2,220 research outputs found
Entrepreneurial intentions among students: towards a re-focused research agenda
Purpose â This paper aims to address the need for a re-focused research agenda in relation to graduate entrepreneurship. An important theme for some years has been the effort to monitor attitudes and intentions of students towards starting up their own businesses. It is timely, however, to raise some questions about both the impact of this research and likewise the general approach it has taken in understanding the phenomenon of graduate entrepreneurship. Design/methodology/approach â The paper draws on a large data set (over 8,000 students) from one UK region. Specifically, it presents data from the 2007/2008 Entrepreneurial Intentions (EI) survey within the Yorkshire and Humberside region and reflects back over previous iterations of this research. Findings â The paper identifies three key outcomes. First, it establishes that across all years of the survey a substantial minority of students consistently hold relatively strong start-up intentions. Second, the paper highlights that, despite considerable efforts to increase the numbers moving to start-up, little impact is discernible. Third, the paper suggests that, although the EI survey is useful as a stock-taking exercise, it fails to address critical questions around the impact of higher education on entrepreneurship and the transition from entrepreneurial intent to the act of venture creation. Originality/value â The paper provides an important positioning perspective on the relationship between higher education and graduate entrepreneurship. While highlighting the importance of the EI research, the paper establishes the need for a re-focused research agenda; one that is conceptually robust and with a focus on the student journey from higher education to graduate entrepreneur
Kinematics of a hot massive accretion disk candidate
Characterizing rotation, infall and accretion disks around high-mass
protostars is an important topic in massive star formation research. With the
Australia Telescope Compact Array and the Very Large Array we studied a massive
disk candidate at high angular resolution in ammonia (NH3(4,4) & (5,5)) tracing
the warm disk but not the envelope. The observations resolved at ~0.4''
resolution (corresponding to ~1400AU) a velocity gradient indicative of
rotation perpendicular to the molecular outflow. Assuming a Keplerian accretion
disk, the estimated protostar-disk mass would be high, similar to the
protostellar mass. Furthermore, the position-velocity diagram exhibits
additional deviation from a Keplerian rotation profile which may be caused by
infalling gas and/or a self-gravitating disk. Moreover, a large fraction of the
rotating gas is at temperatures >100K, markedly different to typical low-mass
accretion disks. In addition, we resolve a central double-lobe cm continuum
structure perpendicular to the rotation. We identify this with an ionized,
optically thick jet.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for Astrophysical Journal Letters, a
high-resolution version of the draft can be found at
http://www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/papers.htm
Interactions between unidirectional quantized vortex rings
We have used the vortex filament method to numerically investigate the
interactions between pairs of quantized vortex rings that are initially
traveling in the same direction but with their axes offset by a variable impact
parameter. The interaction of two circular rings of comparable radii produce
outcomes that can be categorized into four regimes, dependent only on the
impact parameter; the two rings can either miss each other on the inside or
outside, or they can reconnect leading to final states consisting of either one
or two deformed rings. The fraction of of energy went into ring deformations
and the transverse component of velocity of the rings are analyzed for each
regime. We find that rings of very similar radius only reconnect for a very
narrow range of the impact parameter, much smaller than would be expected from
geometrical cross-section alone. In contrast, when the radii of the rings are
very different, the range of impact parameters producing a reconnection is
close to the geometrical value. A second type of interaction considered is the
collision of circular rings with a highly deformed ring. This type of
interaction appears to be a productive mechanism for creating small vortex
rings. The simulations are discussed in the context of experiments on colliding
vortex rings and quantum turbulence in superfluid helium in the zero
temperature limit
Simplified Quantum Process Tomography
We propose and evaluate experimentally an approach to quantum process
tomography that completely removes the scaling problem plaguing the standard
approach. The key to this simplification is the incorporation of prior
knowledge of the class of physical interactions involved in generating the
dynamics, which reduces the problem to one of parameter estimation. This allows
part of the problem to be tackled using efficient convex methods, which, when
coupled with a constraint on some parameters allows globally optimal estimates
for the Kraus operators to be determined from experimental data. Parameterising
the maps provides further advantages: it allows the incorporation of mixed
states of the environment as well as some initial correlation between the
system and environment, both of which are common physical situations following
excitation of the system away from thermal equilibrium. Although the approach
is not universal, in cases where it is valid it returns a complete set of
positive maps for the dynamical evolution of a quantum system at all times.Comment: Added references to interesting related work by Bendersky et a
Ultrashort pulse characterization by spectral shearing interferometry with spatially chirped ancillae
We report a new version of spectral phase interferometry for direct electric
field reconstruction (SPIDER), which enables consistency checking through the
simultaneous acquisition of multiple shears and offers a simple and precise
calibration method. By mixing the test pulse with two spatially chirped ancilla
fields we generate a single-shot interferogram which contains multiple shears,
the spectral amplitude of the test pulse, and the reference phase, which is
accurate for broadband pulses. All calibration parameters - shear,
upconversion-frequency and reference phase position - can be accurately
obtained from a single calibration trace.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
An Optimal Design for Universal Multiport Interferometers
Universal multiport interferometers, which can be programmed to implement any
linear transformation between multiple channels, are emerging as a powerful
tool for both classical and quantum photonics. These interferometers are
typically composed of a regular mesh of beam splitters and phase shifters,
allowing for straightforward fabrication using integrated photonic
architectures and ready scalability. The current, standard design for universal
multiport interferometers is based on work by Reck et al (Phys. Rev. Lett. 73,
58, 1994). We demonstrate a new design for universal multiport interferometers
based on an alternative arrangement of beam splitters and phase shifters, which
outperforms that by Reck et al. Our design occupies half the physical footprint
of the Reck design and is significantly more robust to optical losses.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Encoding a qubit into multilevel subspaces
We present a formalism for encoding the logical basis of a qubit into
subspaces of multiple physical levels. The need for this multilevel encoding
arises naturally in situations where the speed of quantum operations exceeds
the limits imposed by the addressability of individual energy levels of the
qubit physical system. A basic feature of the multilevel encoding formalism is
the logical equivalence of different physical states and correspondingly, of
different physical transformations. This logical equivalence is a source of a
significant flexibility in designing logical operations, while the multilevel
structure inherently accommodates fast and intense broadband controls thereby
facilitating faster quantum operations. Another important practical advantage
of multilevel encoding is the ability to maintain full quantum-computational
fidelity in the presence of mixing and decoherence within encoding subspaces.
The formalism is developed in detail for single-qubit operations and
generalized for multiple qubits. As an illustrative example, we perform a
simulation of closed-loop optimal control of single-qubit operations for a
model multilevel system, and subsequently apply these operations at finite
temperatures to investigate the effect of decoherence on operational fidelity.Comment: IOPart LaTeX, 2 figures, 31 pages; addition of a numerical simulatio
Dissipation of Quantum Turbulence in the Zero Temperature Limit
Turbulence, produced by an impulsive spin-down from angular velocity Omega to
rest of a cube-shaped container, is investigated in superfluid 4He at
temperatures 0.08 K - 1.6 K. The density of quantized vortex lines L is
measured by scattering negative ions. Homogeneous turbulence develops after
time t of approximately 20 \Omega and decays as L proportional to t^(-3/2). The
corresponding energy flux epsilon = nu' (kappa L)^2, which is proportional to
t^(-3), is characteristic of quasi-classical turbulence at high Re with a
saturated energy-containing length. The effective kinematic viscosity in the
T=0 limit is nu' = 0.003 kappa, where kappa=10^(-3) cm^2 / s is the circulation
quantum.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Updated following referees comment
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