431 research outputs found
Coherent quantum effects through dispersive bosonic media
The coherent evolution of two atomic qubits mediated by a set of bosonic
field modes is investigated. By assuming a specific encoding of the quantum
states in the internal levels of the two atoms we show that entangling quantum
gates can be realised, with high fidelity, even when a large number of
mediating modes is involved. The effect of losses and imperfections on the
gates' operation is also considered in detail.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figure
Precision mass measurements of very short-lived, neutron-rich Na isotopes using a radiofrequency spectrometer
Mass measurements of high precision have been performed on sodium isotopes out to Na using a new technique of radiofrequency excitation of ion trajectories in a homogeneous magnetic field. This method, especially suited to very short-lived nuclides, has allowed us to significantly reduce the uncertainty in mass of the most exotic Na isotopes: a relative error of 5x10 was achieved for Na having a half-life of only 30.5 ms and 9x10 for the weakly produced Na. Verifying and minimizing binding energy uncertainties in this region of the nuclear chart is important for clarification of a long standing problem concerning the strength of the =20 magic shell closure. These results are the fruit of the commissioning of the new experimental program Mistral
Continuity for s-convex fuzzy processes
In a previous paper we introduced the concept of s-convex fuzzy mapping and
established some properties. In this work we study the continuity for s-convex
fuzzy processes
X-ray anomalous scattering investigations on the charge order in -NaVO
Anomalous x-ray diffraction studies show that the charge ordering in
-NaVO is of zig-zag type in all vanadium ladders. We
have found that there are two models of the stacking of layers along
\emph{c-}direction, each of them consisting of 2 degenerated patterns, and that
the experimental data is well reproduced if the 2 patterns appears
simultaneously. We believe that the low temperature structure contains stacking
faults separating regions corresponding to the four possible patterns.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett., 4 pages, 4 eps figures inserted in the
tex
Computation of Resistive Wakefields
We evaluate longitudinal resistive wakefields for cylindrical beam pipes
numerically and compare the results with existing approximate formul\ae. We
consider an ultra-relativistic bunch traversing a cylindrical, metallic tube
for a model in which the wall conductivity is taken to be first independent and
second dependent on frequency, and we show how these can be included simply and
efficiently in particle tracking simulations. We also extend this to higher
order modes, and to the transverse wakes. This full treatment can be necessary
in the design of modern nano-beam accelerators
Accurate mass measurements of short-lived isotopes with the MISTRAL rf spectrometer
The MISTRAL experiment has measured its first masses at ISOLDE. Installed in May 1997, this radiofrequency transmission spectrometer is to concentrate on nuclides with particularly short half-lives. MISTRAL received its first stable beam in October and first radioactive beam in November 1997. These first tests, with a plasma ion source, resulted in excellent isobaric separation and reasonable transmission. Further testing and development enabled first data taking in July 1998 on neutron-rich Na isotopes having half-lives as short as 31 ms
A vanishing viscosity approach to a rate-independent damage model
We analyze a rate-independent model for damage evolution in elastic bodies. The central quantities are a stored energy functional and a dissipation functional, which is assumed to be positively homogeneous of degree one. Since the energy is not simultaneously (strictly) convex in the damage variable and the displacements, solutions may have jumps as a function of time. The latter circumstance makes it necessary to recur to suitable notions of weak solution. However, the by-now classical concept of global energetic solution fails to describe accurately the behavior of the system at jumps. Hence, we consider rate-independent damage models as limits of systems driven by viscous, rate-dependent dissipation. We use a technique for taking the vanishing viscosity limit, which is based on arc-length reparameterization. In this way, in the limit we obtain a novel formulation for the rate-independent damage model, which highlights the interplay of viscous and rate-independent effects in the jump regime, and provides a better description of the energetic behavior of the system at jump
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