360 research outputs found
On Integrability of spinning particle motion in higher-dimensional black hole spacetimes
We study the motion of a classical spinning particle (with spin degrees of
freedom described by a vector of Grassmann variables) in higher-dimensional
general rotating black hole spacetimes with a cosmological constant. In all
dimensions n we exhibit n bosonic functionally independent integrals of
spinning particle motion, corresponding to explicit and hidden symmetries
generated from the principal conformal Killing--Yano tensor. Moreover, we
demonstrate that in 4-, 5-, 6-, and 7-dimensional black hole spacetimes such
integrals are in involution, proving the bosonic part of the motion integrable.
We conjecture that the same conclusion remains valid in all higher dimensions.
Our result generalizes the result of Page et. al. [hep-th/0611083] on complete
integrability of geodesic motion in these spacetimes.Comment: Version 2: revised version, added references. 5 pages, no figure
Quantum and Classical Dynamics of a BEC in a Large-Period Optical Lattice
We experimentally investigate diffraction of a Rb-87 Bose-Einstein condensate
from a 1D optical lattice. We use a range of lattice periods and timescales,
including those beyond the Raman-Nath limit. We compare the results to quantum
mechanical and classical simulations, with quantitative and qualitative
agreement, respectively. The classical simulation predicts that the envelope of
the time-evolving diffraction pattern is shaped by caustics: singularities in
the phase space density of classical trajectories. This behavior becomes
increasingly clear as the lattice period grows.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Adiabatic Geometric Phase for a General Quantum States
A geometric phase is found for a general quantum state that undergoes
adiabatic evolution. For the case of eigenstates, it reduces to the original
Berry's phase. Such a phase is applicable in both linear and nonlinear quantum
systems. Furthermore, this new phase is related to Hannay's angles as we find
that these angles, a classical concept, can arise naturally in quantum systems.
The results are demonstrated with a two-level model.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Effect of mixing and spatial dimension on the glass transition
We study the influence of composition changes on the glass transition of
binary hard disc and hard sphere mixtures in the framework of mode coupling
theory. We derive a general expression for the slope of a glass transition
line. Applied to the binary mixture in the low concentration limits, this new
method allows a fast prediction of some properties of the glass transition
lines. The glass transition diagram we find for binary hard discs strongly
resembles the random close packing diagram. Compared to 3D from previous
studies, the extension of the glass regime due to mixing is much more
pronounced in 2D where plasticization only sets in at larger size disparities.
For small size disparities we find a stabilization of the glass phase quadratic
in the deviation of the size disparity from unity.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, Phys. Rev. E (in print
Chaos and Order in Models of Black Hole Pairs
Chaos in the orbits of black hole pairs has by now been confirmed by several
independent groups. While the chaotic behavior of binary black hole orbits is
no longer argued, it remains difficult to quantify the importance of chaos to
the evolutionary dynamics of a pair of comparable mass black holes. None of our
existing approximations are robust enough to offer convincing quantitative
conclusions in the most highly nonlinear regime. It is intriguing to note that
in three different approximations to a black hole pair built of a spinning
black hole and a non-spinning companion, two approximations exhibit chaos and
one approximation does not. The fully relativistic scenario of a spinning
test-mass around a Schwarzschild black hole shows chaos, as does the
Post-Newtonian Lagrangian approximation. However, the approximately equivalent
Post-Newtonian Hamiltonian approximation does not show chaos when only one body
spins. It is well known in dynamical systems theory that one system can be
regular while an approximately related system is chaotic, so there is no formal
conflict. However,the physical question remains, Is there chaos for comparable
mass binaries when only one object spins? We are unable to answer this question
given the poor convergence of the Post-Newtonian approximation to the fully
relativistic system. A resolution awaits better approximations that can be
trusted in the highly nonlinear regime
The effect of a velocity barrier on the ballistic transport of Dirac fermions
We propose a novel way to manipulate the transport properties of massless
Dirac fermions by using velocity barriers, defining the region in which the
Fermi velocity, , has a value that differs from the one in the
surrounding background. The idea is based on the fact that when waves travel
accross different media, there are boundary conditions that must be satisfied,
giving rise to Snell's-like laws. We find that the transmission through a
velocity barrier is highly anisotropic, and that perfect transmission always
occurs at normal incidence. When in the barrier is larger that the
velocity outside the barrier, we find that a critical transmission angle
exists, a Brewster-like angle for massless Dirac electrons.Comment: 4.3 pages, 5 figure
Lagrangian theory of structure formation in relativistic cosmology I: Lagrangian framework and definition of a nonperturbative approximation
In this first paper we present a Lagrangian framework for the description of
structure formation in general relativity, restricting attention to
irrotational dust matter. As an application we present a self-contained
derivation of a general-relativistic analogue of Zel'dovich's approximation for
the description of structure formation in cosmology, and compare it with
previous suggestions in the literature. This approximation is then
investigated: paraphrasing the derivation in the Newtonian framework we provide
general-relativistic analogues of the basic system of equations for a single
dynamical field variable and recall the first-order perturbation solution of
these equations. We then define a general-relativistic analogue of Zel'dovich's
approximation and investigate its implications by functionally evaluating
relevant variables, and we address the singularity problem. We so obtain a
possibly powerful model that, although constructed through extrapolation of a
perturbative solution, can be used to put into practice nonperturbatively, e.g.
problems of structure formation, backreaction problems, nonlinear properties of
gravitational radiation, and light-propagation in realistic inhomogeneous
universe models. With this model we also provide the key-building blocks for
initializing a fully relativistic numerical simulation.Comment: 21 pages, content matches published version in PRD, discussion on
singularities added, some formulas added, some rewritten and some correcte
Complete Integrability of Geodesic Motion in General Kerr-NUT-AdS Spacetimes
We explicitly exhibit n-1 constants of motion for geodesics in the general
D-dimensional Kerr-NUT-AdS rotating black hole spacetime, arising from
contractions of even powers of the 2-form obtained by contracting the geodesic
velocity with the dual of the contraction of the velocity with the
(D-2)-dimensional Killing-Yano tensor. These constants of motion are
functionally independent of each other and of the D-n+1 constants of motion
that arise from the metric and the D-n = [(D+1)/2] Killing vectors, making a
total of D independent constants of motion in all dimensions D. The Poisson
brackets of all pairs of these D constants are zero, so geodesic motion in
these spacetimes is completely integrable.Comment: 4 pages. We have now found that the geodesic motion is not just
integrable, but completely integrabl
Comment on "Control landscapes are almost always trap free: a geometric assessment"
We analyze a recent claim that almost all closed, finite dimensional quantum
systems have trap-free (i.e., free from local optima) landscapes (B. Russell
et.al. J. Phys. A: Math. Theor. 50, 205302 (2017)). We point out several errors
in the proof which compromise the authors' conclusion.
Interested readers are highly encouraged to take a look at the "rebuttal"
(see Ref. [1]) of this comment published by the authors of the criticized work.
This "rebuttal" is a showcase of the way the erroneous and misleading
statements under discussion will be wrapped up and injected in their future
works, such as R. L. Kosut et.al, arXiv:1810.04362 [quant-ph] (2018).Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
Adiabatic Theory of Nonlinear Evolution of Quantum States
We present a general theory for adiabatic evolution of quantum states as
governed by the nonlinear Schrodinger equation, and provide examples of
applications with a nonlinear tunneling model for Bose-Einstein condensates.
Our theory not only spells out conditions for adiabatic evolution of
eigenstates, but also characterizes the motion of non-eigenstates which cannot
be obtained from the former in the absence of the superposition principle. We
find that in the adiabatic evolution of non-eigenstates, the Aharonov-Anandan
phases play the role of classical canonical actions.Comment: substantial revision, 5 pages and 3 figure
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