757 research outputs found
The Apparent Political and Administrative Expediency Exception Established by the Supreme Court in the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Humberto Alvarez-Machain to the Rule of Law as Reflected by Recognized Principles of International Law
Kinetics of Intramolecular Chemical Exchange by Initial Growth Rates of Spin Saturation Transfer Difference Experiments (SSTD NMR)
We report here the Initial Growth Rates SSTD NMR method, as a new powerful tool to obtain the kinetic parameters of intramolecular chemical exchange in challenging small organic and organometallic molecules
New features of quantum discord uncovered by q-entropies
The notion of quantum discord introduced by Ollivier and Zurek [Phys. Rev.
Lett 88, 017901 (2001)] (see also Henderson and Vedral [J. Phys. A 34, 6899
(2001)]) has attracted increasing attention, in recent years, as an entropic
quantifier of non-classical features pertaining to the correlations exhibited
by bipartite quantum systems. Here we generalize the notion so as to encompass
power-law q-entropies (that reduce to the standard Shannon entropy in the limit
) and study the concomitant consequences. The ensuing, new
discord-like measures we advance describe aspects of non-classicality that are
different from those associated with the standard quantum discord. A particular
manifestation of this difference concerns a feature related to order. Let
stand for the standard, Shannon-based discord measure and for the one. If two quantum states , are such that , this
order-relation does not remain invariant under a change from to .Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Explosive Nucleosynthesis: What we learned and what we still do not understand
This review touches on historical aspects, going back to the early days of
nuclear astrophysics, initiated by BFH and Cameron, discusses (i) the
required nuclear input from reaction rates and decay properties up to the
nuclear equation of state, continues (ii) with the tools to perform
nucleosynthesis calculations and (iii) early parametrized nucleosynthesis
studies, before (iv) reliable stellar models became available for the late
stages of stellar evolution. It passes then through (v) explosive environments
from core-collapse supernovae to explosive events in binary systems (including
type Ia supernovae and compact binary mergers), and finally (vi) discusses the
role of all these nucleosynthesis production sites in the evolution of
galaxies. The focus is put on the comparison of early ideas and present, very
recent, understanding.Comment: 11 pages, to appear in Springer Proceedings in Physics (Proc. of
Intl. Conf. "Nuclei in the Cosmos XV", LNGS Assergi, Italy, June 2018
Massive stars as thermonuclear reactors and their explosions following core collapse
Nuclear reactions transform atomic nuclei inside stars. This is the process
of stellar nucleosynthesis. The basic concepts of determining nuclear reaction
rates inside stars are reviewed. How stars manage to burn their fuel so slowly
most of the time are also considered. Stellar thermonuclear reactions involving
protons in hydrostatic burning are discussed first. Then I discuss triple alpha
reactions in the helium burning stage. Carbon and oxygen survive in red giant
stars because of the nuclear structure of oxygen and neon. Further nuclear
burning of carbon, neon, oxygen and silicon in quiescent conditions are
discussed next. In the subsequent core-collapse phase, neutronization due to
electron capture from the top of the Fermi sea in a degenerate core takes
place. The expected signal of neutrinos from a nearby supernova is calculated.
The supernova often explodes inside a dense circumstellar medium, which is
established due to the progenitor star losing its outermost envelope in a
stellar wind or mass transfer in a binary system. The nature of the
circumstellar medium and the ejecta of the supernova and their dynamics are
revealed by observations in the optical, IR, radio, and X-ray bands, and I
discuss some of these observations and their interpretations.Comment: To be published in " Principles and Perspectives in Cosmochemistry"
Lecture Notes on Kodai School on Synthesis of Elements in Stars; ed. by Aruna
Goswami & Eswar Reddy, Springer Verlag, 2009. Contains 21 figure
Recent Advances in Modeling Stellar Interiors
Advances in stellar interior modeling are being driven by new data from
large-scale surveys and high-precision photometric and spectroscopic
observations. Here we focus on single stars in normal evolutionary phases; we
will not discuss the many advances in modeling star formation, interacting
binaries, supernovae, or neutron stars. We review briefly: 1) updates to input
physics of stellar models; 2) progress in two and three-dimensional evolution
and hydrodynamic models; 3) insights from oscillation data used to infer
stellar interior structure and validate model predictions (asteroseismology).
We close by highlighting a few outstanding problems, e.g., the driving
mechanisms for hybrid gamma Dor/delta Sct star pulsations, the cause of giant
eruptions seen in luminous blue variables such as eta Car and P Cyg, and the
solar abundance problem.Comment: Proceedings for invited talk at conference High Energy Density
Laboratory Astrophysics 2010, Caltech, March 2010, submitted for special
issue of Astrophysics and Space Science; 7 pages; 5 figure
Quantization of Midisuperspace Models
We give a comprehensive review of the quantization of midisuperspace models.
Though the main focus of the paper is on quantum aspects, we also provide an
introduction to several classical points related to the definition of these
models. We cover some important issues, in particular, the use of the principle
of symmetric criticality as a very useful tool to obtain the required
Hamiltonian formulations. Two main types of reductions are discussed: those
involving metrics with two Killing vector fields and spherically symmetric
models. We also review the more general models obtained by coupling matter
fields to these systems. Throughout the paper we give separate discussions for
standard quantizations using geometrodynamical variables and those relying on
loop quantum gravity inspired methods.Comment: To appear in Living Review in Relativit
The confined helium atom: An information–theoretic approach
In this article, we study the helium atom confined in a spherical impenetrable cavity
by using informational measures. We use the Ritz variational method to obtain the
energies and wave functions of the confined helium atom as a function of the cavity
radius r0. As trial wave functions we use one uncorrelated function and five explicitly
correlated basis sets in Hylleraas coordinates with different degrees of electronic correlation.
We computed the Shannon entropy, Fisher information, Kullback–Leibler
entropy, Tsallis entropy, disequilibrium and Fisher–Shannon complexity, as a function
of r0. We found that these entropic measures are sensitive to electronic correlation
and can be used to measure it. As expected these entropic measures are less sensitive
to electron correlation in the strong confinement regime (r0 < 1 a.u.).Spanish projects
PID2020-113390GB-I00 (MICIN), PY20-00082 (ERDF-Junta de Andalucía), and A-FQM-52-UGR20 (ERDF-University of Granada
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