3,057 research outputs found
Mechanism of Molecular Orientation by Single-cycle Pulses
Significant molecular orientation can be achieved by time-symmetric
single-cycle pulses of zero area, in the THz region. We show that in spite of
the existence of a combined time-space symmetry operation, not only large peak
instantaneous orientations but also nonzero time-average orientations over a
rotational period can be obtained. We show that this unexpected phenomenon is
due to interferences among eigenstates of the time-evolution operator, as was
described previously for transport phenomena in quantum ratchets. This
mechanism also works for sequences of identical pulses, spanning a rotational
period. This fact can be used to obtain a net average molecular orientation
regardless of the magnitude of the rotational constant.Comment: Published version may be found at
(URL:http://link.aip.org/link?/JCP/137/044303). Substantial changes with
respect to previous versions, including new titl
Improved Spin Dynamics Simulations of Magnetic Excitations
Using Suzuki-Trotter decompositions of exponential operators we describe new
algorithms for the numerical integration of the equations of motion for
classical spin systems. These techniques conserve spin length exactly and, in
special cases, also conserve the energy and maintain time reversibility. We
investigate integration schemes of up to eighth order and show that these new
algorithms can be used with much larger time steps than a well established
predictor-corrector method. These methods may lead to a substantial speedup of
spin dynamics simulations, however, the choice of which order method to use is
not always straightforward.Comment: J. Mod. Phys. C (in press
Directional States of Symmetric-Top Molecules Produced by Combined Static and Radiative Electric Fields
We show that combined electrostatic and radiative fields can greatly amplify
the directional properties, such as axis orientation and alignment, of
symmetric top molecules. In our computational study, we consider all four
symmetry combinations of the prolate and oblate inertia and polarizability
tensors, as well as the collinear and perpendicular (or tilted) geometries of
the two fields. In, respectively, the collinear or perpendicular fields, the
oblate or prolate polarizability interaction due to the radiative field forces
the permanent dipole into alignment with the static field. Two mechanisms are
found to be responsible for the amplification of the molecules' orientation,
which ensues once the static field is turned on: (a) permanent-dipole coupling
of the opposite-parity tunneling doublets created by the oblate polarizability
interaction in collinear static and radiative fields; (b) hybridization of the
opposite parity states via the polarizability interaction and their coupling by
the permanent dipole interaction to the collinear or perpendicular static
field. In perpendicular fields, the oblate polarizability interaction, along
with the loss of cylindrical symmetry, is found to preclude the wrong-way
orientation, causing all states to become high-field seeking with respect to
the static field. The adiabatic labels of the states in the tilted fields
depend on the adiabatic path taken through the parameter space comprised of the
permanent and induced-dipole interaction parameters and the tilt angle between
the two field vectors
A New Measurement of the Stellar Mass Density at z~5: Implications for the Sources of Cosmic Reionization
We present a new measurement of the integrated stellar mass per comoving
volume at redshift 5 determined via spectral energy fitting drawn from a sample
of 214 photometrically-selected galaxies with z'<26.5 in the southern GOODS
field. Following procedures introduced by Eyles et al. (2005), we estimate
stellar masses for various sub-samples for which reliable and unconfused
Spitzer IRAC detections are available. A spectroscopic sample of 14 of the most
luminous sources with =4.92 provides a firm lower limit to the stellar mass
density of 1e6 Msun/Mpc^3. Several galaxies in this sub-sample have masses of
order 10^11 Msun implying significant earlier activity occurred in massive
systems. We then consider a larger sample whose photometric redshifts in the
publicly-available GOODS-MUSIC catalog lie in the range 4.4 <z 5.6. Before
adopting the GOODS-MUSIC photometric redshifts, we check the accuracy of their
photometry and explore the possibility of contamination by low-z galaxies and
low-mass stars. After excising probable stellar contaminants and using the z'-J
color to exclude any remaining foreground red galaxies, we conclude that 196
sources are likely to be at z~5. The implied mass density from the unconfused
IRAC fraction of this sample, scaled to the total available, is 6e6 Msun/Mpc^3.
We discuss the uncertainties as well as the likelihood that we have
underestimated the true mass density. Including fainter and quiescent sources
the total integrated density could be as high as 1e7 Msun/Mpc^3. Using the
currently available (but highly uncertain) rate of decline in the star
formationhistory over 5 <z< 10, a better fit is obtained for the assembled mass
at z~5 if we admit significant dust extinction at early times or extend the
luminosity function to very faint limits. [abridged]Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ, 39 page
Extreme Barbarism, a Death Cult, and Holy Warriors in Mexico: Societal Warfare South of the Border?
This short essay is about impression—gut feelings combined with a certain amount of analytical skill—about recent trends taking place in Mexico concerning the ongoing criminal insurgencies being waged by the various warring cartels, gangs, and mercenary organizations that have metastasized though out that nation (and in many other regions as well). The authors spent over eight hours sequestered together about a month ago on a five-hundred mile ‗there and back again road trip‘ to attend a training conference as instructors for the Kern County Chiefs of Police. Our talks centered on Mexican Drug Cartels, 3rd Generation Gangs, 3rd Phase Cartels, Criminal Insurgency Theory, and a host of related topics most folks just don‘t normally discuss in polite company. In the car, and at the conference, we were bombarded by Sullivan‘s never ending twitter and social networking news feeds—in Spanish and English—linked to the criminal violence in Mexico. If Dante had been our contemporary, we fear, he could just have easily taken a stroll through some of the cities and towns of Mexico using those news feeds and substituting the imagery for the circles of hell he described in his early 14th century work the Divine Comedy
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