5,006 research outputs found
Stationary states and quantum quench dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates in a double-well potential
We consider the properties of stationary states and the dynamics of
Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) in a double-well (DW) potential with pair
tunneling by using a full quantum-mechanical treatment. Furthermore, we study
the quantum quench dynamics of the DW system subjected to a sudden change of
the Peierls phase. It is shown that strong pair tunneling evidently influences
the energy spectrum structure of the stationary states. For relatively weak
repulsive interatomic interactions, the dynamics of the DW system with a
maximal initial population difference evolves from Josephson oscillations to
quantum self-trapping as one increases the pair tunneling strength, while for
large repulsion the strong pair tunneling inhibits the quantum self-trapping.
In the case of attractive interatomic interactions, strong pair tunneling tends
to destroy the Josephson oscillations and quantum self-trapping, and the system
eventually enters a symmetric regime of zero population difference. Finally,
the effect of the Peierls phase on the quantum quench dynamics of the system is
analyzed and discussed. These new features are remarkably different from the
usual dynamical behaviors of a BEC in a DW potential.Comment: 9 pages,7 figures,accepted for publication in Journal of Physics
Efficient Algorithms for Load Shuffling in Split-Platform AS/RS
We address the issue of shuffling loads in Automated Storage/Retrieval Systems (AS/RS) in this paper. The objective is to pre-sort the loads into any specified locations in order to minimize the response time of retrievals. 1D, 2D and 3D AS/RS racks have been designed in order to achieve the shuffling efficiently. The shuffling algorithms are described in detail. The response time of retrieval, the lower and upper bounds of energy consumption are also derived. Results of the analysis and numerical experiments show that the shuffling algorithms are quite efficient.Singapore-MIT Alliance (SMA
CLAMP: Prompt-based Contrastive Learning for Connecting Language and Animal Pose
Animal pose estimation is challenging for existing image-based methods
because of limited training data and large intra- and inter-species variances.
Motivated by the progress of visual-language research, we propose that
pre-trained language models (e.g., CLIP) can facilitate animal pose estimation
by providing rich prior knowledge for describing animal keypoints in text.
However, we found that building effective connections between pre-trained
language models and visual animal keypoints is non-trivial since the gap
between text-based descriptions and keypoint-based visual features about animal
pose can be significant. To address this issue, we introduce a novel
prompt-based Contrastive learning scheme for connecting Language and AniMal
Pose (CLAMP) effectively. The CLAMP attempts to bridge the gap by adapting the
text prompts to the animal keypoints during network training. The adaptation is
decomposed into spatial-aware and feature-aware processes, and two novel
contrastive losses are devised correspondingly. In practice, the CLAMP enables
a new cross-modal animal pose estimation paradigm. Experimental results show
that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance under the supervised,
few-shot, and zero-shot settings, outperforming image-based methods by a large
margin. The source code will be made publicly available
Aquabis(4-chloro-2-hydroxybenzoato-κO)(1,10-phenanthroline-κ2 N,N′)zinc(II)
In the title compound, [Zn(C7H4ClO3)2(C12H8N2)(H2O)], the ZnII cation is coordinated by two 4-chloro-2-salicylate anions, one 1,10-phenanthroline ligand and one water molecule in a square-pyramidal coordination geometry; the Zn cation lies 0.4591 (11) Å from the basal plane. The benzene rings of the anions are involved in π–π stacking. The centroid–centroid distance between parallel benzene rings of adjacent molecules is 3.9017 (17) Å, and the centroid–centroid distance between benzene and pyridine rings of adjacent molecules is 3.584 (2) Å. Intramolecular O—H⋯O hydrogen bonding is present
Phytohormone-mediated interkingdom signaling shapes the outcome of rice-Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae interactions
Background: Small-molecule hormones are well known to play key roles in the plant immune signaling network that is activated upon pathogen perception. In contrast, little is known about whether phytohormones also directly influence microbial virulence, similar to what has been reported in animal systems.
Results: In this paper, we tested the hypothesis that hormones fulfill dual roles in plant-microbe interactions by orchestrating host immune responses, on the one hand, and modulating microbial virulence traits, on the other. Employing the rice-Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo) interaction as a model system, we show that Xoo uses the classic immune hormone salicylic acid (SA) as a trigger to activate its virulence-associated quorum sensing (QS) machinery. Despite repressing swimming motility, sodium salicylate (NaSA) induced production of the Diffusible Signal Factor (DSF) and Diffusible Factor (DF) QS signals, with resultant accumulation of xanthomonadin and extracellular polysaccharides. In contrast, abscisic acid (ABA), which favors infection by Xoo, had little impact on DF- and DSF-mediated QS, but promoted bacterial swimming via the LuxR solo protein OryR. Moreover, we found both DF and DSF to influence SA-and ABA-responsive gene expression in planta.
Conclusions: Together our findings indicate that the rice SA and ABA signaling pathways cross-communicate with the Xoo DF and DSF QS systems and underscore the importance of bidirectional interkingdom signaling in molding plant-microbe interactions
Coping With My Loneliness: the Effects of Social Exclusion on Consumer Choice of Unique Products
This research examines the diverging effects of social exclusion on consumer choice. We propose that the experience of social exclusion can either increase or decrease consumers' likelihood of choosing unique products depending on whether regaining social acceptance is perceived as desirable means to cope with the state of being socially excluded
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