3,529,469 research outputs found
Coherent manipulation of cold Rydberg atoms near the surface of an atom chip
Coherent superpositions of the 49s and 48s Rydberg states of cold Rb atoms
were studied near the surface of an atom chip. The superpositions were created
and manipulated using microwaves resonant with the two-photon 49s-48s
transition. Coherent behavior was observed using Rabi flopping, Ramsey
sequences, spin-echo and spin-locking. These results are discussed in the
context of Rydberg atoms as electric field noise sensors. We consider the
coherence of systems quadratically coupled to noise fields with 1/f^k power
spectral densities (k \approx 1).Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Critical point for the strong field magnetoresistance of a normal conductor/perfect insulator/perfect conductor composite with a random columnar microstructure
A recently developed self-consistent effective medium approximation, for
composites with a columnar microstructure, is applied to such a
three-constituent mixture of isotropic normal conductor, perfect insulator, and
perfect conductor, where a strong magnetic field {\bf B} is present in the
plane perpendicular to the columnar axis. When the insulating and perfectly
conducting constituents do not percolate in that plane, the
microstructure-induced in-plane magnetoresistance is found to saturate for
large {\bf B}, if the volume fraction of the perfect conductor is greater
than that of the perfect insulator . By contrast, if , that
magnetoresistance keeps increasing as without ever saturating. This
abrupt change in the macroscopic response, which occurs when , is a
critical point, with the associated critical exponents and scaling behavior
that are characteristic of such points. The physical reasons for the singular
behavior of the macroscopic response are discussed. A new type of percolation
process is apparently involved in this phenomenon.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Simple Types of Anisotropic Inflation
We display some simple cosmological solutions of gravity theories with
quadratic Ricci curvature terms added to the Einstein-Hilbert lagrangian which
exhibit anisotropic inflation. The Hubble expansion rates are constant and
unequal in three orthogonal directions. We describe the evolution of the
simplest of these homogeneous and anisotropic cosmological models from its
natural initial state and evaluate the deviations they will create from
statistical isotropy in the fluctuations produced during a period of
anisotropic inflation. The anisotropic inflation is not a late-time attractor
in these models but the rate of approach to a final isotropic de Sitter state
is slow and is conducive to the creation of observable anisotropic statistical
effects in the microwave background. The statistical anisotropy would not be
scale invariant and the level of statistical anisotropy will grow with scale.Comment: 8pages, 3 figs v2:refs added, typos fixe
A Strong Constraint on Ever-Present Lambda
We show that the causal set approach to creating an ever-present cosmological
'constant' in the expanding universe is strongly constrained by the isotropy of
the microwave background. Fluctuations generated by stochastic lambda
generation which are consistent with COBE and WMAP observations are far too
small to dominate the expansion dynamics at z<1000 and so cannot explain the
observed late-time acceleration of the universe. We also discuss other
observational constraints from the power spectrum of galaxy clustering and show
that the theoretical possibility of ever-present lambda arises only in 3+1
dimensional space-times.Comment: 5 pages, minor additions, published versio
Is there a prescribed parameter's space for the adiabatic geometric phase?
The Aharonov-Anandan and Berry phases are determined for the cyclic motions
of a non-relativistic charged spinless particle evolving in the superposition
of the fields produced by a Penning trap and a rotating magnetic field.
Discussion about the selection of the parameter's space and the relationship
between the Berry phase and the symmetry of the binding potential is given.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Quasi-conservation laws for compressible 3D Navier-Stokes flow
We formulate the quasi-Lagrangian fluid transport dynamics of mass density
and the projection q=\bom\cdot\nabla\rho of the vorticity \bom onto
the density gradient, as determined by the 3D compressible Navier-Stokes
equations for an ideal gas, although the results apply for an arbitrary
equation of state. It turns out that the quasi-Lagrangian transport of
cannot cross a level set of . That is, in this formulation, level sets of
(isopychnals) are impermeable to the transport of the projection .Comment: 2 page note, to appear in Phys Rev
Are there hyperentropic objects ?
By treating the Hawking radiation as a system in thermal equilibrium, Marolf
and R. Sorkin have argued that hyperentropic objects (those violating the
entropy bounds) would be emitted profusely with the radiation, thus opening a
loophole in black hole based arguments for such entropy bounds. We demonstrate,
on kinetic grounds, that hyperentropic objects could only be formed extremely
slowly, and so would be rare in the Hawking radiance, thus contributing
negligibly to its entropy. The arguments based on the generalized second law of
thermodynamics then rule out weakly self-gravitating hyperentropic objects and
a class of strongly self-gravitating ones.Comment: LaTeX, 4 page
How does the entropy/information bound work ?
According to the universal entropy bound, the entropy (and hence information
capacity) of a complete weakly self-gravitating physical system can be bounded
exclusively in terms of its circumscribing radius and total gravitating energy.
The bound's correctness is supported by explicit statistical calculations of
entropy, gedanken experiments involving the generalized second law, and
Bousso's covariant holographic bound. On the other hand, it is not always
obvious in a particular example how the system avoids having too many states
for given energy, and hence violating the bound. We analyze in detail several
purported counterexamples of this type (involving systems made of massive
particles, systems at low temperature, systems with high degeneracy of the
lowest excited states, systems with degenerate ground states, or involving a
particle spectrum with proliferation of nearly massless species), and exhibit
in each case the mechanism behind the bound's efficacy.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages. Contribution to the special issue of Foundation of
Physics in honor of Asher Peres; C. Fuchs and A. van der Merwe, ed
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