3,026 research outputs found
Energy levels and decoherence properties of single electron and nuclear spins in a defect center in diamond
The coherent behavior of the single electron and single nuclear spins of a
defect center in diamond and a 13C nucleus in its vicinity, respectively, are
investigated. The energy levels associated with the hyperfine coupling of the
electron spin of the defect center to the 13C nuclear spin are analyzed.
Methods of magnetic resonance together with optical readout of single defect
centers have been applied in order to observe the coherent dynamics of the
electron and nuclear spins. Long coherence times, in the order of microseconds
for electron spins and tens of microseconds for nuclear spins, recommend the
studied system as a good experimental approach for implementing a 2-qubit gate.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Casimir forces between arbitrary compact objects
We develop an exact method for computing the Casimir energy between arbitrary
compact objects, either dielectrics or perfect conductors. The energy is
obtained as an interaction between multipoles, generated by quantum current
fluctuations. The objects' shape and composition enter only through their
scattering matrices. The result is exact when all multipoles are included, and
converges rapidly. A low frequency expansion yields the energy as a series in
the ratio of the objects' size to their separation. As an example, we obtain
this series for two dielectric spheres and the full interaction at all
separations for perfectly conducting spheres.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Graduate Quantum Mechanics Reform
We address four main areas in which graduate quantum mechanics education can
be improved: course content, textbook, teaching methods, and assessment tools.
We report on a three year longitudinal study at the Colorado School of Mines
using innovations in all these areas. In particular, we have modified the
content of the course to reflect progress in the field in the last 50 years,
used textbooks that include such content, incorporated a variety of teaching
techniques based on physics education research, and used a variety of
assessment tools to study the effectiveness of these reforms. We present a new
assessment tool, the Graduate Quantum Mechanics Conceptual Survey, and further
testing of a previously developed assessment tool, the Quantum Mechanics
Conceptual Survey. We find that graduate students respond well to
research-based techniques that have been tested mainly in introductory courses,
and that they learn much of the new content introduced in each version of the
course. We also find that students' ability to answer conceptual questions
about graduate quantum mechanics is highly correlated with their ability to
solve calculational problems on the same topics. In contrast, we find that
students' understanding of basic undergraduate quantum mechanics concepts at
the modern physics level is not improved by instruction at the graduate level.Comment: accepted to American Journal of Physic
Using resource graphs to represent conceptual change
We introduce resource graphs, a representation of linked ideas used when
reasoning about specific contexts in physics. Our model is consistent with
previous descriptions of resources and coordination classes. It can represent
mesoscopic scales that are neither knowledge-in-pieces or large-scale concepts.
We use resource graphs to describe several forms of conceptual change:
incremental, cascade, wholesale, and dual construction. For each, we give
evidence from the physics education research literature to show examples of
each form of conceptual change. Where possible, we compare our representation
to models used by other researchers. Building on our representation, we
introduce a new form of conceptual change, differentiation, and suggest several
experimental studies that would help understand the differences between
reform-based curricula.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures, no tables. Submitted for publication to the
Physical Review Special Topics Physics Education Research on March 8, 200
Interpretation of the Total Magnetic Field Anomalies Measured by the CHAMP Satellite Over a Part of Europe and the Pannonian Basin
In this study we interpret the magnetic anomalies at satellite altitude over a part of Europe and the Pannonian Basin. These anomalies are derived from the total magnetic measurements from the CHAMP satellite. The anomalies reduced to an elevation of 324 km. An inversion method is used to interpret the total magnetic anomalies over the Pannonian Basin. A three dimensional triangular model is used in the inversion. Two parameter distributions: Laplacian and Gaussian are investigated. The regularized inversion is numerically calculated with the Simplex and Simulated Annealing methods and the anomalous source is located in the upper crust. A probable source of the magnetization is due to the exsolution of the hematite-ilmenite minerals
Measuring the Solar Radius from Space during the 2003 and 2006 Mercury Transits
The Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) aboard the Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory observed the transits of Mercury on 2003 May 7 and 2006 November 8.
Contact times between Mercury and the solar limb have been used since the 17th
century to derive the Sun's size but this is the first time that high-quality
imagery from space, above the Earth's atmosphere, has been available. Unlike
other measurements this technique is largely independent of optical distortion.
The true solar radius is still a matter of debate in the literature as measured
differences of several tenths of an arcsecond (i.e., about 500 km) are
apparent. This is due mainly to systematic errors from different instruments
and observers since the claimed uncertainties for a single instrument are
typically an order of magnitude smaller. From the MDI transit data we find the
solar radius to be 960".12 +/- 0".09 (696,342 +/- 65 km). This value is
consistent between the transits and consistent between different MDI focus
settings after accounting for systematic effects.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (2012 March 5
Vasodilator effect of glucagon: receptorial crosstalk among glucagon, GLP-1, and receptor for glucagon and GLP-1
Glucagon is known for its insulin-antagonist effect in the blood glucose homeostasis, while it also reduces vascular resistance. The mechanism of the vasoactive effect of glucagon has not been studied before; thereby we aimed to investigate the mediators involved in the vasodilatation induced by glucagon. The vasoactive effect of glucagon, insulin, and glucagon-like peptide-1 was studied on isolated rat thoracic aortic rings using a wire myograph. To investigate the mechanism of the vasodilatation caused by glucagon, we determined the role of the receptor for glucagon and the receptor for GLP-1, and studied also the effect of various inhibitors of gasotransmitters, inhibitors of reactive oxygen species formation, NADPH oxidase, prostaglandin synthesis, protein kinases, potassium channels, and an inhibitor of the Na(+)/Ca(2+)-exchanger. Glucagon causes dose-dependent relaxation in the rat thoracic aorta, which is as potent as that of insulin but greater than that of GLP-1 (7-36) amide. Vasodilatation by GLP-1 is partially mediated by the glucagon receptor. The vasodilatation due to glucagon evokes via the glucagon-receptor, but also via the receptor for GLP-1, and it is endothelium-independent. Contribution of gasotransmitters, prostaglandins, the NADPH oxidase enzyme, free radicals, potassium channels, and the Na(+)/Ca(2+)-exchanger is also significant. Glucagon causes dose-dependent relaxation of rat thoracic aorta in vitro, via the receptor for glucagon and the receptor for GLP-1, while the vasodilatation evoked by GLP-1 also evolves partially via the receptor for glucagon, thereby, a possible crosstalk between the 2 hormones and receptors could occur
Industrial biotechnology of Pseudomonas putida: advances and prospects
Pseudomonas putida is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium that can be encountered in diverse ecological habitats. This ubiquity is traced to its remarkably versatile metabolism, adapted to withstand physicochemical stress, and the capacity to thrive in harsh environments. Owing to these characteristics, there is a growing interest in this microbe for industrial use, and the corresponding research has made rapid progress in recent years. Hereby, strong drivers are the exploitation of cheap renewable feedstocks and waste streams to produce value-added chemicals and the steady progress in genetic strain engineering and systems biology understanding of this bacterium. Here, we summarize the recent advances and prospects in genetic engineering, systems and synthetic biology, and applications of P. putida as a cell factory
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
Investigation of the Crust of the Pannonian Basin, Hungary Using Low-Altitude CHAMP Horizontal Gradient Magnetic Anomalies
The Pannonian Basin is a deep intra-continental basin that formed as part of the Alpine orogeny. It is some 600 by 500 km in area and centered on Hungary. This area was chosen since it has one of the thinnest continental crusts in Europe and is the region of complex tectonic structures. In order to study the nature of the crustal basement we used the long-wavelength magnetic anomalies acquired by the CHAMP satellite. The SWARM constellation, scheduled to be launched next year, will have two lower altitude satellites flying abreast, with a separation of between ca. 150 to 200 km. to record the horizontal magnetic gradient. Since the CHAMP satellite has been in orbit for eight years and has obtained an extensive range of data, both vertically and horizontally there is a large enough data base to compute the horizontal magnetic gradients over the Pannonian Basin region using these many CHAMP orbits. We recomputed a satellite magnetic anomaly map, using the spherical-cap method of Haines (1985), the technique of Alsdorf et al. (1994) and from spherical harmonic coefficients of MF6 (Maus et aI., 2008) employing the latest and lowest altitude CHAMP data. We then computed the horizontal magnetic anomaly gradients (Kis and Puszta, 2006) in order to determine how these component data will improve our interpretation and to preview what the SW ARM mission will reveal with reference to the horizontal gradient anomalies. The gradient amplitude of an 1000 km northeast-southwest profile through our horizontal component anomaly map varied from 0 to 0.025 nT/km with twin positive anomalies (0.025 and 0.023 nT/km) separated by a sharp anomaly negative at o nT/km. Horizontal gradient indicate major magnetization boundaries in the crust (Dole and Jordan, 1978 and Cordell and Grauch, 1985). Our gradient anomaly was modeled with a twodimensional body and the anomaly, of some 200 km, correlates with a 200 km area of crustal thinning in the southwestern Pannonian Basin
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