1,979 research outputs found
Unravelling work drive: A comparison between workaholism and overcommitment
Workaholism and overcommitment are often used as interchangeable constructs describing an individual’s over-involvement toward their own job. Employees with high levels in both constructs are characterized by an excessive effort and attachment to their job, with the incapability to detach from it and negative consequences in terms of poor health and job burnout. However, few studies have simultaneously measured both constructs, and their relationships are still not clear. In this study, we try to disentangle workaholism and overcommitment by comparing them with theoretically related contextual and personal antecedents, as well as their health consequences. We conducted a nonprobability mixed mode research design on 133 employees from different organizations in Italy using both self-and other-reported measures. To test our hypothesis that workaholism and overcommitment are related yet different constructs, we used partial correlations and regression analyses. The results confirm that these two constructs are related to each other, but also outline that overcommitment (and not workaholism) is uniquely related to job burnout, so that overcommitment rather than workaholism could represent the true negative aspect of work drive. Additionally, workaholism is more related to conscientiousness than overcommitment, while overcommitment shows a stronger relationship with neuroticism than workaholism. The theoretical implications are discussed
Coalescing binary systems of compact objects: Dynamics of angular momenta
The end state of a coalescing binary of compact objects depends strongly on
the final total mass M and angular momentum J. Since gravitational radiation
emission causes a slow evolution of the binary system through quasi-circular
orbits down to the innermost stable one, in this paper we examine the
corresponding behavior of the ratio J/M^2 which must be less than 1(G/c) or
about 0.7(G/c) for the formation of a black hole or a neutron star
respectively. The results show cases for which, at the end of the inspiral
phase, the conditions for black hole or neutron star formation are not
satisfied. The inclusion of spin effects leads us to a study of precession
equations valid also for the calculation of gravitational waveforms.Comment: 22 pages, AASTeX and 13 figures in PostScrip
Representation reduction and solution space contraction in quasi-exactly solvable systems
In quasi-exactly solvable problems partial analytic solution (energy spectrum
and associated wavefunctions) are obtained if some potential parameters are
assigned specific values. We introduce a new class in which exact solutions are
obtained at a given energy for a special set of values of the potential
parameters. To obtain a larger solution space one varies the energy over a
discrete set (the spectrum). A unified treatment that includes the standard as
well as the new class of quasi-exactly solvable problems is presented and few
examples (some of which are new) are given. The solution space is spanned by
discrete square integrable basis functions in which the matrix representation
of the Hamiltonian is tridiagonal. Imposing quasi-exact solvability constraints
result in a complete reduction of the representation into the direct sum of a
finite and infinite component. The finite is real and exactly solvable, whereas
the infinite is complex and associated with zero norm states. Consequently, the
whole physical space contracts to a finite dimensional subspace with
normalizable states.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures (2 in color
An absolute quantum energy inequality for the Dirac field in curved spacetime
Quantum Weak Energy Inequalities (QWEIs) are results which limit the extent
to which the smeared renormalised energy density of a quantum field can be
negative. On globally hyperbolic spacetimes the massive quantum Dirac field is
known to obey a QWEI in terms of a reference state chosen arbitrarily from the
class of Hadamard states; however, there exist spacetimes of interest on which
state-dependent bounds cannot be evaluated. In this paper we prove the first
QWEI for the massive quantum Dirac field on four dimensional globally
hyperbolic spacetime in which the bound depends only on the local geometry;
such a QWEI is known as an absolute QWEI
On the Convergence of the WKB Series for the Angular Momentum Operator
In this paper we prove a recent conjecture [Robnik M and Salasnich L 1997 J.
Phys. A: Math. Gen. 30 1719] about the convergence of the WKB series for the
angular momentum operator. We demonstrate that the WKB algorithm for the
angular momentum gives the exact quantization formula if all orders are summed.Comment: latex, 9 pages, no figures, to be published in Journal of Physics A:
Math. and Ge
The gravitational-wave memory from eccentric binaries
The nonlinear gravitational-wave memory causes a time-varying but
nonoscillatory correction to the gravitational-wave polarizations. It arises
from gravitational waves that are sourced by gravitational waves. Previous
considerations of the nonlinear memory effect have focused on quasicircular
binaries. Here, I consider the nonlinear memory from Newtonian orbits with
arbitrary eccentricity. Expressions for the waveform polarizations and
spin-weighted spherical-harmonic modes are derived for elliptic, hyperbolic,
parabolic, and radial orbits. In the hyperbolic, parabolic, and radial cases
the nonlinear memory provides a 2.5 post-Newtonian (PN) correction to the
leading-order waveforms. This is in contrast to the elliptical and
quasicircular cases, where the nonlinear memory corrects the waveform at
leading (0PN) order. This difference in PN order arises from the fact that the
memory builds up over a short "scattering" time scale in the hyperbolic case,
as opposed to a much longer radiation-reaction time scale in the elliptical
case. The nonlinear memory corrections presented here complete our knowledge of
the leading-order (Peters-Mathews) waveforms for elliptical orbits. These
calculations are also relevant for binaries with quasicircular orbits in the
present epoch which had, in the past, large eccentricities. Because the
nonlinear memory depends sensitively on the past evolution of a binary, I
discuss the effect of this early-time eccentricity on the value of the
late-time memory in nearly circularized binaries. I also discuss the
observability of large "memory jumps" in a binary's past that could arise from
its formation in a capture process. Lastly, I provide estimates of the
signal-to-noise ratio of the linear and nonlinear memories from hyperbolic and
parabolic binaries.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures. v2: minor changes to match published versio
Deformed Clifford algebra and supersymmetric quantum mechanics on a phase space with applications in quantum optics
In order to realize supersymmetric quantum mechanics methods on a four
dimensional classical phase-space, the complexified Clifford algebra of this
space is extended by deforming it with the Moyal star-product in composing the
components of Clifford forms. Two isospectral matrix Hamiltonians having a
common bosonic part but different fermionic parts depending on four real-valued
phase space functions are obtained. The Hamiltonians are doubly intertwined via
matrix-valued functions which are divisors of zero in the resulting
Moyal-Clifford algebra. Two illustrative examples corresponding to
Jaynes-Cummings-type models of quantum optics are presented as special cases of
the method. Their spectra, eigen-spinors and Wigner functions as well as their
constants of motion are also obtained within the autonomous framework of
deformation quantization.Comment: 22 pages. published versio
Quantum mechanical spectral engineering by scaling intertwining
Using the concept of spectral engineering we explore the possibilities of
building potentials with prescribed spectra offered by a modified intertwining
technique involving operators which are the product of a standard first-order
intertwiner and a unitary scaling. In the same context we study the iterations
of such transformations finding that the scaling intertwining provides a
different and richer mechanism in designing quantum spectra with respect to
that given by the standard intertwiningComment: 8 twocolumn pages, 5 figure
Method for Generating Additive Shape Invariant Potentials from an Euler Equation
In the supersymmetric quantum mechanics formalism, the shape invariance
condition provides a sufficient constraint to make a quantum mechanical problem
solvable; i.e., we can determine its eigenvalues and eigenfunctions
algebraically. Since shape invariance relates superpotentials and their
derivatives at two different values of the parameter , it is a non-local
condition in the coordinate-parameter space. We transform the shape
invariance condition for additive shape invariant superpotentials into two
local partial differential equations. One of these equations is equivalent to
the one-dimensional Euler equation expressing momentum conservation for
inviscid fluid flow. The second equation provides the constraint that helps us
determine unique solutions. We solve these equations to generate the set of all
known -independent shape invariant superpotentials and show that there
are no others. We then develop an algorithm for generating additive shape
invariant superpotentials including those that depend on explicitly,
and derive a new -dependent superpotential by expanding a Scarf
superpotential.Comment: 1 figure, 4 tables, 18 page
Exactly Solvable Hydrogen-like Potentials and Factorization Method
A set of factorization energies is introduced, giving rise to a
generalization of the Schr\"{o}dinger (or Infeld and Hull) factorization for
the radial hydrogen-like Hamiltonian. An algebraic intertwining technique
involving such factorization energies leads to derive -parametric families
of potentials in general almost-isospectral to the hydrogen-like radial
Hamiltonians. The construction of SUSY partner Hamiltonians with ground state
energies greater than the corresponding ground state energy of the initial
Hamiltonian is also explicitly performed.Comment: LaTex file, 21 pages, 2 PostScript figures and some references added.
To be published in J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. (1998
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