277 research outputs found
Spin-Current Relaxation Time in Spin-Polarized Heisenberg Paramagnets
We study the spatial Fourier transform of the spin correlation function
G_q(t) in paramagnetic quantum crystals by direct simulation of a 1d lattice of
atoms interacting via a nearest-neighbor Heisenberg exchange Hamiltonian. Since
it is not practical to diagonalize the s=1/2 exchange Hamiltonian for a lattice
which is of sufficient size to study long-wavelength (hydrodynamic)
fluctuations, we instead study the s -> infinity limit and treat each spin as a
vector with a classical equation of motion. The simulations give a detailed
picture of the correlation function G_q(t) and its time derivatives. At high
polarization, there seems to be a hierarchy of frequency scales: the local
exchange frequency, a wavelength-independent relaxation rate 1/tau that
vanishes at large polarization P ->1, and a wavelength-dependent spin-wave
frequency proportional to q^2. This suggests a form for the correlation
function which modifies the spin diffusion coefficients obtained in a moments
calculation by Cowan and Mullin, who used a standard Gaussian ansatz for the
second derivative of the correlation function.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Fission widths of hot nuclei from Langevin dynamics
Fission dynamics of excited nuclei is studied in the framework of Langevin
equation. The one body wall-and-window friction is used as the dissipative
force in the Langevin equation. In addition to the usual wall formula friction,
the chaos weighted wall formula developed earlier to account for
nonintegrability of single-particle motion within the nuclear volume is also
considered here. The fission rate calculated with the chaos weighted wall
formula is found to be faster by about a factor of two than that obtained with
the usual wall friction. The systematic dependence of fission width on
temperature and spin of the fissioning nucleus is investigated and a simple
parametric form of fission width is obtained.Comment: RevTex, 12 pages including 9 Postscript figure
Prescission neutron multiplicity and fission probability from Langevin dynamics of nuclear fission
A theoretical model of one-body nuclear friction which was developed earlier,
namely the chaos-weighted wall formula, is applied to a dynamical description
of compound nuclear decay in the framework of the Langevin equation coupled
with statistical evaporation of light particles and photons. We have used both
the usual wall formula friction and its chaos-weighted version in the Langevin
equation to calculate the fission probability and prescission neutron
multiplicity for the compound nuclei W, Pt, Pb,
Fr, Th, and Es. We have also obtained the contributions
of the presaddle and postsaddle neutrons to the total prescission multiplicity.
A detailed analysis of our results leads us to conclude that the chaos-weighted
wall formula friction can adequately describe the fission dynamics in the
presaddle region. This friction, however, turns out to be too weak to describe
the postsaddle dynamics properly. This points to the need for a suitable
explanation for the enhanced neutron emission in the postsaddle stage of
nuclear fission.Comment: RevTex, 14 pages including 5 Postscript figures, results improved by
using a different potential, conclusions remain unchanged, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
International variation in the definition of ‘main condition' in ICD-coded health data
Hospital-based medical records are abstracted to create International Classification of Disease (ICD) coded discharge health data in many countries. The ‘main condition' is not defined in a consistent manner internationally. Some countries employ a ‘reason for admission' rule as the basis for the main condition, while other countries employ a ‘resource use' rule. A few countries have recently transitioned from one of these approaches to the other. The definition of ‘main condition' in such ICD data matters when it is used to define a disease cohort to assign diagnosis-related groups and to perform risk adjustment. We propose a method of harmonizing the international definition to enable researchers and international organizations using ICD-coded health data to aggregate or compare hospital care and outcomes across countries in a consistent manner. Inter-observer reliability of alternative harmonization approaches should be evaluated before finalizing the definition and adopting it worldwid
Time evolution of condensed state of interacting bosons with reduced number fluctuation in a leaky box
We study the time evolution of the Bose-Einstein condensate of interacting
bosons confined in a leaky box, when its number fluctuation is initially (t=0)
suppressed. We take account of quantum fluctuations of all modes, including k =
0. We identify a ``natural coordinate'' b_0 of the interacting bosons, by which
many physical properties can be simply described. Using b_0, we successfully
define the cosine and sine operators for interacting many bosons. The
wavefunction, which we call the ``number state of interacting bosons'' (NSIB),
of the ground state that has a definite number N of interacting bosons can be
represented simply as a number state of b_0. We evaluate the time evolution of
the reduced density operator \rho(t) of the bosons in the box with a finite
leakage flux J, in the early time stage for which Jt << N. It is shown that
\rho(t) evolves from a single NSIB at t = 0, into a classical mixture of NSIBs
of various values of N at t > 0. We define a new state called the
``number-phase squeezed state of interacting bosons'' (NPIB). It is shown that
\rho(t) for t>0 can be rewritten as the phase-randomized mixture (PRM) of
NPIBs. It is also shown that the off-diagonal long-range order (ODLRO) and the
order parameter defined by it do not distinguish the NSIB and NPIB. On the
other hand, the other order parameter \Psi, defined as the expectation value of
the boson operator, has different values among these states. For each element
of the PRM of NPIBs, we show that \Psi evolves from zero to a finite value very
quickly. Namely, after the leakage of only two or three bosons, each element
acquires a full, stable and definite (non-fluctuating) value of \Psi.Comment: 25 pages including 3 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. A (1999). The
title is changed to stress the time evolution. Sections II, III and IV of the
previous manuscript have been combined into one section. The introduction and
summary of the previous manuscript have been combined into the Introduction
and Summary. The names and abbreviations of quantum states are changed to
stress that they are for interacting many bosons. More references are cite
Crossover and scaling in a nearly antiferromagnetic Fermi liquid in two dimensions
We consider two-dimensional Fermi liquids in the vicinity of a quantum
transition to a phase with commensurate, antiferromagnetic long-range order.
Depending upon the Fermi surface topology, mean-field spin-density-wave theory
predicts two different types of such transitions, with mean-field dynamic
critical exponents (when the Fermi surface does not cross the magnetic
zone boundary, type ) and (when the Fermi surface crosses the magnetic
zone boundary, type ). The type system only displays behavior at
all energies and its scaling properties are similar (though not identical) to
those of an insulating Heisenberg antiferromagnet. Under suitable conditions
precisely stated in this paper, the type system displays a crossover from
relaxational behavior at low energies to type behavior at high energies. A
scaling hypothesis is proposed to describe this crossover: we postulate a
universal scaling function which determines the entire, temperature-,
wavevector-, and frequency-dependent, dynamic, staggered spin susceptibility in
terms of 4 measurable, , parameters (determining the distance, energy, and
order parameter scales, plus one crossover parameter). The scaling function
contains the full scaling behavior in all regimes for both type and
systems. The crossover behavior of the uniform susceptibility and the specific
heat is somewhat more complicated and is also discussed. Explicit computation
of the crossover functions is carried out in a large expansion on a
mean-field model. Some new results for the critical properties on the ordered
side of the transition are also obtained in a spin-density wave formalism. The
possible relevance of our results to the doped cuprate compounds is briefly
discussed.Comment: 20 pages, REVTeX, 6 figures (uuencoded compressed PostScript file for
figures is appended
Experiments on subcooled flow boiling in I.C. engine-like conditions at low flow velocities
[EN] Subcooled boiling flow is specially attractive for engine cooling system design, as no essential changes in its architecture are required while it is still possible to take advantage of the highest rates of heat transfer associated with nucleate boiling, mostly at high engine loads. In this paper, experiments on subcooled boiling flow in representative temperature conditions were conducted with a usual engine coolant in the low velocity range, for which little information is available, even if it may be relevant when advanced thermal management strategies are used. The results were analyzed by comparison with a reference Chen-type model which provided reasonable results for relatively low wall temperatures, but with noticeable discrepancies at higher wall temperatures. Analysis of the deviations observed indicated a significant influence of the Prandtl number on the suppression factor, and the inclusion into the model of a first estimate of this effect produced a noticeable improvement in its results, thus suggesting that one such modified additive model may be useful for practical engine cooling applications. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.This work has been supported by Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion through Grant TRA2010-16205. O. Cornejo is indebted to Senacyt Panama for their support.Torregrosa, AJ.; Broatch, A.; Olmeda, P.; Cornejo, O. (2014). Experiments on subcooled flow boiling in I.C. engine-like conditions at low flow velocities. Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science. 52:347-354. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2013.10.004S3473545
Positivity of relative canonical bundles and applications
Given a family of canonically polarized manifolds, the
unique K\"ahler-Einstein metrics on the fibers induce a hermitian metric on the
relative canonical bundle . We use a global elliptic
equation to show that this metric is strictly positive on , unless
the family is infinitesimally trivial.
For degenerating families we show that the curvature form on the total space
can be extended as a (semi-)positive closed current. By fiber integration it
follows that the generalized Weil-Petersson form on the base possesses an
extension as a positive current. We prove an extension theorem for hermitian
line bundles, whose curvature forms have this property. This theorem can be
applied to a determinant line bundle associated to the relative canonical
bundle on the total space. As an application the quasi-projectivity of the
moduli space of canonically polarized varieties
follows.
The direct images , , carry natural hermitian metrics. We prove an
explicit formula for the curvature tensor of these direct images. We apply it
to the morphisms that are induced by the Kodaira-Spencer map and obtain a differential
geometric proof for hyperbolicity properties of .Comment: Supercedes arXiv:0808.3259v4 and arXiv:1002.4858v2. To appear in
Invent. mat
Renormalization group and nonequilibrium action in stochastic field theory
We investigate the renormalization group approach to nonequilibrium field
theory. We show that it is possible to derive nontrivial renormalization group
flow from iterative coarse graining of a closed-time-path action. This
renormalization group is different from the usual in quantum field theory
textbooks, in that it describes nontrivial noise and dissipation. We work out a
specific example where the variation of the closed-time-path action leads to
the so-called Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation, and show that the renormalization
group obtained by coarse graining this action, agrees with the dynamical
renormalization group derived by directly coarse graining the equations of
motion.Comment: 33 pages, 3 figures included in the text. Revised; one reference
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