6,769 research outputs found
Acquisition of Information is Achieved by the Measurement Process in Classical and Quantum Physics
No consensus seems to exist as to what constitutes a measurement which is
still considered somewhat mysterious in many respects in quantum mechanics. At
successive stages mathematical theory of measure, metrology and measurement
theory tried to systematize this field but significant questions remain open
about the nature of measurement, about the characterization of the observer,
about the reliability of measurement processes etc. The present paper attempts
to talk about these questions through the information science. We start from
the idea, rather common and intuitive, that the measurement process basically
acquires information. Next we expand this idea through four formal definitions
and infer some corollaries regarding the measurement process from those
definitions. Relativity emerges as the basic property of measurement from the
present logical framework and this rather surprising result collides with the
feeling of physicists who take measurement as a myth. In the closing this paper
shows how the measurement relativity wholly consists with some effects
calculated in QM and in Einstein's theory.Comment: Prepared for : Quantum Theory: Reconsideration of Foundations - 4
(QTFR-4), Vaxjo, Sweden, 6-11 June 2007. To be published by the American
Institute of Physics in the AIP Conference Proceedings series. Talk presented
by Paolo Rocch
Versatile Electro-Dynamic Tethers Dynamics Simulator for Debris Mitigation Tools Design
As far as the space debris mitigation is concerned, the electro-dynamic tethers (EDTs) represent a valuable alternative for de-orbiting. The paper presents a high accuracy numerical simulator developed to support the design and verify the effectiveness of such systems: accurate models are exploited for the mechanical, electrodynamical and environmental representation. Results confirmed the known instabilities of EDTs; to cope with them a control strategy is here proposed, traded off among different laws. The selected control relies on varying either the load resistance or the cathodic emitter voltage drop, at the system cathode, being the current profile the controlled variable. The sensitivity analysis, run on several design parameters, is presented and the interdependencies with stability and performance are discussed
Tremor in motor neuron disease may be central rather than peripheral in origin
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
Motor neuron disease (MND) refers to a spectrum of degenerative diseases affecting motor neurons. Recent clinical and post-mortem observations have revealed considerable variability in the phenotype. Rhythmic involuntary oscillations of the hands during action, resembling tremor, can occur in MND, but their pathophysiology has not yet been investigated.
METHODS:
A total of 120 consecutive patients with MND were screened for tremor. Twelve patients with action tremor and no other movement disorders were found. Ten took part in the study. Tremor was recorded bilaterally using surface electromyography (EMG) and triaxial accelerometer, with and without a variable weight load. Power spectra of rectified EMG and accelerometric signal were calculated. To investigate a possible cerebellar involvement, eyeblink classic conditioning was performed in five patients.
RESULTS:
Action tremor was present in about 10% of our population. All patients showed distal postural tremor of low amplitude and constant frequency, bilateral with a small degree of asymmetry. Two also showed simple kinetic tremor. A peak at the EMG and accelerometric recordings ranging from 4 to 12 Hz was found in all patients. Loading did not change peak frequency in either the electromyographic or accelerometric power spectra. Compared with healthy volunteers, patients had a smaller number of conditioned responses during eyeblink classic conditioning.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our data suggest that patients with MND can present with action tremor of a central origin, possibly due to a cerebellar dysfunction. This evidence supports the novel idea of MND as a multisystem neurodegenerative disease and that action tremor can be part of this condition
Fine structural analyses of pancreatic acinar cell nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified soybean
We carried out ultrastructural morphometrical and immunocytochemical analyses on pancreatic acinar cell nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified (GM) soybean, in order to investigate possible structural and molecular modifications of nucleoplasmic and nucleolar constituents.We found a significant lowering of nucleoplasmic and nucleolar splicing factors as well as a perichromatin granule accumulation in GM-fed mice, suggestive of reduced post-transcriptional hnRNA processing and/or nuclear export. This is in accordance to already described zymogen synthesis and processing modifications in the same animals
Sensitivity of the spherical gravitational wave detector MiniGRAIL operating at 5 K
We present the performances and the strain sensitivity of the first spherical
gravitational wave detector equipped with a capacitive transducer and read out
by a low noise two-stage SQUID amplifier and operated at a temperature of 5 K.
We characterized the detector performance in terms of thermal and electrical
noise in the system output sygnal. We measured a peak strain sensitivity of
at 2942.9 Hz. A strain sensitivity of better than
has been obtained over a bandwidth of 30 Hz. We expect
an improvement of more than one order of magnitude when the detector will
operate at 50 mK. Our results represent the first step towards the development
of an ultracryogenic omnidirectional detector sensitive to gravitational
radiation in the 3kHz range.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Evolution of human IgH3 ' EC duplicated structures: both enhancers HS1,2 are polymorphic with variation of transcription factor's consensus sites
The enhancer complex regulatory region at the 3' of the immunoglobulin heavy cluster (IgH3'EC) is duplicated in apes along with four constant genes and the region is highly conserved throughout humans. Both human IgH3'ECs consist of three loci high sensitive (HS) to DNAse I with enhancer activity. It is thus possible that the presence of structural divergences between the two IgH3'ECs and of relative polymorphisms correspond to functional regulatory changes. To analyse the polymorphisms of these almost identical regions, it resulted mandatory to identify the presence of divergent sequences, in order to select distinctive primers for specific PCR genomic amplifications. To this aim, we first compared the two entire IgH3'ECs in silicio, utilising the updated GenBank (GB) contigs, then we analysed the two IgH3'ECs by cloning and sequencing amplicons from independent genomes. In silicio analysis showed that several inversions, deletions and short insertions had occurred after the duplication. We analysed in detail, by sequencing specific regions, the polymorphisms occurring in enhancer HS1,2-A (which lies in IgH3'EC-1, 3' to the C alpha-1 gene) and in enhancer HS1,2-B (which lies in IgH3'EC-2, 3' to C alpha-2). Polymorphisms are due to the repetition (occurring one to four times) of a 38-bp sequence present at the 3' of the core of enhancers HS1,2. The structure of both human HS1,2 enhancers has revealed not yet described polymorphic features due to the presence of variable spacer elements separating the 38-bp repetitions and to variable external elements bordering the repetition cluster. We found that one of the external elements gave rise to a divergent allele 3 in the two clusters. The frequency of the different alleles of the two loci varies in the Italian population and allele 3 of both loci are very rare. The analysis of the Callicebus moloch, Gorilla gorilla and Pan troglodytes HS1,2 enhancers showed the transformation from the ancestral structure with the 31- to the 17-by external element in hominids. The relevance of the polymorphisms in the HS1,2 enhancers is due to the variable number of binding sites for the transcription factors: NF-kappa B, CMYB, BSAP1/2, AP1/4, E47, MyoD and mu E5 and thus to the possible influence of these variations on switch, production of Ig and on maturation of B cells. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Quark nuggets search using 2350 Kg gravitational waves aluminum bar detectors
The gravitational wave resonant detectors can be used as detectors of quark
nuggets, like nuclearites (nuclear matter with a strange quark). This search
has been carried out using data from two 2350 Kg, 2 K cooled, aluminum bar
detectors: NAUTILUS, located in Frascati (Italy), and EXPLORER, that was
located in CERN Geneva (CH). Both antennas are equipped with cosmic ray shower
detectors: signals in the bar due to showers are continuously detected and used
to characterize the antenna performances. The bar excitation mechanism is based
on the so called thermo-acoustic effect, studied on dedicated experiments that
use particle beams. This mechanism predicts that vibrations of bars are induced
by the heat deposited in the bar from the particle. The geometrical acceptance
of the bar detectors is 19.5 sr, that is smaller than that of other
detectors used for similar searches. However, the detection mechanism is
completely different and is more straightforward than in other detectors. We
will show the results of ten years of data from NAUTILUS (2003-2012) and 7
years from EXPLORER (2003-2009). The experimental limits we obtain are of
interest because, for nuclearites of mass less than grams, we find a
flux smaller than that one predicted considering nuclearites as dark matter
candidates.Comment: presented to the 33rd International Cosmic Ray Conference Rio de
Janeiro 201
Density correlations in ultracold atomic Fermi gases
We investigate density fluctuations in a coherent ensemble of interacting
fermionic atoms. Adapting the concept of full counting statistics, well-known
from quantum optics and mesoscopic electron transport, we study second-order as
well as higher-order correlators of density fluctuations. Using the mean-field
BCS state to describe the whole interval between the BCS limit and the BEC
limit, we obtain an exact expression for the cumulant-generating function of
the density fluctuations of an atomic cloud. In the two-dimensional case, we
obtain a closed analytical expression. Poissonian fluctuations of a molecular
condensate on the BEC side are strongly suppressed on the BCS side. The size of
the fluctuations in the BCS limit is a direct measure of the pairing potential.
We also discuss the BEC-BCS crossover of the third cumulant and the temperature
dependence of the second cumulant.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. A. New calculation of the
bin statistics of a free Bose gas; updated and extended bibliograph
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