198 research outputs found
Lower bounds for the spinless Salpeter equation
We obtain lower bounds on the ground state energy, in one and three
dimensions, for the spinless Salpeter equation (Schr\"odinger equation with a
relativistic kinetic energy operator) applicable to potentials for which the
attractive parts are in for some ( or 3). An extension
to confining potentials, which are not in , is also presented.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Contribution to a special issue of Journal of
Nonlinear Mathematical Physics in honour of Francesco Calogero on the
occasion of his seventieth birthda
Upper limit on the number of bound states of the spinless Salpeter equation
We obtain, using the Birman-Schwinger method, upper limits on the total
number of bound states and on the number of -wave bound states of the
semirelativistic spinless Salpeter equation. We also obtain a simple condition,
in the ultrarelativistic case (), for the existence of at least one
-wave bound states: , where is a known function of and
.Comment: 18 page
Upper limit on the critical strength of central potentials in relativistic quantum mechanics
In the context of relativistic quantum mechanics, where the Schr\"odinger
equation is replaced by the spinless Salpeter equation, we show how to
construct a large class of upper limits on the critical value,
, of the coupling constant, , of the central potential,
. This critical value is the value of for which a first
-wave bound state appears.Comment: 8 page
Lower limit in semiclassical form for the number of bound states in a central potential
We identify a class of potentials for which the semiclassical estimate
of
the number of (S-wave) bound states provides a (rigorous) lower limit:
, where the double braces denote the integer part.
Higher partial waves can be included via the standard replacement of the
potential with the effective -wave potential
. An analogous upper
limit is also provided for a different class of potentials, which is however
quite severely restricted.Comment: 9 page
Wrinkles and folds in a fluid-supported sheet of finite size
A laterally confined thin elastic sheet lying on a liquid substrate displays
regular undulations, called wrinkles, characterized by a spatially extended
energy distribution and a well-defined wavelength . As the confinement
increases, the deformation energy is progressively localized into a single
narrow fold. An exact solution for the deformation of an infinite sheet was
previously found, indicating that wrinkles in an infinite sheet are unstable
against localization for arbitrarily small confinement. We present an extension
of the theory to sheets of finite length , accounting for the experimentally
observed wrinkle-to-fold transition. We derive an exact solution for the
periodic deformation in the wrinkled state, and an approximate solution for the
localized, folded state. We show that a second-order transition between these
two states occurs at a critical confinement .Comment: 15 page
Existence of mesons after deconfinement
We investigate the possibility for a quark-antiquark pair to form a bound
state at temperatures higher than the critical one (), thus after
deconfinement. Our main goal is to find analytical criteria constraining the
existence of such mesons. Our formalism relies on a Schr\"{o}dinger equation
for which we study the physical consequences of both using the free energy and
the internal energy as potential term, assuming a widely accepted
temperature-dependent Yukawa form for the free energy and a recently proposed
nonperturbative form for the screening mass. We show that using the free energy
only allows for the 1S bottomonium to be bound above , with a dissociation
temperature around . The situation is very different with the
internal energy, where we show that no bound states at all can exist in the
deconfined phase. But, in this last case, quasi-bound states could be present
at higher temperatures because of a positive barrier appearing in the
potential.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures; only the case T>T_c is discussed in v
Construction and test of a moving boundary model for negative streamer discharges
Starting from the minimal model for the electrically interacting particle
densities in negative streamer discharges, we derive a moving boundary
approximation for the ionization fronts. The boundary condition on the moving
front is found to be of 'kinetic undercooling' type. The boundary
approximation, whose first results have been published in [Meulenbroek et al.,
PRL 95, 195004 (2005)], is then tested against 2-dimensional simulations of the
density model. The results suggest that our moving boundary approximation
adequately represents the essential dynamics of negative streamer fronts.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
From cylindrical to stretching ridges and wrinkles in twisted ribbons
Twisted ribbons subjected to a tension exhibit a remarkably rich morphology,
from smooth and wrinkled helicoids, to cylindrical or faceted patterns. These
shapes are intimately related to the instability of the natural, helicoidal
symmetry of the system, which generates both longitudinal and transverse
stresses, thereby leading to buckling of the ribbon. In this paper, we focus on
the tessellation patterns made of triangular facets. Our experimental
observations are described within an "asymptotic isometry" approach that brings
together geometry and elasticity. The geometry consists of parametrized
families of surfaces, isometric to the undeformed ribbon in the singular limit
of vanishing thickness and tensile load. The energy, whose minimization selects
the favored structure among those families, is governed by the tensile work and
bending cost of the pattern. This framework describes the coexistence lines in
a morphological phase diagram, and determines the domain of existence of
faceted structures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; Supplemental material: 4 page
On the decrease of the number of bound states with the increase of the angular momentum
For the class of central potentials possessing a finite number of bound
states and for which the second derivative of is negative, we prove,
using the supersymmetric quantum mechanics formalism, that an increase of the
angular momentum by one unit yields a decrease of the number of bound
states of at least one unit: . This property is used
to obtain, for this class of potential, an upper limit on the total number of
bound states which significantly improves previously known results
How Geometry Controls the Tearing of Adhesive Thin Films on Curved Surfaces
Flaps can be detached from a thin film glued on a solid substrate by tearing
and peeling. For flat substrates, it has been shown that these flaps
spontaneously narrow and collapse in pointy triangular shapes. Here we show
that various shapes, triangular, elliptic, acuminate or spatulate, can be
observed for the tears by adjusting the curvature of the substrate. From
combined experiments and theoretical models, we show that the flap morphology
is governed by simple geometric rules.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
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