7,950 research outputs found
Topological Aspects of the Non-adiabatic Berry Phase
The topology of the non-adiabatic parameter space bundle is discussed for
evolution of exact cyclic state vectors in Berry's original example of split
angular momentum eigenstates. It turns out that the change in topology occurs
at a critical frequency. The first Chern number that classifies these bundles
is proportional to angular momentum. The non-adiabatic principal bundle over
the parameter space is not well-defined at the critical frequency.Comment: 14 pages, Dep. of Physics, Uni. of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas
78712, to appear in J. Physics
Algebraic Quantum Mechanics and Pregeometry
We discuss the relation between the q-number approach to quantum mechanics suggested by Dirac and the notion of "pregeometry" introduced by Wheeler. By associating the q-numbers with the elements of an algebra and regarding the primitive idempotents as "generalized points" we suggest an approach that may make it possible to dispense with an a priori given space manifold. In this approach the algebra itself would carry the symmetries of translation, rotation, etc. Our suggestion is illustrated in a preliminary way by using a particular generalized Clifford algebra proposed originally by Weyl, which approaches the ordinary Heisenberg algebra a suitable limit. We thus obtain a certain insight into how quantum mechanics may be regarded as a purely algebraic theory, provided that we further introduce a new set of "neighbourhood operators", which remove an important kind of arbitrariness that has thus far been present in the attempt to treat quantum mechanics solely in terms of a Heisenberg algebra
The density matrix in the de Broglie-Bohm approach
If the density matrix is treated as an objective description of individual
systems, it may become possible to attribute the same objective significance to
statistical mechanical properties, such as entropy or temperature, as to
properties such as mass or energy. It is shown that the de Broglie-Bohm
interpretation of quantum theory can be consistently applied to density
matrices as a description of individual systems. The resultant trajectories are
examined for the case of the delayed choice interferometer, for which Bell
appears to suggest that such an interpretation is not possible. Bell's argument
is shown to be based upon a different understanding of the density matrix to
that proposed here.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
The hidden geometric character of relativistic quantum mechanics
The presentation makes use of geometric algebra, also known as Clifford
algebra, in 5-dimensional spacetime. The choice of this space is given the
character of first principle, justified solely by the consequences that can be
derived from such choice and their consistency with experimental results. Given
a metric space of any dimension, one can define monogenic functions, the
natural extension of analytic functions to higher dimensions; such functions
have null vector derivative and have previously been shown by other authors to
play a decisive role in lower dimensional spaces. All monogenic functions have
null Laplacian by consequence; in an hyperbolic space this fact leads
inevitably to a wave equation with plane-like solutions. This is also true for
5-dimensional spacetime and we will explore those solutions, establishing a
parallel with the solutions of the Dirac equation. For this purpose we will
invoke the isomorphism between the complex algebra of 4x4 matrices, also known
as Dirac's matrices. There is one problem with this isomorphism, because the
solutions to Dirac's equation are usually known as spinors (column matrices)
that don't belong to the 4x4 matrix algebra and as such are excluded from the
isomorphism. We will show that a solution in terms of Dirac spinors is
equivalent to a plane wave solution. Just as one finds in the standard
formulation, monogenic functions can be naturally split into positive/negative
energy together with left/right ones. This split is provided by geometric
projectors and we will show that there is a second set of projectors providing
an alternate 4-fold split. The possible implications of this alternate split
are not yet fully understood and are presently the subject of profound
research.Comment: 29 pages. Small changes in V3 suggested by refere
Symmetry Representations in the Rigged Hilbert Space Formulation of Quantum Mechanics
We discuss some basic properties of Lie group representations in rigged
Hilbert spaces. In particular, we show that a differentiable representation in
a rigged Hilbert space may be obtained as the projective limit of a family of
continuous representations in a nested scale of Hilbert spaces. We also
construct a couple of examples illustrative of the key features of group
representations in rigged Hilbert spaces. Finally, we establish a simple
criterion for the integrability of an operator Lie algebra in a rigged Hilbert
space
Velocity in Lorentz-Violating Fermion Theories
We consider the role of the velocity in Lorentz-violating fermionic quantum
theory, especially emphasizing the nonrelativistic regime. Information about
the velocity will be important for the kinematical analysis of scattering and
other problems. Working within the minimal standard model extension, we derive
new expressions for the velocity. We find that generic momentum and spin
eigenstates may not have well-defined velocities. We also demonstrate how
several different techniques may be used to shed light on different aspects of
the problem. A relativistic operator analysis allows us to study the behavior
of the Lorentz-violating Zitterbewegung. Alternatively, by studying the time
evolution of Gaussian wave packets, we find that there are Lorentz-violating
modifications to the wave packet spreading and the spin structure of the wave
function.Comment: 24 page
TCP over High Speed Variable Capacity Links: A Simulation Study for Bandwidth Allocation
New optical network technologies provide opportunities for fast, controllable bandwidth management. These technologies can now explicitly provide resources to data paths, creating demand driven bandwidth reservation across networks where an applications bandwidth needs can be meet almost exactly. Dynamic synchronous Transfer Mode (DTM) is a gigabit network technology that provides channels with dynamically adjustable capacity. TCP is a reliable end-to-end transport protocol that adapts its rate to the available capacity. Both TCP and the DTM bandwidth can react to changes in the network load, creating a complex system with inter-dependent feedback mechanisms. The contribution of this work is an assessment of a bandwidth allocation scheme for TCP flows on variable capacity technologies. We have created a simulation environment using ns-2 and our results indicate that the allocation of bandwidth maximises TCP throughput for most flows, thus saving valuable capacity when compared to a scheme such as link over-provisioning. We highlight one situation where the allocation scheme might have some deficiencies against the static reservation of resources, and describe its causes. This type of situation warrants further investigation to understand how the algorithm can be modified to achieve performance similar to that of the fixed bandwidth case
Factorization Structure of Gauge Theory Amplitudes and Application to Hard Scattering Processes at the LHC
Previous work on electroweak radiative corrections to high energy scattering
using soft-collinear effective theory (SCET) has been extended to include
external transverse and longitudinal gauge bosons and Higgs bosons. This allows
one to compute radiative corrections to all parton-level hard scattering
amplitudes in the standard model to NLL order, including QCD and electroweak
radiative corrections, mass effects, and Higgs exchange corrections, if the
high-scale matching, which is suppressed by two orders in the log counting, and
contains no large logs, is known. The factorization structure of the effective
theory places strong constraints on the form of gauge theory amplitudes at high
energy for massless and massive gauge theories, which are discussed in detail
in the paper. The radiative corrections can be written as the sum of
process-independent one-particle collinear functions, and a universal soft
function. We give plots for the radiative corrections to q qbar -> W_T W_T, Z_T
Z_T, W_L W_L, and Z_L H, and gg -> W_T W_T to illustrate our results. The
purely electroweak corrections are large, ranging from 12% at 500 GeV to 37% at
2 TeV for transverse W pair production, and increasing rapidly with energy. The
estimated theoretical uncertainty to the partonic (hard) cross-section in most
cases is below one percent, smaller than uncertainties in the parton
distribution functions (PDFs). We discuss the relation between SCET and other
factorization methods, and derive the Magnea-Sterman equations for the Sudakov
form factor using SCET, for massless and massive gauge theories, and for light
and heavy external particles.Comment: 44 pages, 30 figures. Refs added, typos fixed. ZL ZL plots removed
because of a possible subtlet
Schwinger, Pegg and Barnett and a relationship between angular and Cartesian quantum descriptions
From a development of an original idea due to Schwinger, it is shown that it
is possible to recover, from the quantum description of a degree of freedom
characterized by a finite number of states (\QTR{it}{i.e}., without classical
counterpart) the usual canonical variables of position/momentum \QTR{it}{and}
angle/angular momentum, relating, maybe surprisingly, the first as a limit of
the later.Comment: 7 pages, revised version, to appear on J. Phys. A: Math and Ge
Evolution of field spiral galaxies up to redshifts z=1
We have gained VLT/FORS spectra and HST/ACS images of a sample of 220 distant
field spiral galaxies. Spatially resolved rotation curves were extracted and
fitted with synthetic velocity fields that take into account all geometric and
observational effects, like blurring due to the slit width and seeing
influence. The maximum rotation velocity Vmax could be determined for 124
galaxies that cover the redshift range 0.1<z<1.0. The luminosity-rotation
velocity distribution of this sample is offset from the Tully-Fisher relation
(TFR) of local low-mass spirals, whereas the distant high-mass spirals are
compatible with the local TFR. We show that the slope of the local and the
intermediate-z TFR would be in compliance if its scatter decreased by more than
a factor of 3 between z~0.5 and z~0. On the other hand, the distant
low-luminosity disks have much lower stellar M/L ratios than their local
counterparts, while high-luminosity disks barely evolved in M/L over the
covered redshift range. This could be the manifestation of the "downsizing"
effect, i.e. the succesive shift of the peak of star formation from high-mass
to low-mass galaxies towards lower redshifts. This trend might be canceled out
in the TF diagram due to the simultaneous evolution of multiple parameters. We
also estimate the ratios between stellar and total masses, finding that these
remained constant since z=1, as would be expected in the context of
hierarchically growing structure. (Abridged)Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, ApJ, accepte
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