4,062 research outputs found

    Regularisation of Chiral Gauge Theories

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    This article gives a review of the topic of regularising chiral gauge theories and is aimed at a general audience. It begins by clarifying the meaning of chirality and goes on to discussing chiral projections in field theory, parity violation and the distinction between vector and chiral field theories. It then discusses the standard model of electroweak interactions from the perspective of chirality. It also reviews at length the phenomenon of anomalies in quantum field theories including the intuitive understanding of anomalies based on the Dirac sea picture as given by Nielsen and Ninomiya. It then raises the issue of a non-perturbative and constructive definition of the standard model as well as the importance of such formulations. The second Nielsen-Ninomiya theorem about the impossibility of regularising chiral gauge theories under some general assumptions is also discussed. After a brief review of lattice regularisation of field theories, it discusses the issue of fermions on the lattice with special emphasis on the problem of species doubling. The implications of these problems to introducing chiral fermions on the lattice as well as the interpretations of anomalies within the lattice formulations and the lattice Dirac sea picture are then discussed. Finally the difficulties of formulating the standard model on the lattice are illustrated through detailed discussions of the Wilson-Yukawa method, the domain wall fermions method and the recently popular Ginsparg-Wilson method.Comment: LATEX, 26 pages, 7 fig

    ScALPEL: A Scalable Adaptive Lightweight Performance Evaluation Library for application performance monitoring

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    As supercomputers continue to grow in scale and capabilities, it is becoming increasingly difficult to isolate processor and system level causes of performance degradation. Over the last several years, a significant number of performance analysis and monitoring tools have been built/proposed. However, these tools suffer from several important shortcomings, particularly in distributed environments. In this paper we present ScALPEL, a Scalable Adaptive Lightweight Performance Evaluation Library for application performance monitoring at the functional level. Our approach provides several distinct advantages. First, ScALPEL is portable across a wide variety of architectures, and its ability to selectively monitor functions presents low run-time overhead, enabling its use for large-scale production applications. Second, it is run-time configurable, enabling both dynamic selection of functions to profile as well as events of interest on a per function basis. Third, our approach is transparent in that it requires no source code modifications. Finally, ScALPEL is implemented as a pluggable unit by reusing existing performance monitoring frameworks such as Perfmon and PAPI and extending them to support both sequential and MPI applications.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 2 table

    Characterization of nano-composite M-2411/Y-123 thin films by electron backscatter diffraction and in-field critical current measurements

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    Thin films of nano-composite Y-Ba-Cu-O (YBCO) superconductors containing nano-sized, non-superconducting particles of Y2Ba 4CuMOx (M-2411 with M = Ag and Nb) have been prepared by the PLD technique. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) has been used to analyze the crystallographic orientation of nano-particles embedded in the film microstructure. The superconducting YBa2Cu3O7 (Y-123) phase matrix is textured with a dominant (001) orientation for all samples, whereas the M-2411 phase exhibits a random orientation. Angular critical current measurements at various temperature (T) and applied magnetic field (B) have been performed on thin films containing different concentration of the M-2411 second phase. An increase in critical current density J c at T < 77 K and B < 6 T is observed for samples with low concentration of the second phase (2 mol % M-2411). Films containing 5 mol % Ag-2411 exhibit lower Jc than pure Y-123 thin films at all fields and temperatures. Samples with 5 mol % Nb-2411 show higher Jc(B) than phase pure Y-123 thin films for T < 77 K

    Properties of Mg-doped Nd-Ba-Cu-O generic seed crystals for the top seeded melt growth of (RE)-Ba-Cu-O bulk superconductors

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    We have recently developed a new generic seed crystal that has been used successfully to fabricate any oriented, single grain (RE)-Ba-Cu-O bulk superconductor by a cold seeding technique. In this paper we report the chemical, structural and microstructural properties of these seed crystals, including the variation of melting point, crystallographic parameters and volume fraction of Mg-rich inclusions in the Nd1 + xBa 2-x(Cu1-yMgy)3Oz matrix as a function of externally added MgO content. The influence of Mg-doping on the superconducting transition temperatures of YBCO grains fabricated using these seeds is investigated. Finally, an optimum MgO content of the generic seed that effectively controls the orientation of the seeded grain without compromising its superconducting properties is suggested from the many seed crystals fabricated with a wide range of Mg-rich addition

    Entanglement-Assisted Quantum Error Correction with Linear Optics

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    We construct a theory of continuous-variable entanglement-assisted quantum error correction. We present an example of a continuous-variable entanglement-assisted code that corrects for an arbitrary single-mode error. We also show how to implement encoding circuits using passive optical devices, homodyne measurements, feedforward classical communication, conditional displacements, and off-line squeezers.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, major expansion of paper with detailed exampl

    Pairing symmetry signatures of T1 in superconducting ferromagnets

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    We study the nuclear relaxation rate 1/T1 as a function of temperature for a superconducting-ferromagnetic coexistent system using a p-wave triplet model for the superconducting pairing symmetry. This calculation is contrasted with a singlet s-wave one done previously, and we see for the s-wave case that there is a Hebel-Slichter peak, albeit reduced due to the magnetization, and no peak for the p-wave case. We then compare these results to a nuclear relaxation rate experiment on UGe2 to determine the possible pairing symmetry signatures in that material. It is seen that the experimental data is inconclusive to rule out the possibility of s-wave pairing in UGe2UGe_{2}.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Different haemodynamic (24-h ambulatory blood-pressure monitoring) and rennin-inhibiting effect of a 1 week treatment with enalapril and lisinopril

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    Ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate monitoring were used for comparing the antihypertensive effect of a 1-week treatment with enalapril and lisinopril 10 mg once daily (double-blind crossover placebo-controlled d y ). Twelve outpatients with mild to moderate hypertension were treated. Both drugs had a significant and identical hypotensive effect. Neither drug affected the diurnal rhythm of blood pressure or heart rate. Therefore the two drugs are equipotent antihypertensive agents. Both drugs inhibited ACE activity to a highly significant extent, but in this regard lisinopril was more effective than enalapril. However, lisinopril's greater ACE inhibition was not accompanied by a greater hypotensive effect. The clinical value of this difference is not yet established

    Incommensurate spin resonance in URu2Si2

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    We focus on inelastic neutron scattering in URu2Si2URu_2Si_2 and argue that observed gap in the fermion spectrum naturally leads to the spin feature observed at energies ωres=4−6meV\omega_{res} = 4-6 meV at momenta at \bQ^* = (1\pm 0.4, 0,0). We discuss how spin features seen in URu2Si2URu_2Si_2 can indeed be thought of in terms of {\em spin resonance} that develops in HO state and is {\em not related} to superconducting transition at 1.5K. In our analysis we assume that the HO gap is due to a particle-hole condensate that connects nested parts of the Fermi surface with nesting vector Q∗\bf{Q}^* . Within this approach we can predicted the behavior of the spin susceptibility at \bQ^* and find it to be is strikingly similar to the phenomenology of resonance peaks in high-Tc_c and heavy fermion superconductors. The energy of the resonance peak scales with THOT_{HO} ωres≃4kBTHO\omega_{res} \simeq 4 k_BT_{HO}. We discuss observable consequences spin resonance will have on neutron scattering and local density of states.Comment: 8 pgaes latex, 4 fig
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