79 research outputs found
Scattering and delay time for 1D asymmetric potentials: the step-linear and the step-exponential cases
We analyze the quantum-mechanical behavior of a system described by a
one-dimensional asymmetric potential constituted by a step plus (i) a linear
barrier or (ii) an exponential barrier. We solve the energy eigenvalue equation
by means of the integral representation method, classifying the independent
solutions as equivalence classes of homotopic paths in the complex plane.
We discuss the structure of the bound states as function of the height U_0 of
the step and we study the propagation of a sharp-peaked wave packet reflected
by the barrier. For both the linear and the exponential barrier we provide an
explicit formula for the delay time \tau(E) as a function of the peak energy E.
We display the resonant behavior of \tau(E) at energies close to U_0. By
analyzing the asymptotic behavior for large energies of the eigenfunctions of
the continuous spectrum we also show that, as expected, \tau(E) approaches the
classical value for E -> \infty, thus diverging for the step-linear case and
vanishing for the step-exponential one.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Demkov-Kunike model for cold atom association: weak interaction regime
We study the nonlinear mean-field dynamics of molecule formation at coherent
photo- and magneto-association of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate for the
case when the external field configuration is defined by the quasi-linear level
crossing Demkov-Kunike model, characterized by a bell-shaped pulse and finite
variation of the detuning. We present a general approach to construct an
approximation describing the temporal dynamics of the molecule formation in the
weak interaction regime and apply the developed method to the nonlinear
Demkov-Kunike problem. The presented approximation, written as a scaled
solution to the linear problem associated to the nonlinear one we treat,
contains fitting parameters which are determined through a variational
procedure. Assuming that the parameters involved in the solution of the linear
problem are not modified, we suggest an analytical expression for the scaling
parameter.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Synchronization in populations of globally coupled oscillators with inertial effects
A model for synchronization of globally coupled phase oscillators including
``inertial'' effects is analyzed. In such a model, both oscillator frequencies
and phases evolve in time. Stationary solutions include incoherent
(unsynchronized) and synchronized states of the oscillator population. Assuming
a Lorentzian distribution of oscillator natural frequencies, , both
larger inertia or larger frequency spread stabilize the incoherent solution,
thereby making harder to synchronize the population. In the limiting case
, the critical coupling becomes independent of
inertia. A richer phenomenology is found for bimodal distributions. For
instance, inertial effects may destabilize incoherence, giving rise to
bifurcating synchronized standing wave states. Inertia tends to harden the
bifurcation from incoherence to synchronized states: at zero inertia, this
bifurcation is supercritical (soft), but it tends to become subcritical (hard)
as inertia increases. Nonlinear stability is investigated in the limit of high
natural frequencies.Comment: Revtex, 36 pages, submit to Phys. Rev.
Current and charge distributions of the fractional quantum Hall liquids with edges
An effective Chern-Simons theory for the quantum Hall states with edges is
studied by treating the edge and bulk properties in a unified fashion. An exact
steady-state solution is obtained for a half-plane geometry using the
Wiener-Hopf method. For a Hall bar with finite width, it is proved that the
charge and current distributions do not have a diverging singularity. It is
shown that there exists only a single mode even for the hierarchical states,
and the mode is not localized exponentially near the edges. Thus this result
differs from the edge picture in which electrons are treated as strictly one
dimensional chiral Luttinger liquids.Comment: 21 pages, REV TeX fil
1/2-BPS Correlators as c=1 S-matrix
We argue from two complementary viewpoints of Holography that the 2-point
correlation functions of 1/2-BPS multi-trace operators in the large-N (planar)
limit are nothing but the (Wick-rotated) S-matrix elements of c=1 matrix model.
On the bulk side, we consider an Euclideanized version of the so-called
bubbling geometries and show that the corresponding droplets reach the
conformal boundary. Then the scattering matrix of fluctuations of the droplets
gives directly the two-point correlators through the GKPW prescription. On the
Yang-Mills side, we show that the two-point correlators of holomorphic and
anti-holomorphic operators are essentially equivalent with the transformation
functions between asymptotic in- and out-states of c=1 matrix model. Extension
to non-planar case is also discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, corrected typos, version to appear in JHE
Statistical distribution of quantum entanglement for a random bipartite state
We compute analytically the statistics of the Renyi and von Neumann entropies
(standard measures of entanglement), for a random pure state in a large
bipartite quantum system. The full probability distribution is computed by
first mapping the problem to a random matrix model and then using a Coulomb gas
method. We identify three different regimes in the entropy distribution, which
correspond to two phase transitions in the associated Coulomb gas. The two
critical points correspond to sudden changes in the shape of the Coulomb charge
density: the appearance of an integrable singularity at the origin for the
first critical point, and the detachement of the rightmost charge (largest
eigenvalue) from the sea of the other charges at the second critical point.
Analytical results are verified by Monte Carlo numerical simulations. A short
account of some of these results appeared recently in Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf
104}, 110501 (2010).Comment: 7 figure
Self-dual noncommutative \phi^4-theory in four dimensions is a non-perturbatively solvable and non-trivial quantum field theory
We study quartic matrix models with partition function Z[E,J]=\int dM
\exp(trace(JM-EM^2-(\lambda/4)M^4)). The integral is over the space of
Hermitean NxN-matrices, the external matrix E encodes the dynamics, \lambda>0
is a scalar coupling constant and the matrix J is used to generate correlation
functions. For E not a multiple of the identity matrix, we prove a universal
algebraic recursion formula which gives all higher correlation functions in
terms of the 2-point function and the distinct eigenvalues of E. The 2-point
function itself satisfies a closed non-linear equation which must be solved
case by case for given E. These results imply that if the 2-point function of a
quartic matrix model is renormalisable by mass and wavefunction
renormalisation, then the entire model is renormalisable and has vanishing
\beta-function.
As main application we prove that Euclidean \phi^4-quantum field theory on
four-dimensional Moyal space with harmonic propagation, taken at its
self-duality point and in the infinite volume limit, is exactly solvable and
non-trivial. This model is a quartic matrix model, where E has for N->\infty
the same spectrum as the Laplace operator in 4 dimensions. Using the theory of
singular integral equations of Carleman type we compute (for N->\infty and
after renormalisation of E,\lambda) the free energy density
(1/volume)\log(Z[E,J]/Z[E,0]) exactly in terms of the solution of a non-linear
integral equation. Existence of a solution is proved via the Schauder fixed
point theorem.
The derivation of the non-linear integral equation relies on an assumption
which we verified numerically for coupling constants 0<\lambda\leq (1/\pi).Comment: LaTeX, 64 pages, xypic figures. v4: We prove that recursion formulae
and vanishing of \beta-function hold for general quartic matrix models. v3:
We add the existence proof for a solution of the non-linear integral
equation. A rescaling of matrix indices was necessary. v2: We provide
Schwinger-Dyson equations for all correlation functions and prove an
algebraic recursion formula for their solutio
Quantum Theory in Accelerated Frames of Reference
The observational basis of quantum theory in accelerated systems is studied.
The extension of Lorentz invariance to accelerated systems via the hypothesis
of locality is discussed and the limitations of this hypothesis are pointed
out. The nonlocal theory of accelerated observers is briefly described.
Moreover, the main observational aspects of Dirac's equation in noninertial
frames of reference are presented. The Galilean invariance of nonrelativistic
quantum mechanics and the mass superselection rule are examined in the light of
the invariance of physical laws under inhomogeneous Lorentz transformations.Comment: 25 pages, no figures, contribution to Springer Lecture Notes in
Physics (Proc. SR 2005, Potsdam, Germany, February 13 - 18, 2005
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