278,857 research outputs found
Fermi Coordinates for Weak Gravitational Fields
A Reference is corrected. (We derive the Fermi coordinate system of an
observer in arbitrary motion in an arbitrary weak gravitational field valid to
all orders in the geodesic distance from the worldline of the observer. In flat
space-time this leads to a generalization of Rindler space for arbitrary
acceleration and rotation. The general approach is applied to the special case
of an observer resting with respect to the weak gravitational field of a static
mass distribution. This allows to make the correspondence between general
relativity and Newtonian gravity more precise.)Comment: 7 Pages, Preprint KONS-RGKU-94-04, LaTe
"Hidden” degassing from streams: estimation of the CO2 release from the thermal springs of Sperchios Basin, Greece
Areas located at plate boundaries are characterized by the presence of seismic, volcanic, and geothermal activity, as well as ore deposition. Such processes are enhanced by the circulation of hydrothermal fluids in the crust transporting volatiles from either the deep crust or the mantle to the surface. Intense geodynamic activity is also taking place in Greece giving rise to: (i) the highest seismicity in Europe, (ii) the presence of an active volcanic arc and numerous areas of anomalously high geothermal gradient, and (iii) a widespread occurrence of thermal springs. Elevated heat flow values are concentrated in Sperchios basin, an area characterised by a system of deeply rooted extensional faults and quaternary volcanic activity. This regime favoured the formation of hydrothermal systems, the surface expression of which are thermal springs with intense bubbling of CO2-rich gases. Flux measurements in the bubbling pools were made with the floating chamber method. The highest bubbling CO2 output is found in Thermopyles and Psoroneria (1 and 2 t/d, respectively). The outgoing channels of these springs have an elevated flow (>250 l/s) of gas-charged water (>15 mmol/l of CO2). Although no bubbling is noticed along the stream, the CO2 content decreases by an order of magnitude after few hundreds of metres, indicating an intense degassing from the water. Taking into account the water flow and the amount of CO2 lost to the atmosphere, the CO2 output of the outgoing channels is quantified in >10 t/d for Thermopyles and 9 t/d for Psoroneria. An estimation is also made at Ypati, Kamena Vourla, Koniavitis and Edipsos, where the mean values reach 1 t/d of CO2 for each spring. The obtained values are always higher respect to the estimated outputs from visible bubbling, suggesting that most of the degassing is “hidden”. Furthermore, the loss of CO2 from the water determines a shift in dissolved carbonate species as demonstrated by the pH increase along the channel that leads eventually to an oversaturation in carbonate minerals and therefore travertine deposition. To sum up, the total CO2 output of the study area is estimated at 30 t/d, with the major contribution deriving from the degassing along the outflow channels of the thermal springs. Such output is comparable to that of the single active volcanic systems along the South Aegean Volcanic Arc (Sousaki, Methana, Milos, Santorini, Kos and Nisyros) and highlights the importance of “hidden” degassing along CO2-oversaturated streams
Lack of Pattern Separation in Sensory Inputs to the Olfactory Bulb during Perceptual Learning.
Recent studies revealed changes in odor representations in the olfactory bulb during active olfactory learning (Chu et al., 2016; Yamada et al., 2017). Specifically, mitral cell ensemble responses to very similar odorant mixtures sparsened and became more distinguishable as mice learned to discriminate the odorants over days (Chu et al., 2016). In this study, we explored whether changes in the sensory inputs to the bulb underlie the observed changes in mitral cell responses. Using two-photon calcium imaging to monitor the odor responses of the olfactory sensory neuron (OSN) axon terminals in the glomeruli of the olfactory bulb during a discrimination task, we found that OSN inputs to the bulb are stable during discrimination learning. During one week of training to discriminate between very similar odorant mixtures in a Go/No-go task, OSN responses did not show significant sparsening, and the responses to the trained similar odorants did not diverge throughout training. These results suggest that the adaptive changes of mitral cell responses during perceptual learning are ensured by mechanisms downstream of OSN input, possibly in local circuits within olfactory bulb
Instrumentation of a high-sensitivity microwave vector detection system for low-temperature applications
We present the design and the circuit details of a high-sensitivity microwave
vector detection system, which is aiming for studying the low-dimensional
electron system embedded in the slots of a coplanar waveguide at low
temperatures. The coplanar waveguide sample is placed inside a phase-locked
loop; the phase change of the sample may cause a corresponding change in the
operation frequency, which can be measured precisely. We also employ a
double-pulse modulation on the microwave signals, which comprises a fast pulse
modulation for gated averaging and a slow pulse modulation for lock-in
detection. In measurements on real samples at low temperatures, this system
provides much better resolutions in both amplitude and phase than most of the
conventional vector analyzers at power levels below -65 dBm.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, lette
Phase Diagram for Magnon Condensate in Yttrium Iron Garnet Film
Recently, magnons, which are quasiparticles describing the collective motion
of spins, were found to undergo Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) at room
temperature in films of Yttrium Iron Garnet (YIG). Unlike other quasiparticle
BEC systems, this system has a spectrum with two degenerate minima, which makes
it possible for the system to have two condensates in momentum space. Recent
Brillouin Light scattering studies for a microwave-pumped YIG film of thickness
d=5 m and field H=1 kOe find a low-contrast interference pattern at the
characteristic wavevector of the magnon energy minimum. In this report, we
show that this modulation pattern can be quantitatively explained as due to
non-symmetric but coherent Bose-Einstein condensation of magnons into the two
energy minima. Our theory predicts a transition from a high-contrast symmetric
phase to a low-contrast non-symmetric phase on varying the and , and a
new type of collective oscillations.Comment: 6 figures. Accepted by Nature Scientific Report
Probability-preserving evolution in a non-Hermitian two-band model
A non-Hermitian PT-symmetric system can have full real spectrum but does not
ensure probability preserving time evolution, in contrast to that of a
Hermitian system. We present a non-Hermitian two-band model, which is comprised
of dimerized hopping terms and staggered imaginary on-site potentials, and
study the dynamics in the exact PT-symmetric phase based on the exact solution.
It is shown that an initial state, which does not involve two
equal-momentum-vector eigenstates in different bands, obeys perfectly
probability-preserving time evolution in terms of the Dirac inner product.
Beyond this constriction, the quasi-Hermitian dynamical behaviors, such as
non-spreading propagation and fractional revival of a Gaussian wave packet, are
also observed.Comment: 8 pages, 14 figure
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