433 research outputs found
Quantum coherence generated by interference-induced state selectiveness
The relations between quantum coherence and quantum interference are
discussed. A general method for generation of quantum coherence through
interference-induced state selection is introduced and then applied to `simple'
atomic systems under two-photon transitions, with applications in quantum
optics and laser cooling.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Journal of Modern Optics'
special issue on quantum interferenc
Novel A-B type oscillations in a 2-D electron gas in inhomogenous magnetic fields
We present results from a quantum and semiclassical theoretical study of the
and resistivities of a high mobility 2-D electron gas
in the presence of a dilute random distribution of tubes with magnetic flux
and radius , for arbitrary values of and . We
report on novel Aharonov-Bohm type oscillations in and ,
related to degenerate quantum flux tube resonances, that satisfy the selection
rule , with an integer. We discuss possible
experimental conditions where these oscillations may be observed.Comment: 11 pages REVTE
Comparing Formulations of Generalized Quantum Mechanics for Reparametrization-Invariant Systems
A class of decoherence schemes is described for implementing the principles
of generalized quantum theory in reparametrization-invariant `hyperbolic'
models such as minisuperspace quantum cosmology. The connection with
sum-over-histories constructions is exhibited and the physical equivalence or
inequivalence of different such schemes is analyzed. The discussion focuses on
comparing constructions based on the Klein-Gordon product with those based on
the induced (a.k.a. Rieffel, Refined Algebraic, Group Averaging, or Spectral
Analysis) inner product. It is shown that the Klein-Gordon and induced products
can be simply related for the models of interest. This fact is then used to
establish isomorphisms between certain decoherence schemes based on these
products.Comment: 21 pages ReVTe
The regulated four parameter one dimensional point interaction
The general four parameter point interaction in one dimensional quantum
mechanics is regulated. It allows the exact solution, but not the perturbative
one. We conjecture that this is due to the interaction not being asymptotically
free. We then propose a different breakup of unperturbed theory and
interaction, which now is asymptotically free but leads to the same physics.
The corresponding regulated potential can be solved both exactly and
perturbatively, in agreement with the conjecture.Comment: 17 pages, no figures, Tex fil
Holographic renormalization as a canonical transformation
The gauge/string dualities have drawn attention to a class of variational
problems on a boundary at infinity, which are not well defined unless a certain
boundary term is added to the classical action. In the context of supergravity
in asymptotically AdS spaces these problems are systematically addressed by the
method of holographic renormalization. We argue that this class of a priori ill
defined variational problems extends far beyond the realm of holographic
dualities. As we show, exactly the same issues arise in gravity in non
asymptotically AdS spaces, in point particles with certain unbounded from below
potentials, and even fundamental strings in flat or AdS backgrounds. We show
that the variational problem in all such cases can be made well defined by the
following procedure, which is intrinsic to the system in question and does not
rely on the existence of a holographically dual theory: (i) The first step is
the construction of the space of the most general asymptotic solutions of the
classical equations of motion that inherits a well defined symplectic form from
that on phase space. The requirement of a well defined symplectic form is
essential and often leads to a necessary repackaging of the degrees of freedom.
(ii) Once the space of asymptotic solutions has been constructed in terms of
the correct degrees of freedom, then there exists a boundary term that is
obtained as a certain solution of the Hamilton-Jacobi equation which
simultaneously makes the variational problem well defined and preserves the
symplectic form. This procedure is identical to holographic renormalization in
the case of asymptotically AdS gravity, but it is applicable to any Hamiltonian
system.Comment: 37 pages; v2 minor corrections in section 2, 2 references and a
footnote on Palatini gravity added. Version to appear in JHE
Effect of acute copper sulfate exposure on olfactory responses to amino acids and pheromones in goldfish (Carassius auratus)
Exposure of olfactory epithelium to environmentally relevant concentrations of copper disrupts olfaction in fish. To examine
the dynamics of recovery at both functional and morphological levels after acute copper exposure, unilateral exposure of goldfish olfactory epithelia to 100 μM CuSO4 (10 min) was followed by electro-olfactogram (EOG) recording and scanning electron microscopy. Sensitivity to amino acids (L-arginine
and L-serine), generally considered food-related odorants, recovered most rapidly (three days), followed by that to
catecholamines(3-O-methoxytyramine),bileacids(taurolithocholic acid) and the steroid pheromone, 17,20 -dihydroxy-4-pregnen-
3-one 20-sulfate, which took 28 days to reach full recovery. Sensitivity to the postovulatory pheromone prostaglandin F2R had
not fully recovered even at 28 days. These changes in sensitivity were correlated with changes in the recovery of ciliated and microvillous receptor cell types. Microvillous cells appeared largely unaffected by CuSO4 treatment. Cilia in
ciliated receptor neurones, however, appeared damaged one day post-treatment and were virtually absent after three days but
had begun to recover after 14 days. Together, these results support the hypothesis that microvillous receptor neurones detect amino acids whereas ciliated receptor neurones were not functional and are responsible for detection of social stimuli (bile acidsandpheromones).Furthermore, differences in sensitivity to copper may be due to different transduction pathways in
the different cell types
Equivalence of Local and Separable Realizations of the Discontinuity-Inducing Contact Interaction and Its Perturbative Renormalizability
We prove that the separable and local approximations of the
discontinuity-inducing zero-range interaction in one-dimensional quantum
mechanics are equivalent. We further show that the interaction allows the
perturbative treatment through the coupling renormalization.
Keywords: one-dimensional system, generalized contact interaction,
renormalization, perturbative expansion. PACS Nos: 3.65.-w, 11.10.Gh, 31.15.MdComment: ReVTeX 7pgs, doubl column, no figure, See also the website
http://www.mech.kochi-tech.ac.jp/cheon
Annual variation in the levels of transcripts of sex-specific genes in the mantle of the common mussel, Mytilus edulis
Mytilus species are used as sentinels for the assessment of environmental health but sex or stage in the reproduction cycle is rarely considered even though both parameters are likely to influence responses to pollution. We have validated the use of a qPCR assay for sex identification and related the levels of transcripts to the reproductive cycle. A temporal study of mantle of Mytilus edulis found transcripts of male-specific vitelline coat lysin (VCL) and female-specific vitelline envelope receptor for lysin (VERL) could identify sex over a complete year. The levels of VCL/VERL were proportional to the numbers of sperm/ova and are indicative of the stage of the reproductive cycle. Maximal levels of VCL and VERL were found in February 2009 declining to minima between July - August before increasing and re-attaining a peak in February 2010. Water temperature may influence these transitions since they coincide with minimal water temperature in February and maximal temperature in August. An identical pattern of variation was found for a cryptic female-specific transcript (H5) but a very different pattern was observed for oestrogen receptor 2 (ER2). ER2 varied in a sex-specific way with male > female for most of the cycle, with a female maxima in July and a male maxima in December. Using artificially spawned animals, the transcripts for VCL, VERL and H5 were shown to be present in gametes and thus their disappearance from mantle is indicative of spawning. VCL and VERL are present at equivalent levels in February and July-August but during gametogenesis (August to January) and spawning (March to June) VCL is present at lower relative amounts than VERL. This may indicate sex-specific control mechanisms for these processes and highlight a potential pressure point leading to reduced reproductive output if environmental factors cause asynchrony to gamete maturation or release
Quantum Cosmology of Generalized Two--Dimensional Dilaton Gravity Models
The quantum cosmology of two-dimensional dilaton-gravity models is
investigated. A class of models is mapped onto the constrained
oscillator-ghost-oscillator model. A number of exact and approximate solutions
to the corresponding Wheeler-DeWitt equation are presented. A wider class of
minisuperspace models that can be solved in this fashion is identified.
Supersymmetric extensions to the induced gravity theory and the bosonic string
theory are then considered and closed-form solutions to the associated quantum
constraints are derived. The possibility of applying the third-quantization
procedure to two-dimensional dilaton-gravity is briefly discussed.Comment: 28 pages, late
Bessel Process and Conformal Quantum Mechanics
Different aspects of the connection between the Bessel process and the
conformal quantum mechanics (CQM) are discussed. The meaning of the possible
generalizations of both models is investigated with respect to the other model,
including self adjoint extension of the CQM. Some other generalizations such as
the Bessel process in the wide sense and radial Ornstein- Uhlenbeck process are
discussed with respect to the underlying conformal group structure.Comment: 28 Page
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