1,015 research outputs found
On the stability of the primordial closed string gas
We recast the study of a closed string gas in a toroidal container in the
physical situation in which the single string density of states is independent
of the volume because energy density is very high. This includes the gas for
the well known Brandenberger-Vafa cosmological scenario. We describe the gas in
the grandcanonical and microcanonical ensembles. In the microcanonical
description, we find a result that clearly confronts the Brandenberger-Vafa
calculation to get the specific heat of the system. The important point is that
we use the same approach to the problem but a different regularization. By the
way, we show that, in the complex temperature formalism, at the Hagedorn
singularity, the analytic structure obtained from the so-called
F-representation of the free energy coincides with the one computed using the
S-representation.Comment: 20 pages and 1 figure. The final version that appeared in JHE
Generalized models reveal stabilizing factors in food webs
Insights into what stabilizes natural food webs have always been limited by a fundamental dilemma: Studies either need to make unwarranted simplifying assumptions, which undermines their relevance, or only examine few replicates of small food webs, which hampers the robustness of findings. We used generalized modeling to study several billion replicates of food webs with nonlinear interactions and up to 50 species. In this way, first we show that higher variability in link strengths stabilizes food webs only when webs are relatively small, whereas larger webs are instead destabilized. Second, we reveal a new power law describing how food-web stability scales with the number of species and their connectance. Third, we report two universal rules: Food-web stability is enhanced when (i) species at a high trophic level feed on multiple prey species and (ii) species at an intermediate trophic level are fed upon by multiple predator species
On the SO(N) symmetry of the chiral SU(N) Yang--Mills model
The posibility of quantizing the anomalous Yang--Mills model
preserving the symmetry under the orthogonal subgroup is indicated. The
corresponding Wess--Zumino action (1-cocycle) possesses the additional
symmetry and can be expressed in terms of chiral fields taking values in the
homogeneous space . The modified anomaly and the constraints
commutator (2-cocycle) are calculated.Comment: 9 pages, preprint PAR-LPTHE 92-48 (DECEMBER 1992), Late
The four-loop beta-function in Quantum Chromodynamics
We present the analytical calculation of the four-loop QCD beta-function
within the minimal subtraction scheme.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, 1 figure, uses axodraw.st
Asymptotic Freedom for Non-Relativistic Confinement
Some aspects of asymptotic freedom are discussed in the context of a simple
two-particle non-relativisitic confining potential model. In this model
asymptotic freedom follows from the similarity of the free-particle and bound
state radial wave functions at small distances and for the same angular
momentum and the same large energy. This similarity, which can be understood
using simple quantum mechanical arguments, can be used to show that the exact
response function approaches that obtained when final state interactions are
ignored. A method of calculating corrections to this limit is given and
explicit examples are given for the case of the harmonic oscillator.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, RevTex
Kinetics of Ordering in Fluctuation-Driven First-Order Transitions: Simulations and Dynamical Renormalization
Many systems where interactions compete with each other or with constraints
are well described by a model first introduced by Brazovskii. Such systems
include block copolymers, alloys with modulated phases, Rayleigh-Benard Cells
and type-I superconductors. The hallmark of this model is that the fluctuation
spectrum is isotropic and has a minimum at a nonzero wave vector represented by
the surface of a d-dimensional hyper-sphere. It was shown by Brazovskii that
the fluctuations change the free energy structure from a to a
form with the disordered state metastable for all quench depths.
The transition from the disordered to the periodic, lamellar structure changes
from second order to first order and suggests that the dynamics is governed by
nucleation. Using numerical simulations we have confirmed that the equilibrium
free energy function is indeed of a form. A study of the dynamics,
however, shows that, following a deep quench, the dynamics is described by
unstable growth rather than nucleation. A dynamical calculation, based on a
generalization of the Brazovskii calculations shows that the disordered state
can remain unstable for a long time following the quench.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures submitted to PR
Simplest random K-satisfiability problem
We study a simple and exactly solvable model for the generation of random
satisfiability problems. These consist of random boolean constraints
which are to be satisfied simultaneously by logical variables. In
statistical-mechanics language, the considered model can be seen as a diluted
p-spin model at zero temperature. While such problems become extraordinarily
hard to solve by local search methods in a large region of the parameter space,
still at least one solution may be superimposed by construction. The
statistical properties of the model can be studied exactly by the replica
method and each single instance can be analyzed in polynomial time by a simple
global solution method. The geometrical/topological structures responsible for
dynamic and static phase transitions as well as for the onset of computational
complexity in local search method are thoroughly analyzed. Numerical analysis
on very large samples allows for a precise characterization of the critical
scaling behaviour.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. E (Feb 2001). v2: minor
errors and references correcte
Inhomogeneous chiral symmetry breaking in noncommutative four fermion interactions
The generalization of the Gross-Neveu model for noncommutative 3+1 space-time
has been analyzed. We find indications that the chiral symmetry breaking occurs
for an inhomogeneous background as in the LOFF phase in condensed matter.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, published version, minor correction
Quantum corrections to the ground state energy of a trapped Bose-Einstein condensate: A diffusion Monte Carlo calculation
The diffusion Monte Carlo method is applied to describe a trapped atomic
Bose-Einstein condensate at zero temperature, fully quantum mechanically and
nonperturbatively. For low densities, [n(0): peak
density, a: s-wave scattering length], our calculations confirm that the exact
ground state energy for a sum of two-body interactions depends on only the
atomic physics parameter a, and no other details of the two-body model
potential. Corrections to the mean-field Gross-Pitaevskii energy range from
being essentially negligible to about 20% for N=2-50 particles in the trap with
positive s-wave scattering length a=100-10000 a.u.. Our numerical calculations
confirm that inclusion of an additional effective potential term in the
mean-field equation, which accounts for quantum fluctuations [see e.g. E.
Braaten and A. Nieto, Phys. Rev. B 56}, 14745 (1997)], leads to a greatly
improved description of trapped Bose gases.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Nanosized superparamagnetic precipitates in cobalt-doped ZnO
The existence of semiconductors exhibiting long-range ferromagnetic ordering
at room temperature still is controversial. One particularly important issue is
the presence of secondary magnetic phases such as clusters, segregations,
etc... These are often tedious to detect, leading to contradictory
interpretations. We show that in our cobalt doped ZnO films grown
homoepitaxially on single crystalline ZnO substrates the magnetism
unambiguously stems from metallic cobalt nano-inclusions. The magnetic behavior
was investigated by SQUID magnetometry, x-ray magnetic circular dichroism, and
AC susceptibility measurements. The results were correlated to a detailed
microstructural analysis based on high resolution x-ray diffraction,
transmission electron microscopy, and electron-spectroscopic imaging. No
evidence for carrier mediated ferromagnetic exchange between diluted cobalt
moments was found. In contrast, the combined data provide clear evidence that
the observed room temperature ferromagnetic-like behavior originates from
nanometer sized superparamagnetic metallic cobalt precipitates.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures; details about background subtraction added to
section III. (XMCD
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