153 research outputs found
Direct molecular dynamics simulation of liquid-solid phase equilibria for two-component plasmas
We determine the liquid-solid phase diagram for carbon-oxygen and oxygen-selenium plasma mixtures using two-phase molecular dynamics simulations. We identify liquid, solid, and interface regions using a bond angle metric. To study finite-size effects, we perform 27 648- and 55 296-ion simulations. To help monitor nonequilibrium effects, we calculate diffusion constants . For the carbon-oxygen system we find that for oxygen ions in the solid is much smaller than for carbon ions and that both diffusion constants are 80 or more times smaller than diffusion constants in the liquid phase. There is excellent agreement between our carbon-oxygen phase diagram and that predicted by Medin and Cumming. This suggests that errors from finite-size and nonequilibrium effects are small and that the carbon-oxygen phase diagram is now accurately known. The oxygen-selenium system is a simple two-component model for more complex rapid proton capture nucleosynthesis ash compositions for an accreting neutron star. Diffusion of oxygen, in a predominantly selenium crystal, is remarkably fast, comparable to diffusion in the liquid phase. We find a somewhat lower melting temperature for the oxygen-selenium system than that predicted by Medin and Cumming. This is probably because of electron screening effects
On symmetries of Chern-Simons and BF topological theories
We describe constructing solutions of the field equations of Chern-Simons and
topological BF theories in terms of deformation theory of locally constant
(flat) bundles. Maps of flat connections into one another (dressing
transformations) are considered. A method of calculating (nonlocal) dressing
symmetries in Chern-Simons and topological BF theories is formulated
Formation of hot heavy nuclei in supernova explosions
We point out that during the supernova II type explosion the thermodynamical
condition of stellar matter between the protoneutron star and the shock front
corresponds to the nuclear liquid-gas phase coexistence region, which can be
investigated in nuclear multifragmentation reactions. We have demonstrated,
that neutron-rich hot heavy nuclei can be produced in this region. The
production of these nuclei may influence dynamics of the explosion and
contribute to the synthesis of heavy elements.Comment: 6 pages with 4 figure
Asymmetric neutrino emission due to neutrino-nucleon scatterings in supernova magnetic fields
We derive the cross section of neutrino-nucleon scatterings in supernova
magnetic fields, including weak-magnetism and recoil corrections. Since the
weak interaction violates the parity, the scattering cross section
asymmetrically depends on the directions of the neutrino momenta to the
magnetic field; the origin of pulsar kicks may be explained by the mechanism.
An asymmetric neutrino emission (a drift flux) due to neutrino-nucleon
scatterings is absent at the leading level of , where
is the nucleon magneton, is the magnetic field strength, and is
the matter temperature at a neutrinosphere. This is because at this level the
drift flux of the neutrinos are exactly canceled by that of the antineutrinos.
Hence, the relevant asymmetry in the neutrino emission is suppressed by much
smaller coefficient of , where is the nucleon mass;
detailed form of the relevant drift flux is also derived from the scattering
cross section, using a simple diffusion approximation. It appears that the
asymmetric neutrino emission is too small to induce the observed pulsar kicks.
However, we note the fact that the drift flux is proportional to the deviation
of the neutrino distribution function from the value of thermal equilibrium at
neutrinosphere. Since the deviation can be large for non-electron neutrinos, it
is expected that there occurs cancellation between the deviation and the small
suppression factor of . Using a simple parameterization,
we show that the drift flux due to neutrino-nucleon scatterings may be
comparable to the leading term due to beta processes with nucleons, which has
been estimated to give a relevant kick velocity when the magnetic field is
sufficiently strong as -- G.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure. Accepted by Physical Review
Cosmological Plebanski theory
We consider the cosmological symmetry reduction of the Plebanski action as a
toy-model to explore, in this simple framework, some issues related to loop
quantum gravity and spin-foam models. We make the classical analysis of the
model and perform both path integral and canonical quantizations. As for the
full theory, the reduced model admits two types of classical solutions:
topological and gravitational ones. The quantization mixes these two solutions,
which prevents the model to be equivalent to standard quantum cosmology.
Furthermore, the topological solution dominates at the classical limit. We also
study the effect of an Immirzi parameter in the model.Comment: 20 page
Perfect state distinguishability and computational speedups with postselected closed timelike curves
Bennett and Schumacher's postselected quantum teleportation is a model of
closed timelike curves (CTCs) that leads to results physically different from
Deutsch's model. We show that even a single qubit passing through a
postselected CTC (P-CTC) is sufficient to do any postselected quantum
measurement, and we discuss an important difference between "Deutschian" CTCs
(D-CTCs) and P-CTCs in which the future existence of a P-CTC might affect the
present outcome of an experiment. Then, based on a suggestion of Bennett and
Smith, we explicitly show how a party assisted by P-CTCs can distinguish a set
of linearly independent quantum states, and we prove that it is not possible
for such a party to distinguish a set of linearly dependent states. The power
of P-CTCs is thus weaker than that of D-CTCs because the Holevo bound still
applies to circuits using them regardless of their ability to conspire in
violating the uncertainty principle. We then discuss how different notions of a
quantum mixture that are indistinguishable in linear quantum mechanics lead to
dramatically differing conclusions in a nonlinear quantum mechanics involving
P-CTCs. Finally, we give explicit circuit constructions that can efficiently
factor integers, efficiently solve any decision problem in the intersection of
NP and coNP, and probabilistically solve any decision problem in NP. These
circuits accomplish these tasks with just one qubit traveling back in time, and
they exploit the ability of postselected closed timelike curves to create
grandfather paradoxes for invalid answers.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures; Foundations of Physics (2011
BF models, Duality and Bosonization on higher genus surfaces
The generating functional of two dimensional field theories coupled to
fermionic fields and conserved currents is computed in the general case when
the base manifold is a genus g compact Riemann surface. The lagrangian density
is written in terms of a globally defined 1-form and a
multi-valued scalar field . Consistency conditions on the periods of
have to be imposed. It is shown that there exist a non-trivial dependence of
the generating functional on the topological restrictions imposed to . In
particular if the periods of the field are constrained to take values , with any integer, then the partition function is independent of the
chosen spin structure and may be written as a sum over all the spin structures
associated to the fermions even when one started with a fixed spin structure.
These results are then applied to the functional bosonization of fermionic
fields on higher genus surfaces. A bosonized form of the partition function
which takes care of the chosen spin structure is obtainedComment: 17 page
Statistical approach for supernova matter
We formulate a statistical model for description of nuclear composition and
equation of state of stellar matter at subnuclear densities and temperature up
to 20 MeV, which are expected during the collapse and explosion of massive
stars. The model includes nuclear, electromagnetic and weak interactions
between all kinds of particles, under condition of statistical equilibrium. We
emphasize importance of realistic description of the nuclear composition for
understanding stellar dynamics and nucleosynthesis. It is demonstrated that the
experience accumulated in studies of nuclear multifragmentation reactions can
be used for better modelling properties of stellar medium.Comment: 35 pages including 23 figures, submitted to Nuclear Physics
Symmetries of topological field theories in the BV-framework
Topological field theories of Schwarz-type generally admit symmetries whose
algebra does not close off-shell, e.g. the basic symmetries of BF models or
vector supersymmetry of the gauge-fixed action for Chern-Simons theory (this
symmetry being at the origin of the perturbative finiteness of the theory). We
present a detailed discussion of all these symmetries within the algebraic
approach to the Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism. Moreover, we discuss the general
algebraic construction of topological models of both Schwarz- and Witten-type.Comment: 30 page
Equation of State for Hot and Dense Matter: -- Model with Scaled Hadron Masses and Couplings
The proposed earlier relativistic mean-field model with hadron masses and
coupling constants depending on the -meson field is generalized to
finite temperatures. Within this approach we simulate the in-medium behavior of
the hadron masses motivated by the Brown-Rho scaling. The high-lying baryon
resonances and boson excitations as well as excitations of the ,
and fields interacting via mean fields are incorporated into
this scheme. Thermodynamic properties of hot and dense hadronic matter are
elaborated with the constructed equation of state. Even at zero baryon density,
effective masses of --- excitations abruptly drop down
for T\gsim 170 MeV and reach zero at a critical temperature
MeV. Below (at MeV) the
specific heat gets a peak like at crossover. We demonstrate that our EoS can be
matched with that computed on the lattice for high temperatures provided the
baryon resonance couplings with nucleon are partially suppressed. In this case
the quark liquid would masquerade as the hadron one. The model is applied to
description of heavy ion collisions in a broad collision energy range. It might
be especially helpful for studying phase diagram in the region near possible
phase transitions.Comment: 53 pages, 16 figures; minor changes made, references adde
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