10,922 research outputs found
Peripheral vision horizon display testing in RF-4C aircraft
A test program to assess the capability of the peripheral vision horizon display (PVHD) to provide peripheral attitude cues to the pilot is described. The system was installed in the rear cockpit of a RF-4C aircraft, selected because its poor instrument crosscheck conditions. The PVHD test plan was designed to assess three primary areas: (1) ability of the system to reduce spatial disorientation; (2) ability of the system to aid the pilot in recovering from unusual attitudes; and (3) improvement in pilot performance during instrument landing system (ILS) approaches. Results of preliminary test flights are summarized. The major problem areas concern the distinction of the display itself and the capability of the display to provide pitch motion cues
Threshold behavior of bosonic two-dimensional few-body systems
Bosonic two-dimensional self-bound clusters consisting of atoms
interacting through additive van der Waals potentials become unbound at a
critical mass m*(N); m*(N) has been predicted to be independent of the size of
the system. Furthermore, it has been predicted that the ground state energy
E(N) of the N-atom system varies exponentially as the atomic mass approaches
m*. This paper reports accurate numerical many-body calculations that allow
these predictions to be tested. We confirm the existence of a universal
critical mass m*, and show that the near-threshold behavior can only be
described properly if a previously neglected term is included. We comment on
the universality of the energy ratio E(N+1)/E(N) near threshold.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
The Trapped Polarized Fermi Gas at Unitarity
We consider population-imbalanced two-component Fermi gases under external
harmonic confinement interacting through short-range two-body potentials with
diverging s-wave scattering length. Using the fixed-node diffusion Monte Carlo
method, the energies of the "normal state" are determined as functions of the
population-imbalance and the number of particles. The energies of the trapped
system follow, to a good approximation, a universal curve even for fairly small
systems. A simple parameterization of the universal curve is presented and
related to the equation of state of the bulk system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 tables, 2 figure
Dipolar Bose gases: Many-body versus mean-field description
We characterize zero-temperature dipolar Bose gases under external spherical
confinement as a function of the dipole strength using the essentially exact
many-body diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) technique. We show that the DMC energies
are reproduced accurately within a mean-field framework if the variation of the
s-wave scattering length with the dipole strength is accounted for properly.
Our calculations suggest stability diagrams and collapse mechanisms of dipolar
Bose gases that differ significantly from those previously proposed in the
literature
The maximum density droplet to lower density droplet transition in quantum dots
We show that, Landau level mixing in two-dimensional quantum dot wave
functions can be taken into account very effectively by multiplying the exact
lowest Landau level wave functions by a Jastrow factor which is optimized by
variance minimization. The comparison between exact diagonalization and fixed
phase diffusion Monte Carlo results suggests that the phase of the many-body
wave functions are not affected much by Landau level mixing. We apply these
wave functions to study the transition from the maximum density droplet state
(incipient integer quantum Hall state with angular momentum L=N(N-1)/2) to
lower density droplet states (L>N(N-1)/2).Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Covariance analysis of the airborne laser ranging system
The requirements and limitations of employing an airborne laser ranging system for detecting crustal shifts of the Earth within centimeters over a region of approximately 200 by 400 km are presented. The system consists of an aircraft which flies over a grid of ground deployed retroreflectors, making six passes over the grid at two different altitudes. The retroreflector baseline errors are assumed to result from measurement noise, a priori errors on the aircraft and retroreflector positions, tropospheric refraction, and sensor biases
Dilute Bose gases interacting via power-law potentials
Neutral atoms interact through a van der Waals potential which asymptotically
falls off as r^{-6}. In ultracold gases, this interaction can be described to a
good approximation by the atom-atom scattering length. However, corrections
arise that depend on the characteristic length of the van der Waals potential.
We parameterize these corrections by analyzing the energies of two- and
few-atom systems under external harmonic confinement, obtained by numerically
and analytically solving the Schrodinger equation. We generalize our results to
particles interacting through a longer-ranged potential which asymptotically
falls off as r^{-4}.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Systematic reduction of sign errors in many-body problems: generalization of self-healing diffusion Monte Carlo to excited states
A recently developed self-healing diffusion Monte Carlo algorithm
[PRB 79, 195117] is extended to the calculation of excited states. The
formalism is based on an excited-state fixed-node approximation and the mixed
estimator of the excited-state probability density. The fixed-node ground state
wave-functions of inequivalent nodal pockets are found simultaneously using a
recursive approach. The decay of the wave-function into lower energy states is
prevented using two methods: i) The projection of the improved trial-wave
function into previously calculated eigenstates is removed. ii) The reference
energy for each nodal pocket is adjusted in order to create a kink in the
global fixed-node wave-function which, when locally smoothed out, increases the
volume of the higher energy pockets at the expense of the lower energy ones
until the energies of every pocket become equal. This reference energy method
is designed to find nodal structures that are local minima for arbitrary
fluctuations of the nodes within a given nodal topology. We demonstrate in a
model system that the algorithm converges to many-body eigenstates in
bosonic-like and fermionic cases.Comment: New version with two new figures. Several formulas of intermediate
steps in the analytical derivations have been added. The review reports and
replies with a summary of changes are included in the source pdf files with
nicer figures are also included in the sourc
The few-body problem in terms of correlated gaussians
In their textbook, Suzuki and Varga [Y. Suzuki and K. Varga, {\em Stochastic
Variational Approach to Quantum-Mechanical Few-Body Problems} (Springer,
Berlin, 1998)] present the stochastic variational method in a very exhaustive
way. In this framework, the so-called correlated gaussian bases are often
employed. General formulae for the matrix elements of various operators can be
found in the textbook. However the Fourier transform of correlated gaussians
and their application to the management of a relativistic kinetic energy
operator are missing and cannot be found in the literature. In this paper we
present these interesting formulae. We give also a derivation for new
formulations concerning central potentials; the corresponding formulae are more
efficient numerically than those presented in the textbook.Comment: 10 page
Dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates with dipole-dependent scattering length
We consider a Bose-Einstein condensate of polar molecules in a harmonic trap,
where the effective dipole may be tuned by an external field. We demonstrate
that taking into account the dependence of the scattering length on the dipole
moment is essential to reproducing the correct energies and for predicting the
stability of the condensate. We do this by comparing Gross-Pitaevskii
calculations with diffusion Monte Carlo calculations. We find very good
agreement between the results obtained by these two approaches once the dipole
dependence of the scattering length is taken into account. We also examine the
behavior of the condensate in non-isotropic traps
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