10,826 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
Generation of electron spin polarization in disordered organic semiconductors
The generation mechanisms of electron spin polarization (ESP) of charge
carriers (electrons and holes, called "doublets") in doublet-doublet
recombination and triplet-doublet quenching in disordered organic
semiconductors are analyzed in detail. The ESP is assumed to result from
quantum transitions between the states of the spin Hamiltonian of the pair of
interacting particles. The value of the ESP is essentially determined by the
mechanism of relative motion of particles. In our work we have considered the
cage and free diffusion models. The effect of possible attractive
spin-independent interactions between particles is also analyzed. Estimation
with obtained formulas shows that the proposed mechanisms can lead to a fairly
strong ESP much larger than the thermal one (at room temperatures)Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Lead salt diode lasers and development of tunable solid state lasers for remote sensing
Extensive studies of the output characteristics of single quantum well lead-telluride lasers developed at the General Motors Research Laboratories were carried out. Threshold currents, output powers and line structures were measured as a function of temperature. Very low-current lasing thresholds, record high operating temperatures and over 30% tuning ranges were achieved. Excellent reproducibilities, good far-field patterns and reasonable linewidths (approx. 500 kHz) were found
Gravitational quantum states of neutrons in a rough waveguide
A theory of gravitational quantum states of ultracold neutrons in waveguides
with absorbing/scattering walls is presented. The theory covers recent
experiments in which the ultracold neutrons were beamed between a mirror and a
rough scatterer/absorber. The analysis is based on a recently developed theory
of quantum transport along random rough walls which is modified in order to
include leaky (absorbing) interfaces and, more importantly, the low-amplitude
high-aperture roughness. The calculations are focused on a regime when the
direct transitions into the continuous spectrum above the absorption threshold
dominate the depletion of neutrons from the gravitational states and are more
efficient than the processes involving the intermediate states. The theoretical
results for the neutron count are sensitive to the correlation radius (lateral
size) of surface inhomogeneities and to the ratio of the particle energy to the
absorption threshold in a weak roughness limit. The main impediment for
observation of the higher gravitational states is the "overhang" of the
particle wave functions which can be overcome only by use scatterers with
strong roughness. In general, the strong roughness with high amplitude is
preferable if one wants just to detect the individual gravitational states,
while the strong roughness experiments with small amplitude and high aperture
are preferable for the quantitative analysis of the data. We also discuss the
ways to further improve the accuracy of calculations and to optimize the
experimental regime.Comment: 48 pages, 14 figure
D3 branes in a Melvin universe: a new realm for gravitational holography
The decoupling limit of a certain configuration of D3 branes in a Melvin
universe defines a sector of string theory known as Puff Field Theory (PFT) - a
theory with non-local dynamics but without gravity. In this work, we present a
systematic analysis of the non-local states of strongly coupled PFT using
gravitational holography. And we are led to a remarkable new holographic
dictionary. We show that the theory admits states that may be viewed as brane
protrusions from the D3 brane worldvolume. The footprint of a protrusion has
finite size - the scale of non-locality in the PFT - and corresponds to an
operator insertion in the PFT. We compute correlators of these states, and we
demonstrate that only part of the holographic bulk is explored by this
computation. We then show that the remaining space holographically encodes the
dynamics of the D3 brane tentacles. The two sectors are coupled: in this
holographic description, this is realized via quantum entanglement across a
holographic screen - a throat in the geometry - that splits the bulk into the
two regions in question. We then propose a description of PFT through a direct
product of two Fock spaces - akin to other non-local settings that employ
quantum group structures.Comment: 44 pages, 13 figures; v2: minor corrections, citations added; v3:
typos corrected in section on local operators, some asymptotic expansions
improved and made more consistent with rest of paper in section on non-local
operator
Viscoplasticity: A thermodynamic formulation
A thermodynamic foundation using the concept of internal state variables is given for a general theory of viscoplasticity, as it applies to initially isotropic materials. Three fundamental internal state variables are admitted. They are: a tensor valued back stress for kinematic effects, and the scalar valued drag and yield strengths for isotropic effects. All three are considered to phenomenologically evolve according to competitive processes between strain hardening, strain induced dynamic recovery, and time induced static recovery. Within this phenomenological framework, a thermodynamically admissible set of evolution equations is put forth. This theory allows each of the three fundamental internal variables to be composed as a sum of independently evolving constituents
- …
