5,548 research outputs found
Deformed Double Yangian Structures
Scaling limits when q tends to 1 of the elliptic vertex algebras A_qp(sl(N))
are defined for any N, extending the previously known case of N=2. They realise
deformed, centrally extended double Yangian structures DY_r(sl(N)). As in the
quantum affine algebras U_q(sl(N)), and quantum elliptic affine algebras
A_qp(sl(N)), these algebras contain subalgebras at critical values of the
central charge c=-N-Mr (M integer, 2r=ln p/ln q), which become Abelian when
c=-N or 2r=Nh for h integer. Poisson structures and quantum exchange relations
are derived for their abstract generators.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX2e Document - packages amsfonts,amssymb,subeqnarra
Dynamical transitions in incommensurate systems
In the dynamics of the undamped Frenkel-Kontorova model with kinetic terms,
we find a transition between two regimes, a floating incommensurate and a
pinned incommensurate phase. This behavior is compared to the static version of
the model. A remarkable difference is that, while in the static case the two
regimes are separated by a single transition (the Aubry transition), in the
dynamical case the transition is characterized by a critical region, in which
different phenomena take place at different times. In this paper, the
generalized angular momentum we have previously introduced, and the dynamical
modulation function are used to begin a characterization of this critical
region. We further elucidate the relation between these two quantities, and
present preliminary results about the order of the dynamical transition.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, file 'epl.cls' necessary for compilation
provided; subm. to Europhysics Letter
COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and anti-vaxxers – supporting healthcare workers to navigate the unvaccinated: Reflections from clinical practice
An important step in preparation for the fourth COVID-19 wave is to provide healthcare workers (HCWs) with skills to facilitate behaviour change in vaccine-hesitant patients. Convincing members of the public who are vaccine hesitant rather than anti-vaxxers should be the focus of our efforts. Our experience is that vaccine-hesitant individuals and anti-vaxxers are generally distinct cohorts, with differing reasons for their vaccine reluctance. If we are to truly address hesitancy, we must take time to understand the reasons for an individual’s hesitancy. Developing a conceptual framework and skills for HCWs during encounters with unvaccinated individuals will be important not only for shifting some to get vaccinated, but also to manage the complex emotions that HCWs will undoubtedly be forced to confront during the fourth wave
Phononics: Manipulating heat flow with electronic analogs and beyond
The form of energy termed heat that typically derives from lattice
vibrations, i.e. the phonons, is usually considered as waste energy and,
moreover, deleterious to information processing. However, with this colloquium,
we attempt to rebut this common view: By use of tailored models we demonstrate
that phonons can be manipulated like electrons and photons can, thus enabling
controlled heat transport. Moreover, we explain that phonons can be put to
beneficial use to carry and process information. In a first part we present
ways to control heat transport and how to process information for physical
systems which are driven by a temperature bias. Particularly, we put forward
the toolkit of familiar electronic analogs for exercising phononics; i.e.
phononic devices which act as thermal diodes, thermal transistors, thermal
logic gates and thermal memories, etc.. These concepts are then put to work to
transport, control and rectify heat in physical realistic nanosystems by
devising practical designs of hybrid nanostructures that permit the operation
of functional phononic devices and, as well, report first experimental
realizations. Next, we discuss yet richer possibilities to manipulate heat flow
by use of time varying thermal bath temperatures or various other external
fields. These give rise to a plenty of intriguing phononic nonequilibrium
phenomena as for example the directed shuttling of heat, a geometrical phase
induced heat pumping, or the phonon Hall effect, that all may find its way into
operation with electronic analogs.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, modified title and revised, accepted for
publication in Rev. Mod. Phy
Defect-induced perturbations of atomic monolayers on solid surfaces
We study long-range morphological changes in atomic monolayers on solid
substrates induced by different types of defects; e.g., by monoatomic steps in
the surface, or by the tip of an atomic force microscope (AFM), placed at some
distance above the substrate. Representing the monolayer in terms of a suitably
extended Frenkel-Kontorova-type model, we calculate the defect-induced density
profiles for several possible geometries. In case of an AFM tip, we also
determine the extra force exerted on the tip due to the tip-induced
de-homogenization of the monolayer.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Electron properties of carbon nanotubes in a periodic potential
A periodic potential applied to a nanotube is shown to lock electrons into
incompressible states that can form a devil's staircase. Electron interactions
result in spectral gaps when the electron density (relative to a half-filled
Carbon pi-band) is a rational number per potential period, in contrast to the
single-particle case where only the integer-density gaps are allowed. When
electrons are weakly bound to the potential, incompressible states arise due to
Bragg diffraction in the Luttinger liquid. Charge gaps are enhanced due to
quantum fluctuations, whereas neutral excitations are governed by an effective
SU(4)~O(6) Gross-Neveu Lagrangian. In the opposite limit of the tightly bound
electrons, effects of exchange are unimportant, and the system behaves as a
single fermion mode that represents a Wigner crystal pinned by the external
potential, with the gaps dominated by the Coulomb repulsion. The phase diagram
is drawn using the effective spinless Dirac Hamiltonian derived in this limit.
Incompressible states can be detected in the adiabatic transport setup realized
by a slowly moving potential wave, with electron interactions providing the
possibility of pumping of a fraction of an electron per cycle (equivalently, in
pumping at a fraction of the base frequency).Comment: 21 pgs, 8 fig
Effective actions at finite temperature
This is a more detailed version of our recent paper where we proposed, from
first principles, a direct method for evaluating the exact fermion propagator
in the presence of a general background field at finite temperature. This can,
in turn, be used to determine the finite temperature effective action for the
system. As applications, we discuss the complete one loop finite temperature
effective actions for 0+1 dimensional QED as well as for the Schwinger model in
detail. These effective actions, which are derived in the real time (closed
time path) formalism, generate systematically all the Feynman amplitudes
calculated in thermal perturbation theory and also show that the retarded
(advanced) amplitudes vanish in these theories. Various other aspects of the
problem are also discussed in detail.Comment: 9 pages, revtex, 1 figure, references adde
Free Boson Representation of
A representation of the quantum affine algebra of an
arbitrary level is constructed in the Fock module of eight boson fields.
This realization reduces the Wakimoto representation in the
limit. The analogues of the screening currents are also obtained. They commute
with the action of modulo total differences of some
fields.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, RIMS-920, YITP/K-101
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