234,799 research outputs found

    Electron-hydrogen scattering in Faddeev-Merkuriev integral equation approach

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    Electron-hydrogen scattering is studied in the Faddeev-Merkuriev integral equation approach. The equations are solved by using the Coulomb-Sturmian separable expansion technique. We present SS- and PP-wave scattering and reactions cross sections up to the H(n=4)H(n=4) threshold.Comment: 2 eps figure

    Further results on independent Metropolis-Hastings-Klein sampling

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    Sampling from a lattice Gaussian distribution is emerging as an important problem in coding and cryptography. This paper gives a further analysis of the independent Metropolis-Hastings-Klein (MHK) algorithm we presented at ISIT 2015. We derive the exact spectral gap of the induced Markov chain, which dictates the convergence rate of the independent MHK algorithm. Then, we apply the independent MHK algorithm to lattice decoding and obtained the decoding complexity for solving the CVP as Õ(e∥Bx-c∥2 / mini ∥b̂i∥2). Finally, the tradeoff between decoding radius and complexity is also established

    Multiple solutions in extracting physics information from experimental data

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    Multiple solutions exist in various experimental situations whenever the sum of several amplitudes is used to fit the experimentally measured distributions, such as the cross section, the mass spectrum, or the angular distribution. We show a few examples where multiple solutions were found, while only one solution was reported in the publications. Since there is no existing rules found in choosing any one of these solutions as the physics one, we propose a simple rule which agrees with what have been adopted in previous literatures: the solution corresponding to the minimal magnitudes of the amplitudes must be the physical solution. We suggest test this rule in the future experiments.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure

    Exploring Quantum Phase Transitions with a Novel Sublattice Entanglement Scenario

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    We introduce a new measure called reduced entropy of sublattice to quantify entanglement in spin, electron and boson systems. By analyzing this quantity, we reveal an intriguing connection between quantum entanglement and quantum phase transitions in various strongly correlated systems: the local extremes of reduced entropy and its first derivative as functions of the coupling constant coincide respectively with the first and second order transition points. Exact numerical studies merely for small lattices reproduce several well-known results, demonstrating that our scenario is quite promising for exploring quantum phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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