8,319 research outputs found
Intercontinental antenna arraying by symbol stream combining at ICE Giacobini-Zinner encounter
Deep space tracking stations on different continents were arrayed during the encounter of the International Cometary Explorer (ICE) spacecraft with the comet Giacobini-Zinner during September 9 through 12, 1985. This is the first time that telemetry signals received on different continents have been combined to enhance signal to noise ratio. The arraying was done in non-real time using the method of symbol stream combining. The improvement in signal to noise ratio was typically 2 dB over the stronger of the two stations in each array
Extended Classical Over-Barrier Model for Collisions of Highly Charged Ions with Conducting and Insulating Surfaces
We have extended the classical over-barrier model to simulate the
neutralization dynamics of highly charged ions interacting under grazing
incidence with conducting and insulating surfaces. Our calculations are based
on simple model rates for resonant and Auger transitions. We include effects
caused by the dielectric response of the target and, for insulators, localized
surface charges. Characteristic deviations regarding the charge transfer
processes from conducting and insulating targets to the ion are discussed. We
find good agreement with previously published experimental data for the image
energy gain of a variety of highly charged ions impinging on Au, Al, LiF and KI
crystals.Comment: 32 pages http://pikp28.uni-muenster.de/~ducree
"Squashed Entanglement" - An Additive Entanglement Measure
In this paper, we present a new entanglement monotone for bipartite quantum
states. Its definition is inspired by the so-called intrinsic information of
classical cryptography and is given by the halved minimum quantum conditional
mutual information over all tripartite state extensions. We derive certain
properties of the new measure which we call "squashed entanglement": it is a
lower bound on entanglement of formation and an upper bound on distillable
entanglement. Furthermore, it is convex, additive on tensor products, and
superadditive in general.
Continuity in the state is the only property of our entanglement measure
which we cannot provide a proof for. We present some evidence, however, that
our quantity has this property, the strongest indication being a conjectured
Fannes type inequality for the conditional von Neumann entropy. This inequality
is proved in the classical case.Comment: 8 pages, revtex4. v2 has some more references and a bit more
discussion, v3 continuity discussion extended, typos correcte
Classical information deficit and monotonicity on local operations
We investigate classical information deficit: a candidate for measure of
classical correlations emerging from thermodynamical approach initiated in
[Phys. Rev. Lett 89, 180402]. It is defined as a difference between amount of
information that can be concentrated by use of LOCC and the information
contained in subsystems. We show nonintuitive fact, that one way version of
this quantity can increase under local operation, hence it does not possess
property required for a good measure of classical correlations. Recently it was
shown by Igor Devetak, that regularised version of this quantity is monotonic
under LO. In this context, our result implies that regularization plays a role
of "monotoniser".Comment: 6 pages, revte
Critical behaviour of the Rouse model for gelling polymers
It is shown that the traditionally accepted "Rouse values" for the critical
exponents at the gelation transition do not arise from the Rouse model for
gelling polymers. The true critical behaviour of the Rouse model for gelling
polymers is obtained from spectral properties of the connectivity matrix of the
fractal clusters that are formed by the molecules. The required spectral
properties are related to the return probability of a "blind ant"-random walk
on the critical percolating cluster. The resulting scaling relations express
the critical exponents of the shear-stress-relaxation function, and hence those
of the shear viscosity and of the first normal stress coefficient, in terms of
the spectral dimension of the critical percolating cluster and the
exponents and of the cluster-size distribution.Comment: 9 pages, slightly extended version, to appear in J. Phys.
Macroscopic Quantum Tunneling of Ferromagnetic Domain Walls
Quantum tunneling of domain walls out of an impurity potential in a
mesoscopic ferromagnetic sample is investigated. Using improved expressions for
the domain wall mass and for the pinning potential, we find that the cross-over
temperature between thermal activation and quantum tunneling is of a different
functional form than found previously. In materials like Ni or YIG, the
crossover temperatures are around 5 mK. We also find that the WKB exponent is
typically two orders of magnitude larger than current estimates. The sources
for these discrepancies are discussed, and precise estimates for the transition
from three-dimensional to one-dimensional magnetic behavior of a wire are
given. The cross-over temperatures from thermal to quantum transitions and
tunneling rates are calculated for various materials and sample sizes.Comment: 10 pages, 2 postscript figures, REVTe
First-Principles Calculations of Hyperfine Interactions in La_2CuO_4
We present the results of first-principles cluster calculations of the
electronic structure of La_2CuO_4. Several clusters containing up to nine
copper atoms embedded in a background potential were investigated.
Spin-polarized calculations were performed both at the Hartree-Fock level and
with density functional methods with generalized gradient corrections to the
local density approximation. The distinct results for the electronic structure
obtained with these two methods are discussed. The dependence of the
electric-field gradients at the Cu and the O sites on the cluster size is
studied and the results are compared to experiments. The magnetic hyperfine
coupling parameters are carefully examined. Special attention is given to a
quantitative determination of on-site and transferred hyperfine fields. We
provide a detailed analysis that compares the hyperfine fields obtained for
various cluster sizes with results from additional calculations of spin states
with different multiplicities. From this we conclude that hyperfine couplings
are mainly transferred from nearest neighbor Cu^{2+} ions and that
contributions from further distant neighbors are marginal. The mechanisms
giving rise to transfer of spin density are worked out. Assuming conventional
values for the spin-orbit coupling, the total calculated hyperfine interaction
parameters are compared to informations from experiments.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figure
Dynamics of gelling liquids: a short survey
The dynamics of randomly crosslinked liquids is addressed via a Rouse- and a
Zimm-type model with crosslink statistics taken either from bond percolation or
Erdoes-Renyi random graphs. While the Rouse-type model isolates the effects of
the random connectivity on the dynamics of molecular clusters, the Zimm-type
model also accounts for hydrodynamic interactions on a preaveraged level. The
incoherent intermediate scattering function is computed in thermal equilibrium,
its critical behaviour near the sol-gel transition is analysed and related to
the scaling of cluster diffusion constants at the critical point. Second,
non-equilibrium dynamics is studied by looking at stress relaxation in a simple
shear flow. Anomalous stress relaxation and critical rheological properties are
derived. Some of the results contradict long-standing scaling arguments, which
are shown to be flawed by inconsistencies.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures; Dedicated to Lothar Schaefer on the occasion of
his 60th birthday; Changes: added comments on the gel phase and some
reference
Thermal and Chemical Equilibration in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
We investigate the thermalization and the chemical equilibration of a parton
plasma created from Au+Au collision at LHC and RHIC energies starting from the
early moment when the particle momentum distributions in the central region
become for the first time isotropic due to longitudinal cooling. Using the
relaxation time approximation for the collision terms in the Boltzmann
equations for gluons and for quarks and the real collision terms constructed
from the simplest QCD interactions, we show that the collision times have the
right behaviour for equilibration. The magnitude of the quark (antiquark)
collision time remains bigger than the gluon collision time throughout the
lifetime of the plasma so that gluons are equilibrating faster than quarks both
chemically and kinetically. That is we have a two-stage equilibration scenario
as has been pointed out already by Shuryak sometimes ago. Full kinetic
equilibration is however slow and chemical equilibration cannot be completed
before the onset of the deconfinement phase transition assumed to be at
MeV. By comparing the collision entropy density rates of the
different processes, we show explicitly that inelastic processes, and
\emph{not} elastic processes as is commonly assumed, are dominant in the
equilibration of the plasma and that gluon branching leads the other processes
in entropy generation. We also show that, within perturbative QCD, processes
with higher power in \alpha_s need not be less important for the purpose of
equilibration than those with lower power. The state of equilibration of the
system has also a role to play. We compare our results with those of the parton
cascade model.Comment: 17 pages, revtex+psfig style with 14 embedded postscript figures, to
appear in Phys. Rev.
The implications of 18F-FDG PET for the diagnosis of endoprosthetic loosening and infection in hip and knee arthroplasty: Results from a prospective, blinded study
BACKGROUND: The most frequent complications of joint arthroplasty are septic or aseptic loosening of endoprostheses. Preoperative differentiation is essential, since very different treatment methods result from the diagnoses. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the clinical value of (18)F-Fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography ((18)F-FDG PET) as a diagnostic modality for inflammation and loosening in hip and knee joint prostheses. METHODS: (18)F-FDG-PET examinations and multiphase bone scan were performed on hip and knee endoprostheses in 27 patients prior to revision surgical procedures planned for prosthetic loosening. Intact prostheses were found at the opposite site in some patients so that additional 9 joints could be examined with the field of view of (18)F-FDG PET. Verification and valuation of the PET and scintigraphic image findings were conducted by comparing them with information combined from intraoperative findings, histopathology, and microbiological investigations. RESULTS: Evidence of loosening was correctly determined in 76.4% of cases using (18)F-FDG-PET, and in 75% of cases using bone scan. The detection of periprosthetic inflammation using (18)F-FDG-PET had a sensitivity of 100% for septic cases and of 45.5% in cases of increased abrasion and aseptic foreign-body reactions. However, reliable differentiation between abrasion-induced and bacterial-caused inflammation was not possible using (18)F-FDG-PET. CONCLUSION: (18)F-Fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography ((18)F-FDG-PET) allows reliable prediction of peri-prosthetic septical inflammatory tissue reactions. Because of the high sensitivity of this method, a negative PET result in the setting of a diagnostically unclear situation eliminates the need for revision surgery. In contrast, a positive PET result gives no clear differentiation regarding the cause of inflammation
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