12,137 research outputs found
Multiple colliding electromagnetic pulses: a way to lower the threshold of pair production from vacuum
The scheme of simultaneous multiple pulse focusing on one spot naturally
arises from the structural features of projected new laser systems, such as ELI
and HiPER. It is shown that the multiple pulse configuration is beneficial for
observing pair production from vacuum under the action of sufficiently
strong electromagnetic fields. The field of the focused pulses is described
using a realistic three-dimensional model based on an exact solution of the
Maxwell equations. The pair production threshold in terms of
electromagnetic field energy can be substantially lowered if, instead of one or
even two colliding pulses, multiple pulses focused on one spot are used. The
multiple pulse interaction geometry gives rise to subwavelength field features
in the focal region. These features result in the production of extremely short
bunches.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Fermion Pair Production From an Electric Field Varying in Two Dimensions
The Hamiltonian describing fermion pair production from an arbitrarily
time-varying electric field in two dimensions is studied using a
group-theoretic approach. We show that this Hamiltonian can be encompassed by
two, commuting SU(2) algebras, and that the two-dimensional problem can
therefore be reduced to two one-dimensional problems. We compare the group
structure for the two-dimensional problem with that previously derived for the
one-dimensional problem, and verify that the Schwinger result is obtained under
the appropriate conditions.Comment: Latex, 14 pages of text. Full postscript version available via the
worldwide web at http://nucth.physics.wisc.edu/ or by anonymous ftp from
ftp://nucth.physics.wisc.edu:/pub/preprints
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Modeling the effects of combining diverse software fault detection techniques
The software engineering literature contains many studies of the efficacy of fault finding techniques. Few of these, however, consider what happens when several different techniques are used together. We show that the effectiveness of such multitechnique approaches depends upon quite subtle interplay between their individual efficacies and dependence between them. The modelling tool we use to study this problem is closely related to earlier work on software design diversity. The earliest of these results showed that, under quite plausible assumptions, it would be unreasonable even to expect software versions that were developed ‘truly independently’ to fail independently of one another. The key idea here was a ‘difficulty function’ over the input space. Later work extended these ideas to introduce a notion of ‘forced’ diversity, in which it became possible to obtain system failure behaviour better even than could be expected if the versions failed independently. In this paper we show that many of these results for design diversity have counterparts in diverse fault detection in a single software version. We define measures of fault finding effectiveness, and of diversity, and show how these might be used to give guidance for the optimal application of different fault finding procedures to a particular program. We show that the effects upon reliability of repeated applications of a particular fault finding procedure are not statistically independent - in fact such an incorrect assumption of independence will always give results that are too optimistic. For diverse fault finding procedures, on the other hand, things are different: here it is possible for effectiveness to be even greater than it would be under an assumption of statistical independence. We show that diversity of fault finding procedures is, in a precisely defined way, ‘a good thing’, and should be applied as widely as possible. The new model and its results are illustrated using some data from an experimental investigation into diverse fault finding on a railway signalling application
Multidimensional Worldline Instantons
We extend the worldline instanton technique to compute the vacuum pair
production rate for spatially inhomogeneous electric background fields, with
the spatial inhomogeneity being genuinely two or three dimensional, both for
the magnitude and direction of the electric field. Other techniques, such as
WKB, have not been applied to such higher dimensional problems. Our method
exploits the instanton dominance of the worldline path integral expression for
the effective action.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figure
Finite-size fluctuations and photon statistics near the polariton condensation transition in a single-mode microcavity
We consider polariton condensation in a generalized Dicke model, describing a
single-mode cavity containing quantum dots, and extend our previous mean-field
theory to allow for finite-size fluctuations. Within the fluctuation-dominated
regime the correlation functions differ from their (trivial) mean-field values.
We argue that the low-energy physics of the model, which determines the photon
statistics in this fluctuation-dominated crossover regime, is that of the
(quantum) anharmonic oscillator. The photon statistics at the crossover are
different in the high- and low- temperature limits. When the temperature is
high enough for quantum effects to be neglected we recover behavior similar to
that of a conventional laser. At low enough temperatures, however, we find
qualitatively different behavior due to quantum effects.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. v2: Revised version with minor corrections
(typos, added reference, correction in argument following Eq. 25). v3:
further typos correcte
Two-dimensional fermionic superfluids, pairing instability and vortex liquids in the absence of time reversal symmetry
We consider a generic two-dimensional system of fermionic particles with
attractive interactions and no disorder. If time-reversal symmetry is absent,
it is possible to obtain incompressible insulating states in addition to the
superfluid at zero temperature. The superfluid-insulator phase transition is
found to be second order in type-II systems using a perturbative analysis of
Cooper pairing instability in quantum Hall states of unpaired fermions. We
obtain the pairing phase diagram as a function of chemical potential (density)
and temperature. However, a more careful analysis presented here reveals that
the pairing quantum phase transition is always preempted by another transition
into a strongly correlated normal state which retains Cooper pairing and cannot
be smoothly connected to the quantum Hall state of unpaired fermions. Such a
normal phase can be qualitatively viewed as a liquid of vortices, although it
may acquire conventional broken symmetries. Even if it did not survive at
finite temperatures its influence would be felt through strong quantum
fluctuations below a crossover temperature scale. These conclusions directly
apply to fermionic ultra-cold atom systems near unitarity, but are likely
relevant for the properties of other strongly correlated superfluids as well,
including high temperature superconductors.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Electron-Positron Pair Production in Space- or Time-Dependent Electric Fields
Treating the production of electron and positron pairs by a strong electric
field from the vacuum as a quantum tunneling process we derive, in
semiclassical approximation, a general expression for the pair production rate
in a -dependent electric field pointing in the -direction. We also
allow for a smoothly varying magnetic field parallel to . The result is
applied to a confined field for , a
semi-confined field for , and a linearly increasing
field . The boundary effects of the confined fields on
pair-production rates are exhibited. A simple variable change in all formulas
leads to results for electric fields depending on time rather than space.
In addition, we discuss tunneling processes in which empty atomic bound
states are spontaneously filled by negative-energy electrons from the vacuum
under positron emission. In particular, we calculate the rate at which the
atomic levels of a bare nucleus of finite size and large
are filled by spontaneous pair creation.Comment: 33 pages and 9 figures. to appear in Phys. Rev.
The Zel'dovich effect and evolution of atomic Rydberg spectra along the Periodic Table
In 1959 Ya. B. Zel'dovich predicted that the bound-state spectrum of the
non-relativistic Coulomb problem distorted at small distances by a short-range
potential undergoes a peculiar reconstruction whenever this potential alone
supports a low-energy scattering resonance. However documented experimental
evidence of this effect has been lacking. Previous theoretical studies of this
phenomenon were confined to the regime where the range of the short-ranged
potential is much smaller than Bohr's radius of the Coulomb field. We go beyond
this limitation by restricting ourselves to highly-excited s states. This
allows us to demonstrate that along the Periodic Table of elements the
Zel'dovich effect manifests itself as systematic periodic variation of the
Rydberg spectra with a period proportional to the cubic root of the atomic
number. This dependence, which is supported by analysis of experimental and
numerical data, has its origin in the binding properties of the ionic core of
the atom.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
Quantum effects with an X-ray free electron laser
A quantum kinetic equation coupled with Maxwell's equation is used to
estimate the laser power required at an XFEL facility to expose intrinsically
quantum effects in the process of QED vacuum decay via spontaneous pair
production. A 9 TW-peak XFEL laser with photon energy 8.3 keV could be
sufficient to initiate particle accumulation and the consequent formation of a
plasma of spontaneously produced pairs. The evolution of the particle number in
the plasma will exhibit non-Markovian aspects of the strong-field pair
production process and the plasma's internal currents will generate an electric
field whose interference with that of the laser leads to plasma oscillations.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX2
Improved Approximations for Fermion Pair Production in Inhomogeneous Electric Fields
Reformulating the instantons in a complex plane for tunneling or transmitting
states, we calculate the pair-production rate of charged fermions in a
spatially localized electric field, illustrated by the Sauter electric field
E_0 sech^2 (z/L), and in a temporally localized electric field such as E_0
sech^2 (t/T). The integration of the quadratic part of WKB instanton actions
over the frequency and transverse momentum leads to the pair-production rate
obtained by the worldline instanton method, including the prefactor, of Phys.
Rev. D72, 105004 (2005) and D73, 065028 (2006). It is further shown that the
WKB instanton action plus the next-to-leading order contribution in spinor QED
equals the WKB instanton action in scalar QED, thus justifying why the WKB
instanton in scalar QED can work for the pair production of fermions. Finally
we obtain the pair-production rate in a spatially localized electric field
together with a constant magnetic field in the same direction.Comment: RevTex, 12 pages, two figures; replaced by the version accepted in
Phys. Rev.
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