5,596 research outputs found
Quantum tunneling time
A simple model of a quantum clock is applied to the old and controversial
problem of how long a particle takes to tunnel through a quantum barrier. The
model I employ has the advantage of yielding sensible results for energy
eigenstates, and does not require the use of time-dependant wave packets.
Although the treatment does not forbid superluminal tunneling velocities, there
is no implication of faster-than-light signaling because only the transit
duration is measurable, not the absolute time of transit. A comparison is given
with the weak-measurement post-selection calculations of Steinberg.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, research pape
Genetic diversity and selective breeding of red common carps in China
China has a very rich genetic diversity in common carp (Cyprinus carpio) and the red common carp plays an important role in Chinese aquaculture and genetic studies. Selective breeding, particularly crossbreeding has been applied successfully to red common carps in China, and the products of these efforts have been in commercial use since the 1970s. However, knowledge of the quantitative and molecular genetics of these carps is limited. Studies were therefore undertaken to: (1) understand the genetic diversity and genetic relationship of red common carps in China; (2) understand the inheritance of color phenotype of Oujiang color carp; (3) select stable Oujiang color carp with fast growth rate and ornamental Oujiang color carp comparable with the Koi common carp from Japan; (4) study the culture performance and culture systems suitable for the Oujiang color carp in cages and paddies; (5) extend better quality fish and appropriate culture systems for small scale fish farmers in poor areas
A Robust Rational Route to in a Simple Asset Pricing Model (revised March 2004)
We investigate asset pricing dynamics in an adaptive evolutionary asset pricing model with fundamentalists, trend followers and a market maker. Agents can choose between a fundamentalist strategy at positive information cost or choose a trend following strategy for free. Price adjustment is proportional to the excess demand in the asset market. Agents asynchronously update their strategy according to realized net profits in the recent past. As agents become more sensitive to differences in strategy performance, the fundamental steady state becomes unstable and multiple steady states may arise. As the traders' sensitivity to differences in fitness increases, a bifurcation route to chaos sets in due to homoclinic bifurcations of stable and unstable manifolds of the fundamental steady state.
Entanglement, quantum phase transition and scaling in XXZ chain
Motivated by recent development in quantum entanglement, we study relations
among concurrence , SU(2) algebra, quantum phase transition and
correlation length at the zero temperature for the XXZ chain. We find that at
the SU(2) point, the ground state possess the maximum concurrence. When the
anisotropic parameter is deformed, however, its value decreases. Its
dependence on scales as in the XY metallic
phase and near the critical point (i.e. ) of the Ising-like
insulating phase. We also study the dependence of on the correlation length
, and show that it satisfies near the critical point. For
different size of the system, we show that there exists a universal scaling
function of with respect to the correlation length .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. to appear in Phys. Rev.
2-(3-Hydroxy-propyl)isoindoline-1,3-dione:Competition among hydrogen-bond acceptors
The title compound, C11H11NO3, has two mol-ecules in the asymmetric unit, which differ in the orientation of their side-chain OH groups, allowing them to form inter-molecular O - H⋯O hydrogen bonds to different acceptors. In one case, the acceptor is the OH group of the other mol-ecule, and in the other case it is an imide O=C group. This is the first example in the N-substituted phthalimide series in which independent mol-ecules have different types of acceptor. Mol-ecular-orbital calculations place the greatest negative charge on the OH group. © 2008 International Union of Crystallography
On Bures fidelity of displaced squeezed thermal states
Fidelity plays a key role in quantum information and communication theory.
Fidelity can be interpreted as the probability that a decoded message possesses
the same information content as the message prior to coding and transmission.
In this paper, we give a formula of Bures fidelity for displaced squeezed
thermal states directly by the displacement and squeezing parameters and
birefly discuss how the results can apply to quantum information theory.Comment: 10 pages with RevTex require
Revisiting the -Meson Production at the Hadronic Colliders
The production of heavy-flavored hadron at the hadronic colliders provides a
challenging opportunity to test the validity of pQCD predictions. There are two
mechanisms for the hadroproduction, i.e. the gluon-gluon fusion
mechanism via the subprocess and the
extrinsic heavy quark mechanism via the subprocesses and , both of which shall have sizable
contributions in proper kinematic region. Different from the
fixed-flavor-number scheme (FFNS) previously adopted in the literature, we
study the hadroproduction under the general-mass
variable-flavor-number scheme (GM-VFNS), in which we can consistently deal with
the double counting problem from the above two mechanisms. Properties for the
hadroproduction are discussed. To be useful reference, a
comparative study of FFNS and GM-VFNS is presented. Both of which can provide
reasonable estimations for the hadroproduction. At the Tevatron,
the difference between these two schemes is small, however such difference is
obvious at the LHC. The forthcoming more precise data on LHC shall provide a
good chance to check which scheme is more appropriate to deal with the
-meson production and to further study the heavy quark components in
hadrons.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables. To match the published version. To be
published in Eur.Phys.J.
Dynamics of heavy-Rydberg ion-pair formation in K(14p,20p)-SF6, CCl4ᅠcollisions
The dynamics of formation of heavy-Rydberg ion-pair states throughᅠelectron transferᅠin K(np)-SF6, CCl4ᅠcollisions is examined byᅠmeasuringᅠtheᅠvelocity,ᅠangular, and bindingᅠenergyᅠdistributions of the product ion pairs. The results areᅠanalyzedᅠwith the aid of a Monte Carlo collision code that models both the initial electron capture and the subsequent evolution of the ion pairs. The model simulations are in good agreement with the experimental data and highlight the factors such asᅠRydberg atomᅠsize, the kineticᅠenergyᅠof relativeᅠmotionᅠof theᅠRydberg atomᅠand target particle, and (in the case of attaching targets that dissociate) the energetics ofᅠdissociationᅠthat can be used to control the properties of the product ion-pair states
Proximal tubule cells stimulated by lipopolysaccharideinhibit macrophage activation
Proximal tubule cells stimulated by lipopolysaccharide inhibit macrophage activation.BackgroundTubule cells can produce a variety of cytokines, extracellular matrix (ECM) components, and adhesion molecules in vitro and in vivo. It is generally assumed that stimulated tubule cells are proinflammatory and at least partially responsible for interstitial inflammation. However, the overall effect of tubular cells on interstitial cells is unknown. In this study, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine production and net effects on macrophages of tubule cells activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were examined.MethodsTubule cells stimulated with LPS expressed tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-12, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), IL-10, and transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β). Conditioned media werecollected from confluent monolayers of rat tubule cells stimulated, or not, by LPS for 4 and 18 hours, respectively. Macrophages were cultured with conditioned media and/or LPS (0.5 μg/mL) for 18 hours.ResultsTNF-α and IL-lβ mRNA of macrophages stimulated by LPS increased more than fivefold when cultured with control conditioned media from unstimulated tubule cells. Surprisingly, TNF-α and IL-lβ levels of macrophages stimulated by LPS were not increased when cultured with conditioned media from activated tubule cells. Neutralizing antibodies to IL-10 and TGF-β were used to define the inhibitory component(s) in conditioned medium. Anti-IL-10, but not anti-TGF-β, abolished partially the inhibitory effects of conditioned media on macrophages.ConclusionTubule cells produce both pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and the net effect, partially explained by IL-10, of tubule cells activated with LPS is to inhibit activity of macrophages. Thus, the net effect of activated tubule cells on interstitial pathology may in certain circumstances, be anti- rather than pro-inflammatory
- …