2,387 research outputs found
Dynamic Density Response of Trapped Interacting Quantum Gases
An expression for the dynamic density response function has been obtained for
an interacting quantum gas in Random Phase Approximation (RPA) including first
order self and exchange contribution. It involves the single particle wave
functions and eigen values. The expression simplifies when diagonal elements
are considered. The diagonal elements of the imaginary part of Fourier
transformed response function is relevant in the measurement of Bragg
scattering cross-section and in several other applications.Comment: 2 pages, 0 figure, conferenc
Dynamics of Uniform Quantum Gases, I: Density and Current Correlations
A unified approach valid for any wavenumber, frequency, and temperature is
presented for uniform ideal quantum gases allowing for a comprehensive study of
number density and particle-current density response functions. Exact
analytical expressions are obtained for spectral functions in terms of
polylogarithms. Also, particle-number and particle-current static
susceptibilities are presented which, for fugacity less than unity,
additionally involve Kummer functions. The wavenumber and temperature dependent
transverse-current static susceptibility is used to show explicitly that
current correlations are of a long range in a Bose-condensed uniform ideal gas
but for bosons above the critical temperature and for Fermi and Boltzmann gases
at all temperatures these correlations are of short range. Contact repulsive
interactions for systems of neutral quantum particles are considered within the
random-phase approximation. The expressions for particle-number and
transverse-current susceptibilities are utilized to discuss the existence or
nonexistence of superfluidity in the systems under consideration
Topological Correlations in a Layer Adsorbed on a Crystal Surface
The incoherent scattering of electrons by a layer adsorbed at a single crystal surface is
determined by the topological correlations of elements forming the adsorbed layer. The model for the
description of atoms or molecules adsorbed on the surface is formulated in terms of occupation
operators which are expressed in terms of pseudospin operators with a given spin value. The
correlations can be determined by the fluctuation dissipation theorem in connection with the
susceptibility or given directly by means of the Green functions properly chosen. An example of the
topological or chemical disorder of two components is considered in detail. The calculations of the
topological correlations allow us to find the incoherent scattering amplitude as a function of the
surface coverage which can be experimentally detected.Zadanie pt. „Digitalizacja i udostępnienie w Cyfrowym Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego kolekcji czasopism naukowych wydawanych przez Uniwersytet Łódzki” nr 885/P-DUN/2014 zostało dofinansowane ze środków MNiSW w ramach działalności upowszechniającej naukę
Analytical pair correlations in ideal quantum gases: Temperature-dependent bunching and antibunching
The fluctuation-dissipation theorem together with the exact density response
spectrum for ideal quantum gases has been utilized to yield a new expression
for the static structure factor, which we use to derive exact analytical
expressions for the temperature{dependent pair distribution function g(r) of
the ideal gases. The plots of bosonic and fermionic g(r) display "Bose pile"
and "Fermi hole" typically akin to bunching and antibunching as observed
experimentally for ultracold atomic gases. The behavior of spin-scaled pair
correlation for fermions is almost featureless but bosons show a rich structure
including long-range correlations near T_c. The coherent state at T=0 shows no
correlation at all, just like single-mode lasers. The depicted decreasing trend
in correlation with decrease in temperature for T < T_c should be observable in
accurate experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, minor revisio
Dynamics of Uniform Quantum Gases, II: Magnetic Susceptibility
A general expression for temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility of
quantum gases composed of particles possessing both charge and spin degrees of
freedom has been obtained within the framework of the generalized random-phase
approximation. The conditions for the existence of dia-, para-, and
ferro-magnetism have been analyzed in terms of a parameter involving
single-particle charge and spin. The zero-temperature limit retrieves the
expressions for the Landau and the Pauli susceptibilities for an electron gas.
It is found for a Bose gas that on decreasing the temperature, it passes either
through a diamagnetic incomplete Meissner-effect regime or through a
paramagnetic-ferromagnetic large magnetization fluctuation regime before going
to the Meissner phase at BEC critical temperature
Cartographic Efficacy: Histories of the Present, Participatory Futures
Throughout history, maps have held a particularly potent ability to inform and persuade their users. Recognizing the power maps and their modes of productions possess, participatory mapping has been celebrated for its capacity to empower systemically disenfranchised communities by way of establishing inclusive pathways for influencing collection and representation of spatial information. What has remained largely periphery to considerations of participatory mapping, however, has been discussions of map design. Decades of scholarship in both traditional and critical veins of cartography, however, argue that it’s the careful execution of design choices that grant the map its power. Without attention to design, cartographers warn, the map will not be able to successfully communicate its intended message. However, even with little direct discussion of map design being reported, participatory mapping has a proven track record in an expansive range of locations and contexts of successfully supporting communities in advocating for their rights.
As such, this dissertation takes up this disciplinary dissonance to explore what, ultimately, makes a map effective. Through content analysis of cartographic education materials, interviews with leaders of participatory mapping projects, and participant observation at national and international professional gatherings for cartographers, this research reveals an underlying tension between what informs the established understandings of effectiveness and how that effectiveness is achieved. Such tension can result in instances of disciplinary shaming and gatekeeping which, in turn, limit exchange of information and consequently prevented an evolution of the understandings of effectiveness. This dissertation calls for an expansion of the discipline’s framework of cartographic efficacy. I ultimately invite cartographers to allocate resources for understanding forms of efficacy that expand beyond traditional modalities in addition to making space for those who are not professionally trained cartographers to assert their ability to make effective maps and explore design principles with aplomb
Density excitations of a harmonically trapped ideal gas
The dynamic structure factor of a harmonically trapped Bose gas has been
calculated well above the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature by treating
the gas cloud as a canonical ensemble of noninteracting classical particles.
The static structure factor is found to vanish as wavenumber squared in the
long-wavelength limit. We also incorporate a relaxation mechanism
phenomenologically by including a stochastic friction force to study the
dynamic structure factor. A significant temperature dependence of the
density-fluctuation spectra is found. The Debye-Waller factor has been
calculated for the trapped thermal cloud as function of wavenumber and of
particle number. A substantial difference is found between clouds of small and
large particle number
Formal Interpretation of a Multi-Agent Society as a Single Agent
Contains fulltext :
194702.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this paper the question is addressed to what extent the collective processes in a multi-agent society can be interpreted as single agent processes. This question is answered by formal analysis and simulation. It is shown for an example process how it can be conceptualised, formalised and simulated in two different manners: from a single agent (or cognitive) and from a multi-agent (or social) perspective. Moreover, it is shown how an ontological mapping can be formally defined between the two formalisations, and how this mapping can be extended to a mapping of dynamic properties. Thus it is shown how collective behaviour can be interpreted in a formal manner as single agent behaviour.23 p
Approximate well-supported Nash equilibria in symmetric bimatrix games
The -well-supported Nash equilibrium is a strong notion of
approximation of a Nash equilibrium, where no player has an incentive greater
than to deviate from any of the pure strategies that she uses in
her mixed strategy. The smallest constant currently known for
which there is a polynomial-time algorithm that computes an
-well-supported Nash equilibrium in bimatrix games is slightly
below . In this paper we study this problem for symmetric bimatrix games
and we provide a polynomial-time algorithm that gives a
-well-supported Nash equilibrium, for an arbitrarily small
positive constant
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