1,066 research outputs found
Accurate "superluminal" transmission via entanglement, superoscillations and quasi-Dirac distributions
We analyse a system in which, due to entanglement between the spin and
spatial degrees of freedom, the reduced transmitted state has the shape of the
freely propagating pulse translated in the complex co-ordinate plane. In the
case an apparently "superluminal" advancement of the pulse the delay amplitude
distribution is found to be a peculiar approximation to the Dirac
delta-function, and the transmission coefficient exhibits a well-defined
super-oscillatory window. Analogies with potential tunnelling and the Wheeler's
delayed choice experiment are highlighted
Observations of Mare Serenitatis from lunar orbit and their interpretation
Visual observations are investigated of color differences of Serenitatis mare materials from orbit complement photography and other remotely sensed data. The light tan gray inner fill of the Serenitatis basin is younger than the dark blue gray annulus; the latter continues into and appears to be contemporaneous with the fill of Mare Tranquillitatis. Mare ridges occur in both the inner basin fill and the dark annulus of Serenitatis. Ridges are interpreted as the result of structural deformation and up-doming after the solidification of the basaltic lavas. On the southeastern rim of the Serenitatis basin is the darkes blue gray unit within which Apollo 17 landed. Highland massifs surrounding this unit have unstable slopes which are believed to be the result of localized tectonic activity. On the southwest rim of the basin are the dark tan to brown gray mantling materials of the Sulpicius Gallus Formation. Farther west on the rim are dark blue grap patches which resemble the mare material of the Serenitatis dark annulus
Hartman effect and spin precession in graphene
Spin precession has been used to measure the transmission time \tau over a
distance L in a graphene sheet. Since conduction electrons in graphene have an
energy-independent velocity v, one would expect \tau > L/v. Here we calculate
that \tau < L/v at the Dirac point (= charge neutrality point) in a clean
graphene sheet, and we interpret this result as a manifestation of the Hartman
effect (apparent superluminality) known from optics.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; v2: added a section on the case of
perpendicularly aligned magnetizations; v3: added a figur
Coherent state quantization of paragrassmann algebras
By using a coherent state quantization of paragrassmann variables, operators
are constructed in finite Hilbert spaces. We thus obtain in a straightforward
way a matrix representation of the paragrassmann algebra. This algebra of
finite matrices realizes a deformed Weyl-Heisenberg algebra. The study of mean
values in coherent states of some of these operators lead to interesting
conclusions.Comment: We provide an erratum where we improve upon our previous definition
of odd paragrassmann algebra
On causality, apparent 'superluminality' and reshaping in barrier penetration
We consider tunnelling of a non-relativistic particle across a potential
barrier. It is shown that the barrier acts as an effective beam splitter which
builds up the transmitted pulse from the copies of the initial envelope shifted
in the coordinate space backwards relative to the free propagation. Although
along each pathway causality is explicitly obeyed, in special cases reshaping
can result an overall reduction of the initial envelope, accompanied by an
arbitrary coordinate shift. In the case of a high barrier the delay amplitude
distribution (DAD) mimics a Dirac -function, the transmission amplitude
is superoscillatory for finite momenta and tunnelling leads to an accurate
advancement of the (reduced) initial envelope by the barrier width. In the case
of a wide barrier, initial envelope is accurately translated into the complex
coordinate plane. The complex shift, given by the first moment of the DAD,
accounts for both the displacement of the maximum of the transmitted
probability density and the increase in its velocity. It is argued that
analysing apparent 'superluminality' in terms of spacial displacements helps
avoid contradiction associated with time parameters such as the phase time
Qubit residence time measurements with a Bose-Einstein condensate
We show that an electrostatic qubit located near a Bose-Einstein condensate
trapped in a symmetric double-well potential can be used to measure the
duration the qubit has spent in one of its quantum states. The stronq, medium
and weak measurement regimes are analysed and a new type of Zeno effect is
discussed. The analogy between the residence and the traversal (tunnelling)
times is highlighted
Threshold Effects in Multi-channel Coupling and Spectroscopic Factors in Exotic Nuclei
In the threshold region, the cross section and the associated overlap
integral obey the Wigner threshold law that results in the Wigner-cusp
phenomenon. Due to flux conservation, a cusp anomaly in one channel manifests
itself in other open channels, even if their respective thresholds appear at a
different energy. The shape of a threshold cusp depends on the orbital angular
momentum of a scattered particle; hence, studies of Wigner anomalies in weakly
bound nuclei with several low-lying thresholds can provide valuable
spectroscopic information. In this work, we investigate the threshold behavior
of spectroscopic factors in neutron-rich drip-line nuclei using the Gamow Shell
Model, which takes into account many-body correlations and the continuum
effects. The presence of threshold anomalies is demonstrated and the
implications for spectroscopic factors are discussed.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review C Figure correcte
Characterization of anomalous Zeeman patterns in complex atomic spectra
The modeling of complex atomic spectra is a difficult task, due to the huge
number of levels and lines involved. In the presence of a magnetic field, the
computation becomes even more difficult. The anomalous Zeeman pattern is a
superposition of many absorption or emission profiles with different Zeeman
relative strengths, shifts, widths, asymmetries and sharpnesses. We propose a
statistical approach to study the effect of a magnetic field on the broadening
of spectral lines and transition arrays in atomic spectra. In this model, the
sigma and pi profiles are described using the moments of the Zeeman components,
which depend on quantum numbers and Land\'{e} factors. A graphical calculation
of these moments, together with a statistical modeling of Zeeman profiles as
expansions in terms of Hermite polynomials are presented. It is shown that the
procedure is more efficient, in terms of convergence and validity range, than
the Taylor-series expansion in powers of the magnetic field which was suggested
in the past. Finally, a simple approximate method to estimate the contribution
of a magnetic field to the width of transition arrays is proposed. It relies on
our recently published recursive technique for the numbering of LS-terms of an
arbitrary configuration.Comment: submitted to Physical Review
Relation between widths of proton resonances and neutron asymptotic normalization coefficients in mirror states of light nuclei in a microscopic cluster model
It has been suggested recently ({\it Phys. Rev. Lett.} 91, 232501 (2003))
that the widths of narrow proton resonances are related to neutron Asymptotic
Normalization Coefficients (ANCs) of their bound mirror analogs because of
charge symmetry of nucleon-nucleon interactions.
This relation is approximated by a simple analytical formula which involves
proton resonance energies, neutron separation energies, charges of residual
nuclei and the range of their strong interaction with the last nucleon. In the
present paper, we perform microscopic-cluster model calculations for the ratio
of proton widths to neutron ANCs squared in mirror states for several light
nuclei. We compare them to predictions of the analytical formula and to
estimates made within a single-particle potential model. A knowledge of this
ratio can be used to predict unknown proton widths for very narrow low-lying
resonances in the neutron-deficient region of the - and -shells, which
is important for understanding the nucleosynthesis in the -process.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
The Stationary Phase Method for a Wave Packet in a Semiconductor Layered System. The applicability of the method
Using the formal analysis made by Bohm in his book, {\em "Quantum theory"},
Dover Publications Inc. New York (1979), to calculate approximately the phase
time for a transmitted and the reflected wave packets through a potential
barrier, we calculate the phase time for a semiconductor system formed by
different mesoscopic layers. The transmitted and the reflected wave packets are
analyzed and the applicability of this procedure, based on the stationary phase
of a wave packet, is considered in different conditions. For the applicability
of the stationary phase method an expression is obtained in the case of the
transmitted wave depending only on the derivatives of the phase, up to third
order. This condition indicates whether the parameters of the system allow to
define the wave packet by its leading term. The case of a multiple barrier
systems is shown as an illustration of the results. This formalism includes the
use of the Transfer Matrix to describe the central stratum, whether it is
formed by one layer (the single barrier case), or two barriers and an inner
well (the DBRT system), but one can assume that this stratum can be comprise of
any number or any kind of semiconductor layers.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures although figure 4 has 5 graph
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