11,144 research outputs found
Optimal Eavesdropping in Quantum Cryptography. II. Quantum Circuit
It is shown that the optimum strategy of the eavesdropper, as described in
the preceding paper, can be expressed in terms of a quantum circuit in a way
which makes it obvious why certain parameters take on particular values, and
why obtaining information in one basis gives rise to noise in the conjugate
basis.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, Latex, the second part of quant-ph/970103
Gyratons on Melvin spacetime
We present and analyze new exact gyraton solutions of algebraic type II on a
background which is static, cylindrically symmetric Melvin universe of type D.
For a vanishing electromagnetic field it reduces to previously studied gyratons
on Minkowski background. We demonstrate that the solutions are member of a more
general family of the Kundt spacetimes. We show that the Einstein equations
reduce to a set of mostly linear equations on a transverse 2-space and we
discuss the properties of polynomial scalar curvature invariants which are
generally non-constant but unaffected by the presence of gyratons.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, journal version extended by appendices B and
Comment on "Plasma ionization by annularly bounded helicon waves" [Phys . Plasmas 13, 063501 (2006)]
The neoclassical calculation of the helicon wave theory contains a
fundamental flaw. Use is made of a proportional relationship between the
magnetic field and its curl to derive the Helmholtz equation describing helicon
wave propagation; however, by the fundamental theorem of Stokes, the curl of
the magnetic field must be perpendicular to that portion of the field
contributing to the local curl. Reexamination of the equations of motion
indicates that only electromagnetic waves propagate through a stationary region
of constant pressure in a fully ionized, neutral medium.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, to be published in Phys. Plasmas,
http://link.aip.org/link/?PHPAEN/16/054701/
Comparing periodic-orbit theory to perturbation theory in the asymmetric infinite square well
An infinite square well with a discontinuous step is one of the simplest
systems to exhibit non-Newtonian ray-splitting periodic orbits in the
semiclassical limit. This system is analyzed using both time-independent
perturbation theory (PT) and periodic-orbit theory and the approximate formulas
for the energy eigenvalues derived from these two approaches are compared. The
periodic orbits of the system can be divided into classes according to how many
times they reflect from the potential step. Different classes of orbits
contribute to different orders of PT. The dominant term in the second-order PT
correction is due to non-Newtonian orbits that reflect from the step exactly
once. In the limit in which PT converges the periodic-orbit theory results
agree with those of PT, but outside of this limit the periodic-orbit theory
gives much more accurate results for energies above the potential step.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, submitted to Physical Review
P,T-Violating Nuclear Matrix Elements in the One-Meson Exchange Approximation
Expressions for the P,T-violating NN potentials are derived for ,
and exchange. The nuclear matrix elements for and
exchange are shown to be greatly suppressed, so that, under the assumption of
comparable coupling constants, exchange would dominate by two orders of
magnitude. The ratio of P,T-violating to P-violating matrix elements is found
to remain approximately constant across the nuclear mass table, thus
establishing the proportionality between time-reversal-violation and
parity-violation matrix elements. The calculated values of this ratio suggest a
need to obtain an accuracy of order for the ratio of the
PT-violating to P-violating asymmetries in neutron transmission experiments in
order to improve on the present limits on the isovector pion coupling constant.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, no figure
Contributions to the Science of Environmental Impact Assessment: Three Papers on the Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) of Northern Alaska
Editor's Introduction -- D. W. Norton; An Assessment of the Colville River Delta Stock of Arctic Cisco--Migrants from Canada? -- B. J. Gallaway, W. B. Griffiths, P. C. Craig, W. J. Gazey, and J. W. Helmericks; Temperature Preference of Juvenile Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) From the Alaskan Beaufort Sea -- R. G. Fechhelm, W. H. Neill, and B. J. Gallaway; Modeling Movements and Distribution of Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) Relative to Temperature-Salinity Regimes of the Beaufort Sea Near the Waterflood Causeway, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. -- W. H. Neill, R. G. Fechhelm, B. J. Gallaway, J. D. Bryan, and S. W. Anderson; Notice to Author
The tetralogy of Birkhoff theorems
We classify the existent Birkhoff-type theorems into four classes: First, in
field theory, the theorem states the absence of helicity 0- and spin 0-parts of
the gravitational field. Second, in relativistic astrophysics, it is the
statement that the gravitational far-field of a spherically symmetric star
carries, apart from its mass, no information about the star; therefore, a
radially oscillating star has a static gravitational far-field. Third, in
mathematical physics, Birkhoff's theorem reads: up to singular exceptions of
measure zero, the spherically symmetric solutions of Einstein's vacuum field
equation with Lambda = 0 can be expressed by the Schwarzschild metric; for
Lambda unequal 0, it is the Schwarzschild-de Sitter metric instead. Fourth, in
differential geometry, any statement of the type: every member of a family of
pseudo-Riemannian space-times has more isometries than expected from the
original metric ansatz, carries the name Birkhoff-type theorem. Within the
fourth of these classes we present some new results with further values of
dimension and signature of the related spaces; including them are some
counterexamples: families of space-times where no Birkhoff-type theorem is
valid. These counterexamples further confirm the conjecture, that the
Birkhoff-type theorems have their origin in the property, that the two
eigenvalues of the Ricci tensor of two-dimensional pseudo-Riemannian spaces
always coincide, a property not having an analogy in higher dimensions. Hence,
Birkhoff-type theorems exist only for those physical situations which are
reducible to two dimensions.Comment: 26 pages, updated references, minor text changes, accepted by Gen.
Relat. Gra
Standing gravitational waves from domain walls
We construct a plane symmetric, standing gravitational wave for a domain wall
plus a massless scalar field. The scalar field can be associated with a fluid
which has the properties of `stiff' matter, i.e. matter in which the speed of
sound equals the speed of light. Although domain walls are observationally
ruled out in the present era the solution has interesting features which might
shed light on the character of exact non-linear wave solutions to Einstein's
equations. Additionally this solution may act as a template for higher
dimensional 'brane-world' model standing waves.Comment: 4 pages two-column format, no figures, added discussion of physical
meaning of solution, added refernces, to be published PR
On Charge-3 Cyclic Monopoles
We determine the spectral curve of charge 3 BPS su(2) monopoles with C_3
cyclic symmetry. The symmetry means that the genus 4 spectral curve covers a
(Toda) spectral curve of genus 2. A well adapted homology basis is presented
enabling the theta functions and monopole data of the genus 4 curve to be given
in terms of genus 2 data. The Richelot correspondence, a generalization of the
arithmetic mean, is used to solve for this genus 2 curve. Results of other
approaches are compared.Comment: 34 pages, 16 figures. Revision: Abstract added and a few small
change
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