TY - JOUR A1 - Feudel, Fred A1 - Bergemann, Kay A1 - Tuckerman, Laurette S. A1 - Egbers, C. A1 - Futterer, B. A1 - Gellert, Marcus A1 - Hollerbach, Rainer T1 - Convection patterns in a spherical fluid shell JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - Symmetry-breaking bifurcations have been studied for convection in a nonrotating spherical shell whose outer radius is twice the inner radius, under the influence of an externally applied central force field with a radial dependence proportional to 1/r(5). This work is motivated by the GeoFlow experiment, which is performed under microgravity condition at the International Space Station where this particular central force can be generated. In order to predict the observable patterns, simulations together with path-following techniques and stability computations have been applied. Branches of axisymmetric, octahedral, and seven-cell solutions have been traced. The bifurcations producing them have been identified and their stability ranges determined. At higher Rayleigh numbers, time-periodic states with a complex spatiotemporal symmetry are found, which we call breathing patterns. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.83.046304 SN - 1539-3755 VL - 83 IS - 4 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Richter, Philipp A1 - Krause, F. A1 - Fechner, Cora A1 - Charlton, Jane C. A1 - Murphy, M. T. T1 - The neutral gas extent of galaxies as derived from weak intervening Ca II absorbers JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - We present a systematic study of weak intervening CaII absorbers at low redshift (z < 0.5), based on the analysis of archival high-resolution (R >= 45 000) optical spectra of 304 quasars and active galactic nuclei observed with VLT/UVES. Along a total redshift path of Delta z approximate to 100 we detected 23 intervening CaII absorbers in both the CaII H & K lines, with rest frame equivalent widths W-r,W-3934 = 15-799 m angstrom and column densities log N(CaII) = 11.25-13.04 (obtained by fitting Voigt-profile components). We obtain a bias-corrected number density of weak intervening CaII absorbers of dN/dz = 0.117 +/- 0.044 at < z(abs)> = 0.35 for absorbers with log N(CaII) >= 11.65 (W-r,W-3934 >= 32 m angstrom). This is similar to 2.6 times the value obtained for damped Lyman alpha absorbers (DLAs) at low redshift. All CaII absorbers in our sample show associated absorption by other low ions such as MgII and FeII; 45 percent of them have associated NaI absorption. From ionization modelling we conclude that intervening CaII absorption with log N(CaII) >= 11.5 arises in DLAs, sub-DLAs and Lyman-limit systems (LLS) at HI column densities of log N(HI) >= 17.4. Using supplementary HI information for nine of the absorbers we find that the CaII/HI ratio decreases strongly with increasing HI column density, indicating a column-density-dependent dust depletion of Ca. The observed column density distribution function of CaII absorption components follows a relatively steep power law, f(N) proportional to N-beta, with a slope of -beta = -1.68, which again points towards an enhanced dust depletion in high column density systems. The relatively large cross section of these absorbers together with the frequent detection of CaII absorption in high-velocity clouds (HVCs) in the halo of the Milky Way suggests that a considerable fraction of the intervening CaII systems trace (partly) neutral gas structures in the halos and circumgalactic environment of galaxies (i.e., they are HVC analogs). Based on the recently measured detection rate of CaII absorption in the Milky Way HVCs we estimate that the mean (projected) CaII covering fraction of galaxies and their gaseous halos is < f(c,CaII)> = 0.33. Using this value and considering all galaxies with luminosities L >= 0.05 L-star we calculate that the characteristic radial extent of (partly) neutral gas clouds with log N(HI) >= 17.4 around low-redshift galaxies is R-HVC approximate to 55 kpc. KW - galaxies: halos KW - galaxies: formation KW - galaxies: ISM KW - intergalactic medium KW - quasars: absorption lines Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201015566 SN - 0004-6361 VL - 528 IS - 4 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Markus P. A1 - Gross, David A1 - Eisert, Jens T1 - Concentration of Measure for Quantum States with a Fixed Expectation Value JF - Communications in mathematical physics N2 - Given some observable H on a finite-dimensional quantum system, we investigate the typical properties of random state vectors vertical bar psi >> that have a fixed expectation value < psi vertical bar H vertical bar psi > = E with respect to H. Under some conditions on the spectrum, we prove that this manifold of quantum states shows a concentration of measure phenomenon: any continuous function on this set is almost everywhere close to its mean. We also give a method to estimate the corresponding expectation values analytically, and we prove a formula for the typical reduced density matrix in the case that H is a sum of local observables. We discuss the implications of our results as new proof tools in quantum information theory and to study phenomena in quantum statistical mechanics. As a by-product, we derive a method to sample the resulting distribution numerically, which generalizes the well-known Gaussian method to draw random states from the sphere. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00220-011-1205-1 SN - 0010-3616 VL - 303 IS - 3 SP - 785 EP - 824 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mann, R. B. A1 - Young, M. B. A1 - Fuüntes-Schuller, I. T1 - A perturbative approach to inelastic collisions in a Bose-Einstein condensate JF - Journal of physics : B, Atomic, molecular and optical physics N2 - It has recently been discovered that for certain rates of mode-exchange collisions analytic solutions can be found for a Hamiltonian describing the two-mode Bose-Einstein condensate. We proceed to study the behaviour of the system using perturbation theory if the coupling constants only approximately match these parameter constraints. We find that the model is robust to such perturbations. We study the effects of degeneracy on the perturbations and find that the induced changes differ greatly from the non-degenerate case. We also model inelastic collisions that result in particle loss or condensate decay as external perturbations and use this formalism to examine the effects of three-body recombination and background collisions. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0953-4075/44/8/085301 SN - 0953-4075 VL - 44 IS - 8 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Valleriani, Angelo A1 - Zhang, Gong A1 - Nagar, Apoorva A1 - Ignatova, Zoya A1 - Lipowsky, Reinhard T1 - Length-dependent translation of messenger RNA by ribosomes JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - A simple measure for the efficiency of protein synthesis by ribosomes is provided by the steady state amount of protein per messenger RNA (mRNA), the so-called translational ratio, which is proportional to the translation rate. Taking the degradation of mRNA into account, we show theoretically that both the translation rate and the translational ratio decrease with increasing mRNA length, in agreement with available experimental data for the prokaryote Escherichia coli. We also show that, compared to prokaryotes, mRNA degradation in eukaryotes leads to a less rapid decrease of the translational ratio. This finding is consistent with the fact that, compared to prokaryotes, eukaryotes tend to have longer proteins. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.83.042903 SN - 1539-3755 VL - 83 IS - 4 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tepper-Garcia, Thorsten A1 - Richter, Philipp A1 - Schaye, Joop A1 - Booth, C. M. A1 - Vecchia, Claudio Dalla A1 - Theuns, Tom A1 - Wiersma, Robert P. C. T1 - Absorption signatures of warm-hot gas at low redshift o vi JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - We investigate the origin and physical properties of O vi absorbers at low redshift (z = 0.25) using a subset of cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations (OWLS) project. Intervening O vi absorbers are believed to trace shock-heated gas in the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) and may thus play a key role in the search for the missing baryons in the present-day Universe. When compared to observations, the predicted distributions of the different O vi line parameters (column density, Doppler parameter, rest equivalent width W-r) from our simulations exhibit a lack of strong O vi absorbers, a discrepancy that has also been found by Oppenheimer & Dave. This suggests that physical processes on subgrid scales (e.g. turbulence) may strongly influence the observed properties of O vi systems. We find that the intervening O vi absorption arises mainly in highly metal enriched (10-1 < Z/Z(circle dot) less than or similar to 1) gas at typical overdensities of 1 < /<<>> less than or similar to 102. One-third of the O vi absorbers in our simulation are found to trace gas at temperatures T < 105 K, while the rest arises in gas at higher temperatures, most of them around T = 105.3 +/- 0.5 K. These temperatures are much higher than inferred by Oppenheimer & Dave, probably because that work did not take the suppression of metal-line cooling by the photoionizing background radiation into account. While the O vi resides in a similar region of (, T)-space as much of the shock-heated baryonic matter, the vast majority of this gas has a lower metal content and does not give rise to detectable O vi absorption. As a consequence of the patchy metal distribution, O vi absorbers in our simulations trace only a very small fraction of the cosmic baryons (< 2 per cent) and the cosmic metals. Instead, these systems presumably trace previously shock-heated, metal-rich material from galactic winds that is now mixing with the ambient gas and cooling. The common approach of comparing O vi and H i column densities to estimate the physical conditions in intervening absorbers from QSO observations may be misleading, as most of the H i (and most of the gas mass) is not physically connected with the high-metallicity patches that give rise to the O vi absorption. KW - methods: numerical KW - galaxies: formation KW - intergalactic medium KW - quasars: absorption lines KW - cosmology: theory Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.18123.x SN - 0035-8711 VL - 413 IS - 1 SP - 190 EP - 212 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Hans-Jürgen T1 - Gauss-Bonnet lagrangian G lnG and cosmological exact solutions JF - Physical review : D, Particles, fields, gravitation, and cosmology N2 - For the Lagrangian L = G lnG where G is the Gauss-Bonnet curvature scalar we deduce the field equation and solve it in closed form for 3-flat Friedmann models using a state-finder parametrization. Further we show that among all Lagrangians F(G) this L is the only one not having the form G(r) with a real constant r but possessing a scale-invariant field equation. This turns out to be one of its analogies to f(R) theories in two-dimensional space-time. In the appendix, we systematically list several formulas for the decomposition of the Riemann tensor in arbitrary dimensions n, which are applied in the main deduction for n = 4. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.83.083513 SN - 1550-7998 VL - 83 IS - 8 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Beye, Martin A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - A soft X-ray approach to electron-phonon interactions beyond the Born-Oppenheimer approximation JF - Journal of electron spectroscopy and related phenomena : the international journal on theoretical and experimental aspects of electron spectroscopy N2 - With modern soft X-ray methods, the whole field of electron-phonon interactions becomes accessible directly in the ultrafast time domain with ultrashort pulsed X-ray sources, as well as in the energy domain through modern highly resolving spectrometers. The well-known core-hole clock approach plays an intermediate role, resolving energetic and temporal features at the same time. In this perspective paper, we review several experiments to illustrate the modern advances in the selective study of electron-phonon interactions as fundamentally determining ingredients for materials properties. We present the different complementary approaches that can be taken with soft X-ray methods to conquer this field beyond the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. KW - Electron-phonon coupling KW - Resonant inelastic X-ray scattering KW - X-ray emission spectroscopy KW - Near edge X-ray absorption fine structure Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2010.12.032 SN - 0368-2048 VL - 184 IS - 3-6 SP - 313 EP - 317 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Campbell, Earl T. T1 - Catalysis and activation of magic states in fault-tolerant architectures JF - Physical review : A, Atomic, molecular, and optical physics N2 - In many architectures for fault-tolerant quantum computing universality is achieved by a combination of Clifford group unitary operators and preparation of suitable nonstabilizer states, the so-called magic states. Universality is possible even for some fairly noisy nonstabilizer states, as distillation can convert many noisy copies into fewer purer magic states. Here we propose protocols that exploit multiple species of magic states in surprising ways. These protocols provide examples of previously unobserved phenomena that are analogous to catalysis and activation well known in entanglement theory. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.83.032317 SN - 1050-2947 VL - 83 IS - 3 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schaefer, Edith A1 - Westendorf, Christian A1 - Bodenschatz, Eberhard A1 - Beta, Carsten A1 - Geil, Burkhard A1 - Janshoff, Andreas T1 - Shape oscillations of dictyostelium discoideum cells on ultramicroelectrodes monitored by impedance analysis JF - Small Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.201001955 SN - 1613-6810 VL - 7 IS - 6 SP - 723 EP - 726 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER -