139,924 research outputs found
Coherent molecular bound states of bosons and fermions near a Feshbach resonance
We analyze molecular bound states of atomic quantum gases near a Feshbach
resonance. A simple, renormalizable field theoretic model is shown to have
exact solutions in the two-body sector, whose binding energy agrees well with
observed experimental results in both Bosonic and Fermionic cases. These
solutions, which interpolate between BEC and BCS theories, also provide a more
general variational ansatz for resonant superfluidity and related problems.Comment: Minor changes -- to match the final published versio
The Spin--Symmetry of the Quark Model
Corrections to the exact heavy--quark symmetry results are expected to follow
the mass effect of the heavy--quark. We show, by an explicit
calculation, that there is something other than the mass effect that suppresses
the breaking of the spin symmetry
Dissociation and Decay of Ultra-cold Sodium Molecules
The dissociation of ultracold molecules is studied by ramping an external
magnetic field through a Feshbach resonance. The observed dissociation energy
shows non-linear dependence on the ramp speed and directly yields the strength
of the atom-molecule coupling. In addition, inelastic molecule-molecule and
molecule-atom collisions are characterized
Channel Parameters Estimation Algorithm Based on The Characteristic Function under Impulse Noise Environment
Under communication environments, such as wireless sensor networks, the noise observed usually exhibits impulsive as well as Gaussian characteristics. In the initialization of channel iterative decoder, such as low density parity check codes, it is required in advance to estimate the channel parameters to obtain the prior information from the received signals. In this paper, a blind channel parameters estimator under impulsive noise environment is proposed, which is based on the empirical characteristic function in MPSK/MQAM higher-order modulation system. Simulation results show that for various MPSK/MQAM modulations, the estimator can obtain a more accurate unbiased estimation even though we do not know which kind of higher-order modulation is used
Uniform fractional factorial designs
The minimum aberration criterion has been frequently used in the selection of
fractional factorial designs with nominal factors. For designs with
quantitative factors, however, level permutation of factors could alter their
geometrical structures and statistical properties. In this paper uniformity is
used to further distinguish fractional factorial designs, besides the minimum
aberration criterion. We show that minimum aberration designs have low
discrepancies on average. An efficient method for constructing uniform minimum
aberration designs is proposed and optimal designs with 27 and 81 runs are
obtained for practical use. These designs have good uniformity and are
effective for studying quantitative factors.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-AOS987 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Basic physical and chemical processes in space radiation effects on polymers
The effects of space ionizing radiation on polymers is investigated in terms of operative physical and chemical processes. A useful model of charged particle impact with a polymer was designed. Principle paths of molecular relaxation were identified and energy handling processes were considered. The focus of the study was on energy absorption and the immediately following events. Further study of the radiation degradation of polymers is suggested
Experimental study of contact transition control incorporating joint acceleration feedback
Joint acceleration and velocity feedbacks are incorporated into a classical internal force control of a robot in contact with the environment. This is intended to achieve a robust contact transition and force tracking performance for varying unknown environments, without any need of adjusting the controller parameters, A unified control structure is proposed for free motion, contact transition, and constrained motion in view of the consumption of the initial kinetic energy generated by a nonzero impact velocity. The influence of the velocity and acceleration feedbacks, which are introduced especially for suppressing the transition oscillation, on the postcontact tracking performance is discussed. Extensive experiments are conducted on the third joint of a three-link direct-drive robot to verify the proposed scheme for environments of various stiffnesses, including elastic (sponge), less elastic (cardboard), and hard (steel plate) surfaces. Results are compared with those obtained by the transition control scheme without the acceleration feedback. The ability of the proposed control scheme in resisting the force disturbance during the postcontact period is also experimentally investigated
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