335 research outputs found
Local Electronic Correlation at the Two-Particle Level
Electronic correlated systems are often well described by dynamical mean
field theory (DMFT). While DMFT studies have mainly focused hitherto on
one-particle properties, valuable information is also enclosed into local
two-particle Green's functions and vertices. They represent the main ingredient
to compute momentum-dependent response functions at the DMFT level and to treat
non-local spatial correlations at all length scales by means of diagrammatic
extensions of DMFT. The aim of this paper is to present a DMFT analysis of the
local reducible and irreducible two-particle vertex functions for the Hubbard
model in the context of an unified diagrammatic formalism. An interpretation of
the observed frequency structures is also given in terms of perturbation
theory, of the comparison with the atomic limit, and of the mapping onto the
attractive Hubbard model.Comment: 29 pages, 26 Figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Conceptual mechanization studies for a horizon definition spacecraft attitude control subsystem, phase A, part II, 10 October 1966 - 29 May 1967
Attitude control subsystem for spin stabilized spacecraft for mapping earths infrared horizon radiance profiles in 15 micron carbon dioxide absorption ban
Mode Confinement in Photonic Quasi-Crystal Point-Defect Cavities for Particle Accelerators
In this Letter, we present a study of the confinement properties of
point-defect resonators in finite-size photonic-bandgap structures composed of
aperiodic arrangements of dielectric rods, with special emphasis on their use
for the design of cavities for particle accelerators. Specifically, for
representative geometries, we study the properties of the fundamental mode (as
a function of the filling fraction, structure size, and losses) via 2-D and 3-D
full-wave numerical simulations, as well as microwave measurements at room
temperature. Results indicate that, for reduced-size structures, aperiodic
geometries exhibit superior confinement properties by comparison with periodic
ones.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Applied Physics
Letter
Photonic quasicrystals for general purpose nonlinear optical frequency conversion
We present a general method for the design of 2-dimensional nonlinear
photonic quasicrystals that can be utilized for the simultaneous phase-matching
of arbitrary optical frequency-conversion processes. The proposed scheme--based
on the generalized dual-grid method that is used for constructing tiling models
of quasicrystals--gives complete design flexibility, removing any constraints
imposed by previous approaches. As an example we demonstrate the design of a
color fan--a nonlinear photonic quasicrystal whose input is a single wave at
frequency and whose output consists of the second, third, and fourth
harmonics of , each in a different spatial direction
MODEX: Laboratory experiment exploring sediment spreading of a mound under waves and currents
The dispersal of sand from submerged mounds in the nearshore is
driven by the interplay of processes such as converging and recirculating flows,
changing roughness, bed slope effects and wave focusing/refraction. This
morphological diffusivity is key to understanding sand bars in shallow seas, tidal
inlets, estuaries, and the nearshore response to human interventions such as
nourishments and dredging. Most of the work on the evolution of submerged
mounds has been based on fluvial studies, focusing on flow without waves. In these
cases, circular mounds tend to deform to crescentic (barchan) shapes. In contrast,
observations of sandbars and berms in the nearshore subjected to waves show much
more complex translation and deformation behavior. This contribution introduces
the laboratory MOrphological Diffusivity Experiment (MODEX) aimed at
examining morphological diffusivity under different forcing conditions. The
experiment particularly addresses the linkages between small scale (local) effects
(e.g. bed slope, bedforms) on the adjustment of sandy mounds.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Chiral Quasicrystalline Order and Dodecahedral Geometry in Exceptional Families of Viruses
On the example of exceptional families of viruses we i) show the existence of
a completely new type of matter organization in nanoparticles, in which the
regions with a chiral pentagonal quasicrystalline order of protein positions
are arranged in a structure commensurate with the spherical topology and
dodecahedral geometry, ii) generalize the classical theory of quasicrystals
(QCs) to explain this organization, and iii) establish the relation between
local chiral QC order and nonzero curvature of the dodecahedral capsid faces.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Qualitative and quantitative analysis of stability and instability dynamics of positive lattice solitons
We present a unified approach for qualitative and quantitative analysis of
stability and instability dynamics of positive bright solitons in
multi-dimensional focusing nonlinear media with a potential (lattice), which
can be periodic, periodic with defects, quasiperiodic, single waveguide, etc.
We show that when the soliton is unstable, the type of instability dynamic that
develops depends on which of two stability conditions is violated.
Specifically, violation of the slope condition leads to an amplitude
instability, whereas violation of the spectral condition leads to a drift
instability. We also present a quantitative approach that allows to predict the
stability and instability strength
From conformal embeddings to quantum symmetries: an exceptional SU(4) example
We briefly discuss several algebraic tools that are used to describe the
quantum symmetries of Boundary Conformal Field Theories on a torus. The
starting point is a fusion category, together with an action on another
category described by a quantum graph. For known examples, the corresponding
modular invariant partition function, which is sometimes associated with a
conformal embedding, provides enough information to recover the whole
structure. We illustrate these notions with the example of the conformal
embedding of SU(4) at level 4 into Spin(15) at level 1, leading to the
exceptional quantum graph E4(SU(4)).Comment: 22 pages, 3 color figures. Version 2: We changed the color of figures
(ps files) in such a way that they are still understood when converted to
gray levels. Version 3: Several references have been adde
Chiral non-linear sigma-models as models for topological superconductivity
We study the mechanism of topological superconductivity in a hierarchical
chain of chiral non-linear sigma-models (models of current algebra) in one,
two, and three spatial dimensions. The models have roots in the 1D
Peierls-Frohlich model and illustrate how the 1D Frohlich's ideal conductivity
extends to a genuine superconductivity in dimensions higher than one. The
mechanism is based on the fact that a point-like topological soliton carries an
electric charge. We discuss a flux quantization mechanism and show that it is
essentially a generalization of the persistent current phenomenon, known in
quantum wires. We also discuss why the superconducting state is stable in the
presence of a weak disorder.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, no figure
Isotropic Conductivity of Two-Dimensional Three-Component Symmetric Composites
The effective dc-conductivity problem of isotropic, two-dimensional (2D),
three-component, symmetric, regular composites is considered. A simple cubic
equation with one free parameter for
is suggested whose solutions automatically have all the exactly known
properties of that function. Numerical calculations on four different
symmetric, isotropic, 2D, three-component, regular structures show a
non-universal behavior of with an
essential dependence on micro-structural details, in contrast with the
analogous two-component problem. The applicability of the cubic equation to
these structures is discussed. An extension of that equation to the description
of other types of 2D three-component structures is suggested, including the
case of random structures.
Pacs: 72.15.Eb, 72.80.Tm, 61.50.AhComment: 8 pages (two columns), 8 figures. J. Phys. A - submitte
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