31,710 research outputs found
Hierarchical solutions of the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model: Exact asymptotic behavior near the critical temperature
We analyze the replica-symmetry-breaking construction in the
Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model of a spin glass. We present a general scheme for
deriving an exact asymptotic behavior near the critical temperature of the
solution with an arbitrary number of discrete hierarchies of the broken replica
symmetry. We show that all solutions with finite-many hierarchies are unstable
and only the scheme with infinite-many hierarchies becomes marginally stable.
We show how the solutions from the discrete replica-symmetry-breaking scheme go
over to the continuous one with increasing the number of hierarchies.Comment: REVTeX4, 11 pages, no figure
Rayleigh-Benard Convection in Large-Aspect-Ratio Domains
The coarsening and wavenumber selection of striped states growing from random
initial conditions are studied in a non-relaxational, spatially extended, and
far-from-equilibrium system by performing large-scale numerical simulations of
Rayleigh-B\'{e}nard convection in a large-aspect-ratio cylindrical domain with
experimentally realistic boundaries. We find evidence that various measures of
the coarsening dynamics scale in time with different power-law exponents,
indicating that multiple length scales are required in describing the time
dependent pattern evolution. The translational correlation length scales with
time as , the orientational correlation length scales as ,
and the density of defects scale as . The final pattern evolves
toward the wavenumber where isolated dislocations become motionless, suggesting
a possible wavenumber selection mechanism for large-aspect-ratio convection.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Discovery of a New Quadruple Lens HST 1411+5211
Gravitational lensing is an important tool for probing the mass distribution
of galaxies. In this letter we report the discovery of a new quadruple lens HST
1411+5211 found in archived WFPC2 images of the galaxy cluster CL140933+5226.
If the galaxy is a cluster member then its redshift is . The images of
the source appear unresolved in the WFC implying that the source is a quasar.
We have modeled the lens as both a single galaxy and a galaxy plus a cluster.
The latter model yields excellent fits to the image positions along with
reasonable parameters for the galaxy and cluster making HST 1411+5211 a likely
gravitational lens. Determination of the source redshift and confirmation of
the lens redshift would allow us to put strong constraints on the mass
distribution of the lensing galaxy.Comment: 11 pages including 1 postscript figure, aastex. Accepted to the ApJL.
Also available from:
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu:80/users/philf/www/papers/list.htm
Field-tuned quantum critical point of antiferromagnetic metals
A magnetic field applied to a three-dimensional antiferromagnetic metal can
destroy the long-range order and thereby induce a quantum critical point. Such
field-induced quantum critical behavior is the focus of many recent
experiments. We investigate theoretically the quantum critical behavior of
clean antiferromagnetic metals subject to a static, spatially uniform external
magnetic field. The external field does not only suppress (or induce in some
systems) antiferromagnetism but also influences the dynamics of the order
parameter by inducing spin precession. This leads to an exactly marginal
correction to spin-fluctuation theory. We investigate how the interplay of
precession and damping determines the specific heat, magnetization,
magnetocaloric effect, susceptibility and scattering rates. We point out that
the precession can change the sign of the leading \sqrt{T} correction to the
specific heat coefficient c(T)/T and can induce a characteristic maximum in
c(T)/T for certain parameters. We argue that the susceptibility \chi =\partial
M/\partial B is the thermodynamic quantity which shows the most significant
change upon approaching the quantum critical point and which gives experimental
access to the (dangerously irrelevant) spin-spin interactions.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Rare earth spin ensemble magnetically coupled to a superconducting resonator
Interfacing superconducting quantum processors, working in the GHz frequency
range, with optical quantum networks and atomic qubits is a challenging task
for the implementation of distributed quantum information processing as well as
for quantum communication. Using spin ensembles of rare earth ions provide an
excellent opportunity to bridge microwave and optical domains at the quantum
level. In this letter, we demonstrate magnetic coupling of Er spins
doped in YSiO crystal to a high-Q coplanar superconducting
resonator.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical properties of mutually delayed coupled semiconductor lasers
We theoretically investigate the dynamical properties of a system of two semiconductor lasers that are mutually coupled via their optical fields. An intrinsic feature of the coupling is its time delay which generically arises from the finite propagation time of the light form one laser to the other. In our system the coupling time is in the sub-ns range, which is of the same order of magnitude as the period of laser's internal relaxation oscillations. We model this system with Lang-Kobayashi-type rate equations where we account for the mutual coupling of the two lasers by a delay term. The resulting set of nonlinear delay differential equations is analyzed by using recently developed numerical continuation. We consider the case of two nearly identical lasers with symmetrical coupling conditions but different frequencies, and present an analysis of the coupled laser modes (CLMs) of the system
Reduction of Dilute Ising Spin Glasses
The recently proposed reduction method for diluted spin glasses is
investigated in depth. In particular, the Edwards-Anderson model with \pm J and
Gaussian bond disorder on hyper-cubic lattices in d=2, 3, and 4 is studied for
a range of bond dilutions. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of using
bond dilution to elucidate low-temperature properties of Ising spin glasses,
and provide a starting point to enhance the methods used in reduction. Based on
that, a greedy heuristic call ``Dominant Bond Reduction'' is introduced and
explored.Comment: 10 pages, revtex, final version, find related material at
http://www.physics.emory.edu/faculty/boettcher
Alternative Solution of the Path Integral for the Radial Coulomb Problem
In this Letter I present an alternative solution of the path integral for the
radial Coulomb problem which is based on a two-dimensional singular version of
the Levi-Civita transformation.Comment: 7 pages, Late
A Numerical Approach to Coulomb Gauge QCD
We calculate the ghost two-point function in Coulomb gauge QCD with a simple
model vacuum gluon wavefunction using Monte Carlo integration. This approach
extends the previous analytic studies of the ghost propagator with this ansatz,
where a ladder-rainbow expansion was unavoidable for calculating the path
integral over gluon field configurations. The new approach allows us to study
the possible critical behavior of the coupling constant, as well as the Coulomb
potential derived from the ghost dressing function. We demonstrate that IR
enhancement of the ghost correlator or Coulomb form factor fails to
quantitatively reproduce confinement using Gaussian vacuum wavefunctional
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