20,869 research outputs found
Phase Coherence in Multiple Pulse Optical Spectroscopy
In this paper we describe a new technique for the generation of multiple pulse phase coherent sequences in optical spectroscopy. The technique is an extension of the acousto-optic modulation and fluorescence detection methods developed for optical transitions by Zewail and Orlowski (Zewail et al., Chem. Phys. Lett. 48, 256 (1977); Orlowski et al., Chem. Phys. Lett. 54, 197 (1978)). Application of these multiple pulse trains (of different phases) to optical transitions of two-level and multilevel systems is demonstrated experimentally. It is shown that they can be used to (i) suppress spontaneous emission background, (ii) enhance coherent transients such as photon echoes, (iii) measure additional relaxation parameters in systems with complex rotational-vibrational levels, and (iv) enhance the effective laser bandwidths through composite pulse trains, as demonstrated on I2 gas. Finally, the potential of this development is extended to the possibility of observing selective multiquantum excitation in molecules
Score Reliability and Factor Similarity of the Sociocultural Attitudes towards Appearance Questionnaire-3 (SATAQ-3) Among Four Ethnic Groups
Background:This study evaluated the score reliability and equivalence of factor structure of the Sociocultural Attitudes towards Appearance Questionnaire-3 (SATAQ-3) [1] in a sample of female college students from the four largest ethnic groups in the USA.Methods:Participants were 1245 women who self-identified as European American/White (n = 543), African American/Black (n = 137), Asian American (n = 317), or Latina/Hispanic (n = 248). All completed the SATAQ-3 and a demographic questionnaire. To test the factor similarity and score reliability across groups, we used exploratory factor analysis and calculated Cronbach’s alphas (respectively).Results:Score reliability was high for all groups. Tests of factor equivalence suggested that the four pre-established factors of the SATAQ-3 (i.e., knowledge, perceived pressure, thin-ideal internalization, athletic-ideal internalization) were similar for women of all ethnic groups. Only two items (20 and 27) did not consistently load on the previously identified scale across all four groups. When scored, African Americans reported significantly less perceived pressure and internalization than all other groups.Conclusions:Results support the use of the SATAQ-3 in female college students of these four ethnicities
Precision Determination of the Mass Function of Dark Matter Halos
The predicted mass function of dark matter halos is essential in connecting
observed galaxy cluster counts and models of galaxy clustering to the
properties of the primordial density field. We determine the mass function in
the concordance CDM cosmology, as well as its uncertainty, using
sixteen -particle nested-volume dark-matter simulations, spanning a
mass range of over five orders of magnitude. Using the nested volumes and
single-halo tests, we find and correct for a systematic error in the
friends-of-friends halo-finding algorithm. We find a fitting form and full
error covariance for the mass function that successfully describes the
simulations' mass function and is well-behaved outside the simulations'
resolutions. Estimated forecasts of uncertainty in cosmological parameters from
future cluster count surveys have negligible contribution from remaining
statistical uncertainties in the central cosmology multiplicity function. There
exists a potentially non-negligible cosmological dependence (non-universality)
of the halo multiplicity function.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ
On the intersection of free subgroups in free products of groups
Let (G_i | i in I) be a family of groups, let F be a free group, and let G =
F *(*I G_i), the free product of F and all the G_i. Let FF denote the set of
all finitely generated subgroups H of G which have the property that, for each
g in G and each i in I, H \cap G_i^{g} = {1}. By the Kurosh Subgroup Theorem,
every element of FF is a free group. For each free group H, the reduced rank of
H is defined as r(H) = max{rank(H) -1, 0} in \naturals \cup {\infty} \subseteq
[0,\infty]. To avoid the vacuous case, we make the additional assumption that
FF contains a non-cyclic group, and we define sigma := sup{r(H\cap
K)/(r(H)r(K)) : H, K in FF and r(H)r(K) \ne 0}, sigma in [1,\infty]. We are
interested in precise bounds for sigma. In the special case where I is empty,
Hanna Neumann proved that sigma in [1,2], and conjectured that sigma = 1;
almost fifty years later, this interval has not been reduced. With the
understanding that \infty/(\infty -2) = 1, we define theta := max{|L|/(|L|-2) :
L is a subgroup of G and |L| > 2}, theta in [1,3]. Generalizing Hanna Neumann's
theorem, we prove that sigma in [theta, 2 theta], and, moreover, sigma = 2
theta if G has 2-torsion. Since sigma is finite, FF is closed under finite
intersections. Generalizing Hanna Neumann's conjecture, we conjecture that
sigma = theta whenever G does not have 2-torsion.Comment: 28 pages, no figure
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