2,792 research outputs found
Probing dipole-forbidden autoionizing states by isolated attosecond pulses
We propose a general technique to retrieve the information of
dipole-forbidden resonances in the autoionizing region. In the simulation, a
helium atom is pumped by an isolated attosecond pulse in the extreme
ultraviolet (EUV) combined with a few-femtosecond laser pulse. The excited wave
packet consists of the , , and states, including the background
continua, near the doubly excited state. The resultant electron
spectra with various laser intensities and time delays between the EUV and
laser pulses are obtained by a multilevel model and an ab initio time-dependent
Schr\"odinger equation calculation. By taking the ab initio calculation as a
"virtual measurement", the dipole-forbidden resonances are characterized by the
multilevel model. We found that in contrast to the common assumption, the
nonresonant coupling between the continua plays a significant role in the
time-delayed electron spectra, which shows the correlation effect between
photoelectrons before they leave the core. This technique takes the advantages
of ultrashort pulses uniquely and would be a timely test for the current
attosecond technology.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Retrieval of electron-atom scattering cross sections from laser-induced electron rescattering of atomic negative ions in intense laser fields
We investigated the two-dimensional electron momentum distributions of atomic
negative ions in an intense laser field by solving the time-dependent
Schrodinger equation (TDSE) and using the first- and 2nd-order strong-field
approximations (SFA). We showed that photoelectron energy distributions and
low-energy photoelectron momentum spectra predicted from SFA are in reasonable
agreement with the solutions from the TDSE. More importantly, we showed that
accurate electron-atom elastic scattering cross sections can be retrieved
directly from high-energy electron momentum spectra of atomic negative ions in
the laser field. This opens up the possibility of measuring electron-atom and
electron-molecule scattering cross sections from the photodetachment of atomic
and molecular negative ions by intense short lasers, respectively, with
temporal resolutions in the order of femtoseconds.Comment: 6 papges, 5 figure
Accurate retrieval of structural information from laser-induced photoelectron and high-harmonic spectra by few-cycle laser pulses
By analyzing ``exact'' theoretical results from solving the time-dependent
Schr\"odinger equation of atoms in few-cycle laser pulses, we established the
general conclusion that differential elastic scattering and photo-recombination
cross sections of the target ion with {\em free} electrons can be extracted
accurately from laser-generated high-energy electron momentum spectra and
high-order harmonic spectra, respectively. Since both electron scattering and
photoionization (the inverse of photo-recombination) are the conventional means
for interrogating the structure of atoms and molecules, this result shows that
existing few-cycle infrared lasers can be implemented for ultrafast imaging of
transient molecules with temporal resolution of a few femtoseconds.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
From hadrons to quarks in neutron stars: a review
We review the equation of state of matter in neutron stars from the solid
crust through the liquid nuclear matter interior to the quark regime at higher
densities. We focus in detail on the question of how quark matter appears in
neutron stars, and how it affects the equation of state. After discussing the
crust and liquid nuclear matter in the core we briefly review aspects of
microscopic quark physics relevant to neutron stars, and quark models of dense
matter based on the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio framework, in which gluonic processes
are replaced by effective quark interactions. We turn then to describing
equations of state useful for interpretation of both electromagnetic and
gravitational observations, reviewing the emerging picture of hadron-quark
continuity in which hadronic matter turns relatively smoothly, with at most
only a weak first order transition, into quark matter with increasing density.
We review construction of unified equations of state that interpolate between
the reasonably well understood nuclear matter regime at low densities and the
quark matter regime at higher densities. The utility of such interpolations is
driven by the present inability to calculate the dense matter equation of state
in QCD from first principles. As we review, the parameters of effective quark
models -- which have direct relevance to the more general structure of the QCD
phase diagram of dense and hot matter -- are constrained by neutron star mass
and radii measurements, in particular favoring large repulsive density-density
and attractive diquark pairing interactions. We describe the structure of
neutron stars constructed from the unified equations of states with crossover.
Lastly we present the current equations of state -- called "QHC18" for
quark-hadron crossover -- in a parametrized form practical for neutron star
modeling.Comment: v2, 42 pages, 36 figures, 3 tables; to be published in Reports on
Progress in Physics; new sections for cooling, X-ray analyses, and
gravitational waves are added; the results for tidal deformability are
included; equations of state and the numerical tables are updated; v3, typos
corrected in eq.
Dynamical stabilization of matter-wave solitons revisited
We consider dynamical stabilization of Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) by
time-dependent modulation of the scattering length. The problem has been
studied before by several methods: Gaussian variational approximation, the
method of moments, method of modulated Townes soliton, and the direct averaging
of the Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) equation. We summarize these methods and find that
the numerically obtained stabilized solution has different configuration than
that assumed by the theoretical methods (in particular a phase of the
wavefunction is not quadratic with ). We show that there is presently no
clear evidence for stabilization in a strict sense, because in the numerical
experiments only metastable (slowly decaying) solutions have been obtained. In
other words, neither numerical nor mathematical evidence for a new kind of
soliton solutions have been revealed so far. The existence of the metastable
solutions is nevertheless an interesting and complicated phenomenon on its own.
We try some non-Gaussian variational trial functions to obtain better
predictions for the critical nonlinearity for metastabilization but
other dynamical properties of the solutions remain difficult to predict
Covering the Fermi Surface with Patches of Quarkyonic Chiral Spirals
We argue that in cold, dense quark matter, in the limit of a large number of
colors the ground state is unstable with respect to creation of a complicated
Quarkyonic Chiral Spiral (QCS) state, in which both chiral and translational
symmetries are spontaneously broken. The entire Fermi surface is covered with
patches of QCSs, whose number increases as the quark density does. The low
energy excitations are gapless, given by Wess-Zumino-Novikov-Witten model plus
transverse kinetic terms localized about different patches.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
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