1,659 research outputs found
Efficient variational approach to dynamics of a spatially extended bosonic Kondo model
We develop an efficient variational approach to studying dynamics of a
localized quantum spin coupled to a bath of mobile spinful bosons. We use
parity symmetry to decouple the impurity spin from the environment via a
canonical transformation and reduce the problem to a model of the interacting
bosonic bath. We describe coherent time evolution of the latter using bosonic
Gaussian states as a variational ansatz. We provide full analytical expressions
for equations describing variational time evolution that can be applied to
study in- and out-of-equilibrium phenomena in a wide class of quantum impurity
problems. In the accompanying paper [Y. Ashida {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett.
123, 183001 (2019)], we present a concrete application of this general
formalism to the analysis of the Rydberg Central Spin Model, in which the
spin-1/2 Rydberg impurity undergoes spin-changing collisions in a dense cloud
of two-component ultracold bosons. To illustrate new features arising from
orbital motion of the bath atoms, we compare our results to the Monte Carlo
study of the model with spatially localized bosons in the bath, in which random
positions of the atoms give rise to random couplings of the standard central
spin model.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. See also Phys. Rev. Lett. 123, 183001 (2019)
[arXiv:1905.08523
Quantum Rydberg Central Spin Model
We consider dynamics of a Rydberg impurity in a cloud of ultracold bosonic
atoms in which the Rydberg electron can undergo spin-changing collisions with
surrounding atoms. This system realizes a new type of the quantum impurity
problem that compounds essential features of the Kondo model, the Bose polaron,
and the central spin model. To capture the interplay of the Rydberg-electron
spin dynamics and the orbital motion of atoms, we employ a new variational
method that combines an impurity-decoupling transformation with a Gaussian
ansatz for the bath particles. We find several unexpected features of this
model that are not present in traditional impurity problems, including
interaction-induced renormalization of the absorption spectrum that eludes
simple explanations from molecular bound states, and long-lasting oscillations
of the Rydberg-electron spin. We discuss generalizations of our analysis to
other systems in atomic physics and quantum chemistry, where an electron
excitation of high orbital quantum number interacts with a spinful quantum
bath.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. See also Phys. Rev. A 100, 043618 (2019)
[arXiv:1905.09615
Finite-temperature reaction-rate formula: Finite volume system, detailed balance, limit, and cutting rules
A complete derivation, from first principles, of the reaction-rate formula
for a generic process taking place in a heat bath of finite volume is given. It
is shown that the formula involves no finite-volume correction. Through
perturbative diagrammatic analysis of the resultant formula, the
detailed-balance formula is derived. The zero-temperature limit of the formula
is discussed. Thermal cutting rules, which are introduced in previous work, are
compared with those introduced by other authors.Comment: 35pages (text) plus 4pages (figures
Different mechanics of snap-trapping in the two closely related carnivorous plants Dionaea muscipula and Aldrovanda vesiculosa
The carnivorous aquatic Waterwheel Plant (Aldrovanda vesiculosa L.) and the
closely related terrestrial Venus Flytrap (Dionaea muscipula SOL. EX J. ELLIS)
both feature elaborate snap-traps, which shut after reception of an external
mechanical stimulus by prey animals. Traditionally, Aldrovanda is considered as
a miniature, aquatic Dionaea, an assumption which was already established by
Charles Darwin. However, videos of snapping traps from both species suggest
completely different closure mechanisms. Indeed, the well-described snapping
mechanism in Dionaea comprises abrupt curvature inversion of the two trap
lobes, while the closing movement in Aldrovanda involves deformation of the
trap midrib but not of the lobes, which do not change curvature. In this paper,
we present the first detailed mechanical models for these plants, which are
based on the theory of thin solid membranes and explain this difference by
showing that the fast snapping of Aldrovanda is due to kinematic amplification
of the bending deformation of the midrib, while that of Dionaea unambiguously
relies on the buckling instability that affects the two lobes.Comment: accepted in Physical Review
Pathological activation of KIT in metastatic tumors of acral and mucosal melanomas
ArticleINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER. 124(4):862-868 (2009)journal articl
Two tricritical lines from a Ginzburg-Landau expansion: application to the LOFF phase
We study the behavior of the two plane waves configuration in the LOFF phase
close to T=0. The study is performed by using a Landau-Ginzburg expansion up to
the eighth order in the gap. The general study of the corresponding grand
potential shows, under the assumption that the eighth term in the expansion is
strictly positive, the existence of two tricritical lines. This allows to
understand the existence of a second tricritical point for two antipodal plane
waves in the LOFF phase and justifies why the transition becomes second order
at zero temperature. The general analysis done in this paper can be applied to
other cases.Comment: LaTex file, 15 pages, 6 figure
The fluctuation energy balance in non-suspended fluid-mediated particle transport
Here we compare two extreme regimes of non-suspended fluid-mediated particle
transport, transport in light and heavy fluids ("saltation" and "bedload",
respectively), regarding their particle fluctuation energy balance. From direct
numerical simulations, we surprisingly find that the ratio between collisional
and fluid drag dissipation of fluctuation energy is significantly larger in
saltation than in bedload, even though the contribution of interparticle
collisions to transport of momentum and energy is much smaller in saltation due
to the low concentration of particles in the transport layer. We conclude that
the much higher frequency of high-energy particle-bed impacts ("splash") in
saltation is the cause for this counter-intuitive behavior. Moreover, from a
comparison of these simulations to Particle Tracking Velocimetry measurements
which we performed in a wind tunnel under steady transport of fine and coarse
sand, we find that turbulent fluctuations of the flow produce particle
fluctuation energy at an unexpectedly high rate in saltation even under
conditions for which the effects of turbulence are usually believed to be
small
Energy and pressure densities of a hot quark-gluon plasma
We calculate the energy and hydrostatic pressure densities of a hot
quark-gluon plasma in thermal equilibrium through diagrammatic analyses of the
statistical average, , of the
energy-momentum-tensor operator . To leading order at high
temperature, the energy density of the long wave length modes is consistently
extracted by applying the hard-thermal-loop resummation scheme to the
operator-inserted no-leg thermal amplitudes .
We find that, for the long wave length gluons, the energy density, being
positive, is tremendously enhanced as compared to the noninteracting case,
while, for the quarks, no noticeable deviation from the noninteracting case is
found.Comment: 33 pages. Figures are not include
Nonlinear Optical Response in two-dimensional Mott Insulators
We study the third-order nonlinear optical susceptibility and
photoexcited states of two-dimensional (2D) Mott insulators by using an
effective model in the strong-coupling limit of a half-filled Hubbard model. In
the numerically exact diagonalization calculations on finite-size clusters, we
find that the coupling of charge and spin degrees of freedom plays a crucial
role in the distribution of the dipole-allowed states with odd parity and the
dipole-forbidden states with even parity in the photoexcited states. This is in
contrast with the photoexcited states in one dimension, where the charge and
spin degrees of freedom are decoupled. In the third-harmonic generation (THG)
spectrum, main contribution is found to come from the process of three-photon
resonance associated with the odd-parity states. As a result, the two-photon
resonance process is less pronounced in the THG spectrum. The calculated THG
spectrum is compared with recent experimental data. We also find that
with cross-polarized configuration of pump and probe photons shows
spectral distributions similar to with co-polarized configuration,
although the weight is small. These findings will help the analyses of the
experimental data of in the 2D Mott insulators.Comment: 9 pages,5 figures,RevTeX
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