671 research outputs found
Experimental evidence for the breakdown of a Hartree-Fock approach in a weakly interacting Bose gas
We study the formation of a quasi-condensate in a nearly one dimensional,
weakly interacting trapped atomic Bose gas. We show that a Hartree Fock
(mean-field) approach fails to explain the presence of the quasi-condensate in
the center of the cloud: the quasi-condensate appears through an
interaction-driven cross-over and not a saturation of the excited states.
Numerical calculations based on Bogoliubov theory give an estimate of the
cross-over density in agreement with experimental results.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Letter
Quasi-one-dimensional Bose gases with large scattering length
Bose gases confined in highly-elongated harmonic traps are investigated over
a wide range of interaction strengths using quantum Monte Carlo techniques. We
find that the properties of a Bose gas under tight transverse confinement are
well reproduced by a 1d model Hamiltonian with contact interactions. We point
out the existence of a unitary regime, where the properties of the quasi-1d
Bose gas become independent of the actual value of the 3d scattering length. In
this unitary regime, the energy of the system is well described by a hard rod
equation of state. We investigate the stability of quasi-1d Bose gases with
positive and negative 3d scattering length.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Supporting Tropos concepts in Agent OPEN
The growth of interest in agent-orientation as a new paradigm has introduced the need for developing concepts, tools and techniques for modeling and engineering agent-based software systems. Object technology has been supporting the development of information systems for many years but is now slowly evolving to encompass more recent ideas relating to the concept of "agent". Integrating agent concepts into existing OO methodologies has resulted in several agent-oriented methodologies, one of which is Agent OPEN. In this paper, we evaluate the existing Agent OPEN description against ideas formulated within Tropos, an agent-oriented software development methodology. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2004
Analyzing a Bose polaron across resonant interactions
Recently, two independent experiments reported the observation of long-lived
polarons in a Bose-Einstein condensate, providing an excellent setting to study
the generic scenario of a mobile impurity interacting with a quantum reservoir.
Here, we expand the experimental analysis by disentangling the effects of trap
inhomogeneities and the many-body continuum in one of these experiments. This
makes it possible to extract the energy of the polaron at a well-defined
density as a function of the interaction strength. Comparisons with quantum
Monte-Carlo as well as diagrammatic calculations show good agreement, and
provide a more detailed picture of the polaron properties at stronger
interactions than previously possible. Moreover, we develop a semi-classical
theory for the motional dynamics and three-body loss of the polarons, which
partly explains a previously unresolved discrepancy between theory and
experimental observations for repulsive interactions. Finally, we utilize
quantum Monte-Carlo calculations to demonstrate that the findings reported in
the two experiments are consistent with each other
Dilute Bose gas with correlated disorder: A Path Integral Monte Carlo study
We investigate the thermodynamic properties of a dilute Bose gas in a
correlated random potential using exact path integral Monte Carlo methods. The
study is carried out in continuous space and disorder is produced in the
simulations by a 3D speckle pattern with tunable intensity and correlation
length. We calculate the shift of the superfluid transition temperature due to
disorder and we highlight the role of quantum localization by comparing the
critical chemical potential with the classical percolation threshold. The
equation of state of the gas is determined in the regime of strong disorder,
where superfluidity is suppressed and the normal phase exists down to very low
temperatures. We find a dependence of the energy in agreement with the
expected behavior in the Bose glass phase. We also discuss the major role
played by the disorder correlation length and we make contact with a
Hartree-Fock mean-field approach that holds valid if the correlation length is
very large. The density profiles are analyzed as a function of temperature and
interaction strength. Effects of localization and the depletion of the order
parameter are emphasized in the comparison between local condensate and total
density. At very low temperature we find that the energy and the particle
distribution of the gas are very well described by the T=0 Gross-Pitaevskii
theory even in the regime of very strong disorder.Comment: 27 pages, 20 figure
Anomalous fluctuations of the condensate in interacting Bose gases
We find that the fluctuations of the condensate in a weakly interacting Bose
gas confined in a box of volume follow the law . This anomalous behaviour arises from the occurrence of infrared
divergencies due to phonon excitations and holds also for strongly correlated
Bose superfluids. The analysis is extended to an interacting Bose gas confined
in a harmonic trap where the fluctuations are found to exhibit a similar
anomaly.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
Stochastic Paleoclimatology: Modeling the EPICA Ice Core Climate Records
We analyze and model the stochastic behavior of paleoclimate time series and
assess the implications for the coupling of climate variables during the
Pleistocene glacial cycles. We examine 800 kyr of carbon dioxide, methane,
nitrous oxide, and temperature proxy data from the EPICA Dome-C ice core, which
are characterized by 100~kyr glacial cycles overlain by fluctuations across a
wide range of time scales. We quantify this behavior through multifractal
time-weighted detrended fluctuation analysis, which distinguishes near
red-noise and white-noise behavior below and above the 100~kyr glacial cycle
respectively in all records. This allows us to model each time series as a
one-dimensional periodic non-autonomous stochastic dynamical system, and assess
the stability of physical processes and the fidelity of model-simulated time
series. We extend this approach to a four-variable model with linear coupling
terms, which we interpret in terms of the interrelationships between the time
series. Methane and nitrous oxide are found to have significant destabilizing
influences, while carbon dioxide and temperature have smaller stabilizing
influences. We draw conclusions about causal relationships in glacial
transitions and the climate processes that may have facilitated these
couplings, and highlight opportunities to further develop stochastic modeling
approaches.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Synthesis and characterization of a benzoyl modified Pebax materials for gas separation applications
Pebax copolymers produced by Arkema are widely employed for different applications, including active molecular carriers and membranes for gas separation. In the present work, a new modification approach for Pebax®2533 is presented, along with the characterization of the newly obtained materials. Pebax was modified by grafting, through a nucleophilic acyl substitution, a benzoyl group on Polyamide12 block. The yield of the reaction was confirmed by FTIR and NMR analysis, while thermal DSC and TGA characterizations were then carried out on the polymeric products characterized by different degrees of substitution to understand their properties. Finally, self-standing films were obtained by casting and gas permeation tests were conducted at 35 °C using CO2, N2, CH4, O2 and He, in order to understand the potentiality of the new material as membrane for gas separation. DSC showed that in the modified Pebax, named “Benzoyl-P2533” (BP2533), the crystalline phase of the Nylon block was canceled, as expected, but at the same time the degree of crystallinity of the block of Polytetramethyleneoxide increased from 19%, measured for the unmodified Pebax, to a max of 35% for the fully substituted material. For this reason, gas permeability showed small but consistent increment, in the order of 10–11% for most of the gas tested, with the only exception being helium, where the increment resulted to be around 48%. As a consequence, the overall selectivity of CO2 against helium dropped with respect to pristine Pebax. For all the other gases, on the other hand the selectivity with respect to CO2 remained substantially constant, resulting in slight but neat improvement of the ability of the new material to separate this gas
Landau damping of transverse quadrupole oscillations of an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate
We study the interaction between low-lying transverse collective oscillations
and thermal excitations of an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate by means of
perturbation theory. We consider a cylindrically trapped condensate and
calculate the transverse elementary excitations at zero temperature by solving
the linearized Gross-Pitaevskii equations in two dimensions. We use them to
calculate the matrix elements between thermal excited states coupled with the
quasi-2D collective modes. The Landau damping of transverse collective modes is
investigated as a function of temperature. At low temperatures, the damping
rate due to the Landau decay mechanism is in agreement with the experimental
data for the decay of the transverse quadrupole mode, but it is too small to
explain the slow experimental decay of the transverse breathing mode. The
reason for this discrepancy is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, 1 figur
The Beliaev technique for a weakly interacting Bose gas
Aiming at simplicity of explicit equations and, at the same time, controllable accuracy of the theory, we present our results for all the thermodynamic quantities and correlation functions for a weakly interacting Bose gas at short-to-intermediate distances obtained within an improved version of Beliaev's diagrammatic technique. With a controllably small (but essentially finite) Bogoliubov's symmetry-breaking term, Beliaev's diagrammatic technique becomes regular in the infrared limit. Up to higher-order terms (for which we present parametric order-of-magnitude estimates), the partition function and entropy of the system formally correspond to those of a non-interacting bosonic (pseudo-)Hamiltonian with a temperature-dependent Bogoliubov-type dispersion relation. Away from the fluctuation region, this approach provides the most accurate-in fact, the best possible within the Bogoliubov-type pseudoHamiltonian framework-description of the system with controlled accuracy. It produces accurate answers for the off-diagonal correlation functions up to distances where the behavior of correlators is controlled by generic hydrodynamic relations and, thus, can be accurately extrapolated to arbitrarily large scales. In the fluctuation region, the non-perturbative contributions are given by universal (for all weakly interacting U(1) systems) constants and scaling functions, which can be obtained separately-by simulating classical U(1) models-and then used to extend the description of the weakly interacting Bose gas to the fluctuation region. The technique works in all spatial dimensions, and we explicitly checked the validity of this technique against first-principle Monte Carlo simulations for various thermodynamic properties and the single-particle density matrix. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft
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