Nonlinear Dynamics of Aeolian Sand Ripples
We study the initial instability of flat sand surface and further nonlinear
dynamics of wind ripples. The proposed continuous model of ripple formation
allowed us to simulate the development of a typical asymmetric ripple shape and
the evolution of sand ripple pattern. We suggest that this evolution occurs via
ripple merger preceded by several soliton-like interaction of ripples.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, corrected 2 typo
Evidence of strong stabilizing effects on the evolution of boreoeutherian (Mammalia) dental proportions.
The dentition is an extremely important organ in mammals with variation in timing and sequence of eruption, crown morphology, and tooth size enabling a range of behavioral, dietary, and functional adaptations across the class. Within this suite of variable mammalian dental phenotypes, relative sizes of teeth reflect variation in the underlying genetic and developmental mechanisms. Two ratios of postcanine tooth lengths capture the relative size of premolars to molars (premolar-molar module, PMM), and among the three molars (molar module component, MMC), and are known to be heritable, independent of body size, and to vary significantly across primates. Here, we explore how these dental traits vary across mammals more broadly, focusing on terrestrial taxa in the clade of Boreoeutheria (Euarchontoglires and Laurasiatheria). We measured the postcanine teeth of NÂ =Â 1,523 boreoeutherian mammals spanning six orders, 14 families, 36 genera, and 49 species to test hypotheses about associations between dental proportions and phylogenetic relatedness, diet, and life history in mammals. Boreoeutherian postcanine dental proportions sampled in this study carry conserved phylogenetic signal and are not associated with variation in diet. The incorporation of paleontological data provides further evidence that dental proportions may be slower to change than is dietary specialization. These results have implications for our understanding of dental variation and dietary adaptation in mammals
Mass splittings of nuclear isotopes in chiral soliton approach
The differences of the masses of nuclear isotopes with atomic numbers between
\~10 and ~30 can be described within the chiral soliton approach in
satisfactory agreement with data. Rescaling of the model is necessary for this
purpose - decrease of the Skyrme constant by about 30%, providing the "nuclear
variant" of the model. The asymmetric term in Weizsaecker-Bethe- Bacher mass
formula for nuclei can be obtained as the isospin dependent quantum correction
to the nucleus energy. Some predictions for the binding energies of neutron
rich nuclides are made in this way, from, e.g. Be-16 and B-19 to Ne-31 and
Na-32. Neutron rich nuclides with high values of isospin are unstable relative
to strong interactions. The SK4 (Skyrme) variant of the model, as well as SK6
variant (6-th order term in chiral derivatives in the lagrangian as solitons
stabilizer) are considered, and the rational map approximation is used to
describe multiskyrmions.Comment: 16 pages, 10 tables, 2 figures. Figures are added and few misprints
are removed. Submitted to Phys. Atom. Nucl. (Yad. Fiz.
Aeolian transport layer
We investigate the airborne transport of particles on a granular surface by
the saltation mechanism through numerical simulation of particle motion coupled
with turbulent flow. We determine the saturated flux and show that its
behavior is consistent with a classical empirical relation obtained from wind
tunnel measurements. Our results also allow to propose a new relation valid for
small fluxes, namely, , where and
are the shear and threshold velocities of the wind, respectively, and
the scaling exponent is . We obtain an expression for the
velocity profile of the wind distorted by the particle motion and present a
dynamical scaling relation. We also find a novel expression for the dependence
of the height of the saltation layer as function of the wind velocity.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A two-species continuum model for aeolian sand ripples
We formulate a continuum model for aeolian sand ripples consisting of two
species of grains: a lower layer of relatively immobile clusters, with an upper
layer of highly mobile grains moving on top. We predict analytically the ripple
wavelength, initial ripple growth rate and threshold saltation flux for ripple
formation. Numerical simulations show the evolution of realistic ripple
profiles from initial surface roughness via ripple growth and merger.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
The geometry of entanglement: metrics, connections and the geometric phase
Using the natural connection equivalent to the SU(2) Yang-Mills instanton on
the quaternionic Hopf fibration of over the quaternionic projective space
with an fiber the geometry of
entanglement for two qubits is investigated. The relationship between base and
fiber i.e. the twisting of the bundle corresponds to the entanglement of the
qubits. The measure of entanglement can be related to the length of the
shortest geodesic with respect to the Mannoury-Fubini-Study metric on between an arbitrary entangled state, and the separable state nearest to
it. Using this result an interpretation of the standard Schmidt decomposition
in geometric terms is given. Schmidt states are the nearest and furthest
separable ones lying on, or the ones obtained by parallel transport along the
geodesic passing through the entangled state. Some examples showing the
correspondence between the anolonomy of the connection and entanglement via the
geometric phase is shown. Connections with important notions like the
Bures-metric, Uhlmann's connection, the hyperbolic structure for density
matrices and anholonomic quantum computation are also pointed out.Comment: 42 page
Is the tetraneutron a bound dineutron-dineutron molecule?
In light of a new experiment which claims a positive identification, we
discuss the possible existence of the tetraneutron. We explore a novel model
based on a dineutron-dineutron molecule. We show that this model is not able to
explain the tetraneutron as a bound state, in agreement with other theoretical
models already discussed in the literature.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, J. Phys. G, in pres
Dental Microwear and Diet of the Plio-Pleistocene Hominin Paranthropus boisei
The Plio-Pleistocene hominin Paranthropus boisei had enormous, flat, thickly enameled cheek teeth, a robust cranium and mandible, and inferred massive, powerful chewing muscles. This specialized morphology, which earned P. boisei the nickname âNutcracker Manâ, suggests that this hominin could have consumed very mechanically challenging foods. It has been recently argued, however, that specialized hominin morphology may indicate adaptations for the consumption of occasional fallback foods rather than preferred resources. Dental microwear offers a potential means by which to test this hypothesis in that it reflects actual use rather than genetic adaptation. High microwear surface texture complexity and anisotropy in extant primates can be associated with the consumption of exceptionally hard and tough foods respectively. Here we present the first quantitative analysis of dental microwear for P. boisei. Seven specimens examined preserved unobscured antemortem molar microwear. These all show relatively low complexity and anisotropy values. This suggests that none of the individuals consumed especially hard or tough foods in the days before they died. The apparent discrepancy between microwear and functional anatomy is consistent with the idea that P. boisei presents a hominin example of Liem's Paradox, wherein a highly derived morphology need not reflect a specialized diet
- âŠ