5,122 research outputs found
Joint determination of orbits of spacecraft and moons of Mars by optical sighting of the moons
Scanning optical system to provide attitude and trajectory of unmanned spacecraft during orbit about Mar
Form factor expansion of the row and diagonal correlation functions of the two dimensional Ising model
We derive and prove exponential and form factor expansions of the row
correlation function and the diagonal correlation function of the two
dimensional Ising model
About a possible 3rd order phase transition at T=0 in 4D gluodynamics
We revisit the question of the convergence of lattice perturbation theory for
a pure SU(3) lattice gauge theory in 4 dimensions. Using a series for the
average plaquette up to order 10 in the weak coupling parameter beta^{-1}, we
show that the analysis of the extrapolated ratio and the extrapolated slope
suggests the possibility of a non-analytical power behavior of the form
(1/\beta -1/5.7(1))^{1.0(1)}, in agreement with another analysis based on the
same asumption. This would imply that the third derivative of the free energy
density diverges near beta =5.7. We show that the peak in the third derivative
of the free energy present on 4^4 lattices disappears if the size of the
lattice is increased isotropically up to a 10^4 lattice. On the other hand, on
4 x L^3 lattices, a jump in the third derivative persists when L increases. Its
location coincides with the onset of a non-zero average for the Polyakov loop.
We show that the apparent contradiction at zero temperature can be resolved by
moving the singularity in the complex 1/\beta plane. If the imaginary part of
the location of the singularity Gamma is within the range 0.001< Gamma < 0.01,
it is possible to limit the second derivative of P within an acceptable range
without affecting drastically the behavior of the perturbative coefficients. We
discuss the possibility of checking the existence of these complex
singularities by using the strong coupling expansion or calculating the zeroes
of the partition function.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, contains a resolution of the main paradox and a
discussion of possible check
On the elimination of the polarization bias of the luminescence or transient absorption of photoexcited isotropic solutions.
The photoluminescence from isotropic solutions and the light absorption by photogenerated species in isotropic solutions are in general partially polarized. In the case of electric-dipole transitions, the polarization bias can be represented as the product of a sample-dependent factor and a geometrical factor G for arbitrary experimental arrangements; G depends only on the orientation of the polarizers in the excitation beam and in the luminescence beam. G = 0 is a sufficient condition for the elimination of the polarization bias. The formalism is extended to unpolarized excitation and/or detection. The condition G = 0 is independent of ground-state depletion due to polarized or unpolarized excitation. The rotation of monochromators is introduced as a new experimental parameter. All known experimental configurations are treated in a systematic way. New configurations are proposed for surface excitation and for a quantum counter. The main results apply also to transient-absorption spectroscopy
The 1999 Heineman Prize Address- Integrable models in statistical mechanics: The hidden field with unsolved problems
In the past 30 years there have been extensive discoveries in the theory of
integrable statistical mechanical models including the discovery of non-linear
differential equations for Ising model correlation functions, the theory of
random impurities, level crossing transitions in the chiral Potts model and the
use of Rogers-Ramanujan identities to generalize our concepts of Bose/Fermi
statistics. Each of these advances has led to the further discovery of major
unsolved problems of great mathematical and physical interest. I will here
discuss the mathematical advances, the physical insights and extraordinary lack
of visibility of this field of physics.Comment: Text of the 1999 Heineman Prize address given March 24 at the
Centenial Meeting of the American Physical Society in Atlanta 20 pages in
latex, references added and typos correcte
Renormalised four-point coupling constant in the three-dimensional O(N) model with N=0
We simulate self-avoiding walks on a cubic lattice and determine the second
virial coefficient for walks of different lengths. This allows us to determine
the critical value of the renormalized four-point coupling constant in the
three-dimensional N-vector universality class for N=0. We obtain g* =
1.4005(5), where g is normalized so that the three-dimensional
field-theoretical beta-function behaves as \beta(g) = - g + g^2 for small g. As
a byproduct, we also obtain precise estimates of the interpenetration ratio
Psi*, Psi* = 0.24685(11), and of the exponent \nu, \nu = 0.5876(2).Comment: 16 page
Demographic history and genetic differentiation in apes
SummaryComparisons of genetic variation between humans and great apes are hampered by the fact that we still know little about the demographics and evolutionary history of the latter species [1–4]. In addition, characterizing ape genetic variation is important because they are threatened with extinction, and knowledge about genetic differentiation among groups may guide conservation efforts [5]. We sequenced multiple intergenic autosomal regions totaling 22,400 base pairs (bp) in ten individuals each from western, central, and eastern chimpanzee groups and in nine bonobos, and 16,000 bp in ten Bornean and six Sumatran orangutans. These regions are analyzed together with homologous information from three human populations and gorillas. We find that whereas orangutans have the highest diversity, western chimpanzees have the lowest, and that the demographic histories of most groups differ drastically. Special attention should therefore be paid to sampling strategies and the statistics chosen when comparing levels of variation within and among groups. Finally, we find that the extent of genetic differentiation among “subspecies” of chimpanzees and orangutans is comparable to that seen among human populations, calling the validity of the “subspecies” concept in apes into question
High-precision estimate of g4 in the 2D Ising model
We compute the renormalized four-point coupling in the 2d Ising model using
transfer-matrix techniques. We greatly reduce the systematic uncertainties
which usually affect this type of calculations by using the exact knowledge of
several terms in the scaling function of the free energy. Our final result is
g4=14.69735(3).Comment: 17 pages, revised version with minor changes, accepted for
publication in Journal of Physics
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