551 research outputs found
Optical probes of the quantum vacuum: The photon polarization tensor in external fields
The photon polarization tensor is the central building block of an effective
theory description of photon propagation in the quantum vacuum. It accounts for
the vacuum fluctuations of the underlying theory, and in the presence of
external electromagnetic fields, gives rise to such striking phenomena as
vacuum birefringence and dichroism. Standard approximations of the polarization
tensor are often restricted to on-the-light-cone dynamics in homogeneous
electromagnetic fields, and are limited to certain momentum regimes only. We
devise two different strategies to go beyond these limitations: First, we aim
at obtaining novel analytical insights into the photon polarization tensor for
homogeneous fields, while retaining its full momentum dependence. Second, we
employ wordline numerical methods to surpass the constant-field limit.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures; typo in Eq. (5) corrected (matches journal
version
Renormalization flow of QED
We investigate textbook QED in the framework of the exact renormalization
group. In the strong-coupling region, we study the influence of
fluctuation-induced photonic and fermionic self-interactions on the
nonperturbative running of the gauge coupling. Our findings confirm the
triviality hypothesis of complete charge screening if the ultraviolet cutoff is
sent to infinity. Though the Landau pole does not belong to the physical
coupling domain owing to spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking (chiSB), the
theory predicts a scale of maximal UV extension of the same order as the Landau
pole scale. In addition, we verify that the chiSB phase of the theory which is
characterized by a light fermion and a Goldstone boson also has a trivial
Yukawa coupling.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Pair Production Beyond the Schwinger Formula in Time-Dependent Electric Fields
We investigate electron-positron pair production in pulse-shaped electric
background fields using a non-Markovian quantum kinetic equation. We identify a
pulse-length range for subcritical fields still in the nonperturbative regime
where the number of produced pairs significantly exceeds that of a naive
expectation based on the Schwinger formula. From a conceptual viewpoint, we
find a remarkable quantitative agreement between the (real-time) quantum
kinetic approach and the (imaginary-time) effective action approach.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Typos corrected and references added, PRD Versio
Renormalisation Flow and Universality for Ultracold Fermionic Atoms
A functional renormalisation group study for the BEC-BCS crossover for
ultracold gases of fermionic atoms is presented. We discuss the fixed point
which is at the origin of universality for broad Feshbach resonances. All
macroscopic quantities depend only on one relevant parameter, the concentration
a k_F, besides their dependence on the temperature in units of the Fermi
energy. In particular, we compute the universal ratio between molecular and
atomic scattering length in vacuum. We also present an estimate to which level
of accuracy universality holds for gases of Li and K atoms.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, to be published in PR
Flow Equations for the BCS-BEC Crossover
The functional renormalisation group is used for the BCS-BEC crossover in
gases of ultracold fermionic atoms. In a simple truncation, we see how
universality and an effective theory with composite bosonic di-atom states
emerge. We obtain a unified picture of the whole phase diagram. The flow
reflects different effective physics at different scales. In the BEC limit as
well as near the critical temperature, it describes an interacting bosonic
theory.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Geothermal Casimir Phenomena
We present first worldline analytical and numerical results for the
nontrivial interplay between geometry and temperature dependencies of the
Casimir effect. We show that the temperature dependence of the Casimir force
can be significantly larger for open geometries (e.g., perpendicular plates)
than for closed geometries (e.g., parallel plates). For surface separations in
the experimentally relevant range, the thermal correction for the
perpendicular-plates configuration exhibits a stronger parameter dependence and
exceeds that for parallel plates by an order of magnitude at room temperature.
This effect can be attributed to the fact that the fluctuation spectrum for
closed geometries is gapped, inhibiting the thermal excitation of modes at low
temperatures. By contrast, open geometries support a thermal excitation of the
low-lying modes in the gapless spectrum already at low temperatures.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, contribution to QFEXT07 proceedings, v2:
discussion switched from Casimir energy to Casimir force, new analytical
results included, matches JPhysA versio
Effects of Metallicity on the Rotation Rates of Massive Stars
Recent theoretical predictions for low metallicity massive stars predict that
these stars should have drastically reduced equatorial winds (mass loss) while
on the main sequence, and as such should retain most of their angular momentum.
Observations of both the Be/(B+Be) ratio and the blue-to-red supergiant ratio
appear to have a metallicity dependence that may be caused by high rotational
velocities. We have analyzed 39 archival Hubble Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph (STIS), high resolution, ultraviolet spectra of O-type stars in
the Magellanic Clouds to determine their projected rotational velocities V sin
i. Our methodology is based on a previous study of the projected rotational
velocities of Galactic O-type stars using International Ultraviolet Explorer
(IUE) Short Wavelength Prime (SWP) Camera high dispersion spectra, which
resulted in a catalog of V sin i values for 177 O stars. Here we present
complementary V sin i values for 21 Large Magellanic Cloud and 22 Small
Magellanic Cloud O-type stars based on STIS and IUE UV spectroscopy. The
distribution of V sin i values for O type stars in the Magellanic Clouds is
compared to that of Galactic O type stars. Despite the theoretical predictions
and indirect observational evidence for high rotation, the O type stars in the
Magellanic Clouds do not appear to rotate faster than their Galactic
counterparts.Comment: accepted by ApJ, to appear 20 December 2004 editio
Functional renormalization for trion formation in ultracold fermion gases
The energy spectrum for three species of identical fermionic atoms close to a
Feshbach resonance is computed by use of a nonperturbative flow equation.
Already a simple truncation shows that for large scattering length the
lowest energy state is a "trion" (or trimer) bound state of three atoms. At the
location of the resonance, for , we find an infinite set of
trimer bound states, with exponentially decreasing binding energy. This feature
was pointed out by Efimov. It arises from limit cycle scaling, which also leads
to a periodic dependence of the three body scattering coupling on .
Extending our findings by continuity to nonzero density and temperature we find
that a "trion phase" separates a BEC and a BCS phase, with interesting quantum
phase transitions for T=0.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, minor changes, reference adde
INTEGRAL observations of SS433, a supercritically accreting microquasar with hard spectrum
Observations of SS433 by INTEGRAL carried out in March -- May 2003 are
presented. SS433 is evidently detected on the INTEGRAL images of the
corresponding sky region in the energy bands 25-50 and 50-100 keV. The
precessional variability of the hard X-ray flux is clearly seen. The X-ray
eclipse caused by the binary orbital motion is also detected. A possible origin
of the hard continuum is briefly discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Accepted to A&A INTEGRAL special volum
Transient chirp in high speed photonic crystal quantum dots lasers with controlled spontaneous emission
We report on a series of experiments on the dynamics of spontaneous emission
controlled nanolasers. The laser cavity is a photonic crystal slab cavity,
embedding self-assembled quantum dots as gain material. The implementation of
cavity electrodynamics effects increases significantly the large signal
modulation bandwidth, with measured modulation speeds of the order of 10 GHz
while keeping an extinction ratio of 19 dB. A linear transient wavelength shift
is reported, corresponding to a chirp of less than 100 pm for a 35-ps laser
pulse. We observe that the chirp characteristics are independent of the
repetition rate of the laser up to 10 GHz
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