5,382 research outputs found
Time-dependent Mechanics and Lagrangian submanifolds of Dirac manifolds
A description of time-dependent Mechanics in terms of Lagrangian submanifolds
of Dirac manifolds (in particular, presymplectic and Poisson manifolds) is
presented. Two new Tulczyjew triples are discussed. The first one is adapted to
the restricted Hamiltonian formalism and the second one is adapted to the
extended Hamiltonian formalism
Efficient Posterior Simulation for Cointegrated Models with Priors On the Cointegration Space
A message coming out of the recent Bayesian literature on cointegration is that it is important to elicit a prior on the space spanned by the cointegrating vectors (as opposed to a particular identified choice for these vectors). In this note, we discuss a sensible way of eliciting such a prior. Furthermore, we develop a collapsed Gibbs sampling algorithm to carry out efficient posterior simulation in cointegration models. The computational advantages of our algorithm are most pronounced with our model, since the form of our prior precludes simple posterior simulation using conventional methods (e.g. a Gibbs sampler involves non-standard posterior conditionals). However, the theory we draw upon implies our algorithm will be more efficient even than the posterior simulation methods which are used with identified versions of cointegration models.
Population bound effects on bosonic correlations in non-inertial frames
We analyse the effect of bounding the occupation number of bosonic field
modes on the correlations among all the different spatial-temporal regions in a
setting in which we have a space-time with a horizon along with an inertial
observer. We show that the entanglement between A (inertial observer) and R
(uniformly accelerated observer) depends on the bound N, contrary to the
fermionic case. Whether or not decoherence increases with N depends on the
value of the acceleration a. Concerning the bipartition A-antiR (Alice with an
observer in Rindler's region IV), we show that no entanglement is created
whatever the value of N and a. Furthermore, AR entanglement is very quickly
lost for finite N and for infinite N. We will study in detail the mutual
information conservation law found for bosons and fermions. By means of the
boundary effects associated to N finiteness, we will show that for bosons this
law stems from classical correlations while for fermions it has a quantum
origin. Finally, we will present the strong N dependence of the entanglement in
R-antiR bipartition and compare the fermionic cases with their finite N bosonic
analogs. We will also show the anti-intuitive dependence of this entanglement
on statistics since more entanglement is created for bosons than for their
fermion counterparts.Comment: revtex 4, 12 pages, 10 figures. Added Journal ref
Unveiling quantum entanglement degradation near a Schwarzschild black hole
We analyze the entanglement degradation provoked by the Hawking effect in a
bipartite system Alice-Rob when Rob is in the proximities of a Schwarzschild
black hole while Alice is free falling into it. We will obtain the limit in
which the tools imported from the Unruh entanglement degradation phenomenon can
be used properly, keeping control on the approximation. As a result, we will be
able to determine the degree of entanglement as a function of the distance of
Rob to the event horizon, the mass of the black hole, and the frequency of
Rob's entangled modes. By means of this analysis we will show that all the
interesting phenomena occur in the vicinity of the event horizon and that the
presence of event horizons do not effectively degrade the entanglement when Rob
is far off the black hole. The universality of the phenomenon is presented:
There are not fundamental differences for different masses when working in the
natural unit system adapted to each black hole. We also discuss some aspects of
the localization of Alice and Rob states. All this study is done without using
the single mode approximation.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, revtex4. Added Journal referenc
Feed-forward Space Vector Modulation for Single-Phase Multilevel Cascade Converters with any DC voltage ratio
Modulation techniques for multilevel converters
can create distorted output voltages and currents if the DC link
voltages are unbalanced. This situation can be avoided if the
instantaneous DC voltage error is not taken into account in the
modulation process. This paper proposes a feed-forward space
vector modulation method for a single-phase multilevel cascade
converter. Using this modulation technique, the modulated output
voltage of the power converter always generates the reference
determined by the controller even in worst case voltage unbalance
conditions. In addition the possibility of optimizing the DC
voltage ratio between the H-bridges of the power converter is
introduced. Experimental results from a 5kVA prototype are
presented in order to validate the proposed modulation technique
Segmentally homologous neurons acquire two different terminal neuropeptidergic fates in the Drosophila nervous system
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. In this study, we identify the means by which segmentally homologous neurons acquire different neuropeptide fates in Drosophila. Ventral abdominal (Va)-neurons in the A1 segment of the ventral nerve cord express DH31 and AstA neuropeptides (neuropeptidergic fate I) by virtue of Ubx activity, whereas the A2-A4 Va-neurons express the Capa neuropeptide (neuropeptidergic fate II) under the influence of abdA. These different fates are attained through segment-specific programs of neural subtype specification undergone by segmentally homologous neurons. This is an attractive alternative by which Hox genes can shape Drosophila segmental neural architecture (more sophisticated than the previously identified binary “to live” or “not to live” mechanism). These data refine our knowledge of the mechanisms involved in diversifying neuronal identity within the central nervous systemThis study was supported by grant number: BFU2013-43858-
Enhanced Magnetic Anisotropy of Mn12-acetate
Thin films of the Single Molecule Magnet (Mn12-acetate) have been fabricated
on a Si-substrate by the Dip-and-Dry method, a simple and robust technique.
Atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy characterizations
reveal that homogeneous, thin films of a few molecular layers with smoothness
at the molecular level are deposited. Significant changes in magnetic
properties of Mn12-acetate exposed to the same solvent were observed in
zero-field-cooled and field-cooled magnetization, as well as ac-susceptibility
measurements. The blocking temperature was found to increase to TB > 10 K at
low magnetic fields, indicating an enhanced magnetic anisotropy.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Hall effect in strongly correlated low dimensional systems
We investigate the Hall effect in a quasi one-dimensional system made of
weakly coupled Luttinger Liquids at half filling. Using a memory function
approach, we compute the Hall coefficient as a function of temperature and
frequency in the presence of umklapp scattering. We find a power-law correction
to the free-fermion value (band value), with an exponent depending on the
Luttinger parameter . At high enough temperature or frequency the
Hall coefficient approaches the band value.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
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