2,618 research outputs found
Vacuum Nodes and Anomalies in Quantum Theories
We show that nodal points of ground states of some quantum systems with
magnetic interactions can be identified in simple geometric terms. We analyse
in detail two different archetypical systems: i) a planar rotor with a
non-trivial magnetic flux , ii) Hall effect on a torus. In the case of
the planar rotor we show that the level repulsion generated by any reflection
invariant potential is encoded in the nodal structure of the unique vacuum
for . In the second case we prove that the nodes of the first
Landau level for unit magnetic charge appear at the crossing of the two
non-contractible circles , with holonomies
for any reflection invariant potential
. This property illustrates the geometric origin of the quantum translation
anomaly.Comment: 14 pages, 2 ps-figures, to appear in Commun. Math. Phy
Ab initio calculations of structures and stabilities of (NaI)_nNa+ and (CsI)_nCs+ cluster ions
Ab initio calculations using the Perturbed Ion model, with correlation
contributions included, are presented for nonstoichiometric (NaI)_nNa+ and
(CsI)_nCs+ (n=1-14) cluster ions. The ground state and several low-lying
isomers are identified and described. Rocksalt ground states are common and
appear at cluster sizes lower than in the corresponding neutral systems. The
most salient features of the measured mobilities seem to be explained by
arguments related to the changes of the compactness of the clusters as a
function of size. The stability of the cluster ions against evaporation of a
single alkali halide molecule shows variations that explain the enhanced
stabilities found experimentally for cluster sizes n=4, 6, 9, and 13. Finally,
the ionization energies and the orbital eigenvalue spectrum of two (NaI)_13Na+
isomers are calculated and shown to be a fingerprint of the structure.Comment: 8 pages plus 13 postscript figures, LaTeX. Accepted for publication
in Phys, Rev. B; minor changes including a more complete comparison to pair
potential result
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Using Ontology Research in Semantic Web Applications
In the light of improving the World Wide Web, researchers are working towards the Semantic Web. Ontologies and ontology-based applications are its basic ingredients. Several ontological environments, categorizations and methodologies can be found in the literature. This paper shows how we have investigated the state of the art in these areas in an ontology building process that is the basis for an application developed at the later stage in an events organisation domain
Orbital-Free Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Melting in Na8 and Na20: Melting in Steps
The melting-like transitions of Na8 and Na20 are investigated by ab initio
constant energy molecular dynamics simulations, using a variant of the
Car-Parrinello method which employs an explicit electronic kinetic energy
functional of the density, thus avoiding the use of one-particle orbitals.
Several melting indicators are evaluated in order to determine the nature of
the various transitions, and compared with other simulations. Both Na8 and Na20
melt over a wide temperature range. For Na8, a transition is observed to begin
at approx. 110 K, between a rigid phase and a phase involving isomerizations
between the different permutational isomers of the ground state structure. The
``liquid'' phase is completely established at approx. 220 K. For Na20, two
transitions are observed: the first, at approx. 110 K, is associated with
isomerization transitions between those permutational isomers of the ground
state structure which are obtained by interchanging the positions of the
surface-like atoms; the second, at approx. 160 K, involves a structural
transition from the ground state isomer to a new set of isomers with the
surface molten. The cluster is completely ``liquid'' at approx. 220 K.Comment: Revised version, accepted for publication in J. Chem. Phys. The
changes include longer simulations for the Na20 microcluster, a more complete
comparison to previous theoretical results, and the discussion of some
technical details of the method applie
Coupling Nitrogen Vacancy Centers in Diamond to Superconducting Flux Qubits
We propose a method to achieve coherent coupling between Nitrogen-vacancy
(NV) centers in diamond and superconducting (SC) flux qubits. The resulting
coupling can be used to create a coherent interaction between the spin states
of distant NV centers mediated by the flux qubit. Furthermore, the magnetic
coupling can be used to achieve a coherent transfer of quantum information
between the flux qubit and an ensemble of NV centers. This enables a long-term
memory for a SC quantum processor and possibly an interface between SC qubits
and light.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev. Lett. Updated text and Supplementary Material
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