183,647 research outputs found
Early Time Dynamics of Gluon Fields in High Energy Nuclear Collisions
Nuclei colliding at very high energy create a strong, quasi-classical gluon
field during the initial phase of their interaction. We present an analytic
calculation of the initial space-time evolution of this field in the limit of
very high energies using a formal recursive solution of the Yang-Mills
equations. We provide analytic expressions for the initial chromo-electric and
chromo-magnetic fields and for their energy-momentum tensor. In particular, we
discuss event-averaged results for energy density and energy flow as well as
for longitudinal and transverse pressure of this system. For example, we find
that the ratio of longitudinal to transverse pressure very early in the system
behaves as where
is the longitudinal proper time, is related to the saturation scales
of the two nuclei, and with a scale to
be defined later. Our results are generally applicable if .
As already discussed in a previous paper, the transverse energy flow of
the gluon field exhibits hydrodynamic-like contributions that follow transverse
gradients of the energy density . In addition, a
rapidity-odd energy flow also emerges from the non-abelian analog of Gauss' Law
and generates non-vanishing angular momentum of the field. We will discuss the
space-time picture that emerges from our analysis and its implications for
observables in heavy ion collisions.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
HopSkipJumpAttack: A Query-Efficient Decision-Based Attack
The goal of a decision-based adversarial attack on a trained model is to
generate adversarial examples based solely on observing output labels returned
by the targeted model. We develop HopSkipJumpAttack, a family of algorithms
based on a novel estimate of the gradient direction using binary information at
the decision boundary. The proposed family includes both untargeted and
targeted attacks optimized for and similarity metrics
respectively. Theoretical analysis is provided for the proposed algorithms and
the gradient direction estimate. Experiments show HopSkipJumpAttack requires
significantly fewer model queries than Boundary Attack. It also achieves
competitive performance in attacking several widely-used defense mechanisms.
(HopSkipJumpAttack was named Boundary Attack++ in a previous version of the
preprint.
Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in the local density of states
The scattering of electrons with inhomogeneities produces modulations in the
local density of states of a metal. We show that electron interference
contributions to these modulations are affected by the magnetic field via the
Aharonov-Bohm effect. This can be exploited in a simple STM setup that serves
as an Aharonov-Bohm interferometer at the nanometer scale.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. v2 added reference
Spin torque ferromagnetic resonance with magnetic field modulation
We demonstrate a technique of broadband spin torque ferromagnetic resonance
(ST-FMR) with magnetic field modulation for measurements of spin wave
properties in magnetic nanostructures. This technique gives great improvement
in sensitivity over the conventional ST-FMR measurements, and application of
this technique to nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) reveals a rich
spectrum of standing spin wave eigenmodes. Comparison of the ST-FMR
measurements with micromagnetic simulations of the spin wave spectrum allows us
to explain the character of low-frequency magnetic excitations in nanoscale
MTJs.Comment: Also see: http://faculty.sites.uci.edu/krivorotovgroup
Efficiency at maximum power output of an irreversible Carnot-like cycle with internally dissipative friction
We investigate the efficiency at maximum power of an irreversible Carnot
engine performing finite-time cycles between two reservoirs at temperatures
and , taking into account of internally dissipative
friction in two "adiabatic" processes. In the frictionless case, the
efficiencies at maximum power output are retrieved to be situated between
and , with being
the Carnot efficiency. The strong limits of the dissipations in the hot and
cold isothermal processes lead to the result that the efficiency at maximum
power output approaches the values of and
, respectively. When dissipations of two isothermal
and two adiabatic processes are symmetric, respectively, the efficiency at
maximum power output is founded to be bounded between 0 and the Curzon-Ahlborn
(CA) efficiency , and the the CA efficiency is achieved in
the absence of internally dissipative friction
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