79 research outputs found

    Nonlinear Schroedinger Equations within the Nelson Quantization Picture

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    We present a class of nonlinear Schroedinger equations (NLSEs) describing, in the mean field approximation, systems of interacting particles. This class of NLSEs is obtained generalizing expediently the approach proposed in Ref. [G.K. Phys. Rev. A 55, 941 (1997)], where a classical system obeying to an exclusion-inclusion principle is quantized using the Nelson stochastic quantization. The new class of NLSEs is obtained starting from the most general nonlinear classical kinetics compatible with a constant diffusion coefficient D=\hbar/2m. Finally, in the case of s-stationary states, we propose a transformation which linearizes the NLSEs here proposed.Comment: 5 pages, (RevTeX4), to appear in Rep. Math. Phys. 51 (2003

    Classical kinetic energy, quantum fluctuation terms and kinetic-energy functionals

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    We employ a recently formulated dequantization procedure to obtain an exact expression for the kinetic energy which is applicable to all kinetic-energy functionals. We express the kinetic energy of an N-electron system as the sum of an N-electron classical kinetic energy and an N-electron purely quantum kinetic energy arising from the quantum fluctuations that turn the classical momentum into the quantum momentum. This leads to an interesting analogy with Nelson's stochastic approach to quantum mechanics, which we use to conceptually clarify the physical nature of part of the kinetic-energy functional in terms of statistical fluctuations and in direct correspondence with Fisher Information Theory. We show that the N-electron purely quantum kinetic energy can be written as the sum of the (one-electron) Weizsacker term and an (N-1)-electron kinetic correlation term. We further show that the Weizsacker term results from local fluctuations while the kinetic correlation term results from the nonlocal fluctuations. For one-electron orbitals (where kinetic correlation is neglected) we obtain an exact (albeit impractical) expression for the noninteracting kinetic energy as the sum of the classical kinetic energy and the Weizsacker term. The classical kinetic energy is seen to be explicitly dependent on the electron phase and this has implications for the development of accurate orbital-free kinetic-energy functionals. Also, there is a direct connection between the classical kinetic energy and the angular momentum and, across a row of the periodic table, the classical kinetic energy component of the noninteracting kinetic energy generally increases as Z increases.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure. To appear in Theor Chem Ac

    Boosting Anti-Inflammatory Potency of Zafirlukast by Designed Polypharmacology

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    Multitarget design offers access to bioactive small molecules with potentially superior efficacy and safety. Particularly multifactorial chronic inflammatory diseases demand multiple pharmacological interventions for stable treatment. By minor structural changes, we have developed a close analogue of the cysteinyl-leukotriene receptor antagonist zafirlukast that simultaneously inhibits soluble epoxide hydrolase and activates peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor \u3b3. The triple modulator exhibits robust anti-inflammatory activity in vivo and highlights the therapeutic potential of designed multitarget agents

    Perturbations of Noise: The origins of Isothermal Flows

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    We make a detailed analysis of both phenomenological and analytic background for the "Brownian recoil principle" hypothesis (Phys. Rev. A 46, (1992), 4634). A corresponding theory of the isothermal Brownian motion of particle ensembles (Smoluchowski diffusion process approximation), gives account of the environmental recoil effects due to locally induced tiny heat flows. By means of local expectation values we elevate the individually negligible phenomena to a non-negligible (accumulated) recoil effect on the ensemble average. The main technical input is a consequent exploitation of the Hamilton-Jacobi equation as a natural substitute for the local momentum conservation law. Together with the continuity equation (alternatively, Fokker-Planck), it forms a closed system of partial differential equations which uniquely determines an associated Markovian diffusion process. The third Newton law in the mean is utilised to generate diffusion-type processes which are either anomalous (enhanced), or generically non-dispersive.Comment: Latex fil

    Über den Einfluß der ambipolaren Trägerdiffusion auf einem Lichtbogen

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    Rechnungen zur elektrodenstabilisierten Bogenentladung

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