2,627 research outputs found
Comments on ``A note on first-order formalism and odd-derivative actions'' by S. Deser
We argue that the obstacles to having a first-order formalism for
odd-derivative actions presented in a pedagogical note by Deser are based on
examples which are not first-order forms of the original actions. The general
derivation of an equivalent first-order form of the original second-order
action is illustrated using the example of topologically massive
electrodynamics (TME). The correct first-order formulations of the TME model
keep intact the gauge invariance presented in its second-order form
demonstrating that the gauge invariance is not lost in the Ostrogradsky
process.Comment: 6 pages, references are adde
Graded extension of SO(2,1) Lie algebra and the search for exact solutions of Dirac equation by point canonical transformations
SO(2,1) is the symmetry algebra for a class of three-parameter problems that
includes the oscillator, Coulomb and Morse potentials as well as other problems
at zero energy. All of the potentials in this class can be mapped into the
oscillator potential by point canonical transformations. We call this class the
"oscillator class". A nontrivial graded extension of SO(2,1) is defined and its
realization by two-dimensional matrices of differential operators acting in
spinor space is given. It turns out that this graded algebra is the
supersymmetry algebra for a class of relativistic potentials that includes the
Dirac-Oscillator, Dirac-Coulomb and Dirac-Morse potentials. This class is, in
fact, the relativistic extension of the oscillator class. A new point canonical
transformation, which is compatible with the relativistic problem, is
formulated. It maps all of these relativistic potentials into the
Dirac-Oscillator potential.Comment: Replaced with a more potrable PDF versio
Scattering of relativistic particles with Aharonov-Bohm-Coulomb interaction in two dimensions
The Aharonov-Bohm-Coulomb potentials in two dimensions may describe the
interaction between two particles carrying electric charge and magnetic flux,
say, Chern--Simons solitons, or so called anyons. The scattering problem for
such two-body systems is extended to the relativistic case, and the scattering
amplitude is obtained as a partial wave series. The electric charge and
magnetic flux is (, ) for one particle and (, ) for the
other. When , and takes on integer
or half integer values, the partial wave series is summed up approximately to
give a closed form. The results exhibit some nonperturbative features and
cannot be obtained from perturbative quantum electrodynamics at the tree level.Comment: revtex, 11 pages, no figur
Observation of anomalous decoherence effect in a quantum bath at room temperature
Decoherence of quantum objects is critical to modern quantum sciences and
technologies. It is generally believed that stronger noises cause faster
decoherence. Strikingly, recent theoretical research discovers the opposite
case for spins in quantum baths. Here we report experimental observation of the
anomalous decoherence effect for the electron spin-1 of a nitrogen-vacancy
centre in high-purity diamond at room temperature. We demonstrate that under
dynamical decoupling, the double-transition can have longer coherence time than
the single-transition, even though the former couples to the nuclear spin bath
as twice strongly as the latter does. The excellent agreement between the
experimental and the theoretical results confirms the controllability of the
weakly coupled nuclear spins in the bath, which is useful in quantum
information processing and quantum metrology.Comment: 22 pages, related paper at http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.557
Sensing remote nuclear spins
Sensing single nuclear spins is a central challenge in magnetic resonance
based imaging techniques. Although different methods and especially diamond
defect based sensing and imaging techniques in principle have shown sufficient
sensitivity, signals from single nuclear spins are usually too weak to be
distinguished from background noise. Here, we present the detection and
identification of remote single C-13 nuclear spins embedded in nuclear spin
baths surrounding a single electron spins of a nitrogen-vacancy centre in
diamond. With dynamical decoupling control of the centre electron spin, the
weak magnetic field ~10 nT from a single nuclear spin located ~3 nm from the
centre with hyperfine coupling as weak as ~500 Hz is amplified and detected.
The quantum nature of the coupling is confirmed and precise position and the
vector components of the nuclear field are determined. Given the distance over
which nuclear magnetic fields can be detected the technique marks a firm step
towards imaging, detecting and controlling nuclear spin species external to the
diamond sensor
Approximate solution of the Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau equation for a vector Yukawa potential with arbitrary total angular momenta
The usual approximation scheme is used to study the solution of the
Duffin-Kemmer-Petiau (DKP) equation for a vector Yukawa potential in the
framework of the parametric Nikiforov-Uvarov (NU) method. The approximate
energy eigenvalue equation and the corresponding wave function spinor
components are calculated for arbitrary total angular momentum in closed form.
Further, the approximate energy equation and wave function spinor components
are also given for case. A set of parameter values is used to obtain the
numerical values for the energy states with various values of quantum levelsComment: 17 pages; Communications in Theoretical Physics (2012). arXiv admin
note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1205.0938, and with
arXiv:quant-ph/0410159 by other author
Quantum Mechanics of Multi-Prong Potentials
We describe the bound state and scattering properties of a quantum mechanical
particle in a scalar -prong potential. Such a study is of special interest
since these situations are intermediate between one and two dimensions. The
energy levels for the special case of identical prongs exhibit an
alternating pattern of non-degeneracy and fold degeneracy. It is shown
that the techniques of supersymmetric quantum mechanics can be used to generate
new solutions. Solutions for prongs of arbitrary lengths are developed.
Discussions of tunneling in -well potentials and of scattering for piecewise
constant potentials are given. Since our treatment is for general values of
, the results can be studied in the large limit. A somewhat surprising
result is that a free particle incident on an -prong vertex undergoes
continuously increased backscattering as the number of prongs is increased.Comment: 17 pages. LATEX. On request, TOP_DRAW files or hard copies available
for 7 figure
Quantum-dot spin qubit and hyperfine interaction
We review our investigation of the spin dynamics for two electrons confined
to a double quantum dot under the influence of the hyperfine interaction
between the electron spins and the surrounding nuclei. Further we propose a
scheme to narrow the distribution of difference in polarization between the two
dots in order to suppress hyperfine induced decoherence.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; Presented as plenary talk at the annual DPG
meeting 2006, Dresden (to appear in Advances in Solid State Physics vol. 46,
2006
Quantum-mechanical model for particles carrying electric charge and magnetic flux in two dimensions
We propose a simple quantum mechanical equation for particles in two
dimensions, each particle carrying electric charge and magnetic flux. Such
particles appear in (2+1)-dimensional Chern-Simons field theories as charged
vortex soliton solutions, where the ratio of charge to flux is a constant
independent of the specific solution. As an approximation, the charge-flux
interaction is described here by the Aharonov-Bohm potential, and the
charge-charge interaction by the Coulomb one. The equation for two particles,
one with charge and flux () and the other with () where
is a pure number is studied in detail. The bound state problem is solved
exactly for arbitrary and when . The scattering problem is
exactly solved in parabolic coordinates in special cases when takes integers or half integers. In both cases the cross sections obtained
are rather different from that for pure Coulomb scattering.Comment: 12 pages, REVTeX, no figur
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