35,810 research outputs found
Charm and longitudinal structure functions with the Kharzeev-Levin-Nardi model
We use the Kharzeev-Levin-Nardi model of the low gluon distributions to
fit recent HERA data on charm and longitudinal structure functions. Having
checked that this model gives a good description of the data, we use it to
predict and to be measured in a future electron-ion collider. The
results interpolate between those obtained with the de Florian-Sassot and
Eskola-Paukkunen-Salgado nuclear gluon distributions. The conclusion of this
exercise is that the KLN model, simple as it is, may still be used as an
auxiliary tool to make estimates both for heavy ion and electron-ion
collisions.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Dimensional reduction of the CPT-even electromagnetic sector of the Standard Model Extension
The CPT-even abelian gauge sector of the Standard Model Extension is
represented by the Maxwell term supplemented by
, where the
Lorentz-violating background tensor, , possesses
the symmetries of the Riemann tensor. In the present work, we examine the
planar version of this theory, obtained by means of a typical dimensional
reduction procedure to dimensions. The resulting planar electrodynamics
is composed of a gauge sector containing six Lorentz-violating coefficients, a
scalar field endowed with a noncanonical kinetic term, and a coupling term that
links the scalar and gauge sectors. The dispersion relation is exactly
determined, revealing that the six parameters related to the pure
electromagnetic sector do not yield birefringence at any order. In this model,
the birefringence may appear only as a second order effect associated with the
coupling tensor linking the gauge and scalar sectors.The equations of motion
are written and solved in the stationary regime. The Lorentz-violating
parameters do not alter the asymptotic behavior of the fields but induce an
angular dependence not observed in the Maxwell planar theory.Comment: 13 pages, revtex style, no figures, to appear in Physical Review
D(2011
Particle Learning for General Mixtures
This paper develops particle learning (PL) methods for the estimation of general mixture models. The approach is distinguished from alternative particle filtering methods in two major ways. First, each iteration begins by resampling particles according to posterior predictive probability, leading to a more efficient set for propagation. Second, each particle tracks only the "essential state vector" thus leading to reduced dimensional inference. In addition, we describe how the approach will apply to more general mixture models of current interest in the literature; it is hoped that this will inspire a greater number of researchers to adopt sequential Monte Carlo methods for fitting their sophisticated mixture based models. Finally, we show that PL leads to straight forward tools for marginal likelihood calculation and posterior cluster allocation.Business Administratio
Probing quantum fluctuation theorems in engineered reservoirs
Fluctuation Theorems are central in stochastic thermodynamics, as they allow
for quantifying the irreversibility of single trajectories. Although they have
been experimentally checked in the classical regime, a practical demonstration
in the framework of quantum open systems is still to come. Here we propose a
realistic platform to probe fluctuation theorems in the quantum regime. It is
based on an effective two-level system coupled to an engineered reservoir, that
enables the detection of the photons emitted and absorbed by the system. When
the system is coherently driven, a measurable quantum component in the entropy
production is evidenced. We quantify the error due to photon detection
inefficiency, and show that the missing information can be efficiently
corrected, based solely on the detected events. Our findings provide new
insights into how the quantum character of a physical system impacts its
thermodynamic evolution.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Thermal evolution of hybrid stars within the framework of a nonlocal Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model
We study the thermal evolution of neutron stars containing deconfined quark
matter in their core. Such objects are generally referred to as quark-hybrid
stars. The confined hadronic matter in their core is described in the framework
of non-linear relativistic nuclear field theory. For the quark phase we use a
non-local extension of the SU(3) Nambu Jona-Lasinio model with vector
interactions. The Gibbs condition is used to model phase equilibrium between
confined hadronic matter and deconfined quark matter. Our study indicates that
high-mass neutron stars may contain between 35 and 40 % deconfined quark-hybrid
matter in their cores. Neutron stars with canonical masses of around would not contain deconfined quark matter. The central proton
fractions of the stars are found to be high, enabling them to cool rapidly.
Very good agreement with the temperature evolution established for the neutron
star in Cassiopeia A (Cas A) is obtained for one of our models (based on the
popular NL3 nuclear parametrization), if the protons in the core of our stellar
models are strongly paired, the repulsion among the quarks is mildly repulsive,
and the mass of Cas A has a canonical value of .Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Electronic properties of curved graphene sheets
A model is proposed to study the electronic structure of slightly curved
graphene sheets with an arbitrary number of pentagon-heptagon pairs and
Stone-Wales defects based on a cosmological analogy. The disorder induced by
curvature produces characteristic patterns in the local density of states that
can be observed in scanning tunnel and transmission electron microscopy.Comment: Corrected versio
Fold-Saddle Bifurcation in Non-Smooth Vector Fields on the Plane
This paper presents results concerning bifurcations of 2D piecewise-smooth
dynamical systems governed by vector fields. Generic three parameter families
of a class of Non-Smooth Vector Fields are studied and its bifurcation diagrams
are exhibited. Our main result describes the unfolding of the so called
Fold-Saddle singularity
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