127,250 research outputs found

    Quantum phase transition and engineering in two-component BEC in optical lattices

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    In this paper we review recent progress in studying quantum phase transitions in one- and two-component Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) in optical lattices. These phase transitions involve the emergence and disappearance of quantum coherence over whole optical lattice and of linear superposition of macroscopic quantum states. The latter may provide new means to engineer and to manipulate novel macroscopic quantum states and novel coherent atomic beams for quantum information processing, quantum computing etc.Comment: Format: LaTex2e. 7 pages, no figure. Talk at the Yang Symposium (in honor of C.N. Yang's 80th birthday), Beijing, China, June 2002. To appear in the Proceeding

    Direct and secondary nuclear excitation with x-ray free-electron lasers

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    The direct and secondary nuclear excitation produced by an x-ray free electron laser when interacting with a solid-state nuclear target is investigated theoretically. When driven at the resonance energy, the x-ray free electron laser can produce direct photoexcitation. However, the dominant process in that interaction is the photoelectric effect producing a cold and very dense plasma in which also secondary processes such as nuclear excitation by electron capture may occur. We develop a realistic theoretical model to quantify the temporal dynamics of the plasma and the magnitude of the secondary excitation therein. Numerical results show that depending on the nuclear transition energy and the temperature and charge states reached in the plasma, secondary nuclear excitation by electron capture may dominate the direct photoexcitation by several orders of magnitude, as it is the case for the 4.8 keV transition from the isomeric state of 93^{93}Mo, or it can be negligible, as it is the case for the 14.4 keV M\"ossbauer transition in 57Fe^{57}\mathrm{Fe}. These findings are most relevant for future nuclear quantum optics experiments at x-ray free electron laser facilities.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures; minor corrections made; accepted by Physics of Plasma

    Universality of Low-Energy Scattering in 2+1 Dimensions: The Non Symmetric Case

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    For a very large class of potentials, V(x⃗)V(\vec{x}), x⃗∈R2\vec{x}\in R^2, we prove the universality of the low energy scattering amplitude, f(k⃗′,k⃗)f(\vec{k}', \vec{k}). The result is f=π2{1/logk)+O(1/(logk)2)f=\sqrt{\frac{\pi}{2}}\{1/log k)+O(1/(log k)^2). The only exceptions occur if VV happens to have a zero energy bound state. Our new result includes as a special subclass the case of rotationally symmetric potentials, V(∣x⃗∣)V(|\vec{x}|).Comment: 65 pages, Latex, significant changes, new sections and appendice

    Hidden symmetry and quantum phases in spin-3/2 cold atomic systems

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    Optical traps and lattices provide a new opportunity to study strongly correlated high spin systems with cold atoms. In this article, we review the recent progress on the hidden symmetry properties in the simplest high spin fermionic systems with hyperfine spin F=3/2F=3/2, which may be realized with atoms of 132^{132}Cs, 9^9Be, 135^{135}Ba, 137^{137}Ba, and 201^{201}Hg. A {\it generic} SO(5) or isomorphically, Sp(4)Sp(4)) symmetry is proved in such systems with the s-wave scattering interactions in optical traps, or with the on-site Hubbard interactions in optical lattices. Various important features from this high symmetry are studied in the Fermi liquid theory, the mean field phase diagram, and the sign problem in quantum Monte-Carlo simulations. In the s-wave quintet Cooper pairing phase, the half-quantum vortex exhibits the global analogue of the Alice string and non-Abelian Cheshire charge properties in gauge theories. The existence of the quartetting phase, a four-fermion counterpart of the Cooper pairing phase, and its competition with other orders are studied in one dimensional spin-3/2 systems. We also show that counter-intuitively quantum fluctuations in spin-3/2 magnetic systems are even stronger than those in spin-1/2 systems

    Combinatorial interpretation of Haldane-Wu fractional exclusion statistics

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    Assuming that the maximal allowed number of identical particles in state is an integer parameter, q, we derive the statistical weight and analyze the associated equation which defines the statistical distribution. The derived distribution covers Fermi-Dirac and Bose-Einstein ones in the particular cases q = 1 and q -> infinity (n_i/q -> 1), respectively. We show that the derived statistical weight provides a natural combinatorial interpretation of Haldane-Wu fractional exclusion statistics, and present exact solutions of the distribution equation.Comment: 8 pages, 2 eps-figure

    Application of Navier-Stokes analysis to stall flutter

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    A solution procedure was developed to investigate the two-dimensional, one- or two-dimensional flutter characteristics of arbitrary airfoils. This procedure requires a simultaneous integration in time of the solid and fluid equations of motion. The fluid equations of motion are the unsteady compressible Navier-Stokes equations, solved in a body-fitted moving coordinate system using an approximate factorization scheme. The solid equations of motion are integrated in time using an Euler implicit scheme. Flutter is said to occur if small disturbances imposed on the airfoil attitude lead to divergent oscillatory motions at subsequent times. The flutter characteristics of airfoils in subsonic speed at high angles of attack and airfoils in high subsonic and transonic speeds at low angles of attack are investigated. The stall flutter characteristics are also predicted using the same procedure
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