1,585,844 research outputs found
Low-Energy Heavy-Ion Reactions and the Skyrme Effective Interaction
The Skyrme effective interaction, with its multitude of parameterisations,
along with its implemen- tation using the static and time-dependent density
functional (TDHF) formalism have allowed for a range of microscopic
calculations of low-energy heavy-ion collisions. These calculations allow
variation of the effective interaction along with an interpretation of the
results of this variation informed by a comparison to experimental data.
Initial progress in implementing TDHF for heavy-ion collisions necessarily used
many approximations in the geometry or the interaction. Over the last decade or
so, the implementations have overcome all restrictions, and studies have begun
to be made where details of the effective interaction are being probed. This
review surveys these studies in low energy heavy-ion reactions, finding
significant effects on observables from the form of the spin-orbit interaction,
the use of the tensor force, and the inclusion of time-odd terms in the density
functional.Comment: submitted to Prog. Part. Nucl. Phy
Reply to the comment by Jacobs and Thorpe
Reply to a comment on "Infinite-Cluster geometry in central-force networks",
PRL 78 (1997), 1480. A discussion about the order of the rigidity percolation
transition.Comment: 1 page revTe
Star Clusters with Primordial Binaries: II. Dynamical Evolution of Models in a Tidal Field
[abridged] We extend our analysis of the dynamical evolution of simple star
cluster models, in order to provide comparison standards that will aid in
interpreting the results of more complex realistic simulations. We augment our
previous primordial-binary simulations by introducing a tidal field, and
starting with King models of different central concentrations. We present the
results of N-body calculations of the evolution of equal-mass models, starting
with primordial binary fractions of 0 - 100 %, and N values from 512 to 16384.
We also attempt to extrapolate some of our results to the larger number of
particles that are necessary to model globular clusters. We characterize the
steady-state `deuterium main sequence' phase in which primordial binaries are
depleted in the core in the process of `gravitationally burning'. In this phase
we find that the ratio of the core to half-mass radius, r_c/r_h, is similar to
that measured for isolated systems. In addition to the generation of energy due
to hardening and depletion of the primordial binary population, the overall
evolution of the star clusters is driven by a competing process: the tidal
disruption of the system. We find that the depletion of primordial binaries
before tidal dissolution of the system is possible only if the initial number
is below 0.05 N, in the case of a King model with W_0=7 and N=4096 (which is
one of our longest living models). We compare our findings, obtained by means
of direct N-body simulations but scaled, where possible, to larger N, with
similar studies carried out by means of Monte Carlo methods.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, matches MNRAS accepted version, some sections
reorganized but no major change
Cotunneling Spectroscopy in Few-Electron Quantum Dots
Few-electron quantum dots are investigated in the regime of strong tunneling
to the leads. Inelastic cotunneling is used to measure the two-electron
singlet-triplet splitting above and below a magnetic field driven
singlet-triplet transition. Evidence for a non-equilibrium two-electron
singlet-triplet Kondo effect is presented. Cotunneling allows orbital
correlations and parameters characterizing entanglement of the two-electron
singlet ground state to be extracted from dc transport.Comment: related papers available at http://marcuslab.harvard.ed
Strong low-frequency quantum correlations from a four-wave mixing amplifier
We show that a simple scheme based on nondegenerate four-wave mixing in a hot
atomic vapor behaves like a near-perfect phase-insensitive optical amplifier,
which can generate bright twin beams with a measured quantum noise reduction in
the intensity difference of more than 8 dB, close to the best optical
parametric amplifiers and oscillators. The absence of a cavity makes the system
immune to external perturbations, and the strong quantum noise reduction is
observed over a large frequency range.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Major rewrite of the previous version. New
experimental results and further analysi
TOPEX satellite concept. TOPEX option study report
Candidate bus equipment from the Viking, Applications Explorer Mission, and Small Scientific Satellite programs for application to the TOPEX mission options is assessed. Propulsion module equipment and subsystem candidates from the Applications Explorer Mission satellites and the Small Scientific Satellite spacecraft are evaluated for those TOPEX options. Several subsystem concepts appropriate to the TOPEX options are described. These descriptions consider performance characteristics of the subsystems. Cost and availability information on the candidate equipment and subsystems are also provided
Rapid Single-Shot Measurement of a Singlet-Triplet Qubit
We report repeated single-shot measurements of the two-electron spin state in
a GaAs double quantum dot. The readout scheme allows measurement with fidelity
above 90% with a 7 microsecond cycle time. Hyperfine-induced precession between
singlet and triplet states of the two-electron system are directly observed, as
nuclear Overhauser fields are quasi-static on the time scale of the measurement
cycle. Repeated measurements on millisecond to second time scales reveal
evolution of the nuclear environment.Comment: supplemental material at
http://marcuslab.harvard.edu/papers/single_shot_sup.pd
Epidemiology of hyperadrenocorticism among 210,824 dogs attending primary-care veterinary practices in the UK from 2009 to 2014
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