31,106 research outputs found
Dilaton as a Dark Matter Candidate and its Detection
Assuming that the dilaton is the dark matter of the universe, we propose an
experiment to detect the relic dilaton using the electromagnetic resonant
cavity, based on the dilaton-photon conversion in strong electromagnetic
background. We calculate the density of the relic dilaton, and estimate the
dilaton mass for which the dilaton becomes the dark matter of the universe.
With this we calculate the dilaton detection power in the resonant cavity, and
compare it with the axion detection power in similar resonant cavity
experiment.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figure
Fault-tolerant linear optics quantum computation by error-detecting quantum state transfer
A scheme for linear optical implementation of fault-tolerant quantum
computation is proposed, which is based on an error-detecting code. Each
computational step is mediated by transfer of quantum information into an
ancilla system embedding error-detection capability. Photons are assumed to be
subjected to both photon loss and depolarization, and the threshold region of
their strengths for scalable quantum computation is obtained, together with the
amount of physical resources consumed. Compared to currently known results, the
present scheme reduces the resource requirement, while yielding a comparable
threshold region.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Color Reflection Invariance and Monopole Condensation in QCD
We review the quantum instability of the Savvidy-Nielsen-Olesen (SNO) vacuum
of the one-loop effective action of SU(2) QCD, and point out a critical defect
in the calculation of the functional determinant of the gluon loop in the SNO
effective action. We prove that the gauge invariance, in particular the color
reflection invariance, exclude the unstable tachyonic modes from the gluon loop
integral. This guarantees the stability of the magnetic condensation in QCD.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, JHEP styl
Dilatonic Dark Matter and Unified Cosmology -- a New Paradigm --
We study the possibility that the dilaton -- the fundamental scalar field
which exists in all the existing unified field theories -- plays the role of
the dark matter of the universe. We find that the condition for the dilaton to
be the dark matter strongly restricts its mass to be around 0.5 keV or 270 MeV.
For the other mass ranges, the dilaton either undercloses or overcloses the
universe. The 0.5 keV dilaton has the free-streaming distance of about 1.4 Mpc
and becomes an excellent candidate of a warm dark matter, while the 270 MeV one
has the free-streaming distance of about 7.4 pc and becomes a cold dark matter.
We discuss the possible ways to detect the dilaton experimentallyComment: 19 pages, 5 figure, Talk given at the IIth RESCEU International
Symposium on Dark Matter in the Universe and its Direct Detections, 1996.
Proceedings published by Academic Press, Tokyo, edited by K sat
Multilevel Modulation of a Sensory Motor Circuit during C. elegans Sleep and Arousal
Sleep is characterized by behavioral quiescence, homeostasis, increased arousal threshold, and rapid reversibility. Understanding how these properties are encoded by a neuronal circuit has been difficult, and no single molecular or neuronal pathway has been shown to be responsible for the regulation of sleep. Taking advantage of the well-mapped neuronal connections of Caenorhabditis elegans and the sleep-like states in this animal, we demonstrate the changed properties of both sensory neurons and downstream interneurons that mediate sleep and arousal. The ASH sensory neuron displays reduced sensitivity to stimuli in the sleep-like state, and the activity of the corresponding interneurons in ASH’s motor circuit becomes asynchronous. Restoration of interneuron synchrony is sufficient for arousal. The multilevel circuit depression revealed provides an elegant strategy to promote a robust decrease in arousal while allowing for rapid reversibility of the sleep state
Neutron scattering study of novel magnetic order in Na0.5CoO2
We report polarized and unpolarized neutron scattering measurements of the
magnetic order in single crystals of Na0.5CoO2. Our data indicate that below
T_N=88 K the spins form a novel antiferromagnetic pattern within the CoO2
planes, consisting of alternating rows of ordered and non-ordered Co ions. The
domains of magnetic order are closely coupled to the domains of Na ion order,
consistent with such a two-fold symmetric spin arrangement. Magnetoresistance
and anisotropic susceptibility measurements further support this model for the
electronic ground state.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Finite-size scaling theory for explosive percolation transitions
The finite-size scaling (FSS) theory for continuous phase transitions has
been useful in determining the critical behavior from the size dependent
behaviors of thermodynamic quantities. When the phase transition is
discontinuous, however, FSS approach has not been well established yet. Here,
we develop a FSS theory for the explosive percolation transition arising in the
Erd\H{o}s and R\'enyi model under the Achlioptas process. A scaling function is
derived based on the observed fact that the derivative of the curve of the
order parameter at the critical point diverges with system size in a
power-law manner, which is different from the conventional one based on the
divergence of the correlation length at . We show that the susceptibility
is also described in the same scaling form. Numerical simulation data for
different system sizes are well collapsed on the respective scaling functions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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