165,136 research outputs found
A Study of Anyon Statistics by Breit Hamiltonian Formalism
We study the anyon statistics of a dimensional Maxwell-Chern-Simons
(MCS) gauge theory by using a systemmetic metheod, the Breit Hamiltonian
formalism.Comment: 25 pages, LATE
Decay Modes of the Hoyle State in
Recent experimental results give an upper limit less than 0.043\% (95\% C.L.)
to the direct decay of the Hoyle state into 3 respect to the sequential
decay into {Be}+. We performed one and two-dimensional tunneling
calculations to estimate such a ratio and found it to be more than one order of
magnitude smaller than experiment depending on the range of the nuclear force.
This is within high statistics experimental capabilities. Our results can also
be tested by measuring the decay modes of high excitation energy states of
C where the ratio of direct to sequential decay might reach 10\% at
(C)=10.3 MeV. The link between a Bose Einstein Condensate (BEC) and
the direct decay of the Hoyle state is also addressed. We discuss a
hypothetical `Efimov state' at (C)=7.458 MeV, which would mainly
{\it sequentially} decay with 3 of {\it equal energies}: a
counterintuitive result of tunneling. Such a state, if it would exist, is at
least 8 orders of magnitude less probable than the Hoyle's, thus below the
sensitivity of recent and past experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Phys. Lett.
Valley-kink in Bilayer Graphene at : A Charge Density Signature for Quantum Hall Ferromagnetism
We investigate interaction-induced valley domain walls in bilayer graphene in
the quantum Hall state, subject to a perpendicular electric field that
is antisymmetric across a line in the sample. Such a state can be realized in a
double-gated suspended sample, where the electric field changes sign across a
line in the middle. The non-interacting energy spectrum of the ground state is
characterized by a sharp domain wall between two valley-polarized regions.
Using the Hartree-Fock approximation, we find that the Coulomb interaction
opens a gap between the two lowest-lying states near the Fermi level, yielding
a smooth domain wall with a kink configuration in the valley index. Our results
suggest the possibility to visualize the domain wall via measuring the charge
density difference between the two graphene layers, which we find exhibits a
characteristic pattern. The width of the kink and the resulting pattern can be
tuned by the interplay between the magnetic field and gate electric fields
G\"{o}del-type universes in f(R) gravity
The gravity theories provide an alternative way to explain the current
cosmic acceleration without a dark energy matter component. If gravity is
governed by a theory a number of issues should be reexamined in this
framework, including the violation of causality problem on nonlocal scale. We
examine the question as to whether the gravity theories permit
space-times in which the causality is violated. We show that the field
equations of these gravity theories do not exclude solutions with
breakdown of causality for a physically well-motivated perfect-fluid matter
content. We demonstrate that every perfect-fluid G\"{o}del-type solution of a
generic gravity satisfying the condition is necessarily
isometric to the G\"odel geometry, and therefore presents violation of
causality. This result extends a theorem on G\"{o}del-type models, which has
been established in the context of general relativity. We also derive an
expression for the critical radius (beyond which the causality is
violated) for an arbitrary theory, making apparent that the violation of
causality depends on both the gravity theory and the matter content. As
an illustration, we concretely take a recent gravity theory that is free
from singularities of the Ricci scalar and is cosmologically viable, and show
that this theory accommodates noncausal as well as causal G\"odel-type
solutions.Comment: 7 pages, V3: Version to appear in Phys. Rev. D (2009), typos
corrected, the generality of our main results is emphasized. The illustrative
character of a particular theory is also made explici
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A Palette of Deepened Emotions: Exploring Emotional Challenge in Virtual Reality Games
Recent work introduced the notion of âemotional challengeâpromising for understanding more unique and diverse player experiences (PX). Although emotional challenge has immediately attracted HCI researchersâ attention, the concept has not been experimentally explored, especially in virtual reality (VR), one of the latest gaming environments. We conducted two experiments to investigate how emotional challenge affects PX when separately from or jointly with conventional challenge in VR and PC conditions. We found that relatively exclusive emotional challenge induced a wider range of different emotions in both conditions, while the adding of emotional challenge broadened emotional responses only in VR. In both experiments, VR significantly enhanced the measured PX of emotional responses, appreciation, immersion and presence. Our findings indicate that VR may be an ideal medium to present emotional challenge and also extend the understanding of emotional (and conventional) challenge in video games
Analysis and interpretation of high transverse entanglement in optical parametric down conversion
Quantum entanglement associated with transverse wave vectors of down
conversion photons is investigated based on the Schmidt decomposition method.
We show that transverse entanglement involves two variables: orbital angular
momentum and transverse frequency. We show that in the monochromatic limit high
values of entanglement are closely controlled by a single parameter resulting
from the competition between (transverse) momentum conservation and
longitudinal phase matching. We examine the features of the Schmidt eigenmodes,
and indicate how entanglement can be enhanced by suitable mode selection
methods.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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