63,340 research outputs found
Back to Parmenides
After a brief introduction to issues that plague the realization of a theory
of quantum gravity, I suggest that the main one concerns a quantization of the
principle of relative simultaneity. This leads me to a distinction between time
and space, to a further degree than that present in the canonical approach to
general relativity. With this distinction, one can make sense of superpositions
as interference between alternative paths in the relational configuration space
of the entire Universe. But the full use of relationalism brings us to a
timeless picture of Nature, as it does in the canonical approach (which
culminates in the Wheeler-DeWitt equation). After a discussion of Parmenides
and the Eleatics' rejection of time, I show that there is middle ground between
their view of absolute timelessness and a view of physics taking place in
timeless configuration space. In this middle ground, even though change does
not fundamentally exist, the illusion of change can be recovered in a way not
permitted by Parmenides. It is recovered through a particular density
distribution over configuration space which gives rise to 'records'.
Incidentally, this distribution seems to have the potential to dissolve further
aspects of the measurement problem that can still be argued to haunt the
application of decoherence to Many-Worlds quantum mechanics. I end with a
discussion indicating that the conflict between the conclusions of this paper
and our view of the continuity of the self may still intuitively bother us.
Nonetheless, those conclusions should be no more challenging to our intuition
than Derek Parfit's thought experiments on the subject.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figure. Winner of the essay contest: "Space-time after
quantum gravity" (University of Illinois and Universit\'e de Geneve). To be
published in special editio
Atom-field transfer of coherence in a two-photon micromaser assisted by a classical field
We investigate the transfer of coherence from atoms to a cavity field
initially in a statistical mixture in a two-photon micromaser arrangement. The
field is progressively modified from a maximum entropy state (thermal state)
towards an almost pure state (entropy close to zero) due to its interaction
with atoms sent across the cavity. We trace over the atomic variables, i.e.,
the atomic states are not collapsed by a detector after they leave the cavity.
We find that by applying an external classical driving field it is possible to
substantially increase the field purity without the need of previously
preparing the atoms in a superposition of their energy eigenstates. We also
discuss some of the nonclassical features of the resulting field.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, LaTe
The Hessian Riemannian flow and Newton's method for Effective Hamiltonians and Mather measures
Effective Hamiltonians arise in several problems, including homogenization of
Hamilton--Jacobi equations, nonlinear control systems, Hamiltonian dynamics,
and Aubry--Mather theory. In Aubry--Mather theory, related objects, Mather
measures, are also of great importance. Here, we combine ideas from mean-field
games with the Hessian Riemannian flow to compute effective Hamiltonians and
Mather measures simultaneously. We prove the convergence of the Hessian
Riemannian flow in the continuous setting. For the discrete case, we give both
the existence and the convergence of the Hessian Riemannian flow. In addition,
we explore a variant of Newton's method that greatly improves the performance
of the Hessian Riemannian flow. In our numerical experiments, we see that our
algorithms preserve the non-negativity of Mather measures and are more stable
than {related} methods in problems that are close to singular. Furthermore, our
method also provides a way to approximate stationary MFGs.Comment: 24 page
Conservation laws arising in the study of forward-forward Mean-Field Games
We consider forward-forward Mean Field Game (MFG) models that arise in
numerical approximations of stationary MFGs. First, we establish a link between
these models and a class of hyperbolic conservation laws as well as certain
nonlinear wave equations. Second, we investigate existence and long-time
behavior of solutions for such models
On the Nonrelativistic Limit of the Scattering of Spin One-half Particles Interacting with a Chern-Simons Field
Starting from a relativistic quantum field theory, we study the low energy
scattering of two fermions of opposite spins interacting through a Chern-Simons
field. Using the Coulomb gauge we implement the one loop renormalization
program and discuss vacuum polarization and magnetic moment effects. We prove
that the induced magnetic moments for spin up and spin down fermions are the
same. Next, using an intermediary auxiliary cutoff the scattering amplitude is
computed up to one loop. Similarly to Aharonov-Bohm effect for spin zero
particles, the low energy part of the amplitude contains a logarithmic
divergence in the limit of very high intermediary cutoff. In our approach
however the needed counterterm is automatically provided without any additional
hypothesis.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, revtex; Minor correction
Mean Field Limits for Interacting Diffusions in a Two-Scale Potential
In this paper we study the combined mean field and homogenization limits for
a system of weakly interacting diffusions moving in a two-scale, locally
periodic confining potential, of the form considered
in~\cite{DuncanPavliotis2016}. We show that, although the mean field and
homogenization limits commute for finite times, they do not, in general,
commute in the long time limit. In particular, the bifurcation diagrams for the
stationary states can be different depending on the order with which we take
the two limits. Furthermore, we construct the bifurcation diagram for the
stationary McKean-Vlasov equation in a two-scale potential, before passing to
the homogenization limit, and we analyze the effect of the multiple local
minima in the confining potential on the number and the stability of stationary
solutions
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