8,369 research outputs found
Some local--global phenomena in locally finite graphs
In this paper we present some results for a connected infinite graph with
finite degrees where the properties of balls of small radii guarantee the
existence of some Hamiltonian and connectivity properties of . (For a vertex
of a graph the ball of radius centered at is the subgraph of
induced by the set of vertices whose distance from does not
exceed ). In particular, we prove that if every ball of radius 2 in is
2-connected and satisfies the condition for
each path in , where and are non-adjacent vertices, then
has a Hamiltonian curve, introduced by K\"undgen, Li and Thomassen (2017).
Furthermore, we prove that if every ball of radius 1 in satisfies Ore's
condition (1960) then all balls of any radius in are Hamiltonian.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures; journal accepted versio
Could any black holes be produced at the LHC?
We introduce analytical quantum gravity modifications of the production cross
section for terascale black holes by employing an effective ultraviolet cut off
. We find the new cross sections approach the usual "black disk" form at
high energy, while they differ significantly near the fundamental scale from
the standard increase with respect to . We show that the heretofore
discontinuous step function used to represent the cross section threshold can
realistically be modeled by two functions representing the incoming and final
parton states in a high energy collision. The growth of the cross section with
collision energy is thus a unique signature of and number of spatial
dimensions . Contrary to the classical black disk result, our cross section
is able to explain why black holes might not be observable in LHC experiments
while they could be still at the reach of ultra-high energy cosmic ray events.Comment: v1: 10 pages, 1 figure; v2: 11 pages, 1 figure, additional
references, minor modifications; v3: new title, expanded discussion with
updated production estimates, additional references, 4 figures, 19 pages,
version accepted for publication on Physical Review
Rhodium complexes bearing tetradentate diamine-bis(phenolate) ligands
Using tetradentate, dianionic ligands, several new rhodium complexes have been prepared. Some of these diamine-bis(phenolate) compounds, are active for C–H activation of benzene. These complexes are air and thermally stable. All four complexes were characterized by X-ray diffraction
Noise Thermometry with Two Weakly Coupled Bose-Einstein Condensates
Here we report on the experimental investigation of thermally induced
fluctuations of the relative phase between two Bose-Einstein condensates which
are coupled via tunneling. The experimental control over the coupling strength
and the temperature of the thermal background allows for the quantitative
analysis of the phase fluctuations. Furthermore, we demonstrate the application
of these measurements for thermometry in a regime where standard methods fail.
With this we confirm that the heat capacity of an ideal Bose gas deviates from
that of a classical gas as predicted by the third law of thermodynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Primary beam effects of radio astronomy antennas -- II. Modelling the MeerKAT L-band beam
After a decade of design and construction, South Africa's SKA-MID precursor
MeerKAT has begun its science operations. To make full use of the widefield
capability of the array, it is imperative that we have an accurate model of the
primary beam of its antennas. We have taken available L-band full-polarization
'astro-holographic' observations of three antennas and a generic
electromagnetic simulation and created sparse representations of the beams
using principal components and Zernike polynomials. The spectral behaviour of
the spatial coefficients has been modelled using discrete cosine transform. We
have provided the Zernike-based model over a diameter of 10 deg averaged over
the beams of three antennas in an associated software tool (EIDOS) that can be
useful in direction-dependent calibration and imaging. The model is more
accurate for the diagonal elements of the beam Jones matrix and at lower
frequencies. As we get more accurate beam measurements and simulations in the
future, especially for the cross-polarization patterns, our pipeline can be
used to create more accurate sparse representations of MeerKAT beams.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF
of an article accepted for publication in MNRAS following peer review. The
version of record [K. M. B. Asad et al., 2021] is available online at:
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab10
Tunneling through nanosystems: Combining broadening with many-particle states
We suggest a new approach for transport through finite systems based on the
Liouville equation. By working in a basis of many-particle states for the
finite system, Coulomb interactions are taken fully into account and correlated
transitions by up to two different contact states are included. This latter
extends standard rate equation models by including level-broadening effects.
The main result of the paper is a general expression for the elements of the
density matrix of the finite size system, which can be applied whenever the
eigenstates and the couplings to the leads are known. The approach works for
arbitrary bias and for temperatures above the Kondo temperature. We apply the
approach to standard models and good agreement with other methods in their
respective regime of validity is found.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures included to tex
Age effect on retina and optic disc normal values
Purpose:
To investigate retinal thickness and optic disc parameters by the Retinal Thickness Analyzer (RTA) glaucoma program in older normal subjects and to determine any age effect.
Methods:
Subjects over 40 years of age without any prior history of eye diseases were recruited. Only subjects completely normal on clinical ophthalmologic examination and on visual field testing by Humphrey Field Analyzer (HFA) using the SITA 24-2 program were included. A total of 74 eyes from 74 subjects with even age distribution over the decades were enrolled and underwent topographic measurements of the posterior pole and of the optic disc by RTA. The `glaucoma full' program in software version 4.11B was applied.
Results:
Mean patient age was 59.9 +/- 10.3 years with a range from 40 to 80 years. The only parameter intraocular pressure (IOP) correlated with was retinal posterior pole asymmetry (r=0.27, p=0.02). IOP itself increased significantly with age (r=0.341, p=0.003). Mean defect and pattern standard deviation of the HFA did not correlate with any of the retinal or optic disc measurements. Increasing age correlated significantly with some of the morphologic measurements of the RTA: decreasing perifoveal minimum thickness (r=-0.258, p=0.026), increased cup-to-disc area ratio (r=0.302, p=0.016) and increased cup area (r=0.338 p=0.007).
Conclusions:
An age effect exists for some of the retina and optic disc measurements obtained by the RTA. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
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