2,108 research outputs found
Reflection positivity and invertible topological phases
We implement an extended version of reflection positivity (Wick-rotated
unitarity) for invertible topological quantum field theories and compute the
abelian group of deformation classes using stable homotopy theory. We apply
these field theory considerations to lattice systems, assuming the existence
and validity of low energy effective field theory approximations, and thereby
produce a general formula for the group of Symmetry Protected Topological (SPT)
phases in terms of Thom's bordism spectra; the only input is the dimension and
symmetry group. We provide computations for fermionic systems in physically
relevant dimensions. Other topics include symmetry in quantum field theories, a
relativistic 10-fold way, the homotopy theory of relativistic free fermions,
and a topological spin-statistics theorem.Comment: 136 pages, 16 figures; minor changes/corrections in version 2; v3
major revision; v4 minor revision: corrected proof of Lemma 9.55, many small
changes throughout; v5 version for publication in Geometry & Topolog
Louisiana Juvenile Justice at the Crossroads
Over the past decade, interest in community-based corrections for juveniles has grown while dissatisfaction with the expense and ineffectiveness of training schools has increased. Since 1985, the National Council on Crime and Delinquency has investigated technologies that would make a shift from juvenile justice systems plagued with over-incarceration to those emphasizing community-based care. The application of a public-safety risk assessment instrument to Louisiana juvenile offenders revealed that substantial numbers of youth could be safely managed in well-run community programs. This risk assessment technology, together with accurate, policy sensitive, population forecasting and an intensive review of existing community programs, can substantially assist administrators in moving toward more effective juvenile correctional systems
A viscoplastic theory applied to copper
A phenomenologically based viscoplastic model is derived for copper. The model is thermodynamically constrained by the condition of material dissipativity. Two internal state variables are considered. The back stress accounts for strain-induced anisotropy, or kinematic hardening. The drag stress accounts for isotropic hardening. Static and dynamic recovery terms are not coupled in either evolutionary equation. The evolution of drag stress depends on static recovery, while the evolution of back stress depends on dynamic recovery. The material constants are determined from isothermal data. Model predictions are compared with experimental data for thermomechanical test conditions. They are in good agreement at the hot end of the loading cycle, but the model overpredicts the stress response at the cold end of the cycle
Pumping conductance, the intrinsic anomalous Hall effect, and statistics of topological invariants
The pumping conductance of a disordered two-dimensional Chern insulator
scales with increasing size and fixed disorder strength to sharp plateau
transitions at well-defined energies between ordinary and quantum Hall
insulators. When the disorder strength is scaled to zero as system size
increases, the "metallic" regime of fluctuating Chern numbers can extend over
the whole band. A simple argument leads to a sort of weighted equipartition of
Chern number over minibands in a finite system with periodic boundary
conditions: even though there must be strong fluctuations between disorder
realizations, the mean Chern number at a given energy is determined by the {\it
clean} Berry curvature distribution expected from the intrinsic anomalous Hall
effect formula for metals. This estimate is compared to numerical results using
recently developed operator algebra methods, and indeed the dominant variation
of average Chern number is explained by the intrinsic anomalous Hall effect. A
mathematical appendix provides more precise definitions and a model for the
full distribution of Chern numbers.Comment: 12 page
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