1,949 research outputs found

    Meson and Baryon dispersion relations with Brillouin fermions

    Get PDF
    We study the dispersion relations of mesons and baryons built from Brillouin quarks on one N_f=2 gauge ensemble provided by QCDSF. For quark masses up to the physical strange quark mass, there is hardly any improvement over the Wilson discretization, if either action is link-smeared and tree-level clover improved. For quark masses in the range of the physical charm quark mass, the Brillouin action still shows a perfect relativistic behavior, while the Wilson action induces severe cut-off effects. As an application we determine the masses of the \Omega_c^0, \Omega_{cc}^+ and \Omega_{ccc}^{++} baryons on that ensemble.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; v2: one Reference added, matches published versio

    Training Induced Positive Exchange Bias in NiFe/IrMn Bilayers

    Full text link
    Positive exchange bias has been observed in the Ni81_{81}Fe19_{19}/Ir20_{20}Mn80_{80} bilayer system via soft x-ray resonant magnetic scattering. After field cooling of the system through the blocking temperature of the antiferromagnet, an initial conventional negative exchange bias is removed after training i. e. successive magnetization reversals, resulting in a positive exchange bias for a temperature range down to 30 K below the blocking temperature (450 K). This new manifestation of magnetic training is discussed in terms of metastable magnetic disorder at the magnetically frustrated interface during magnetization reversal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Femtosecond x-ray absorption spectroscopy of spin and orbital angular momentum in photoexcited Ni films during ultrafast demagnetization

    Full text link
    We follow for the first time the evolution of the spin and orbital angular momentum of a thin Ni film during ultrafast demagnetization, by means of x-ray magnetic circular dichroism. Both components decrease with a 130 +/- 40 fs time constant upon excitation with a femtosecond laser pulse. Additional x-ray absorption measurements reveal an increase in the spin-orbit interaction by 6 +/- 2 % during this process. This is the experimental demonstration quantifying the importance of spin-orbit mediated processes during the demagnetization

    Melt viscosities of lattice polymers using a Kramers potential treatment

    Full text link
    Kramers relaxation times Ï„K\tau_{K} and relaxation times Ï„R\tau_{R} and Ï„G\tau_{G} for the end-to-end distances and for center of mass diffusion are calculated for dense systems of athermal lattice chains. Ï„K\tau_{K} is defined from the response of the radius of gyration to a Kramers potential which approximately describes the effect of a stationary shear flow. It is shown that within an intermediate range of chain lengths N the relaxation times Ï„R\tau_{R} and Ï„K\tau_{K} exhibit the same scaling with N, suggesting that N-dependent melt-viscosities for non-entangled chains can be obtained from the Kramers equilibrium concept.Comment: submitted to: Journal of Chemical Physic

    Rate of decoherence for an electron weakly coupled to a phonon gas

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of an electron weakly coupled to a phonon gas. The initial state of the electron is the superposition of two spatially localized distant bumps moving towards each other, and the phonons are in a thermal state. We investigate the dynamics of the system in the kinetic regime and show that the time evolution makes the non-diagonal terms of the density matrix of the electron decay, destroying the interference between the two bumps. We show that such a damping effect is exponential in time, and the related decay rate is proportional to the total scattering cross section of the electron-phonon interaction.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figure

    Opposite Arrows of Time Can Reconcile Relativity and Nonlocality

    Full text link
    We present a quantum model for the motion of N point particles, implying nonlocal (i.e., superluminal) influences of external fields on the trajectories, that is nonetheless fully relativistic. In contrast to other models that have been proposed, this one involves no additional space-time structure as would be provided by a (possibly dynamical) foliation of space-time. This is achieved through the interplay of opposite microcausal and macrocausal (i.e., thermodynamic) arrows of time.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; v5: section headlines adde

    Dispersion relation and spectral range of Karsten-Wilczek and Borici-Creutz fermions

    Full text link
    We investigate some properties of Karsten-Wilczek and Borici-Creutz fermions, which are the best known varieties in the class of minimally doubled lattice fermion actions. Our focus is on the dispersion relation and the distribution of eigenvalues in the free-field theory. We consider the situation in two and four space-time dimensions, and we discuss how properties vary as a function of the Wilson-like lifting parameter rr.Comment: 41 pages, 16 figures, 5 appendices; v2: enhanced discussion, 6 additional references, typo in caption of Fig.6 fixe

    Topological properties of minimally doubled fermions in two space-time dimensions

    Full text link
    The two-dimensional Schwinger model is used to explore how lattice fermion operators perceive the global topological charge q∈Zq \in \mathbb{Z} of a given background gauge field. We focus on Karsten-Wilczek and Borici-Creutz fermions, which are minimally doubled, and compare them to Wilson, Brillouin, naive, staggered and Adams fermions. For each operator the eigenvalue spectrum in a background with q≠0q \neq 0 is determined along with the chiralities of the eigenmodes, and the spectral flow of the pertinent hermitean operator is worked out. We find that Karsten-Wilczek and Borici-Creutz fermions perceive the global topological charge qq in the same way as staggered and naive fermions do.Comment: 32 pages, 31 figures with 68 panel

    Manifestation of fundamental quantum complementarities in time-domain interference experiments with quantum dots: A theoretical analysis

    Full text link
    A theoretical analysis is presented showing that fundamental complementarity between the particle-like properties of an exciton confined in a semiconductor quantum dot and the ability of the same system to show interference may be studied in a time domain interference experiment, similar to those currently performed. The feasibility of such an experiment, including required pulse parameters and the dephasing effect of the environment, is studied.Comment: Final, considerably extended version; 8 pages, 3 figure
    • …
    corecore