92,565 research outputs found
Significance of interface anisotropy in laser induced magnetization precession in ferromagnetic metal films
Laser induced ultrafast demagnetization in ferromagnetic metals was
discovered almost 20 years ago, but currently there is still lack of consensus
on the microscopic mechanism responsible for the corresponding transfer of
angular momentum and energy between electron, lattice and spin subsystems. A
distinct, but intrinsically correlated phenomenon occurring on a longer
timescale is the magnetization precession after the ultrafast demagnetization
process, if a magnetic field is applied to tilt the magnetization vector away
from its easy direction, which can be attributed to the change of anisotropy
after laser heating. In an in-plane magnetized Pt/Co/Pt thin film with
perpendicular interface anisotropy, we found excellent agreement between
theoretical prediction with plausible parameters and experimental data measured
using time resolved magneto-optical Kerr effect. This agreement confirms that
the time evolution of the anisotropy field, which is driven by the interaction
between electrons and phonons, determines the magnetization precession
completely. A detailed analysis shows that, even though the whole sample is
magnetized in-plane, the dynamic interface anisotropy field dictates the
initial phase of the magnetization precession, highlighting the significance of
the interface anisotropy field in laser induced magnetization precession.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Effects of medium-induced meson mixing on the equation of state in isospin-asymmetric nuclear matter
We reexamine effects of the meson mixing mediated by nucleon
polarizations on the symmetry energy in isospin-asymmetric nuclear matter.
Taking into account the rearrangement term neglected in previous studies by
others, we evaluate the mixing angle in a novel way within the
Relativistic Mean-Field Models with and without chiral limits. It is found that
the symmetry energy is significantly softened at high densities contrary to the
finding in earlier studies. As the first step of going beyond the lowest-order
calculations, we also solve the RPA equation for the mixing. In
this case, it is found that the symmetry energy is not only significantly
softened by the mixing at supra-saturation densities, similar to
the lowest-order mixing, but interestingly also softened at
subsaturation densities. In addition, the softening of the symmetry energy at
subsaturation densities can be partly suppressed by the nonlinear
self-interaction of the meson.Comment: Significant changes made. Accepted version to appear in PRC (2009
Strongly interacting bosons in a disordered optical lattice
Disorder, prevalent in nature, is intimately involved in such spectacular
effects as the fractional quantum Hall effect and vortex pinning in type-II
superconductors. Understanding the role of disorder is therefore of fundamental
interest to materials research and condensed matter physics. Universal
behavior, such as Anderson localization, in disordered non-interacting systems
is well understood. But, the effects of disorder combined with strong
interactions remains an outstanding challenge to theory. Here, we
experimentally probe a paradigm for disordered, strongly-correlated bosonic
systems-the disordered Bose-Hubbard (DBH) model-using a Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) of ultra-cold atoms trapped in a completely characterized
disordered optical lattice. We determine that disorder suppresses condensate
fraction for superfluid (SF) or coexisting SF and Mott insulator (MI) phases by
independently varying the disorder strength and the ratio of tunneling to
interaction energy. In the future, these results can constrain theories of the
DBH model and be extended to study disorder for strongly-correlated fermionic
particles.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures updated to correct errors in referencing previous
wor
Entanglement between two fermionic atoms inside a cylindrical harmonic trap
We investigate quantum entanglement between two (spin-1/2) fermions inside a
cylindrical harmonic trap, making use of the von Neumann entropy for the
reduced single particle density matrix as the pure state entanglement measure.
We explore the dependence of pair entanglement on the geometry and strength of
the trap and on the strength of the pairing interaction over the complete range
of the effective BCS to BEC crossover. Our result elucidates an interesting
connection between our model system of two fermions and that of two interacting
bosons.Comment: to appear in PR
Globally Optimal Crowdsourcing Quality Management
We study crowdsourcing quality management, that is, given worker responses to
a set of tasks, our goal is to jointly estimate the true answers for the tasks,
as well as the quality of the workers. Prior work on this problem relies
primarily on applying Expectation-Maximization (EM) on the underlying maximum
likelihood problem to estimate true answers as well as worker quality.
Unfortunately, EM only provides a locally optimal solution rather than a
globally optimal one. Other solutions to the problem (that do not leverage EM)
fail to provide global optimality guarantees as well. In this paper, we focus
on filtering, where tasks require the evaluation of a yes/no predicate, and
rating, where tasks elicit integer scores from a finite domain. We design
algorithms for finding the global optimal estimates of correct task answers and
worker quality for the underlying maximum likelihood problem, and characterize
the complexity of these algorithms. Our algorithms conceptually consider all
mappings from tasks to true answers (typically a very large number), leveraging
two key ideas to reduce, by several orders of magnitude, the number of mappings
under consideration, while preserving optimality. We also demonstrate that
these algorithms often find more accurate estimates than EM-based algorithms.
This paper makes an important contribution towards understanding the inherent
complexity of globally optimal crowdsourcing quality management
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