18,091 research outputs found
Status Buying Responses in a Survey of Students and Variations in Informational Levels.
This article reports on a survey of a large number of undergraduate students in the U.S. They were queried about whether they preferred living in a society where they had high relative income (status) but low purchasing power or a society where they have low status, but high purchasing power.While the overwhelming majority indicate a desire to buy status, the information given about intergenerational mobilty and amenities like health available in the different socities makes a big difference in the responses. The data indicate that that the majority desiring to buy status disappears with better information.
The Efimov effect for three interacting bosonic dipoles
Three oriented bosonic dipoles are treated using the hyperspherical adiabatic
representation, providing numerical evidence that the Efimov effect persists
near a two-dipole resonance and in a system where angular momentum is not
conserved. Our results further show that the Efimov features in scattering
observables become universal, with a known three-body parameter, i.e. the
resonance energies depend only on the two-body physics, which also has
implications for the universal spectrum of the four-dipole problem. Moreover,
the Efimov states should be long-lived, which is favorable for their creation
and manipulation in ultracold dipolar gases. Finally, deeply-bound two-dipole
states are shown to be relatively stable against collisions with a third
dipole, owing to the emergence of a repulsive interaction originating in the
angular momentum nonconservation for this system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
On the Appearance of Families of Efimov States in the Spinor Three-Body Problem
Few-body systems with access to multiple internal levels exhibit richness
beyond that typically found in their single-level counterparts. One example is
that of Efimov states in strongly-correlated spinor three-body systems. In [V.
E. Colussi, C. H. Greene, and J. P. D'Incao, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 113}, 045302
(2014)] this problem was analyzed for spinor condensates finding a complex
level structure as in an early work [Bulgac and Efimov, Sov. J. Nucl. Phys. 22,
153 (1976)] in nuclear physics, and the impact of Efimov physics on the general
form of the scattering observables was worked out. In this paper we discuss the
appearance of novel families of Efimov states in the spinor three-body problem.Comment: Conference proceedings for the 21st International Conference on
Few-Body Problems in Physic
Origin of the Three-body Parameter Universality in Efimov Physics
In recent years extensive theoretical and experimental studies of universal
few-body physics have led to advances in our understanding of universal Efimov
physics [1]. The Efimov effect, once considered a mysterious and esoteric
effect, is today a reality that many experiments in ultracold quantum gases
have successfully observed and continued to explore [2-14]. Whereas theory was
the driving force behind our understanding of Efimov physics for decades,
recent experiments have contributed an unexpected discovery. Specifically,
measurements have found that the so-called three-body parameter determining
several properties of the system is universal, even though fundamental
assumptions in the theory of the Efimov effect suggest that it should be a
variable property that depends on the precise details of the short-range two-
and three-body interactions. The present Letter resolves this apparent
contradiction by elucidating unanticipated implications of the two-body
interactions. Our study shows that the three-body parameter universality
emerges because a universal effective barrier in the three-body potentials
prevents the three particles from simultaneously getting close to each other.
Our results also show limitations on this universality, as it is more likely to
occur for neutral atoms and less likely to extend to light nuclei.Comment: 11 pages; 9 figures. Includes Supplementary Materia
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