8,199 research outputs found
Disorder Potentials near Lithographically Fabricated Atom Chips
We show that previously observed large disorder potentials in magnetic
microtraps for neutral atoms are reduced by about two orders of magnitude when
using atom chips with lithographically fabricated high quality gold layers.
Using one dimensional Bose-Einstein condensates, we probe the remaining
magnetic field variations at surface distances down to a few microns.
Measurements on a 100 um wide wire imply that residual variations of the
current flow result from local properties of the wire.Comment: submitted on September 24th, 200
Damping of bulk excitations over an elongated BEC - the role of radial modes
We report the measurement of Beliaev damping of bulk excitations in cigar
shaped Bose Einstein condensates of atomic vapor. By using post selection,
excitation line shapes of the total population are compared with those of the
undamped excitations. We find that the damping depends on the initial
excitation energy of the decaying quasi particle, as well as on the excitation
momentum. We model the condensate as an infinite cylinder and calculate the
damping rates of the different radial modes. The derived damping rates are in
good agreement with the experimentally measured ones. The damping rates
strongly depend on the destructive interference between pathways for damping,
due to the quantum many-body nature of both excitation and damping products.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
New scalar resonances from sneutrino-Higgs mixing in supersymmetry with small lepton number (R-parity) violation
We consider new s-channel scalar exchanges in top quark and massive
gauge-bosons pair production in e+e- collisions, in supersymmetry with a small
lepton number violation. We show that a soft bilinear lepton number violating
term in the scalar potential which mixes the Higgs and the slepton fields can
give rise to a significant scalar resonance enhancement in e+e- -> ZZ, W+W- and
in e+e- -> t t(bar). The sneutrino-Higgs mixed state couples to the incoming
light leptons through its sneutrino component and to either the top quark or
the massive gauge bosons through its Higgs component. Such a scalar resonance
in these specific production channels cannot result from trilinear Yukawa-like
R-parity violation alone, and may, therefore, stand as strong evidence for the
existence of R-parity violating bilinears in the supersymmetric scalar
potential. We use the LEP2 measurements of the WW and ZZ cross-sections to
place useful constrains on this scenario, and investigate the expectations for
the sensitivity of a future linear collider to these signals. We find that
signals of these scalar resonances, in particular in top-pair production, are
well within the reach of linear colliders in the small lepton number violation
scenario.Comment: 22 pages in revtex, 10 figures embadded in the text using epsfi
Interaction-induced localization of anomalously-diffracting nonlinear waves
We study experimentally the interactions between normal solitons and tilted
beams in glass waveguide arrays. We find that as a tilted beam, traversing away
from a normally propagating soliton, coincides with the self-defocusing regime
of the array, it can be refocused and routed back into any of the intermediate
sites due to the interaction, as a function of the initial phase difference.
Numerically, distinct parameter regimes exhibiting this behavior of the
interaction are identified.Comment: Physical Review Letters, in pres
Are Muslims the New Catholics? Europe’s Headscarf Laws in Comparative Historical Perspective
In this paper a biologically-inspired model for partly occluded patterns is proposed. The model is based on the hypothesis that in human visual system occluding patterns play a key role in recognition as well as in reconstructing internal representation for a pattern’s occluding parts. The proposed model is realized with a bidirectional hierarchical neural network. In this network top-down cues, generated by direct connections from the lower to higher levels of hierarchy, interact with the bottom-up information, generated from the un-occluded parts, to recognize occluded patterns. Moreover, positional cues of the occluded as well as occluding patterns, that are computed separately but in the same network, modulate the top-down and bottom-up processing to reconstruct the occluded patterns. Simulation results support the presented hypothesis as well as effectiveness of the model in providing a solution to recognition of occluded patterns. The behavior of the model is in accordance to the known human behavior on the occluded patterns
Excitonic Funneling in Extended Dendrimers with Non-Linear and Random Potentials
The mean first passage time (MFPT) for photoexcitations diffusion in a
funneling potential of artificial tree-like light-harvesting antennae
(phenylacetylene dendrimers with generation-dependent segment lengths) is
computed. Effects of the non-linearity of the realistic funneling potential and
slow random solvent fluctuations considerably slow down the center-bound
diffusion beyond a temperature-dependent optimal size. Diffusion on a
disordered Cayley tree with a linear potential is investigated analytically. At
low temperatures we predict a phase in which the MFPT is dominated by a few
paths.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Disorder and Funneling Effects on Exciton Migration in Tree-Like Dendrimers
The center-bound excitonic diffusion on dendrimers subjected to several types
of non-homogeneous funneling potentials, is considered. We first study the
mean-first passage time (MFPT) for diffusion in a linear potential with
different types of correlated and uncorrelated random perturbations. Increasing
the funneling force, there is a transition from a phase in which the MFPT grows
exponentially with the number of generations , to one in which it does so
linearly. Overall the disorder slows down the diffusion, but the effect is much
more pronounced in the exponential compared to the linear phase. When the
disorder gives rise to uncorrelated random forces there is, in addition, a
transition as the temperature is lowered. This is a transition from a
high- regime in which all paths contribute to the MFPT to a low- regime
in which only a few of them do. We further explore the funneling within a
realistic non-linear potential for extended dendrimers in which the dependence
of the lowest excitonic energy level on the segment length was derived using
the Time-Dependent Hatree-Fock approximation. Under this potential the MFPT
grows initially linearly with but crosses-over, beyond a molecular-specific
and -dependent optimal size, to an exponential increase. Finally we consider
geometrical disorder in the form of a small concentration of long connections
as in the {\it small world} model. Beyond a critical concentration of
connections the MFPT decreases significantly and it changes to a power-law or
to a logarithmic scaling with , depending on the strength of the funneling
force.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
The effects of related experiments
The effects of the experiment itself upon the obtained results and,
especially, the influence of a large number of experiments are extensively
discussed in the literature. We show that the important factor that stands at
the basis of these effects is that the involved experiments are related and not
independent and detached from each other. This relationship takes, as shown
here, different forms for different situations and is found in entirely
different physical regimes such as the quantum and classical ones.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. One figure removed. Some former text
has been rewritten in compact and clearer way. Also the title change
Elastic and Raman scattering of 9.0 and 11.4 MeV photons from Au, Dy and In
Monoenergetic photons between 8.8 and 11.4 MeV were scattered elastically and
in elastically (Raman) from natural targets of Au, Dy and In.15 new cross
sections were measured. Evidence is presented for a slight deformation in the
197Au nucleus, generally believed to be spherical. It is predicted, on the
basis of these measurements, that the Giant Dipole Resonance of Dy is very
similar to that of 160Gd. A narrow isolated resonance at 9.0 MeV is observed in
In.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figure
Lattice QCD with mixed actions
We discuss some of the implications of simulating QCD when the action used
for the sea quarks is different from that used for the valence quarks. We
present exploratory results for the hadron mass spectrum and pseudoscalar meson
decay constants using improved staggered sea quarks and HYP-smeared overlap
valence quarks. We propose a method for matching the valence quark mass to the
sea quark mass and demonstrate it on UKQCD clover data in the simpler case
where the sea and valence actions are the same.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures some minor modification to text and figures.
Accepted for publicatio
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