1,358 research outputs found
Quantum Inequalities for the Electromagnetic Field
A quantum inequality for the quantized electromagnetic field is developed for
observers in static curved spacetimes. The quantum inequality derived is a
generalized expression given by a mode function expansion of the four-vector
potential, and the sampling function used to weight the energy integrals is
left arbitrary up to the constraints that it be a positive, continuous function
of unit area and that it decays at infinity. Examples of the quantum inequality
are developed for Minkowski spacetime, Rindler spacetime and the Einstein
closed universe.Comment: 19 pages, 1 table and 1 figure. RevTex styl
Statistical Determination of Bulk Flow Motions
We present here a new parameterization for the bulk motions of galaxies and
clusters (in the linear regime) that can be measured statistically from the
shape and amplitude of the two-dimensional two-point correlation function. We
further propose the one-dimensional velocity dispersion (v_p) of the bulk flow
as a complementary measure of redshift-space distortions, which is
model-independent and not dependent on the normalisation method. As a
demonstration, we have applied our new methodology to the C4 cluster catalogue
constructed from Data Release Three (DR3) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We
find v_p=270^{+433}km/s (also consistent with v_p=0) for this cluster sample
(at z=0.1), which is in agreement with that predicted for a WMAP5-normalised
LCDM model (i.e., v_p(LCDM=203km/s). This measurement does not lend support to
recent claims of excessive bulk motions (\simeq1000 km/s) which appear in
conflict with LCDM, although our large statistical error cannot rule them out.
From the measured coherent evolution of v_p, we develop a technique to
re-construct the perturbed potential, as well as estimating the unbiased matter
density fluctuations and scale--independent bias.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Relativistic Ring-Diagram Nuclear Matter Calculations
A relativistic extension of the particle-particle hole-hole ring-diagram
many-body formalism is developed by using the Dirac equation for
single-particle motion in the medium. Applying this new formalism, calculations
are performed for nuclear matter. The results show that the saturation density
is improved and the equation of state becomes softer as compared to
corresponding Dirac-Brueckner-Hartree-Fock calculations. Using the Bonn A
potential, nuclear matter is predicted to saturate at an energy per nucleon of
--15.30 MeV and a density equivalent to a Fermi momentum of 1.38 fm, in
excellent agreement with empirical information. The compression modulus is 152
MeV at the saturation point.Comment: 23 pages text (LaTex) and 2 figures (paper, will be faxed upon
request), UI-NTH-92-0
Can We Improve the Preprocessing of Photospheric Vector Magnetograms by the Inclusion of Chromospheric Observations?
The solar magnetic field is key to understanding the physical processes in
the solar atmosphere. Nonlinear force-free codes have been shown to be useful
in extrapolating the coronal field upward from underlying vector boundary data.
However, we can only measure the magnetic field vector routinely with high
accuracy in the photosphere, and unfortunately these data do not fulfill the
force-free condition. We must therefore apply some transformations to these
data before nonlinear force-free extrapolation codes can be self-consistently
applied. To this end, we have developed a minimization procedure that yields a
more chromosphere-like field, using the measured photospheric field vectors as
input. The procedure includes force-free consistency integrals, spatial
smoothing, and -- newly included in the version presented here -- an improved
match to the field direction as inferred from fibrils as can be observed in,
e.g., chromospheric H images. We test the procedure using a model
active-region field that included buoyancy forces at the photospheric level.
The proposed preprocessing method allows us to approximate the chromospheric
vector field to within a few degrees and the free energy in the coronal field
to within one percent.Comment: 22 pages, 6 Figur
Glueball production in radiative J/psi, Upsilon decays
Using a bound-state model of weakly bound gluons for glueballs made of two
gluons and a natural generalization of the perturbative QCD formalism for
exclusive hadronic processes, we present results for glueball production in
radiative J/psi, Upsilon decays into several possible glueball states,
including L \not= 0 ones. We perform a detailed phenomenological analysis,
presenting results for the more favored experimental candidates and for decay
angular distributions.Comment: RevTeX4, 26 pages, 11 eps figure
The Quantum Interest Conjecture
Although quantum field theory allows local negative energy densities and
fluxes, it also places severe restrictions upon the magnitude and extent of the
negative energy. The restrictions take the form of quantum inequalities. These
inequalities imply that a pulse of negative energy must not only be followed by
a compensating pulse of positive energy, but that the temporal separation
between the pulses is inversely proportional to their amplitude. In an earlier
paper we conjectured that there is a further constraint upon a negative and
positive energy delta-function pulse pair. This conjecture (the quantum
interest conjecture) states that a positive energy pulse must overcompensate
the negative energy pulse by an amount which is a monotonically increasing
function of the pulse separation. In the present paper we prove the conjecture
for massless quantized scalar fields in two and four-dimensional flat
spacetime, and show that it is implied by the quantum inequalities.Comment: 17 pages, Latex, 3 figures, uses eps
Collective modes of asymmetric nuclear matter in Quantum HadroDynamics
We discuss a fully relativistic Landau Fermi liquid theory based on the
Quantum Hadro-Dynamics () effective field picture of Nuclear Matter
({\it NM}).
From the linearized kinetic equations we get the dispersion relations of the
propagating collective modes. We focus our attention on the dynamical effects
of the interplay between scalar and vector channel contributions. A beautiful
``mirror'' structure in the form of the dynamical response in the
isoscalar/isovector degree of freedom is revealed, with a complete parallelism
in the role respectively played by the compressibility and the symmetry energy.
All that strongly supports the introduction of an explicit coupling to the
scalar-isovector channel of the nucleon-nucleon interaction. In particular we
study the influence of this coupling (to a -meson-like effective field)
on the collective response of asymmetric nuclear matter (). Interesting
contributions are found on the propagation of isovector-like modes at normal
density and on an expected smooth transition to isoscalar-like oscillations at
high baryon density. Important ``chemical'' effects on the neutron-proton
structure of the mode are shown. For dilute we have the isospin
distillation mechanism of the unstable isoscalar-like oscillations, while at
high baryon density we predict an almost pure neutron wave structure of the
propagating sounds.Comment: 18 pages (LATEX), 8 Postscript figures, uses "epsfig
Revisit of the Interaction between Holographic Dark Energy and Dark Matter
In this paper we investigate the possible direct, non-gravitational
interaction between holographic dark energy (HDE) and dark matter. Firstly, we
start with two simple models with the interaction terms
and , and then we move on to the general form . The cosmological constraints of the models are
obtained from the joint analysis of the present Union2.1+BAO+CMB+ data. We
find that the data slightly favor an energy flow from dark matter to dark
energy, although the original HDE model still lies in the 95.4% confidence
level (CL) region. For all models we find at the 95.4% CL. We show that
compared with the cosmic expansion, the effect of interaction on the evolution
of and is smaller, and the relative increment
(decrement) amount of the energy in the dark matter component is constrained to
be less than 9% (15%) at the 95.4% CL. By introducing the interaction, we find
that even when the big rip still can be avoided due to the existence of a
de Sitter solution at . We show that this solution can not be
accomplished in the two simple models, while for the general model such a
solution can be achieved with a large , and the big rip may be avoided
at the 95.4% CL.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, version accepted for publication in JCA
Streamer Wave Events Observed in Solar Cycle 23
In this paper we conduct a data survey searching for well-defined streamer
wave events observed by the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO)
on-board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) throughout Solar Cycle
23. As a result, 8 candidate events are found and presented here. We compare
different events and find that in most of them the driving CMEs ejecta are
characterized by a high speed and a wide angular span, and the CME-streamer
interactions occur generally along the flank of the streamer structure at an
altitude no higher than the bottom of the field of view of LASCO C2. In
addition, all front-side CMEs have accompanying flares. These common
observational features shed light on the excitation conditions of streamer wave
events.
We also conduct a further analysis on one specific streamer wave event on 5
June 2003. The heliocentric distances of 4 wave troughs/crests at various
exposure times are determined; they are then used to deduce the wave properties
like period, wavelength, and phase speeds. It is found that both the period and
wavelength increase gradually with the wave propagation along the streamer
plasma sheet, and the phase speed of the preceding wave is generally faster
than that of the trailing ones. The associated coronal seismological study
yields the radial profiles of the Alfv\'en speed and magnetic field strength in
the region surrounding the streamer plasma sheet. Both quantities show a
general declining trend with time. This is interpreted as an observational
manifestation of the recovering process of the CME-disturbed corona. It is also
found that the Alfv\'enic critical point is at about 10 R where the
flow speed, which equals the Alfv\'en speed, is 200 km s
Noise-assisted preparation of entangled atoms
We discuss the generation of entangled states of two two-level atoms inside
an optical cavity. The cavity mode is supposed to be coupled to a white noise
with adjustable intensity. We describe how the entanglement between the atoms
inside the cavity arise in such a situation. The entanglement is maximized for
intermediate values of the noise intensity, while it is a monotonic function of
the spontaneous rate. This resembles the phenomenon of stochastic resonance and
sheds more light on the idea to exploit white noise in quantum information
processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
- …