18,054 research outputs found
Faraday patterns in dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates
Faraday patterns can be induced in Bose-Einstein condensates by a periodic
modulation of the system nonlinearity. We show that these patterns are
remarkably different in dipolar gases with a roton-maxon excitation spectrum.
Whereas for non-dipolar gases the pattern size decreases monotonously with the
driving frequency, patterns in dipolar gases present, even for shallow roton
minima, a highly non trivial frequency dependence characterized by abrupt
pattern size transitions, which are especially pronounced when the dipolar
interaction is modulated. Faraday patterns constitute hence an optimal tool for
revealing the onset of the roton minimum, a major key feature of dipolar gases.Comment: 4 pages, 10 figure
DC Conductance of Molecular Wires
Inspired by the work of Kamenev and Kohn, we present a general discussion of
the two-terminal dc conductance of molecular devices within the framework of
Time Dependent Current-Density Functional Theory. We derive a formally exact
expression for the adiabatic conductance and we discuss the dynamical
corrections. For junctions made of long molecular chains that can be either
metallic or insulating, we derive the exact asymptotic behavior of the
adiabatic conductance as a function of the chain's length. Our results follow
from the analytic structure of the bands of a periodic molecular chain and a
compact expression for the Green's functions. In the case of an insulating
chain, not only do we obtain the exponentially decaying factors, but also the
corresponding amplitudes, which depend very sensitively on the electronic
properties of the contacts. We illustrate the theory by a numerical study of a
simple insulating structure connected to two metallic jellium leads.Comment: 15 pgs and 9 figure
Do We Need to Put God into Emotional Support?: A Comparison of Caucasians’ and African-Americans’ Evaluations of Religious versus Non-Religious Comforting Messages
The current study explored whether ethnicity influences young adults’ evaluations of two different sets of comforting messages: those in which concepts such as God, prayer, religion, and faith are woven into low, moderate, and high person-centered strategies (called ‘‘religious strategies’’) and those in which such concepts are not embedded (called ‘‘non-religious strategies’’) into the messages. One hundred ninety-seven college students (63% African-American; 37% Caucasian) rated the sensitivity and effectiveness of religious and non-religious comforting messages. Several significant differences were observed between Caucasians and African-Americans in their evaluations of these strategies. Findings are discussed in terms of their practical implications for ‘‘real world’’ comforting efforts as well as the theoretical significance they hold for the concept of person-centeredness
Interim user's manual for boundary layer integral matrix procedure, version J
A computer program for analyzing two dimensional and axisymmetric nozzle performance with a variety of wall boundary conditions is described. The program has been developed for application to rocket nozzle problems. Several aids to usage of the program and two auxiliary subroutines are provided. Some features of the output are described and three sample cases are included
Boundary layer integral matrix procedure code modifications and verifications
A summary of modifications to Aerotherm's Boundary Layer Integral Matrix Procedure (BLIMP) code is presented. These modifications represent a preliminary effort to make BLIMP compatible with other JANNAF codes and to adjust the code for specific application to rocket nozzle flows. Results of the initial verification of the code for prediction of rocket nozzle type flows are discussed. For those cases in which measured free stream flow conditions were used as input to the code, the boundary layer predictions and measurements are in excellent agreement. In two cases, with free stream flow conditions calculated by another JANNAF code (TDK) for use as input to BLIMP, the predictions and the data were in fair agreement for one case and in poor agreement for the other case. The poor agreement is believed to result from failure of the turbulent model in BLIMP to account for laminarization of a turbulent flow. Recommendations for further code modifications and improvements are also presented
Magnetoconductance of carbon nanotube p-n junctions
The magnetoconductance of p-n junctions formed in clean single wall carbon
nanotubes is studied in the noninteracting electron approximation and
perturbatively in electron-electron interaction, in the geometry where a
magnetic field is along the tube axis. For long junctions the low temperature
magnetoconductance is anomalously large: the relative change in the conductance
becomes of order unity even when the flux through the tube is much smaller than
the flux quantum. The magnetoconductance is negative for metallic tubes. For
semiconducting and small gap tubes the magnetoconductance is nonmonotonic;
positive at small and negative at large fields.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Economic Analysis in the Pacific Northwest Land Resources Project: Theoretical Considerations and Preliminary Results
The Pacific Northwest Land Resources Inventory Demonstration Project i s an a ttempt to combine a whole spectrum of heterogeneous geographic, institutional and applications elements in a synergistic approach to the evaluation of remote sensing techniques. This diversity is the prime motivating factor behind a theoretical investigation of alternative economic analysis procedures. For a multitude of reasons--simplicity, ease of understanding, financial constraints and credibility, among others--cost-effectiveness emerges as the most practical tool for conducting such evaluation determinatIons in the Pacific Northwest. Preliminary findings in two water resource application areas suggest, in conformity with most published studies, that Lands at-aided data collection methods enjoy substantial cost advantages over alternative techniques. The pntential for sensitivity analysis based on cost/accuracy tradeoffs is considered on a theoretical plane in the absence of current accuracy figures concerning the Landsat-aided approach
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Baylisascaris procyonis: an emerging helminthic zoonosis.
Baylisascaris procyonis, a roundworm infection of raccoons, is emerging as an important helminthic zoonosis, principally affecting young children. Raccoons have increasingly become peridomestic animals living in close proximity to human residences. When B. procyonis eggs are ingested by a host other than a raccoon, migration of larvae through tissue, termed larval migrans, ensues. This larval infection can invade the brain and eye, causing severe disease and death. The prevalence of B. procyonis infection in raccoons is often high, and infected animals can shed enormous numbers of eggs in their feces. These eggs can survive in the environment for extended periods of time, and the infectious dose of B. procyonis is relatively low. Therefore, the risk for human exposure and infection may be greater than is currently recognized
Welcher Weg? A trajectory representation of a quantum Young's diffraction experiment
The double slit problem is idealized by simplifying each slit by a point
source. A composite reduced action for the two correlated point sources is
developed. Contours of the reduced action, trajectories and loci of transit
times are developed in the region near the two point sources. The trajectory
through any point in Euclidian 3-space also passes simultaneously through both
point sources.Comment: 12 pages LaTeX2e, 9 figures. Typos corrected. Author's final
submission. A companion paper to "Interference, reduced action, and
trajectories", quant-ph/0605120. Keywords: interference, Young's experiment,
entanglement, nonlocality, trajectory representation, determinis
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