9,265 research outputs found
Slow‐Wave Structures Utilizing Superconducting Thin‐Film Transmission Lines
Slow‐wave propagation of electromagnetic waves in transmission lines formed of thin‐film superconductors has been studied theoretically and experimentally. Previous theoretical analyses have been extended to include nonlocal theories. Strong dependence of phase velocity is found on film thickness and interfilm spacing when these become less than a few penetration depths. Velocity is also modified by coherence length, mean free path, nature of reflection of electrons at the film surfaces, and by temperature and magnetic field. Experimental measurements were made to verify the dependence on thickness, spacing, and temperature by means of a resonance technique. Agreement with theory was excellent in the case of temperature. Data taken for varying thickness and spacing verified the general trend of theoretical predictions. They indicate a nonlocal behavior with some specular reflection, but scatter of the data taken for different films prevents precise comparison of theory and experiment. Estimates of bulk penetration depths were made for indium, λ_In = 648±130 Å. For tantalum a rough estimate could be made of λTa = 580 Å. Data were consistent with the estimate of coherence length for indium of ξ_0 ≈ 3000 Å. Velocity was found to be independent of frequency in the range 50–500 MHz, while losses increased as the square. Pulse measurements indicated that delays of several microseconds and storage of several thousand pulses on a single line are feasible
Federal Order Product Price Formulas and Cheesemaker Margins: A Closer Look
Agricultural and Food Policy, Demand and Price Analysis,
Speciational view of macroevolution: are micro and macroevolution decoupled?
We introduce a simple computational model that, with a microscopic dynamics
driven by natural selection and mutation alone, allows the description of true
speciation events. A statistical analysis of the so generated evolutionary tree
captures realistic features showing power laws for frequency distributions in
time and size. Albeit these successful predictions, the difficulty in obtaining
punctuated dynamics with mass extinctions suggests the necessity of decoupling
micro and macro-evolutionary mechanisms in agreement with some ideas of Gould's
and Eldredge's theory of punctuated equilibrium.Comment: Europhys. Lett. 75:342--34
Magnetically Stimulated Diffusion of Rydberg Gases
The specific kind of diffusion stimulated (rather than suppressed) by the
external magnetic field, which was predicted for the first time by Schmelcher
and Cederbaum in 1992, is considered here for the case of high-angular-momentum
(i.e., approximately "circular") Rydberg atoms. The coefficient of such
diffusion was calculated by a purely analytical approach and was found to be
well relevant to the experiments on antihydrogen formation.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 pages, 1 EPS figure; v2: additional numerical estimates
and extended discussion in the end of pape
Quantum Affine Lie Algebras, Casimir Invariants and Diagonalization of the Braid Generator
Let be an infinite-dimensional quantum affine Lie
algebra. A family of central elements or Casimir invariants are constructed and
their eigenvalues computed in any integrable irreducible highest weight
representation. These eigenvalue formulae are shown to absolutely convergent
when the deformation parameter is such that . It is proven that the
universal R-matrix of satisfies the celebrated
conjugation relation with the usual twist map. As
applications, the braid generator is shown to be diagonalizable on arbitrary
tensor product modules of integrable irreducible highest weight -modules and a spectral decomposition formula for the braid generator is
obtained which is the generalization of Reshetikhin's and Gould's forms to the
present affine case. Casimir invariants acting on a specified module are also
constructed and their eigenvalues, again absolutely convergent for ,
computed by means of the spectral decomposition formula.Comment: 22 pages (many changes are made
Microlensing with advanced contour integration algorithm: Green's theorem to third order, error control, optimal sampling and limb darkening
Microlensing light curves are typically computed either by ray-shooting maps
or by contour integration via Green's theorem. We present an improved version
of the second method that includes a parabolic correction in Green's line
integral. In addition, we present an accurate analytical estimate of the
residual errors, which allows the implementation of an optimal strategy for the
contour sampling. Finally, we give a prescription for dealing with
limb-darkened sources reaching arbitrary accuracy. These optimizations lead to
a substantial speed-up of contour integration codes along with a full mastery
of the errors.Comment: 34 pages, 11 figure
Microlensing Detections of Moons of Exoplanets
We investigate the characteristic of microlensing signals of Earth-like moons
orbiting ice-giant planets. From this, we find that non-negligible satellite
signals occur when the planet-moon separation is similar to or greater than the
Einstein radius of the planet. We find that the satellite signal does not
diminish with the increase of the planet-moon separation beyond the Einstein
radius of the planet unlike the planetary signal which vanishes when the planet
is located well beyond the Einstein radius of the star. We also find that the
satellite signal tends to have the same sign as that of the planetary signal.
These tendencies are caused by the lensing effect of the star on the moon in
addition to the effect of the planet. We determine the range of satellite
separations where the microlensing technique is optimized for the detections of
moons. By setting an upper limit as the angle-average of the projected Hill
radius and a lower limit as the half of the Einstein radius of the planet, we
find that the microlensing method would be sensitive to moons with projected
separations from the planet of for a Jupiter-mass planet, for a Saturn-mass planet, and for a Uranus-mass planet. We compare the
characteristics of the moons to be detected by the microlensing and transit
techniquesComment: 6pages, 6 figure
Quantum Continuum Mechanics Made Simple
In this paper we further explore and develop the quantum continuum mechanics
(CM) of [Tao \emph{et al}, PRL{\bf 103},086401] with the aim of making it
simpler to use in practice. Our simplifications relate to the non-interacting
part of the CM equations, and primarily refer to practical implementations in
which the groundstate stress tensor is approximated by its Kohn-Sham version.
We use the simplified approach to directly prove the exactness of CM for
one-electron systems via an orthonormal formulation. This proof sheds light on
certain physical considerations contained in the CM theory and their
implication on CM-based approximations. The one-electron proof then motivates
an approximation to the CM (exact under certain conditions) expanded on the
wavefunctions of the Kohn-Sham (KS) equations. Particular attention is paid to
the relationships between transitions from occupied to unoccupied KS orbitals
and their approximations under the CM. We also demonstrate the simplified CM
semi-analytically on an example system
Contagious Anxiety: Anxious European Americans Can Transmit Their Physiological Reactivity to African Americans.
During interracial encounters, well-intentioned European Americans sometimes engage in subtle displays of anxiety, which can be interpreted as signs of racial bias by African American partners. In the present research, same-race and cross-race stranger dyads ( N = 123) engaged in getting-acquainted tasks, during which measures of sympathetic nervous system responses (preejection period, PEP) and heart rate variability were continuously collected. PEP scores showed that African American partners had stronger physiological linkage to European American partners who evidenced greater anxiety-greater cortisol reactivity, behavioral tension, and self-reported discomfort-which suggests greater physiological responsiveness to momentary changes in partners' affective states when those partners were anxious. European Americans showed physiological linkage to African American and European American partners, but linkage did not vary as a function of their partner's anxiety. Using physiological linkage offers a novel approach to understanding how affective responses unfold during dynamic intergroup interactions
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