6,948 research outputs found
Religious attitudes and home bias: theory and evidence from a pilot study
This paper examines the relationship between religion and home bias. We propose a simple theoretical framework that suggests that countries interacting via their representative individuals might show a certain degree of religion-driven international altruism that in turn affects trade. We test these predictions exploiting data from a survey on religious attitudes and individuals' preferences over consumption of home-produced versus foreign goods that we designed and carried out in 15 different countries. We find evidence that religious openness and home bias are negatively correlated. This appears to provide some support to the hypothesis that religious openness, through trust and altruism, may have a pro-trade effect.
Matrix Product State representation for Slater Determinants and Configuration Interaction States
Slater determinants are product states of filled quantum fermionic orbitals.
When they are expressed in a configuration space basis chosen a priori, their
entanglement is bound and controlled. This suggests that an exact
representation of Slater determinants as finitely-correlated states is
possible. In this paper we analyze this issue and provide an exact Matrix
Product representation for Slater determinant states. We also argue possible
meaningful extensions that embed more complex configuration interaction states
into the description.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. Published in IJMPB, focus issue on "Classical
vs. Quantum Correlations in Composite Systems
Effective thermal dynamics following a quantum quench in a spin chain
We study the nonequilibrium dynamics of the Quantum Ising Model following an
abrupt quench of the transverse field. We focus on the on-site autocorrelation
function of the order parameter, and extract the phase coherence time
from its asymptotic behavior. We show that the initial state
determines only through an effective temperature set by its
energy and the final Hamiltonian. Moreover, we observe that the dependence of
on the effective temperature fairly agrees with that obtained
in thermal equilibrium as a function of the equilibrium temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Published versio
Optimal correlations in many-body quantum systems
Information and correlations in a quantum system are closely related through
the process of measurement. We explore such relation in a many-body quantum
setting, effectively bridging between quantum metrology and condensed matter
physics. To this aim we adopt the information-theory view of correlations, and
study the amount of correlations after certain classes of
Positive-Operator-Valued Measurements are locally performed. As many-body
system we consider a one-dimensional array of interacting two-level systems (a
spin chain) at zero temperature, where quantum effects are most pronounced. We
demonstrate how the optimal strategy to extract the correlations depends on the
quantum phase through a subtle interplay between local interactions and
coherence.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures + supplementary material. To be published in PR
Non-Abelian fractional quantum Hall states and chiral coset conformal field theories
We propose an effective Lagrangian for the low energy theory of the Pfaffian
states of the fractional quantum Hall effect in the bulk in terms of
non-Abelian Chern-Simons (CS) actions. Our approach exploits the connection
between the topological Chern-Simons theory and chiral conformal field
theories. This construction can be used to describe a large class of
non-Abelian FQH states.Comment: Revised manuscript, 17 pages; new section discusses parafermion
state
Long time dynamics following a quench in an integrable quantum spin chain: local versus non-local operators and effective thermal behavior
We study the dynamics of the quantum Ising chain following a zero-temperature
quench of the transverse field strength. Focusing on the behavior of two-point
spin correlation functions, we show that the correlators of the order parameter
display an effective asymptotic thermal behavior, i.e., they decay
exponentially to zero, with a phase coherence rate and a correlation length
dictated by the equilibrium law with an effective temperature set by the energy
of the initial state. On the contrary, the two-point correlation functions of
the transverse magnetization or the density-of-kinks operator decay as a
power-law and do not exhibit thermal behavior. We argue that the different
behavior is linked to the locality of the corresponding operator with respect
to the quasi-particles of the model: non-local operators, such as the order
parameter, behave thermally, while local ones do not. We study which features
of the two-point correlators are a consequence of the integrability of the
model by analizing their robustness with respect to a sufficiently strong
integrability-breaking term.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, published version. Extensive changes, one
author adde
Dissipative dynamics at first-order quantum transitions
We investigate the effects of dissipation on the quantum dynamics of many-body systems at quantum transitions, especially considering those of the first order. This issue is studied within the paradigmatic one-dimensional quantum Ising model. We analyze the out-of-equilibrium dynamics arising from quenches of the Hamiltonian parameters and dissipative mechanisms modeled by a Lindblad master equation, with either local or global spin operators acting as dissipative operators. Analogously to what happens at continuous quantum transitions, we observe a regime where the system develops a nontrivial dynamic scaling behavior, which is realized when the dissipation parameter u (globally controlling the decay rate of the dissipation within the Lindblad framework) scales as the energy difference Δ of the lowest levels of the Hamiltonian, i.e., u∼Δ. However, unlike continuous quantum transitions where Δ is power-law suppressed, at first-order quantum transitions Δ is exponentially suppressed with increasing the system size (provided the boundary conditions do not favor any particular phase)
Solar Radiation Projections of Cmip5 Models for South of Brazil
The most critical factors in the acceleration of climate and environmental changes are related to the industrial development and consequently to an increase in the demand for electricity. Looking for measures that minimize impacts to the environment, alternative energy sources are gaining more and more space in the Brazilian energy matrix. Brazil presents a great solar potential for the generation of electric energy, so the knowledge of solar radiation and its characteristics are fundamental for the study of the energy use. Due to the above, this article aims to verify the climatic variability corresponding to the variations in solar radiation patterns, in the face of climate change scenarios. The database used in this research is part of the Phase 5 Intercomparison of Matching Models (CMIP5). Was used the RCP 8.5 that scenario is considered the most pessimistic for the 21st century and is consistent with no policy change to reduce emissions and strong dependence on fossil fuels. It is important, first of all, to determine its availability in order to enable the use of solar radiation as a source of energy in a given location and / or region. The climatic projections, based on the pessimistic scenario, in a 75-year period (2026-2100) showed a fall in solar radiation in all of Rio Grande do Sul, reaching 12% in the eastern region of the state. A concern with the factors that influence the pessimistic perspectives of this scenario, as it may affect a possible production of electric energy from solar radiation
Adiabatic dynamics in a spin-1 chain with uniaxial single-spin anisotropy
We study the adiabatic quantum dynamics of an anisotropic spin-1 XY chain
across a second order quantum phase transition. The system is driven out of
equilibrium by performing a quench on the uniaxial single-spin anisotropy, that
is supposed to vary linearly in time. We show that, for sufficiently large
system sizes, the excess energy after the quench admits a non trivial scaling
behavior that is not predictable by standard Kibble-Zurek arguments for
isolated critical points or extended critical regions. This emerges from a
competing effect of many accessible low-lying excited states, inside the whole
continuous line of critical points.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, published versio
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