166,052 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

    GAPS IN THE HEISENBERG-ISING MODEL

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    We report on the closing of gaps in the ground state of the critical Heisenberg-Ising chain at momentum π\pi. For half-filling, the gap closes at special values of the anisotropy Δ=cos(π/Q)\Delta= \cos(\pi/Q), QQ integer. We explain this behavior with the help of the Bethe Ansatz and show that the gap scales as a power of the system size with variable exponent depending on Δ\Delta. We use a finite-size analysis to calculate this exponent in the critical region, supplemented by perturbation theory at Δ0\Delta\sim 0. For rational 1/r1/r fillings, the gap is shown to be closed for {\em all} values of Δ\Delta and the corresponding perturbation expansion in Δ\Delta shows a remarkable cancellation of various diagrams.Comment: 12 RevTeX pages + 4 figures upon reques

    Design and analysis of a wire-driven flexible manipulator for bronchoscopic interventions

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    Bronchoscopic interventions are widely performed for the diagnosis and treatment of lung diseases. However, for most endobronchial devices, the lack of a bendable tip restricts their access ability to get into distal bronchi with complex bifurcations. This paper presents the design of a new wire-driven continuum manipulator to help guide these devices. The proposed manipulator is built by assembling miniaturized blocks that are featured with interlocking circular joints. It has the capability of maintaining its integrity when the lengths of actuation wires change due to the shaft flex. It allows the existence of a relatively large central cavity to pass through other instruments and enables two rotational degrees of freedom. All these features make it suitable for procedures where tubular anatomies are involved and the flexible shafts have to be considerably bent in usage, just like bronchoscopic interventions. A kinematic model is built to estimate the relationship between the translations of actuation wires and the manipulator tip position. A scale-up model is produced for evaluation experiments and the results validate the performance of the proposed mechanism

    Ground State Energy for Fermions in a 1D Harmonic Trap with Delta Function Interaction

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    Conjectures are made for the ground state energy of a large spin 1/2 Fermion system trapped in a 1D harmonic trap with delta function interaction. States with different spin J are separately studied. The Thomas-Fermi method is used as an effective test for the conjecture.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Nanodroplets on rough hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces

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    We present results of Molecular Dynamics (MD) calculations on the behavior of liquid nanodroplets on rough hydrophobic and hydrophilic solid surfaces. On hydrophobic surfaces, the contact angle for nanodroplets depends strongly on the root mean square roughness amplitude, but it is nearly independent of the fractal dimension of the surface. Since increasing the fractal dimension increases the short-wavelength roughness, while the long-wavelength roughness is almost unchanged, we conclude that for hydrophobic interactions the short-wavelength (atomistic) roughness is not very important. We show that the nanodroplet is in a Cassie-like state. For rough hydrophobic surfaces, there is no contact angle hysteresis due to strong thermal fluctuations, which occur at the liquid-solid interface on the nanoscale. On hydrophilic surfaces, however, there is strong contact angle hysteresis due to higher energy barrier. These findings may be very important for the development of artificially biomimetic superhydrophobic surfaces.Comment: 15 pages, 25 figures. Minimal changes with respect to the previous one. A few small improvements, references updated, added the reference to the published paper. Previous work on the same subject: arXiv:cond-mat/060405

    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

    Fractional Energy Loss and Centrality Scaling

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    The phenomenon of centrality scaling in the high-\pt spectra of π0\pi^0 produced in Au-Au collisions at s=200\sqrt s=200 GeV is examined in the framework of relating fractional energy loss to fractional centrality increase. A new scaling behavior is found where the scaling variable is given a power-law dependence on NpartN_{\rm part}. The exponent γ\gamma specifies the fractional proportionality relationship between energy loss and centrality, and is a phenomenologically determined number that characterizes the nuclear suppression effect. The implication on the parton energy loss in the context of recombination is discussed.Comment: 4 pages in RevTe

    Tuning magnetic anisotropy of epitaxial Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films

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    Single crystalline Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films were grown by Molecular Beam Epitaxy and investigated by Magneto-Optic Kerr Effect (MOKE). We find that even though the 4-fold magnetic anisotropies of Ag/Fe/MgO(001) and Ag/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films are different from the corresponding bulk values, their opposite signs allow a fine tuning of the 4-fold magnetic anisotropy in Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films by varying the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 film thicknesses. In particular, the critical point of zero anisotropy can be achieved in a wide range of film thicknesses. Using Rotational MOKE, we determined and constructed the anisotropy phase diagram in the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 thickness plane from which the zero anisotropy exhibits a linear relation between the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 thickness

    A mathematical model of the effect of a predator on species diversity

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    Mathematical model determines reaction between new predator and microbe competitor when the competitor is the predator's sole nutrient resource. The model utilizes differential equations to describe the interactions with the specific growth rates, and analyzes these growth rates as they are affected by population density and nutrient concentration
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